Newsbriefs
423/2009
Gas Station?
So the work looks completed at the Country Store in Phoenicia.
Things are back to normal, right? Wrong… there’s
no gas yet.
What’s the story?
We checked in with the state Department of Environmental Conservation,
which has been overseeing the replacement of buried storage
tanks and a possible spill uncovered in recent months.
“DEC Spills is waiting for the submittal of the Tank Removal
Report detailing work performed to address soil/groundwater
impacts at the time of tank removals and installations,”
noted DEC Region Four spokesperson Wendy Rosenbach this week
of the station’s status. “This report will also
include recommendations and proposals for further investigation
of soil/groundwater impacts at the site….The Petroleum
Bulk Storage (PBS) Unit here at DEC is currently reviewing the
PBS registration materials submitted for this facility.”
Which means we’re all still in process, on the one hand,
but that things should be cleared up by Memorial Day, on the
other.
So now, about the hotel?
Gauge Reprieve
The U.S. Geological Survey recently found a means to maintain
the 96 stream-monitoring gauges operated by the New York City
Department of Environmental Protection as a means of collecting
data for flood mmonitorinmg and other purposes. Last month we
reported that the city had planned to close down most of the
gauges as a means of saving the estimated $17,000 per year it
costs to maintain each device on an annual basis.
Among the local areas affected by the possible loss of data
were gauges in the Peekamoose area of the Rondout watershed,
the upper Esopus creeks in Big Indian, and along the Beaverkill
in Lake Hill..
Funding from the U.S. Geological Survey alone will help keep
operating at least eight gauges considered critical by the agency.
Another nine such gauges will be funded through the joint cooperation
of U.S.G.S., the Department of Environmental Protection, the
state Department of Environmental Conservation, the Susquehanna
Flood Forecast and Warning System and the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.
Way to go, everyone!
Olivebridge Dogs
Ulster County SPCA Executive Director Brian Shapiro, who also
serves as a county legislator, says he sent investigators out
to the Olivebridge home of David Delisio on charges that the
man was keeping 18 Rhodesian Ridgeback dogs in inhumane circumstances
based on a local call.
“Someone in the community alerted us,” said Shapiro
of the case that saw DeLisio, 60, arrested April 8 on 18 counts
of “overdriving, torturing and injuring animals”
under state law, ocessed and released with an appearance ticket
returnable in Town of Olive Court.
The 18 dogs were removed and brought to the UCSPCA facility
in Kingston for evaluation and medical care, and then returned
to DeLisio following an April 15 court appearance before Olive
Town Justice Ron Wright.
DeLisio is currently scheduled to reappear before Judge Wright
in Olive Town Court on May 6.
The 18 dogs, which included adults and six puppies, were all
locked in a tiny room within a barn next to DeLisio’s
home where the floor was covered with several layers of feces,
urine and trash, according to Shapiro and his investigators,
along with a mattress with exposed springs.
“We had 18 dogs crammed into a very, very small room in
a barn, and there were situations that were unsafe. It was really
just a disaster waiting to happen,” said Shapiro of the
situation, as reported to him. “Animals have a right to
have space to move, they have a right to breathe clean air,
not fetid and foul air, and they have a right not to have to
live amongst garbage.”
He added that DeLisio was apparently breeding the dogs as part
of a for-profit venture. When they were removed to the SCPA
home on Wiedy Road in the Town of Ulster, a professional groomer
was brought in to begin clean the animals so they could be examined.
by a veterinarian
“She was going t to come back again and clean them a second
time — even after being scrubbed and scrubbed, they were
still filthy,” he said. “The dogs were in need of
more care when the judge ordered them released back to the defendant.”
Shapiro said that in court, DeLisio’s attorney brought
up a section of the same state Ag & Markets law under which
the SPCA’s peace officers arrested DeLisio that gives
a defendant the right to regain his or her animals until his
or her case goes to trial.
“Even if, as was this cae, what we were talking about
is evidence, and we could argue that the animals were in danger,”
Shapiro said. “I respectfully disagree with the conclusion
that the judge came to… 18 dogs in a 15-foot by 15-foot
room is not acceptable.”
