(News Briefs December
21, 2006)
County Budget…
Ulster County lawmakers approved a $315.64 million 2007 budget
on December 6, raising the property tax levy by 7.52 percent,
after much talk over the planned layoffs of 25 county employees.
They voted down a last-minute attempt to save the jobs before
ultimately approving the budget, 20 to 11.
The adopted budget cuts 54 positions through layoffs and elimination
of vacant positions. The 25 layoffs are in the departments
of Social Services, Buildings and Grounds, Public Health,
Office for the Aging, Tourism, Personnel, Highways and Bridges,
the Sheriff’s Office and the Golden Hill Health Care
Center.
County Administrator Michael Hein said the budget was based
on reform and streamlined operations for the taxpayer, after
last year’s 38.6 percent property tax hike. Last year’s
budget came in at $300.24 million, with a tax levy of $64.97
million. The tax levy for 2007 is set at $69.85 million. He
noted that the layoffs were a part of “right-sizing”
to evaluate the county’s needs rather than blindly increase
personnel.
The final budget, which contains a significant increase from
the County Administrator’s proposed spending plan of
$300.19 million released in October, reflects a state-recommended
change in recording $14.6 million worth of sales tax revenue
that is distributed to the towns and city of Kingston.
The budget downsizes the Tourism Department, consolidates
the Alternative Sentencing and Community Corrections departments
under the Probation Department, and incorporates the Office
for the Aging with the Department of Social Services.
The Ulster County Administrator’s Office will draw up
projected positions, salary levels and other details for a
restructuring of the county Buildings and Grounds, Highways
and Bridges and Public Works Administration departments now
that the Legislature’s Public Works Committee has approved
a proposed outline for a centralized structure with a single
commissioner. The streamlined structure will replace the current
two-commissioner system, in place since 1995. The changes
are expected to take effect by March or April 2007 and require
approval of a local law.
Merger Update
The proposed consolidation of Kingston and Benedictine hospitals
will provide the opportunity for enhanced services and new
programs that will afford better health care for the community
without experiencing any loss of services, particularly those
involving such hot button issues as reproductive health, the
CEOs of both institutions told a state Assembly Health Committee
hearing in Kingston on December 11. The benefits of a collaboration
will eliminate the duplication of services that currently
exists, end a “competitive medical arms race”
between the two institutions, reduce operating expenses, create
a de facto single medical staff, lead to the establishment
of new “centers of excellence” and a host of new
specialties, and allow for greater access to capital to improve
the infrastructures of both hospitals, said Michael Kaminski,
president and chief executive officer (CEO) of Kingston Hospital,
and Tom Dee, his counterpart at Benedictine Hospital. As a
result, many of the Ulster County residents who now seek medical
care elsewhere, including care for low-level surgery and maternity
- an estimated outward migration of 30 percent - will feel
comfortable receiving that care at home, they said.
The hearing in the Ulster County Legislative Chamber chaired
by state Assemblyman Kevin Cahill (D-Kingston) and attended
by state Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther (D-Sullivan County),
both members of the Assembly Health Committee, was one of
seven around the state. The hearings were intended to gauge
citizen response to the recently released report by the so-called
Berger Commission on the state’s health care system
that recommends closure of one of Kingston’s two hospitals
if they are unable to come up with a plan for consolidation
by the end of 2007.
The report of the Commission on Health Care Facilities in
the 21st Century, the independent panel that takes its shorter
name from that of its chairman, Stephen Berger, the former
New York Social Services commissioner, also called for Kingston
Hospital to continue providing access to the reproductive
services currently offered in hospital at a location “proximate”
to the hospital. It also called for a reduction in licensed
beds from a current total of 367 at the two hospitals to between
250 and 300. The report concluded there is too much duplication
of services by the two hospitals and too high a vacancy rate
at both.
What the two hospitals have arrived at so far, according to
their CEOs, is a reorganization that would create a parent
corporation over both hospitals with Kingston hospital retaining
its secular mission and Benedictine its faith-based mission.
Kingston Hospital would continue to provide women’s
health services, including elective first trimester abortions,
at a site “next to the Kingston Hospital campus,”
Kaminski told Cahill and Gunther. Both hospitals would continue
providing all emergency reproductive care that is needed as
is currently the case.
