12/172009
County Budget…
As of press time, Ulster County legislators had still
some time to negotiate a budget for the coming year that
will either keep savings, and multiple cuts, suggested
by first-year County Executive Mike Hein, or go its own
way as the elected body shifts from Democratic to Republican
hands on New Year’s Day.
On Monday night, it was decided that the body would not
be cutting their salaries or increasing their contribution
to health insurance in the upcoming year, and they wouldn’t
be eliminating health insurance for the county’s
assistant district attorneys and public defenders or ending
a vacation/sick time buyout plan for management personnel.
They will, however, include funding in the 2010 budget
for the county’s contract agencies, and first-time
funding for the Ulster County Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals, as well as restoring two positions
in the county Board of Elections cut by County Executive
Michael Hein.
The Legislature’s Ways and Means Committee on Monday,
Nov. 30 reviewed a number of proposed changes to Hein’s
proposed $349.2 million budget.
A proposal to cut legislative salaries by 10 percent,
or $1,000 a year, came from Democratic Legislator Frank
Dart, who was defeated in primaries last summer. That
resolution died for lack of a second, as did another proposal
by Dart to eliminate health benefits for part-time assistant
district attorneys and public defenders, and one by Democratic
Legislator Hector Rodriguez to eliminate the practice
of buying back unused vacation and sick time from management
personnel.
A recommendation to increase legislators’ contributions
to their health care met with some resistance, most notably
from District Two Legislator Donald Gregarious, who said
the proposal would impact only some legislators and would
create inequities between lawmakers and management. That
proposal was tabled because in April the county will review
of all its employee compensation plans.
Committee members passed through a number of competing
resolutions for a vote Tuesday, including separate measures
to fund contract agencies at 100 percent, 90 percent,
and 75 percent of their 2009 levels. Also, legislators
will consider providing the SPCA, currently headed by
District Two Legislator Brian Shapiro, with $40,000, $20,000,
or $10,000. They will also consider reinstating all funding
for the EVOLVE program, cut in the Hein plan, as well
as reinstating the two positions eliminated at the Board
of Elections.
It is the first time legislators are reviewing a budget
not created by a member of their staff and much of the
debate focused on the rationale used by Hein in creating
the budget, especially his proposal to lay off 30 county
employees.
Hein did not attend Monday’s budget review. However
Art Smith, the county budget director, and Adele Reiter,
Hein’s chief of staff, were at the meeting
Committee Chairman Legislator Alan Lomita said he would
forward a list of questions to Hein, but warned legislators
that the executive was under no obligation to respond.
“He doesn’t have to tell you anything,”
said Lomita, D-Rosendale. “His job is to prepare
a budget then it’s our job to make changes to it
if we want, and adopt it.”
In the past, the budget was prepared by the county administrator
who worked for the Legislature and prepared the spending
plan under legislative direction. Hein was county administrator
when the 2009 plan was developed.
Further Ways & Means Committee meetings were set for
most of this week, with the final Legislature’s
budget vote set for next Monday, December 7.
State Budget
Gov. Patersopn swung his own budget ax last Sunday, November
29, implementing $1.1 billion in cuts and savings as weekend
talks with legislators dead-ended with no deficit fix
in sight.
Paterson has warned that New York is going broke, struggling
under a projected $3.2 billion deficit. The state has
now resorted to “juggling” its bills, Paterson
said, and is moving money around to cover costs in the
absence of a deal with the Legislature.
“We are out of time,” Paterson said the weekend
after Thanksgiving. “This is a fiscal emergency.”
He added that he’s begun enacting the parts of his
$3.2 billion deficit reduction plan that don’t need
legislative approval. These include $500 million in cuts
to state agencies - 11% across the board - a more aggressive
Medicaid fraud-recovery effort, debt management steps
and $300 million in extra administrative savings.
Money borrowed for capital projects next week will also
help free up cash in the short term, Paterson said.
In late November, Paterson said the Legislature should
give him the power to make needed cuts on a one-time basis.
Lawmakers quickly dismissed the suggestion.
But as he continues to negotiate, the governor may have
lost leverage with lawmakers who had pressed him to make
the administrative cuts as a way to buy time until January,
when they hope revenues will rebound.
Paterson said Senate Democrats and Republicans have failed
to offer viable solutions, yet they remain opposed to
school aid cuts and back only tiny cuts to health care
- the two biggest parts of the budget.
