(News
Briefs June 8, 2006)
Churchly Appeal
On May 25, a 10-member committee from St. Francis de Sales
parish, which oversees catholic churches throughout the area
(including OLive) met with clergy and lay officials of the
Archdiocese of New York, appealing plans unveiled March 28
to consolidate the parish and close three local Catholic churches,
including Boiceville. The group gave a Powerpoint presentation
outlining the move’s local impacts, parishioners also
had the opportunity to speak one-on-one with members of the
Archdiocese’s Realignment Committee.
“We felt very good about the conversations we had,”
said parish committee Chairman Gene Gormley, “but there’s
no way to know what impact our discussions may or may not
have.” Church officials gave no indication as to when
final decisions would be made.
“We’d better say our prayers,” said Gormley.
“It’s in the hands of the Lord now.”
Report Card!
The New York State Education Department has released its’
2004-2005 annual school report card, which shows the academic
progress of school districts throughout New York State. Overall
the Onteora school district is considered to be in good standing,
but the middle school reveals some areas that are in need
of improvement. The three elementary schools all safely meet
State requirements and the high school has a higher than average
graduation rate.
Onteora middle school grade eight mathematics is in year two
of a school requiring academic progress. Test scores for middle
school English language arts (ELA) fell below the state performance
index for the first year.
When the student population is split into two categories of
general education and special education, the separation reveals
only special education does not meet the standards. Assistant
superintendent Deborah noted that the school has recognized
this gap and is working on teaching assistant training for
students who struggle and are using different strategies for
academic intervention services.
“As a district we can look at their population’s
performance and see if it warrants correction and that is
an area in need of improvement that we identified in our long
range educational plan,” said Fox. In 2004 the administration
conducted a study titled the Comprehensive District Education
Plan (CDEP). Once the study was complete, academic areas of
weakness in the district were recognized as a need for improvement.
Four areas were targeted: English Language Arts and Math in
grades Kindergarten through eight, students with disabilities,
and technical integration.
Fox added that she believes the current budget cuts in special
education will not have an effect on overall test scores regarding
students with disabilities. “If the IEP (individual
education plan) request mandates that more services are needed,
than we provide those services weather it is with our own
staff or through BOCES services, the most cost effective way
that we can,” she said
Commenting on the State mandated tests and the overall education
for students, Fox said, “this is a snapshot of how a
student is doing in a particular grade, it is three hours
of one whole school year.”
According to Onteora High School principal Barbara Ruben,
82 percent of the Onteora class of 2005 graduated with a Regents
diploma (State education statistics have the school listed
as 86 percent graduating with a Regents diploma). Including
non-regent diploma students, 93.5 percent graduated in total.
She believes the success rate is a combination of several
factors. Good quality teachers and staff with a wide range
of instructional programming, including support services for
students with special needs. She also noted the importance
of, “parents who are involved in their children’s
lives.”
The Onteora school district website has easy to read charts
on the latest test scores. Go to http://onteora.schoolwires.com/onteora/site/default.asp
and click on CDEP. The New York State education web site has
test comparison charts to other schools in the area and breakdown
of test scores on all schools in the state, including student
populations, cost per pupil, graduation and drop out rates.
Go to http://www.nysed.gov/ and click on school report card.
Local Vandalism
Town of Olive Police are investigating a criminal mischief
incident that took place on the evening of Monday, May 29
- Memorial Day - when twenty mailboxes, ten state signs and
a number of newspaper boxes were defaced and/or destroyed
by an automobile in West Shokan. The police are seeking anyone
with information regarding the case. Any and all leads will
be kept confidential. Please contact Police Officer Beers
at 657-2849 or e-mail Olivepolice@hvc.rr.com if you have such
info.
Conventional!
The Ulster County Republican and Democratic party conventions
took place Monday night, June 5 in Kingston, with the GOP
at the Holiday Inn where 20-year state policeman Lt. Kevin
Costello of Tillson was named a candidate for sheriff against
the Democrats’ Paul Van Blarcum, who was named at the
Hillside Manor. Retiring Sheriff Richard Bockelmann was blasted
by Dems, lauded by Republicans.