The two local hospitals have engaged in numerous failed attempts
to merge over the past 50 years, the most recent of which
was in 2004. Religious health strictures and reproductive
health care, including abortion, tubal ligation immediately
after childbirth, birth control, family planning and safe-sex
counseling, and the distribution of condoms, have always been
the stumbling point.
Several speakers and a sizeable number of the approximately
150 people attending the hearing are clearly still concerned
about isolating reproductive health services in a separate
location, even one adjacent or “proximate” to
the Kingston Hospital building.
“A separate building or an easily segmented area invites
a threat to safety and confidentiality,” testified Clare
Coleman, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Mid-Hudson
Valley.
“The report singles out and stigmatizes health care
for women,” testified Andrea Park, executive director
of the YWCA of Ulster County. Like several other speakers
testifying, the Park added that she believes the commission’s
recommendations are on a “fast track,” with the
full report requiring either approval or disapproval in its
entirely by the state legislature by December 31.
Benedictine’s Dee took issue with what he believes is
an “anti-woman” view of the hospital in some quarters.
Benedictine operates a highly acclaimed breast center and
its breast and ovarian cancer care have “received national
recognition as benchmark programs hospitals should be providing
in their communities,” he said.
Kraft Charged
Ulster County Legislator Peter Kraft faces a charge of driving
while intoxicated, after being stopped for a traffic infraction
at 3:49 am Sunday morning, Dec. 17. The Ulster County Sheriff’s
Office says Kraft was stopped on Route 28 in Shoken after
deputies observed Kraft crossing pavement markings. Deputies
found Kraft to be intoxicated. He faces a misdemeanor DWI
charge for having a blood alcohol count of greater than .08
percent, the legal limit. He was released on tickets to appear
in Olive Town Court.
Kraft, a Democrat, lives in Glenford and is one of three legislators
representing District 3, which includes the Towns of Hurley,
Marbletown and Olive. He acknowledged the charges Sunday and
said he was at a friend’s house for a Christmas party
and made a poor decision. Kraft was elected to the legislature
in 2003.
Pop Warner!
The Kingston Area Football League has said yes to accepting
teams from the Onteora District into their league. Locally,
parents and players will be fielding two youth football teams
to play at Dietz Stadium each August in a move that organizers
feel will help build up local football prowess and interest
to once again field an OCS varsity team in the coming years.
Onteora dropped its varsity football last year citing a drop
in local interest.
The two teams, each with 20 to 25 players, will include a
Junior team of players aged 8 to 1o and a senior team for
players age 11 to 13. Two head coaches have yet to be named
who will help align the new efforts with existing Onteora
modified and JV programs. In addition, funding will have to
be raised for team uniforms
An introductory meeting for the new program will be announced
in the coming months for play to start next August.
Inauguration!
A midnight swearing in, a 6 a.m. jog, an outdoor inaugural
ceremony and a free James Taylor concert will mark Eliot Spitzer’s
first day as New York governor.
Spitzer, who campaigned on a promise of “Change Begins
on Day One,” will start his new job on Jan. 1 with a
predawn run in downtown Albany and will stage his ceremonial
inaugural at noon on the lawn behind the state Capitol, an
area known as West Capitol Park.The open-air event will be
“the first test of people’s heartiness and willingness
to participate in the rigors of government as we envision
it in New York,” Spitzer said with a grin, while joking
that the Old Farmer’s Almanac predicts temperatures
of 15 below zero that day.
There will be no black-tie gala, a notable difference from
Gov. George Pataki’s 1994 inauguration. In another departure
from Pataki, Spitzer will pay for the event from the $5.5
million remaining in his campaign account. Pataki set up special
fundraising committee for his inaugural, with some of the
money coming from people who wanted to do business with the
state, and did not release the names of donors until Democrats
successfully sued him.
Spitzer, who is still currently the state’s attorney
general, will be joined at the ceremony by fellow Democrats
Lt.-Gov.-elect David Paterson and Attorney General-elect Andrew
Cuomo. Missing: embattled Comptroller Alan Hevesi, also a
Democrat, who won re-election in November despite investigations
about his using a state employee to chauffeur his wife. The
state Ethics Commission concluded he knowingly and willfully
violated the law. A local district attorney has launched an
inquiry and Spitzer - who has said Hevesi has compromised
his credibility to function as the state’s top auditor
- has had his office calculate how much Hevesi should reimburse
the state.
