Newsbriefs
4/9/2009
The
Budget & Us
So the state budget finally passed, with few of the key provisions
that had our readers enthralled making it to the end as state
property tax freezes and other matters moved to the backseat
to make room for a new “tax the rich” fix geared
towards New York’s downstate pockets of wealth.
Millions of dollars in union-paid ads, an influential left wing
of the Democratic Party and the loss of Republican control of
the state Senate contributed to an overhaul of Reagan-era income
tax brackets under the 2009-10 spending plan totaling $131.8
billion that was adopted, leading some to believe that much
was put forth as a smokescreen to pull upstate legislators onboard
in the final rounds.
The final figure is $10.5 billion more than the current budget,
or about 8.7 percent at a time with minimal inflation. Most
of that, however, is use of $7.2 billion in federal economic
stimulus funds.
General fund spending, which excludes federal money, is projected
to increase no more than 1 percent, to about $54 billion.
The Legislature used federal stimulus money to restore about
half of the more than $1 billion in cuts Gov. David Paterson
proposed in his December budget. Schools would get only slight
increases in aid, although Paterson’s proposed cut of
3.3 percent - or about $700 million - was fully restored.
Gone will be the STAR rebate checks taxpayers have been receiving.
But $170 million in spending for legislators’ pet projects,
key for re-election years like 2010 (and always a strong source
of funding for regions such as ours) will be untouched.
The final budget deal overhauls the state’s income tax
rates to get $4 billion from wealthier residents who have been
paying about the same rate as a family making $40,000 a year.
The agreement will increase the current top rate of 6.85 percent.
Residents making more than $300,000 but less than $500,000 would
face an income tax rate of 7.85 percent. Those making more than
$500,000 would see a rate of 8.97 percent.
Of interest to the increasingly photogenic Catskills and Hudson
Valley, the state’s television and film industry will
get $350 million in tax credits to help trim the cost of production
in the state and give breaks to investors.
Also key on a local basis was the grassroots political effort
that helped prevent the Hudson River Valley Greenway Communities
Council and Conservancy from being merged with other state agencies
in budget-cutting moves.
The Greenway is a state agency created to facilitate development
of a voluntary regional strategy for preserving scenic, natural,
historic, cultural and recreational resources while encouraging
compatible economic development and maintaining the tradition
of home rule for land-use decision-making. Through voluntary
participation in the Greenway, communities in 13 counties -
including Ulster, Dutchess, Columbia and Greene (and a growing
number of towns here in the Route 28 corridor) - can receive
technical assistance and funding for local land-use planning
projects that support the goals of the Greenway program.
Republican Senator John Bonacic, meanwhile, spoke for his party,
shut out from final talks for the first time in decades, called
the spending plan “the big ugly,” saying it will
chase business out of the state with higher taxes and fees.
“This budget is like bad fish; it’s going to smell
worse and worse every day,” he said. “”As
a result of the budget, New Yorkers will pay more for things
we use each day - cell phones, electricity, health insurance,
hospital services, and auto insurance, to name just a few.”
Assemblyman Kevin Cahill, meanwhile, spoke for the Democratic
majority when he trumpeted, following the budget’s passage,
the manner in which the budget closed a $17 billion deficit
and “enacted a spending plan that maintains funding for
education while reflecting the State’s fiscal challenges.
With Federal assistance, the budget includes an additional $1.2
billion for schools statewide and restores many of the proposed
cuts in the Executive Budget.”
“Despite an unprecedented deficit, the Assembly put forth
a plan in which the needs of our families take precedence above
all else,” said Cahill. “Not only is it unacceptable
to jeopardize the future of our children, but any reduction
in state-aid would further burden property tax payers, which
is the last thing we should to do in this economic climate.”
Under the budget, aid to Onteora School District, said Cahill,
will rise by $439,194 over recent projections tied to Paterson’s
proposed cuts. And cuts to the Environmental Protection Fund,
utilized to aid in the protection of Catskills lands, will end
up not being as severe as originally announced.
The Assemblyman also praised reforms, within the budget bill,
to the state’s staunch “Rockefeller Drug Laws,”
as well as expansion of the state’s “bottle bill”
for refunds.
Yet to be decided will be the exact roll-out of stimulus dollars
for local “bricks and mortar,” or “road and
bridges” projects, prioritized by the county last month
but still under the control of the governor.