VanBlarcum, of Shandaken, said he would like to see new, innovative
leadership in the Sheriff’s Office and fix the inefficiencies
that he said “plague the department,” notably
the trouble that the county is facing with the new county
jail, which he described as a $20 million problem turned by
Republicans into a $100 million disaster.
In other matters, Republicans nominated state senator incumbents
William Larkin and John Bonacic and incumbent Assemblymen
Thomas Kirwan and Clifford Crouch for two-year terms, along
with Schoharie County clerk Peter Lopez for retiring Assemblyman
Daniel Hooker’s five-county 127th Assembly District.
They did not nominate candidates to run against Assemblyman
Kevin Cahill or Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-Hurley and will not
be able to decide a gubernatorial candidate to face Democrat
Eliot Spitzer until Primary Day in September.
Democrats spoke of themselves being in a strong position after
last year’s legialstive victories, and lauded Spitzer
as well as Van Blarcum and their unopposed incumbents. They
will put up Susan Zimet, an Ulster County legislator from
New Paltz, to oppose Bonacic, Kelly Keck against Crouch; Scott
Trees in the 127th Assembly District; and Lee Kyriacou to
oppose Kirwan in the 100th Assembly District. They do not
have a candidate against Larkin.
Goodbye, Justine
On May 27, hundreds of people attended the memorial service
at United Methodist Church in Woodstock for Superintendent
Justine Winters. She passed away of cancer on May 18 at the
age of 59. In attendance were family, friends and co-workers
from Onteora and Webatuk school district. Reverend Dr. Tom
Kim led religious services and spoke about meeting Winters
for the first time about a year ago. He read from an email
she sent him discussing her cancer, faith, and family and
how much she hoped to attend services, if she was well enough,
having been a member of the Methodist church her entire life.
Family, life long friends and colleagues spoke of her energy,
leadership and direction. Trustee Marino D’Orazio spoke
about first meeting Winters when he was still president of
the school board and how comfortable he felt with her easy
manner. Photos in the front reception area depicted her with
friends and a loving family. Books depicted her career as
a dedicated leader of education. It was noted how Winters
passed away in her home with her family by her side. A burial
and memorial service will be held in Seal Harbor, Maine.
Our Jail Saga…
The 46-page report commissioned by Ulster County in June 2004
to document what went wrong in the planning and construction
of the county Law Enforcement Center grown in cost from an
approved $150,000 to $1.16 million. The $1.16 million in payments
apparently included time spent by Hill International in developing
the 46-page report, which was presented to Ulster County legislators
behind closed doors on April 25. But County Attorney Joshua
Koplovitz said a detailed explanation of the costs has not
been provided during the four months he has been in office.
“I think that’s a waste of taxpayer money,”
he said. “It’s an embarrassment.”
County officials have released about half of a computer presentation
of the 46-page report given by Hill International during a
special county meeting April 25.
Legislative Chairman David Donaldson, D-Kingston, blamed Republicans
- who controlled the county Legislature until the end of 2005
- for allowing the problems that have caused the Law Enforcement
Center’s cost to balloon from an original estimate of
$53 million to more than $86 million, with the final cost
predicted to top $100 million. The project also is more than
two years behind schedule and still has no target completion
date.
“We inherited this mess, and we’re trying to clean
it up,” he said.
County officials have intended to use the Hill International
report to settle claims filed with the county by contractors
who are seeking money related to the project’s delays.
Koplovitz said the county is considering suing some of the
contractors based on 25 pages being withheld from the public
from Hill’s 46-page report.
Now Ulster County officials are considering whether a single
agreement can settle the more than $20 million in contractors’
claims, with Donaldson saying that he hopes to schedule a
meeting among county leaders and representatives of the 10
contractors who have filed claims against the county for money
above and beyond what they originally were to be paid for
work on the new jail.
Richard Parete, who chairs the county’s Law Enforcement
Center Project Committee, has said that he is concerned that
the legal strategy is being developed without the input of
legislators.
