News Briefs 10/9/2008
Register Now
Hudson Valley residents have less than a week left to register
to vote in the November election. Mailed voter registration
forms must be postmarked by Oct. 10 and received by county
Board of Elections offices by Oct. 15. Voter registration
forms are available at all town halls, Department of Motor
Vehicle offices and post offices. Residents also can register
to vote in person at any local Board of Elections office.
To accommodate residents who might be unable to register in
person during the week, the state has designated Saturday,
Oct. 11, as a statewide voter registration day.
Board of Election offices across the state will hold special
hours on that date so last-minute registrants can sign up
to vote in the Nov. 4 election.
In Ulster County, residents can register on that date from
2-9 p.m. at any town hall, except in the town of Olive, where
voter registration will be held at the Olive Free Library
in West Shokan.
To cast ballots in congressional, state, county or local elections,
voters must be a resident of the county in which they wish
to vote for at least 30 days prior to Election Day.
Tax The State
A state appeals court has rejected a ban on local tax collections
on state-owned land, a move that ensures the integrity of
the state Forest Preserve and the fiscal viability of many
Adirondack and Catskill communities.
Last year, in a case called Dillenburg vs. New York, state
Supreme Court Justice Timothy Walker issued an order prohibiting
the state from making property tax payments on all lands managed
by the Department of Environmental Conservation, including
Forest Preserve lands in the Adirondack and Catskill parks.
Last week, the Appellate Division of state Supreme Court,
4th Department, reversed that decision.
“This is a major victory for those who live, work and
recreate in the Adirondacks and Catskills,” said Neil
Woodworth, executive director of the Adirondack Mountain Club
(ADK). “The state Forest Preserve, which protects more
than 3 million acres of wild lands in the Catskills and Adirondacks,
is an important asset to all New Yorkers, and the fiscal burden
of maintaining these lands should be shared by all New Yorkers
and not fall on the shoulders of a few.”
Under the common law principle of sovereign immunity, codified
in the state’s Real Property Tax Law, no municipality
has the right to tax the state unless the state gives its
consent. In 1886, the year after the Legislature created the
Forest Preserve, lawmakers agreed to allow Forest Preserve
communities to collect taxes on these properties, the first
such tax payments in state history. In 2006, New York paid
an estimated $80 million on its land in the Adirondack and
Catskill parks.
Over the years, the Legislature expanded that taxing authority
to certain communities with substantial state property within
their boundaries. Outside of the Forest Preserve, taxes are
paid on most state forest lands, but not all. John C. Dillenburg
III, who was then supervisor of the town of Arkwright in Chautauqua
County, sued the state, alleging that his community was being
unfairly denied tax payments on state-owned property within
its borders.
Judge Walker, decrying the system of taxing state land as
a “hodgepodge” of state laws “devoid of
any consistent rationale,” ordered the state to stop
paying taxes on all of its lands. Judge Walker immediately
stayed his own order pending appeals, and the state has continued
making the tax payments, but the ruling caused uncertainty
and apprehension for local governments and property owners
in the Adirondacks and Catskills Parks.
The decision prompted calls for a moratorium on additional
state land purchases in the Adirondacks until the case was
resolved, a move that would have tied the state’s hands
at a time when it has a rare opportunity to protect tens of
thousands of Adirondack acres and open those lands to public
recreation.
The Appellate Division in Rochester ruled that the Legislature
has the discretion to waive sovereign immunity in certain
cases without being subject to an “equal protection”
challenge. ADK, the Adirondack Council, the Open Space Conservancy,
the Adirondack Landowners Association, the Residents’
Committee to Protect the Adirondacks, the Association for
the Protection of the Adirondacks, the Catskill Center for
Conservation and Development and Audubon New York filed a
court brief in support of continued tax payments on Forest
Preserve land. The coalition was represented by Marc S. Gerstman
of Albany, former chief counsel for the state Department of
Environmental Conservation.
A copy of the decision is available at http://www.courts.state.ny.us/ad4/.
Officers Cleared
Two New York City Department of Environmental Protection police
officers who were brought up on misconduct charges were recently
cleared when a state administrative law judge ruled that Officers
Gianfranco Nuccio and Michael Williamson did not commit misconduct
when they responded to a domestic violence call when on patrol
near the Ashokan Reservoir in Ulster County on October 2,
2007.