Shared Services?
A purchasing cooperative involving county and local governments
in the Hudson Valley will save a projected $130,000 in
2009. State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli is currently touting
the benefits of shared services and urged more participation
in the region and around the state.
A new purchasing co-op in the Mid-Hudson Valley region
includes the counties of Dutchess, Ulster and Rockland,
the City of New Rochelle and the Town of Cortlandt.
A police study is underway also to consider the consolidation
of the Village and Town of Chester departments. The cost
savings is undetermined.
“Tax dollars are tight and families are struggling,”
said DiNapoli. “Now more than ever we need to find
ways to cut costs and lower property taxes.”
DiNapoli said with over 3,100 local governments, school
districts and fire districts in the state, they should
look to consolidate as a means of saving taxpayer dollars.
It’s a Go!
Route 28 will be repaved all the way to the Delaware County
line. On Tuesday, Ulster County Executive Mike Hein announced
that Governor Paterson had approved and certified the
county Transportation Council’s request for an additional
$8.26 million in federal stimulus funds, available for
infrastructure improvements under the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The funding will be used
to resurface Route 28’s roadway and shoulders from
Route 375 in West Hurley to Route 28A in Boiceville, and
from Route 214 in Phoenicia to the county line in Highmount.
Construction is expected to begin in the spring of 2010.
Thinking Floods
Members of the group Lower Esopus Watershed Partnership
are working to have information about the Esopus Creek
used in planning and land-use regulations, while the state
is contemplating a fund for buyouts of perennially-flooded
properties.
It’s time to begin think of high water, once again.
Video aerial photography has been completed for the whole
stream from the Hudson River up to the Ashokan Reservoir
and efforts are being made to determine the impact that
releasing water from the Ashokan Reservoir into the Esopus
Creek has on downstream properties.
Many creekside residents in the town of Ulster whose homes
were flooded in April 2005 blamed the New York City Department
of Environmental Protection because it released water
from the Ashokan into the Esopus at a time when the creek
already was swollen from heavy rains. But the LEWP and
other entities have said flooding along the Esopus also
is caused by terrain changes - from steep slopes near
the reservoir to valley areas in the city of Kingston
and town of Ulster to channels between hillsides in the
village of Saugerties before the creek ends at the Hudson
River. Man-made levies in some areas have also worsened
the potential throughout the watershed area.
Meanwhile, State Senator John Bonacic has introduced legislation
to authorize the use of funds from the Greater Catskills
Flood Relief Program to buy out, on a voluntary basis,
the homes of people in the town who live near New York
City’s leaking aqueducts, with dozens of families
having already qualified to be bought out under the $15
million program Bonacic initiated.
Area families and Bonacic believe the city’s leaking
aqueducts are causing water to seep and flood into their
basements. Studies have shown a correlation between water
in people’s basements and water running through
the aqueduct.
New York City officials maintain seepage and flooding
in Wawarsing, and other areas, are caused by poor drainage
or rainfall. The city has advised area residents to file
claims against the city, which Bonacic said can be time-consuming
and costly without any guarantees of success.
Olivebridge Fire
The American Red Cross of Ulster County has given emergency
aid to three adult individuals after a fire damaged their
home in Olivebridge last week. Disaster Action Team volunteers
met with families at the scene of the fire. The Red Cross
has provided temporary shelter and financial assistance
for food, clothing and medical supplies.
In the coming days and weeks, Red Cross volunteers will
continue to work with those affected by the fire and to
provide more aid if needed. Volunteers will also assist
victims develop a post-disaster plan to get each started
on the road to recovery.
The Red Cross urgently needs volunteers to assist with
disaster relief efforts throughout the county. For more
information on volunteering, contact 338-7020 or www.ulsterredcross.org.
Palen’s Problems
The former head of the Ulster County Health Department
ran an operation based on nepotism, intimidation, political
favoritism and manipulation, according to a report released
recently by county Comptroller Elliott Auerbach. So rife
with mismanagement and questionable leadership was the
department under Dean Palen’s administration that
the “only saving grace was the dedication and commitment
of the staffs of the Environmental Sanitation and Public
Nursing divisions,” Auerbach wrote in his report.