Pillar Killer
It is called “Bt”( Bacillus Thuringiensis) and
it’s being touted as an environmentally friendly thuricide
that will protect vegetation from being eaten by all those
caterpillars that have invaded the region. Bt is a naturally
occurring bacterial disease of insects. Bt insecticides are
most commonly used against some leaf- and needle-feeding caterpillars.
Bt is considered safe to people and non-target species, such
as wildlife.
The insecticidal activity of Bt was first discovered in 1911.
However, it was not commercially available until the 1950s.
In recent years, there has been tremendous renewed interest
in Bt. Several new products have been developed, largely because
of the safety associated with Bt-based insecticides. Unlike
typical nerve-poison insecticides, Bt acts by producing proteins
(delta-endotoxin, the “toxic crystal”) that reacts
with the cells of the gut lining of susceptible insects. These
Bt proteins paralyze the digestive system, and the infected
insect stops feeding within hours. Bt-affected insects generally
die from starvation, which can take several days.
Shandaken Supervisor Robert Cross Jr. had the foresight recently
to order 10 cases of the stuff, which the town sells to residents
at cost. For $10 residents can get a 16-ounce bottle of the
liquid at the Supervisor’s office.
So far many have taken advantage off the program.
“We’re down to two cases, but we’re trying
to order more,” Cross said.
Cross said most people are using it to protect their favorite
flowers, bushes, specimen trees and fruit trees.
Four tablespoons of the BT are mixed with a gallon of water
and then sprayed on the leaves of the plant to be protected.
Cross said spraying only needs to be done once.
Feel Safe Now?
In a report that outlines why it cut back New York City’s
share of antiterrorism funds by roughly 40 percent, the Department
of Homeland Security was so critical of some highly viewed
local measures — like Operation Atlas, in which hundreds
of extra police officers carry out counterterrorism duties
around the city each day — that the Police Department
and other city agencies must now seek further federal approval
before drawing on the money they were given to pay for those
programs.
City and state officials have insisted that they made no mistakes
and are being the recipient of election-year politicizing
of security funding.
New York City received $124.5 million from the Department
of Homeland Security, about 40 percent less than the $207.5
million it received the year before. Many smaller cities around
the country, like Charlotte, N.C. and Omaha, NE, saw their
shares increase sharply.
“We tried to do an analysis of some of the moneys and
whether or not they were given out for political reasons,
and in fact in many of the places where they got money —
but arguably there’s no threat — there are close
elections either at the Senate level or the House level,”
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said of the process.
“Now, whether that was their motive I have no idea.”
The White House tried to minimize the effect on New York.
The grants will be reconsidered each year and could change
if “some grand and unforeseen need arises,” said
Tony Snow, the White House press secretary. “The point
of homeland security, as I said before, is to provide security
for the entire homeland,” he said. “And certainly
no disrespect meant to New York with $124 million for this
coming year.”
The report, obtained yesterday, pointed out opposing views
held by cities and the federal government over how antiterrorism
money should be spent and, as an extension of those views,
how terrorism should be fought. City officials have used federal
money to subsidize continuing costs, like paying overtime
to officers. The federal government, on the other hand, wants
the grants to pay for semi-permanent safeguards that can increase
security over the long term, like improvements in communications
systems, better gas masks and increased training.
Elected city officials were especially stunned that the report
said New York had no national monuments or icons. Members
of New York’s Congressional delegation presented a united
front in pledging action to change the allocations. Representative
Peter T. King, a Republican and chairman of the House Committee
on Homeland Security, said he would hold hearings to investigate
the process, while Senators Charles E. Schumer and Hillary
Rodham Clinton, both Democrats, wrote letters to Michael Chertoff,
the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, demanding
a full explanation.
“We have a counterterrorism center that would deal with
all of the potential scenarios that we have been studying
that we have to be prepared for that could be dramatically
affected by any cut in funding,” said Fire Commissioner
Nicholas A. Scoppetta. “It’s as though Washington
is not going to be convinced of the need until they have another
terrible incident in a place like New York or Washington.”
