Letters3/26/2009
Dear Editor,
As the debate about the Onteora School District and the upcoming budget
continues, I would like to add a brief comment from my perspective
as the Executive Director of INDIE Programs, which you will know is
in danger of having its funding drastically cut or eliminated.
Why should Onteora support INDIE? Why should the local community support
INDIE, especially in such straitened times? I would like to put this
a different way: Is it not in fact the other way around?
INDIE supports Onteora. INDIE supports the community, and has done
so for ten years. It is true that we receive payment for some of our
services, but it is also true that the majority of our work is not
contracted and not paid. We work as teachers, as filmmakers, as consultants,
to cover the financial shortfalls and to continue to serve our constituency:
the youth of the district. We work after school, at weekends, through
holidays, on trips to festivals, in meetings and talks with parents,
with teenagers and community workers.
All of us at INDIE could find work elsewhere that is more lucrative.
But we could not find work that is more rewarding or significant.
That is why we do it, despite the difficulties.
I am sometimes told - sympathetically - that in today's economic climate,
INDIE must consider itself as a business, and bow to the rules all
businesses must bow to. Very well, then. If we are a business, what
is our product? And what is the value of that product? What does it
cost to make that product, and is it - purely in dollars and cents
- a viable enterprise?
Our product is a young citizen who is fulfilling his or her potential
that otherwise would not be fulfilled. Our product is a student who
finishes high school instead of dropping out. Our product is a young
man or young woman who goes to college instead of sitting on the village
green at 19 years old. Our product is a group of individuals who are
happier, more productive, stronger, with more skills and self-confidence,
who then put back into our community.
Three hundred students have been a part of INDIE since its inception.
Many are now at college.
Now, imagine the district without INDIE, with more troubled students,
with more drop outs, with more stress and strife, and higher expenditure
on other programs (always higher than Indie),
Finally, I would like to stress that at INDIE we are all local residents,
committed to the local community - not only Woodstock, but Pine Hill,
Olive, West Hurley and Phoenicia and especially the outlying townships.
I have worked with staff at local schools for five years and I can
say that I have rarely met a group of more talented, dedicated and
creative teachers. They are working under impossibly difficult conditions,
and it is time to acknowledge that good schools begin with a vision
- a vision which involves the entire community, and must morally center
on the future wellbeing of our children, and embody our best hopes.
A vision has no place for fear, or faint heart.
So yes, let's treat our schools as businesses, and work out what the
priorities are for the $50 million annual budget.
Perhaps the broadest education and encouragement of our 1,700 students
is a good starting place?
If the school budget were fifty dollars, INDIE's relative 'cost' would
be one dime. Removing that dime will not solve any of the very real
problems which exist in the district, or in the world - but employing
it for the benefit of those currently in need would be a very efficient
use of a dime indeed.
Russell Richardson, Exec. Director
INDIE Programs
Boiceville, NY
Dear Editor,
The administration has proposed a spending increase of 3.97 percent,
the same as if there were an austerity budget. The tax increase on
that proposal is estimated to be nine percent. If the budget is defeated,
they would, under state law for austerity budgets, be allowed the
same 3.97 percent spending increase. The proposed 9 % increase is
inconsistent and excessive because of the economy of this Country
and doesn’t take into account that retirees and those living
on a fixed income are finding it harder to keep their heads above
water. It’s likely that the proposed budget tax levy increase
might be lowered when the stimulus and State money comes in, but not
enough to lower the tax levy to a level that the working poor and
those living on a fixed income would be able to afford.
The proposed 9 % increase is not necessary because the school could
and should consolidate. Last years Board of Education’s plan
with help from an Advisory Board said that consolidating, closing
one elementary school and other money management factors they had
planned would save the district 2.3 million dollars annually.
Word is that the three Board members that got elected last May ran
on the idea that they wouldn’t close the Phoenicia School. People
working at the Phoenicia School didn’t want to loose their jobs
so they undoubtedly played a large part in getting the three incumbents
thrown off the Board so their long range plan to possibly close their
school wouldn’t be implemented. Do the new Board members now
find themselves in a box that they can’t get out? Apparently
campaign promises is making it almost impossible for them to go along
with the previous board’s long range consolidation plan that
included closing one school?
