3/29/2007
Coalition Shift...
Woodstock town Supervisor Jeremy Wilber has been elected
to serve as an Ulster County delegate on the Coalition
of Watershed Towns executive committee, replacing incumbent
Bruce LaMonda, a town of Olive Councilman who was appointed
to the committee two years ago to fill a vacancy left
by Olive Supervisor Bert Leifeld. The only voting was
by town boards of towns within the watershed portion of
the County: Shandaken, Olive, Woodstock, Denning, Hurley,
Marbletown, Rochester and Wawarsing.
Just prior to the mid-March vote deadline LaMonda was
shocked to learn that he was in a race at all and said
he suspected Wilbur’s name was thrown in by Shandaken
Supervisor Robert Cross Jr., who was on the losing end
of a battle with LaMonda last year when LaMonda asked
the Coalition to support Olive’s efforts to get
the controversial large parcel bill shot down in the Onteora
school district.
Wilbur, who supported the large parcel bill along with
Cross, made a few appearances at Coalition meetings in
Margaretville to try and sway the board, but did not succeed.
At the same session the committee quietly replaced longstanding
Attorney Jeff Baker. Baker, a partner in Albany-based
Young, Sommer, Ward, Ritzenberg, Baker and Moore, will
step aside to make room for the firm’s founding
member Kevin Young, who will take over the day to day
responsibilities. There was no explanation for the change.
Sewer Future?
Earlier this month the Executive Director of the Catskill
Watershed Corporation outlined what his agency can and
can’t do to help Phoenicia landowners with septic
problems now that the hamlet has turned down a waste treatment
system.
Since Phoenicia has declined an offer from New York City
to build a $17.2 system, those with bad septic systems,
cesspools and other inadequate variations like buried
55 gallon drums punched full of holes will need to replace
them.
The cost can be significant. The agency, which has already
funded thousands of systems in the watershed since 1997,
has records showing the average replacement costing $9,783,
but that homeowners should be prepared to spend between
$8000 and $25,000.
Alan Rosa came to Shandaken’s March town board meeting
and explained that some properties can benefit from his
agency’ss septic rehabilitation and replacement
program and others cannot.
Rosa’s agency has funds to help, he said, as long
as certain criteria are met.
The main issue is distance from running water. The bad
septic system, or the center of the property, must be
within 150 feet of a watercourse to qualify. That includes
not only stream like the nearby Esopus and the Stony Clove
Creek, but any place that carries water on a regular basis.
Roadside ditches, however, do not count.
Outside that 150 feet, Rosa said there is little help
his agency can offer save for a hardship variance available
to those with financial troubles. Inside, the agency would
reimburse homeowners for 100% of the cost to build a new
system. If the residence is a second home or investment
property the Agency would reimburse only 60%. Businesses
would get no reimbursement unless they also had a residence
on the premises and used less than 1000 gallons of water
per day. Those meeting such criteria would get a 60% reimbursement.
Rosa also made it clear that the landowner does all the
work, not his agency, which only writes a reimbursement
check.
“It’s a grant. You hire your own engineer
and you hire your own contractor…you own your septic
system,” he said.
Responding to rumors that properties with bad systems
could be condemned, Rosa said that all systems could be
repaired or replaced. Engineers are expected to design
the best system a property allows for, he said.
Some Phoenicia residents were led to believe they could
lose their houses if the community did not accept the
waste treatment system.
Homeowners within the newly expanded eligibility distance
should have received a letter explaining how to participate
in the program. A toll-free call to the CWC (1-877-928-7433)
to arrange an initial visit with technical staffers is
the first step.
Participation is entirely voluntary. Those who sign up
agree to have their system examined. A one-or two-family
residence or home-business combination must use less than
1,000 gallons of water per day.
The CWC Board of Directors was also recently authorized
reimbursement of eligible costs for residential septic
repairs and replacement conducted anywhere in the West-of-Hudson
Watershed between Nov. 23, 2005 and January 31, 2007,
regardless of whether those systems are located in the
current priority areas for the CWC.
