Dear Editor,
Thank you to all who made this year's Harvest Table Fair and
Book Sale at the Olive Free Library a success!
Generous donations from local businesses of raffle items, luncheon
supplies and harvest and baked goods added so much to the success
of the fair. I would
like to thank the Boiceville Market, Bread Alone Bakery, Boiceville
Pharmacy, SEW Inc, Pine View Bakery, Boiceville Liquors, the
Crackerbarrel, Hong Kong Restaraunt, Boiceville Florist, Hanover
Farms and Adam's Fairacre Farms. Our many "friends of the
Library" who donated delicious homemade pies and baked
goods, preserves and syrup, plants and locally grown produce
make the fair so special and successful. All who enjoyed the
Book Sale and Soup Luncheon know what a great community event
this is...Thanks to all of you, the proceeds this year are over
$700.
A special thanks to everyone who helped organize and sell books,
lunch, and harvest items...our volunteers make it happen!
Sincerely,
Anne-Marie Johansson
Trustee Olive Free Library
Dear Editor,
The Press of October 27, 2005 included among the "letters",
one from Barbara Ellis of Boiceville which caused me to wish
I was a Republican [if only for the time it took to read her
"woe is us" lamentation].
Ms. Ellis wonders continuously through her letter, "where
are our Democrat leaders?"; "where are the Democrat
voices in the midst of the most partisan, sleazy, dishonest,
profiteering White House in memory?". She continues, "where
are the Democrat Leadership's and the party's opposition to
Bush's day by day threatening of our national security, the
shredding of the Bill of Rights, our civil liberties and the
Constitution?"
Ms. Ellis takes to task "our leaders" [of the Democrat
Party] for enabling and facilitating this president's disastrous
policies and political ideology; for losing it's voice and for
other acts of omission in performing it's purpose for existing.
Her use of the "where", "when", "what",
and "why" is certainly repetitive with the "who"
being the focal point. However, her advice in "how"
to remedy the sad state of Democrat affairs escaped me.
"When will the Democrat(ic) Leadership muster the passion
to turn themselves into the worthy, formidable and unstoppable
force such as their Republican adversaries are?" That's
it right there! Were I a Republican my heart would sing a political
song of thanksgiving for this letter, it's author and for it's
appearance just a week or so prior to election day. Ms. Ellis,
you don't realize how many Democrats and "fence sitters"
you may have turned off to Democrat candidates on November 8th.
And poor, dear Barbara Ellis; you are still smarting over the
2000 and 2004 elections. Want a winner in 2008? Get a candidate
who can win. Nominate someone who is consistent and doesn't
have to explain their position either political or personal
every other day. When you're explaining, you're losing.
Now for Ashley Rachel Craig of Sedona, Arizona and her campaign
against nominating a friend or associate to the Supreme Court.
How many weddings have you attended, Ms. Craig where the Maid
of Honor and the Bride did not know each other? Likewise the
Groom and Best Man? What CEO promotes a person from some obscure
nook or cranny in the organization? Who do we select as Godmother/Godfather
for our child's Christening or Confirmation? That's correct.
It's someone whom we know quite well.
You suggest we insist on a nominee who isn't closely tied with
any one politician. Well, we would have to go to Rwanda for
just such a choice and I'm not sure about your wisdom in that.
"Contact your local representatives before it's too late",
you advise. That's not how the Constitution directs the procedure
and you want us to consult our reps? They are called on at the
proper time for their advice and consent and for your edification
Harriet Miers would not be the first Supreme Court Justice with
no prior time on a bench or Constitutional law experience.
Where was everyone and their opinion when Lyndon Johnson nominated
Abe Fortes [who wore each other's clothes]? Fortes got "Borked",
not because of their friendship but because Fortes was... well,
he was Abe Fortes.
We are going to have nominees for the court(s) that reflect
their appointing officer's social and political philosophy.
Of that you may be sure, but more importantly our courts will
continue to make the right decisions in spite of the malcontents
and whiners.
Six days from today we will be voting and the next day we will
be complaining. When you call 1-800-CRYBABY next Wednesday my
first question will be, "did you vote"? No? Get off
my phone!
