About Anthony C.
Anthony C. Curcio is a New York attorney who earned his Juris Doctor from Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center in 2014. He completed his legal studies after beginning law school in 2010 and moved into practice in the state where he was trained. His academic background provided a foundation for work that has centered on municipal and local government concerns, among other matters.
He is licensed to practice in New York and has been an active participant in the region’s bar and civic organizations for more than a decade. Since 2015 he has held memberships in the Nassau County Bar Association, the Suffolk County Bar Association, and the New York State Bar Association. At the Nassau County Bar Association he serves as Vice-Chair of the Land Use & Municipal Committee, a role that keeps him closely engaged with zoning, planning boards, and local regulatory questions.
Curcio’s community involvement extends beyond the bar. He has been a member of the Dante Foundation since 2017 and joined the Massapequa Chamber of Commerce in 2022. Those affiliations reflect a sustained presence in community and neighborhood affairs. He also served as President of the Columbian Lawyers Association of Nassau during the 2023–2024 term, a leadership post that involved organizing events, overseeing programming, and representing the group’s interests within the local legal community.
His professional base is Curcio Law PLLC, where he conducts his practice. The work coming through his office often ties back to his committee responsibilities and association activities: land use, municipal regulation, and matters that bring attorneys into contact with local governments and boards. He handles client meetings, prepares submissions for municipal proceedings, and represents parties before administrative bodies when disputes arise.
Colleagues describe him as steady in committee rooms and prepared at hearings. He balances private practice with a steady stream of volunteer and professional activity, using association memberships to stay current on developments that affect local government law and practice. Those ties also provide a channel for mentoring newer attorneys and contributing to public conversations about municipal policy.
He continues to practice from Curcio Law PLLC, handling land use and municipal matters as a principal part of his work.