Taylor, who is married to an Albany native, and Natalie Merchant,
who grew up in western New York, will headline a free concert
at 5 p.m. at an arena just four blocks from the Capitol. Also,
Spitzer and his wife, Silda, will host a reception for the
public at the Capitol from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Those who want
to attend are encouraged to sign up through www.inaugurationny.org.
UCDC Changes
The Ulster County Development Corporation (UCDC) Board of
Directors has announced that Irene MacPherson, UCDC Director
of Business Attraction and Marketing since 1998, has been
named as the Interim President of the Corporation effective
December 22, replacing Chester J. Straub, Jr., 46, who recently
announced his resignation to accept a position with The Technology
Research Development Authority in Titusville, FL. Robert Ryan,
the new incoming Board Chair for 2007, emphasized that “Ms.
MacPherson has been the initial contact for new private sector
commercial and industrial start-up, expansion and relocation
projects for the organization. With her cultivated regional
and national network of brokers, site consultants, business
contacts, her extensive knowledge base, as well as her activism
in many business, cultural and civic organizations, Irene
will provide continuity and solid direction as UCDC moves
forward”.
A Search Committee for a permanent replacement has been appointed.
Future announcements and details will be forthcoming regarding
the position.
UCDC is a private, non-profit organization that acts as “a
catalyst for creating wealth, improving the quality of life
and fostering economic opportunity for Ulster County and its
citizens.” The agency had come under fire in the last
year for having pushed a number of major tourist-based businesses,
including the locally-controversial projects of developer
Dean Gitter, without county oversight.
Hector Rodriguez, chairman of the county Legislature’s
Economic Development, Housing, Planning and Transit Committee,
said Straub offered to resign a year ago, but the development
corporation’s board asked him to stay on while transitions
were made and a plan for the county’s economic future
was created.
County Legislator Robert Aiello, a longtime critic of Straub
and how the UCDC operates, has said Straub is not the kind
of out-of-the-box thinker that Ulster County needs. Aiello,
R-Saugerties, hopes the development corporation board will
hire a successor who has more of a marketing background.
March Gallagher, chairwoman of the Ulster County Industrial
Development Agency, a subsidiary of the development corporation,
said although she has enjoyed working with Straub, she thinks
his time on the job has run its course. The new economic development
strategy for the county will serve as a guide for the new
president, she said.
“It’s sort of a perfect time to get someone new
involved,” she said.
At Onteora...
The Onteora School Board tabled plans to discuss the district’s
bond process and the three grade configurations, middle school
proposals and the possibility of closing another elementary
school at its December 12 meeting. No date was set for future
discussions, but during public be heard, a few people weighed
in on the subject.
In other news….
It was announced that James Walker, the interim assistant
director of pupil personnel services, was hired near the end
of October as a consultant for thirty days, as needed at a
per-diem rate of $500 a day. Connie Hayes announced her resignation
at an October 10 school board meeting. Deborah Fox, the district’s
assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction said
the position of assistant director to pupil personnel is not
being filled and the administration is “looking at different
leadership models.”
The facilities committee discussed ways on how best to use
a $662,000 grant earmarked for improvements on the district’s
infrastructure. The two major suggestions still under debate
are wiring for computer technology or fixing up the high school
auditorium. D’Orazio said that the money will be coming
from the State, but it will still need to be voter approved.
This is part of an EXCEL state grant (Expanding our Children’s
Education and Learning). This money is guaranteed until June
2007.
The school board approved a resolution to draft a letter to
the town of Olive asking them to send a letter to the department
of transportation requesting a traffic light in front of the
High school on route 28. The board agreed to also draft their
own letter to the department of transportation, requesting
a traffic light for safety reasons.
Board member Cindy O’Connor said, “I have one
concern: I just want to make sure the traffic light is used
for dismissal basically for the busses because I have concern
that the traffic light is going to be used for children crossing
the street and that concerns me because the traffic is moving
so fast and the people are not going to be used to that light
and people will go through it.”
She reminded the board that the district policy is a closed
campus. Trustee Rita Vanacore said the district would request
control over the light, giving way to yellow flashing lights
when there is not a school event or dismissal time.
