(News
Briefs April 13, 2006)
Traffic Signal
Will Route 28 be getting its first traffic lights between
the Woodstock turn-off and Delhi in the near future?
At a recent Onteora School Board meeting, district Business
Administrator Victoria McLaren reported that she had spoken
with Ulster County transportation investigator Mark Remano
regarding a possible traffic light in the front of the Middle/High
School after the issue came up several times in the last year.
“He said we need to have a traffic study done, at the
cost of five to eight thousand dollars and it would be at
the districts expense,” said McLaren. “He did
not think we would qualify for a traffic light, but if we
did we would be responsible to pay for the installation of
the traffic light which would be about 80 to 100 thousand
dollars and we would be responsible for future upkeep and
maintenance.”
McLaren thanked assemblyman Kevin Cahill for a quick response
to the school board’s request regarding the matter.
All Olive Art!
Artists of all ages living in the five hamlets that form the
Town of Olive, including Shokan, West Shokan, Boiceville,
Samsonville, and Olivebridge, are being sought by the Olive
Center for the Arts in their current planning of an exhibition
of visual artwork created by artists living in the Town of
Olive that’s being supported by a Decentralization grant
from the New York State Council for the Arts as administered
locally by the Dutchess County Council for the Arts. The Center
is looking for work in all media, and both professional and
amateur artists can apply. There are no age restrictions excepting
parental consent for minors. The exhibition will be held at
the Olive Free Library and is scheduled to run from August
15 to September 30, 2006. Space is limited making it
necessary for the exhibition be juried. Jurors will be professional
artists from the Town of Olive and all decisions will be final.
The purpose of the exhibition, according to the Center, is
to provide a venue for Town of Olive Artists to present their
work to the public, and “to show the diversity and wide
ranging talents of the artists in the town.
For further information, contact Pamela Morgan, program director
at 657-6721 or pjmonroe@hvc.rr.com, Stanley Moskowitz, artistic
director at 657-8974 or moskdesign@netstep.net, or Ruth Ann
Muller, Library Director at 657-2422 or olivefreelibrary@hvc.rr.com.
CWC Gets Heavy
The Catskill Watershed Corporation (CWC) recently resolved
to apply to the Ulster and Sullivan county legislatures for
contributions towards the funding of CWC’s Tax Consulting
Program... which is applied towards the costs associated with
New York City’s litigation against the assessments of
its upstate reservoir properties.
“Since they (the counties) have enacted it (the Alternative
Valuation Method or “Large Parcel Law” under sections
of the real property tax law), they need to help us foot the
bill,” said CWC president Alan Rosa. “We’re
running out of money. We can’t continue to fight the
City and, if the counties are going to use the large parcel
issue to take (a share of the tax revenue New York pays on
the properties), they need to step up to the plate here big
time.”
The CWC Tax Consulting Program, which provides funds for attorneys
and the professional consultants needed to fight the City’s
litigation, was established as part of the 1997 Watershed
Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) contract between New York and
thirty-nine “West of Hudson” (WOH) towns and villages
located in the NYC watershed. It approved $500,000 toward
an Ashokan Reservoir assessment suit case in 1999 and another
half million in 2004. In January of this year, it approved
$100,000 for the Town of Neversink’s defense of the
assessment of the City’s Neversink Reservoir in Sullivan
County.
“This year, Ulster County will receive $1,954,000 just
from the Town of Olive alone for county taxes,” observed
Rosa, who is asking the counties to cover half of the defense
costs. “The City has, of course, challenged their assessment
on those properties and, if the City is successful in dropping
their evaluation, the county will only receive $458,000. So,
that’s a drop of a ‘million-five.’ This
is big money. This is a big deal.”
Bridge Repairs
A letter from the DEP Deputy Commissioner Michael Principe
in mid-February responded to Olive Town Clerk Sylvia Rozzelle’s
inquiry about the status of repairs on New York City-owned
roads and bridges around the Ashokan Reservoir. Referring
to delayed construction which was due to commence in 2005,
Dr. Principe said that the DEP continues to believe that the
bridges are safe.
”All of the Ashokan Bridges have been inspected by DOT
since 2004, and none of the bridges currently have any safety
‘flags’ or restrictions,” Principe wrote.
