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Follow Up on the
News
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5-8
At The High School
At the April
23 board of education meeting, KSQ architects Armand Quadrini
and Scott Hillje gave a presentation focused on a recent
meeting they’d had with State Aid officials and outlined
the costs on the two proposed middle school configurations.
Ten percent more state aid was offered to the district if
certain criteria were met and converting Bennett elementary
in a middle school did not meet the requirements.
“The situation that put the middle school and high
school in a shared footprint would allow you to capture
the maximum state aid,” said Quadrini, although he
warned that this aid configuration could change.
“I want to make sure this is understood by everyone
here tonight, your basic aid is 31 percent and the State
started offering this additional ten percent bump, I think
about seven years ago and I think it could be pulled anytime,”
he added, “The ten percent hopefully will still be
out there when we go out (to bond).”
The total projected bond price tag to extend the middle
school and update the middle/high facilities is $42.3 million.
Additional cost to renovate and create two Kindergarten-through-four
schools would cost in the $20 million to $30 million range,
depending on which schools would close.
“There may be cost implications,” said Quadrini.
“Once we pick a final plan the construction manager
is going to re-estimate the whole project because a lot
of the costs that have been estimated were done about 14-16
months ago.”
Following plan refinements, and SEQRA review, KSQ would
hope to have a bond go out to voters by January 2009. If
the bond were successful, Phase One would begin with the
Middle school construction possibly beginning during the
summer of 2010.
KSQ have added additions to the middle school configuration
in order to make it separate from the high school with the
library and auditorium as the only shared facilities. New
construction would be added to the front end of the building
with the middle school having it’s own entrance, gym
and cafeteria. Food would be brought over from the high
school and kept warm.
Demographic projections predict that the total population
of students by the year 2014 will be 1420 students. The
architects said that three Kindergarten classrooms in each
school, at 23 per class, would have a capacity for 20 additional
pupils. Two first grade classrooms with 25 per classroom
would have an excess capacity of no more than one extra
pupil. Two-second grade classrooms in each school with 25
per class would have an excess capacity of three students.
Two third grade classrooms in each school with a total of
25 per classroom would have an excess capacity of one student.
Two fourth grade classrooms in each school with a total
of 27 per classroom would have an excess capacity of seven
students.
Trustee Maxanne Resnick asked what would happen if there
was a population growth that would tip classroom sizes.
Quadrini answered, “Our duty as your architect is
to apply demographic enrollment as it is presented to us,
so we don’t ask those questions - what if it goes
down? Those are theoretical questions that are outside the
bounds of the demographers’ enrollment report.”
Later in the night, nearing 11pm, a dwindled down audience
was finally allowed to speak. Most expressed angered over
the 15 minutes it took to make the decision and close a
school.
The
Onteora Candidates
Adam Pollack an Onteora studen, has his name on the ballot but
said at a Meet The Candidates event on Monday, May 5, that he
now supported the anti-incumbent slate.
All eight agree that its time to put Large Parcel to an end
and all will vote no, if it comes up for a vote.
Adam Pollack is a senior at Onteora High School and will be
commuting to the University of Albany this fall. His major is
political science. “This is the best way to get involved
since this is what I want to do with my life,” he said.
Pollack lists two reasons why he decided to become a candidate;
the board needs a representative for students with voting power
when making decisions and he is against the five-through-eight
middle school plan and does not want to see a school close because
of low enrollment. His opinion is based on fairness through
taxation, with every town getting it’s fair share. “If
Woodstock and Phoenicia are paying school taxes, then they should
have their own school.” He also suggested putting central
administration offices at Bennett School, with additional space
there for expansion projects important to the student community
such as an athletic center, music and art, and INDIE. Pollack
attended Woodstock Elementary and was against the closure of
West Hurley elementary. He is Vice President of DECA, attended
the Harvard Model Congress this year, is secretary of student
affairs, Vice President of his senior class and helped raise
$10,000 for the Woodstock skate park.
Incumbent School Board President Mary Jane Bernholz lives in
Olive, is married with three children, works in real estate,
valuation and consulting, and attended Ulster County Community
College in business administration. She describes herself as
a proactive decision and policy maker and is on the board’s
audit and communications committees. Bernholz supports the five-through-eight
middle school expansion at the high school and was on the middle
school steering committee. She envisions, “A segregated
middle school attached to the high school.” She said it
is not because of the middle school but declining enrollment
that an elementary school must close, a decision she supports.