The officers received a 911 call while on patrol of an incident
on County Route 28 at a residence across from the reservoir.
After no response from the first Ulster 911 “poll”
for police response, the officers, who were five minutes away,
responded.
They were familiar with the residence since they had been
there before for prior domestic violence and environmental
related calls and they knew one of the occupants was a prior
felon.
While responding, the officers sought supervisory permission,
which was delayed due to the unavailability of the nearest
assigned sergeant. The request was ultimately denied by another
duty sergeant, but later approved by a department inspector
when they officers said they were on the scene.
The officers found a bloody man in the driveway of the residence
and maintained the scene until local and state police arrived.
The inspector who approved the response later brought charges
against the two for violating the interim order.
“These officers should have been commended for their
behavior not charged with misconduct,” said Kenneth
Wynder, president of the Law Enforcement Employees Benevolent
Association, following the judge’s decision. “This
same agency has had officers commit crimes and not be charged
with any misconduct. It is ridiculous to then have to justify
the actions of good officers.”
Union counsel and attorney Terrence Dwyer said this is a case
“that should have never gone as far as it did.”
Gas Drilling…
Information on the potential for natural gas drilling in the
Catskills is now available from the Catskill Watershed Corporation
(CWC) via a packet of basic information culled from various
sources for landowners, municipal officials and Catskills
residents interested in or concerned about the possibility
for natural gas exploration in the Marcellus shale formation.
This geologic formation underlies a large portion of the Appalachian
range, including the Catskill Region and the New York City
Watershed. It is believed to hold substantial deposits of
natural gas which have become accessible because of refined
developments in extraction techniques.
The CWC Board of Directors, while not taking a position on
whether drilling is good or bad for the area, felt that its
role as a regional entity should be to disseminate accurate,
balanced information from reliable sources on the subject,
according to Executive Director Alan Rosa. Towards that end,
it has sent to village and town clerks in the Catskill-Delaware
Watershed a packet of backgrounders, maps and illustrations
on geology, drilling techniques and their impacts, leasing
advice and tax issues.
The packet is available to anyone upon request: Call toll-free
877-WAT-SHED (928-7433); or 845-586-1400.
The CWC has also added a page of pertinent Marcellus shale-related
links to its website (www.cwconline.org). These links include
the DEC, DRBC, CCE, New York Farm Bureau, NYS AG, and the
Oil & Gas Accountability Project.
Guess that, despite early reports from geologists, it all
runs deeper, and farther, than originally expected…
Festival Moved
The folks at Belleayre Mountain want you to know something.
Contrary to popular belief, the state-owned ski center’s
popular fall festival has not been cancelled.
True, it won’t be on the grassy slopes where visitors
can stand in awe of panoramic views of the Catskills in full
color, but Belleayre and new partners Delaware and Ulster
Railroad think they’ve come up with a pretty good alternative.
The 29th Annual Belleayre Fall Festival will be held this
coming Columbus Day weekend, but at a new location thanks
to a partnership announced by the New York State Department
of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and the Delaware and Ulster
Railroad. The festival will take place on Oct. 11-12 at the
Delaware and Ulster Railroad on Route 28 in Arkville, Delaware
County from 10am - 5pm.
This year's festival will offer dozens of craft vendors, live
music, food from Mary*s Cooking, a kid's crafts tent, face
painting, a giant hay maze and much more. The DURR will be
running train rides into the Catskill Mountains at the peak
of fall color. However, the Ski Center’s lifts will
not be running this weekend as previously reported.
Normally held at DEC's Belleayre Mountain ski area about five
miles away, the Railroad has worked with DEC to supply support
for the Festival. Belleayre Mountain representatives will
also be on-site to
provide information about tickets for the upcoming ski season.
Belleayre will have a tent where they will again be selling
the popular $99 four-pack of lift tickets, season passes,
snowsports programs, and much more.
For those that remain upset over the Belleayre Fall festival
being moved to Arkville, Councilman Rob Stanley and a couple
of Pine Hill Business folks have set up a mini festival in
that hamlet. Stanley recently complained that moving the festival
out of the town and the county would harm Shandaken and threatened
to set up something that would catch visitors before they
went westward to Arkville.