If you have questions about whether you are eligible for
reimbursement for past repairs, or whether you qualify
for the revised program, please call the CWC at 845-586-1400
(toll-free 1-877-828-7433).In addition, homeowners who
meet income requirements may qualify for hardship assistance
from the CWC, whether or not their property lies within
an eligible area.
Olive Matters?
Michelle Friedel and Richard R. Wolff attended an Olive
Matters meeting in March to announce their intentions
to run for positions on the school board which will be
voted on in May. Both indicated that their focus was foremost
upon educational issues although they each acknowledged
that the Large Parcel option remains as an annual source
of divisiveness in the school district.
Wolf is a school bus contractor in the Kingston school
district who has lived in Olive since 1985. He has also
served on the Olive Zoning Board of Appeals and boasts
an 11 year record of attendance of local school board
meetings. He said that he supports the continuation of
three elementary schools within the district and an expansion
of the middle school in the long-range plan.
Also in attendance at the March 7 meeting were OCS school
boardmembers Maxanne Resnick and Rita Vanacore, an OM
member.
Seats up for election this year are currently held by
Dave Patterson of Hurley, a former board president, and
Marino D’Orazio of Marbletown, current board president.
Todd Out At CWC
Ward Todd, a longstanding member of the Catskill Watershed
Corporation, will step down from his post next month when
the CWC hold its 10th Annual Meeting of member towns Tuesday,
April 24 at 6 p.m. at CWC offices, 905 Main Street, Margaretville.
Results of the election of representatives from Greene,
Ulster and Sullivan Counties to the CWC Board of Directors
will be announced, but since no one faced opposition it’s
no secret that Town of Hurley Supervisor Mike Shultis
will takes Todd’s place as an Ulster County delegate.
Once officially elected Shultis will represent the watershed
towns of Ulster County alongside Ulster’s other
delegate, Olive town supervisor Bert Leifeld.
There were two other delagate seats available but those,
currently held by Sullivan County’s Georgianna Lepke
and Greene County’s Michael Flaherty, are expected
to be kept by both, who are running unopposed.
Also at the annual meeting a new video about the CWC,
its history and its programs will be screened.
The 15-minute film, produced by Drew Harty of Treadwell,
is timed to coincide with the 10th anniversary of the
New York City Watershed Memorandum of Agreement, which
created the CWC to develop and run environmental protection,
economic development and education programs in the City’s
Catskill-Delaware Watershed.
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.
Local Tragedy
The death of 3-year-old Phoenicia resident Samantha Eve
Scism due to heart failure at a Kingston day-care center
has been determined to be the result of a medical condition,
not a criminal act, city police have said, although a
final medical report was still expected. Scism was pronounced
dead at Benedictine Hospital in Kingston at 3:15 p.m.
Thursday, March 15, 23 minutes after her day-care provider,
Charmaine Trought, called 911 to report the girl was unresponsive
in the day-care center. Police later said the girl died
of cardiac arrest but that they didn’t know what
caused it.
Trought and Samantha’s parents, Brian K. Scism and
Roberta Norman Moore of Phoenicia, were questioned by
police but were not held. It was later surmised that the
girl had a previously undiagnosed medical condition.
Moore described Trought’s operation as “a
loving day-care center” and said she and Scism were
“very happy with it.” Samantha was dropped
off at the day-care center about 8 a.m. Thursday before
her parents went to their respective jobs in Kingston,
police have said.
Services for Samantha Eve were held at the Lasher Funeral
home in Woodstock. Burial was at the Hudler Cemetery in
Mount Tremper.
New Officers...
The Shandaken Democrat Club held its annual elections
of officers at the Boiceville Inn on Feb. 28th. Nick Alba
was elected President of the club, Otia Lee is the new
Vice President, Chandra Lencina is Treasurer, Karen Charman
is Recording Secretary, and Janet Klugiewicz is Corresponding
Secretary. For more information about the Shandaken Democrat
Club, visit the club's website at http://www.shandakendemocrat.org/"
Ulster Summit
Ulster County officials unveiled their new master plan
for the county this past month, one that includes greener
buildings and a continued targeting of culture, the arts,
and technology. The first piece of the 12-part strategy,
according to Glenn Sutherland, chair of the steering committee
for the project dubbed Ulster Tomorrow, will be to coordinate
a group of community leaders who all have personal and
business stakes in the community, and will help the vision
for the county become a reality.