Lastly, Middle School principal Gayle Kavanagh announced her
retirement this year effective June 30, 2007. She has been
principal at the middle school for nearly eight years.
The Judge Snag
The recent death of state Supreme Court Justice Vincent G.
Bradley and the appointment of fellow Justice Michael Kavanagh
to the court’s Appellate Division — both justices
in New York’s Third Judicial District, which includes
Ulster, Greene, Columbia, Albany, Rensselaer, Schoharie and
Sullivan counties, who kept chambers in Kingston and primarily
heard cases in Ulster County — has created a caseload
burden in a judicial district that gets about 9,000 new cases
per year.
With Bradley’s death and Kavanagh’s promotion,
there now are only six justices for the district’s seven
counties. It has been estimated that Bradley’s death
and Kavanagh’s promotion left 1,100 to 1,200 cases to
be picked up by others. Ulster County has the second-highest
caseload in the district, behind Albany.
State Supreme Court Justices John C. Egan and Michael C. Lynch
already have taken some of the caseload in Ulster County,
and Surrogate Court Judge Mary Work and Ulster County Judge
J. Michael Bruhn have been authorized to pitch in, as well.
Rebecca Millouras-Lettre, president of the Ulster County Bar
Association, said more relief is needed. She said Lynch and
Egan are only in the county a couple of days each month and
Bruhn and Work have their hands full with cases in their own
courts.
The Third Judicial District will receive some relief when
the governor appoints a successor to Bradley. There will be
no appointment to for Kavanagh’s post because he still
is considered a Third Judicial District justice.
Partner Benefits...
Ulster County lawmakers are reconsidering whether heterosexuals
in long-standing, financially interdependent relationships
with county employees should be included in a resolution extending
benefits to employees’ domestic partners. The original
action was brought forth as the result of a pending lawsuit
against the county initiated by the Civil Service Employees
Association and three county employees from the Mental Health
Department in September which claimed that homosexual county
employees do not enjoy the same health-care benefits as their
heterosexual colleagues. The suit is based on the state’s
Sexual Orientation Non-Discrimination Act and calls for an
extension of benefits as well as payment of damages since
2003 - the year the state law took effect.
The lawsuit has been on hold pending the Legislature’s
action on the proposed resolution that extends benefits to
county employees in gay, lesbian and heterosexual relationships
that are financially interdependent.
Members of the county’s Health Committee sitting on
a Domestic Partnership Assessment Subcommittee have developed
a set of criteria to go along with the proposed domestic partner
coverage that specifies individuals must be single but not
married or separated; have lived with their domestic partner
for at least a year; and must show two forms of financial
interdependence, such as utility bills or a mortgage.
But County Attorney Joshua Koplovitz said the resolution will
most likely be modified to apply only to homosexual county
employees. Legislature Majority Leader Jeanette Provenzano
said including heterosexual partners may be considered down
the road, but argues that the county should only address concerns
in the lawsuit for now.
“Heterosexual couples have the option to get married,
and therein lies the difference,” said Legislator Brian
Shapiro, D-Woodstock.
Health Committee Chairman Robert Parete believes the domestic
partner benefits provision should include heterosexual county
employees. Minority Leader Glenn Noonan opposes the idea of
domestic partner benefits altogether, warning that the county
will “open up the floodgates” if it extends the
benefits.
The full Legislature plans to vote on the extended benefits
next month.
Ed Grants Now
The Catskill Watershed Corporation Education Committee has
announced that applications are available for the next round
of Watershed Education Grants. Pre-school through 12th grade
students are the target audience for Round 10 of the Grant
Program, designed to increase awareness and understanding
of the New York City Water System and the West-of-Hudson Watershed
which supplies 90 percent of the water supply for nine million
people.Guidelines and applications that can be downloaded
and filled out on-screen are available on the Public Education
page of the corporation’s web site, http://www.cwconline.org/.
Applicants may also call Education Coordinator Diane Galusha
at 845-586-1400, ext. 29 (toll-free 877-WAT-SHED) to obtain
hard copies of the forms and guidelines. The deadline for
submitting applications is February 2, 2007. Awards will be
announced in the spring. Round 10 projects should take place
during the 2007-2008 school year.
