(News Briefs September
27, 2007)
Budget Time?
The town’s spending might go up by seven or eight percent
next year.
That’s according to town supervisor Bert Leifeld, who
said this week that a preliminary spending plan is being prepared
and would be adopted by the town board next month.
Leifeld noted that the preliminary plan is subject to change,
and may bring a different spending increase by the time it’s
adopted as an official budget plan in November.
“I hope we can get it down lower than that,” Leifeld
said, “ We’ll see.”
The town board meets next on October 2nd at 7:30 PM. The session
will be held at town meeting hall on Bostock road in Shokan.
The Tuesday night meeting follows an informal town board session
the night prior, also at 7:30 PM, also at the meeting hall.
Climate? Bah!
New York State officials are hard at work preparing a blueprint
for the buildout of the Belleayre Mountain Ski Center, despite
growing reports from world climate scientists that winter
snow in the Catskills is likely to be a thing of the past
within 20 to 30 years.
Known as a Unit Management Plan, the blueprint must reflect
the details of the agreement reached this month between New
York State and developer Dean Gitter, who is building a mega-resort
with an 18-hole “organic” golf course on the western
border of the ski center.
On Monday, September 24, Belleayre Superintendent Tony Lanza
said that he was not at liberty to discuss the details of
the plan.
“We are working on the UMP right now very hard,”
he said, adding that the goal is to have it ready for public
review in March 2008.
In the meantime, Lanza has had informal discussions with the
membership of the local Food and Lodging Association, but
says those talks have not been about the UMP. Lanza, who meets
on a monthly basis with the Association membership, said he
was only offering his opinion to the group on how the upcoming
construction phase of both the Resort and Belleayre’s
improvements would impact members.
Under terms of the agreement between the State and Gitter’s
development group, Crossroads Ventures, the Trust for Public
Land will purchase 1,216 acres of the development group’s
holdings on the eastern side of the Belleayre Mountain Ski
Center and 78 acres on the western side which is the old Highmount
Ski Center. Most of the land will, in turn, be conveyed to
the state, added to the surrounding Catskill Forest Preserve
and designated “forever wild,” as is the rest
of the preserve. The 78 acres will be added to Belleayre,
which will be upgraded.
Law prevents Belleayre from having more than 25 miles of trails.
It now has just over 14 miles. Under the agreement, 9 more
miles are planned and would include the two and half miles
of trail already located at the Highmount Ski Center.
Joe Kelly, the Chairman of the Coalition for Belleayre, said
the Belleayre portion of the deal would make the facility
“one of the foremost ski centers in the east.”
Kelly recalled that over a decade ago his Coalition tried
to convince the state to purchase Highmount Ski Center but
was unsuccessful. The inclusion of Highmount, which he calls
“a turnkey operation,” will be a great benefit
to Belleayre skiers, he said, but an even more important element
of the deal calls for the development of three miles of new
trails on Belleayre’s eastern side.
Lanza and the DEC are compelled to produce the UMP quickly.
It and the plans for the Belleayre Resort, which is slated
to begin construction next fall, are to be reviewed simultaneously
under the State Environmental Quality Review process, something
that opponents of the resort project fought for several years
ago but were unsuccessful.
In 2004 Lanza made public presentations of a proposed UMP,
but later refused to release the details when opponents of
the resort insisted that the resort plans must be reviewed
in the context of whether or not the resort project would
place limitations on the expansion of the ski center.
Lanza on Monday would not say if the UMP he is currently preparing
would include any details from the 2004 version.
Another element of the recently-announced Gitter agreement
that should interest locals with an eye to the Belleayre expansion
is a clause that enables the possibility of skiers sliding
directly into the Village of Fleischmanns. A 203 acre Gitter-owned
parcel, identified as the “Adelstein property,”
has been pinpointed as a parcel that could be used for “passive
recreational uses” associated with Gitter’s resort.
No lodging would be allowed, but the agreement allows for
the construction of ski trails or lifts “for the purpose
of providing ski access to Fleischmanns.”
The Adelstein property project is not yet part of the overall
resort plan. It would only go into effect once Gitter obtains
all the approvals to begin construction of his resort. Which
is also when, it turns out, the state would get both the Highmount
property and be able to purchase the Big Indian Plateau acreage
at just over $10,000 per acre.