Sutherland added that culture and technology are going
to be a major part of where the county will be headed
in the upcoming years.
“We’re talking about culture, the arts, and
other things of that nature. We’re talking about
enhancing our agricultural base. We’re talking about
obviously enhancing our tourism base and working in the
area of bringing in our green technologies and our renewable
technologies as an industry.”
Sutherland said from there, the county will begin to look
at more in depth, economic development and open space
usage.
Pledging to make the new plans more active than similar
past efforts, 16 individuals have been recruited to help
turn the ideas of the development strategy into reality.
Sutherland is co-leading with county Legislator Hector
Rodriguez, D-New Paltz. Others include Joseph Deegan,
of Deegan Sanglyn Commercial Real Estate, charged with
recruiting a diverse business base; Hurley planner Paul
Hakim of the Wilber National Bank, in charge of streamlining
the local permit review process; Robert Ryan, chairman
of the Ulster County Development Corp., in charge of “cultivating
a community of leaders,” Ward Todd, president of
the Ulster County Chamber of Commerce, looking to develop
measured accountability; Sam Kandel of the Small Business
Development Center; targeting assistance to emerging businesses;
March Gallagher, chairwoman of the Ulster County Industrial
Development Agency, looking to redesign service networks;
Dennis Doyle, director, Ulster County Planning Department,
seeking to develop appropriate infrastructure; Jennifer
Schwartz, deputy director, Ulster County Planning Department,
in charge of preserving and enhancing local quality of
life; Irene MacPherson, interim president of the Ulster
County Development Corp, looking to retain and expand
existing businesses; Nancy Schaef, of the Ulster County
Workforce Development Board, seeking to create a labor
force in line with business needs; Paul Rakov, of the
Emerson Resort and Spa and Crossroads Ventures, tooking
to “enhance the travel and tourism industry; Michael
Siegel, of the Rondout Valley Growers Association, in
charge of the strengthening of agricultural efforts; Melissa
Everett, of Sustainable Hudson Valley, in charge of developing
a strategic advantage in ‘green’ and renewable
technologies and products; and Ron Marquette, vice chairman,
Ulster County Development Corp, looking to nurture a creative
economy.
Stay tuned…
No Casinos...
Ulster County lawmakers are planning to vote next month
on resolution excluding the development of gambling casinos
from the entire county. Members of the county Legislature's
Environmental Committee are bringing forward a resolution
in support of a similar measure being pushed by state
Assemblyman Kevin Cahill calling for Ulster County to
be removed from the list of counties in which Gov. Elliot
Spitzer can enter into compacts with American Indian tribes
to establishing gaming facilities.
Several Ulster County towns, including Gardiner, Hardenburgh,
Marbletown, New Paltz, Plattekill, Saugerties and Woodstock,
have already adopted resolutions outlining their opposition
to gaming facilities.
State Sen. John Bonacic, R-Mount Hope, said the governor
has assured him he does not support a casino in Ulster
County.
Artist Friendly
Business Week magazine has put Kingston and the rest of
Ulster County on its top 10 list of places for artists
to live in the U.S., saying attracting the creative can
be a driving economic force and noting that a burgeoning
arts community is an indicator of neighborhood gentrification
and economic prosperity. Also on the list were Los Angeles,
New York City, San Francisco, Nashville, TN., Santa Fe,
NM; Carson City, NV; Boulder, CO, Nassau-Suffolk counties
of New York state and Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA.