Pesticide Law…
Members of the Ulster County Legislature’s Environmental
Committee are reaching out to other counties enrolled in the
state’s mandatory 48-hour pesticide notification law
as the county prepares to educate the public about the measure,
which takes effect Jan. 1.
The state law requires commercial applicators to send 48-hour
written notification to the owners of adjoining properties
for most pesticide spray applications. It also requires retail
businesses to post warning signs and homeowners to mark off
treated areas larger than 100 square feet. The county Health
Department will enforce the regulations, and consequences
include fines and criminal sanctions.
Local Meth Lab?
Two Woodstock residents have been arrested following a narcotics
investigation. An investigation initiated by the Narcotics
Unit of the Ulster County Sheriff’s Office received
intelligence about possible methamphetamine production in
Woodstock.
Michael Baron and Ashley Roefs, both 19, were arrested at
the scene and charged with a number of drug-related offenses.
A State Police Mobile Response Team outfitted with hazardous
material protective gear executed a search warrant and after
police searched the residence for evidence, they confiscated
cocaine, marijuana, a “recipe” for methamphetamine
production and instructions, several items, chemicals and
apparatus used to manufacture the drug, a scale, “bongs,”
drug packaging material and drug records.
Meth abuse continues to fuel an increase in crimes like robbery
and assault, straining the workload of local police forces
despite a drop in the number of meth lab seizures, according
to a survey Tuesday.
About half the counties in the nation have reported that one
in five inmates are jailed because of meth-related crimes
like robberies and burglaries. County law enforcement officials
consider methamphetamine their primary drug problem, more
than cocaine, marijuana and heroin combined, the survey of
the National Association of Counties found.
Last month, the White House drug-policy office set a goal
to cut meth use by 15 percent over the next three years and
increase seizures of meth labs by 25 percent.
Cheney’s Secrets?
The Bush administration asked an appeals court recently to
overrule a federal judge and allow the White House to keep
secret any records of visitors to Vice President Cheney’s
residence and office. To make the visitor records public would
be an “unprecedented intrusion into the daily operations
of the vice presidency,” the Justice Department argued
in a 57-page brief to the U.S. Court of Appeals in the District
of Columbia.
The government was responding to an October order, by U.S.
District Judge Ricardo M. Urbina, to release two years of
White House visitor logs to The Washington Post. The newspaper,
researching the access lobbyists and others had on the White
House, sought Secret Service records for anyone visiting Cheney,
his legal counsel, chief spokesman and other top aides and
advisers.
In his ruling, Urbina questioned the government’s primary
argument against releasing the records - that the logs are
protected by Cheney’s right to executive privilege.
The government’s response was twofold, focusing largely
on the ownership of the records. Attorneys for the Justice
Department called Urbina’s decision “flatly inconsistent”
with his ruling’s acknowledgment that the Secret Service
had only limited and temporary control over the visitor logs.
Since the records are ultimately controlled by the vice president’s
office, the Secret Service is not authorized to release them,
the government said. Moreover, Congress has excluded presidential
and vice presidential records from the public’s reach
- making the visitor logs untouchable, the government said.
A lawsuit over similar records revealed in September that
Republican activists Grover Norquist and Ralph Reed - key
figures in the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal - landed more
than 100 meetings inside the Bush White House.
In similar territory, Middle East analyst Flynt Leverett,
who served under President Bush on the National Security Council
and is now a fellow at the New America Foundation, revealed
recently that the White House has been blocking the publication
of an op-ed he wrote for the New York Times. The column is
critical of the administration’s refusal to engage Iran.
Leverett’s op-ed has already been cleared by the CIA,
where he was a senior analyst. Leverett explained, “I’ve
been doing this for three and a half years since leaving government,
and I’ve never had to go to the White House to get clearance
for something that I was publishing as long as the CIA said,
‘Yeah, you’re not putting classified information.’”
According to Leverett the op-ed was “all based on stuff
that Secretary Powell, Secretary Rice, Deputy Secretary Armitage
have talked about publicly. It’s been extensively reported
in the media.” Leverett says the incident shows “just
how low people like Elliot Abrams at the NSC [National Security
Council] will stoop to try and limit the dissemination of
arguments critical of the administration’s policy.”
Got A Passport?
New travelers’ requirements being imposed by the U.S.
