News Briefs 8/14/2008
Heating…
Worried About the Upcoming Heating Season? A presentation
on New York Energy $mart Programs will be put on by The Catskill
Center for Conservation & Development in Arkville on Monday,
August 18th from 6:00 to 8:30 pm at its main offices on Route
28. The session is set up for homeowners and business owners
to learn about the New York State Energy Research & Development
Authority’s programs to help state residents save money
& energy, including cash incentive and low interest loan
programs.
New York Energy $martSM programs are designed to lower electricity
costs by encouraging energy efficiency as the State’s
electric utilities move to competition. Margaretville Energy
$mart Partnership is a program of the Village of Margaretville
and the Greater Margaretville Chamber of Commerce.Register
by August 15: Mid-Hudson Energy $mart Communities, 845-331-2238
or e-mail Patrice Courtney Strong, patricecourtney@gmail.com
The local effort mirrors, and will include information on,
similar activity starting to take place on a national and
state basis, including Governor David Paterson’s recent
call for the immediate creation of an emergency task force
on home heating issues, especially as pertains to seniors
and others on fixed incomes.
County officials recently held a “home heating summit”
to solicit input and concerns from local government representatives,
non-profit agencies, businesses, religious organizations and
others in response to rising energy costs. At the summit’s
conclusion, county Administrator Michael Hein said a working
group will be established to use information gathered during
the event, as well as from other resources, to respond to
the problem. That response will be delivered to the Ulster
County Legislature in September, Hein said. The working group
will consist of people from several county departments, as
well as Family of Woodstock, the United Way and the American
Red Cross.
Diane Reeder, executive director of Queen’s Galley,
a non-profit organization that runs a food kitchen at Washington
Manor in Kingston, has said her group served 1,200 meals a
month two years ago and now serves more than 7,000. She added
that if her organization cannot afford to heat its building
this winter, it will have to close.
Meanwhile, area oil suppliers are playing cat and mouse with
their annual prepayment and budget plans, with some getting
mailings out already while others wwait for a possible dip
in prices.
“Applications are going out this week,” said a
representative at Kosco, the fuel company near Kingston. “Customers
have until August 14 to return them. We’ve set a fixed
price of $4.699 per gallon. You can opt for downward protection
by paying an insurance fee of 20 cents per gallon - the price
will follow the market down. We used to eat that fee, which
we have to pay when we get the oil off the barge. But with
prices so high, we can’t absorb it, so we’re padding
it to the customer.”
Heritage has four different payment plans that vary according
to the time span of the payment spread (all at once, four
months, or ten months) and to whether the price is capped
or will go down if the market goes down. Their rate is $4.759
per gallon, discounted to $4.709 if paid in cash or by Internet-check,
plus a ten- to forty-cent per gallon surcharge depending on
the plan chosen.
Calls to Bottini Fuel, now merged with Colonial Oil and Gas,
were not returned as of press time. Its website, bottinifuel.com,
mentions a payment plan but does not indicate when applications
will be available. It does provide a list of government energy
assistance programs and Salvation Army offices for those in
need.
Dependable Oil in Shokan is banking on a further price reduction
and is holding out to send out its prepayment and budget plans.
Meanwhile, business is booming at Cracker Mill Hearth and
Emporium, the Shokan seller of wood, gas, and pellet stoves,
but the proprietor did not sound happy.
“We’re selling three or four more stoves per month
ahead of what we usually sell this time of year. June was
like September. People are upset, particularly older people
who filled up their mostly empty tank this spring and had
to pay $800 or $900. They can’t afford it.”
More funding needs to be made available though the federal
government’s energy-assistance program because of high
fuel oil prices expected this winter, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer
and state Assemblyman Kevin Cahill have said in recent weeks,
with the U.S. Senator speaking last week at Family of Woodstock’s
New Paltz site and Cahill talking from a state conference
on Heating in Niagara Falls.
Schumer said Hudson Valley residents will spend approximately
$275 million more in home heating oil costs this winter than
they did last winter. He also said an estimated 3,100 senior
citizens in Ulster County will use the federal Low-Income
Home Energy Assistance Program, or HEAP, to help pay for their
home heating costs. To ensure that seniors and other residents
stay warm, Schumer said he was working on two pieces of emergency
legislation to provide additional money to the state through
HEAP; one calling for a second economic stimulus package that
would increase HEAP funding by $1.25 billion nationwide, to
a total of $3.78 billion; the other to increase HEAP aid by
$2.53 billion, for a total of $5.1 billion.