In a recent e mail Superintendent Ford was asked if the 2.3 million
dollars saving plan to close the Phoenicia School that was talked
about last spring was a true annual savings to our school district.
Her reply was that figure was compiled from our own stats at that
time, based on actual personnel, layoff effects, etc. Those things
change in time, so I could not say the figure was exactly the same
now. As with any large shift, there would need to be recalculation
toward a goal date.
That sounds like there was some talk at one time or another about
closing the Phoenicia School, but no vote was ever taken. Dr. Ford’s
statement didn’t say that the long range plan that the previous
board planned on doing wouldn’t be cost effective and it didn’t
say that it would effect any student’s education. In fact it
sounds like it was a very well thought out plan that would benefit
students and the tax payers well into the future. All of Onteora’s
School District tax payers ought to be asking this question. If the
total consolidation plan that the previous board had in place was
the practical and cost effective way to go last year why isn’t
it this year? Maybe the present Onteora School Board members should
take a look in the rear view mirror to see the future of our district
in the way that the previous board did.
William Warnecke
Glenford, NY
Dear Editor,
INDIE is so many things to so many individuals and the community at
large. I know that for my daughter, her friends and my family, INDIE's
presence, influence and guidance is a beacon filled with hope and
possibility. I would hazard to say that for anyone in INDIE's history,
whether directly or indirectly involved, the sense of being part of
something of great value for our collective future would be quite
similar.
INDIE is: a place for creative expression; education beyond the borders
of the traditional classroom; spurring interest and inspiration for
the individual and the collective community; motivation; a sense of
accomplishment; an opportunity to build community, to learn, to experiment,
to experience; a place to listen and a place to be heard.
For many of its students, INDIE is what keeps them in school. This
is not a slogan or simple rhetoric, it is a sentiment that I have
heard come from their very lips, time and time again. Onteora alone
is not "doing it" for many of our children, they need INDIE,
as they need BOCES and Special Education, and sports, and band, etc...
This is about our most precious commodity, the youth, our future,
it is not a simple red line through some numbers on a balance sheet.
Karin Alisa Houben
West Hurley, NY
Dear Editor,
It is a shame that the people we are forced to learn from know so
little about how to teach. It is a shame that Lance Edelman cannot
elaborate further on the subject of what will happen to the at risk
students of Onteora. He may believe Onteora is meeting the needs of
its students but for many years the teachers at the school have believed
the same and yet so many students there are unhappy. My personal experience
at Onteora was that it was the most traumatic and depressing time
of my life. The first two years of which I did without INDIE and if
I had not been recommended for INDIE I would have dropped out when
I turned 16, if I had lived to be 16. Instead I joined INDIE, I made
films that got into the Woodstock Film Festival, and won awards from
the Hudson Valley Student Film Festival, and the Reel Teens Festival.
I left Onteora a year early to go to SUNY Ulster and today I have
a real chance of escaping Woodstock, which is something not a lot
of Onteora students achieve. Many other students that I started INDIE
with are doing the same, students who, at the beginning of high school
never, thought they'd leave Ulster County. They are almost all in
college. So it is apparently the demise of INDIE that it has helped
so many students succeed, because they are no longer around to fight
for it or for the prospective students who will need it. I can assure
anyone with doubts that there will always be students who need more
than Onteora alone can give, and without INDIE to shoulder that burden
Edelman has no hope of providing a safe learning environment for any
of his students. I once heard that INDIE was created as a reaction
to what was stirring in most schools in the late 90s, which was that
students were acting out violently toward their schools, the worst
of which was the Columbine massacre in 1999. Today we live in a time
of change, which is good. However, teenagers have not changed so much
that places like INDIE are no longer needed. The fear and dismay and
angst that all kids feel is still alive and well and as long as Onteora
students are compressed into that little tiny building there will
always be more need for INDIE than Lance Edelman can see. I advise
everyone to take a closer look at what experiences Onteora students
leave with or without and what experiences we would like them to have
or not have. As far as myself, I am afraid for the prospective students
of Onteora if they do not have the option of INDIE and I am sad that
something that was so vital to my survival of high school has had
such hardships in surviving for itself.