Talk about a sticky web of intertwining interests and requirements…
No matter no one’s daring to bring up the threat of
climate change.
People Say No
Residents in the Delaware County towns of Andes and Bovina
have managed to thwart the building of a series of large industrial
windmills for the private generation of electricity, with
each community’s town boards recently rubberstamping
local sentiment, built up after years of grass roots level
activism, against character changes to their communities.
The controversial proposals ultimately defeated included proposed
commercial wind farms that would have installed massive wind
turbines and generated millions of dollars. Individual turbines
would have been up to 350 feet in height… and noisy.
Public opposition was based on the advent of such industrial
structures into a pristine rural area, as well as the turbines
propensity for killing masses of birds.
In Bovina, the Town Board ultimately rejected the wind proposal
because of strong community opposition to the project. Tom
Craveiro, co-director of the Alliance for Bovina, said in
a statement that the town was determined to “preserve
the scenic, rural and agricultural character” of Bovina.
A similar move in Andes was made after several attempts to
close down raucous public meetings filled with wind power
opponents led to fears of political retribution and the town
board decided to say no to the developments because of public
sentiment.
Seems that towns can find ways of dictating their own futures
based on shifts in majority sentiment…
Temple Pond...
What’s up along Route 28 down near Glenford along that
stretch of river and mountain we’ve all come to love
so much? Seems the Pitcairns, who used to own what is now
Allair Studios up on the mountain and now keep to the lower
territory, are simply replacing footings on their magnificent
boat house. ..
Ah, the change of seasons, when all our final jobs finally
get done.
The Hotel’s Fate...
Will the Phoenicia Hotel be torn down? Or can it be saved?
These questions remain unanswered this week, or at least unresolved,
as the Town of Shandaken has asked the property owner, Richie
Stokes, to produce an engineering report showing that the
structure, which was badly damaged by fire last month, does
not need to be razed because it still can be rebuilt. Town
Building Inspector Tom Burt has determined that the Main Street
structure needs to be removed, but Stokes has disagreed. Fearing
liability issues, the town has warned Stokes that if he does
not produce the report then there is no compelling reason
to contradict Burt’s decision.
Solar Kingston!
Empire State Development, New York’s economic development
arm, announced on September 24 its commitment to provide up
to $1.5 million in support of solar-related companies. The
money will be available directly to companies that relocate
to the Hudson Valley.
ESD will seek input from The Solar Energy Consortium, a public-private
partnership designed to foster solar energy research and production
in the state.
Vincent Cozzolino, co-founder of The Solar Energy Consortium
said the announcement shows the state’s “commitment
to addressing the looming energy crisis and the harmful effects
of global warming by not only investing in clean renewable
power but doing so in a way that will create jobs in the Hudson
Valley and across the state.”
Congressman Maurice Hinchey said the state fund, along with
the $3.5 million he has secured for the consortium, “will
revolutionize the way we all live while helping to save the
planet from global warming.”
State Senator John Bonacic said the funds are “an investment
that will not only create jobs, but will help create an energy
source for the future.”
Park Lark
The Fourth Annual Lark in the Park, an event started by the
Catskill Mountain Club as a means of encouraging greater use
of the Catskill Park we inhabit, is taking place this year
from September 29th through October 8th with more than 20
hikes, walks, bike rides, kayak excursions, driving tours,
book signings and presentation, and even a photo scavenger
hunt, which are all spread out around the 705,000 acre Catskill
Park. All of the events are free and open to the public.
Some of the Lark in the Park activities planned for this year
include hikes to Sunset Rock, Vernooy Kill Falls, Diamond
Notch, Alder Lake, Huckleberry Point, Giant Ledge, Wittenberg
Mountain, Indian Head Mountain, the Blackhead Range, and the
Hunter Mountain fire tower; bike rides between Alder Lake
and Big Pond, on the Catskills Scenic Rail Trail, and through
the rolling hills of Delaware County; a kayak excursion on
the East Branch Delaware River; a guided driving tour of covered
bridges and a self-guided driving tour of the Beaverkill Valley;
the annual Catskill Park Photo Scavenger Hunt; and a Catskill
Trails talk and slide show.