Wright, asked about the case, said it was best for him to not
comment. Attempts to get in contact with DeLisio came to naught.
“It’s really in the hudge’s hands to weigh
the pros and cons of a case,” Shapiro added, after noting
that this was the first time a local judge had ordered animals
returned after an SPCA save. “In this case, the dogs were
under very specific care that we’ll bring up in court.”
The Olivebridge case follows one last month when the SPCA, under
Shapiro’s leadership since last autumn, found 21 live
cats and one dead cat in the home of Andrea Kopp, 54 of Wittenburg.
That case, Shapiro said, is still in Woodstock court.
The SPCA director added that the growth in local cases his and
other SPCA offices have been seeing of late comes partly as
a result of the economic downturn, but also as a result of the
SPCA’s heightened efforts to put greater effort into enforcing
the state’s laws regarding pets and animals.
“Animal neglect and animal cruelty is against the law,”
he said. “Ulster County is a place where we focus on this.”
And yet, beyond regular help from the county’s District
Attorney’s office prosectuting cases such as that involving
DeLisio or Kopp, Shapiro added that more was needed.
“The UCSPCA provides the Ulster County government with
Humane Law services, yet receives no compensation whatsoever,”
he noted of his agency’s $600,000 annual budget.. “This
is highly unfair… Our only support comes from community
donations.”
He added that Ulster County is the only county in the region
whose county government does not support their local SPCA, and
urged people to visit www.ucspca.org or call 331-5377 for further
information.
Planning Grants
The Board of Directors of the Catskill Watershed Corporation
(CWC) recently approved six community planning grants benefiting
nine municipalities in Delaware and Ulster County. The awards,
issued under the Local Technical Assistance Program (LTAP),
totaled $200,000.
Ulster County ($50,000) will develop community planning tools
for the Towns of Olive and Shandaken, incorporating principles
of smart growth and open space controls. The Town of Olive applied
on behalf of the seven municipalities of the Central Catskills
Collaborative (the Towns of Hurley, Olive, Shandaken, Middletown,
Andes and the Villages of Margaretville and Fleischmanns) along
the Route 28 corridor and a project that will propose measures
to protect natural and scenic resources along Route 28 and Upper
Esopus Creek, the Bush Kill, and the East Branch of the Delaware
River. The Town of Middletown applied to conduct a $40,830 regional
economic Revitalization Plan for Middletown, Roxbury, Andes
and the Villages of Fleischmanns and Margaretville that will
focus on the local economy and the importance of water resources
to tourism and economic stability. The Village of Fleischmanns
will receive two grants — a $20,000 award to update its
zoning law, and a $14,170 grant to complete a comprehensive
plan for the village park. The Town of Stamford ($25,000) will
complete a Comprehensive Plan to address watershed and farmland
protection.
CWC programs and projects are explained in detail on the corporation’s
web site: www.cwconline.org. The entity’s 12th Annual
Meeting will take place on Tuesday, April 28 at 6 p.m. at CWC
offices, 905 Main Street, Margaretville.
Food Costs Up!
Ulster County’s biweekly Marketbasket Survey reflecting
the cost of feeding a family of four through local supermarkets,
jumped a whopping 7% between April 3 and April 17. The survey
which is based on the USDA’s Moderate Cost Family Food
Plan shows that the weekly cost to feed a family of four is
now up to $218.65. According to Patrick Long, the county’s
Deputy Director of Consumer Affairs, this is the largest biweekly
jump in food costs since they began tracking them last August.
Nearly all of the increase said Long, is in the category of
Meats & Fish.
Old School...
The Olive & Hurley Old School Baptist Church at Winchell’s
Corner is currently in the process of completing an 11-year
restoration project of the centuries-old meeting house this
Spring. At the moment, the structure’s entire interior
is scaffolded, the ceiling is being repaired, the walls are
being scraped and skim-coated, and the entire interior will
be repainted in its original colors. The new, replicated shutters
should be installed shortly. Volunteers are also installing
new, massive bluestone slabs on the front porch (to replace
some busted-up cement slabs).