Now he says that the activities in Pine Hill are only meant
to compliment the larger Festival. Look for Live music and
an Oktoberfest atmosphere starting Friday night at both the
Pine Hill Arms and the Colonial Inn and there might be some
special events at the Pine Hill Community Center as well.
There’s even vendor space available for the weekend.
Word is being spread that such space, while costing $125 in
Arkville, is available for only $25.
If all goes well the event, called the Fall Crawl Oktoberfest,
may become an annual thing.
There’s another limb of this lanky stretch of fall fest
activities set for Saturday in Big Indian at Catskill Outback
Adventures.
Historical Meeting
The Historical Society of the Town of Olive will hold its
fall meeting on Saturday Oct. 18 from 10AM to Noon at the
Olive Free Library in West Shokan. Robert Steuding will be
offering his newest book for release " The Heart of The
Catskills; History of the southern area of the Catskills centered
on Slide Mountain from the earliest settlers to the Grand
Hotel." Mr. Steuding will talk about his research and
the stories he has gathered and copies of the book will be
available from Purple Mountain Press for sale and signing.
Refreshments will be provided.
Pass On Pass?
Ulster County Legislature Chairman David Donaldson’s
proposal that Ulster, Greene and Delaware counties team up
to institute a “Catskill Regional Ski Pass” has
received a chilly reception from one of the region’s
biggest ski centers and only a curious look from another.
Donaldson, who earlier this year called for a public boycott
of activities at Hunter and Windham ski centers in Greene
County in response to their criticism of subsidies for the
state-owned Belleayre Mountain Ski Center, now thinks that
leaders of the three counties should meet with tourism leaders
and ski center operators to develop and promote a ski pass
that would allow skiers to ski at any of the centers in the
Catskill region.
Tim Woods, president of Windham Mountain, said Donaldson’s
idea has been discussed at length within his organization
since it was proposed, and Windham is not interested.
“First, we’re subsidizing Belleayre (with taxpayer
dollars),” Woods said. “Then we’re loaning
them our customers?”
Woods said he looks forward to more skier visits this season
anyway, saying that he expects high gas prices to keep skiers
from the metropolitan area closer to home than Vermont and
New Hampshire.
Hunter Mountain President Russ Coloton said that he doesn’t
know anything about the regional ski pass plan.
“No one has contacted us yet,” he said. “Our
only understanding of it is from what we read in the paper.”
Coloton added that he would be interested in hearing more
about the plan.
Donaldson said the leaders of the three Catskill Region counties
should work together to promote the whole region and raise
awareness of the fact that there are more ski centers in New
York state than in any other state in the country, and that
there are more ski centers in the Catskill region than in
any other region in the state.
“This type of approach makes more sense than Greene
County attacking Ulster County’s No. 1 tourist attraction,
or Ulster County calling for a boycott of Greene County’s
ski resorts, which in the long run is detrimental to the region
as a whole and to both counties,” Donaldson said.
Who Spent What
Members of the state Senate Majority spent an average of 62
percent more on their legislative offices than Minority party
members during the six months ending March 31, while Assembly
Majority members spent 33 percent more than Minority members
during the same period, according to a new searchable database
of legislative expenditure reports posted at www.SeeThroughNY.net.
The data show the 32 Senate Republicans spent an average of
$445,904 and the 30 Senate Democrats spent average of $274,316
on staff, rent, travel, telephone service, office supplies
and other expenditures. In the 150-member Assembly, where
Democrats hold a 108-42 edge, the average Democratic member
spent $181,078 while the average Assembly Republican spent
$135,982.
Topping the Senate expenditure list for the period was former
Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno, who spent $607,232. The
Assembly’s top spender was Assemblyman Richard Gottfried
(D-Manhattan) at $402,776. Spending figures for to member
offices do not include added staff assigned to legislators
who chair committees. Also not included are member items,
or pork barrel projects, which can be viewed on www.SeeThroughNY.net
under “Community Projects Spending.”
Roughly $48 million of the $110.7 million spent by the Legislature
during the period was allocated to individual member offices.
The other $63 million was spent on committee and central operations
including telephones, print shops, TV and radio studios and
other items. The Legislature’s 2008-09 budget is $219
million.
Flu Shots!