Lark in the Park was first organized in 2004 as a way to bring
people together to celebrate the 100-year anniversary of the
Catskill Park. A complete schedule of 2007 Lark in the Park
events is available online at www.catskillmountainclub.org
(click on Activities &Events) or www.catskillpark.org
(click on Lark in the Park). Participants should check for
pre-registration requirements for each event and call or e-mail
the event leaders directly to sign up. For information on
travel and lodging in the Catskill region, visit www.catskillregiontoday.com
.
Coalition Shift?
The leadership of the Coalition of Watershed Towns unanimously
endorsed Hunter Town Supervisor Dennis Lucas to head up the
regional advocacy group now that long time Executive Committee
Chairman Patrick Meehan has resigned. The decision was made
last week when the Coalition’s Executive Committee met
at Catskill Watershed Corporation headquarters in Margaretville.
Lucas, a Democrat, has been a member of the executive committee
for several years, serving as one of the two Greene County
delegates to the group, which represents watershed communities
in five different counties. He has a reputation of being short
fused in matters pertaining to the City of New York and its
regulatory enforcement arm, the Department of Environmental
Protection.
Meehan, the Republican supervisor of Greene’s town of
Windham, now leaves a vacancy on the committee and will be
replaced with another public official from Greene. Meanwhile,
the rest of the executive committee, made up of reps from
all five counties of Ulster, Delaware, Greene, Sullivan and
Schoharie, showed united support for Lucas to be the new Chairman.
Lucas has a track record of not agreeing with the stance of
the New York City Department of Environmental Protection,
the agency that the Coalition frequently battles. While many
disputes between the two groups drag on for years through
long discussions and negotiations, Lucas has shown himself
to have a different approach in such matters.
As the top official in Hunter, Lucas cut through the red tape
last year and took the DEP to court over the recreational
use of City owned lands. Lucas wants those lands open to the
public in the same way state land is. The courts agreed with
Lucas. DEP is appealing that ruling.
After his appointment last week, Lucas told reporters that
while his predecessor was inclined to find common ground with
the City, Lucas himself was not a compromiser.
In related news, the Coalition has filed a lawsuit against
the United States Environmental Protection Agency over EPA’s
issuance to the City of a 10 year long waiver from filtering
the Big Apple’s water supply. That waiver, in the making
for a couple of years, was supposed to be only for five years.
That’s the amount of time used by the Coalition to decide
what watershed dwellers would get out of the bargain if the
City was granted the waiver from building a filtration system
estimated at between $8 and $12 billion to build and hundreds
of millions a year to operate.
At the same meeting that Lucas was appointed, the Executive
Committee met in a closed door session to discuss how to proceed
with the case.
Hospitals Merge
Officials of three Ulster County hospitals have finally signed
the master alignment agreement creating a new corporation
to over their operations.
The state’s Burger Commission last year called on Kingston
and Benedictine Hospitals to join forces and the hospitals
later announced that they had reached a joint operating agreement,
but the did not call it a merger. The master alignment agreement
okayed last week now also includes Margaretville Memorial
Hospital.
The hospitals will share nearly $48 million in state money
to carry out the state-mandated affiliation of the two facilities,
New York Health Commissioner Dr. Richard F. Daines announced
on September 20, in advance of the agreement signing at Wiltwyck
Golf Club on the 21st. $4.1 million of that will be used to
establish a clinic where birth control-related medical matters
could be looked after.
The new company will be known as Health Alliance Planning
Inc. The affiliation will consolidate some overlapping services
and reduce the total number of beds at the two main facilities
from the current 367 to between 250 and 300.
The $47.6 million for the local affiliation is coming from
a $550 million pool that was set aside by the state to help
designated hospitals and nursing homes in New York implement
the Berger Commission’s mandates.
A president and CEO of Health Alliance has not yet been chosen;
for now the board chairs of all three hospitals will co-chair
the new agency. The new organization will ensure that all
three hospitals will retain their basic characters and boards.
Meanwhile, the Kingston/Benedictine hospital affiliation watchdog
group HealthCare STAT has said that the $4.1 million plan
to build a clinic where abortions and other women’s
reproductive services would be performed is better than what
was originally proposed. But they have added a request that
the center be operational before the planned alliance of Kingston
and Benedictine hospital is completed.
