News Briefs 11/20/2008
Landfill News...
l What’s up with the replaceing of that landfill building
that collapsed from too much snow last Holiday season?.
A rebid has gone out after the initial bids came in much higher
than anticipated and two further bids were opened yesterday,
Nov. 17. The original bids ranged from $450,000 to $550,000.
Transitional Builders Inc., a firm with a couple of decades
experience, came in with $331,063 for metal materials and
$299,913 for wood while Eugene DiLorenzo Construction bid
$512,000 for metal and $503,200 for wood.
Town supervisor Berndt Leifeld and the town board had been
looking to spend more in the $200,000 range and hopes of having
the project done before the holidays seem to have gone the
way of the old building. The whole situation has been kicked
back to the insurance company, who demanded the rebid in the
first place, for further action.
That insurance outfit, Selective Insurance Co of America,
brokered through the Leeds office of Marshall & Sterling
, said they had scoped a bid of $93,000 from Golden Oak Contracting
of Pine Bush but later attempts at contact by both the town
and the insurers were unsuccessful.
Without the protective overhang, the town pays for an unestimated
additional weight fee from snow, water or whatever other moisture
gets into the bins.
So now the fight switches to Marshall & Sterling, along
with the possibility of some top end shifts on the board that
we’ve been hearing about...
County Budget
Using a portion of the $2.8 million contingency fund included
in the $345 million spending plan approved by County Administrator
Michael Hein enables the Legislature to put its mark on the
budget while holding the tax levy increase to roughly the
2.95 percent hike proposed under the Hein plan. But during
the committee’s meeting Monday, November 17 legislators
added about an additional $304,468 to the budget.
All but about $42,492 will come from the county’s contingency
fund, an amount of money usually included in a budget to provide
the county with a cushion against unanticipated expenses throughout
the year.
The $42,492 in new spending comes on top of $17,063 in new
spending added by the committee last week. Among the new spending
approved by the committee was $24,992 for a public health
assistant in the county Health Department and $17,500 in additional
spending for a plethora of contract agencies in the county.
The proposed budget included $220,000 for contract agency
funding — the additional funding will increase by $10,000
the county’s contribution to the Ulster County Library
Association; increase by $5,000 the $50,000 contribution to
the Dutchess County Arts Council, which administers the Ulster
County arts program funding; and provide $2,500 to the Hudson
River Maritime Museum.
The single largest funding allocation approved Monday was
$150,000 for The Solar Energy Consortium, which was allocated
the full $150,000 pot of money in the contingency fund earmarked
for “legislative incentives.”
Rejected by committee members were proposals by GOP Minority
Leader Glenn Noonan to roll back the salaries for the county
executive and his deputies and the county comptroller to the
levels originally proposed. The salaries included in the budget
were increased to reflect raises given to all management employees
for the upcoming year.
Committee members also rejected a proposal by Noonan to cut
off funding to the Ulster County Development Corp. However
they agreed to move into the county’s contingency fund
$200,000 in incentive funding for the agency.
It takes the votes of two-thirds of the Legislature, or 22
legislators, to move money from the contingency fund. The
committee and full Legislature are expected to vote on a final
budget on Dec. 10.
Hiring Shocker
When the Menla Mountain Retreat, a Woodland Valley conference
center owned by the NYC-based nonprofit Tibet House hired
a new manager last summer, they got more state history than
they expected. Turns out the new staffer, Tania Robyn Cyrlin,
36, of Rhinebeck is also known as Tanya Hollander, one of
four people arrested in March for their roles in a high priced
prostitution ring, Emperor’s Club VIP, whose clients
included former Governor Eliot Spitzer.
“When we interviewed and hired her back in July, we
had absolutely no idea that she had any involvement in such
a thing”, said Nena Thurman, Menla’s Managing
Director. “She was referred to us through contacts in
the City as a capable administrator and it’s an unfortunate
situation for everyone since she’s been doing a very
good job for us. But we’re extremely troubled to learn
of her problems only now, and especially troubled that she
withheld what’s clearly pertinent information about
her background. Clearly, had we been aware, we might have
hired someone else.”
