News Briefs 7/2/2009
Dems To Caucus
The Olive Democratic Party will be holding its biannual caucus
at the town meeting hall on Bostock Road in Shokan on Thursday,
July 9 starting at 7:30 PM. Expect Bert Leifeld, supervisor,
Town Clerk Sylvia Rozelle, councilpersons Helen Chase and
Bruce LaMonda, Highway Superintendent Jimmy Fugel and judge
Tim Cox to get the nods for incumbent runs.
As for competition... both the Olive GOP and Olive Conservative
Parties are still figuring out dates for their caucuses and
mulling over candidates. According to Cindy Johansen, things
are “still kind of early yet” with the parties
still carrying petitions for county races. According to Pete
Friedel, currently the only Republican in town offices, some
competitive races should be expected come November. Stay tuned
for all the excitement...
That Shot Glass…
Ulster County District Attorney Holley Carnright calls it
downright “thoughtless.” Onteora Superintendent
of Schools Dr. Leslie Ford takes full responsibility for it
on behalf of the district.
What they are talking about is the party favor given to all
students who attended the recent senior prom – shot
glasses for alcoholic beverages.
The legal drinking age in New York (and all other states)
is 21. High school seniors are typically 17 or 18.
It seems the gifts were decided upon by a school committee,
and that at least one board member has asked for an investigation.
Muting matters, it also appears that the situation Onteora’s
facing is occurring elsewhere. The Assocoated Press ran a
story about a Pennsylvania school district also giving away
what it thought were “mini vases” to its seniors.
There, the prom committee, which includes adults as well as
students, ordered the shot glasses from a prom favor Web site.
Dr. Ford has said that she has revised school policies to
prevent something like that from happening again.
“That isn’t the message we want to send to our
children. We are very anxiously telling them to be very safe
and drug free in many different ways in the district, so we
want to make sure our actions line up behind that,”
she said.
Expect this all to come up again at the next Onteora School
Board meeting on July 7.
The 28A Skidoo...
So what’s with the apparent stopping of work on the
rerouting of Route 28A? Did the rain get too much for the
work crews?
No, according to New York City Department of Environmental
Protection spokesperson Mercedes Padilla, there had to be
some “rethinking” of several items.
Padilla said on June 30 that a Wednesday afternoon, July 1
meeting had been planned for the project’s key designers,
engineers, and DEP legal staff on “several design, property-related,
and legal issues.”
“They need to look at progress made, and not made,”
Padilla added, noting that officials would be in touch with
The Olive Press by Thursday, July 2 on what was decided...
and what had happened. “They’ll also have some
finalized finish dates at that point.”
Meanwhile, back in Olive town offices in West Shokan, supervisor
Bert Leifeld said that as far as he had heard, “Their
engineers made a few major mistakes and have to do it all
over again, with everything to be rectified by September.”
Leifeld added that the problems included some property line
mishaps that now need to be redesigned. But he did add that
it was also the biggest roadbuilding project Olive has seen
since the straightening of Route 28 in the 1950s, and the
building of the reservoir before that. “It’s the
biggest earth moving project since I’ve been here,”
Leifeld added. “I guess, with all the grumbling I’ve
been hearing about it, that it definoitely falls under the
category of, ‘Being careful about what you wish for
or you might get it.’ As I recall, everyone kept wishing
for a safer, straighter road...” More fron the DEP in
our next issue.
June’s Rains...
Nine people in trouble on the rain-swollen Esopus Creek in
the Town of Marbletown were rescued June 21 when State Police
at Kingston responded to a call regarding people in the creek
after a group was kayaking in the fast moving water and a
kayak and canoe overturned, dumping the people into the water.
They were unable to reach land. Fire departments from Hurley,
Marbletown, and Lomontville and rescue teams from Hurley,
Marbletown and Mobile Life paramedics responded along with
the Ulster Hose Dive Team and the Ulster County Sheriff’s
Office Dive Team.All of the people were rescued and brought
to shore by the Ulster Hose Dive Team. One person suffered
a minor laceration to the leg, All were treated at the scene
for minor hypothermia. They refused transport for further
treatment. Sea Tow Mid-Hudson was used to retrieve the boats.
This past June, it turns out, is poised to become the wettest
June in the 113-year weather record compiled at the Daniel
Smiley Research Center at the Mohonk Preserve outside New
Paltz, the area’s top weather-collecting center.