Glenn T. Anderson
Olivebridge, NY
Dear Editor, This war seems more and more based on lies, less
and less about defending America and spreading democracy, more
and more about making fortunes for the fortunate and controlling
the oil supply. Many have been killed and maimed. We continue
to use depleted uranium (U238) weapons which the UN has declared
a crime against humanity and which violates the Nuremburg Principles
1945, the Charter of the United Nations and the Anti-Genocide
Conventions 1948, contaminating the people of Iraq with radioactivity
and our own troops. This war is coming home. What do our local
candidates for political office think of this ugly war, of these
weapons? What do they think of military recruiters in our local
schools week after week, playing war games with our children,
giving them gifts and promises of college to recruit them to
carry out this brutal regimen endangering their lives, their
psychological and spiritual health, risking serious injury and
radioactive contamination? What do these candidates think of
the economic costs of this war and the diminished federal contribution
to public services and the necessary increase in local taxes
to maintain basic services and education? The cost of this war
to our children is enormous. How can we protect them? The only
political parties who oppose this war and are calling for the
withdrawal of troops are the Green Party and the Working Families
Party. The Green Party has good positive ideas but little chance
of electing candidates. The Working Families Party cross endorses
progressive candidates usually in the Democratic Party but occasionally
in the Republican Party who support the needs of working class,
middle class and poor people primarily in the areas of jobs,
health care, housing and education. It is important for our
government to support these needs because we are becoming a
third world nation of rich and poor and with so much money in
politics, controlling candidates, media and policy that we are
losing our democracy. These are the important reasons I will
vote on the WORKING FAMILIES line where their candidates also
are good on local issues and hope you will too. For additional
information : www.workingfamiliesparty.org Elaine Hencke, Enlist
for Peace Woodstock, NY
Dear Editor, Temporarily at least, New York State no longer
has an effective death penalty law due to a court ruling objecting
to certain technicalities in the law and the refusal so far
of the State Assembly to reinstate capital punishment. An important
meeting will be held in Kingston Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. to “End
the Death Penalty for Good,” featuring Assembly Democratic
representative Kevin Cahill, an opponent of the death penalty,
retired New York State prison warden Stephen Dalsheim, and Sing-Sing
chaplain Rev. Petero Sabume. The free public event will take
place at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Catskills,
320 Sawkill Rd. It is sponsored by Mid-Hudson New Yorkers Against
the Death Penalty, the UUCC1s Social Action Committee, and the
Hudson Valley Activist Newsletter. Directions from the Kingston
Thruway traffic circle: Emerge from the circle at the Washington
Ave. exit and get in the left lane. Turn left at the first traffic
light on Sawkill Rd. It1s about a mile or so from there, on
the right. Information, jacdon@earthlink.net. Jack A. Smith
New Paltz, NY
Dear Editor, The safety concerns surrounding the intersections
of Wittenberg Rd., Old Rt. 28 and State Rt. 212 in Mt. Tremper
have been present for over twenty five years that I am aware
of. Former Chief Constable and Town Supervisor Jack Schlegel
and Former Town Supervisor and U.C. Legislator Marion Umhey
have been drawing attention to the dangerous potential of the
intersection’s confusing design and nature for years.
Until recently, the recommendations of these long time Mt. Tremper
residents have gone unheeded by the State and others responsible
for maintenance of the intersection. The reason always given
was that the lack of any serious accidents occurring was demonstrative
that no problem existed. Well, how many of you have ever made
the statement following a tragedy “Why do they always
wait for someone to die before they do something?” There
is no denying the fact that many more people are now visiting
our local communities from out of town, and their unfamiliarity
with this intersection is evident by anyone who chooses to watch
for a while. What also becomes readily apparent is the almost
contemptuous disregard for the existing stop signs by a surprising
number of drivers, not all of whom are strangers to the area.
I find it interesting is that every area resident that I have
spoken to readily admits that there is in fact an inherent problem
with the current design and all have stories to tell about close
calls experienced while negotiating this hazard. While it might
be true that there is some skepticism about the effectiveness
of a roundabout, there is complete consensus on the fact that
a problem exists. It is a rare occurrence for the NYSDOT to
actually propose fixing a traffic problem before a serious crash
occurs. The NYSDOT engineers have worked cooperatively with
Ulster County engineers and the U.C. Traffic Safety Board in
evaluating the problems and designing a solution that most effectively
addresses a unique and complicated situation. A particular concern
of the engineers and the Traffic Safety Board is an acceptable
incorporation of the intersection of Wittenberg Rd. and Rt.