More, with pictures, in our next issues…
Affordablility…
The first funding awards from the federal economic stimulus
package aimed at boosting affordable housing with the Hudson
Valley receiving a total of $27.2 million from three different
programs.
Senator Charles Schumer said the Hudson Valley will receive
$6.1 million in Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funding,
$7.6 million in capital funding for homelessness services, and
$13.6 million from the capital fund for modernization and development
of public housing. Schumer said this vital funding will both
create jobs and upgrade aging affordable housing complexes to
improve the quality of life for tens of thousands of New Yorkers.
The funding breaks out as follows:
$6.1 million boost for CDBG, a program once vital in the Shandaken
and Olive areas via the once-powerful SHARP Committee, which
provides funding for local governments to undertake a wide range
of activities intended to create suitable living environments
for low-income families and seniors by providing decent affordable
housing and creating economic opportunities.
$7.6 million from the Homelessness Prevention Block grant program.
This program provides financial and other assistance to prevent
individuals and families from becoming homeless and help those
who experiencing homelessness to be quickly re-houses and stabilized.
This funding targets individuals and families who would be homeless
without this assistance by providing a variety of services including
short and medium term rental assistance, housing and relocation
services, and aid with other costs.
$13.6 million from the Capital Fund, which will be used to provide
funds to Public Housing Agencies eligible for Capital funding
as authorized under Section 9 of the United States Housing Act
of 1937, with the exception that funds cannot be used for operations
or rental assistance. The funds will be used for capital and
management activities including modernization and development
of public housing.
Locally, The U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development
agency is offering home repair loans at 1 percent interest for
qualifying very-low income homeowners. Homeowners 62 and older
who cannot afford a loan may qualify for a grant. The maximum
outstanding loans at a given time is $20,000 and the maximum
repayment term is 20 years. Grants are limited to a lifetime
assistance of $7,500.
Home repair loan applicants must live in a rural area, own and
occupy the single-family dwelling in need of repair, have an
acceptable credit history, the ability to repay the loan and
an income falling within the very-low category for the household
size of the county inhabited.
A coverage area including Columbia, Dutchess and Ulster counties
is now being handled out of Middletown, in Orange County. For
more information, call (845) 343-1872, ext. 4.
In addition, The Rural Ulster Preservation Company (RUPCO),
a member of the national NeighborWorks network, is being awarded
$190,500 in flexible first round grant funds to provide a much-needed
boost to the agency operating budget as a whole and to its First
Time Homebuyer programs in particular. Eligible applicants will
be first time homebuyers who have gone through RUPCO’s
First Time Homebuyer’s Education and Counseling program
and are purchasing a home in Ulster County. This program will
assist approximately 15 households with incomes of up to 115%
of area median income.
For more information about RUPCO call 331-2140 ext. 268.
Stimulus…
The Hudson Valley is expected to receive at least $167 million
in transportation and infrastructure funding through the federal
economic stimulus package. The highway, road repair, bridge
work and other infrastructure projects are anticipated to create
some 4,000 jobs. Among local projects pegged, to date, are…
$3.3 million for a project to construct new bluestone sidewalks
along Route 209 in the Hamlet of Stone Ridge located in the
Town of Marbletown, Ulster County. The project will restore
the historic sidewalk, repave a nearly one mile section of highway,
and install a new traffic signal at the intersection of Route
209 and Route 213. The new traffic signal will also include
enhanced pedestrian signal poles and crosswalks. Construction
is expected to be completed in the summer of 2010.
And $4.4 million for a project to repave approximately 22 miles
of state route 9W roadway in Orange and Ulster counties. The
top layer of worn, deteriorated pavement will be removed and
replaced with new asphalt and fresh pavement markings to extend
the service life of pavement. Construction is expected to be
completed by the end of 2009.
Tax Relief?
The Ulster County Legislature voted unanimously this month to
support an Omnibus Property Tax Relief and Reform Bill, which
provides short-term relief and long-term reform on behalf of
the Ulster County residents and New York State taxpayers. The
resolution goes on to request the adoption of this bill by the
New York State Legislature in this 2009 session.
The Omnibus Bill is the work of a consortium of grass roots
tax groups from around New York State, unions and fiscal watchdogs.