The Ulster County Health Department will hold its annual influenza
and pneumococcal vaccination clinics at several locations
throughout the county beginning on October 15 in Shokan. No
appointments are necessary, and county residents may attend
any site which is convenient.
County residents who are at greatest risk for influenza-related
conditions are encouraged to receive the flu vaccination.
This high-risk group includes those over the age of 50, as
well as adults aged 18 and over who have heart disease, chronic
broncho-pulmonary disease, renal disease, diabetes mellitus,
other chronic metabolic disorders, severe anemia and/or compromised
immune function, and others who are at risk of influenza-related
conditions. Influenza vaccine is also recommended for home
care providers and others (including household members) who
may be in close contact with high-risk individuals.
Senior citizens who have Medicare Part B benefits will be
able to obtain their vaccinations through Medicare. The recipient
must be entitled to Part B coverage on the date of service,
Medicare Part B must be the primary insurance coverage, and
the Medicare Card must be presented on the date of service.
For those not eligible for Medicare Part B coverage, there
will be a $20.00 charge for influenza vaccination and a $35.00
charge for pneumococcal vaccination, payable at the clinic.
County residents enrolled in Medicare Managed Care programs
should consult with their primary care physician prior to
presenting at one of the Health Department’s sites.
Ulster County Department of Health Flu Clinics will be administered
locally this year from the Ulster County Senior Care-A-Van,
for seniors age 60 and over, at Reservoir United Methodist
Church on Route 28 from 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM on Tuesday, October
14 and at the United Methodist Church in Phoenicia from 10:30
AM to 2:30 PM on Wednesday, November 12.
For recorded information about all dates and times, please
call the Ulster County Health Department Flu Hotline at 340-3093.
Information can also be obtained through our web site: www.co.ulster.ny.us/health.
Meanwhile, Margaretville Hospital will hold its annual Fall
Health Fair on Monday, October 13 from 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
in the hospital lobby. Free health screenings will include:
Blood pressure, blood glucose, Body Mass Indexing, hearing
tests, CO breath analyzer, and Pulse Oximeter for lung function.
For additional information about the Health Fair or hospital
services, please call 845-586-2631.
Solar Bucks
The House of Representatives has granted final approval to
$2.4 million for C9 Corporation and PrecisionFlow Technologies
to further develop their solar technology for the US military.
The companies will conduct their work in conjunction with
The Solar Energy Consortium in Ulster County.
The Senate is also expected to grant its final approval for
the funding shortly.
C9 currently has a contract with the U.S. Department of Defense
to develop Silicon Carbide-type semiconductors for the military.
It is anticipated that the newly developed solar application
technology will be used for civilian and commercial use as
well.
PrecisionFlow Technologies will construct the machines that
C9 will use to develop its solar products. It’s expected
that PrecisionFlow Technologies will be adding new jobs at
its Saugerties site to adequately handle this new business.
U.S. Congressman Maurice Hinchey, currently running for reelection,
secured $3.2 million for C9 as part of the Fiscal Year 2008
budget.
Heritage Tourism
The Central Catskills Collaborative held the latest of its
monthly meetings at the historic Skene Memorial Library in
Fleischmanns on Thursday, October 2. The featured speaker
was Peg Ellsworth, Executive Director of the M-ARK Project
and previously a driving force behind the Town of Roxbury’s
outstanding heritage tourism programs and landscapes, which
earned the community the prestigious Preserve America Designation
and the NY State Historic Preservation Award. The Roxbury
Nine Vintage Base Ball Club and popular “turn-of-the-century”
events like Railride into Yesteryear have helped stimulate
the town and surrounding area’s economy for 10 years.
The community of Fleischmanns, once a baseball hub of the
Catskills, also recently resurrected its vintage baseball
team, the Mountain Athletic Club, and hopes to connect with
the historic Delaware and Ulster Railroad to repeat Roxbury’s
success.
After the presentation, the gathering organized into facilitated
interest groups, who discussed connections between heritage
tourism and two of the region’s key resources: Route
28 (the Onteora Trail) and the Ulster & Delaware (U&D)
Railroad Corridor. The session was designed to assist the
collaborative, which is beginning the planning process for
a Rte. 28 scenic byway and looking into improving the connections
between municipalities and business and nonprofit entities
along the U&D Corridor.