Director Paul Huth said that June was proving to be not only
waterlogged but cold as well. “We’re consistently
recording nighttime temperatures in the 50s and daytime temperatures
in the 70s,” he said. “I imagine in a week or
two, we’ll start to see it get very warm. Then we’ll
all be complaining how hot and humid it is. The trend we’re
seeing is that the weather is extreme,”. It’s
significantly above or below the average whatever it’s
doing. These extremes have an enormous impact to humans, infrastructure,
farmers and wildlife.
The wettest June on record at Mohonk was back in 1903 when
12.4 inches soaked the region. The research center is somewhere
around eleven inches, making it the second wettest month ever
recorded, with another week to go.
The average is 3.9 inches for June, and according to Paul
Huth, “We received 6.9 inches in one week!”
Burglaries!
Four Pine Hill residents have been charged by Shandaken police
in connection with a number of burglaries in the Pine Hill
and Big Indian areas between late May and June 22. Arrested
June 23 and 24 were Felix A. Cruz, Bradley V. Grant, Desirea
Walley, and Anthony C. Kilter, police said. Cruz, 21, was
charged with four counts of burglary and one count of criminal
possession of a weapon, felonies; and four counts of criminal
mischief and one count of criminal possession of stolen property,
misdemeanors. Grant, 18, was charged with two counts of felony
burglary. He was also charged with two counts of criminal
mischief, and one count of criminal possession of stolen property,
misdemeanors. Walley, 19, was charged with four counts of
burglary and one count of grand larceny, felonies. She was
also charged with one count of criminal possession of stolen
property, and one count of petit larceny, misdemeanors. Kilter,
19, was charged with three counts of burglary, and one count
of grand larceny, felonies. He was also charged with one count
of criminal possession of stolen property, and one count of
petit larceny, misdemeanors. All four were sent to the Ulster
County Jail on $10,000 cash bail or $20,000 secured bond.
Assisting in the arrests were the Ulster County Sheriff’s
Office and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection
Police.
Comments
Meanwhile, law enforcement authorities recently arrested a
Kingston man on eight counts of burglary in the third degree.
Scott Hapeman, 37, of Pine Street, allegedly committed burglaries
at the VFW and K&W Car Wash in the Town of Ulster, Hobo
Deli, Steve’s Pizza and Bistro to Go, all in the Town
of Kingston, the Frozen Rainbow in the Town of Esopus, PX
Express in the Town of Rochester and Elks Lodge in the Town
of Saugerties. The arrest was made following an investigation
by State Police, the Ulster County’s Sheriff’s
Office, Town Police from Ulster and Saugerties and the Ulster
County District Attorney’s Office. All of the break-ins
were committed in December 2008. Cash was taken in each instance
and extensive damage was done to the premises. Hapeman was
arraigned and remanded to the Ulster County Jail in lieu of
$100,000 bail.
More At Jail?
Three corrections officers at the Ulster County Jail have
filed a civil lawsuit in U.S. District Court, Northern District
of New York against two of their superiors alleging they were
retaliated against after one of the officers exercised his
free speech rights. Kent Singer, Thomas Nollner and Jonathan
Decker charge that they were retaliated against by two of
their superiors after Singer created a parody of the Absolut
vodka advertisement by replacing the word “vodka”
with “corruption” last September. The parody was
said to have been created out of frustration with practices
that included alleged prearranged promotions without union
input and the manipulation of schedules to favor officers
with whom superiors were friendly. The lawsuit names Sgt.
Christopher Ferro and Lt. Jon Becker as defendants.
The suit said Ferro reassigned Singer to prisoner transports,
which is an assignment normally reserved for junior officers
with less experience and a position Singer had previously
handled out-of-title. The prisoner transport job was also
particularly burdensome for Singer because it interfered with
his efforts to care for his dying mother, the suit said.
Nollner and Decker claim Ferro threatened them with physical
force after alleging they had backed Singer’s parody.
The suit, which will be heard by Judge David Hurd, seeks monetary
compensation for the plaintiffs’ pain and suffering
and for the violation of their constitutional rights.
Undersheriff Frank Faluotico said he had not seen the complaint
but noted that he would review it and also look to see if
those officers had filed a complaint with the Sheriff’s
Office prior to filing the lawsuit. Faluotico said if a complaint
had been made to the sheriff it would have been investigated
by internal affairs. He said, though, that he did not believe
such a complaint had been made.