The consortium has been working for nine months on legislation
that would reform the property tax system to provide immediate
relief to overburdened homeowners through the creation of a
property tax circuit breaker –with the long term goal
of creating a fair and equitable tax system by shifting costs
from the local level to the state.
Stay tuned…
Host Family?
There are several opportunities out there now for prospective
host families willing to share their homes with students from
abroad over the coming months.
USAI, a local educational organization, is looking for families
who would like to host international students from Spain and
France attending Frost Valley Day Camp for 3 weeks in July and
August. Weekly stipends will be available for travel and entertainment.
If your family is interested, contact Belen Millan, Director
of the Summer Programs, at 688-2434. You can read more about
USAI at www.usaimmersion.com.
Also, Coleman Catholic High School is looking for families willing
to host a Korean or Chinese exchange student for the entire
2009-2010 school year. Benefits of hosting include a monthly
stipend and a tuition break for your child attending Coleman
For further information or if interested, contact Bob or Laura
Cunningham at (845) 338- 3969 or via email at cclan7@aol.com
State Of The Arts
The Center for Research, Regional Education and Outreach (CRREO)
and the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art (SDMA) at the State University
of New York at New Paltz, along with the Dutchess Council for
the Arts, will host a program for artists, arts organizations
and interested residents throughout the region, titled “Innovative
Responses to the Current Funding Crisis in the Arts” on
Tuesday, April 28. The program begins at 4 p.m. with a director’s
tour of the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art. At 5 p.m. in Lecture
Center 102, Heather Hitchens, executive director of the New
York State Council on the Arts, will speak about ways in which
the council is addressing the state budget cuts and the future
state of the arts in New York.
Following the keynote, Hitchens will moderate a panel discussion
with the focus on the status of New York state arts funding
and the innovative approaches that arts organizations and artists
might use to maintain their programs and businesses. Panelists
include Carl Van Brunt, artist and gallery owner, Jeff Haynes,
musician, founder and president of Komunyaka Music, Lou Trapani,
artistic and managing director, Center for Performing Arts at
Rhinebeck, Meira Blaustein, cofounder and festival director,
Woodstock Film Festival , and Carole Wolf, executive director,
Mill Street Loft.
Each panelist will be asked to talk about their own innovative
responses to the current funding crisis. This will be followed
by a problem-solving discussion guided by audience queries.
The event is free and open to the public.
“The nation’s financial crisis has had a significant
impact on the arts community, creating real challenges for arts
organizations, arts management, and the relationship of business
and government to the arts in our state,” said Sara Pasti,
director of the SDMA. “With this event, we are trying
to mine what Hudson Valley artists and art managers have done
creatively to deal with the current situation.”
The mission of The Center for Research, Regional Education and
Outreach (CRREO) (www.newpaltz.edu/crreo) is to conduct studies
on topics of regional interest; bring visibility and focus to
these matters; foster communities working together to better
serve citizenry; and advance the public interest in our region.
Getting Low…
A popular summer destination for locals and visitors alike has
come to the attention of many this week. The Pine Hill Lake,
known also as Belleayre Beach, has lost lots of water. Now less
than half full, the shores of the state-owned, man-made resource
have grown considerably as the water line drops, now well below
the diving platform used by swimmers and the dock used to launch
boats.
But according to state officials all is well.
“We have lowered the level of the lake to conduct routine
maintenance’ said Lori Severino, a spokesperson for the
State’s Department of Environmental Conservation. Once
the work is complete, she said, the lake will be refilled.
Unclear is what specifically the state is working on at the
lake.
Calls to Belleayre Superintendent Tony Lanza were not returned.
Go, Tessa!
Onteora High School junior Tessa Morelli will be honored at
Carnegie Hall on June 4th for winning a national award through
The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, an annual showcase
of creativity in Grades 7-12. Presented by the Alliance for
Young Artists & Writers, a National Silver Award will be
presented to Tessa for her film Cycles, a commentary on material
possessions in a disposable world. Selected award recipients
and high school seniors recognized with top honors for portfolios
will have their art or writing exhibited in Manhattan at the
World Monuments Fund Gallery.