212 into the roundabout design. I personally believe that what
is being proposed will significantly reduce the likelihood of
a serious crash at this intersection. I also believe that when
complete, the roundabout will be an aesthetic enhancement to
our community. Something with both character and functionality
that will be a pleasant replacement for the unattractive and
dangerous “hole” that currently exists. George Wood
Mt. Tremper, NY Dear Editor, We were eastbound on 212 into Woodstock
yesterday (Oct. 26) about 2:30 p m when we were stopped by an
accident. A motorcyclist lay stretched full length from the
south side of the road to the middle at a point east of the
golf course, where a small woods road T's with 212. He was plainly
dead. His cycle was nearby. He appeared to have been hit moments
before by a County Waste garbage truck that was pulled into
the woods road. A man from the truck was putting out flares
to stop traffic from hitting the body.
What bothers me especially about this story is that I seem to
recall that a County Waste truck had hit and killed a motorcyclist
just a week or ten days ago. If they haven't done so, the cops
should have said something about this. Ann Crawford Woodstock,
NY Dear Editor,
Have we really learned anything over the past four years about
emergency preparedness, response and recovery? Preparedness
means doing things before an event occurs, not after. Good planning
means making decisions before an event so that execution of
the plan is immediate and without hesitation. Response means
doing something now, not later!
The real disaster of Wilma is NOT the broken windows, damaged
roofs, uprooted and damaged trees, power lines or poles that
were knocked down with the resulting loss of power.
The real disaster for Floridians is telling people what “government
is going to do, after the storm.” When the president came
to Florida more than 96 hours after the winds were out into
the Atlantic, he told people what government would be doing
and what the state would provide. “”Things don’t
happen instantly. But things are happening”, Bush said.
Well, they should happen within hours of a storm, not days.
Fires are fought within minutes, not hours.
FEMA, the Florida governor, the state emergency manager and
local officials reported that they were the gold standard for
preparedness and that they were ready for anything. They stated
that assets were pre-positioned and at the ready. Three hundred
truckloads of water, ice and meals were supposedly at Homestead
Air Force Base and the Jacksonville Naval Air Station in Jacksonville,
but what does all this pre-positioning really mean?
Where was the fuel pre-positioned so that it could begin to
be delivered Monday afternoon after the storm was over and not
on Thursday? What about the food, ice, and water that was in
pre-positioned trucks around the country? How long does it take
them to get to the affected area? The trucks were loaded. Some
ran out of fuel. Some distribution centers could not unload
because they didn’t have forklifts.
Other tragedies were people living in high-rise buildings without
power. Elevators depend on power, which depends upon running
water to feed their cooling system. Driving through intersections
without traffic signals is like playing Russian roulette. Lack
of phone service meant no 911 services for emergencies. If it
was not a life-threatening emergency, you could not expect help
from first responders.
This is not about preparedness or planning. This is not about
being patient. This is about frustration. This is about using
common sense and abandoning bureaucracy and focusing on thinking
ahead, anticipating worst case scenarios and getting things
done in a responsive and timely manner
Governor Bush admitted that the emergency relief effort “didn’t
work as it should”. He visited the Martin County Emergency
Operations Center promising more water and ice but warning of
a nationwide shortage of meals-ready-to-eat. So why are hundreds
of grocery stores throwing out perishable food worth hundreds
of thousands of dollars, instead of packing ice or getting diesel-powered
refrigerated trailers or generators to keep their freezers going?
Why is the cost of throwing food away, while hundreds go hungry,
cheaper, more economical or a better solution than having a
“keep cold and ready for sale solution”.
Even if these suggestions are not the best, the real point is
that bureaucracy and the lack of creative planning, effective
training and proper decision-making are the real tragedies and
disasters of a major storm. Terrorists will not be as kind as
Mother Nature. They don’t give us days of warning.
This was a natural disaster. Add to it panic if it had been
terrorism and without warning or preparedness time. Would the
situation be significantly worse?
At the end of the day when disaster strikes, we learn how unprepared
we are and then everyone starts blaming somebody or everybody.
Days later we tell people to be patient. Things start happening
in direct proportion to the number and location that politicians
start touring. Ultimately, life returns to a “new normal”;
politicians find the money that they would not think about approving
before the disaster and everyone goes back to sleep until the
next one. Unfortunately everyone has a short memory.
Your family’s safety is your responsibility. You need
to be your own first responder! You must prepare and plan your
own Safety MAP™, and let government do what they do best
in a disaster or emergency, whatever that is.