Although the board has not decided what elementary school it
would be she said there must remain one on the east and west
end of the district. “It would be either Bennett or Phoenicia
and West Hurley or Woodstock,” she said. “The advantage
is a two year planning period, so there would be community involvement
and this makes sure everyone is comfortable in the process.”
Over her past three years on the school board she offers a long
list of achievements including her leadership in school nutrition,
getting rid of junk food and soda, creation of no tobacco and
a health and wellness policy, as well as keeping Onteora’s
budgets the lowest in Ulster County. She said that if she could
go back and change anything that she would communicate better
with the public. She also wants to clear up what she believes
is a public misconception that her vision is all about money.
“We’re in the business of students and I have been
personally mindful of that…”
Incumbent and board Vice President Cindy O’Connor lives
in Olivebridge, is married with two children (her third and
oldest son was struck and killed by a school bus driver in 2002),
and owns and operates Sheldon Hill Forestry Supplies on Route
28 in Boiceville with her husband. She has a Bachelors of Science
degree in marketing from Kings College in Wilkes-Barre, PA.
. O’Connor sits on the audit and communication committee
and over her three years as a board member is most proud of,
“Raising the standard of student achievement and district
wide accountability.” She has also worked diligently on
the budget which she says, “Is now determined by actual
expenses, student needs and prioritizing our building repairs.”
She supports the five-through-eight middle school plan at the
high school because. “There is no other choice when it
comes to State aid.” She believes there should be two
elementary schools with one at each end of the district. O’Connor
regrets not being able to attend more school functions.
Incumbent Rita Vanacore lives in Shokan, is married with three
children, is licensed in cosmetology, and is part owner and
hair stylist at Dream Weavers in Kingston. Vanacore is on the
policy and early childhood development committee. She supports
adding the 5-8 middle school onto the high school, and with
the district enrollment shrinking has advocated for the closing
of Phoenicia Elementary. She views enrollment declining so low
that in the ten years a central campus at the Boiceville site
is all that that will be needed. She would like to see INDIE
moved into the high school. Vanacore said she is most proud
of, “The lowest tax levy in the county for three years.”
She also lists accomplishments such as getting rid of junk food,
support for the health and nutrition program, increasing the
technology budget, limiting access to the military and the no
tobacco policy. She would not do anything different stating,
“Overall I am very happy with the job I have done.”
Ralph Legnini has lived throughout the district for the past
27 years, the past nine in Olive with his wife and two children,
and is a musician who runs his own music production company
and has recorded with artists such as James Taylor and Kate
Pierson He is the director of the Children’s Aikido program
at Woodstock Aikido and has a degree in music education from
Herbert H. Lehman College. He is against closing an elementary
schoo and believes, “We need to celebrate our different
community cultures instead of morphing into one generic school.”
He believes the board’s 5-8 Middle School redistricting
plan may not be as cost effective as it appears and feels that
the proposal to have 25 to 27 students per classroom is “not
healthy from an educational standpoint.” Legnini understands
that with the economy in tough times, higher taxes especially
toward people on social security is difficult, but he does not
believe a large bond is the answer to lowering taxes. His vision
is to utilize the community for more resources and downsize
the current proposed improvements to the buildings.
Woodstock resident Donna Flayhan is married with two children,
is an associate professor at SUNY New Paltz, with a Ph.D in
Communication from the University of Iowa. Flayhan directs the
Lower Manhattan Public Health Project and is on the Advisory
Board of a research think tank conducting studies on sick 9/11
workers. She said many people are moving here and demographics
only recognize area births, which is why the actual school population
is slightly above the demographic charts. She said if elected
she would “Work towards entrusting and listening to the
community where we can all come up with the best plan.”
She would prefer to put funding toward fixing the buildings
instead of new construction, a plan she calls a “tragedy,”and
is worried about the increased cost of fuel and insurance when
it comes to transporting children further to a centralized campus
over neighborhood schools.
Shandaken resident Ann McGillicuddy is married with three children,
has a Bachelor of Fine Arts from SUNY Purchase, and grew up
in an educational family environment with her father w a public
school teacher for 36 years and her grandmother one for 32 years.
She moved from the Kingston area six years ago for the schools.