Housing News…
The number of foreclosure filings reported in the U.S. last
month more than doubled versus August 2006 and jumped 36 percent
from July, a trend that signals many homeowners are increasingly
unable to make timely payments on their mortgages or sell
their homes amid a national housing slump.
A total of 243,947 foreclosure filings were reported in August,
up 115 percent from 113,300 in the same month a year ago.
There were 179,599 foreclosure filings reported in July. The
filings include default notices, auction sale notices and
bank repossessions. Some properties might have received more
than one notice if the owners have multiple mortgages.
Accompanying the foreclosure figures, house prices have generally
fallen to their lowest averages in 16 years.
Be careful…
STAR Time
As part of a massive mailing to about 2.7 million property
owners across New York State, Ulster County residents who
receive the STAR exemption on their school tax bill will receive
an application for a new tax relief incentive: the 2007 Middle
Class STAR Property Tax Rebate program.
Governor Spitzer’s new Middle Class STAR Property Tax
Rebate program was designed to provide property tax relief
for senior citizens and middle income families. The rebate
arrives in the form of a check and is provided in addition
to the STAR relief that was already reflected on school tax
bills. The State will calculate rebate checks on a sliding
scale based on income and town within each school district.
The benefit gradually decreases as income rises. Taxpayers
earning over $250,000 are not eligible for this additional
new relief, but will continue to receive their current STAR
benefit.
Qualifying taxpayers who wish to take advantage of the Middle
Class STAR opportunity must complete and return the application
by November 30, 2007. Seniors 65 years or older who already
receive the enhanced STAR exemption do not have to apply,
they will receive their STAR rebate check automatically.
The statewide mailing will be complete by the end of September,
allowing people ample time to fill out the application prior
to the November 30 deadline. Applicants are encouraged to
apply online for the fastest check processing service, but
must wait until their applications arrive in the mail because
each notice contains a special STAR code unique to the individual
property. Filing the application is fast, secure, and free.
Once your application arrives, simply go to the Tax Department’s
website at www.nystax.gov and follow the directions for online
filing.
More detailed information is also available on the website,
as well as through the Tax Department’s Call Center
at 1-877-6-STAR-NY.
Applications Due
The deadline for applying to Congressman Maurice Hinchey for
a nomination to a military service academy is Friday, October
19. After reviewing the applications and conducting interviews,
Hinchey will nominate local students for admission to the
U.S. Air Force Academy, U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, U.S.
Military Academy and U.S. Naval Academy.
Members of the U.S. House of Representatives may only nominate
residents of the district they represent. U.S. Senators may
make nominations for residents of the states they represent.
Interested applicants must also apply directly to the academy
of their choice to be considered for an offer of appointment.
Each academy has its own application process in addition to
and separate from that of nominators such as Hinchey. Last
year, Hinchey nominated 11 students to the military academies.
Information and instructions for applying for a nomination
may be found Hinchey’s website: http://www.house.gov/hinchey/services/nominations.shtml
Sexy Emerson?
A federal judge is expected to rule next Thursday, October
4, on whether sexual harassment and discrimination claims
by two former employees of the Emerson Resort will go to jury
trial in the coming months. The lawsuit, outlined here last
year, claims federal and state human rights law violations
by the resort as evidenced via a growing mountain of sexually
charged depositions and evidence, including a corporate hiring
questionnaire asking employees to rate their frequency of
sexual relations and their sexual satisfaction.
The lawsuit names as defendants Wright and Margaret Inge,
a consultant hired by Emerson Place; as well as Spotted Dog
Ventures, doing business as Catskill Corners/Emerson Place;
and Kaatskill Payroll Services Inc. The suit does not specifically
name Gitter, the sole owner of Kaatskill Payroll Services
and one of the owners of Spotted Dog Ventures, as well as
managing partner of the Emerson Spa and Resort and of Crossroads
Ventures, the development company that has proposed the Belleayre
Resort at Catskill Park mega-development recently granted
a conceptual go-ahead by Governor Elliot Spitzer.