Hurricane-ravaged New Orleans will receive half of what it
got last year - $4.6 million, down from $9.3 million - although
Homeland Security said the money was to help cities grapple
with catastrophic disasters from Mother Nature and terrorists
alike. But several cities saw boosted bottom lines, including
three that didn’t get any money last year. Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., won $9.9 million for 2006 after receiving what Rep.
Rep. Clay Shaw Jr., R-Fla., called a paltry share last year
compared with Miami.
Older Celebs…
The 2006 New York State Senior Citizens of the Year Representing
Ulster County, in conjunction with “Older Americans,”
celebrated during the month of May, were recently announced,
with former IBMer Leona Norton, a dedicated member of the
Ulster County Office for the Aging Advisory Council for over
five years and an active volunteer at the Reformed Church
of the Comforter and member of the City of Kingston Mayor’s
Task Force, was recognized for her years of community service.
Norton has been President of the Colonial Gardens Senior Citizens
Club for almost ten years, is a member of Retired Volunteer
Senior Citizens (RSVP) program in Ulster County and has been
a volunteer at the City of Kingston Visitor’s Center
for many years. Alleda Ellsworth, a retired elementary education
teacher and President of the Ulster County Alliance, was named
for her years as a senior advocate and a community activist.
The two were honored during a reception at the Governor’s
Mansion in Albany on Wednesday, May 10.
Poison Ivy!
Another reason to worry about global warming: more and itchier
poison ivy.
The noxious vine grows faster and bigger as carbon dioxide
levels in the atmosphere rise, researchers have recently reported.
And a CO2-driven vine also produces more of its rash-causing
chemical, urushiol, conclude experiments conducted in a forest
at Duke University where scientists increased carbon-dioxide
levels to those expected in 2050.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas - a chemical that traps
heat similar to the way a greenhouse does - that’s considered
a major contributor to global warming. Greenhouse gases have
been steadily increasing in the atmosphere since the Industrial
Revolution.
Compared to poison ivy grown in usual atmospheric conditions,
those exposed to the extra-high carbon dioxide grew about
three times larger - and produced more allergenic form of
urushiol, scientists from Duke and Harvard University reported.
“The fertilization effect of rising CO2 on poison ivy
... and the shift toward a more allergenic form of urushiol
have important implications for the future health of both
humans and forests,” the study concludes.
Wellheads…
Local government officials, environmental representatives
and concerned citizens are invited to a one-day Aquifer and
Wellhead Protection workshop Thursday, June 22 at Belleayre
Mountain Ski Center’s Discovery (Lower) Lodge in Highmount.
Registration deadline is June 12. The fee is $35 which includes
workshop materials, continental breakfast and lunch, but the
Catskill Watershed Corporation (CWC) will cover the registration
fee of participants living and/or working in any town in the
Catskill-Delaware Watershed west of the Hudson River. To register
and arrange for this special benefit, contact Myra Fedyniak
at Ulster County Environmental Management Council/Water Quality
Management Agency (EMC/WQMA) at 845-338-2479, or mfed_ucemc@yahoo.com.
The workshop runs from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and is designed
for members of town and planning boards and environmental
commissions; building and health inspectors; water supply
operators and others interested in the critical issue of water
protection. Workshop participants will receive a workbook
with BMP information, model zoning ordinances and case studies.
The event is sponsored by EMC/WQMA in cooperation with the
CWC, Lower Esopus River Watch, Greene County Soil & Water
Conservation District, and Delaware County Planning Department.
Future Whopper!
Taxpayers will soon get a surprise bill that could exceed
$1 trillion for the cost of paying future medical benefits
for state and local workers who retire. Retiree medical costs
are the biggest long-term challenge that state and local governments
face. By comparison, state and local pensions have an unfunded
liability of about $500 billion.
State and local governments have set aside $2.5 trillion to
help pay pension benefits for 19 million civil servants and
7 million retirees. But they have set aside almost nothing
to pay for retiree medical benefits.
“Taxpayers will revolt when they realize the enormous
cost of this,” Minnesota State Auditor Pat Anderson
says. She says the financial burdens on local governments
will be so great they will put pressure on the federal government
to nationalize health care.