There are three other outstanding lawsuits involving the Ulster
County Jail and its employees. In one suit, a former female
corrections officer said she was subjected to sexual harassment
on the job and in another lawsuit, another former and three
current female corrections officers made similar allegations.
A former male corrections officer at the jail has also filed
a suit, this one seeking reinstatement to his job, which he
said he lost after he was falsely accused of sexual assault
and harassment by a female co-worker.
Meanwhile, Ulster County Executive Mike Hein sent a letter
to all county employees reiterating the County’s workplace
harassment policy, highlighting his administration’s
“Zero Tolererance” stance.
“I want to make it perfectly clear that my administration
has zero tolerance for workplace harassment in any form whatsoever,”
Hein wrote. “If it should occur, there is a clear path
in place for reporting it, investigating it and taking swift
and decisive action against those who are found to have violated
the policy.”
The County Executive noted that previously, training of County
employees took place every 3 years and that upon becoming
County Executive, he directed that the training take place
annually. He added that the County is currently completing
this year’s annual training of all County employees
in the areas of diversity, workplace harassment and workplace
violence.
Along with the letter to each employee, the County Executive
enclosed a copy of the County’s Workplace Harassment
Policy.
Quad Artists…
The Town of Olive will join other mid-Hudson towns in celebrating
the rebuilding of the Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge that is
part of the Quadracentennial celebration of the Hudson River.
Artists Kate McLoughlin and Doris Goldberg will create an
emblem to represent Olive as well as work with youth and adult
groups to make 25 flags around the theme of their town’s
past present and future. Jen Dragon is doing the same in Shandaken.
The inaugural ceremony of the rebuilt bridge will involve
a huge procession that will include emblems and banners representing
each of the towns in Ulster and Dutchess counties and is scheduled
for October 3rd .Preparation and designing of the flags will
begin in Olive in July with children in the Summer Recreation
Group, Summer Reading Group and adults in the Merry Mountain
Maids and the Art Club. For further information call Doris
Goldberg at 679-3239 by July 4th. A meeting is planned for
the first week in August to get the flag makers together and
put the finishing touches on all of the flags.
More information on Shandaken activities will be forthcoming…
Congressman Maurice Hinchey recently announced that he’s
obtained an additional $750,000 for the Hudson Quadricentennial.
A portion of the funding, about $175,000, will be used to
develop a web project with National Geographic about the river’s
past and present. Another $60,000 will be used for conferences
at regional historical sites and colleges and another $250,000
will be spent on celebrating Samuel de Champlain’s 1609
exploration of the state’s northeast corner.
Stimulus Funding
The federal government will make available to Mid-Hudson counties
$62 million in federal economic recovery bond authorities
to the counties of Dutchess, Orange, Ulster and Sullivan.
The bonds, from the Recovery Zone Bond program, as part of
the stimulus package, are designed to finance a range of qualified
public development projects ranging from job training to building
infrastructure including public schools or courthouses.
Dutchess County will have available to it $20.4 million; Orange
County will have $25 million; Sullivan County will have $2
million and Ulster County will have $14.7 million.
This municipal bond will have 45 percent of the interest subsidized
by the federal government.
“This funding will help stem the flow of job loss and
ensure that local initiatives receive the funding they need
to begin and continue,” said Congressman Maurice Hinchey.
“State and local budgets are feeling the squeeze in
upstate New York and this new federal support will help prevent
cuts to critical programs, while also maintaining and creating
local jobs.”
Many local small businesses may also be eligible for interest-free
loans under a new program created by the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The newly launched “America’s
Recovery Capital” (ARC) program allows small companies
to take out loans of $35,000 to pay down existing business
debts. Borrowers pay no interest on the ARC loans and repayment
does not begin for one year.
To qualify for the ARC loans, small firms must demonstrate
they are experiencing immediate financial hardship due to
the economic downturn, but are otherwise deemed by the Small
Business Administration (SBA) to be viable. The loans will
be made by commercial lenders and can be used for payments
of principal and interest for existing, qualifying small business
debts like credit card obligations, mortgages, lines of credit,
and balances due to suppliers, vendors, and utilities.
To apply for ARC loans, businesses should visit their local
SBA-approved small business lenders. The loans will be available
through Sept. 30, 2010, or until appropriated funding runs
out. Additional information about the ARC loan program is
available at www.sba.gov/recovery/arcloanprogram/index.html
Job Training!