She believes that the school boards’ decision to create
a five-through-eight middle school is a bad idea and runs counter
to the fact that successful rural schools tend to rely on community
interaction and not a removed centralized district. “My
vision is to find alternative creative solutions.” She
said that research shows when students remain in their community
schools with access to teachers, parents and local volunteers
that they achieve at higher standards. “Either new construction
or teachers-I don’t think I can choose one or the other.”
Woodstock resident Laurie Osmond is an active PTA member at
Phoenicia elementary, where she has one child, and is a small
business owner in media production who is a member of the Ulster
County Chamber of Commerce. She attended Brown University and
San Francisco State University with a Bachelor of Arts in Broadcast
Communication Arts. She wants to see the proposed middle school
expansion stopped because she feels it shows a lack of logic
behind the planning, and is angered by last-minute decisions
being made about state aid formulas the board should have been
aware of long ago. She wants to see studies based on State aid,
lower classroom sizes and the different plans that were proposed
in the past but never followed through. Osmond believes the
solution is too scale back, invest in teachers, pull resources
from communities and rethink all of it.
Our
Last Farmers
When asked what the biggest challenges he faces on the farm
are, he laughed and said “fuel, anything related to fuel”
then added that “fertilizer has gone from 150 a ton to
a little over 600 a ton.” When asked if there is hope
for our young farmers, he laughed again and said, “There
is with organic crops and ready-to-eat foods that can be produced
and processed on the farm.”
Ingram pointed to the field across the road and up the hill
and said, “All back up in there was plowed for grain production
and there were big bins in the granary to keep wheat, rye, oats
and buckwheat. That’s what they had in those days... they
used oxen at first and as time went on they changed over to
horses.” He said that “horse powered farms now have
an advantage over fuel powered farms.”
Ingram’s daughter Naomi boils maple syrup with her husband
Grant on the family farm and they also have a couple of cows
pastured at a mostly fallow neighboring farm owned by a family
friend. She feels that, “The fuel costs will drive the
price of food up and cause a move back to more local food production.
A lot more people want local food and they are a lot more aware.”
Ingram added, “All these little farms through here were
little 15 cow dairies. Al Rose had the chicken farm on Mill
Road and he also carted the neighbors milk cans to the creamery
in Kyserike near Alligerville. Everyone here shipped milk. Vegetables
were grown by most everybody and many farmers had rooms or cabins
to rent out to the summer trade. You had to do a little bit
of everything. Today you need some specialty thing and you need
to keep the deer out. Years ago there were no deer here, they
were all killed by the farmers.”
He compared today to World War II, saying “Everybody had
a garden to help subsidize due to the food rationing. This current
mess is similar in that; you may not be able to get everything
you need. People have gotten used to cheap food and food out
of season.... A lot of things are going to change with the energy
increase. Everything in modern farming depends on cheap plentiful
fuel. You‘ve got to keep the cost of your inputs low and
use less energy.”
Harvey “Lintz” Avery has lived in West Shokan his
whole life and immediately ticked off the names of half a dozen
surrounding farms when he was growing up on his family’s
farm in Moonhaw.
“We had cows,” he said. “My aunt Jenny had
a cow, John Nichol’s brothers had cows. These were small
family farms. Nearly all families were involved in some kind
of food production.”
Avery pointed to the spring house in his sister Beverly’s
front yard and said, “My father used to put the milk cans
in the spring house to keep it cool. Most farms shipped some
milk in cans to the Kyserike Creamery.... Mr. Bailey of Beechford
Farms in Boiceville used to cut ice for use in the dairy. He
liked that people worked together, helped each other. We didn’t
have any money but we had lots of work to do. We always had
plenty of food.”
Lonnie Gale, resident of Phoenicia and author of Shandaken,
New York, A Pictorial History was emphatic when he exclaimed,
“It was all farms early on! How else could you feed everyone
who worked in the other industries?”
The route 28 corridor from Boiceville to Phoenicia had several
large dairy farms starting with Beechford Farms located just
west of where the high school now exists. As the local dairy
industry became less viable over time Beechford Farms declined
and was eventually developed for housing.
Where dairy farms once stood and operated along Rt. 28 in Mt.