New accounting rules require that governments, starting next
year, put a price tag on the value of medical benefits promised
to civil servants when they retire. The federal government
also has a $2.3 trillion unfunded liability for medical and
disability benefits promised to civil servants and military
personnel who retire. The costs are not the nation’s
biggest financial problem. Medicare has a $33.4 trillion unfunded
liability. Social Security has a $4.6 trillion shortfall.
The new accounting rules don’t require governments to
do anything about retiree costs. But governments will come
under pressure from lenders and others to act. “If this
problem is ignored, that will be a negative factor when we
determine credit ratings,” says Standard & Poor’s
credit analyst Parry Young.
Corporations implemented a similar accounting rule in 1993.
The result was a drastic reduction in the number of companies
offering medical benefits to retirees.
Governments have less freedom to cut retiree health care because
most benefits were negotiated in union contracts. Public employee
unions plan to fight attempts to reduce retiree medical benefits.
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg plans to set $1 billion
aside this year for retiree benefits.
Torture Okayed…
The Pentagon has decided to omit from new detainee policies
a key tenet of the Geneva Convention that explicitly bans
“humiliating and degrading treatment,” according
to knowledgeable military officials, a step that would mark
a further, potentially permanent, shift away from strict adherence
to international human rights standards.
The decision could culminate a lengthy debate within the Defense
Department but will not become final until the Pentagon makes
new guidelines public, a step that has been delayed. However,
the State Department fiercely opposes the military’s
decision to exclude Geneva Convention protections and has
been pushing for the Pentagon and White House to reconsider,
the Defense Department officials acknowledged.
Faked News?
Federal authorities are actively investigating dozens of American
television stations for broadcasting items produced by the
Bush administration and major corporations, and passing them
off as normal news. Some of the fake news segments talked
up success in the war in Iraq, or promoted the companies’
products. Investigators from the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) are seeking information about stations across the country
after a report by the non-profit group Centre for Media and
Democracy detailed the extraordinary extent of the use of
such items.
The report found that over a 10-month period at least 77 television
stations were making use of the faux news broadcasts, known
as Video News Releases (VNRs). Not one told viewers who had
produced the items.
The FCC has declined to comment on the investigation but investigators
from the commission’s enforcement unit recently approached
CMD for a copy of the group’s report.
The range of VNR is wide. Among items provided by the Bush
administration to news stations was one in which an Iraqi-American
in Kansas City was seen saying “Thank you Bush. Thank
you USA” in response to the 2003 fall of Baghdad. The
footage was actually produced by the State Department, one
of 20 federal agencies that have produced and distributed
such items.
Many of the corporate reports, produced by drugs manufacturers
such as Pfizer, focus on health issues and promote the manufacturer’s
product. One example cited by the report was a Halloween segment
produced by the confectionery giant Mars, which featured Snickers,
M&Ms and other company brands. While the original VNR
disclosed that it was produced by Mars, such information was
removed when it was broadcast by the television channel -
in this case a Fox-owned station in St Louis, Missouri.
Bloomberg news service said that other companies that sponsored
the promotions included General Motors, the world’s
largest car maker, and Intel, the biggest maker of semi-conductors.
The FCC was urged to act by a lobbying campaign organised
by Free Press, another non-profit group that focuses on media
policy. Spokesman Craig Aaron said more than 25,000 people
had written to the FCC about the VNRs. “Essentially
it’s corporate advertising or propaganda masquerading
as news,” he said. “The public obviously expects
their news reports are going to be based on real reporting
and real information. If they are watching an advertisement
for a company or a government policy, they need to be told.”
The controversy over the use of VNRs by television stations
first erupted last spring. At the time the FCC issued a public
notice warning broadcasters that they were obliged to inform
viewers if items were sponsored. The maximum fine for each
violation is $32,500.
Teen Taxes Up!
The $69 billion tax cut bill that President Bush signed recently
tripled tax rates for teenagers with college savings funds,
despite Mr. Bush’s 1999 pledge to veto any tax increase.