Shortly after taking her new job, Hollander pled guilty in
Manhattan Federal Court on August 25 to a charge of violating
the Travel Act which bans crossing state lines to carry out
illegal business such as prostitution, in which Hollander
acted as a booking agent. Under sentencing guidelines outlined
in her plea agreement, she faces a possible 6 to 10 months
in prison. Sentencing is scheduled for November 25.
In August her lawyer, Michael Farkas, told reporters she had
not been asked to cooperate with prosecutors in any possible
criminal case against Spitzer: Since that time all criminal
charges in the matter against Spitzer have been dropped. Farkas
indicated that at her sentencing he would ask the judge to
consider whether Hollander was being treated more harshly
than other possible co-conspirators such as the former Governor.
Hunting Tragedy
State Police Sunday night charged a 45-year-old New York City
man with manslaughter in the second degree in connection with
the shooting death of a 16-month-old baby in the Sullivan
County Town of Bethel, when Edward Taibi allegedly fired a
shot from his rifle while hunting. The bullet went through
the wall of a nearby trailer and hit the child, Charly Skala
of Woodbourne, who died of her injuries at Westchester Medical
Center.
Taibi had been hunting on private property nearby and fired
his rifle, striking a deer. He then fired a second time from
about 400 feet from a residence and struck the victim in the
upper torso.
State Police said Taibi was extremely remorseful and noted
how this tragedy points up the need for extreme caution and
safety when hunting.
The investigation is continuing by the State Police with the
assistance of the State Environmental Conservation Police
and the Sullivan County District Attorney’s Office.
Food Costs Up
The Ulster County District Attorney’s Office says that
the weekly cost of feeding a local family of four was $215.42
for the week ending November 7. This is an increase of $13.79
since the previous survey for the week ending October 24.
The Marketbasket Survey which is based on the USDA’s
Moderate Cost Family Food Plan, reflects bi-weekly price checks
in three local chain-type supermarkets.
The county will be extending its food aid hours at Shandaken
Town Hall the morning of Tuesday, November 25 to help with
those facing food shortages locally.
Meanwhile, local Boy Scouts collected over 70,000 food items
on Saturday, November 15 as part of their annual Scouting
For Food drive. A total of 35 local food pantries have benefited
from the project to help stock their shelves for the holiday
season. Over 100 volunteers who helped the Scouts pack food
for delivery came from the Salvation Army, Kiwanis Club of
Kingston, Lowe’s Home Improvement staff, Peoples Place,
Kingston Key Club, UPS drivers and families, Queen’s
Galley, Ulster County Community Action, Old Dutch Church,
Ship 609, Caring Hands Soup Kitchen and Catsbaan Church.
Bad Asphalt
The Associated Press story finding its way into post-election
broadcasts and print stories this past week was an eye catcher,
for certain.
“Asphalt is becoming scarce as U.S. refiners overhaul
their equipment to maximize output of highly profitable fuels
such as diesel and gasoline, using inexpensive — and
hard to process — crude oil,” read the kicker
sentence, after varying localized leads. “To make things
worse, refiners are also cutting back on the production of
a petrochemical that many states mix into asphalt to make
roads more durable.”
Wow… so what did that possibly mean, locally, where
our roads tend to need repair regularly because of the Northeast’s
weather extremes?
“Supplies are still available here,” said Woodstock
Highway Superintendent Mike Reynolds of the news, which was
new to him as a national story. “It’s just the
prices that have gone astronomical.”
Reynolds furthered his point by use of a vivid example. In
the midst of his department’s biggest repaving job this
past summer, he said, the price of blacktop materials went
up $11 a ton in one week, from $65.24 per ton during the last
week in July to $76.09 per ton during the first week in August.