The words “uneducated” and “unemployed”
share more than a prefix. U.S. Labor Department statistics
show that while the nation’s overall jobless rate rose
last month to 9.4 percent (the highest since 1983), it was
15.5 percent among those who haven’t completed high
school - and a mere 4.8 percent among those with four-year
college degrees.
The recession-boosted peril of job loss for the uneducated
is particularly severe among males. As The Wall Street Journal
recently reported, due to the collapse of the U.S. housing
market, “the male-dominated manufacturing and home-building
industries are both suffering, and that has hurt less educated
men far more than less educated women.”
Harvard University labor economist Lawrence Katz said that
the last two recessions, in 1990-91 and 2001, were more “egalitarian”
in their consequences.
But beyond concerns over uneven gender distribution of today’s
unemployment pain lies the spreading realization that regardless
of sex, racial, age and regional categories, more education
generally equals more job security. Thanks to that enhanced,
bottom-line awareness, many Americans are taking positive
action to remedy their disadvantages on the schooling front.
Across the country, community colleges report record demand
from students who want to quickly plug the gap in their resumés.
Meanwhile, it’s also turning out that the recession
is hurting U.S. cities at “radically varying levels,”
which will lead to an uneven economic recovery, according
to a new study by the Brookings Institution.
“This is not one national recession. It’s felt
barely at all in some parts of the country, and it’s
felt deeply and significantly in others,” said the Brookings
Institution’s Alan Berube, co-author of the report.
“For the next several months we’ll have to pay
attention to several places that look like they’re not
poised to recover anytime soon.”
The survey of the nation’s 100 largest metropolitan
areas ranks cities from strongest to weakest economic performance
according to six “key indicators” — employment,
unemployment rates, wages, gross metropolitan product, housing
prices, and foreclosure rates. San Antonio, Tex. came out
on top, and Detroit, Mich., with its 14 percent unemployment
rate, is in last place. Our own region is in relatively good
standing, all told.
The report finds two distinct Manufacturing Belts (Berube
said Brookings went with “Manufacturing Belt”
instead of “Rust Belt” because, “We have
friends there who have been trying to shed the rust image
for some time”). One belt spans Midwestern metro areas
decimated by the auto industry and the other is in the Northeast,
where manufacturing in aerospace and plastics hasn’t
seen such a decline. And there are two “Sun Belts”:
a bad one in housing-wrecked areas around Florida and Arizona,
and a better belt stretching across states like New Mexico,
Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana, where there have
been modest home price increases.
Casinos?
Despite a stoppage of work at the site of the former Concord
Hotel in Sullivan County, a new hotel-casino will ultimately
be built there, the president of Empire Resorts said recently.
The Concord project is a joint venture of Westchester developer
Louis Cappelli and Empire Resorts, which owns and operates
Monticello Casino and Raceway in Monticello. Plans were to
retain that facility and build another racetrack and video
slot machine casino at the Concord project. But, with the
economy the way it is, financing for the Concord has not materialized
yet.
Cappelli has promised to have the hotel-resort-casino open
in two years once the construction starts.
Meanwhile, US Senator Charles Schumer has called the new director
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and asked Larry EchoHawk to
take a fresh look at the application to pursue all Native
American casinos in Sullivan County. Former Interior Secretary
Dirk Kempthorne rejected a request to place land in trust
to build casinos, but the senator asked EchoHawk to take a
new look in light of the economic development, jobs and tourism
benefits a casino would bring to the Catskills region.
Schumer said EchoHawk said he would take a “top to bottom”
review of the BIA’s gaming policy and pledged to take
a hard look at the Kempthorne precedent.
The Stockbridge-Munsee plans a casino in the Town of Thompson
and the St. Regis Mohawks wanted to build at Monticello Raceway,
in addition to the Concord project.
Mapling Up!
New York maple syrup production for the most recent season
this past Spring increased 10 percent from last year’s
production. Syrup production is estimated at 362,000 gallons,
up from the 328,000 gallons produced in 2008 according to
Stephen Ropel, Director of USDA’s National Agricultural
Statistics Service, New York Field Office. Vermont and Maine
produced more syrup than New York. The number of taps, 1.51
million, increased 4 percent from last year. Syrup produced
per tap averaged 0.240 gallons, up from 0.227 gallons in 2008.