But he did add that “A recent inspection by DEP revealed
that the Reservoir Road railroad bridge is in need of temporary
shoring to stabilize the structure until the full repair can
begin. DEP will install the necessary shoring shortly.”
Rozzelle, who recalls that repairs were to begin years before
a June 2004
meeting with Olive Supervisor Brendt Leifeld, wherein Principe
set the 2005 date, wonders about the viability of the next
target date set in Principe’s letter for “repair
or full replacement” of the ten City-owned bridges around
the Ashokan.
”We now expect to put a construction contract for seven
of the bridges out
for bid in 2006, and begin work in 2007,” Principe wrote.
However, DEP’s representative in Shokan, Michael Kight,
sees a closer kick-off for the project.
”We’re really not sure on the scheduling yet.
We’ve got purchase orders in the works but we haven’t
got them back and approved yet. So, we’re waiting
on that at this time,” Kight said on Monday.
Kight said that he still has to coordinate the projects with
the Ulster
County DPW.
”As soon as I get word from them and then get the quotes
submitted, I’ll
have a better idea of what the time frame’s going to
be,” Kight said, acknowledging that no firm solution
has been resolved as to how the dividing weir bridge might
be repaired without closing it down. His uncertainty suggests
that the DEP promise to keep one lane open during the work
may not be practical.
Since construction of this kind always comes wrapped in red
tape, is there a chance that work will commence anytime this
year?
”Yes, as soon as possible,” he said, “We’re
trying to get the Dividing Weir
and the Boiceville Bridge repaired as soon as we can get everything
working. The county and the Town of Olive will be assisting
and all forces will join together to get it done as quickly
as possible. But we’re still waiting on that quote from
the county. There’ll be sufficient warning.”
How sufficient? Before Autumn? By late summer?
”Sooner,” Kight said. “May or June.”
Cutting Time…
Ulster County budget-cutting began this week within the legislature’s
Ways and Means Committee, with a goal of across-the-board
five percent drops in spending. Meetings are scheduled for
2 p.m. 17 and 19 in the County Office Building at 244 Fair
St. The first occurred on Monday. A special session of the
full Legislature is expected to be called before the end of
the month to act on the cuts.
County legislators in February began seeking ways to reduce
spending in response to a predicted deficit of $1.15 million,
although recent forecasts show a slightly smaller deficit,
of $1,068,219. County departments have been working under
a 2006 county budget of $300.25 million, up $7.12 million
from the 2005 budget but resulting in a 39 percent increase
in the property tax levy, the highest in the state.
New revenues being looked at by the county include a $4.2
million mortgage tax that buyers will pay, a $1 million mortgage
tax that sellers will pay and $900,000 from a vehicle tax
that would charge $5 per registration of private vehicle and
$10 for each commercial vehicle.
A cigarette tax is also under consideration, along with the
renewal of a two percent hotel/motel tax.
Boom Business
Gov. George Pataki came to Kingston in the past weeks to announce
a plan to bring a fledgling armored equipment manufacturer,
founded by a Stone Ridge resident, to the Kingston Business
Park, with the potential to create 570 jobs over five years.
Armor Dynamics Inc. simultaneously announced that it expects
to secure $100 million in contracts with the U.S. Department
of Defense and Department of Homeland Security for explosive-resistant
equipment over the coming year. The company plans to build
a 58,000-square foot manufacturing facility and announce a
projected opening date later this spring. The project is being
funded in part by a $522,800 grant from the state Office of
Science, Technology and Academic Research for the manufacturer
to work with a SUNY Geneseo researcher to “begin the
commercialization of the ballistic panels that provide new
protection for military personnel with about one-third the
weight of existing products.” Armor Dynamics, which
has six managing partners, will invest $20 million in the
project. The company has already developed products being
used in the field of combat.
Pataki said the project is part of an ongoing effort to create
employment opportunities in Ulster County, where previous
initiatives have come up short of expectations.
Recruiter Warning
Members of the Onteora community have started voicing increasing
concern over the ever-more frequent presence of military recruiters
in the High School.
“The No Child Left Behind requires the school to allow
the military recruiter on an ‘equal basis’ as
other college and employer recruiters, such as Onteora’s
April 5 College fair, but nothing requires more extensive
access to students,” said Woodstocker Jane Van de Bogart
at a recent meeting.