Schumer said that, based on recent oil prices, the average
senior could have to spend between $720 and $1,260 more for
fuel oil this winter than in the winter of 2007-08.
He noted that HEAP used up all of its 2007-08 money by February
last winter, and said if funding levels are not increased,
the funding for 2008-09 could run dry by Christmas.
Cahill said the state has to balance its budget and deal with
property taxes but that the most important issue is making
sure residents can afford to heat their homes this winter.
He said if HEAP is not enhanced, people will freeze in their
homes this winter. He said the state Assembly already has
taken action to address the issue by passing legislation that
calls for $550 million to enhance HEAP and for the income
eligibility level for the assistance program to be increased
to 80 percent of the state’s median income. That would
mean a family of four would be eligible for HEAP assistance
if the household’s income was $55,500 or less, Cahill
said. He added that the Assembly’s legislation also
calls for $250 million for energy-conservation measures.
There currently is no companion bill in the state Senate.
Cahill, who chairs the Assembly’s Energy Committee,
said the legislation would be funded by a 2 percent gross
receipts tax on large oil companies, a retroactive measure
to recapture windfall profits from when sales tax on gasoline
was capped at $2 in 2005 and by prohibiting oil companies
from passing along the additional costs to consumers through
price increases.
Gas Politics
The Riverkeeper environmental group has called on Governor
David Paterson to designate the New York City Watershed in
the Catskills permanently off-limits for natural gas drilling.
The organization said it agrees with the state’s decision
to update its environmental review for gas drilling in New
York’s portion of the Marcellus Shale formation.
The process of extracting the natural gas from the shale could
potentially throw the natural balance out of kilter and cause
pollution to the water supply and that, said Riverkeeper staff
attorney James Simpson, and could force the EPA to impose
a very expensive water filtration system on the Watershed.
“Should the (filtration exemption) be revoked, New York
City would be forced to build extremely expensive filtration
plant. The cost is now estimated at $10 billion with $300
million annually to operate the plant,” he said. The
current exemption is “the best way to guarantee clean
drinking water for New York City as well as safe Watershed
protection.”
“It’s important to look for new and alternative
sources of energy, but not at the expense of drinking water
quality, not at the expense of New York’s watershed
areas and not at the expense of city taxpayers to the tune
of billions of dollars,” said New York City Councilman
James Gennaro, chairman of the city council’s Environmental
Protection Committee.
There will be a regional symposium on “Gas Leasing:
Negotiating & Protecting Your Interests” held on
Tuesday, August 19, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the Sullivan
West High School Auditorium in Lake Huntington, sponsored
by the Sullivan County Division of Planning & Environmental
Management, the Chenango County Farm Bureau and the Cornell
Cooperative Extension. It will focus on what landowners need
to know before signing a lease with a natural gas company,
particularly how to protect their property and insuring financial
interests, and what gas drilling will mean for your community.
Featured speakers will include Dr. William Pammer, Jr., Commissioner
of the Sullivan County Division of Planning and Environmental
Management; Bradd Vickers, President of the Chenango County
Farm Bureau; Christopher Denton, Attorney-at-Law; Don Zaengle,
a consulting petroleum geologist; and Jim Leonard, CPA. The
panel will address the gas development process in Central
and Southern New York.Registration for this symposium is required.
Interested parties must register with the Sullivan County
Division of Planning at 845-794-3000, ext. 5028, by no later
than 4 p.m. on Monday, August 18.
Ownership?
Ulster County was recently awarded $750,000.00 to expand homeownership
opportunities within the County. The funding is the result
of the County’s application for assistance to the New
York State Office of Community Renewal. The program is expected
to assist 33 households within Ulster County and provide nearly
5.2 million dollars of additional private equity funding.
The program is designed to provide gap financing and minor
rehabilitation to lower housing costs to levels affordable
to those making less than 80% of the area’s median income.
In addition, home ownership counseling is included to ensure
that those assisted remain in their homes once purchased.
The Rural Ulster Preservation Company (RUPCO) was instrumental
in the preparation of the grant and will provide program delivery
for the County.