Since then, the longstanding road worker added, things have
continued to go up.
“It just changes how much you can get done,” Reynolds
said. “At this point, with other costs going up, our
infrastructure’s going to have to take the hit.”
The underlying problem, it turns out, is a shift in refining
technologies spurred on by the recent price hike in oil, as
well as growing concerns about a diminishing of supplies over
the coming years. In the past, about 40 percent of an oil
barrel would be turned into asphalt products, whereas now
that formula’s been shifted down to around 10 percent.
The results have forced thousands of miles of highways, city
streets and country roads to go without needed repairs, or
a shift in repair methods that has reduced the amount of asphalt
required for road jobs
There’s also new research just starting out on changing
the chemical requirements of asphalt, or looking again at
the more expensive alternative of using concrete for roads.
The nation, AP has reported, is currently undersupplied by
about 24,000 barrels of asphalt a day, or 5 percent of total
daily demand, and is expected to be down about 257,000 barrels
a day by 2012,. The shift in refinery technology that led
to the decline in asphalt production was spurred by oil refineries
installing billion-dollar machines called “cokers”
that are able to refine the chunkiest, low-grade and least
expensive crude oil into highly profitable fuels, such as
gasoline and diesel, leaving leading asphalt suppliers to
thin out their product in the meantime.
What ever happened to the idea of utilizing old tires in roadways?
That’s done regularly, Reynolds said, but usually in
binder and base coats atop of which regular asphalt gets laid.
As for the larger story, it turns out AP ran almost identical
stories about “Peak Asphalt,” as they’re
calling the phenomenon, two autumns ago, when gas prices first
started rising in the year following the Katrina mess.
Check those shocks…
Smelly Dogs
A woman from Indiana has been arrested on animal cruelty charges
by the Ulster County SPCA with assistance from the Ulster
County Sheriff’s Office and Town of Shandaken Police.
After receiving complaints reporting strong smells of urine
and feces emanating from the vehicle while it was in Shandaken,
the Ulster County SPCA seized 11 dogs in overcrowded cages
and deplorable conditions from a passenger van in the parking
lot of the Wenton Motel in Saugerties, said SPCA Executive
Director Brian Shapiro.
“Conditions were awful. The woman was arrested and remanded
to Ulster County Jail and the animals are currently under
our care,” he said. “This case is currently in
court and we are prosecuting it.”
Cameron Lickey, 49, of Indianapolis, Indiana was arrested
and charged with 11 misdemeanor violations for Failure to
Provide Sustenance under New York State Agriculture and Markets
Law.
A number of the dog crates in the van contained as much as
30 pounds of feces and waste in each of them, according to
Humane Law Enforcement Investigator Glenn Daniels. Some of
the dogs had over two pounds of dirty matted hair shaved off
each of them as well. “These were the conditions in
the van they were living in on a very cold night,” Daniels
said.
According to Shapiro, he received an initial tip that Lickey
was trying to sell puppies in Shandaken.
Donations to assist in the care of these dogs may be sent
to the Ulster County SPCA, 20 Wiedy Rd. Kingston, NY 12401.
Resiliency!?!
“Building Resiliency for Our Youth,” a special
program recently hosted by Ulster BOCES, took a close look
at the life-saving issues teachers sometimes face when they
keep a keen eye out for possible abuse in the home. The conference
brought together educators, social workers, and administrators
from throughout Ulster County in sharing best practices and
brainstorming solutions unique to their profession.
Dr. Kris Miccio, J.S.D., an associate professor of law at
Sturm College of Law at the University of Denver and an award-winning
Fulbright scholar and author, led the program. A native New
Yorker, she is also the founding director of the Center for
Battered Women’s Legal Services of Sanctuary for Families,
and had years of expertise to share on the topic of child
abuse.
The in-depth educational session was designed especially for
members of the Traumatic Event Team in Ulster County. The
Traumatic Event Team was designed to be a resource and support
to Districts that may need additional help in a crisis situation.