Several people recounted an incident where two students got
into a political discussion with a recruiter and the recruiter
remarked by calling them “retarded liberal hippies.”
The school board has been asked to institute a policy where
students would be provided with a safe, nurturing learning
environment. In response, the school board requested future
discussions before making a possible policy resolution. Board
President Dave Patterson said he would like to see the difference
between the recruiter’s frequency at the school as compared
to the specific policies of the No Child Left Behind Act and
reminded people of the “opt out” forms on the
schools web site. When parents fill out the form, recruiters
will not be allowed access to their child’s school records.
District Superintendent Justine Winters noted that in communications
with the district’s lawyer about the military’s
increasing frequency of requests to be on campus she was told
there is not much a school district can do, because of legislation.
The Army trumps home rule.
Trustee Rita Vanacore wanted to know how often colleges enter
the school and use it as guidelines for allowing the military
access. “Do they come here once a year? I know that
there is a time of when that happens.”
Trustee Marino D’Orazio requested that the board adopt
a policy.
“My wish is if we can limit the military to come only
during the designated fair, so that the fair is for all institutions
that want to recruit our students, like once in the fall semester
and once in the spring semester and that is it,” he
said. “And after that the doors are closed to them.”
Legal opinions about such a stance are currently being sought.
Jail Overrun…
The cost of Ulster County’s long-delayed Law Enforcement
Center has exceeded $100 million, well past its original budget
figure of $71.8 million. The final cost is now forecast to
reach $103 million because of higher-than-expected claims
against the county by several contractors who are working
on the facility. Work won’t be finished until sometime
this summer, over two years beyond schedule.
Some $16 million in costs will now need to be borrowed, it
has been determined, with bonding being worked out/ There
are also a growing number of lawsuits, by and against the
county, that have evolved from the controversial project,
which many have attribuited with the county legislature’s
shift from Republican to Democrat hands last November..
Ag Meeting…
The link between healthy forests and sustainable businesses
in the region is the key to a working landscape that provides
jobs and environmental benefits to local communities. To that
end, the Watershed Agricultural Council’s Forestry Program
has been working closely with local woodworkers and sawmills
to lay the ground work for a Catskill WoodNet. The group plans
to launch an interactive website in Summer ’06 –
www.catskillwoodnet.org – that will represent the high
quality craftsmanship and creativity of the Catskill Region’s
forest-based businesses. Moreover, they will be holding a
special regional meeting at Belleayre on Wednesday, April
19.
The goal is to encourage and support the local manufacturing
of forest products from the Catskill Mountains through improved
interaction among the region’s wood businesses. The
idea for the WoodNet came from similar organizations in Vermont
(www.vtwoodnet.org) and the Adirondacks (www.adirondackwood.com).
Those interested in becoming part of the Catskill WoodNet
are invited to attend an informational gathering on April
19 from 6 - 8 p.m. at The Longhouse Lodge at Belleayre Mountain
in Highmount, NY. The meeting will introduce the group to
the Catskill WoodNet and answer any questions about the future
website. The event is also a great opportunity to network
with other members of the local wood-using community. If you
wish to attend the upcoming meeting, please call Collin Miller
at WAC at (607) 865-7790 x112 or e-mail collinmiller@nycwatershed.org.
New Casino?
PKF Consulting of the New York Metro area is currently evaluating
a major casino resort project proposed for a site near Exit
112 of Route 17 near Mamakating in Sullivan County. The first
phase of the project would include 750 guest rooms, a casino
with approximately 3,500 slot machines and 150 table games,
numerous restaurants, lounges and shops, entertainment venues,
a large full-service spa and some 40,000 square feet of ballroom
and meeting space. The second phase of the project could add
another 750 guest rooms and another 10,000 square feet of
meeting space. Surveys are currently being requested. For
further information visit
www.pkfc.com/survey/Proposed_Catskills_Casino_Resort.htm.
Gas Spiking?
The price of gasoline could rise this summer because of supply
problems from the phaseout of a fuel additive found to contaminate
groundwater, government and industry officials have started
saying. The average retail price of gasoline in the United
States is $2.50 a gallon - the highest level since October
– but a growing number of analysts say $3 is a possibility
by summer.