The 46-page report from the comptroller comes as the result
of a five-month investigation into the Health Department
under Palen and paints a picture of a department operated
more as a personal fiefdom than a part of county government.
It also revealed the flaws of Ulster County being run,
until recently, by a part-time Legislature in which existed
a decentralized system of departmental oversight.
Palen was appointed Ulster County public health director
by the county Board of Health in 1994. Members of the
Board of Health were appointed by the Legislature and
charged with overseeing the day-to-day operations of the
Health Department. But, Auerbach said, many board members
were “hand-picked by Palen and, at one time, included
his personal physician.”
For much of his tenure with the county, Palen also served
as the director of environmental sanitation, where he
controlled operations of that department. His wife Debra
was his administrative assistant in the Environmental
Sanitation Division, and, according to Auerbach’s
report, she was given responsibilities and authorities
that far exceeded her job description.
Palen was let go by county Executive Michael Hein in June
2009; Mrs. Palen was sent home the same day and was slated
to be transferred to a different position, but she chose
to retire instead.
A day after Palen was fired, county officials discovered
more than $32,000 in uncashed checks and dozens of unissued
health permits in a locked safe behind his wife’s
desk. As a result of those findings, Hein asked Auerbach
and Ulster County District Attorney Holley Carnright to
investigate operations at the Health Department.
Carnright, in a statement issued Friday, said he will
review Auerbach’s report before deciding whether
a criminal investigation is warranted.
Local journalists have noted that reports on Palen, including
his mismanagement of oversight responsibilities for the
Pine Hill Water Company, were coming out throughout the
years of the man’s problematic tenure.
Affordability…
A study of the region’s housing needs, in the works
for months and talked about last summer, has found the
area lacking affordable housing and is projecting that
the problem will get worse over the next 10 years. More
specifically, it found that Ulster County had an “affordability
gap” of 10,696 houses and 5,257 apartments and Dutchess
County had a gap of 17,913 houses and 6,900 apartments
in 2006, according to the study of the housing climate
in Ulster, Dutchess, and Orange counties.
“Three-County Regional Housing Needs Assessment
- 2006-2020” projects that by 2020 the gap in affordable
housing will grow by 6,079 units in Ulster County and
7,648 units in Dutchess County.
The study was prepared by the planning departments of
the three counties with Economic and Policy Resources
Inc.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development defines
affordable housing as costing a household no more than
30 percent of its gross annual income on mortgage payments
or rent, taxes, utilities, and insurance.
Despite the fact that a “correction” in the
housing market after the bubble burst led prices to decline
in some places more than 25 percent from the 2006 peak,
“house price declines are expected to alleviate
some affordability pressures in the three-county region,
but not to the same extent that the price run-up added
to those pressures,” the study says.
Additionally, in the next few years, housing prices are
expected to recover and exceed 2006 levels, Economic and
Policy Resources President Jeffrey Carr said recently
at a Rural Ulster Preservation Co. lunch during which
he outlined the report’s key findings.
Looking forward, the study noted a number of hurdles remain,
including the fact that the economic recession is likely
to make credit more difficult to obtain in the near future,
residents will continue to struggle with high energy prices,
property taxes have been steadily rising, and the difference
between supply and demand of affordable housing could
continue to push prices up.
Solutions on the demand side, according to the study,
include assistance with financing and down payments while
on the supply side include development through planning
and zoning regulatory changes and incentives for developers.
In order not to fall further behind, the study noted by
2020 Ulster County would need to build 714 affordable
owner units and 1,113 renter units and Dutchess County
would need to build 898 affordable owner units and 1,310
renter units.
Researchers pointed out, however, that increasing the
supply of housing is “not a ‘magic bullet’”
and broader solutions include economic development efforts
to create jobs and increase the incomes of residents in
the community.
Feds Get Enck
New York State’s Deputy Secretary for the Environment
Judith Enck, who has served since November 2006 as top
environmental advisor to Governors Paterson and Spitzer,
has left state government for a new job at the US Environmental
Protection Agency. A November 5 announcement by the agency
named Enck as its new Regional Administrator for EPA Region
2, overseeing New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, the US
Virgin Islands, and 7 tribal nations. Whether the state
post she vacates will be immediately filled is unclear
as of press time, although according to Enck, her deputy
Peter Iwanowicz will remain on the job.