The final value of the 2008 crop is $13.9 million, 82 percent
above the previous year’s value of production. The average
price was $42.40 per gallon equivalent for all sales.
Ashes Down…
A new Emerald Ash Borer infestation (EAB) has been discovered
in western New York state, and is being tagged for possible
infiltration eastwards into the Catskills. The EAB is a small
but destructive beetle that infests and kills North American
ash tree species, including green, white, black and blue ash.
This is the first time it has been detected in New York.
New York has more than 900 million ash trees, representing
about seven percent of all trees in the state, and all are
at risk should this invasive, exotic pest become established.
This is just the latest in a series of terrestrial and aquatic
invasive species detections across New York State, including
the Asian Longhorned Beetle, Sirex woodwasp, didymo, zebra
mussels, and Eurasian water milfoil. This has prompted the
state to strengthen regulations, increase educational outreach,
and encourage ways of limiting the unintentional spread of
these potentially devastating pests throughout the state.
“This is yet another wake-up call for all New Yorkers
that invasive species pose a grave threat to the health of
our natural resources and ecosystems, and ultimately, our
economy,” said state Department of Environmental Conservation
Commissioner Pete Grannis in a press release about the new
discovery. “Tough but practical measures, such as quarantines,
firewood regulations, public education and other regulatory
actions will continue to be needed if we are to limit the
damage from EAB and other invasives.”
In 2008, New York adopted regulations that ban untreated firewood
from entering the state and restricts intrastate movement
of untreated firewood to no more than a 50-mile radius from
its source (http://www.dec.ny.gov/animals/28722.html). This
was done as a precaution against the introduction and spread
of EAB and other invasive species because of the documented
risk of transmission by moving firewood.
The infestation was initially reported to the New York State
Department of Agriculture and Markets on June 15, 2009, by
Rick Hoebeke, an entomolologist at Cornell University, after
two U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Agricultural Research
Service employees recognized damage to some local ash trees
just off Exit 16 of State Route 17/I-86. After receiving the
report and conducting an initial inspection, an adult beetle
from the infested area was submitted with the identification
confirmed by the USDA’s Systematic Entomology Laboratory
at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.
Photographs depicting the infestation will be posted to ftp://ftp.dec.state.ny.us/dpae/press/
Approximately 30 trees are infested or highly suspected of
being infested to date.
Since its discovery in southeastern Michigan in 2002, the
EAB is responsible for the destruction of over 70 million
ash trees in the U.S. The beetle has been moving steadily
outward from its first discovered infestation in Detroit,
Michigan, and has now been found in 13 states and two neighboring
Canadian provinces. The primary way this insect spreads is
when firewood and wood products are moved from one place to
another. l
Appraisal Shifts?
The National Association of Realtors is asking Attorney General
Andrew Cuomo to delay the implementation of new appraisal
rules, because it believes the changes are having a detrimental
effect on the housing market. In a letter sent to Cuomo yesterday,
the Washington, D.C.-based association is asking that implementation
of the rules, which seek to put a wall between appraisers
and mortgage lenders, be delayed for 18 months.
The rules, which took effect May 1, result from a settlement
among Cuomo, the Federal Housing Finance Agency and mortgage
giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Cuomo had said that collusion
between mortgage brokers and appraisers led to inflated home
values and contributed to the foreclosure crisis.
Cuomo also said he was considering legal action — leading
to the new rules with national ramifications.
The Realtors association, in its letter to Cuomo, says it
supports keeping appraisers independent. But it said there
is significant evidence that the rules, which require that
appraisers be hired by a third-party source, and not a lender,
are “hampering the housing market’s recovery.”
Appraisers are usually called in to determine a home’s
value after a buyer and seller have agreed on a price. If
the appraiser determines that the value is lower than that
price, that can hamper the buyer’s ability to get a
mortgage.
Flood Mapping
The Government Accountability Office is going to begin a study
into FEMA’s methodology and policies for upgrading their
flood maps and designating new flood zones.
After reported discrepancies about flood maps, Senators Charles
Schumer and Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico wrote to the agency
urging it to initiative an investigation to save homeowners
from costly, mandatory and unnecessary flood insurance fees.
“New York homeowners and businesses have been saddled
with mandatory, onerous flood insurance fees as a result of
these often-severely flawed flood maps,” said Schumer.