In March, Ulster County Executive Mike Hein, also Chairman of
the county’s Transportation Council, announced that cumulatively,
governments within Ulster County would be receiving an estimated
$20.7 million in federal stimulus funds for transportation initiatives.
The announcement followed the adoption of a prioritization list
by the UCTC of the infrastructure projects submitted under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).
Approximately $17.6 million will be allocated to 10 first-round
highway, bridge and pedestrian projects located throughout the
county; and another $3.1 million to 8 transit projects. Five
second-round projects, totaling approximately $15.7 million,
were also approved in the event that one or more first-round
projects could not proceed, or the state found other means of
funding them
Among the approved Round 1 Highway, Bridge and Pedestrian Projects
put forth by Hein was $2 million for Route 28 Paving from Route
375 to the Delaware County Line, along with another $2.2 million
for general paving work on state highways throughout the county…
most of which seemed likely to go to projects in the county’s
southern half. Round two projects also included another $11.2
million for Route 28 repaving.
Let’s see what happens on the state level, next.
Annual Meeting
The Catskill Watershed Corporation will hold its 12th Annual
Meeting of member towns Tuesday, April 28 at 6 p.m. at CWC offices,
905 Main Street, Margaretville. Results of the election of representatives
from Schoharie and Ulster Counties to the CWC Board of Directors
will be announced.
In Ulster County, Olive Town Supervisor Bert Leifeld is seeking
re-election. Leifeld, who currently serves as the CWC’s
Vice President, was not challenged in the election process said
CWC Attorney Tim Cox, and was therefore nominated by all of
the Ulster County watershed towns. Beginning on the 28th, Leifeld
will begin his second, four year term.
Ulster County’s other delegate is Mike Shultis, the former
supervisor of the Town of Hurley who lost a reelection bid two
years ago, who will serve two more years on the CWC Board.
The CWC board consists of 15 members, 12 of them elected officials
of West-of-Hudson watershed municipalities. Delegates are elected
to the board by supervisors of the 39 townships in the watershed.
The board includes six members from Delaware County, two from
Ulster County, two from Greene County, and one each from Sullivan
and Schoharie Counties. In addition, the board includes a representative
of the city, appointed by the Mayor of New York; a representative
of the state, appointed by the Governor; and a representative
of the environmental community, also appointed by the Governor.
Gauge Update…
New York City Department of Environmental Protection officials
have agreed to keep open three stream gauges, including two
that provide flood information, for an additional six months,
but have not changed plans to discontinue use of 53 gauges as
a budget-cutting requirement.
U.S. Geological Survey officials said one Ulster County gauge
on the Rondout Creek above Red Brook at Peekamoose will be maintained
even though it is not required by the National Weather Service
for real-time water levels.
In a report on the significance, federal officials wrote the
Ulster gauge represents a good starting monitor for early runoff
levels because of the 1,740-foot elevation.
Two of the gauges to remain in service for the additional time
are in Delaware County – and tied into the Delaware River
watershed basin — and are used for National Weather Service
flood forecasts.
In a revised U.S.. Geological Survey list, 25 gauges of the
total 53 planned to be discontinued are currently used to provide
flood modeling or forecast data to the National Weather Service.
In all there are 11 gauges to be discontinued on June 30; 31
on Sept. 30; 3 on March 31, 2010; and 8 on Sept. 30, 2010.
U.S.. Sen. Charles Schumer in a press release said the decision
to keep three gauges operational for an additional six months
is not enough to protect residents and property downstream along
the Rondout and Esopus creeks.
“This is a step in the right direction, but only one-tenth
the way to what is needed,” he said, preparing to visit
Boiceville this week for a brief speaking event at the Five
Arches Bridge. “The bottom line is that the DEP has a
responsibility to Catskill and Hudson Valley watershed communities
to fund these gauges to guard against flooding, measure water
levels and provide crucial data to the USGS and local authorities.
We will continue to work with communities and local governments
to prevent cuts.”
Back To Earth!
There’s a host of fun outdoors events happening over the
coming two weeks, tied to the concurrence this year of Easter
and Passover and all their pastoral themes, Earth Day, and the
final advent of flower shoots, foliage, and warmer weather.