According to recent reports, questions of witnesses have centered
on comments about thong underwear, the meaning of the phrase
“We need more tits and ass here,” and accusations
that former Chief Executive Officer W. Theodore Wright fostered
a sexually harassing atmosphere at the resort. The details
are contained in legal filings and within the complaint brought
by two former employees - Carol Martineau-Lopez and Bonita
Benjamin - in U.S. Northern District Court in Albany, as well
as depositions from the resort’s employees and owner,
developer Dean Gitter.
. District Court Judge Gary Sharpe is expected to hear the
case October 4 and decide whether it merits a trial..
Beth A. Bourassa, the defendants’ attorney, said she
submitted a request in June for dismissal of the case, which
she argued is “wholly lacking in merit.” Her case
rests on painting the two plaintiffs, both longstanding local
residents, as schemers.
Family Table
Because of the hardship of high gas prices, the Margaretville-based
church-sponsored Family Table food assistance program is offering
help to families within the area, including possible travel
vouchers for those seeking to shop at the food pantry from
beyond a twenty mile radius of Margaretville. The Family Table
Community Assistance Program opened has been running since
December, 2003 and now serves over 1,500 financially distressed
people in Delaware, Greene, Ulster and Schoharie counties.
It is open 6 days a week and literally distributes tons of
food each month. The Family Table helps income-eligible families
regardless of the town or county in which they reside. The
Family Table’s selection of goods varies from canned
goods to fresh dairy products and drug store items. An annual
$5 membership fee allows members to shop every day if they
wish. In addition to providing for those on a fixed income,
such as the elderly and disabled, The Family Table also provides
assistance for those who have had an unexpected illness, injury
or catastrophic event which prevents them from maintaining
a basic standard of living.
Individuals interested in joining The Family Table must earn
below the USDA financial guidelines which are published annually
and are posted on the sponsoring Catskill Mountain Christian
Center’s website at www.cmcconline.org/thefamilytable.
To find out more about The Family Table, including volunteer
opportunities, call 845-586-3150, visit them on the web at
cmcconline.org or in person at the Catskill Mountain Christian
Center at 629 Main Street in Margaretville. The Family Table
is open Monday through Saturday from 10am to 4pm and to 6pm
on Thursday.
Ulster Tomorrow
Over 200 Ulster County residents are serving as volunteers
on the Ulster Tomorrow economic strategy plan for Ulster County.
Announced last March as a partnership between the Ulster County
Development Corporation, the Ulster County Legislature and
the Ulster County Industrial Development Agency, Ulster Tomorrow
is “an inclusive plan for Ulster County’s economic
future” that is currently matching 15 specific strategic
plans with strategy groups made up of a cross-section of the
local community that have been meeting since April to devise
action plans and to establish “deliverables” for
each of the strategies.
The assembled strategy team members met at the Hillside Manor
in Kingston on September 18 to give updated reports on the
overall plans, working towards a full progress report scheduled
for release in November.
The 15 strategies and their designated leaders are: 1. Cultivate
a Community of Leaders, 2. Create a Culture of Change and
Collaboration, 3. Develop Measured Accountability, 4. Target
Assistance to Emerging Businesses, 5. Redesign Service Networks,
6. Streamline Local Permit Review Process, 7. Develop Appropriate
Infrastructure, 8. Preserve and Enhance Quality of Life, 9.
Recruit a Diverse Business Base, 10. Retain and Expand Existing
Businesses, 11. Create a Labor Force in Line with Business
Needs, 12. Enhance Travel and Tourist Industry, 13. Strengthen
and Maintain Economic Viability of Agriculture, 14. Develop
am Advantage in “Green” and Renewable Technologies
and 15. Nurture the Creative Economy.
Employed Yet?
Almost 10,000 new jobs were created in the Hudson Valley and
Catskills regions year over year in August, according to statistics
from the state Labor Department. The largest job gains were
in the Putnam-Rockland-Westchester area with 7,000 new positions.
That was followed by Orange-Dutchess with 2,200 jobs, Ulster
with 1,600, Sullivan County with 300 new jobs and Greene County
with 100. Columbia and Delaware counties both lost 100 jobs.
Labor Department analyst John Nelson Thursday said the numbers
bear out that the region is doing well. The private sector
job growth rate is 1.2 percent, which matched the national
rate of 1.2 percent, he said. “We outpaced just about
all other regions in the state with the exception of New York
City, which came in at 1.8 percent, and the North Country,
which came in at 1.3 percent.”