For more information please contact Peter Manning, Regional
Planner, The Catskill Center for Conservation and Development
(845) 586-2611 or pmanning@catskillcenter.org
Census Fears
Fear of the government in many communities after the Sept.
11 attacks and years of debate over immigration policy could
create problems in getting an accurate count of the U.S. population
in 2010, the director of the Census Bureau said recently.
To combat people’s hesitancy, the bureau will work with
local governments and organizations such as churches and community
groups to make sure people understand what the census is and
that the data won’t be shared. Participation in the
nation’s count every 10 years is required, but no one
has been prosecuted for refusing to respond. Getting an accurate
count of everyone who lives in the country is vital because
it determines how congressional seats are apportioned and
how federal funds are given out, among other things.
“A community that doesn’t respond to the census
doesn’t exist,” said New York City’s chief
demographer, Joseph Salvo.
To conduct the survey, the Census Bureau sends mailings and
then follows up with visits to households that don’t
respond. It doesn’t ask about legal status, but there
has been a push to count only American citizens. The 2008
Republican platform includes that point.
Awareness!
October will again see the country observing Breast Cancer
Awareness Month. During Breast Cancer Awareness Month, many
of the organizations and agencies that provide breast cancer
screening, education, information and support offer expanded
services and special programs.
“This is an excellent time for women to learn about
their risk and get screened for breast cancer. All women 40
and over should get an annual mammogram and clinical breast
exam. Women 20 to 39 should get a clinical breast exam at
least once every three years,” said Michel Bonnin, Director
of Imaging Services at Ellenville Regional Hospital.
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related
death among women in New York State. Each year, nearly 14,000
New York women are diagnosed with breast cancer and about
3,000 die from the disease.
Women are at increased risk for breast cancer if they have
had their first pregnancy over the age of 30, began their
period at a very young age, have a first degree relative (maternal
or paternal side of the family) diagnosed with breast cancer,
have a genetic predisposition, or have been previously diagnosed
with cancer.
If you are uninsured and over 40 there are community programs
that provide access to free mammograms for women without insurance.
Call Ellenville Regional Hospital at 647-6400 extension 271
to find a cancer screening program near you.
Green Cahill
Governor Dave Paterson has signed legislation to encourage
the construction of new homes and the renovation of existing
homes to meet “green building” standards. The
measure was sponsored by Assemblyman Kevin Cahill of Kingston,
chairman of the Assembly Energy Committee.
The bill creates financial incentives to state residents who
agree to “go green” when building new homes or
renovating existing ones. The program will be administered
by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority.
“One of the quickest and most effective ways we can
cut back on energy costs and globe changing pollution is to
rethink the way we build and renovate our homes,” Cahill
said. “Sustainable green building practices are no longer
a luxury; they are a necessity for our economic, environmental
and energy security. The program will give homeowners and
builders the incentives to make green buildings the standard
going forward.”
Environmental Advocates has named Kingston Assemblyman Kevin
Cahill as Legislator of the Year.
DOJ Crimes?
In 18 months of searching, Justice Department Inspector General
Glenn A. Fine and Office of Professional Responsibility chief
H. Marshall Jarrett have uncovered new e-mail messages hinting
at heightened involvement of White House lawyers and political
aides in the firings of nine federal prosecutors two years
ago. But they could not probe much deeper because key officials
declined to be interviewed and a critical timeline drafted
by the White House was so heavily redacted that it was ‘virtually
worthless as an investigative tool,’ the authorities
said. ‘We were unable to fully develop the facts regarding
the removal of [David C.] Iglesias and several other US Attorneys
because of the refusal by certain key witnesses to be interviewed
by us, as well as the White House’s decision not to
provide ... internal documents to us,’ the investigators
concluded in their report.”
Guess we have to wait for this one to fully unfold…
Talking Guns
Educators, public safety officials, parents, and concerned
citizens are invited to attend a conference on “Violence
in Our Schools: Protecting Our Most Valuable Resource”
featuring Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, an expert in dealing with
this national and international threat, on Thursday, October
16, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in the Quimby Theater on the
Stone Ridge campus of SUNY Ulster. Colonel Grossman will speak
on “Lessons Learned from Jonesboro, Littleton, Virginia
Tech, and from Vietnam and Iraq; The Psychological Cost of
School and Campus Violence.” The morning talk will be
followed by an afternoon session on “Impact and Solutions.”