Locally, Enck is best known as the architect of the controversial
2007 Agreement in Principal for the proposed Belleayre
Resort, which suspended that project’s SEQRA process
under then Governor Spitzer’s executive authority.
Although the AIP framed a non-binding conceptual agreement
between the state, the project’s developer, and
other parties, the project’s status remains uncertain
at this time.
Enck was also the leading champion of “Smart Growth”
policies within state government.
In related news, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg
named his longtime Special Advisor Caswell Holloway as
the new head of the cuity’s powerful Department
of Environmental Protection More on that in our next issue.
Ag To The Aid!
A presentation entitled, “The Role of Agriculture
in Curbing Climate Change: Win-Win Scenarios,” will
be presented at Cornell Cooperative Extension of Ulster
County’s Annual Meeting to be held on Monday, December
14 at 6:30pm in the Student Lounge located in Vanderlyn
Hall at the SUNY Ulster campus in Stone Ridge. The meeting
and presentation is free and open to the general public.
The keynote speaker, Jennifer G. Phillips, Assistant Professor
at the Bard Center for Environmental Policy, will look
at agriculture as both a source and a sink for greenhouse
gases that are likely to be regulated in the future. Fortunately,
many of the practices that will curb greenhouse gas production
or lead to increased carbon storage are also ones that
can increase farm productivity, lower costs, and lead
to resilient, sustainable agro-ecosystems. Although in
the early stages of research, many of these practices
are both familiar and proven. Phillips will include a
brief review of the role of greenhouse gases in climate
regulation and the expected changes in store for the Northeast
that focus on recent science and field research.
For more information about Cornell Cooperative Extension
of Ulster County’s community programs and events
call 845-340-3990 or visit us www.cceulster.org.
New Loans
Ulster County is initiating a new “Credit for Success”
Program, which will provide loans from $25,000 to $150,000
to Ulster County businesses that meet the program’s
requirements. All of the funding for this initiative is
from private sector sources not County taxpayer dollars.
At a recent press event launching the new loans, County
Executive Mike Hein introduced the newly formed Ulster
County Bank Consortium, whose members are Catskill Hudson
Savings Bank, Provident Bank, Rondout Savings Bank, Sawyer
Savings Bank, TD Bank, Ulster Savings Bank and Walden
Savings Bank, who are working with the New York Business
Development Corporation (NYBDC) and the Ulster County
Development Corporation (UCDC) to provide this option
to Ulster County businesses.
The program requirements include presentation of a lending
institution declination letter and among other things
a business must work with the Small Business Development
Center to create a business plan. The program is available
now and is only offered by participating banks, who are
sharing the risk of each loan spread across the seven
participating entities. NYBDC is managing the program
as the primary lender.
Ulster County businesses wishing to participate in this
program should contact the Ulster Business Development
Corporation at 338-8840.
Meningitis…
A Marbletown Elementary School kindergartner died in recent
weeks, apparently from a bacterial - and non-contagious
- form of meningitis, according to Ulster County’s
new public health director, Dr. La Mar Hasbrouck, who
said the Health Department is monitoring the situation
but believes no preventive treatments are required for
people who came in contact with the child, identified
by a funeral home as 5-year-old Grace L. Imperato of Stone
Ridge.
In a letter to Marbletown Elementary School parents, Principal
William Cafiero wrote the Rondout Valley School District
was advised that, “given the minimal risk involved,
schools should not be closed and children do not need
to be kept home.”
Hasbrouck, who has been the county’s public health
director for less than two weeks, said lab tests indicated
the student who died did not suffer from the H1N1 influenza
virus, commonly called swine flu.
The type of meningitis that health officials believe afflicted
the child is rare and occurs when bacteria from common
infections like strep throat, pneumonia and bronchitis
“get out of the normal places” and move into
the bloodstream and brain.
Meningitis is an inflammation of the membranes that cover
the brain and spinal cord and often is referred to as
“spinal meningitis.”
Nereida Veytia, a registered nurse and director of patient
services for the county Health Department, said parents
still should watch their children for the symptoms of
meningitis. Common symptoms in patients over the age of
2 include a high fever, headache and stiff neck. Other
symptoms include nausea, vomiting, discomfort looking
into bright lights, confusion, sleepiness and difficulty
eating and sleeping.