Noria Gugliotta
Bearsville, NY
Dear Editor,
As some of you have noticed, the brackets lining the streets of Phoenicia
that once housed baskets filled with beautiful flowers, have been
taken down.. While it is a sad turn of events, something wonderful
is going to come from it.
A wonderful project in its own right, the Summerscape Program brought
attention to the town in a positive way, (for a change) over the last
several years. Recently however, discord found its way to the flowers,
and the town board, along with some residents, felt that it was money
not well spent. Our Supervisor said himself that he and the Town Board
did not support the program, would never fund it, and felt the need
to offer other services to the community far outweighed the Program.
So it became apparent that there was not a gleam of hope that a blossom
would ever bloom again from the baskets along Main Street Phoenicia.
So, what to do with those pesky metal reminders of summers past, empty
and longing, waiting for a purpose once again. Well, a purpose once
again they shall have.
One can not argue that the greatest and most immediate need facing
our community, is to feed the increasing number of residents relying
on our community Food Bank and Food Pantry. Reports about the growing
number of people looking to these services to nourish their families
while they struggle to survive, dominate local and regional newspapers.
With this in mind, it seems a no-brainer for SHARP and the Town Board
of Shandaken, that instead of having these vacant objects hanging
futilely from the poles, they could be sold and the proceeds can go
towards both the Food Bank and the Food Pantry.. The brackets and
baskets would go to a municipality that would make use of them in
their own beautification program, and our town would benefit through
helping those most in need. It is a win- win situation and solves
the dilemma that has been brewing over the Summerscape Program. I
encourage you all to support this town wide effort and I applaud the
cool minds that came up with the solution.
Buffy Kibe
Exec. Director - SHARP
Phoenicia, NY
Dear Editor,
On or about December 9, 2009 I forwarded a letter addressing the bailout
situations.
Understanding basic contract law, I advocated that no tax payer dollars
be spent until all players sign letters of renunciation, renouncing
all bonus money, all golden parachutes, all accrued compensation and
all extra benefits, such as planes trains and cars etc.
What is done by a contract can be undone by a signed renunciation.
The congress did not place these types of restraints on the bailouts.
Now you have the greedy and arrogant corporate CEO's saying a contract
is a contract.
I cannot believe that the congress does not have some lawyers who
are knowledgeable in basic contract law. Perhaps there is a little
Rush Harp conspiratorial thinking in all of us.
Senators and Congressmen have a separate retirement program that is
not tied into FICA. It is funded directly with taxpayer dollars.
I wonder who manages and insures the senator's and congressmen's retirement
fund. Could it be AIG? Did they take care of themselves and leave
the taxpayers to swing in the breeze? What do you think?
H. Clark Bell
Woodstock, NY
Dear Editor,
Society deserves something back from Bernie Madoff, and all those
other finance crooks. Enslave them in hard labor camps. Test all drugs,
tortures and surgical techniques on them -- forget animals. Give ALL
their homes and other assets to the people they screwed, NOT families
or friends. And when they die, donate their organs, preserve what's
left, and hang them naked in front of the Stock Exchange.
J. Andrew Smith
Bloomfield, NJ
Dear Editor,
Regarding the construction on Route 28A by the Ashokan Reservoir,
we write to protest the extensive destruction being done in the name
of safety. Overkill doesn't even begin to describe the deforestation
and general lack of respect for the natural beauty of the area. As
citizens of the Town of Olive we wonder why we were not asked to vote
for or against this extensive work. Who made this decision?
The very pleasurable drive on 28A has now been ruined and it is now
with deep sadness that we travel through this once beautiful area.
And, in this economy especially, we ask the price of this project.
We certainly hope it is not being paid with our tax dollars.
Anthony and Virginia Castrogiovanni
Olivebridge, NY
Dear Editor,
Sure, there are crooks out there. But the overwhelming majority of
actions by corporate directors and managers that created today's messes
have been legal.