Among the fun…
The Ashokan Center in Olivebridge is hosting an “Honoring
the Earth” celebration on Saturday, April 18, lending
focus to Earth Day on the 22nd, Arbor Day on the 24th, National
Environmental Education Week from April 12-18th and April’s
No Child Left Inside Days. It will all go down from 10 am to
5 pm at the Ashokan Center’s campus with a special early
morning bird walk at 6:30 am being offered by pre-registration.
At 10 am the official opening ceremony will be led by Barbara
Threecrow followed by a discussion about “Where We Are
in the World Today.” Throughout the day there will be
naturalist led walks and hikes, forest and watershed ecology
programs, Native Earth Skills, fiber arts and traditional crafts,
Earthball games, and music from Ashokan co-founders Jay Ungar
and Molly Mason. For more information and to sign up for the
bird walk visit Ashokan Center’s website at www.AshokanCenter.org,
or call (845) 657-8333 x14.
For Easter, there will be egg hunts on Saturday, April 11 at
10:00 AM in Olive (organizers stressing this is for the town’s
children, only) at David Park in West Shokan, 11:00 AM for anyone
at the Parish Field in Phoenicia (put on by the M.F. Whitney
Fire Company), and at 12 Noon for all ages at the Forsyth Nature
Center in Kingston. On that day there will also be a special
Earth Day Street Fair at the United Methodist Church on Clinton
Avenue in Kingston.
In addition, the 4-H Feathered Friends Poultry Club of Ulster
County invites families to attend their sixth annual Spring
Fun Festival on Saturday, April 11 from 10:00am to 4:00pm at
the High Falls Fire House just off Route 213, rain or shine.
All proceeds will go to support 4-H Feathered Friends Poultry
Club community service projects. Activities for the day will
include a treasure hunt, children’s crafts, face painting,
Easter egg coloring plus informative sessions for parents and
children alike that will include how to raise poultry in your
backyard. Bunny Basics workshops for those interested in raising
rabbits will take place at 11:00am and 2:00pm. Visitors can
also learn more about Ulster County 4-H youth clubs, including
this summer’s 4-H Career Explorations three-day conference
for youth entering grades 8-12, taking place June 30 –
July 2, as well as how to participate in the 2009 Ulster County
Fair. This event is supported by the Cornell Cooperative Extension
Ulster County 4-H Youth Development Program.
Finally, on Saturday, April 25, Cornell Cooperative Extension
of Ulster County’s Master Gardeners program will be offering
up its own day-long Garden Day 2009 in Vanderlyn Hall at SUNY
Ulster in Stone Ridge from 8:30am to 4:00pm. This year’s
theme, “The Frugal Gardener,” features an array
of experts speaking about a variety of the hottest trends in
gardening via 16 hands-on and how-to classes. Keynote speaker
Margaret Roach will open the program with her presentation entitled,
“Making a Garden for 365 Days a Year”. Seating is
not guaranteed for all classes on day of event so reservations
are requested. For a complete listing of classes and details
and registration form contact Master Gardener Coordinator, Dona
Crawford at 845-340-3990.
Get on out and celebrate! No excuses…
Farmstand?
A proposed farm stand law for the town of Shandaken, which drew
a large crowd of belligerent naysayers at a public hearing last
month, will be the subject of another hearing next Monday, April
13th at 6pm, following complaints that the town mishandled the
first public hearing.
Patricia Ellison, a local Attorney, published a letter recently
stating that she felt the produce law, if passed, would be unenforceable
because the public hearing held last month was closed before
everyone that wanted to speak was given the chance.
“Our lawyer thought it was a good idea to have another
public hearing,” DiSclafani said, adding that there have
also been some changes made to the proposed law which will be
discussed at the hearing.
Pure
Catskills!
The Watershed Agricultural Council (WAC) is soliciting proposals
from farmers, business owners, local agencies, individual consultants
and community organizers who coordinate and host events that
raise awareness and appreciation for local agriculture. The
WAC, through its Pure Catskills Buy Local campaign, will be
providing sponsorship awards of up to $3,000 per event, with
a total of $50,000 available for the region. The New York City
Department of Environmental Protection provides funding for
this sponsorship program, now in its third year. Pure Catskills
event sponsorships are intended to support community-based efforts
to connect communities with local farms by eating local food.
Eligible events will incorporate the addition of local food
elements to traditional community events such as meals, fairs
and festivals or educate the public on the preparation, availability
and work of local farmers in producing of foods locally. Eligible
events must take place between May 1 and December 31, 2009.