Fined...
Local Businessman Harry Jameson was fined $250 Tuesday for
his role in the much publicized trucking away of Phoenicia
Hotel remains. Dave Gutierrez, also named in the matter, was
fined $600 according to Jameson, who spoke to reporters outside
the courtroom moments after the decision was rendered by Town
Justice Mike Miranda.
Last month the Department of Environmental Conservation issued
tickets to the two local men involved in what DEC alleges
was the unlawful disposal of remains of the hotel.
The charges, which were misdemeanors and violations, are leveled
at Harry Jameson, the owner of Romer Mountain Park in Woodland
Valley and David Gutierrez, owner of Woodstock Landscaping
and the contractor that demolished the remains of the structure.
DEC Police charged Jameson with operating a solid waste management
facility without a permit after some amount was debris was
trucked off the hotel site to Jameson’s property.
Gutierrez was charged with unattended open burning, open burning
without a permit and open burning for commercial purposes.
He was also charged with two counts of unlawfully disposing
of solid waste. While much of the debris remains on the site
in huge pile, some amount was allegedly trucked off site to
Jameson’s property.
Jameson said he paid the fine and plans to just put the matter
behind him.
Home Sales
The sales of existing single-family homes in the Hudson Valley
and Catskills regions continued their double-digit decline
in the first six months of the year, according to the New
York State Association of Realtors. The largest decline in
year over year sales was in Sullivan County, which saw a 43
percent drop off in sales. Rockland County was second with
a 32 percent decline. Ulster and Orange counties each saw
just under 31 percent declines.
In Westchester County, sales of existing houses fell by over
28 percent. They dropped by 23 percent in Putnam County, by
22 percent in Columbia County, 17 percent in Dutchess County
and by over 12 percent in Greene County.
Year over year in June, Columbia County had the largest decline
in existing single-family home sales with an almost 46 percent
decline. The drop in Sullivan County was 44 percent, followed
by under 42 percent in Orange, 39 percent in Ulster, 31 percent
in Westchester, 29 percent in Rockland and Putnam Counties,
23 percent in Delaware County and over 13 percent in Dutchess
County.
In June, the most expensive houses sold in Westchester at
a median price of $675,000. Homes in Rockland sold for $445,000;
in Putnam for over $347,000; in Dutchess for just under $314,000;
in Orange County for $295,000; in Columbia County for $280,000;
in Ulster County for $255,000; in Sullivan County for $210,000;
and in Greene County for over $166,000.
Bad Cop…
An Ulster County grand jury has indicted a former county deputy
sheriff on charges he sought sexual favors from a girl under
the age of 17 in exchange for ignoring a crime, according
to the District Attorney’s Office.
Jeffrey P. Geskie, 27, of Hurley, was indicted on charges
of receiving a bribe and committing a criminal sexual act,
both felonies, and official misconduct, a misdemeanor. The
offenses are alleged to have occurred in High Falls on June
2. Authorities at the time said the sexual acts were in exchange
for Geskie not filing trespass and other charges against the
girl, who has not been identified.
“While in uniform, while on duty, he elicited sexual
favors from (the girl) in return for looking the other way
on criminal charges,” Ulster County District Attorney
Holley Carnright said in a prepared statement.
The girl’s attorney, Joseph O’Connor, said at
the time that his client essentially was forced to perform
a sex act because Geskie used threats against her. Among other
things, O’Connor said, Geskie told the girl she would
be thrown in jail and that he would notify her future college
of her wrongdoing if she did not oblige. Geskie was arrested
by the state police and resigned from the Sheriff’s
Office soon after.
The June arrest was not the first time Geskie found himself
in legal trouble. In two lawsuits, he was accused of violating
the civil rights of two people in incidents that occurred
in 2004, 2005 and 2007.
Vols Wanted…
The Hudson Valley Ombudsman Program is seeking bright, motivated
people who would like to make a difference to residents in
nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. If you
have a few hours each week to volunteer, you can become an
Ombudsman and play a crucial role in resolving conflicts and
maintaining a high quality of life and care for residents
of long-term care. The Hudson Valley Ombudsman program offers
free training and ongoing support in exchange for your good
will and life skill. A new training session will begin in
September. For more information and to apply, contact Bette
Ann Moskowitz at the Ulster County Office for the Aging: (845)
340-3456, or (845) 452-5600 (Ext. 301).