Not only legal, but also widely regarded as essential for the American
Way of Life. To put food on our tables. To heat our homes. To provide
jobs. To defend liberty and freedom...
Simply put: giant business and financial corporations govern. The
few who run them make goverrning decisions dictating people's work,
living conditions, health and the nature of our communities.
Business and financial corporations are not simply "market players."
Although in legal terms corporations are mere "fictions of the
law," they function as political forces. Their directors and
managers define how people live, what people do.
They write our laws, propagandize our children, dictate public policy,
plunder the planet. To gain such power, they long ago got Congress,
federal judges and state legislatures to wrap their corporate bodies
in the Constitution of the United States. To bestow upon their corporate
"fictions" the authority to govern.
Armed with "freedom of speech," "due process,"
"equal protection of the law," the "commerce clause,"
and other constitutional authority, corporate directors and managers
wield the law against people, communities and the Earth.
Their real bottom line is not that their corporations are "just
too big to fail." It's that without giant corporations, we helpless
human Earthlings could do nothing to meet our needs. We would languish
freezing, starving, unemployed, unentertained, vulnerable, in the
dark.
After the great Savings and Loan thefts, after the great WorldCom
and Enron corporation thefts - after every financial cataclysm of
the past century - people have been assured that the problem was "greed
and excess."
There were always pundits and politicians to declare "greed and
excess," just as there were Madoffs galore to personify this
evil. So as night followed day, legislatures passed laws to regulate
"greed and excess."
Sure, Madoff and his ilk are major crooks. They've caused great harm
to many people. There are laws aplenty to deal with such obvious crooks
- so they'll end up in jail and good riddance.
But after the Madoffs of each generation are locked up, corporate
directors and managers who "legally" screwed the nation
continue governing the nation. They keep instructing us that the source
of the nation's problems is "greed and excesses." They keep
spending our money to fix their messes. They keep writing our laws.
So let's not be distracted by high-profile crooks on perp walks. Instead,
we can look beyond "greed and excess" to what actually counts:
the constitutional law, statute law and judge made law enabling a
handful of corporate directors and managers to keep shoving their
stupidities down our throats.
We the People can simply revise constitutional theory and practice
regarding corporate "fictions," flesh and blood "humans,"
and planet Earth. To do this, we'll have to assume the authority to
govern ourselves. Isn't that a revolutionary idea!
Richard Grossman
West Hurley, NY
Dear Editor,
Considering the financial melt down in progress this may seem like
a minor matter but, it is not for forest landowners in the north east.
We have had many major problems in the past with invasive insects
destroying our forests and are enduring some now that are out of control.
Examples are, Emerald Ash Borer about to destroy the Ash trees, the
Wooly Adelgid which is killing our Hemlocks, working its way up the
Hudson Valley. Our oaks are threatened with Oak Wilt and Sudden Oak
Death syndrome, diseases of which little is known. The one that there
is a lot known is the Asian Long Horned Beatle (ALB). This critter
arrived in wooden pallets from China and if left unchecked has the
potential of wiping out all the hardwoods, particularly the Sugar
Maples, of not only the Catskills but, the whole north east of the
country.
The ALB, first discovered in Brooklyn in 1996, and later discovered
in Chicago and in some counties in New Jersey where it is believed
to have been eradicated using extreme measures. Recently it has been
discovered in Worcester, Mass. The potential for economic, social,
and environmental effects if this pest were to become established
in the Catskills is extensive.
To counter and increase awareness of this threat and others to our
forests the NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation is developing
a day long conference that will inform stakeholders, forest landowners
and others, how to detect these invasive and very destructive species.
There will be a description of a mock exercise of what a rapid response
by the DEC to a discovery of the ALB would be like in our area. This
might well include, and most likely would, the clear cutting of many,
many acres around the point of discovery. There would be no heed to
the boundary lines of properties, private and other and the DEC has
the lawful right to do this.