Communities eligible include those in Delaware, Greene, Otsego,
Schoharie, Sullivan and Ulster counties.
A minimum of three Pure Catskills Buy Local Campaign members
must participate in each event. Members include local farm and
food-based businesses and organizations that produce local food
or support the development of a vibrant local food system in
the Catskills region. Members can be found at www.purecatskills.com
and include hundreds of farms, farmers markets, restaurants,
retailers and community organizations. Those enrolling by April
15 will receive a listing in the Farm Fresh Guide, a print publication
distributed regionally and due out in May. Application materials
are available online at purecatskills.com and applicants are
strongly encouraged to access these materials through the website.
All applications must be postmarked by April 27. Faxed and emailed
applications will not be accepted.
For more information on this opportunity, contact Challey Comer
at ccomer@nycwatershed.org or (607) 865-7090, ext. 217.
The WAC is funded by The New York City Department of Environmental
Protection, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Forest
Service, and other federal and foundation sources.
For more information, visit www.nycwatershed.org.
Plastic Bag Law
Ulster County lawmakers were set to decide this week, as we
went to press, on the setting of a public hearing on establishing
a 10-cent per bag charge for each plastic shopping bag used
at cash registers when packing items for customers. The proposed
6 p.m. May 6 public hearing was endorsed by the county Ways
and Means committee last week but some lawmakers contend residents
who can least afford the additional fee will be the most affected.
Lawmakers on the county Environmental Committee contend the
law will combat plastic bags “along streets and roads,
and they often find their way into waterways including the Hudson
River via drains, streams, and sewage pipes.”
Committee members added that “plastic bags biodegrade
very slowly, and in fact, over time break down into smaller,
more toxic petro-polymers which eventually contaminate soils
and waterways. As a consequence their microscopic particles
can enter the food chain.”
Under the proposed law, fees would be charged by “each
sales outlet, store, shop or other place of business ... which
operates primarily to sell or convey food or merchandise directly
to the ultimate consumer.”
The law would include carryout food businesses that have either
5,000 square feet of retail space or are part of a chain that
has five or more stores. Penalties would be a civil fine of
$250 for the first violation and $500 for subsequent violations.
During a Democratic caucus several lawmakers said the law would
create problems for small stores that pay more for paper bags
and there would be additional storage and shipping costs because
of additional weight. Supporters said the law could help develop
cost-effective home budgeting practices.
Energy Policies…
Senator Kevin S. Parker, Chair of the Senate Energy Committee,
and Assemblyman Kevin Cahill, Chair of the Assembly Energy Committee,
recently announced legislation to re-establish in statute a
state energy board charged with crafting a comprehensive state
energy plan for New York. The new State Energy Plan will provide
for the oversight and guidance to ensure the success of the
new initiatives sparked by the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act. The legislation charges the board to develop and regularly
update a comprehensive plan to identify and meet the State’s
future energy needs. An earlier State energy planning statute
expired in 2003. Currently the State is engaged in an energy
planning process pursuant to an Executive Order of the Governor.
Senators Parker and Cahill said funds from President Obama’s
Federal stimulus package give New York a “unique opportunity”
for economic growth and the creation of new “green jobs.”
They also said that the new legislation enables New York “to
better ensure affordable service, oversight and accountability
of providers, and focus on New York’s long-term energy
needs.”
The new law will require comprehensive studies of the state’s
energy needs. The plan will include assessments of the following:
regional and statewide analyses of power generation, transmission
and distribution; reliability and affordability; short and long
term fuel forecasts; renewable energy technologies and distributed
generation; environmental justice and public health; efficiency
and conservation; transportation; residential, commercial and
industrial construction; emergency management; and economic
development.
The bill will empower the Board to hold hearings, adopt rules
and regulations and issue subpoenas.. It would require all major
utilities to file information necessary to the development of
an Energy Plan. It would direct the Power Authority of the State
of New York and the Long Island Power Authority to participate
in the planning process and to submit strategic, operating and
capital plans. The bill would also require state agencies to
report on the progress made to implement identified energy plan
policies and priorities and progress made to attain energy plan
goals. The first plan will be due on January 1, 2013.
Let’s see if they can help with the frozen high cost of
home heating oil, and even worse problems in the liquid propane
markets this past year…
Climate Change!