Watery Lawsuit
Following months of battling a proposed 360,000 gallon, 50
foot tall water tower next door to her home, a Flieschmanns
women has filed a lawsuit against the Village and the Town
of Middletown to stop it.
Anita Rubin, who lives on Paradise Camp Road, directed press
inquiries to her attorney.
The Village has been mulling the water tower plan for over
two years, working with Delaware Engineering, the firm that
built the Village’s sewer system. Trustees have described
the project as a back up system for the Villages water supply,
which lost some capacity a few years ago when the village
sold two wells. While the Villages supply that comes from
natural springs is said to be adequate, the water tower is
said to be capable of supplying one to three days of water
to the village in the event of some catastrophe. It would
also increase water pressure for the Village.
That may be all well and good, but on July 11th Attorney Ken
Ayers filed a lawsuit against the Village, Middletown and
landowner Arnold Bernstein because his client feels the process
used to determine that the tower is needed was shoddy.
Ayers said the Village improperly prepared the environmental
study of the project and concluded that it was not harmful.
He said the Middletown Planning Board then used that study
to justify granting a special use permit to build the project
on Bernstein’s land. He also says that in exchange for
allowing the project on his property, Bernstein gets a 16
foot wide, 1000 foot long private road built on his land at
taxpayer expense, thus opening up the property for possible
sub-division purposes. He also said the Village could increase
the size of the tower almost threefold if it saw fit, and
that the Middletown planning board refused to place any conditions
on the permit issued despite cries from Rubin and other neighbors
to restrict the addition of any other apparatus, like cell
towers, on top of the water tower.
Worse, Ayers said the project, paid for in part by a $1.7
million grant, would also require a $1.3 million loan. To
pay that loan back the Village would hike water rates from
the $200 a year to $299 per customer.
Rubin said that despite all this, much of it has been kept
quiet.
“Not many in the Village know what this will cost them
in the long run,” she said.
Arctic Melt
Ice at the North Pole melted at an unprecedented rate in recent
weeks, with leading scientists warning that the Arctic could
be ice-free in summer by 2013. Satellite images show that
ice caps started to disintegrate dramatically at the end of
July as storms over Alaska’s Beaufort Sea began sucking
streams of warm air into the Arctic. As a result, scientists
say that the disappearance of sea ice at the North Pole could
exceed last year’s record loss. More than a million
square kilometres melted over the summer of 2007 as global
warming tightened its grip on the Arctic. But such destruction
could now be matched, or even topped, this year.
This startling loss of Arctic sea ice has major meteorological,
environmental and ecological implications. The region acts
like a giant refrigerator that has a strong effect on the
northern hemisphere’s meteorology. Without its cooling
influence, weather patterns will be badly disrupted, including
storms set to sweep around the edges of the Atlantic Ocean.
Other environmental changes are likely to follow. Without
sea ice to bolster them, land ice - including glaciers - could
topple into the ocean and raise global sea levels, threatening
many low-lying areas, including Bangladesh and scores of Pacific
islands. In addition, the disappearance of reflective ice
over the Arctic means that solar radiation would no longer
be bounced back into space, thus heating the planet even further.
On top of these issues, there are fears that water released
by the melting caps will disrupt the Gulf Stream, while an
ice-free Arctic in summer offers new opportunities for oil
and gas drilling there - and for political disputes over territorial
rights.
What really unsettles scientists, however, is their inability
to forecast precisely what is happening in the Arctic, the
part of the world most vulnerable to the effects of global
warming. ‘
When we did the first climate change computer models, we thought
the Arctic’s summer ice cover would last until around
2070,’ said Professor Peter Wadhams of Cambridge University.
‘It is now clear we did not understand how thin the
ice cap had already become - for Arctic ice cover has since
been disappearing at ever increasing rates. Every few years
we have to revise our estimates downwards. Now the most detailed
computer models suggest the Arctic’s summer ice is going
to last for only a few more years - and given what we have
seen happen last week, I think they are probably correct.’