By winning at the national level, Tessa joins the ranks of some
of the country’s most revered artists and writers who
once received Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, a list which
includes Robert Redford, Andy Warhol, Truman Capote, John Lithgow,
Bernard Malamud, Joyce Carol Oates, Sylvia Plath, and Richard
Avedon.
The first level of recognition for outstanding student work
took place through Ulster BOCES partnership in the Hudson Valley
Art Affiliate, which coordinated the participation of students
in Dutchess, Orange, Sullivan, and Ulster Counties. In mid-January,
Tessa was one of 38 students recognized at the Hudson Valley
Scholastic Awards, making hers one of 10 Gold Key Awards earned
by an Ulster County student. After earning the regional award,
Tessa’s work was evaluated by an esteemed panel of jurors
in New York City, along with 37 others from the Mid-Hudson region,
and thousands of entries from other regional affiliate programs
across the country.
Tessa’s film, Cycles, features a woman on a vintage bicycle
in Phoenicia who replaces random objects with others she finds,
only to find that another “nomadic” character has
moved them once again. “As the film progressed, particularly
while I was editing, it became more and more of a social commentary,”
she says. “It could definitely be interpreted as a criticism
of how fickle we are with our material possessions…”
For more information, contact Katy Colletti, Ulster BOCES coordinator
of Talent Development & the Arts, at 845-255-1402, ext.
1257.
The Third!
The Woodstock Chamber Orchestra brings its Thirtieth Season
Celebrations to a close with performances of Beethoven’s
monumental Symphony No. 3, the Eroica (Heroic) Symphony, May
1, 2 and 3, throughout the area. In this work Beethoven opened
new vistas of sound and constructed a work of inner musical
logic that set a standard for symphonic composers. David Leighton,
Artistic Director of the WCO, will conduct this towering work,
as well as Beethoven’s concert aria, “Ah, perfido!”
with soprano Cheryl Warfield, and two intimate pieces by Frederick
Delius, “On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring”
and “Summer Night on the River”.
Performances are 8 pm Friday, May 1 at Olin Hall, Bard College,
8 pm Saturday, May 2 at Pointe of Praise Family Life Center,
243 Hurley Avenue, Kingston and 3 pm Sunday, May 3 at Bearsville
Theater, Route 212, Woodstock. Call 246-7045 or visit www.wco-online.com
for information.
Pot’s Benefits…
Citing “overwhelming” evidence that marijuana eases
pain and anxiety for the chronically ill, medicinal pot advocates
told a federal appeals panel last week that the federal government
should be stopped from spreading “false information”
about marijuana.
As was argued in the debate over whether stem cell research
should be resumed, Americans for Safe Access cast the Bush administration’s
opposition to any legalized use of marijuana as being shaped
by conservative sentiments instead of hard facts. President
Obama has signaled to Cabinet members that science should be
guiding government judgments in controversial matters of medicine
and technology, not the prevailing political mood. IN recent
weeks, however, a government lawyer told three judges of the
U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals that the administration wasn’t
required to explain or retract its statements that marijuana
“has no currently accepted medical use.”
Marijuana is banned under federal law but is legal for cancer
patients and others suffering chronic illnesses in California
and a dozen other states. Safe Access sued the federal government
under a law that prohibits it from disseminating inaccurate
information.
U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric Holder signaled last month that the administration
wouldn’t interfere with medical pot dispensing in states
where it is legal as long as users abide by state law.
Safe Access argues that the federal government needs to update
its assessment to conform with the reality of marijuana’s
broadening legal use as a pain reliever.
Eating Better
Ulster County Executive Michael Hein has signed a local law
requiring chain restaurants in the county to post the calorie
content of the foods they serve. The move makes Ulster the first
county in the Mid-Hudson Valley to take such a step.
The law, adopted 17-9 by the Legislature, requires all chain
restaurants that have 15 or more food-service establishments
in the Unites States to clearly post calorie information on
menus, menu boards and food-display tags in their Ulster County
locations. It does not apply to locally owned and operated eateries
or chains with fewer than 15 restaurants.
The law has the backing of a number of heath organizations,
including the American Cancer Society.