Tremper are now two farm stands in close proximity: Alyce and
Rogers, located on the site of the old Hudler Dairy Farm, was
founded when its owners came up to the Catskills during the
back-to-the-land movement which arose after the energy and dollar
crisis of the 1970s. Alyce remembers, “In 1980 when it
was hard to get things, much less trucks coming through. I had
this huge organic garden that I worked on day and night and
I would go up and down 28 to the restaurants like Rudi’s
and the Shandaken Inn and Mt. Pleasant Lodge. They were very
happy to get fresh organic produce. These days we buy most of
our products from farms and artisanal producers located in the
surrounding seven counties.” Roger added that, “Some
of our suppliers are long established multi-generational farms
such as R.O. Davenport who are able producers of the highest
quality foods. We’ve been forging relationships with regional
farms for 25 years.” Alyce chimed in that, “Our
customers know that when they bite into a peach here it will
be the best tasting peach you can find. We hand pick everything
for the highest quality and our customer base has a lot of multi
generational families as customers. We watch the kids grow up.
We have artisan-type cheeses, smoked trout and do a brisk trade
in homemade pies. We seek out produce and products as local
as possible.”
Less then a quarter mile up the road lies the Hanover Farms
stand run by Al Higley Sr. and his son Al Higley Jr. Al Jr.
recounted the time when he was 11 and his brother was 15 and
they “grew a big garden at their uncle Harvey “Lintz”
Avery’s farm in West Shokan and set up a farm stand on
the corner of Bell Lane and Watson Hollow Road.” Al Jr.
said that, “We grow very little for the stand; it would
be impossible to both grow and have a market with a wide variety
of food and food products.” He proudly showed off his
own mesclun mix containing a large variety of different salad
greens and culinary herbs.
Teresa Rusinek, who works as an agricultural issues and horticultural
production educator for Cornell Cooperative Extension in Kingston,
says that “There has been a notable increase in the number
of livestock operations that primarily seek to pasture or graze
the animals rather than confine. There has also been a big increase
in the number of horse farms with lots of people breeding and
boarding.”
. Rusinek advocates for farmland conservation in order to “keep
space open. Its all about food security and the more we can
grow at home here in the northeast, the better off we would
all be. The more land that is converted to other uses makes
it difficult to bring it back.”
She went on to say that she “finds it a little scary that
we may not have the land to go back too if we have to.”
Rusinek finished by saying that there are many resources available
for startup farmers and that anyone can contact the Cornell
Cooperative Extension in Kingston at 340-3990 for more information
on farming opportunities in the Hudson Valley.
Saving
Habeas Corpus...
During the Inquisition toca frequently resulted in its victims
admitting to casting spells on their innocent neighbors or
other such unacceptable behavior for which they would be burned
at the stake. When it was used on a man alleged to be Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, the accused mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks,
the captive confessed responsibility for almost 30 terrorist
plots, including assassination designs against Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf, Pope John Paul and other leaders. Mohammed,
frequently referred as “KSM,” is one of six individuals
the U.S. government designates as “high-value detainees”
who could be executed at Guantanamo following military “commission”
trials set to begin.Held devoid of outside contact since his
capture in Pakistan in early 2003 until he met his defense
counsel, Navy Captain Prescott Prince, two weeks ago at a
secret CIA camp apart from other detainees at the Guantanamo
base, KSM has yet to clarify his approach to the trial with
his lawyer, but Prince has stated a belief that a fair trial
was not possible in the circumstances.
Michael Ratner, the West Shokan and Manhattan resident who
serves as president of the Center for Constitutional Rights
(CCR) defending another of the high-value captives, Mohammed
al-Qalitani, has paid close attention to the KSM case. Having
devoted his legal career to the defense of civil and human
rights, he’s well aware of the lasting impact upon rights
the decisions in these cases will have, registering them as
among the most important court battles of the modern era.
“Here’s my view of (KSM). The government has admitted
that he was water-tortured, right?” Ratner asked. “We
represent a lot of clients who have undergone those types
of torture. Essentially, my earliest experience was with guys
called the “Tipton 3”, who weren’t even
waterboarded but confessed to being in a training camp with
Osama bin Laden. At first they denied it, then they were tortured
and confessed. British intelligence has proven they were working
in England at the time they were supposedly being trained
by bin Laden. That gives you an example. Another client, Mahir
Arar- a famous Canadian taken off a U.S. airplane at Kennedy
Airport and sent to Syria for torture, supposedly also confessed
to being trained in Afghanistan. He’s never been to
Afghanistan in his life. He’s been completely exonerated
by the Canadians. They just claimed he was al-Qaida. Basically
the rule we plead applicable to these cases is ‘people
under torture will say whatever their torturers want to hear.’