As a landowner, and knowledgeable of the potential disastrous effects
of an unchecked infestation of the ALB, and knowing the cataclysmic
impact of the DEC’s response would be if it occurred on or near
my land I would remain supportive of their efforts to eradicate it.
I suggest landowners and other stakeholders take note, get informed
and if possible attend the conference.
Date Wednesday, May 6 – 9AM to 4PM Upper Lodge, Belleayre Mtn.
Save the date, information on registration will be forth coming in
the near future.
Jack McShane, Treasurer
Catskill Landowners Assoc.
Andes, NY
Dear Editor,
I recently became aware of an issue which could have a huge impact
upon our region. There is a new process for extracting natural gas
which can reach shale beds two miles below ground level. There appears
to be a high likleyhood of disruption to local aquifers, and emmisions
into the atmosphere connected to this process. Major pipelines are
also necessary for the delivery of natural gas to urban centers. The
gas companies are approaching landowners for leases on their property
with promises of big financial returns for the use of their land.
At present they are moving forward in Northeast Pennsylvania, but
according to an article in the New York Times in Sept.of 2008, landowners
in the Margaretville area have already been approcahed.
We should be concerned about this because although the benefits that
natural gas mining could bring to large landowners are attractive,
every resident of the region will be exposed to the risks and environmental
damage. This is something that needs to be discussed in the public
realm now, not after it is too late.
I ask the local newspapers to please bring this important story to
the attention of your readers.
Christina Countryman
Shokan, NY
Dear Editor,
Bravo for the free Phoenicia Times that prints some of the writing
of one of the most significant writers of the 20th century, winner
of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Samuel Beckett, from his play "Waiting
for Godot" and in the same issue where to obtain free cancer
screenings. This is a newspaper that tries to be for all citizens.
At the end of the scene printed in the 2/26 POV, Vladimir and Estragon
wait for Godot. Much has been made of who Godot is. God is often the
answer. Becket has said "If Godot were God, I would have called
him that.
When asked what Godot stood for, Beckett replied it suggested itself
to him by the slang word for boot in French, "Godillot Godasse",
because feet play such an important part in the play. This is the
explanation most given.
Second most repeated story is that B. encountered a group of people
standing on a street corner during the annual Tour de France bicycle
race and he asked what they were doing, "nous attendous Godot"
they replied that all the competitors had passed except for the oldest,
whose name was Godot.
Another story is that he was waiting for a bus on the rue Godot de
Mauroy and was accosted by a prostitute. He refused and the woman,
in a huff, demanded to know what special creature he was saving himself
for, was he waiting for Godot?
Becket also said "If I know who Godot was, I would have said
so in the play. He maintains that Godot was a bad play and expresses
amazement that people find so much in it. He said he wrote it to kill
time, waiting for the war to end and for his novels, which he felt
was his important work, to be recognized.
There is a line in Godot that really resonates:
Vladimir: But you can't go barefoot!
Estragon: Christ did.
Vladimir: Christ! What has Christ got to do with it? You're not going
to compare yourself to Christ!
Estargon: ALL MY LIFE I'VE COMPARED MYSELF TO HIM.
From his novel "Molloy" : "I can't help it, gas escapes
from my fundament on the least pretext, it's hard not to mention it
now and then, however great my distaste. One day I counted them. Three
hundred and fifteen farts in nineteen hours, or an average of over
sixteen farts an hour. After all it's not excessive. Four farts every
fifteen minutes. It's nothing. Not even one fart every four minutes.
It's unbelievable. Damn it, I hardly fart at all, I should never have
mentioned it. Extraordinary how mathematics help you to know yourself."
Robert Jacobson
Mt. Tremper, NY
Dear Editor,
Several years ago I wrote a letter to this paper expressing my displeasure
with something the Olive Highway Department did on my street. Recently
they did something else and I now feel compelled to write again.
A couple of weeks ago we had a major windstorm and two of our trees
near the road got blown down, taking with them the electrical and
phone service for my house. Most of the trees wound up in the street
and when Central Hudson responded they sent a crew out and cut the
trees off the wires and moved them to the side of the road. That was
great but it left us wondering how we were going to get rid of the
trees permanently.