Hein said that in the days after the Legislature’s vote,
his office received a number of calls from residents who seemed
to oppose the law, but the way the calls reached the office
struck the executive as odd. He said local residents were called
by someone — he doesn’t know who, but suspects the
restaurant industry was involved — and asked a series
of questions about “jobs, taxes and menu items”
and then had their calls forwarded to the executive’s
office.
The law is scheduled to take effect in October.
Jail Time…
A Shandaken man is expected to get one to three years in prison
for killing a passenger in his pickup truck in a drunk driving
incident. Jay Conosa, 44, of 11 Regina Way, located in the Broadstreet
Hollow area of town, pleaded guilty in Ulster County Court to
second-degree vehicular manslaughter and vehicular assault,
prosecutors said. Conosa is expected to be sentenced on May
18 to 1 to 3 years in state prison on each count.
In court, Conosa pleaded guilty to felony charges in a one-vehicle
accident last September that claimed the life of his passenger,
Timothy Phelan, 48, of Phoenicia, and seriously injured the
other passenger, Karl W. Bowers, 50,of Shandaken, who suffered
multiple rib fractures and other injuries.
State police took a blood sample from Canosa following the crash
and found he had a blood alcohol content of 0.11, exceeding
the state’s legal limit for alcohol. Prosecutors said
Canosa admitted drinking beer and other alcoholic drinks at
a local tavern before driving home to Shandaken.
Canosa was driving a 1987 pickup truck with two passengers on
Broadstreet Hollow Road in the town of Shandaken at about 10:30
p.m. on Sept. 6, 2008, when the truck veered off the pavement
at a strong bend in the road and struck a large tree.
Burn Barrels?
The state Department of Environmental Conservation has issued
a springtime advisory warning of the potential harmful health
effects and increased likelihood of wildfires caused by backyard
“burn barrels.”
The agency warns that “burning household trash can cause
harmful health effects due to the release of potentially dangerous
compounds found in backyard fires.” Burn barrels usually
have fires that burn at lower temperatures than large industrial
incinerators, resulting in harmful fumes released into the air
and hazardous materials remaining in the ash. They also noted
that ashes from a burn barrel should never be used to fertilize
a vegetable garden because the ashes can contain numerous hazardous
materials that would be harmful if ingested.
Any type of burning by a commercial or industrial enterprise,
except agriculture, is illegal unless a permit has been obtained
from the Department of Environmental Conservation. Residential
burning may require a permit, depending on the location of the
residence. Open burning is prohibited within incorporated villages
and cities, and all towns over 20,000 in population.
Attempts by the DEC to ban such burnings, including brush piles,
ran into public opposition when proposed last year and are currently
awaiting revision and new hearings, eventually.
Stay tuned… and stay safe.
Economics...
“Toward a New Economics; Transparency and Sharing”
is the title of a public talk and community conversation being
held in Rosendale on Sunday May 3 from 4:00 to 6:00 PM at the
Lifebridge Foundation, with support from the UN Millennium Development
Goals. Three speakers will be featured: David McCarthy, author
of The Six-Fold Economics of Compassion, past chairman of Hudson
Valley Sustainable Communities Network (Now Sustainable Hudson
Valley), and staff videographer for Karma Triyana Dharmachakra
Monastery in Woodstock; Kristine Flones, initiator of The Woodstock
TimeBank, an exchange of services experiment; and Mike Ignatowski,
head of The Global Marshall Plan Initiative, and President of
the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Catskills.
The program Towards a New Economics – Transparency and
Sharing is free and open to the public at Lifebridge Sanctuary,
333 Mountain Rd. Rosendale. Call 658.3439 or visit www.lifebridge.org
for further information.
Also, the Third Annual Hudson Valley Entrepreneurial Conference
& Expo is set to get underway April 29 and 30 at the Mid
Hudson Civic Center in Poughkeepsie NY
Among highlights will be a presentation by Glenn Croston, author
of 75 Green Businesses You Can Start to Make Money and Make
a Difference. Expect hosts of seminars and workshops, information
booths and job networking. For further information call (845)
790-5004 or visit www.GEThudsonvalley.org.