‘It does not really matter whether 2007 or 2008 is the
worst year on record for Arctic ice,’ he added. ‘The
crucial point is that ice is clearly not building up enough
over winter to restore cover and that when you combine current
estimates of ice thickness with the extent of the ice cap,
you get a very clear indication that the Arctic is going to
be ice-free in summer in five years. And when that happens,
there will be consequences.’
Part-Time…
The number of Americans who have seen their full-time jobs
chopped to part time because of weak business has swelled
to more than 3.7 million - the largest figure since the government
began tracking such data more than half a century ago. Furthermore,
the resulting loss of pay is now being seen as a primary source
of pain for millions of American families, reinforcing the
downturn gripping the economy. Paychecks are shrinking just
as home prices plunge and gas prices soar, furthering the
austerity across the nation.
On the surface, the job market is weak but hardly desperate.
Layoffs remain less frequent than in many economic downturns,
and the unemployment rate is a relatively modest 5.5 percent.
But that figure masks the strains of those who are losing
hours or working part time because they cannot find full-time
work - a stealth force that is eroding American spending power.
All told, people the government classifies as working part
time involuntarily - predominantly those who have lost hours
or cannot find full-time work - swelled to 5.3 million last
month, a jump of greater than 1 million over the last year.
These workers now amount to 3.7 percent of all those employed,
up from 3 percent a year ago, and the highest level since
1995.
The loss of hours has been affecting men in particular - and
Hispanic men more so. Among those who were forced into part-time
work from the spring of 2007 to the spring of 2008, 73 percent
were men and 35 percent were Hispanic. Some 28 percent of
the jobs affected were in construction, 14 percent in retail
and 13 percent in professional and business services..
The growing ranks of involuntary part-timers reflect the sophisticated
fashion through which many American employers have come to
manage their payrolls, say experts. In decades past, when
business soured, companies tended to resort to mass layoffs,
hiring people back when better times returned. But as high
technology came to permeate American business, companies have
grown reluctant to shed workers. Even the lowest-wage positions
in retail, fast food, banking or manufacturing require computer
skills and a grasp of a company’s systems. Several months
of training may be needed to get a new employee up to speed.
More part-time and fewer full-time workers also allows companies
to save on health care costs. Only 16 percent of retail workers
receive health insurance through their employer, while more
than half of full-time workers are covered.
Many experts see the swift cutback in hours as a precursor
of a more painful chapter to come: broader layoffs. Some struggling
companies are holding on to workers and cutting shifts while
hoping to ride out hard times. If business does not improve,
more extreme measures could follow.
Stay tuned…
Live & Laugh…
Anne Cardinale, Director of the Ulster County Office for the
Aging reminds seniors that the 11th Annual Live, Laugh &
Learn Senior Conference Day of Workshops will be held on Wednesday,
August 20, 2008 at the Business Resource Center, 1 Development
Court, Kingston.. The registration fee is $5 and includes
refreshments. The program has many workshops - registration
begins at 8:30 AM. The classes run from 9:15 AM; the last
class ending at 4:40 PM. To register and obtain additional
information, please call: Ulster County Office for the Aging
at: (845) 340-3456.
Developments…
A revised proposal for a housing and golf development on the
Carvel property will preserve vistas along state Route 199
and drastically reduce the overall number of homes, representatives
of the builder have told members of the Pine Plains Planning
Board last week.The concept for the Carvel site development,
a partnership between the Durst Organization and Landmark
Land Co., initially was presented to the board in 2003 calling
for 951 homes spread across approximately 2,200 acres on both
side of the Pine Plains-Milan border with a major golf resort
at its center. After strong opposition was voiced by many
community members, Durst and Landmark presented a modified
plan.
Exactly how many homes are proposed to be built under the
revised plan remains to be seen. Carvel representatives presented
conflicting numbers during recent meetings, ranging from 648
to 724.
The golf course also been reduced - from 27 holes to 18 holes
- and proposed roads have been reduced from 60,000 feet under
the old plan to 45,000 to 48,000 feet in the new plan.
“Our modified plan reflects many of the concerns that
were voiced ... and we believe we have crafted a plan that
is financially viable and preserves the beauty and the environment
of the Carvel site while delivering financial resources to
the surrounding community,” Alexander Durst said in
a statement.
Meanwhile a giant development in eastern Maine located on
3,300 acres of remote wildlands on pristine Schoodic Peninsula,
described as a green community where homeowners and visitors
would enjoy views of the ocean and of mountains rising up
from the sea five miles away on Mount Desert Island, is starting
to face major opposition from a variety of directions.