Department Homeland Security are set to take effect at the
end of January, later than originally planned but still a
shock to many used to quick jaunts to Canada or Mexico, which
previously did not need passports for re-entry into the U.S.
New adult passports cost $97 apiece, while passports for individuals
under the age of 16 cost $82. Generally, it takes about six
weeks to receive a passport in the mail. However, if applicants
need to speed up the process, they can pay an additional $60
fee and provide an overnight return envelope to get their
passport in about two weeks.
Beginning January 23, anyone, including U.S. citizens, traveling
by air between the United States and Canada, Mexico, Central
America, South America, the Caribbean and Bermuda will be
required to present a valid passport, Air NEXUS card or U.S.
Coast Guard Merchant Mariner document, according to the Department
of Homeland Security.
And as early as Jan. 1, 2008, a valid passport or other document
determined by Homeland Security will be required for all such
travel by land, sea or air.
According to the U.S. Department of State’s Web site,
the goal of the new rule -called the Western Hemisphere Travel
Initiative - is to strengthen border security and facilitate
entry into the United States for citizens and legitimate foreign
visitors by providing “standardized, secure and reliable
documentation.” That documentation will allow the Department
of Homeland Security to quickly, reliably and accurately identify
a traveler, according to the Web site.
Individuals applying for a passport for the first time must
do so in person. During that process, they must provide valid
identification, usually a driver’s license, in addition
to proof of citizenship. In the case of a minor applying for
a passport, parents must provide identification. A child under
the age of 14 needs both parents to sign for their passport.
She said in the case where one parent is deceased, a death
certificate needs to be provided. In cases where a couple
is separated or divorced, proof has to be provided that the
parent signing for the passport has sole custody
Meanwhile, a new report from the travel industry charges that
the U.S. government isn’t doing enough to prevent the
nation from losing ground as a top international tourism destination,
travel industry leaders. Potential foreign visitors are turned
off by “what is widely perceived as a complicated and
confused visa” process, triggered by post-9/11 security
rules.
Acknowledging its poor image among foreigners, Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice and Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff announced last January a joint initiative that, among
other things, sought to reduce visa hassles. But the initiative
hasn’t produced adequate results, says the new report
from the World Travel & Tourism Council.
“Everyone celebrated that two secretaries were coming
together to solve the problem,” says Vince Wolfington,
an American who chairs the London-based WTTC.
“The follow-up, for all practical purposes, has really
been non-existent,” he says.
Alluding to the departments’ so-called Open Doors initiative,
Wolfington said, “We have half-open doors.”
The State Department said it could not immediately comment,
and a call to Homeland Security was not returned.
In the past five years, global international travel has increased
by 17%. Over the period, the United States saw a 4% decline
in visits from international travelers.
Foreigners who come here tend to spend twice as much money
as domestic tourists, and they tend to return to their countries
with a more favorable image of the USA.
“Right now, we live in an environment where members
of Congress are not convinced they want more travelers in
this country,” says Geoff Freeman, the group’s
executive director.
Detailed information about passports and applying for them
can be found online at http://travel.state.gov. The application
for passports also can be downloaded from that site.
New Directors
Roberto Rodriguez will take over as Ulster County commissioner
of social services on Jan. 8. In the position he will succeed
Barbara Sorkin, acting commissioner since the spring, and
oversee a $100 million annual budget and 325 employees, will
earn an $89,614 annual salary. The Ulster County Department
of Social Services (DSS) is the county’s most costly
department.
The vote to appoint Rodriguez was 22-9. Some of those who
opposed his selection said they were concerned because Rodriguez
lives in Cornwall, Orange County. He said he will move to
Ulster County before assuming his post.
Where he lives is important because the commissioner of social
services is legally responsible for foster children, for whom
DSS serves as legal guardians. The commissioner needs to be
available 24 hours a day to sign documents related to their
care. There are about 185 children in foster care under custody
of DSS.
For the last two years, Rodriguez, 59, was managing partner
for a real estate and e-commerce start-up company. Prior to
that, from 2002-2004, he was president and chief executive
officer of New York United Hospital Medical Center in Port
Chester, a facility with 600 employees and a $60 million annual
operating budget. From 1998 to 2001, Rodriguez was executive
director and CEO of the Los Angeles County/University of Southern
California (LAC+USC) Healthcare Network. LAC+USC had a $740
million annual operations budget and more than 7,000 employees.