School and health officials said the symptoms can develop
in as little as a few hours or as long as one or two days.
In newborns and infants, some of the symptoms can be difficult
to detect, but babies with meningitis may appear slow
or inactive, be irritable, feed poorly and vomit.
Recovery Time?
While there may be some signs of an economic upswing,
there will be no significant progress unless we see more
jobs created, according to Jonathan Drapkin, president
of Pattern for Progress, who said this week that the addition
of jobs is what will stimulate the economy back into an
upswing.
“Until you see that unemployment number start to
come down, then I don’t believe that we’ve
seen the end of this period of the recession,” he
said. “I know there are all kinds of economic models
and measurements that exist and clearly it is a good thing
for the confidence of the country that the stock market
has gone up, but unfortunately there are still way to
many people out of work.”
Drapkin said, though, that a means by which to turn the
corner on job losses has not yet been figured out.
No Casino?
If Empire Resorts wants to continue its efforts to develop
a Native American casino at Monticello Gaming and Raceway,
it will have to find a new partner. The St. Regis Mohawk
Tribe conducted a vote of its community members in recent
weeks and the majority turned thumbs down on continuing
with the off-reservation gaming project.
The vote among its members was 178 “no” and
140 “yes”.
Meanwhile, the president of the Seneca Indian Nation has
reaffirmed its intent to seek a state compact to develop
a full-service Class III gaming casino and hotel in the
Catskills.
“The Seneca Nation is firmly committed to Sullivan
County, the town of Thompson, its officials and residents,”
said a statement from the tribe. “This project will
bring economic growth opportunities to generate a rebirth
of this region, put it back on solid financial footing
to develop its tourism base and provide much-needed job
opportunities. We understand the hardships this area has
faced because as an independent nation, we are challenged
every day to create economic sovereignty opportunities
for our people,” Snyder said.
This past August, a government contingent led by Snyder
and tribal counselors met with U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer,
D-N.Y., Bureau of Indian Affairs head Larry Echohawk and
Sullivan County representatives to urge the federal government
to lift the Kempthorne restriction, which prohibits Indian
tribes from taking off-reservation land into trust for
gaming purposes. That’s a necessary step for New
York state’s Indian nations to establish gaming
operations in Sullivan County.
Legalize It?
The same day they rejected a gay marriage ballot measure,
residents of Maine voted overwhelmingly to allow the sale
of medical marijuana over the counter at state-licensed
dispensaries. Later in the month, the American Medical
Association reversed a longtime position and urged the
federal government to remove marijuana from Schedule One
of the Controlled Substances Act, which equates it with
heroin. And advocates for easing marijuana laws left their
biannual strategy conference with plans to press ahead
on all fronts — state law, ballot measures, and
court — in a movement that for the first time in
decades appeared to be gaining ground.
“This issue is breaking out in a remarkably rapid
way now,” said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director
of the Drug Policy Alliance. “Public opinion is
changing very, very rapidly.”
The shift is widely described as generational. A Gallup
poll in October found 44 percent of Americans favor full
legalization of marijuana — a rise of 13 points
since 2000. Gallup said that if public support continues
growing at a rate of 1 to 2 percent per year, “the
majority of Americans could favor legalization of the
drug in as little as four years.”
A 53 percent majority already does so in the West, according
to the survey. The finding heartens advocates collecting
signatures to put the question of legalization before
California voters in a 2010 initiative.
At the International Drug Reform Conference, activists
gamed specific proposals for taxing and regulating pot
along the lines of cigarettes and alcohol, as a bill pending
in the California Legislature would do. The measure is
not expected to pass, but in urging its serious debate,
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger gave credence to a potential
revenue source that the state’s tax chief said could
raise $1.3 billion in the recession, which advocates describe
as a boon.
There were also tips on lobbying state legislatures, where
measures decriminalizing possession of small amounts have
passed in 14 states. Activists predict half of states
will have laws allowing possession for medical purposes
in the near future.
Interest in medical marijuana and easing other marijuana
laws picked up markedly about 18 months ago, but advocates
say the biggest surge came with the election of Barack
Obama, the third straight president to acknowledge having
smoked marijuana, and the first to regard it with anything
like nonchalance.
“As a kid, I inhaled,” Barack Obama famously
said on the campaign. “That was the whole point.”