SUNY Ulster will host a presentation on Mohonk Lake Climate
Change by Benjamin I. Cook, Ph..D., NOAA Postdoctoral Scholar
of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, from 4:30 to 5:30 P.M.
on April 16 at Burroughs Hall 120 on the Stone Ridge campus.
It is the final lecture in the four-part campus “2020
Vision for the Catskills” sponsored by the Catskill Institute
for the Environment. The event is free and open to the public.
Dr. Cook of the LDEO, a leading research institution at Columbia
University, will present a case study on a Catskills environment
based on species sightings and weather records.
The 2020 Vision for the Catskills Lecture Series held this spring
continues the dialog on environmental issues and human interactions
confronting the Catskills in the coming decade. The lecture
series follows up on issues presented in the fall of 2008 when
NYS DEC and CIE hosted the first “Catskills Environment
and Economy Day.” Prior lectures presented at local colleges
explored invasive species management, technological information
and research tools.
For more information, contact David Lemmon at (845) 687-5239
or by email at lemmond@sunyulster.edu or visit www.catskillinstitute.org.
Recent climate change news has brought forth new evidence that
a nearly ice-free Arctic Ocean in the summer may happen three
times sooner than scientists have estimated, with the Arctic
now estimated to be possibly losing its ice cover in summer
in as few as 30 years instead of at the end of the century.
So much more open water could be a boon for shipping and for
extracting minerals and oil from the seabed, but it raises the
question of ecosystem upheaval.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration funded the
work.
CasiNO?
Empire Resorts, owner of Monticello Gaming and Raceway, recently
announced that it has signed a new 40 year deal with Concord
Associates to keep open its current harness racetrack and video
lottery machine operation in Monticello while it also develops
twin facilities at the planned-to-be built Concord Hotel and
Resort, saying they expect the state to approve an additional
license for the new racing and gaming venue when the Concord
project is completed.
Empire will receive a $2 million annual fee that increases by
five percent every five years over the 40 year term; an annual
percentage fee over the 40 years equal to the greater of $2
million or two percent of gross gaming revenues, including from
future legalization of Indian gaming projects; a payment of
$25 million upon any sale or transfer of the Concord gaming
facilities. Concord will provide Empire with a least $4 million
a year in additional net cash flow.
Concord will also fund, after opening of its harness track,
100 percent of the amounts payable to Empire each year to the
Monticello Raceway horsemen and breeders with respect to their
share of VGM revenues.
Hanlon said Empire Resorts’ existing business at the raceway
“may now be further enhanced by pending legislative approval
in the near term of electronic table games, including electronic
versions of blackjack, roulette, and craps.” He said in
the event there is a legalization of commercial gaming, either
on the state or federal level, Empire “would be well positioned
to take advantage of any (or both) of these opportunities.”
Quite a distance, we must say, from the imminent casinos of
a few years back…
Bad Resort!
The Nevele Hotel in Ellenville has been charged with failing
to secure workers compensation coverage for its workers, a crime
that carries fines of up to $50,000, Ulster County District
Attorney Holley Carnright announced in recent weeks. The hotel
was sentenced by Judge Bruhn to pay restitution, costs, penalties
and charges in the amount of $35,277 to the Workman’s
Compensation Board and to pay an additional fine of $5,000.
An additional condition of the plea is that if the hotel violates
this law again, they could be resentenced, in which case the
fine could be up to $100,000.
The New York State Worker’s Compensation Board had already
sanctioned the Nevele Hotel three times before for not having
workman’s compensation coverage. The most recent violation
involved an employee who was injured at work while the company
did not have workman’s compensation coverage. The case
was investigated by the New York State Worker’s Compensation
Board Office of the Fraud Inspector General and Compliance Unit,
the New York State Insurance Department’s Fraud Bureau,
and the New York State Insurance Fund. The case was then prosecuted
through the joint efforts of the Ulster County District Attorney’s
Office and the New York State Insurance Department’s Fraud
Bureau via the insurance department’s fraud prosecution
program.
“It is important that employees in Ulster County be protected
and that businesses here comply with this law,” said Carnright.
“The businesses and taxpayers of Ulster County should
not have to pick up the hotel’s cost for its injured workers.”
Beaten Back…
New York Regional Interconnect announced last week that it is
suspending its efforts to site a power line in New York. It
was seeking the okay to run the line from Oneida County to Orange
County, but met with much opposition on the local government
and community level.