Norris L. Beren, Exec. Director Emergency Preparedness
Educational Institute.
Dear Editor, When President Bush nominated Judge Samuel Alito
to replace retiring moderate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor on
the Supreme Court, he demonstrated how beholden he is to the
right wing of his party. Rather than President Bush leading,
and seeking a consensus nominee which could unite the country,
Bush's interest was in meeting the demands of the far right
wing base of his party. The nomination of Judge Alito is profoundly
disappointing for so many reasons, not the least of which is
that his confirmation would radically transform the Supreme
Court and create a direct threat to the health and safety of
American women. There is a record of decisions which show Judge
Alito to be insensitive to women's health needs. One example,
that Planned Parenthood is familiar with, was in Planned Parenthood
of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, Alito stood alone and
voted to uphold Pennsylvania's spousal notification requirement.
In callous disregard of battered women who would be negatively
affected by the statute, Alito wrote separately from the majority,
to express his support a statute that would have required Pennsylvania
women to notify their husbands prior to obtaining an abortion.
The Supreme Court later ruled the spousal notification provision
was unconstitutional, stating, "Women do not lose their
constitutionally protected liberty when they marry." Samuel
Alito is an ideologue who does not support the right to choose
and the right to privacy. Only one vote stands between us and
the loss of many of the central protections guaranteed by Roe
v. Wade. This is a battle for our health and safety - and it
is a battle we cannot afford to lose. The US Senate will confirm
or reject this nominee. It is imperative for people to let their
Senators know how important it is to keep the Supreme Court
balanced. The Court must be a place for justice, not political
agendas. Willa Freiband Planned Parenthood Poughkeepsie, NY
Dear Editor, All political candidates for all town and county
offices, regardless of party, have the opportunity to do something
wonderful for all of us, whether they win or lose. They can
remove their signs on election eve when the polls close. It
would give them and their supporters something positive to do
before the vote tallies arrive at their headquarters, and give
the rest of us something to cheer about. Jay Wenk Woodstock,
NY
Dear Editor, Believe it or not rabbits in the U.S. have been
styled "chickens" in order to avoid coming under an
anticruelty act! Apparently chickens are considered not to be
animals and therefore methods of barbaric slaughter can legitimately
be carried out with impunity. Now rabbits have been included
by some devious means to mean non-animal. The United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA) love changing the meaning of
commonly understood words - they even declared that ketchup
was a vegetable. All this, in order to avoid the federal Humane
Slaughter Act which is the law requiring animals to be rendered
unconscious before they are butchered.`` This has resulted in
rabbits having their throats cut whilst conscious and struggling,
and others having their necks broken or struck on the head with
a piece of wood. Some are hung up on a meat hook by their leg
and their heads are then sawn off. Workers have numerous bites
and scratch marks as a result, whilst the animals shriek with
pain. Why don't you protest by contacting the USDA? They can
be contacted by snail mail: Mike Johanns, secretary of agriculture,
Room 200-A, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1400 Independence
Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C., 20250; or by calling (202) 720-3631,
Fax (202) 720-2166 or on the net: www.hfa.org. Shelli Lipton
Saugerties, NY
Dear Editor, A hero of mine died the other day! Rosa Parks -
public figures all over the world have been praising and honoring
her for her courage 55 years ago, when she refused to obey an
unjust law. And now Rosa's body lies in honor in the Capitol
Rotunda "so that the citizens of the United States may
pay their last respects to this great American." By her
single act of disobedience, she ignited the Civil Rights movement
all over the nation. She has been an inspiration to me and others
committed to peace and social justice! I can't but wonder what
our local arbiter of good character (George H.) thinks of her
act? Joan Keefe Saugerties, NY
Dear Editor,
Contrary to statements made in the October 27, ’05 issue
of the Olive Press, ostensibly by its editor, speaking about
the two men running for Olive’s Town Justice, Olive Matters,
is not a political entity. Our group does not back political
parties or their candidates. Individual members are free to
support any candidates of their choice but only in their own
names.
Olive Matters is a collection of people in the Olive community
with diverse backgrounds who are solely committed to working
for the benefit of all the people of Olive regardless of their
political affiliations. Members of our group were originally
formed by Olive’s Supervisor to research and combat the
Large Parcel Law and our members continue to carry out that
intention.
Henrietta Wise, OM member
Olivebridge, NY
Editor’s Note: Our apologies for the mistake.