In office, Obama made good on a promise to halt federal
prosecutions of medical marijuana use where permitted
by state law. That has recalibrated the federal attitude,
which had been consistently hostile to marijuana since
the early 1970s, when President Richard Nixon cast aside
the recommendations of a presidential commission arguing
against lumping pot with hard drugs.
Anti-drug advocates counter with surveys showing high
school students nationwide already are more likely to
smoke marijuana than tobacco — and that the five
states with the highest rate of adolescent pot use permit
medical marijuana.
“We are in the prevention business,” said
Arthur Dean, chairman of the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions
of America. “Kids are getting the message tobacco’s
harmful, and they’re not getting the message marijuana
is.”
In Los Angeles, city officials are dealing with elements
of public backlash after more than 1,000 medical marijuana
dispensaries opened, some employing in-house physicians
to dispense legal permission to virtually all comers.
The boom town atmosphere brought complaints from some
neighbors, but little of the crime associated with underground
drug-dealing.
Advocates cite the latter as evidence that, as with alcohol,
violence associated with the marijuana trade flows from
its prohibition.
New Audio Book
Silver Hollow Audio of Chichester has just released a
new audio version of Petty de Llosa’s The Practice
of Presence: Five Paths for Daily Life, read by the author.
The work, first published in 2006, explores T’ai
Chi, Jungian analysis, Gurdjieff work, the Alexander technique,
as well as prayer and meditation, on a journey toward
a more authentic life of daily awareness. Silver Hollow’s
12-hour audiobook will be available exclusively as downloadable
content. It will be available through the company’s
website, as well as other digital content providers, such
as Playaway and OverDrive.
For more on this innovative and younglocal company, call
688-7333 or visit www.silverhollowaudio.com.
Cheaper Solar?
The New York State Legislature has passed enabling legislation
that will eliminate the upfront costs of renewable energy
and energy efficiency projects to homeowners and businesses
by allowing PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy) financing.
“This important legislation to the solar industry
is all about creating more green jobs in New York,”
said New York Solar Energy Industries Association Vice
President Kevin MacLeod of KPS Contracting, Inc, who represented
the interests of the association to lawmakers. “It
will help create more jobs for contractors who will hire
more employees and generate more taxes, and have a tremendous
multiplier impact to the state.”
NYSEIA, the association representing the solar energy
industry, wrote the initial legislation that was previously
known as the Green Loans Bill, based on a financing model
in the city of Berkeley, Calif., and has been lobbying
for its passage since May, according to MacLeod.
Unanimously passed by both houses at a special session
late Nov. 16, the bill authorizes municipalities to administer
PACE loan programs to finance the installation of renewable
energy systems and energy efficiency improvements across
the state.
PACE programs eliminate the upfront cost for energy improvements
by allowing property owners to pay for the improvements
with low-interest bonds over 15 to 20 years that are repaid
through property taxes. The payment plan is easily transferable
to the next property owner if the current resident decides
to move.
The state bill enables New York to tap into $454 million
in federal funding that will be made available to support
PACE programming. PACE programs are a recent innovation
in finance and have emerged nationwide over the past year.
New York becomes the 16th state to pass the enabling legislation.
The finance model can be used to finance a host of technologies,
including solar PV systems, solar heat and hot water systems,
energy efficiency installations and water conservation
upgrades.
Pantry Benefit...
A benefit for the Shandaken Food Pantry will take place
next Wednesday, December 9 from 4:30 to 8:30 PM at Al’s
Seafood Restaurant in Phoenicia. In addition to a choice
of meals, there will be a Silent & Live Auction at
8:00 PM, as well as Raffle prizes and 50/50 events, plus
“celebrity hosts & waiters!”
The Shandaken Food Pantry, housed in the Phoenicia Methodist
Church, serves all the residents of our town who are in
need. Due to the current economy more and more people
are seeking assistance while funding has not kept pace.
Through this benefit, the pantry hopes to raise the necessary
funds to keep the Food Pantry open weekly.
The restaurant and all the food is being donated by Al’s
owner Paul Pettinato. His staff will be working for free.
Every dollar raised will go directly toward buying food
and other essential items for the Shandaken Food Pantry.
If unable to attend send checks to: Shandaken Food Pantry,
Town Clerk’s Office, Town Hall, Shandaken, N.Y.
12480. All donations are tax deductible.