“The vision is to figure out how to re-establish the
connection between individuals and their natural environments
and reconnect families in the process,” said Mike Saxl,
spokesman for the Winter Harbor Properties investment group
that’s proposing the development.
However, conservation groups and officials at adjacent Acadia
National Park say the plan for up to 1,000 homes is out of
scale and out of character with the unspoiled peninsula, known
for its rugged pink granite coastline and breathtaking views.
Winter Harbor Properties is made up of more than 20 investors,
mostly from Europe, said Cecelia Ward, who lives in Florida
and is overseeing the project.
The development, in the works for 2 1/2 years, calls for clusters
of housing lots, two upscale hotels with restaurants, and
a golf course billed as environmentally friendly. The homes
would have solar power and green septic systems, and they’d
be designed to blend in with the surroundings, developers
say.
Ward, Saxl and others representing Winter Harbor Properties
have been meeting with town officials, conservationists and
residents to discuss the project.
“We want to be a good neighbor and partner and we’re
trying to find ways to do that,” Saxl said.
Could there be lessons learned here? …
IMPACT Funds
Ulster County has received a new state crime-fighting award
of $351,232 to fund its Operation IMPACT actions, including
$101,500 for the Ulster County District Attorney’s Office;
$97,500 for the Kingston Police Department; $97,160 for the
Ulster County Sheriff’s Office; $45,072 for the Ulster
County Probation Department; and $10,000 for the Ellenville
Police Department.
With the help of Operation IMPACT, according to the officials
concerned, crime in Kingston is down 39 percent for the first
five months of 2008, following a 14 percent decrease in crime
between 2006 and 2007. Violent crime is down 53 percent. Property
crime is down 37 percent and violent crime is down 53 percent.
But firearm-related crimes are up slightly (four reported
through May of 2008 compared with three in the same period
of 2007) in Kingston.
In Ulster County, crime this year is generally trending down,
with a decrease of 2.3 percent reported for the first five
months of the year. Violent crime in the county is down more
than 20 percent.
In addition to DCJS, the following state and federal agencies
participate in the Ulster County IMPACT initiative: the New
York State Police; the Division of Parole; the U.S. Attorney’s
Office; the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms;
and the federal office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
In addition, Professor Ling Zhou of Marist College serves
as a crime analyst for the Ulster IMPACT partnership.
Operation IMPACT grants fund personnel, including crime analysts,
assistant district attorneys, field intelligence officers,
probation officers and investigators. The grants also support
technology, such as mobile surveillance cameras, crime mapping
software, digital fingerprinting equipment and laptop computers.
Arts Grants!
The Ulster County Legislature, Ulster County Arts Council
and Dutchess County Arts Council recently announced 2008 awards
from the Ulster County Cultural Services and Promotion Fund
(UCCSPF) of $47,500 in finances provided by the Ulster County
Legislature. 23 applications were received requesting a total
of $126,077, with 12 organizations receiving awards ranging
from $2,500 - $7,000. A broad array of projects were funded
including audience development initiatives, new programs that
will help established arts organizations reach underserved
populations, and public art projects which will draw tourists
and visitors to communities throughout Ulster County.
Awards were given to The Arts Community, the Arts Society
of Kingston, the Ulster Performing Arts Center (UPAC), High
Meadow Arts, Historic Huguenot Street, Pine Hill Community
Center, Shadowlands Theatre, Shandaken Theatrical Society,
Unison Arts & Learning Center, Woodstock Chamber Orchestra,
Woodstock Film Festival in partnership with the Center for
Creative Education, and the Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild.
Families Needed
Welcome a young person from Brazil, Japan, Germany, Morocco,
or one of over 60 countries into your home. Share your home
and change the world. Host an exchange student from Youth
For Understanding USA. Students are scheduled to fly to the
US throughout August and many are still awaiting news of their
host families. Provide them a once in a lifetime opportunity—host
for just 90 days to get them off to a good start! Call 1-866-493-8872
or visit our website www.yfu-usa.org to find out more information
on becoming a host family or support volunteer with Youth
for Understanding.
FEMA Hub?