Colonel Grossman is a West Point psychology professor, Professor
of Military Science, and an Army Ranger who has combined his
experiences to become the founder of a new field of scientific
endeavor, which has been termed “killology,” or
the study of the act of killing. He is also the author of
Stop Teaching Our Kids To Kill, an indictment of violent video
games, movies, and television shows. His Pulitzer-nominated
book On Killing is on the US Marine Corps’ recommended
reading list and is required reading at the FBI academy and
numerous other academies and colleges.
Seating is limited, and advance registration is recommended.
To register by phone, call 845-687-5109.
Global Warming
The first evidence that millions of tons of a greenhouse gas
20 times more potent than carbon dioxide is being released
into the atmosphere from beneath the Arctic seabed has been
discovered by scientists.Details of preliminary findings suggest
that massive deposits of sub-sea methane are bubbling to the
surface as the Arctic region becomes warmer and its ice retreats.
Underground stores of methane are important because scientists
believe their sudden release has in the past been responsible
for rapid increases in global temperatures, dramatic changes
to the climate, and even the mass extinction of species. Scientists
aboard a research ship that has sailed the entire length of
Russia’s northern coast have discovered intense concentrations
of methane - sometimes at up to 100 times background levels
- over several areas covering thousands of square miles of
the Siberian continental shelf.
In the past weeks, the researchers have seen areas of sea
foaming with gas bubbling up through “methane chimneys”
rising from the sea floor. They believe that the sub-sea layer
of permafrost, which has acted like a “lid” to
prevent the gas from escaping, has melted away to allow methane
to rise from underground deposits formed before the last ice
age.
They have warned that this is likely to be linked with the
rapid warming that the region has experienced in recent years.
Methane is about 20 times more powerful as a greenhouse gas
than carbon dioxide and many scientists fear that its release
could accelerate global warming in a giant positive feedback
where more atmospheric methane causes higher temperatures,
leading to further permafrost melting and the release of yet
more methane. The amount of methane stored beneath the Arctic
is calculated to be greater than the total amount of carbon
locked up in global coal reserves so there is intense interest
in the stability of these deposits as the region warms at
a faster rate than other places on earth.
The Arctic region as a whole has seen an 8F degree rise in
average temperatures over recent decades and a dramatic decline
in the area of the Arctic Ocean covered by summer sea ice.
Many scientists fear that the loss of sea ice could accelerate
the warming trend because open ocean soaks up more heat from
the sun than the reflective surface of an ice-covered sea.
Ashokan Shots
Cornell Cooperative Extension of Ulster County recently participated
in the 2008 Snapshot Day event sponsored by the Hudson River
Estuary Program of the DEC in partnership with Hudson Basin
River Watch. CCE educators collected scientific information
from the Esopus Creek, a tributary of the Hudson River, right
across the street from Onteora High School on Tuesday, October
7 from 10 AM to 12 Noon with the high school’s AP Environmental
Studies class. Data will be posted on the CCE website so that
students can compare their results to the 52 other sites that
will be collecting data from the Hudson River on the same
day. And observations from the Esopus Creek will be posted
on line to NYC participants so they can learn more about their
water source.
To learn more about this event go to www.dec.ny.gov/lands/47285.html.
Baby Plastic
With scientists at odds about the risks of a chemical found
in plastic baby bottles, metal cans and other food packaging,
the government gave consumers some tips on how to reduce their
exposure to BPA even as it said the substance is safe.
A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee met as a
major study linked bisphenol A to possible risks of heart
disease and diabetes. The scientific debate could drag on
for years.
Concerns About Bisphenol ADenis Farrell, AP4 photos Bisphenol
A, a chemical used in baby bottles, food cans and other items,
is safe, federal regulators said. But a new study has suggested
that BPA raised a person’s risk of heart disease and
diabetes.
“Right now, our tentative conclusion is that it’s
safe, so we’re not recommending any change in habits,”
said Laura Tarantino, head of the FDA’s office of food
additive safety. But she acknowledged, “there are a
number of things people can do to lower their exposure.”
For example, consumers can avoid plastic containers imprinted
with the recycling number ‘7,’ as many of those
contain BPA. Or, Tarantino said, they can avoid warming food
in such containers, as heat helps to release the chemical.