While there, the network won the Foster-McGraw American Hospital
Association prize for excellence in community services. Rodriguez
also served for four years as the executive director and CEO
of the Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center in the Bronx
and as the vice president for budget and finance and chief
financial officer for SUNY-Old Westbury.
A Vietnam War veteran, Rodriguez served in the U.S. Army and
was a recipient of the Bronze Star. He is married with two
children.
Meanwhile, registered nurse Anne L. Cardinale of Kingston
has been appointed as Ulster County’s Office for the
Aging Director, replacing outgoing Office for the Aging Director
Kathryn M. Puglisi on January 8, 2007. Cardinale, 59, has
been a Senior Care Specialist for Benedictine Hospital since
July, 2001. In that position, she was responsible for the
coordination of senior care services, inclusive of acute care,
long-term care and community outreach programs. She founded
the popular BeneCare Program while at Benedictine, which provides
wellness courses for seniors throughout Ulster County. Cardinale’s
other positions at Benedictine Hospital were as the Care Coordinator
for the Care Coordination Department and a staff nurse for
the Emergency Department. She began at Benedictine in February,
1996. Cardinale worked as a nurse manager from 1986-1996 at
the Ulster County Residential Health Care Facility, a 40-bed
skilled nursing unit in Kingston. She was responsible for
the supervision of a professional and auxiliary staff of 30
registered nurses, LPNs and nurses aides. Cardinale is currently
president of the New York State Nurses Association - District
11. She is also active in United Way, is a member of the Ulster
County Program Advisory Council – Alzheimer’s
Association and is a member of the Ulster County Memory Walk
planning committee for Alzheimer’s.
Cardinale’s annual salary is $64,228. She resides in
Kingston with her husband Frank, who is well known in the
community as the longtime manager for the Kingston Legion
baseball team.
Blind Money…
The Bush administration has also asked an appeals court to
overturn a ruling that would require a redesign of the nation’s
currency to help the blind. The appeal seeks to overturn a
ruling last month by U.S. District Judge James Robertson who
ordered Treasury to come up with ways for the blind to tell
the difference between different denominations of paper currency.
Robertson had ruled in a lawsuit brought by the American Council
of the Blind. The Council proposed several options for changes
- from printing different size bills to changing the texture
by adding embossed dots or foil. In his ruling, the judge
said that of 180 countries issuing paper currency, only the
United States prints bills that are identical in size and
color in all their denominations. He said the current practice
violates the Rehabilitation Act, a law that prohibits discrimination
on the basis of disability in government programs.
In the government’s appeal, Justice Department lawyers
argued that visually impaired people are not denied “meaningful
access” to money by the way the nation’s currency
is designed. They noted the existence of portable reading
devices that the blind can use to determine the denomination
of paper money. The government said the blind can also make
use of credit cards rather than currency.
No More Leaks
Federal prosecutors are trying to force the American Civil
Liberties Union to turn over copies of a classified document
it received from a source, using what legal experts called
a new extension of the Bush administration’s efforts
to protect national-security secrets. The novelty in the government’s
approach is in its broad use of a grand jury subpoena, which
is typically a way to gather evidence, rather than to confiscate
all traces of it. But the subpoena issued to the ACLU seeks
“any and all copies” of a document e-mailed to
it unsolicited in October, indicating that the government
also wants to prevent further dissemination of the information
in the document.
The subpoena was revealed in court papers unsealed in federal
court in Manhattan recent;y. The subject of the grand jury’s
investigation is not known, but the ACLU said that it had
been told it was not a target of the investigation.
The subpoena, however, raised the possibility that the government
had found a new tool to stop the dissemination of secrets,
one that could avoid the all but absolute constitutional prohibition
on prior restraints on publication.
The disputed document, according to the ACLU, is three-and-a-half
pages long and unremarkable, and its disclosure would be only
mildly embarrassing to the government. It added that the document
“has nothing to do with national defense.”
The ACLU said the subpoena was an effort to chill speech about
the Bush administration. “The government is involved
in a very conscious effort to suppress its critics,”
said Anthony D. Romero, the ACLU’s executive director.