US Senator Charles Schumer has joined Congressman John Hall
to urge the Federal Emergency Management Agency to establish
a Northeastern Regional Disaster Hub in Orange County. The
lawmakers pointed to the Hudson Valley’s proximity to
air, rail and interstate highway transportation options making
it an ideal location for an emergency center that would serve
high-risk areas including Boston, New York City, Philadelphia
and Washington, DC.
FEMA is currently examining its overall assets and capabilities
and is exploring establishing a hub somewhere in the Northeast.
Schumer and Hall suggested to FEMA a location in the Town
of Wallkill as a regional hub. The agency already has a Primary
Entry Point station in the Town of Wallkill and that location
could work for a new hub, the lawmakers wrote in their letter
to FEMA Deputy Administrator Harvey Johnson.
Farm Camp!
Frost Valley YMCA is holding a Family Farm Camp which will
be held from Sunday to Friday, August 24-29. Families will
spend the session in yurts at Frost Valley’s working
farm and participating in a series of agricultural-based activities.
This special offering is limited to five families.
Guests will be participating in traditional farm crafts such
as wool spinning and candle-making. They will also be tending
the gardens, working with the animals and cooking with the
vegetables that they harvest. Horseback riding, swimming and
many other activities will also be enjoyed.
Frost Valley’s long-running Family Camp will also run
from Sunday, Aug. 24 through Friday, Aug. 29.
For more information, call (845) 985-2291, ext. 205, or visit
www.FrostValley.org.
Firefighters…
Several states have passed laws to encourage people to become
volunteer firefighters and to make it easier for volunteers
to pull away from work, and to keep employers from punishing
employees who leave to fight fires or respond to emergency
calls, according to the National Volunteer Fire Council. Also,
Congress is considering separate measures that would give
volunteers greater tax exemptions for mileage and help volunteer
departments with rising fuel costs.
In West Virginia, which has lost about 2,000 volunteer firefighters
in the past eight years, legislators are studying proposals
that include a scholarship for volunteers and a type of pension
plan. And measures approved this year in state legislatures
include the passage of a law in Colorado that bars large employers
from firing employees who leave work to respond to emergencies,
a new law in Nebraska that bars employers from punishing employees
who arrive to work late because they have responded to emergencies,
and Louisiana and Pennsylvania law that offers volunteer emergency
responders a $100 income tax credit.
In other words, hope still exists…
Police Blotter
The Shandaken Police report the arrest of a Shokan man on
numerous felony charges. Martin Sletten, age 58 of Twin Oaks
Drive in the Town of Olive was arrested after Shandaken Police
got a 911 call for an assault on August 3. Police allege that
Sletten pushed his way into the residnce of a Mt. Tremper
man and once in the residence displayed a knife in a threatening
manner and stole property from the resident. Sletten was charged
with Burglary in the 1st degree, a class B felony, Robbery
1st degree, also a class B felony, Unlawful imprisonment 1st
degree, a class E felony and Menacing 2nd degree, a classs
A misdemeanor. Sletten was arraigned in the Town of Woodstock
Court and remanded to the Ulster County Jail on $25,000 cash
bail to reappear in Shandaken at a later date. The Shandaken
Police were assisted at the scene by DEP Polce and the Ulster
County Sheriff’s Office Detective Unit.
Reunion!
The Onteora High School Class of 1983 has scheduled its 25th
Reunion for October 10-11, 2008. Members of the class are
requested to visit the Reunion Web site at groups.yahoo.com/group/ocs83reunion
for Reunion details and registration. Any information regarding
classmates whose contact information is unknown is also requested
and may be provided through this same Web site. Phone calls
are also accepted at 845-702-86.
Calendar Listing
Acoustic and lite electric Open Mic on Sunday eve., 9pm at
the Country Inn, Cty. Rt. 2, Krumville 845-657-8956 for more
info.
Those Dawgs...
The Reservoir Dawgs will be appearing at the Boiceville Inn
every Thursday in August. Fred Perry of Reservoir Music has
been producing dance/concert parties at B.I.s Backstage @
the Boiceville Inn since March and said “Ever since
I started doing this everyone asked me when my own band would
play and that time has now come. Last week we blew the roof
off and even the seniors liked it.” The Inn has a full
menu, full bar and large dance floor. Music starts at 8:30pm.
657-6127 for more info.