Abuse, said Dr. Miccio, “is a cultural, social, and
political problem that needs a coordinated response.”
Dr. Miccio drew on her in-depth knowledge of the history of
mother and child abuse in the United States and explained
that for many women, homeland security is not about terrorism—homeland
security is about what is going on in their very own homes.
With statistics like three to four million women being beaten
each year, and three to four thousand women dying from this
abuse, the nexus between mother and child abuse creates a
cycle of violence that can be difficult to penetrate, Dr.
Miccio said.
Pot Bust!
Police shut down a large drug operation and arrested two men
at a secluded house protected by motion sensors and a swamp
that served as a natural moat, the Ulster Regional Drug Enforcement
Narcotics Team said this week. URGENT’s raid of the
house at 473 Spillway Road on Friday turned up more than 45
pounds of marijuana, about 400 marijuana plants, two indoor
growing rooms, hashish, evidence of hashish manufacturing,
hashish oil, evidence of a previous large-scale outdoor growing
operation and $30,000 in cash, according to a press release
from the drug-enforcement team.
The two men arrested — Joseph H. Barton (a.k.a. Joseph
Anderson), 62, and Barton’s stepson, Jay Debberman,
33 — were renting the property and living in “squalor.”
For example, detectives said, there were piles of both new
and dirty clothes around the home, indicating the men bought
new clothes rather than wash items they had worn. Police also
found chukka sticks, police batons and daggers in the house,
but no guns, Budd said.
URGENT said officers went to the house after receiving an
anonymous tip about drug processing and distribution taking
place there but had difficulty accessing the property because
it’s in a heavily wooded area and is blocked by a watery
swamp that’s navigable only by a narrow causeway. There
also were motion sensors around the property’s perimeter
to alert the people inside about any incoming people or vehicles,
URGENT said.
URGENT also said the alleged traffickers tried to avoid detection
by using gas- and diesel-powered generators to offset the
spike in power usage caused by the growing operation.
Police said the men distributed drugs locally and also had
operated in the New York City and New Jersey areas.
Barton was charged with the felonies of criminal possession
of marijuana, criminal possession of a controlled substance
and criminal possession of a weapon. (The weapons charge was
a felony because of a prior conviction, Budd said.) Debberman
was charged with the felonies of criminal possession of marijuana
and criminal possession of a controlled substance and a misdemeanor
county of criminal possession of a weapon.
The two men were arraigned in Hurley Town Court, and though
the Ulster County District Attorney’s Office requested
bail be set at $50,000 for each, Justice Elizabeth Corrado
released them on their own recognizance, police said.
Smoking Ban!
The Ulster County Legislature, on a split vote, has approved
a ban on all smoking on all property owned or leased by the
county, including the community college. Over the past month,
the debate had been over the full ban, generally favored by
Democrats, and a less stringent prohibition pushed by several
Republicans that would have created a 50-foot no-smoking zone
around all entrances to buildings.
Republican Minority Leader Glenn Noonan referred to the smoking
ban as a “feel good law”, prompting an angry response
from Democrat Jeanette Provenzano, who noted that smoking
kills people, and that governments, including the county,
bear a high cost related to health care for people who smoke.
All of the Democrats and three Republicans supported the resolution,
which passed on a vote of 21 to 10.
Meanwhile, on a state level, New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation (DEC) Region 3 Director Willie
Janeway announced in recent weeks that DEC has begun to implement
a long-term enforcement action to reduce the health impacts
associated with smoking and idling trucks and buses, especially
in communities that have been disproportionately impacted
by pollution.Under the plan, DEC will carry out regular but
unannounced enforcement actions in hot spots where heavy truck
traffic enters or exits a neighborhood, or in areas where
trucks are found to congregate. At these hot spots, DEC will
implement pullover operations that target trucks spewing dirty
smoke in violation of air regulations and will patrol the
area for trucks and buses illegally idling.