That’s generally been the case and my office has seen
many of these false confessions- not only in Guantanamo but
as a classic factor in regular criminal law. So, you have
a problem with (KSM) right away.”
Ratner notes that KSM “takes credit for everything”
in his statement, including deeds it would have been impossible
for him to have planned. He confessed to killing the journalist
Daniel Pearl, who was in Pakistan investigating ties between
the Pakistani intelligence service, ISI, and the 9/11 hijackings.
Former CIA officer Robert Baer, whose former agency is closely
linked to the ISI, has stated “My old colleagues say
with 100% certainty that KSM did not kill Pearl” and
even the Pearl family rejects this claim. Even the true identity
of the captive has been questioned- since KSM was reported
killed in a raid on his Karachi apartment in December 2001.
Referring to the then still-classified KSM confession upon
which a NYCDEP police chief (who has since left the department
under a cloud suggesting abuse of authority in a separate
matter) based his decision to close local Monument Road, in
Olive, Ratner said he can think of nothing in the statement
which indicated such a threat.
“Let’s be serious here, whoever he is, and we
won’t know that until there’s some independent
evidence about that, it just seems crazy (to close the road
on the basis of an obscure, projected threat to attack the
Ashokan dam),” said Ratner, recalling the times he’s
had to take the detour. “You can go over the George
Washington Bridge on a truck without being checked or through
the Holland Tunnel and, assuming anybody knows where the place
is, they’re talking about the last of the homemade dams
here and how much (explosive) it would take to blow all the
way down to it; it’s absurd.”
Ratner said lawyers in his office with high security clearances
that have seen some material he’s never seen but, because
of how closely held by high level CIA and military officials
detainee information is, he doubts that the FBI had anything
to show the police chief beyond the now-declassified KSM confession.
Secret evidence is a huge problem in the cases, said Ratner.;
“What they are able to do under the rubric of secret
evidence is say they have all kinds of things and there’s
no way of showing that they don’t. What we DO know is
that to the extent they’re relied on it, it comes out
that it’s not reliable or it’s exaggerated.”
Excessive secrecy has been a government hallmark since the
9/11 attacks, particularly in regard to evidence. Building
debris, kept under armed guard and loaded on trucks with global
positioning devices to make sure none of it went astray, was
disposed of despite loud protests. The FBI seized over 80
videos of the Pentagon crash and refuse to show any of them
except for a few stills. The CIA destroyed video tapes of
hundreds of detainee interrogations in defiance of a judge’s
orders and an air traffic control manager likewise destroyed
audio tapes relating to the hijackings. Records on a man accused
of being bin Laden’s driver were “lost.”
More than 100 detainees died in U.S. custody between 2002
and October 2005. Suicides at Guantanamo’s Camp Delta
have been classified by military authorities as “PR
exercises” and acts of “asymmetrical warfare”
against the U.S. rather than indications of desperation. But
some prosecutors and former interrogators will be testifying
for the defense in the upcoming trials. Even Maj. Gen. Michael
E. Dunlavey, who was in charge of Army interrogations at Delta,
now admits that “torture doesn’t work.”
Agents from the Pentagon’s Criminal Investigation Task
Force (CITF) working to build legal cases against the detainees
told MSNBC in October 2006 that they had opposed the interrogation
tactics not only because they were illegal but because they
were “not likely to produce truthful information, either
for preventing more al-Qaida attacks or prosecuting terrorists”
and may, in fact, make the cases impossible to try. There
were other legal and effective ways to elicit the desired
information than those in use at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison
and other detention sites where interrogation specialists,
(some hired from private firms to evade limitations of conduct
imposed by international law), plied their trade. The agents
said that their own resistance to torture techniques was overruled
at the highest levels of government and Ratner has some points
about that we will revisit in the final installment of this
report.
At this time, Michael Ratner’s group at the CCR is defending
Mohammed al-Qahtani, a Saudi accused of having been assigned
a highjacking role that fateful day by KSM but was refused
entrance to the U.S. and was arrested on the Afghani-Pakistani
border in December 2001. Although he was one of the captives
whose physical, sexual, chemical and psychological mistreatment
would negate any prosecution against him in a civil or military
court, he was named as one of the six to face the death penalty
this month from a special military commission of officers
who, unlike other courts, can consider evidence shielded from
the public and even permit statements coerced by torture.