The rating by the magazine was done in conjunction with
Sperling’s BestPlaces. It gave points for an arts
and cultural index, which considers the number and size
of an area’s arts resources. In that category, Kingston
rated 87 out of 100. The magazine also listed a diversity
index, which considers the likelihood of meeting another
person of different race. A higher number indicates more
diversity, with a maximum score of 100. Kingston rated
33.2.
The magazine said that the percentage of the population
between 25-34 was 12.24 percent and put the cost of living
index at 103. That index is based on a national average
of 100. If the cost of living average were 300, it would
indicate three times the national average.
New At UCDC
An out-of-state economic developer and lawyer was chosen
by Ulster County business leaders as the new president
and CEO of the Ulster County Development Corporation.
Lance Matteson, a Vermont native, was the clear choice
of the 90 resumes sifted through over the past few months
for the top development corporation job. A Harvard graduate,
he has a background in economic development, including
positions as the past executive director of the Bennington
County Industrial Corporation, and the president of the
Bennington County Micro-Technology Center.
Matteson said his main focus will be keeping jobs in the
county, and creating new ones.
Rural Life…
“Rural Life in the Catskills: A Forum on Food, Water
and Wood for the Future,” will bring together scholars,
authors, practitioners and producers to consider these
critical aspects of life in the Catskills on Saturday,
April 14 at the Andes Hotel, Andes, Delaware County. The
event runs from 9:30 to 3:30. The $20 registration fee
includes lunch. To reserve your seat at this stimulating
event, send a check payable to the Catskill Center for
Conservation and Development (CCCD) to the Catskill Center,
PO Box 504, Arkville, NY 12406. Registration deadline
is March 30.
A downloadable program and registration form can be found
at the website of the Olive Natural Heritage Society,
one of the event’s sponsors: www.onhs.org
The heritage of the Catskills encompasses a long legacy
of managing the land for agricultural and forest products,
clean drinking water, wildlife, outdoor recreation and
scenic open spaces. How best to support and encourage
the continuation of these treasured aspects of the region
will be the focus of the day-long forum.
The forum is the fourth symposium on regional environmental
issues sponsored by the Catskill Institute for the Environment
(CIE), a consortium of representatives from area colleges
and other educational organizations. In addition to CIE,
the Catskill Center and ONHS, the Andes forum is co-sponsored
by the Watershed Agricultural Council, Bard Center for
Environmental Policy, the Agroforestry Resource Center,
Catskill Forest Association, NYC Department of Environmental
Protection, and the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation.
Grannis Solid
The GOP-controlled State Senate which normally all but
rubber-stamps gubernatorial appointments, has finally
moved forward on Governor Spitzer’s DEC Commissioner-designate
Alexander “Pete” Grannis. On Tuesday, via
secret vote, the senate’s Environmental Conservation
Committee, held its second confirmation hearing since
March 20 and moved the nomination to its final & formal
approval stampers, the Senate Finance Committee. Common
wisdom in Albany seems to be that Grannis’ appointment
and the restructuring of DEC that’s expected to
follow has been delayed pending agreement on the much
larger and wholly unrelated state budget. As of press
time, that agreement appears to have been reached.
Grannis, a Manhattan Assemblyman and long a key figure
in State environmental policymaking, is broadly supported
for the job by Democrats and the environmental community,
while his 30+ year legislative record has drawn opposition
from trapping, hunting, smoking, and gun rights interests.
In a prepared statement for the Senate “EnCon”
committee, Grannis characterized his priorities for DEC
as rebuilding the long-understaffed agency, climate change,
dam safety, smart growth and sustainability, environmental
justice, and conservation.
OCS Football?
The Onteora Community Junior Football Committee, committed
to helping the Onteora School District rebuild its football
program by enlisting children ages 8-13 to learn the fundamentals
of contact football in a community league, held an informational
meeting and early registration for its planned team on
Saturday, March 24 at the Olive Town Hall on Bostock Road
in Shokan. On hand was Mark Keyser, president of the Kingston
Area Junior Football League. The goal of the Onteora Community
Junior Football Committee is to organize two new teams,
a junior and senior team, each with 20- 25 players. All
games will be played at Dietz Memorial Stadium.