The next morning we heard a strange noise and thought it was our generator
malfunctioning so we ran outside to find our trusty Highway Department
cutting up, chipping and carting away the debris. To say we were overjoyed
would be an understatement. They did a great job and removed a huge
burden off our shoulders and both my wife and I are grateful.
It’s easy to get motivated to send a nasty letter when things
go wrong, but we think it just as important to say thanks for the
great job when dedicated groups of people come to our aid in a time
of need. So many thanks to the Olive Highway Department, the crews
of Central Hudson, the Olive Fire Department and a couple of good
friends (you know who you are) for all they did to help us through
some stormy seas.
Colin & Pat Houston
Boiceville, NY
Dear Editor,
It's finally coming - the media is waking up. They are beginning to
acknowledge that Wall Street has been engaged in unprecedented corruption.
Someone leaked out the AIG bonus fiasco and told the public. Whoops.
Now, the middle class knows what the lower class has always known.
That we've all been had. Of course, the lower class had no hand in
it, but I'll bet that the middle class had an inkling that some of
that easy money that was multiplying by simply trusting their brokers,
was tainted. Now it's sliding out of their hands, just as easily as
it slid in. Don't you want to blame someone? Sure you do, but I think
that we have to first admit that we were a part of it, just as we
were a part of going into Iraq. Looks like doing nothing is becoming
less of an option.
The guilt begins at the top, with the gigantic crooks at AIG and Goldman,
Sachs, to the lobbyists, and then to our representatives, and finally
down to our 401K's. Come on, don't tell me that you never suspected
that those portfolios that you never looked at, weren't invested in
something sordid. You just didn't want to know about it. After all,
everyone else on the planet was in on it. It became a world-wide way
of life.
As for the media, let me tell you that if your job is to cover Wall
Street, you're going to make friends on Wall Street. Those friends
are going to take care of you in order to gain favors, like an invitation
to CNBC when releasing a new product. You shake my hand, I'll shake
yours. I mean do you really think that they are not going to offer
media folks some advice? Like maybe tip them off to a good broker,
or a stock that's about to take off. You don't think so? Well, I'd
like to see someone look into the wealth of the Wall Street media
pundits and find out. Who decides which company to put onto CNBC when
their stock needs a lift? No-one? The news just gets out on TV? Or,
are we fed whatever is to their benefit? The media got their share,
our brokers got their share, and we got our share, until, like the
very old Ponzi scheme, the facts began to leak out.
Madoff had to run out of money, once some of his clients asked for
their investments back. They were spent, or stashed away in some other
country, because he wasn't invested in anything. Wall Street had to
crumble, because as enormous as their best picks were, just too much
was going out to the top and not enough into managing the companies.
We live in a culture that believes that money is infinite. We live
in a culture that believes that clean air and clean water will always
be available. That our planet can support an infinite population.
Well, we folks that live in the country, know that it's not true.
I'll never forget driving down a country road at night, a few years
ago, when I saw millions of frogs on the road. I had no choice but
to drive over them. It hurt. Next year, there were no frogs to be
seen. Need I say more about infinity? Let's wake up and get responsible.
Let's hold criminals accountable. Let's go back to the
rule of law - and let's get back to work.
Jill Paperno
Glenford, NY
Dear Editor,
Michael Hein’s State of The County address was the most accurate
and realistic appraisal of the county’s state of affairs that
I have heard. I fully agree with him that tough times lie ahead and
fully support him in his effort to reduce the expansiveness of Ulster
County government.
The big savings, that supporters of the Charter envisioned will come
at the heels of reducing the size of our county’s government
and restricting the bureaucratic propensity to spend and expand.
Our County’s escalating property taxes have more to do with
our county’s department heads than our county’s legislators.
Remember if you will, our legislators, unlike the ones in Washington
and Albany cut their salaries and health benefits to reduce costs.