Spectators approved by the Pentagon can watch the proceedings
behind a sound-proofed window, listening to an audio-feed
which can be cut off if the defendant begins to say anything
he shouldn’t, but they are forbidden to report anything
not approved by censors.
To Ratner it is, like the lightless underground steel cells
and the conduct of the country in the past 7 years, “barbaric.”
CCR’s 20-something client, al-Qahtani, was interrogated
18 to 20 hours a day for 48 of 54 days in one stretch, being
revived in hospital at one point when his heart rate fell
to 35 beats a minute. He “confessed” to being
trained at al-Qaida camps and identified 30 fellow detainees
as bin Laden bodyguards, all of which he later recanted. All
of this as he was drugged and reduced to the “physicially
and psychologically broken” state his CCR attorney Gitanjali
S. Gutierrez now describes and “nothing new” was
learned from him, as one interrogator admitted.
“The government has never come forward with any evidence
that wasn’t obtained by torture,” Gutierrez declared.
Likewise, Ratner has observed that the measures employed are
anything but a formula for obtaining truthful information.
He also had some very succinct and urgent things to say
about official accountability, financial motives, the questionable
role of the press and the future plans of the CCR and himself
which will be detailed when this report concludes in the next
issue.
A
Jar Of Olives...
Life’s A Gift... Unwrap It!
When
the town took possession of the site, it was lock, stock and
barrel, and believe me, that was an accurate description of
the inventory. We sold lots of gardening supplies in this great
spring warm spell. All proceeds went to benefit the Town of
Olive Animal Shelter. Bev Stein and buddies have cleared the
shelves offering bargains to the shoppers and funds to the Supporters
of the Dogs. The shelves are a whole lot emptier, and the dogs
are over three thousand dollars richer. Everyone walked out
of the door feeling like they got the bargain of the century.
Even the girl scouts got some gardening supplies for the Garry’s
Garden they are creating behind Bennett School in honor of Garry
Van Leuvan who worked there and was loved by students and staff.
Speaking of school. The budget vote is just around the corner.
I would never presume to tell you to cast your vote for one
candidate or another, but, as a retired teacher, I urge you
to vote. Vote for the people who want to make the district a
better place for students. Vote for the people who have visions
for the future, for these children are the future. Vote for
the people who are there, not for a political issue or to be
a speed bump in the road to progress, but are there to fiscally
make EDUCATIONAL policy that will improve the school.
We all know that the school tax on property is a burden, and
no one wants to pay more taxes. Use that frustrated energy to
urge our county and state representative to come up with another
way of funding education. I would prefer a fairer tax on income
rather than nibble away at our homes with property taxes that
vary from community to community and neighborhood to neighborhood.
Gerard Malek married Barbara last week, and Linda Gray and her
husband Bill celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary.
Don Avery died after leading a long, full life. Many hunters
out there will recall the times they spent in his camp in Traver
Hollow. Kalie Herdman, a sweet former student of mine, died
way too soon. There was a baby shower for Lucia Lohrer, Garry
and Lucy Van Leuvan’s daughter, who is expecting a daughter
named Zoey who will be her daddy Michael’s sweetheart.
I, personally, will have a birthday that I plan to celebrate
with “shock and awe.” These are the life and death
celebrations that are multiplied a billion times over. We mark
and take time to celebrate the fact that life is a gift. UNWRAP
IT!
What’s Up With The City?
Now, it appears that what’s been happening in regards
to new attitudes on the part of New York City, and its old Upstate
foes, has been the result of a new round of closed-door talks
going on in Albany, the City department of Environmental Protection’s
Kingston offices, and other locations around the Catskills in
recent months… all started under former governor Eliot
Spitzer but currently being continued by his successor, Governor
David Paterson.
That information arose on April 22 when the Catskill Watershed
Corporation held its annual meeting out in the Delaware County
village of Margaretville. Towards the end of the evening’s
proceedings, it turns out, former State Watershed Inspector
General James Tierney, now a Deputy Commissioner at the State
Department of Environmental Conservation, announced that in
fact it has been the Governor’s office that has stepped
in to help solve the ongoing issue of the city’s policy
of challenging upstate tax assessments.