“By joining forces with the Kingston Area Jr. Football
League in Kingston, children in the Onteora communities
of Woodstock, Shandaken, Hurley, Marbletown and Olive
will have the opportunity to play the game of contact
football prior to entering
seventh grade,” said a press release from the committee.
“The committee’s philosophy is that of engaging
and teaching children football fundamentals so they have
basic skill before entering the Onteora Middle School
and join the Onteora Modified Program. We can see this
philosophy working with the sport programs in baseball
and soccer.”
The Kingston Area Junior Football League was started in
1971 to provide a safe and healthy environment for young
people to learn the game. The league is a non-competitive
instructional league with a junior division which allows
8-10 year olds to play together and a senior division
for 11-13 year olds.
Contact Cindy O’Connor at 657-2620, Wally Fulford
at 657-6741, or Gene Sorbellini at 657 –6570 for
further information.
New CPR News
Chest compression - not mouth-to-mouth resuscitation -
seems to be the key in helping someone recover from cardiac
arrest, according to new research that further bolsters
advice from heart experts. A study in Japan showed that
people were more likely to recover without brain damage
if rescuers focused on chest compressions rather than
rescue breaths, and some experts advised dropping the
mouth-to-mouth part of CPR altogether.
More than a year ago, the American Heart Association revised
CPR guidelines to put more emphasis on chest presses,
urging 30 instead of 15 for every two breaths given. Stopping
chest compressions to blow air into the lungs of someone
who is unresponsive detracts from the more important task
of keeping blood moving to provide oxygen and nourishment
to the brain and heart.
Another big advantage to dropping the rescue breaths:
It could make bystanders more willing to provide CPR in
the first place. Many are unwilling to do the mouth-to-mouth
part and become flummoxed and fearful of getting the ratio
right in an emergency.
Sudden cardiac arrest - when the heart suddenly stops
beating - can occur after a heart attack or as a result
of electrocution or near-drowning. It’s most often
caused by an abnormal heart rhythm. The person experiencing
it collapses, is unresponsive to gentle shaking and stops
normal breathing.
Mt. Tremper Crash
Timothy Smith of Shandaken was found dead the morning
of March 13 in a drainage ditch along state Route 28 in
Mt. Tremper, apparently the victim of a motor vehicle
accident the night before. Shandaken police said the body
of Timothy P. Smith, 45, of Fox Hollow Road, was found
by members of a state Department of Transportation crew
who were inspecting damage to a guard rail on Route 28
near state Route 212. While checking the rail, the DOT
employees saw an overturned 2001 Dodge pickup in a drainage
ditch at the bottom of a steep embankment, and they found
Smith’s body about 10 feet away from the vehicle,
police said.
Police believe Smith was westbound on Route 28, on his
way home from work, between 8:30 and 9:30 p.m. Monday
when his truck went off the road, through the rail and
down the embankment. Smith was thrown from the truck,
which came to rest upside down in the 25-foot-deep ditch,
police said. They said there are houses near the crash
site and that homeowners the next morning reported hearing
the crash. But no one saw anything out of the ordinary
Monday night - neither the vehicle nor Smith’s body
were easily visible from Route 28 - and no one called
police, they said.
It was not clear whether Smith died in the crash or sometime
afterward. Police added that they did not find evidence
that Smith was wearing a seat belt.
Route 28 was closed for about 2 1/2 hours the morning
of the 13th, and traffic was rerouted onto Wittenberg
Road.
Stopping Violence
Ulster County officially opened its own Domestic Violence
Courtroom in recent weeks, using the event to focus on
the court’s mission to give specific attention to
those who batter and abuse their partners. Ulster County
District Attorney Donald A. Williams said the court, which
started operating about a year ago, is unlike the Ulster
County Regional Drug Court, also held in Kingston.
It is not designed, Williams said, to get treatment to
offenders.
“This court is not an alternative court,”
Williams told a gathering of about 30 people who attended
the ceremony. “In this court, there are no excuses.”