Unemployment held steady during the same month, with a few
tenths-of-a-percent increase or decline in most counties.
Garage Rumble
Calling all Teen Bands in the Hudson Valley… Submissions
are again being accepted to enter the 3rd annual regional
Garage Rumble, the teen band battle dedicated to promoting
and launching talented and musically diverse teen bands from
the Hudson Valley, currently in its third year! Eight area
bands will get a chance to perform before a panel of music
industry movers and shakers, raise the roof at the competition
at the historical Bearsville Theater on Sunday, November 11th,
from 3-8 pm. Bands will rumble to win the grand prizes of
a recording session with Chris Andersen at Nevessa Production
and an opportunity to perform live for a November 15th slot
on the Hudson Valley’s exclusive music TV show Poughkeepsie
Live on Time Warner Cable 6. More super prizes, band gift
bags, and backline will be provided by national and local
sponsors including Vox, Marshall, Tech 21, Barcone’s
Music, Audix Microphones, ESP guitars, Guild Acoustic Guitars,
Gretsch Guitars, Jackson, SWR Bass Amplification, and many
more! To qualify band members must be 13 to 19 years old (some
exceptions may be granted) and have at least one member that
is a Hudson Valley resident.
If your band qualifies please submit an audition package including:
A recording of one of your original songs in CD, DVD, or cassette
format. Please be sure to put the band name and contact info
on any format that you submit. This will be evaluated for
creativity, lyrics, melody, energy, musicianship and song
structure. A lyric sheet. An information sheet including the
band’s name; name, age, address, and school, if applicable,
of each band member; a contact person’s email, phone,
and snail mail address; stage plot and equipment needs; a
photo or snapshot of the band, and a $35.00 non-refundable
processing fee with check payable to: Gleaming Iris Productions.
Please submit the above by mail to Garage Rumble/Gleaming
Iris Productions, 18 Artist Road, Saugerties, NY. All submissions
must be post marked by October 26th, 2007. For more info check
out www.garagerumble.com.
Get rocking!
Political Brains
Exploring the neurobiology of politics, scientists have found
that liberals tolerate ambiguity and conflict better than
conservatives because of how their brains work. Scientists
at New York University and UCLA showed through a simple experiment
reported in the journal Nature Neuroscience that political
orientation is related to differences in how the brain processes
information. Previous psychological studies have found that
conservatives tend to be more structured and persistent in
their judgments whereas liberals are more open to new experiences.
Conservatives tend to crave order and structure in their lives,
and are more consistent in the way they make decisions. Liberals,
by contrast, show a higher tolerance for ambiguity and complexity,
and adapt more easily to unexpected circumstances. The latest
study found those traits are not confined to political situations
but also influence everyday decisions.
Using electroencephalographs, which measure neuronal impulses,
the researchers examined activity in a part of the brain —
the anterior cingulate cortex — that is strongly linked
with the self-regulatory process of conflict monitoring. The
match-up was unmistakable: respondents who had described themselves
as liberals showed “significantly greater conflict-related
neural activity” when the hypothetical situation called
for an unscheduled break in routine. Conservatives, however,
were less flexible, refusing to deviate from old habits “despite
signals that this ... should be changed.”
“The results showed “there are two cognitive styles
— a liberal style and a conservative style,” said
UCLA neurologist Dr. Marco Iacoboni.
Desirable…
“Creating Desirable Communities” will be the featured
topic at Catskills Local Government Day Wednesday, Oct. 17
in Margaretville. David Ivan, Michigan State University Extension
Director and Economic Development Specialist, will give the
lunchtime address at Hanah Country Inn, where the annual gathering
will be sponsored by the Catskill Watershed Corporation (CWC)
and the New York State Department of State (DOS). Ivan’s
presentation will be a lively look at some of the 225 communities
he recently surveyed in 10 Midwestern and East Coast states
to determine how the most successful ones manage to fill storefronts,
capitalize on art and cultural heritage, engage citizens and
attract young professionals.
Several morning workshops are also scheduled for Code Enforcement
Officers, financial managers and other municipal officials.