Buy Nothing?
In an attempt to counteract the holiday shopping frenzy, a
free rummage sale/gift swap called BUY NOTHING DAY is scheduled
for Saturday, November 29th, from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. at the
Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Catskills (UUCC),
320 Sawkill Rd., Kingston. Sponsored by the Environmental
Section of the Social Action Committee of UUCC, the event
features a wide array of gift items, all free to the public.
Among available categories of free gifts are toys, gadgets,
fancy books, blankets, household items, small near-new electronics,
tools, music, and winter outerwear (coats, jackets, gloves,
hats and winter boots). In addition, anything and everything!
Participants are encouraged to donate gift-quality items when
they attend BUY NOTHING DAY although it is definitely not
required. Additional items will be put out throughout the
day.
Donations for the free rummage sale will be accepted until
noon the day of the event and in advance on Sunday, November
23rd, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the UUCC, 320 Sawkill Rd. (half-way
between Washington Avenue and Route 209). in Kingston. The
UUCC will screen items before accepting them and will refuse
any out-of-date computer products, or clothing other than
winter outerwear and boots.
BUY NOTHING DAY is an international event started in 1992
by Adbusters magazine and celebrated by millions. It has now
spread to over 60 countries around the globe.
For further information contact Joanne Steele (339-7526 or
aardvark@ulster.net) or visit UUCC on the web at: http://www.uucckingston.org/bnd.html.
Burglary Ring
A special Multi Agency Burglary Ring Detail comprised of State
Police and the Ulster County Sheriff’s Office has arrested
seven people in connection with 20 house burglaries. The suspects
were found to have stolen firearms, flat screen TVs, computers,
electronic devices, jewelry, cash, clothing chainsaws and
other tools. They are also implicated in the grand larceny
of a BMW as the arson of a building and of a motor vehicle.
Much of the stolen items were recovered, police said.
The burglary detail was formed following a dramatic increase
in residential burglaries involving unoccupied residences
in the towns of Rochester, Wawarsing, Marbletown, Rosendale
and Gardiner. The residences had been forcibly entered.
Arrested on second-degree burglary charges were Kyle Kouhout,
18, of Rosendale; Thomas Bauer, 18, of Accord; Brandon Miller,
17, of Kerhonkson; David Stephens, 18, of Accord; Ron Vanetten,
17, of Kerhonkson; john Halter, 21, of Kerhonkson; and Dale
Faulker, 17, of Accord. Additional charges are pending.
All seven were arraigned and remanded to the Ulster County
Jail in lieu of $50,000 cash bail or $100,000 bond.
Climate Change?
The Center for Research, Regional Education and Outreach at
the State University of New York at New Paltz and the World
Affairs Council of the Mid-Hudson Valley Gillespie Forum will
host a presentation on “Climate Change and World Security”
with Marc Levy at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 2, in the Coykendall
Science Building auditorium on campus. The event is free and
open to the public.
Marc Levy serves as deputy director of the Center for International
Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN), part of the Earth
Institute at Columbia University. Levy will speak on climate
change trends and how they impact the stability of nations
and the well-being of populations.
Levy said there is growing recognition that climate change
can have significant impact on world security, particularly
in regions that are already prone to instability. Multi-year
droughts, rising sea levels and increasing temperatures are
climate change trends affecting food and water resources,
and the health and well-being of populations around the world.
For example, the greatest number of people exposed to sea-level
rise is in China, the Philippines, Egypt and Indonesia. China
and the Philippines alone have 64 million people in the lowest
elevation zones (1 meter above sea level).
Levy has published on environmental sustainability indicators,
environment-security connections and the effectiveness of
international environmental institutions. The common thread
running through his work is a desire to deepen our ability
to understand and manage the complex interactions between
humans and their environment. He is currently serving as a
convening lead author for the UN Environment Program’s
Fourth Global Environmental Outlook. Before coming to CIESIN,
Levy had teaching appointments at Princeton University and
Williams College.