The additive, methyl tertiary butyl ether, or MTBE, accounts
for about 10 percent of the volume of every gallon of gasoline
with which it is blended - or 1.4 percent of the nationwide
supply - but refiners plan to stop using it next month because
Congress refused to grant them protection from lawsuits. MTBE
will be replaced with ethanol, but there are doubts within
the Energy Department and the oil industry about whether there
will be enough of the corn-derived fuel to meet the anticipated
surge in demand, and whether the country’s distribution
system is ready to handle it.
Guy Caruso, the head of the Energy Department’s statistical
division, told the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee
that the imminent transition from MTBE to ethanol “could
cause temporary supply dislocations and may cause price volatility.”
His agency estimates that 130,000 barrels per day of extra
ethanol will be needed beginning May 5, an amount equal to
almost 50 percent of current output.
CWC’s Annual...
The Catskill Watershed Corporation (CWC) will hold its Annual
Meeting of member towns Tuesday, April 25 at 6 p.m. at CWC
offices, 905 Main Street, Margaretville. Results of the election
of representatives from Delaware County to the CWC Board of
Directors will be announced. A presentation by CWC staff members
on program achievements during 2005 will be given. The floor
will then be open for questions and comments from representatives
of member towns and villages. Following the Annual Meeting,
the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Directors will
be held. The public is “cordially” invited to
attend.
Universality…
Massachusetts legislators have approved a sweeping health
care reform package that dramatically expands coverage for
the state’s uninsured, a bill that backers hope will
become a model for the rest of the nation. According to the
plan, the poor will be offered free or heavily subsidized
coverage and those who can afford insurance but refuse to
get it will face increasing tax penalties. The plan would
use a combination of financial incentives and penalties to
expand access to health care over the next three years and
extend coverage to the state’s estimated 500,000 uninsured.
If all goes as planned, poor people will be offered free or
heavily subsidized coverage; those who can afford insurance
but refuse to get it will face increasing tax penalties until
they obtain coverage; and those already insured will see a
modest drop in their premiums.
The only other state to come close to the Massachusetts plan
is Maine, which passed a law in 2003 to dramatically expand
health care. That plan relies largely on voluntary compliance.
The measure does not call for new taxes but would require
businesses that do not offer insurance to pay a $295 annual
fee per employee. The bill requires all residents to be insured
beginning July 1, 2007, either by purchasing insurance directly
or obtaining it through their employer.
US Families!
Experts who study families around the globe say America’s
middle-class family is the one people in other countries both
love and loathe. Anthropologists and sociologists at a conference
on family myths say people from other countries hold up the
American middle-class family as the modern ideal. They see
movies, television programs and advertising that suggest wealth
and prosperity - and they want some. But researchers also
say these families understand that not everything about modern
U.S. families is ideal.
“There’s a vision of independence and material
prosperity, but the downside is that other kinds of social
connections are being lost,” said one report. “American
families may have money but don’t have time and bonds
together. There is a sense that maybe the family is a residential
center and people are going off during the day into his or
her world. They see family life as emotionally empty.”
Similar views were noted by other researchers, who have spent
time in Barbados, Egypt and Mexico. Others are working with
colleagues studying families in Argentina and Nepal.
“There’s a very clear criticism of American life,
at least in Mexico, as being overly individualistic, as being
selfish,” says Jennifer Hirsch, associate professor
of sociomedical sciences at Columbia University. “My
experience of life in rural Mexico is that it’s a society
that takes much more pleasure from human connection.”
But she says there also are aspects of America that Mexicans
seek to emulate. “People want to shop like Americans,”
she says. “There is a great global envy for American
patterns of consumption.”
Retirement?
The majority of American workers think they’ll be able
to retire comfortably, but most aren’t saving nearly
enough to meet that goal, according to the new Employee Benefit
Research Institute’s annual retirement confidence survey,
which found that about 68 percent of workers are confident
about having adequate funds for a comfortable retirement,
up slightly from 65 percent in 2005. At the same time, more
than half of all workers say they’ve saved less than
$25,000 toward retirement, according to the Washington, D.C.,
based research group. Even among workers 55 and older, more
than four in 10 have retirement savings under $25,000.