Lauren McDonough, a spokeswoman for Michael J. Garcia, the
United States attorney in Manhattan, declined to comment beyond
acknowledging the ACLU’s filing.
In the past, the government has fired and prosecuted government
officials who provided classified information to people not
authorized to have it. It has also tried to force reporters
and others to identify the government officials who leaked
to them.
The judge will rule on the motion to quash shortly. The Espionage
Act makes it a crime for people who have unauthorized possession
of some kinds of national security information to receive,
retain, disseminate or refuse to turn it over to the government
when asked. But ACLU lawyers say the document does not meet
the statute’s definition and that, in any event, a subpoena
is an improper way to enforce the law.
In its filing, the ACLU also argues that the government is
misusing the grand jury that issued the subpoena.
Pine Hill Radio
Will the Internet rescue radio? With corporadoes like Rupert
Murdoch controlling most of commercial radio and TV, and even
public stations being snapped up by such conglomerates as
Clear Channel, the airwaves have grown increasingly slick
and homogenized. But grassroots media keep rooting out their
own avenues of expression, such as public access cable TV.
Now the Internet is offering a venue for community radio,
and the little hamlet of Pine Hill has accepted the offer,
creating Catskill Community Radio, accessible through www.catskillradio.org
on your computer.
The Pine Hill Community Center (PHCC), in the western reaches
of Shandaken, has been organizing events from crafts workshops
to concerts to a summer farmer’s market since its creation
in 1999 in an attempt to help build community in a town of
sparse population, distant from major cultural attractions.
Among its target audience are local teens, who have famously
“nothing to do”, a situation seen as a breeding
ground for trouble.
PHCC director James Krueger discovered one day that he had
in common with Susan Penick, who teaches archery at PHCC,
an affection for radio. Together, Krueger and Penick envisioned
a radio station that would be open to anyone in the community
who has something to say or music to play, while the combination
of technology and music would appeal to teens looking for
an outlet. They were joined by Julie Greenwood, a computer
programmer who used to have a weekly show, “Soup of
the Evening” on WKZE. She also helped the Zen Mountain
Monastery in Mt. Tremper set up their Internet station, WZEN,
and has had a show on the Vassar College station, WVKR, since
1997. PHCC received a grant from Kids in the Kaatskills for
the teen project and an anonymous grant from a local foundation
for equipment.
Launched on the web about six months ago, the station is gradually
building up a schedule that includes former Shandaken town
supervisor Peter DiModica’s twice-weekly show of esoteric
music; an Irish music show DJ’d by Jack Mansberg, an
elder who lives in Phoenicia; a heavy metal show put together
by the teens; interviews conducted by musician Elly Wininger;
folk music DJ’d by Krueger; and Penick’s show,
which she hesitantly calls “adult contemporary”
or “pop”, featuring music from Tom Waits to Motown.
In between shows, music runs without commentary from a playlist,
so the station is running 24 hours a day, but the goal is
to fill up the schedule, and anyone is welcome to take a stab
at recording their own show with the help of the PHCC staff.
The station is working with Live365 software, which can be
downloaded for free to facilitate listening. The schedule
still has a lot of holes, so shows are repeated over the course
of two or three weeks before being replaced. But new projects
are underway, such as Wininger’s plan to work with the
teens on a show with commentary and interviews on topics they
choose, beginning in January.
Anyone interested in proposing their own radio show may contact
the community center at info@pinehillcommunitycenter.org or
(845) 254-5469. On Tuesday, April 25, a workshop on hosting
radio shows will be held at the community center for people
who want to take a look at the basics before deciding to take
the plunge. The station also welcomes further financial sponsorship.
To tune in... First, you have to get on the Internet. Go to
www.catskillradio.org, where you can look at schedules and
announcements or click either of two “Listen”
buttons to hear the broadcast. If you have never listened
before, you will probably get a dialog box offering a download
of Live365 software, or you may choose Windows Media Player
with a Live365 skin, or other software of your choice already
resident on your hard drive. Another box will ask the speed
of your modem. Once loaded, Live365 will pop up and start
playing the stream.
“If you have dial-up,” cautions Julie Greenwood,
“you might want to listen without any other software
running,” to improve download time and minimize stops
and starts while listening. Those with broadband hookups should
have no difficulty with listening.