More than 90 percent of Americans have traces of BPA in their
bodies, but the FDA says the levels of exposure are too low
to pose a health risk, even for infants and children. Other
scientists, however, say BPA has been shown to affect the
human body even at very low levels.
Another study released by the Journal of the American Medical
Association suggested a new concern about BPA. Using a health
survey of nearly 1,500 adults, the study found that those
exposed to higher amounts of BPA were more likely to report
having heart disease and diabetes. Because of the possible
public health implications, the results “deserve scientific
follow-up,” its authors said.
The study is preliminary, far from proof that the chemical
caused the health problems. Two Dartmouth College analysts
of medical research said it raises questions but provides
no answers about whether the ubiquitous chemical is harmful.
FDA officials said they are not dismissing such findings.
“We recognize the need to resolve the concerning questions
that have been raised,” said Tarantino, acknowledging
that more research is needed. But the FDA is also arguing
that the studies with rats and mice it relied on for its assessment
are more thorough than some of the human research that has
raised doubts.
The agency has asked an outside scientific panel for a second
opinion on BPA’s safety, and the medical journal article
was released to coincide with the advisers’ hearing.
The FDA has the power to ban or limit use of BPA in food containers
and medical devices.
BPA is used in hardened plastics and in a wide range of consumer
goods, including the lining of metal cans, eyeglass lenses
and compact discs. Many scientists believe it can act like
the hormone estrogen, and animal studies have linked it with
breast, prostate and reproductive system problems and some
cancers.
Several states are considering restricting BPA use, some manufacturers
have begun promoting BPA-free baby bottles, and some stores
are phasing out baby products containing the chemical. The
European Union has said BPA-containing products are safe,
but Canada’s government has proposed banning the sale
of baby bottles with BPA as a precaution.
The FDA advisory panel is expected to make its recommendations
to the FDA late next month.
Obituary…
Marilyn Ruth Ford, 80, of Mt. Tremper, died on Sunday, October
5th.
Marilyn lived life to the fullest during her 80 years. She
was born on November 10, 1927 in Brooklyn; the daughter of
Florence Nelson Bennett and Floyd Bennett. As a child, she
remembered riding a sleigh through the snow-covered streets
of her Bay Ridge neighborhood. As a young adult, Marilyn worked
at the radio station of Radio City Music Hall in Manhattan.
She graduated Endicott College in Beverly, Massachusetts.
She met Robert Ford at work in his father’s garage in
Shandaken in 1947, and they married in June of 1948. During
their early married years they lived in Oliverea, New York
City, and Phoenicia. By 1950 they had built their permanent
home in Mt. Tremper. There she shared with all she touched
her sincerity, openness, and genuine love for others.
Marilyn had a love of family, animals, nature, art, and music.
Marilyn had many talents and interests. She played piano,
and painted using watercolors, oils, and pastels. She crafted
many family heirlooms in wood and wool. Marilyn was a talented
seamstress; sewing her daughter’s wedding gown as well
as many quilts, skirts, and dresses. She also crafted stained
glass chandeliers to light her families’ dinner tables.
She taught herself to lay cobblestone with mortar, and carried
stones from the Esopus Creek to build patio walls and stairs.
In her daughter’s house, she laid a cobblestone veneer
chimney three stories high, which is remarkable in light of
her aversion to heights. She loved her family’s many
camping excursions to the Adirondacks, Maine, Cape Cod, and
Vermont. She enjoyed finding useful items at rummage sales,
and in recent years was joined in these pursuits by her daughter,
granddaughter, and great-granddaughter.
Marilyn is survived by her husband of 60 years, Robert; her
children Debbie Park of Idaho, Mark Ford of Saugerties, and
Wayne Ford of Roxbury; a brother, Floyd Bennett of Great Barrington,
Massachusetts; her five grandchildren: Matthew and Harley
Park, Jennifer (Park) Haaland, Christopher Ford, and Marisa
Ford; and two great- grandchildren, Megan and Samuel Haaland.
A Service to Celebrate the life of Mrs. Ford was held on Wednesday
at 10am at the E. B. Gormley Funeral Home 87 Main St. Phoenicia
with the Rev. Ralph Darmstadt as celebrant. Burial will be
in the family plot at the Hudler Cemetery Rt. 28 Mt. Tremper.