For more information about the Center, visit www.newpaltz.edu/crreo.
Cell Breakthrough
Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have discovered
and demonstrated a new method for overcoming two major hurdles
facing solar energy. By developing a new antireflective coating
that boosts the amount of sunlight captured by solar panels
and allows those panels to absorb the entire solar spectrum
from nearly any angle, the research team has moved academia
and industry closer to realizing high-efficiency, cost-effective
solar power.
“To get maximum efficiency when converting solar power
into electricity, you want a solar panel that can absorb nearly
every single photon of light, regardless of the sun’s
position in the sky,” said Shawn-Yu Lin, professor of
physics at Rensselaer and a member of the university’s
Future Chips Constellation, who led the research project.
“Our new antireflective coating makes this possible.”
This development is expected to move solar power a significant
step forward toward economic viability.
Funding for the project was provided by the U.S. Department
of Energy’s Office of Basic Energy Sciences, as well
as the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research.
AIDS Cure?
An American man who suffered from AIDS appears to have been
cured of the disease 20 months after receiving a targeted
bone marrow transplant normally used to fight leukemia, his
doctors said. And although researchers caution that the case
might be no more than a fluke, others say it may inspire a
greater interest in gene therapy to fight the disease that
claims 2 million lives each year. The virus has infected 33
million people worldwide.
Dr. Gero Huetter said Wedneday his 42-year-old patient, an
American living in Berlin who was not identified, had been
infected with the AIDS virus for more than a decade. But 20
months after undergoing a transplant of genetically selected
bone marrow, he no longer shows signs of carrying the virus.
This isn’t the first time marrow transplants have been
attempted for treating AIDS or HIV infection. In 1999, an
article in the journal Medical Hypotheses reviewed the results
of 32 attempts reported between 1982 and 1996. In two cases,
HIV was apparently eradicated, the review reported.
Before the transplant, the patient endured powerful drugs
and radiation to kill off his own infected bone marrow cells
and disable his immune system — a treatment fatal to
between 20 and 30 percent of recipients. He was also taken
off the potent drugs used to treat his AIDS.
Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy
and Infections Diseases in the U.S., said the procedure was
too costly and too dangerous to employ as a firstline cure.
But he said it could inspire researchers to pursue gene therapy
as a means to block or suppress HIV.
David Roth, a professor of epidemiology and international
public health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, said gene therapy as cheap and effective as current
drug treatments is in very early stages of development.
The New Aggies…
State Ag Commissioner Patrick Hooker will kick off the first
Agricultural Renewable Energy Forum Wednesday, December 3,
2008 at the Holiday Inn, 503 Washington Avenue, in Kingston.
The forum for the agriculture community is scheduled for 10:00am
to 3:00pm
To pre-register please call 518-828-4718, or download a registration
form online at www.hvadc.org and click on upcoming events.
For more information call Teresa Rusinek at 845-340-3990.
Potluck Nights
The secnd Monthly Olivebridge Neighborhood Movie and Wood-fired
pizza potluck will take place at the The Odd Fellows Hall,
Rt. 213, Olivebridge on Saturday, Dec.6 with make your own
wood-fired pizza starting at 5 PM followed at 7pm by a screening
of the new film "Homegrown", directed by Robert
McFall. Discussion to follow about the film and how it relates
to our local community . Park at the firehouse, bring a flashlight
and dress warm.
The film "Homegrown" follows the Dervaes family
who run a small organic farm on one fifth of an acre in Pasadena
Ca. The film is an intimate human portrait of what it is like
to live like "Little House On The Prairie" everyday.
The music for the film was composed by Jay Ungar and Molly
Mason of the Ashokan Foundation, who are generously making
the film available for the screening.
A rescreening of the Nov. film, "The Power of Community"
(60 min.) will be possible for those who missed it.
For more info, call 657-2030 or e-mail waverider75@earthlink.net.