Had you attended legislative meetings over the past few years you
would have realized that county government had become far too complex
for part time legislators to handle. As a result, the legislators
became increasingly dependent on the counsel of the department heads
that they were supervising. Department Heads that were far more interested
in increasing their budget than reducing it. Most of the “run
amok” spending projects that we, the tax-payers have been straddled
with over the years, come from the drawing boards of certain department
heads. Now, with these departments under executive supervision, things
should improve dramatically.
However, Hein & his staff will have their work cut out for them
as they move to change an entrenched system that has been going on
for decades. From what I have seen so far, they seem up to the task.
How fast they can do it is another matter.
But, to give Hein his due, he has surprised the hell out of me already.
He has been able to neutralize his own and his staff’s salaries
and will be saving us an additional $133,000 when the Commissioner
of Finance retires. He has also reduced the county’s electricity
costs by $200,000 by signing up with an energy consortium.
I am impressed.
Thomas P Kadgen
Shokan NY
Dear Editor,
The theory behind Keynesian economics is that when the economy is
in a
severe depression, the government has to spend money that people won’t
or can’t spend. What the government spends it on doesn’t
matter. Although, it would be wise to spend it on things we need and
will value for a long time, it doesn’t really matter if we spend
it on a lot of unnecessary things.
Obama decided that he’d spend money on useful things, but because
he
was afraid to waste money, he went too small. The most successful
example of an economic stimulus in our country’s history was
World War II. We could have built those ships, tanks and planes and
dumped them in the ocean. Economically it would have had the same
effect of
stimulating the economy.
Most economists agree, that putting people back to work is what stimulated
the economy, during W.W.II. Congressional Democrats backed away from
the 200 million dollars to improve the National Mall, even though
it would have quickly employed a lot of landscape companies. Republicans
looked for a program that sounded outrageous, and grass on our National
Mall was one of several
that they came up with. They didn’t care that our nation’s
greatest national monuments continue to be surrounded by mud and dirt.
In order for a stimulus to shock the economy back to life it must
happen quickly, but mass transit and new electrical grids take years
to plan and build. There are worthwhile programs you can fund
immediately and the National Mall was one of them.
By emphasizing the worthiness of his spending proposals, Obama allowed
the debate to revolve around the merits of each project. Normal spending
is judged on whether the goods or services justify their cost, but
the point of stimulus spending is simply to spend money fast.
Republicans called Obama’s stimulus plan a ‘wish list,’
but many
Americans just wish they had a job.
Jim O’Leary
Delhi, NY
Dear Editor,
Reference: Onteora Central Schools – School Board...
One man’s Observations and Opinion from information he has read
and heard regarding the Onteora School District
A little about me before I start:
1. Graduated from Onteora 1981
2. 5 years US Military - Navy
3. 30 years in construction industry as a laborer, foreman, supervisor
and now sales
4. My fiancé has a daughter in Bennett School
Enough about me but I hope that helps.
First, a question to the Board for my education and others reading
this.
What is your Goal? And not to be sarcastic but what is your Function?
One issue as I see it is what to do with the building space the school
has and how to best service the students with this space.
Opinion one is to consolidate. Bring the current population to a central
location therefore meeting the request of the NY state government
offices the plan they wish to implement across the state. This to
the means of receiving more moneys to provide a better education for
the children.
Opinion two to hold the status quo and use the buildings and space
we have to provide an education for the children.
How do we get these two points of view to meet?
My compromise (opinion) is as follows:
Take the space the school has and retrofit the buildings to be as
green as possible therefore receiving the green incentives the states
may be offering. This will also show a savings to the school in energy
cost. There will be improvements in the students’ attitudes
and grades (this information is documented in many magazines and studies).
The teacher’s should appreciate the improved atmosphere as well.
This will bring short-term jobs into the community through construction
improvements. These improvements will draw more families into the
community because they may want to have there children education in
a green sustainable environment. This may also bring some of the home
schools students back to the public school system to provide a different
social atmosphere to grow up in perhaps being able to better associate
with society.
The State’s plan to consolidate the school system has many benefits
but has the State reviewed and judged what is best for the larger
school districts in the State. Onteora to my understanding is the
second largest school district in the state by area. So maybe the
plan for the small schools districts by area are not what might be
best for the larger school districts by area.