“`Overconfidence’ is the word that comes to mind,”
said Jack VanDerhei, co-author of the study. He said that
the poor savings performance was especially troubling because
it comes as many of the nation’s employers are eliminating
the defined benefit plans - better known as pensions - that
have buoyed the retirements of current workers’ parents
and grandparents. Many companies also are eliminating retiree
health care coverage or asking retirees to contribute more
for it.
Not all was doom and gloom in the report, the 16th in a series
begun in 1991. More than 70 percent of workers say that they
or their spouses have saved something toward retirement -
a percentage that’s held fairly level for the past six
years, EBRI said. And while many have meager savings, others
are doing quite well at accumulating retirement nest eggs,
the study found.
While more than half of workers have less than $25,000 set
aside, 12 percent have $25,000 to $49,999; 12 percent have
$50,000 to $99,999; 11 percent have $100,000 to $249,999;
and 12 percent have $250,000 or more. As would be expected,
older workers generally have more set aside than younger workers,
with 12 percent of those 55 and older reporting account balances
of $100,000 to $249,999, and 26 percent with accounts of $250,000
and up.
Danger Season
On Saturday, April 15 from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. there will
be a timely program on tree defoliation causes and impacts
that have been projected for the 2006 growing season. It is
anticipated that this year there may be major tree defoliation
in the region so it is important to be well informed in order
to protect the trees on your property. Sponsored by the Department
of Environmental Conservation in partnership with Cornell
Cooperative Extension of Delaware and Greene Counties, this
workshop will cover topics such as Insect Defoliators of Concern
including their identification, seasonal life cycle and where
they are in the Catskills. The insects to be discussed include
the Gypsy Moth, the Forest Tent Caterpillar, the Eastern Tent
Caterpillar and the Fall/Spring Canker Worms. A section on
Trees Targeted and will outline how defoliation affects trees.
Natural Control will provide a discussion of virus and bacteria,
over wintering die-back and parasites, and Chemical Control
will answer questions such as where do I go for help and who
do I contact for small scale (single tree/yard trees), as
well as large scale (forest) impacts. Finally, Managing an
Effected Tree/Forest will discuss dealing with defoliation
(protecting the health of affected trees) as well as dealing
with mortality (salvaging the dead wood). This workshop will
held at two locations, one at Cornell Cooperative Extension
of Delaware in Hamden, NY (607-865-6531) and the other at
the Agroforestry Resource Center in Acra, NY, with a possible
third location in Oneonta. The cost for this workshop is $5
per person and pre-registration is required. For more information,
please contact Cornell Cooperative Extension of Greene County
at 518-622-9820.
Peaking Fat?
Could the obesity epidemic be peaking? According to the government’s
most accurate recent check of the nation’s girth, U.S.
men and children are increasingly tipping the scales. But
the obesity rate among women - who at 33 percent are heavier
as a group - held steady.
The study didn’t examine why men and children are getting
fatter and women aren’t. But some experts think the
leveling off in women could signal a turning point in the
nation’s obesity epidemic.
“Women have always been more responsible about health
than the general population,” said Dr. William Dietz,
of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which
reported the new data. “I’d like to think this
shows women are leading the way in recognizing obesity as
a health threat,” said Dietz, director of the CDC’s
Division of Nutrition and Physical Activity.
Another piece of research also suggests a turn. The NPD Group,
a New York-based market research firm, found the percentage
of overweight adults has held steady from 2002 to 2005.
“I would say it has leveled off. The bad news is we
haven’t found a way to lose weight,” said Harry
Balzer, vice president of NPD, which each year tracks what
thousands of people eat and their self-reported height and
weight.
The survey is considered the gold standard for obesity data
- it’s done through in-person examinations that include
actual height and weight measurements. It found the percentage
of men who are overweight rose to 71 percent in 2003-2004,
from 67 percent in 1999-2000. The obese percentage rose to
31 percent, from 27.5 percent. For women, both the overweight
and obese percentages held steady, at about 62 percent and
33 percent, respectively.
For children, the percentage of boys, ages 2 to 19, who were
seriously overweight, or obese, rose to more than 18 percent
in 2003-2004, from 14 percent four years earlier. For girls,
the percentage rose to 16 percent, from about 14 percent.