Michael Berg, executive director of Family of Woodstock,
said his agency has seen better participation in domestic
violence prevention programs since the Domestic Violence
court was launched in February 2006, having handled over
400 cases in the year since. He added that more men are
participating in the programs and staying in them longer.
Eat Yr Veggies
Fewer than a third of American adults eat the amount of
fruits and vegetables the government recommends, a trend
that’s remained steady for more than a decade, health
officials are now saying. That’s “well below”
the government’s goal of getting 75 percent of Americans
to eat two servings of fruits and having half of the population
consume three servings of vegetables each day by 2010,
said the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
The diet survey, part of a huge federal health survey
of every state, is based on responses from 305,000 adults
in 2005. It indicates the country is only about halfway
toward meeting its healthy eating goal three years from
now. Although the rate of fruit and vegetable consumption
has remained unchanged since 1994, health officials said
the goal is still within reach.
Specifically the survey showed that 27 percent of adults
ate vegetables three times a day, and about 33 percent
ate fruit twice a day. A serving size is a half-cup for
most fruits and vegetables, one cup for leafy greens.
Senior citizens were more likely than others to follow
Mom’s advice to eat more veggies, with slightly
more than a third of that group eating three or more servings
each day. Younger adults, age 18 to 24, ate the fewest
vegetables. Nearly four-fifths of that age category scraped
the veggies to the side of their plates - if they had
vegetables on the plate at all.
Likewise, seniors also ate the most fruit, with nearly
46 percent eating two or more servings of fruit daily.
People age 35 to 44 ate fruit the least, with fewer than
28 percent eating the recommended amount of fruit each
day.
No Plame?
Dr. James Knodell, director of the Office of Security
at the White House, told a congressional committee in
recent weeks that he was aware of no internal investigation
or report into the leak of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame.
The White House had first opposed Knodell testifying but
after a threat of a subpoena from the committee he was
allowed to appear.
Knodell has testified that those who had participated
in the leaking of classified information were required
to attest to this and he was aware that no one, including
Karl Rove, had done that. He said that he had started
at the White House in August 2004, a year after the leak,
but his records show no evidence of a probe or report
there.
Rep. Henry Waxman recalled that President Bush had promised
a full internal probe. Knodell repeated that no probe
took place, as far as he knew, and was not happening today.
Knodell said he had no conversations whatsoever with the
president, vice president, Karl Rove or anyone about the
leak.
Asked by chairman Waxman if he knew this was an issue
of concern, he said “yes.” Asked if he learned
this from the White House or the press, he said, “through
the press.”
Knodell, who is a career employee and not a Bush appointee,
said he would go back and “review this with senior
management.” He admitted that leaking classified
information called for action, whether the leak was accidental
or on purpose.
Hinchey Honored
For the second time, Audubon New York and the Audubon
Council of New York State awarded Congressman Maurice
Hinchey with its William Hoyt Environmental Award, named
in honor of the environmental advocate who passed away
in 1992 while serving in the State Assembly.
Hinchey received the award once before while serving as
an assemblyman.
“From his time in the Albany to his time in Washington,
Congressman Hinchey has distinguished himself as a true
conservationist and a steadfast supporter of protecting
birds, other wildlife and the important habitats of New
York State,” said Albert Caccese, acting executive
director of Audubon New York.
GOP In Straights?
Is something up in the Grand Old Party locally that mirrors
increasing problems being faced by Republicans nationally?
Two top Republican leaders have stepped down of late with
little reasoning why. Ulster County District Attorney
Donald A. Williams Jr., 53 announced he will not seek
re-election in November. It was also revealed that Ulster
County GOP Chairman Peter Savago, 76, will be resigning
his long-held position in the fall after three decades
in power.
Vincent Bradley Jr., 39, a former prosecutor in the Manhattan
District Attorney’s Office and son of the late state
Supreme Court Justice Vincent Bradley Sr., who died last
November, meanwhile announced that he will seek the Democratic
nomination for Ulster County district attorney…
with little opposition stepping forward as yet.