CWC Executive Director Alan Rosa followed up, noting how he’d
been warning watershed towns for over a year that the tax issue
must be resolved because the City has the resources to go far
through the legal system while upstate towns were going broke
in the fight. He spoke about current talks run by the Governor’s
office since January with optimism, and said that he felt the
discussions to date had played a major role in the recent settlement
reached with Olive.
Back when the CWC was set up after the signing of a Governor’s
office-brokered Memorandum of Agreement in 1997, a special account
was set up with New York City funds to pay the costs for defending
tax assessment challenges made by the City against municipalities
within the City’s watershed region. Although there are
still ten different challenges pending, Olive’s battle
had nearly depleted that account.
A call to one of the remaining assessment battles, Hurley supervisor
Gary Bellows, resulted in the news that a recent April 9 court
hearing on their case ended with the judge hearing both summations
and sending both parties back to their drawing boards for another
60 days of finalizing work.
“We’ve been told there’ll be no decision before
June or July,” said Bellows this week. “We won’t
have any more news on the issue until then.”
At the CWC meeting, meanwhile, Rosa and other watershed representatives
insisted that the talks they’d been holding were totally
confidential, much in the same way talks had been back in were
back in the mid-1990s when a host of local representatives met
under former Governor George Pataki to reach the MOA deal they
all signed in 1997.
Dennis Lucas, the Town of Hunter supervisor who serves as Executive
Director of the Coalition of Watershed Towns, whose fight over
proposed New York City regulations led to the creation of the
MOA and CWC, noted in a separate interview that the impetus
for the current talks, and resulting new atmosphere, came after
he reached out to “the governor’s people and other
state regulators” last year to address concerns about
fraying upstate/downstate relations.
He said the big push came after the federal Environmental Protection
Agency okayed a ten year Filtration Avoidance Determination
for the City, sparking a lawsuit and other threats from the
Coalition and other Upstate entities worried that the length
of time of the new approvals would eat into their negotiating
power.
Late last fall, Lucas continued, Tierney - knowledgeable about
Catskills issues since dealing with the Belleayre Resort review
in his previous job - was given the role of leading talks…
and allowed to use a sizable staff to help move things along.
Since January, parties involved in the ongoing talks have included
various DEC officials, the Governor’s Secretary of the
Environment Judith Enck, city DEP Commissioner Emily Lloyd and
Deputy Commissioner Paul Rush, and representatives from the
Catskill Center for Conservation and Development, representing
the region’s environmental interests.
“From these discussions much progress has been made,”
Lucas said, noting that in addition to tax assessment battles,
items being mulled over include giving Upstate entities approval
power regarding City land acquisitions within the watershed,
increased recreation uses for city lands, including those around
its reservoirs, and new investment mechanisms for the region.
“We’re moving back towards an equal partnership
bent on serving our shared constituents… We just had to
recognize once again that we’re all in this together.”
Asked whether there was any relationship between the state’s
new attitude towards the Catskills watershed region and the
Agreement in Principal regarding the controversial Belleayre
Resort that Spitzer announced and signed in Kingston last September,
Lucas said no, not at all. He said the only time the Coalition
of Watershed Towns touched on the Gitter proposal, now grown
more controversial as it involves new state investment in its
own ski center adjacent to the resort complex, was when its
review process raised issues involving community character that
Lucas and others in the entity felt were better left to “home
rule” decisions by individual towns.
“It’s my belief that if one town wants to paint
itself green and go to hell in a handbasket, they have a right
to do so, within reason,” he said. “That’s
part of the character of the Catskills.”
“I’m just tickled pink to see everyone willing to
sit down together and critique our partnership, renew commitments
to work together, and move forward,” Lucas said. “We’re
doing okay.”
Leifeld, for his part, spoke about the “new attitude of
cooperation” also including $500,000 in Smart Growth funds
committed by the state to projects in the Route 28 corridor
from Olive to Andes, and possibly being more tied into “the
Dean Gitter thing” than Lucas wanted to admit.
“I’m not privy to the meetings,” he said.
“But I’m happy they’re happening.”
He also offered that a relationship between the new talks and
the AIP did exist in the way the new administration, through
two governors now, has placed emphasis on developing the Hudson
Valley as a “green corridor” similar to what Silicon
Valley was for the digital age, and bettering relationships,
and opportunities, within the Catskills.
“It’s big stuff,” he said. “For them
to agree to leave us alone for ten years… that’s
something!”
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