Topics include Intermunicipal Cooperation in Building Code
Enforcement, Enforcement of Zoning and Other Local Laws, Information
Security for Municipalities, and Shared Services: Benefits,
Examples, Encouragement and Funding. Municipal officials and
staffers, planning and zoning board members, economic development
coordinators and other interested citizens are welcome to
attend. Space is limited for these workshops so those interested
are advised to register without delay. For an agenda and registration
materials, go to www.cwconline.org/special/gov_day, or call
845-586-1400.
College Aid
A $254,000 grant from the Dyson Foundation will fund scholarships
for State University of New York at New Paltz secondary education
students who transfer from Ulster County Community College.
The program is designed specifically to help alleviate the
teacher shortage in math and science within high-needs districts
throughout the Mid-Hudson region. It requires that its recipients
serve their student-teaching semester in these districts and
also agree to teach for three years in high-needs districts
and disciplines in the region.
The Foundation awards grants of up to $6,000 to each of six
students per year for two years. After all coursework has
been completed, the students receive a stipend of $2,000 for
living expenses for the student-teaching semester. The first
scholarships under this grant will be awarded for students
enrolling at New Paltz in fall 2007.
More information on this grant opportunity is available by
contacting the Transfer Admissions Office at New Paltz at
(845) 257-3200.
Stock Sale…
The Nasdaq Stock Market is selling a nearly 20 percent stake
to Borse Dubai in the United Arab Emirates and is taking control
of the Nordic exchange operator OMX. In a global stock market
shakeup, Borse Dubai and a group from Qatar also moved to
become the largest stakeholders in the London Stock Exchange.
But the transactions involving Dubai and Nasdaq could face
scrutiny in the United States, where a Dubai-owned company’s
plan to manage some U.S. ports previously raised an uproar.
The Nasdaq Stock Market Inc. would take control of Stockholm-based
OMX while selling to Borse Dubai a one-fifth stake in itself
as well as a 28 percent in the London Stock Exchange. Nasdaq
had owned a 31 percent stake in the London exchange.
Hours later, the Qatar Investment Authority said it had bought
20 percent of the London exchange _ possibly setting the stage
for a battle for control of Europe’s largest exchange,
which has fought off a multitude of bids in the past few years
and is now nearly half-owned by Middle Eastern groups.
The deals are subject to approval by shareholders and regulators
in Europe and the United States. Nasdaq and Borse Dubai said
the agreements had unanimous support in both boards and that
they planned to “submit voluntarily the transaction
for consideration by the U.S. government.”
U.S. Sen. Charles E. Schumer, chairman of the Joint Economic
Committee and a senior member of the Senate Banking Committee,
expressed doubts about the deal, saying it “will raise
serious questions that will need to be answered.”
Meteor Changes
An apparent meteorite estimated by astrophysicists to have
been 10 feet in diameter crashed to earth in southern Peru
September 18, leaving an crater 48 feet long and 15 feet deep,
and causing an impact large enough to register as a minor
earthquake on regional seismographs. The impact site in a
remote area six miles from Lake Titicaca and close to the
Bolivian border quickly drew large numbers of visitors from
nearby villages as well as Peruvian television and other press
coverage. According to witnesses, the object made a terrifying
sound as it passed, followed by a rain of smaller rocks that
lasted for several minutes. Witnesses said the impact crater
was partially filled with mud and water, which was hot enough
to have boiled for several hours, emitting a strong sulferous
odor. According to initial reports from Peruvian health officials,
seven police officers were among over 200 visitors to the
site treated by local hospitals and doctors and suffering
from vomiting, dehydration, and diarrhea. Livestock and other
animals were also reportedly affected. Following these initial
reports, Peruvian officials said doctors were unable to identify
any organic cause of the illness, which they suggested was
psychosomatic in origin. As of press time and since 48 hours
after the event, no additional news on the phenomenon has
been released.