Williams said he wants to spend more time with his family
and do other work, perhaps in teaching or as a trial lawyer.
He was appointed district attorney by Gov. George Pataki
in 1999 to succeed Michael Kavanagh, who had been named
a state Supreme Court justice. Williams ran unopposed
for the seat later that year. Four years later, he was
re-elected without opposition. In all, Williams has served
in the Ulster County District Attorney’s Office
for 28 years.
“After having the opportunity to serve as your county
chairman for 30 years, I have decided that it is now time
for me to step down,” Savago wrote. “It is
now time to turn the page. The party needs to look to
a new, younger, vigorous leadership.”
Savago, of New Paltz, served as a county legislator for
18 years and in 1968 became the county Legislature’s
first chairman, a position he held for 10 years. He later
served 14 years as a county elections commissioner.
IRS Favorites?
The head of the Internal Revenue Service is facing questions
in Congress about auditors’ complaints that they
are being forced to close corporate cases prematurely,
allowing billions in tax dollars to go unpaid. In interviews,
these revenue agents warned that unless they were free
to pursue what their instincts tell them, their focus
would end up being only on known abuses, and new ones
created by the tax advice industry would go undetected.
The agency countered that it had increased the number
of companies whose tax returns it examined by a fourth
since 2001, even though the number of auditors was virtually
the same. Agency officials said this was accomplished
by cutting back slightly on audits of the very largest
companies, which produce more than 80 percent of all corporate
profits, while increasing audits of those with assets
of $10 million to $250 million. At the same time, the
officials say, they have shortened the average time to
complete an audit from almost two years in 2001 to less
than 18 months last year.
I.R.S. officials say the auditors who are complaining
are mostly older agents unwilling to adopt new approaches.
One veteran agent of the largest corporate audits compared
the I.R.S. to a crew that walks through an orchard instead
of working from ladders. “You can grab all the low-hanging
fruit in a few highly productive hours, while leaving
most of the harvest untouched,” he said.
Another agent, who said he had worked on some of the largest
I.R.S. cases, said he was admonished for resisting management
pressure to close a case in which his team believed that
vast sums were due.
Rot The Teeth?
Root beer could be the safest soft drink for your teeth,
new research suggests, but many other popular diet and
sugared sodas are nearly as corrosive to dental enamel
as battery acid. Prolonged exposure to soft drinks can
lead to significant enamel loss, even though many people
consider soft drinks to be harmless or just worry about
their sugar content and the potential for putting on pounds,
the study says.
The erosive potential of colas is 10 times that of fruit
juices in just the first three minutes of drinking, a
study last year showed. The latest research reports that
drinking any type of soft drink hurts teeth due to the
citric acid and/or phosphoric acid in the beverages.
Non-colas are less acidic than colas overall, the study
found, but they erode the teeth more effectively than
colas.
“This study simply doesn’t mirror reality,”
said American Beverage Association spokesperson Tracey
Halliday. “The findings cannot be applied to real
life situations where people’s eating and drinking
behaviors are very different and there are many factors
at work.”
Broke Parole
A hit-and-run driver who struck and killed a bicyclist
on state Route 28 last spring has been accused of violating
terms of his five-year probation sentence. Joseph Gilsinger,
40, has been arrested by officers with the Ulster County
Probation Department and charged with violating probation
set by Ulster County Judge J, Michael Bruhn in September
2006. He was arrested on the charge on March 14, according
to the Ulster County Probation Department.
Richard “Ricky” Shultis, 43, of Hurley, was
fatally injured when the bicycle he was riding was struck
about 8:30 p.m. April 19, 2006, on Route 28 in the town
of Ulster by a pickup driven by Gilsinger. Gilsinger,
who did not stop after striking Shultis, was arrested
April 21, 2006, and pleaded guilty July 27, 2006, to a
felony charge of leaving the scene of an injury accident
without reporting it. He was sentenced by Bruhn to five
years probation, with one of the conditions being not
to abuse alcohol or drugs.