“With GOA’s commitment to examine FEMA’s
methodologies and policies, we are one step closer to creating
safer, more accurate flood zones and putting an end to these
faulty maps that force residents and businesses across New
York State and the country to pay costly, unnecessary insurance
fees.”
Gas Prices…
With supplies of crude oil at a 20-year high and demand for
gasoline at a 10-year low, one would think gas prices would
be dropping instead of rising 60 cents per gallon as they
have in the past 8 weeks. What’s up may have nothing
to do with the big oil companies, though, and may instead
reflect the investment of trillions of dollars by Goldman
Sachs, Morgan Stanley and other Wall Street traders who’ve
been buying oil derivatives… unregulated securities
that are basically bets that oil prices will rise to a certain
price by a certain date. Some analysts believe as CNBC’s
chief energy correspondent Sharon Epperson said last month,
that “It’s this money flow rather than fundamental
supply-demand data that’s driving oil prices higher.”
Unlike investors who actually purchase contracts for future
oil deliveries, there’s no limit on how much such speculators
can invest, and no reporting requirements or other regulations
for commodity-based derivatives, courtesy of the “Commodity
Futures Modernization Act” passed by congress with bipartisan
support in 2000. While much of the money appears to be coming
from offshore hedge funds and sovereign wealth funds, those
that are actually doing the investing are the same bankers
we’re presently bailing out with TARP funds and other
tax dollars. The firms involved aren’t saying much,
as when asked about the phenomenon by a McClatchy newspaper
reporter who was told, simply, “Goldman Sachs declines
to comment for your story.”
Prioritization
Ulster County has been awarded a $49,000 grant, from Hudson
River Valley Greenway for local municipalities to identify
and develop land use tools and investments to ensure that
future growth occurs in a compact, sustainable and environmentally
sensitive pattern. The goal is to utilize information on existing
infrastructure, zoning and comprehensive plans and policies
in each community to identify “Priority Growth Areas”
and their appropriate land uses.
The idea is to create more inter-municipal cooperation in
planning items that stress green, sustainable solutions to
development pressures.
For more information visit www.hudsongreenway.state.ny.us.
Local Pot Use
Registered voters in Sen. John J. Bonacic’s (R) district
(Delaware, Sullivan and parts of Ulster and Orange counties)
overwhelmingly support legislation that would protect seriously
ill patients who use medical marijuana with their doctor’s
recommendation from arrest, according to a recent Mason-Dixon
poll. Local patients and medical professionals responded to
the results by urging the state Senate to swiftly enact the
legislation, which has the support of organizations representing
state nurses, medical schools and physicians.
According to the poll conducted June 8 to 10, 75 percent of
the 500 randomly selected voters in Bonacic’s district
interviewed by phone said they support patients’ right
to grow and use limited amounts of marijuana if their doctor
recommends it, including 65 percent of Republicans and 83
percent of Democrats. Asked if they would be more or less
likely to vote for Bonacic if he supported medical marijuana
legislation, 47 percent said they would be more likely, and
only 14 percent said they would be less likely. Twenty-five
percent of respondents said they knew somebody who had used
medical marijuana.
Commissioned by the Marijuana Policy Project, the poll has
a plus-or-minus 4.5 percent margin of error. The entire poll
results can be viewed online at www.mpp.org/nypolls2009. Click
on “State Senate District 42” to see polling data
for Bonacic’s district.
Big Kick Off!
The renowned West Point Band1s Jazz Knights kick off the 2009
Belleayre Music Festival season on Saturday, July 4 at 8 p.m.
with an exhilarating evening of patriotic themed tunes to
salute the Independence weekend. Free reserved tent seating
is available in advance by phone 254-5600, ext. 1344 .. Unlimited
general admission lawn seating will be available when the
reserved tent seats are gone - so bring the entire family
to picnic and celebrate our country's birthday. Preconcert
entertainment will start at 6:15 p.m. with the Efthimiou Trio
and light dinners and bar service will be available in the
Bluestone Cafe. Fireworks will follow the concert.
The rest of the schedule includes: Michael Feinstein on Saturday,
July 11 at 8 p.m., John Covelli and Justin Kolb on Saturday,
July 18 at 8 p.m.; a Festival Opera performance of Die Fledermaus
on Saturday, July 25 at 8 p.m; a performance of Humpty Dumpty,
a children’s opera, on Sunday, July 26 at 1 p.m.; Ladysmith
Black Mambazo on Saturday, Aug. 1 at 8 p.m; The Pablo Zierger
Trio for Nuevo Tango on Friday, Aug. 7 at 8 p.m.; Leny Andrade
on Saturday, Aug. 8 at 8 p.m.; Kevin Mahogany on Friday, Aug.
