Local
Warming
Perhaps we’re just having an unseasonably toasty runup
to a winter that’s yet to arrive. Or perhaps it’s
the ghost of Christmas Future on a planet slowly marinating
in carbon dioxide from Chinese smokestacks making product
for Walmart. Either way it seems winter sure isn’t what
it used to be. We don’t know what that means long term,
but it’s been awfully mild out there. Nobody it seems,
is going to run out of firewood before it’s time to
plant again. Sort of like winter in the Great Smokies maybe,
or fall in Alaska or something. We hope everyone’s enjoying
it because our guess is, well, it’s the future.
So on balance, we think 2006 has been a positive year for
our valleys, our region, our state and our nation. We believe
people have spoken clearly and their voices been heard clearly
on a range of subjects crucial to our future direction. In
Washington change is coming and none too soon. We wish our
friends and loved ones abroad Godspeed home from where some
of our nation’s disastrous policies have landed them.
For all of us, we hope the new year holds many changes to
look forward to in terms of how our government works and how
it doesn’t, and how what we do as a nation reflects
who we are and what we want for our future. That’s kind
of the point of democracy, and we think ours is maybe on the
mend. If 2007 turns out to be a good year for our constitution
and especially for the Bill of Rights, that’ll be the
sign it is.
In Albany we welcome Governor Spitzer and the promise that
his arrival will help restore the public interest to its rightful
place as the whole point of public governance. That shift,
we predict, could be seismic in its implications, even as
far south of the Capitol as we are. First thing we’re
hoping for from the new Governor? Funding, of course, for
the Catskill Interpretive Center in Mt.Tremper, as the essential
regional economic development initiative that it’s always
been. We believe come January, we’ll finally have a
Governor and a DEC commissioner smart enough and concerned
enough to get it. And maybe even in the process get the City
to pony up some money for it as well.
Locally as the year winds down, our largest hamlets, Phoenicia
and Boiceville, are both moving forward as they should on
badly needed septic treatment facilities. Both systems we
believe, are essential to the long term economic viability
of the hamlets they’ll serve and our towns as a whole.
We’ve sometimes disagreed on the best solutions available
– two new plants instead of one to serve both hamlets
is still astonishingly stupid - but we’ve never varied
on the absolute necessity of a permanent waste-treatment solution
for both places. And regardless of the quality of DEP’s
planning on this subject, those solutions that appear to be
developing in both hamlets will work well, we think, and to
everyone’s benefit. Ultimately we believe, this critical
infrastructure is in everyone’s self-interest and deserving
of everyone’s support. No politics here, this is simply
what’s needed for every business and especially for
every homeowner in the districts.
Our school district too is looking up this year: Spending’s
under control and special thanks are due to Jack Jordan who’s
stepped up and done a great job as Interim Superintendent.
Yes, the issue of tax equity persists and there are tough
choices ahead no doubt, especially given the master plan reconfigurations
on the table for 2007. But we think those issues will be handled
as well as they can be. And we trust in the board’s
choice of Dr. Leslie Ford to lead Onteora going forward, and
welcome her to our community.
If there’s a theme that’s emerging as the year
draws to a close, it’s one we might not have expected
given some of our recent history. That theme is that problem
solving might actually be possible. Some days of late, our
mountains seem practically awash in the spirit of realistic
compromise. It even happened at a town meeting in Shandaken
recently, a possible first, where residents, business owners,
elected officials, and the press may have collaboratively
fashioned the structure for a truce, allowing for an unopposed
wastewater referendum vote in Phoenicia February 3. We certainly
hope that’s what happens.
Similar breakthroughs might even be happening in state-run
talks on a possible fast-tracking of a Belleayre Resort compromise.
As we’ve said for years we’d welcome that, if
what it meant was a project on a scale acceptable to our community
and fair to our taxpayers. Our concern however is we’re
not sure our interests are being represented as they would
be under the SEQRA process and that we find troubling. Still,
on balance, the talking is positive so let’s see what
comes of it. Doesn’t appear we’ll have long to
wait.
To be fair of course, there’s plenty ahead for 2007
not to look forward to, but there will be time enough to deal
with those things as they move front and center. But the drift
as we see it, is toward local warming. So far the only explanation
we’ve come up with is that it could be the Dalai Lama
Effect, whose September stay here clearly brought a warming
and clearing trend that many folks agreed was palpable through
much of the fall. Either that, or maybe we’re starting
to mature as a community and realize that conflict isn’t
the only way to get where we’re going. If that’s
what’s happening, we’re all for it. So to that
end we want to remind you that we’ll soon be sponsoring
a series of regional round-table discussions at the High School,
facilitated by our editor, Paul Smart. We hope many of you
will plan on joining us for what we hope will be new opportunities
for dialogue.
Snow or not, we wish everyone a joyous holiday season and
the riches of friends and family and community throughout
all our magical valleys. BP