Doomsday Seeds
The Norwegian government is planning on building a $3 million
“doomsday vault” on the island of Spitsbergen
in the Arctic Sea, which would house 10,000 seeds from various
plants in case of nuclear war or sudden and severe ecological
or environmental change. As reported by BBC News, the Norwegian
government built this bank by hollowing out a cave on Spitsbergen
and then putting in as many seeds as possible in the vault,
with support from countries around the world. The proposed
bank will have top security, blastproof doors and would have
two airlocks amount of seeds deposited will depend on the
number of countries participating in the project. The bank
will be designed to withstand global catastrophes like nuclear
war or natural disasters that would destroy the planet’s
sources of food. Seed collection is being organized by the
Global Crop Diversity Trust.
“What will go into the cave is a copy of all the material
that is currently in collections [spread] all around the world,”
Geoff Hawtin of the Trust has said. “What we’re
trying to do is build a back-up to these, so that a sample
of all the material in these gene banks can be kept in the
gene bank in Spitsbergen.”
Traffic Changes
Ever since Shandaken developer Dean Gitter asked Governor
Elliot Spitzer at a Kingston press event whether there could
be a Catskill Parkway and was told not to get too greedy,
there’s been much speculation about what a forecast
increase in traffic on Route 28 will result in, road-planning-wise.
According to Dennis Doyle of the Ulster County Planning Department,
the only thing under consideration right now, as far as he’s
heard, is a long-stalled restarting of the process by which
the local roadway, which links Kingston with the central Catskills,
Delaware County, Oneonta, Cooperstown, and eventually the
Adirondacks, gets named a Scenic Byway. This, he said, would
bring in new funding possibilities, as well as key aesthetic
guidelines for both development along the vital roadway…
and any widening of it to four lanes, should that one day
occur.
He also said that any such moves would quite a ways off, due
to the complexities of the process involved, and open for
full public review and local governmental input.
In other roads business, tthe New York State Thruway Authority
announced this past week that an independent traffic consulting
firm, Stantec, has revised its traffic growth projections
for the Thruway, resulting in projected out-year funding gaps
in the Authority’s 2005-2011 Multi-Year Financial Plan.
Stantec has attributed the reduced traffic growth projections
along the Thruway to the continued historically high gasoline
prices.
That, says the Thruway Authority, could mean higher tolls
on the superhighway.
Since 1995, the number of full-time staff at the Authority
has declined by 453 positions; the Authority will continue
to reduce staffing levels in future years. Even after constraining
operational costs to a low level, significant operational
deficits and low debt service coverage ratios would remain
in the out-years of the Plan. As a result, absent substantial
reductions to operations and/or the Capital Program, revenue
options need to be progressed.
It is anticipated that any preliminary proposal presented
to the Authority’s seven-member Board to address out-year
gaps will evaluate the Authority’s existing E-ZPass
discount programs, as well as the potential for modest fixed
adjustments between 2008 and 2011. Any revenue actions would
be phased in, allowing the strategy to be revisited should
traffic volumes return to previously projected levels or the
Authority’s financial circumstances change in any significant
way over the next four years.
Environmental…
County lawmakers have set an Oct. 10 public hearing on establishing
an Ulster County Department of the Environment. The session
will be 7 p.m. in the sixth floor chambers in the County Office
Building at 244 Fair St.
Officials said the additional public hearing was needed because
changes were made to accommodate authority to the county executive
in making appointments to the new department under the new
county executive form of government to go into effect Jan.
1, 2009. During a public hearing earlier this month, county
Environmental Management Council Chairman John Maley said
the department could assist municipalities conduct inventories
of natural resources.
Responsibilities of the department are separate from the county
Environmental Management Council and would include: Preparing,
reviewing and recommending methods of planning municipal projects.
It would also prepare open space plans for municipalities;
Having a county Planning Board vote on all municipal planning
and zoning decisions using open space criteria, scenic byway
requirements, and farmland protection mandates; Preparing
and incorporating a comprehensive land use and resource plan.
I
Meanwhile, the Ulster County Planning Board and Environmental
Management Council have completed a thorough public consultation
and planning process to create a draft Open Space Plan for
managing the county’s natural resources. A public discussion
meetings, reviewing the Plan, will be held at 7 pm on Thursday,
September 27 at the Woodstock Community Center. This will
be followed by a public hearing October 3, 6 pm at the Ulster
County Office Building, Kingston. For info, visit www.co.ulster.ny.us/planning/ospace.html
or contact Jennifer Schwartz at 845-340-3340.