Croston will also speak from 8:00 – 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday,
April 29 at SUNY Ulster’s Business Resource Center in
Kingston as a presentation of Sustainable Hudson Valley.
Next Big Issue?
Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.) recently introduced a bill in the
U.S. House of Representatives to amend the U.S. Constitution
to permanently “enshrine” in American society an
inviolable set of parents’ rights…. And more importantly,
set a new “culture wars” issue on the books for
discussion in next year’s mid-term elections. The bill
had 70 co-sponsors, all Republicans, and was intended to stem
the “slow erosion” of parents’ rights and
to circumvent the effects of a United Nations treaty the GOP
believes “clearly undermines parental rights in the United
States.”
The treaty to which the bill refers is the U.N. Convention on
the Rights of the Child, a 20-year-old document signed by President
Bill Clinton in 1995 but never ratified. The treaty sets international
standards for government obligations to children in areas that
range from protection from abuse and exploitation to ensuring
a child’s right to free expression. It was signed by all
nations excepting the U.S. and Somalia.
While a treaty that seeks to protect children may sound innocuous,
its opponents, such as Michael Farris, the Christian conservative
founder of the Home School Legal Defense Association, see in
it a dystopian future in which “Parents would no longer
be able to administer reasonable spankings to their children”;
“A child’s ‘right to be heard’ would
allow him (or her) to seek governmental review of every parental
decision with which the child disagreed”; and “Children
would have the ability to choose their own religion while parents
would only have the authority to give their children advice
about religion,” as he puts it on his website parentalrights.org.
Advocates counter that 193 countries have managed to take the
plunge without catastrophic result; that the treaty is supported
by groups ranging from the Girl Scouts to the Christian Children’s
Fund; and that opponents both overestimate and misunderstand
the treaty’s purpose and likely impact.
Watcha Driving?
General Motors will conduct a massive recall of 1.5 million
cars in May while preparing to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Six models, among three makes under the GM brand, spanning seven
years of manufacture are being recalled due to a risk of engine
compartment fire, according to the National Highway Safety Administration’s
Office of Defects Investigation.
The models being recalled include the 1997-2003 Buick Regal,
the 2000-2003 Chevrolet Impala, the 1998-1999 Chevrolet Lumina,
the 1998-2003 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, the 1998-1999 Oldsmobile
Intrigue and the 1997-2003 Pontiac Grand Prix.
Pre-K Worries
The recession could spell trouble for the nation’s youngest
schoolchildren, despite positive trends in spending and enrollment
for state pre-K programs, according to a new report. At least
nine states are likely to make cuts to pre-kindergarten programs
including some of the biggest - California, Florida and New
York, said Steve Barnett, one of the authors of the annual report
on state-funded preschool and director at the National Institute
for Early Education Research at Rutgers University, who added
that enrollment cuts, fewer dollars per pupil, and delaying
expansion plans are some of the steps that states are considering.
A spokesman for New York Governor David Paterson says the state’s
2010 budget maintains spending on pre-K programs at current
levels, but doesn’t have additional money to expand them.
The institute is urging the federal government to match state
spending with up to $2,500 for every additional child enrolled
in state pre-K programs as a way to grow preschool so that all
of the nation’s 4-year-olds can have access by 2020.
Barnett said a good preschool program helps children acquire
rich vocabularies and learn about numbers and shapes.
“They also learn how to take responsibility for their
actions and to get along with other children,” he said.
“These things are the foundation for success in school
and in life.”
Currently, more than 80 percent of all 4-year-olds attend some
kind of preschool program, according to the report. About half
of those go to a public program, either state pre-K, Head Start
or special education. The other half attend private programs.
Digital Corridor
Mark Greene, a Kingston resident who has won an Emmy for his
work in digital media, is working to develop the Digital Corridor
Initiative, an idea to attract those primarily living in New
York City to relocate to Kingston and surrounding areas.
Greene said Kingston already has a significant population of
what he called technopreneurs or micro-businesses that can be
built upon.