14 at 8 p.m; and Kevin Eubanks of Jay Leno’s Band on
Saturday, Aug. 15 at 8 p.m.
For additional information, and the rest of the listings,
please call 800 942-6904, ext. 1344 or visit: www.belleayremusic.org.
Esoteric Quest
The Esoteric Quest conference is a five-day event taking place
at The Menla Mountain Retreat & Conference Center in Phoenicia,
New York August 24-28. The symposium will feature speakers
and participants from all over the world who will be exploring
and celebrating the life-enhancing spiritual impulses that
have powerfully emerged in America including; the spirituality
of the Iroquois Nation, early American Alchemists, the Masonic
circles associated with some of the Founding Fathers, the
insights of the Transcendentalists and deep esoteric insights
of numerous influential artists and writers in American history
including Saul Bellow.
For more info call 212-219-2527 or see www.EsotericQuest.org
..
Get This...
Major U.S., Canadian and British life and health insurance
companies have billions of dollars invested in tobacco companies,
says a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Wesley Boyd, the study's lead author, found that at least
$4.4 billion US in insurance company funds are invested in
companies whose affiliates produce cigarettes, cigars and
chewing tobacco.
"Despite calls upon the insurance industry to get out
of the tobacco business by physicians and others, insurers
continue to put their profits above people's health,"
said Boyd, a faculty member of Harvard Medical School. "It's
clear their top priority is making money, not safeguarding
people's well-being," he wrote.
According to the study, U.S. insurer Prudential Financial
Inc. has $264.3 million invested among three U.S. tobacco
companies, including Reynolds America and Philip Morris.
Porta Potties...
Because of the state’s ongoing budget crisis, the state
Department of Environmental Conservation is taking its time
reviewing expenditures. And because of that, trailheads around
the state – including 13 in the Hudson Valley and Catskills
regions – are without porta-potties because no money
has been approved for them.
Even if approvals come soon to spend the money, regional DEC
acting director of operations Gary Van Laer said it may be
too late to get them for the summer months.
“It’s kind of a lengthy contract, especially if
it goes over $15,000 this year,” he said. “By
the time I get the invitation to bid out to all suppliers,
I get those back and we go through the contract process, it
takes a while.”
Ulster County Legislature Environmental Committee Chairman
Brian Shapiro is concerned. “People are relieving themselves
in the streams. People are going up to houses and saying,
‘Can I use your bathroom,’ and also, driving miles
away to Grahamsville, which is in another county.”
Shapiro has drafted a local resolution urging the state to
restore the potty at Peekamoose Valley Camping Area in the
Town of Denning.
All trailheads in this region don’t have the potties
right now – including Giant Ledge, Slide Mountain, Alder
Lake, and the Allaben Access Site.
Art Request
The Hudson Valley Seed Library is looking for new artwork
for the covers of its seed packs. Last year, eleven artists
were commissioned to create original pieces for the Seed Library’s
Art Packs. Each artist brought his or her unique style to
the image he or she designed. Mediums included drawing, painting,
collage, cut paper, ceramics, and photography. Last year’s
artists received local and national exposure: on their website,
in blogs, magazines, galleries, and in the homes of thousands
of gardeners across the region and the country.
This year, HVSL co-founder Ken Greene will be looking for
artwork that helps reflect the diversity of the heirloom seeds
offered in the catalog. The Seed Library will be selecting
up to 16 new artists for its 2010 seed packs. Please feel
free to pass along the following guidelines, which describe
eligibility and submission requirements and gives details
of our selection process. To learn more about HVSL and see
last year’s artwork, visit www.seedlibrary.org.
Artists must be part of the greater Hudson Valley region and
all media is ok except photography. Submissions due July 9,
with 32 Round 1 finalists contacted by July 10, Round 2 sketches
due by July 17, 16 Round 2 finalists contacted by July 19,
and final artwork due by August 10.
Up to 16 artists may be selected to create artwork for seed
packs. Artists whose work is accepted will be paid $100 and
given credit on the printed packs as well as a bio and link
on seedlibrary.org.