Under the new law, teenagers age 14 to 17 with investment
income will now be taxed at the same rate as their parents,
not at their own rates. Long-term capital gains and dividends
that had been taxed at 5 percent will now be taxed at 15 percent.
Interest that had been taxed at 10 percent will now be taxed
at as much as 35 percent.
The increases, which are retroactive to the first day of the
year, are expected to generate nearly $2.2 billion over 10
years, according to the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation,
which issues the official estimates.
Bush pledged in 1999 to veto any bill that raised taxes. In
response to a question about the tax increase on teenagers
in the new legislation, the White House issued a statement
that made no reference to the tax increase, but recounted
the tax cuts the administration has sponsored and stated that
President Bush had “reduced taxes on all people who
pay income taxes.” Challenged on that point, the White
House modified its statement 21 minutes later to say that
Mr. Bush had “reduced taxes on virtually all people
who pay income taxes.”
Rural Men…
Seat belt use is reaching record levels, so just who are the
holdouts who fail to buckle up? Often they are young men who
live in rural areas and drive pickups, the government says.
About 48 million people do not regularly put on seat belts
when they are on the road, says the latest report on seat
belt use by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
noting that men account for 65 percent of the more than 31,000
people killed each year in passenger vehicles, that 58 percent
of those killed who were not wearing a seat belt crashed along
rural roads; that about seven in 10 people who died were unbelted
in crashes involving pickup trucks; and that more than six
in 10 people age 8-44 who were killed inside a passenger vehicle
were not buckled up.
Phone Jammer!
The Republican operative who came up with the idea of jamming
Democratic and union get-out-the-vote phone lines on Election
Day 2002 is back in the politics swim. Charles McGee, vice
president of political and corporate communications at Spectrum
Monthly & Printing Inc., sent out an e-mail recently inviting
Republican candidates to a free “GOP Campaign School”
hosted by the company, which publishes Republican mailers
and fliers.. A flier about the class called it a “nuts
and bolts boot camp” to give participants “all
the tools you need to win.”
Hundreds of hang-up calls placed by a telemarketing firm tied
up phone lines set up by the state Democratic Party and the
Manchester firefighters union for more than an hour the morning
of Election Day 2002, when then-U.S. Rep. John Sununu defeated
Democratic Gov. Jeanne Shaheen in a tight U.S. Senate race.
McGee, the former executive director of the state Republican
Party, pleaded guilty to conspiracy in the phone-jamming scandal
and served seven months in prison. He was released last November.
Two other people have been convicted; a fourth has been indicted.
Spectrum head Richard Pease hired McGee about a year after
he stepped down from the Republican State Committee over the
phone-jamming allegations. Pease kept the job open while McGee
was in prison.
“It’s a sad day in Republican politics when one
of the leaders of a criminal conspiracy to disenfranchise
New Hampshire voters is given the opportunity to teach young
Republicans all his tricks,” said the state’s
Democrats’ spokesman, Damien LaVera. “You’d
think that Republicans in New Hampshire would be working overtime
to lift the ethical cloud that hands over their tainted campaign
tactics...
Bad Economy
After years of talking about the Goldilocks economy - not
too hot and not too cold - all of a sudden it appears the
little rascal just got mugged by the three bears. While the
economy began the year growing at a strong pace, activity
seems to have hit the skids in the spring.
Factory orders fell in April. The five-year housing boom is
cooling, with home sales falling and price gains slowing.
In the biggest shocker of all, the government reported Friday
that businesses created just 75,000 new jobs in May - 100,000
fewer than expected.
If the onslaught of weaker economic data was not bad enough,
there also are signs that long-dormant inflation may be starting
to be a problem, and not just in the pain from $3 per gallon
gasoline. The core rate of inflation, excluding food and energy,
is now above the 2 percent upper limit favored by Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues who have
noted how slowing economic growth and rising inflation raise
the specter of stagflation. This dreaded combination of economic
stagnation and inflation had the country in its grips for
more than a decade through the 1970s and early 1980s, bringing
grief to the presidencies of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and
Jimmy Carter.