For more information, go to www.kingstondigitalcorridor.org
Unstimulated…
The list of governors threatening to decline federal stimulus
money last month read like a list of Republicans considering
running for president in 2012: Govs. Mark Sanford, Bobby Jindal
and Sarah Palin led the anti-stimulus charge. But what began
with a bang is ending with something closer to a whimper. All
three of those governors have been forced to scale back their
expectations, to varying degrees, as the push of conservative
philosophy gave way to the pull of political reality.
All three found that praise from the conservative movement in
Washington meant nothing to furious state legislators of both
parties. And in the end, along with other conservative Republican
governors, the three submitted letters in recent weeks asking
to be eligible for federal funds, a spokesman for the White
House Office of Management and Budget confirmed.
“At this point, it looks like everybody’s on board
with the program,” said Tom Gavin, an OMB spokesman.
Republican governors faced with the popular federal spending
legislation, formally known as the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act, staked positions on a political continuum, with national
conservative support at one end and local approval at the other.
Some campaigned for the legislation with the president and accepted
the money enthusiastically. Other governors sought a middle
ground. Still others loudly spoke of a partial rejection of
the federal funds… but all of the latter sparked statehouse
uprisings. Lawmakers, including Republicans in Alaska, Alabama,
South Carolina, Mississippi and Texas, moved to make end runs
around their governors and accept the money.
So now what?
Eating Deals...
Two big eating deals are presently being offered by Ulster County
restaurants, including offerings along the Route 28 corridor.
First off, there are the 26 restaurants, located in Kingston,
Saugerties, New Paltz, Woodstock, and Mount Tremper, that are
offering a $16.09 meal special during Ulster County’s
Quadricentennial Celebration of Henry Hudson’s 1609 voyage.
Chefs are taking the opportunity to be creative. Here are a
few sample deals, most of which are offered through October:
Included among the 26 are Peekamoose Restaurant and Taproom,
located on Route 28 in Big Indian, and Catskill Rose Lodging
and Dining in Mount Tremper. For addresses and contact information,
visit www.hudsonriver400.org.
Also upcoming will be a Saturday, April 25 event where five
area personalities will don aprons and serve lunch at the
Peekamoose Restaurant in Shandaken in an effort to raise funds
for theUlster County Chapter of the American Red Cross. Things
start at noon. Among the “celebrities” will be JR
Lawrence of Mang Insurance Company, Rosina Montana of the Belleayre
Ski Patrol, Retired Onteora Superintendent, Jack Jordan, Margaretville
Hospital CEO Ed Morache, and Emerson Resort & Spa Manager
Tracy Lynch. All tips the waiters receive will go directly to
the Red Cross, as will the non-food costs of each luncheon ticket
sold. Reservations are critical so planners know how many folks
will attend. They can be made electronically at bdgroup@catskill.net
or by phone to 254-5553.
Sweeteners?
If you're watching your weight, those no-calorie sweeteners
could be doing more harm than good. A recent study found that
artificial sweeteners might actually foster weight gain by confusing
the body in a way that makes it harder to burn calories. In
the study, one group of rats were fed yogurt sweetened with
glucose, a simple sugar with the same calories as table sugar.
Another group received yogurt with saccharin. The saccharine
group went on to consume more calories, gain more weight and
put on more body fat. The findings come on the heels of a separate
study that linked diet soda to an increased likelihood of metabolic
syndrome — a combination of risk factors for cardiovascular
disease and diabetes that include abdominal obesity, high cholesterol
and blood glucose levels, and high blood pressure.
The End?
Engaging the World Forum, a gathering where people of faith
look at and share thoughts on difficult issues of contemporary
life, will meet on Sunday, April 26, at 3:00 PM in the Carriage
House at the Jay Gould Memorial Reformed Church in Roxbury to
address the question: “Is It OK to Die?” Rev. Richard
A. Dykstra, who is both minister of the Gould Reformed Church
and works as a chaplain for Catskill Area Hospice and Palliative
Care, will lead the session. He will be joined by two special
guests from the Andes Round Table— Akira Odeni, sociology
professor at SUNY Delhi, and Bill Piervincenzi, retired biology
professor.
For more information, call 586-1689, 607-326-7101, or e-mail
gouldchurch@catskill.net.