According to the Probation Department, officers went,
unannounced, to 32 Brown Road in Oliverea where it was
believed Gilsinger was located. Once there, the officers
found him to be intoxicated. Gilsinger was arraigned and
is being held, without bail, at Ulster County Jail. His
next court date is April 20.
During sentencing, Bruhn said if Gilsinger violated any
part of his probation, he would be sentenced to 2 1/3
to seven years in state prison.
Our Arms Race...
Fifteen years ago Robert Konefal, owner of the Pine Hill
Arms, had a small challenge. The Arms, a popular hotel/
restaurant among skiers at the nearby Belleayre Mountain
Ski Center, had one weekend in mid-March without many
bookings. The ski season was winding down, and Konefal
found there was no particular event or activity going
on in the area that would attract visitors.
That’s when he decided to create his own. In conjunction
with Belleayre, Konefal mounted a popular sports event,
called a Triathlon, involving skiing, biking and running.
The idea worked. All of a sudden there was a reason to
come to Pine Hill on that mid-March weekend, and so successful
was the first one back in 1992, it's become an annual
event, the fifteenth of which was celebrated last Saturday,
when about 50 racers from all over the northeast converged
on this tiny hamlet to participate in the fun.
Konefal has said that the event attracts more and more
people from outside the immediate area because he places
notices in publications devoted to the sport. That catches
the eye of many triathlon enthusiasts, and then it gets
spread via word of mouth. Each year, he added, there are
fewer locals involved, especially those novices who wouldn't
normally participate in a triathlon, but would give it
a try because it's nearby home.
The race begins at Belleayre, where participants ski down
from the top on the Tomahawk trail, cut over to Roaring
Brook and head for the Lower base lodge. There it's onto
bikes for a ride down across route 28, up to the Owls
nest, over to Barley Road, onto Birchcreek road and into
Pine Hill. Then it's all the way back up to the lower
lodge where the bikes are abandoned, and the footrace
begins. Runners then endure a three-mile course back down
to Pine Hill.
In this years men’s race the overall winner was
Alex Sherwood of New Paltz, who completed the event with
an impressive time of 54 minutes, 04 seconds. Second place
was taken by Silas Carey with a time of 56 minutes, 23
seconds. Third place winner was Mike Halstead, who got
to the finish line in 56 minutes, 32 seconds.
In the Woman’s competition the overall winner was
Karin Linner with a time of one hour, five minutes and
53 seconds. Victoria Matysek came in second place with
a time of one hour, 16 minutes and 33 seconds. Third place
went to Marla Brucker with a time of one hour, 23 minutes
and 51 seconds.
Library News!
The Phoenicia Library is pleased to offer two special
events for April. On Thursday April 12th at 3:30 Regina
will assist kids (kindergarten-3rd grade) in creating
crafts for spring. Melissa Thongs will lead a book discussion
of “The Locket” on April 14th at 12:00. “The
Locket” by Richard Paul Evans, is described by the
author as “...a story of love between generations
and the nurturing and forgiveness those relationships
require”. This book is available at the Phoenicia
Library. Contact the library at 845-688-7811 or at phoenicialibrary@hotmail.com.
Bees Buzz Off
With most of the nation's food crops depending on pollination
by bees, the mysterious ailment that is causing bees to
disappear is affecting the nation's food security. A lack
of honeybees means that some farmers won't waste money
by planting crops that can't mature without pollination
by bees. Which will undoubtedly yield less food and leave
consumers paying more for what is available.
No one is sure what is causing bees to vanish, but the
syndrome is so prevalent it now has a name: Colony Collapse
Disorder. To solve the problem federal scientists, the
National Beekeepers Association and state researchers
have formed an emergency working group.
Because of urban development most farm fields in America
are not surrounded by woods and bees. That means that
the nation's beekeepers take their hives to farmers around
the nation, renting them out for a while. That exposes
the nation's bees to a variety of potential toxins in
the environment.
One of the many theories is that pesticides in general
are to blame and that in particular a new generation of
nicotine-based pesticides is killing the bees.