I believe the previous school board did some studies, opinions from
the community are share through emails like this, and the phone lines
set up. Therefore, I would like to see this board make decisions and
move forward on these issues, even if that direction is not the direction
I see as the best path.
I would gladly embrace any responds to this one man’s opinion.
Let me know how you feel. But more importantly, if you care about
the children at Onteora let the School Board know how you feel.
We all have opinions and on important issues like this, it is important
to share them with the people that are making these decisions.
Adam T. Baker
Christian, Father, Step Father,
American, Veteran
Olive, NY
Dear Editor,
Well our next big event is under way. A chicken BBQ on May 2, 2009,
Shokan Park, 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM. This time we are cookin!!!!!! Dinner
will be just like Olive Day. All Ticket we be sold in advance. You
can obtain tickets with Liz Sopata at the high school or email doit472ny@aol.com.
Tickets are $15.00 and include half of a chicken, homemade salads
and deserts and a beverage. Take out will be available. This BBQ is
to raise money for the Belleayre Bash. The Bash is an all night event
that keeps our kids safe on one of the most dangerous nights of the
year, graduation night. It takes approximately $10,000.00 to support
the Bash and in the past we have given away prizes that include a
trip for two and a laptop computer. Prizes and fun start the moment
the kids get on one of the three buses that pick them up at an elementary
school and then drops them off at that location the next morning.
We are also looking for local music entertainment to perform at the
BBQ. We welcome donations. Onteora SADD, PO Box 300, Boiceville, New
York 12412.
Cindy O'Connor & Angie Singer
Co-Advisors, SADD
Dear Editor,
My wife and I moved up to Olive 4 years ago from New York City. We
decided after moving up here to open up a gallery in Woodstock. We
loved the town and the people and really loved the idea of having
a gallery in Woodstock. We quickly started looking for a space. Almost
Immediately we found a place and fell in love with our landlords.
Gig and Marina Basil. They were splendid. Even their brother John
was wonderful to us. They were our surrogate family. They helped us
tremendously.
Having said that, the news of Gig's passing has been very difficult
for us. Gig was marvelous . She was such a loving human being. A gentle
wind bustling thru life. She brought us great joy and gave us a level
of support and love we have rarely been touched by. Even when we moved
our gallery to another location in Woodstock, she was always there
for us, always watching over us.
Gig, we feel blessed having you in our lives even though it was so
brief. We love you. We wish you the best whereever your journey is
now taking you. We wish lots of love to your family. We wish you were
still here...
Serena Van Rensselaer,
Bahram & Aziz Foroughi
Olive, NY
Dear Editor,
Hey, it’s Cally again! Sorry, I haven’t written in while
because my brother has been sick and it’s been busy. I’m
going to fill you in on some of the news! I’ve been lost in
the world of seat assignments! We have bus seat assignments now in
the afternoon. Kids were saying, “no, I want to sit there!”
or “no, I had the outside seat!” and arguing about it,
so now we have sit in the same seat every afternoon. Maybe the kids
are a bit too tired to argue about seats in the morning, so we can
sit anywhere we want then.
In my class we have new seat assignments. We just had this State math
test, and we were sitting in rows for it. I preferred sitting in rows.
I think it makes it easier to pay attention. Now, I’m in a group
of four. I sit with Ryan, Brianna, and Madison. You’re looking
right at the person across from you when you’re in a group like
this, and sometimes it’s easy to look at their paper, or you
find yourself talking to them.
I think seats should be assigned by personality. Some children are
distracting, and some children aren’t. Sometimes, I’m
a distracting person, and in my world of seat assignments I would
be sat with someone quiet who doesn’t have many friends and
needs a distracting person to bring them out. In my imagination of
seat assignments, people who are being distracting to other people
can sit at their own table until they have improved on their listening.
People who have been wonderful all the week would get to choose who
they want to sit with (and get a “free ice cream” slip
to use in the cafeteria). I think teachers will approve of my seating
ideas. What do you think?
Callie Mansfield
West Shokan, NY