A statement from the company said that while it “remains
committed to transmission development in New York State, it
is suspending its current participation in the New York State
Public Service Commission Article VII process” for its
project.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit recently overruled
the interpretation by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC) of federal regulations that would have potentially allowed
the agency to overrule state objections and permit the construction
of power lines, such as the one proposed by New York Regional
Interconnect (NYRI).
NYRI’s proposal to construct massive new electric transmission
lines through Chenango, Broome, Delaware, Sullivan and Orange
counties met with stiff opposition from grass roots organizations
and politicians ranging from Republican State Senator John Bonacic
to Democratic Congressman Maurice Hinchey, who argued that the
project was not needed to meet New York’s electricity
needs and would adversely impact local communities and the environment
along the proposed routes while taking private property through
eminent domain for a private corporation.
In its ruling released February 18, the Fourth Circuit struck
down the FERC’s December 2006 interpretation of Section
216 of the Federal Power Act — a provision put in place
by the Energy Policy Act of 2005, finding that FERC’s
interpretation of the agency’s authority under Section
216 was “expansive” and “contrary to the plain
meaning of the statute.” In a strong rebuke to FERC’s
decision, the Circuit ruled that, “The statute (Section
216) does not give FERC permitting authority when a state has
affirmatively denied a permit application within the one-year
deadline.”
Trooper Case…
An upstate judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by the widow
of a state trooper from Greene County who was killed in a 2007
shootout in nearby Margaretville, ruling that a county probation
department’s delay in issuing an arrest warrant did not
contribute to the trooper’s death.
The family of Trooper David Brinkerhoff claimed St. Lawrence
County officials were negligent when they allowed fugitive Travis
Trim to remain free despite multiple probation violations.
Brinkerhoff, 29, was killed by friendly fire during a gunfight
in a farmhouse on April 25, 2007. He was in a group of troopers
that stormed the Margaretville home where Trim, 23, was hiding
the day after shooting, but not seriously injuring, another
trooper. Trim was killed in the shootout.
State Supreme Court Justice David Demarest dismissed Barbara
Brinkerhoff’s lawsuit, concluding the delay in issuing
an arrest warrant for Trim “was not a factor which indirectly
produced this tragic result.”
Mrs. Brinkerhoff and her infant daughter, Isabella, filed a
lawsuit last August seeking unspecified damages against the
St. Lawrence County Probation Department. In a notice of claim
filed in February 2008, the family indicated it was seeking
$100 million. The lawsuit contended that if St. Lawrence County
officials had properly handled the warrant, Trim could have
been arrested months before Trooper Brinkerhoff was killed.
Demarest said in his ruling that while the delay of the warrant
may have allowed Trim to remain at large, it was Trim’s
shooting of another trooper that prompted state police to confront
him in the Margaretville house.
Stop Driving?
Scientists are creating tests to show when it’s time for
people with early Alzheimer’s disease to stop driving.
Typically, specialists say, patients gradually scale back their
driving, avoiding busy freeways or night trips or left-turn
intersections.
Working on ways to help similar patients, a team in Iowa has
developed an intricate behind-the-wheel exam: A 35-mile drive
through rural, residential and urban streets in a tricked-out
Ford Taurus able to record just about every action the driver
takes, much like an airplane “black box” does. Lipstick-size
video cameras were positioned to show oncoming traffic, too.
Researchers recruited 40 people with early-stage Alzheimer’s
who still had their driver’s licenses to take the road
test, and compared how 115 older drivers without dementia handled
the same trip.
On average, the Alzheimer’s drivers committed 42 safety
mistakes, compared with 33 for the other drivers. Lane violations,
such as swerving or hugging the center line as another car approaches,
were the biggest problem for the Alzheimer’s drivers.
They performed 50 percent worse. And overall errors rose with
increasing age whether or not the driver had Alzheimer’s,
an extra 2 1/2 mistakes for every five years of age.
But some Alzheimer’s patients drove just as well as their
healthier counterparts. Here’s the key: Researchers also
checked whether any of a battery of neuropsychological tests
given beforehand accurately predicted who would drive worse
- and some did.
Flunking simple memory tests didn’t make a difference.
Standard neurologic tests of multitasking abilities did, ones
that assess if people’s cognitive, visual and motor skills
work together in a way to make quick decisions. Examples include
showing patients geometric figures for a few seconds and having
them draw the shape from memory, or drawing paths between a
sequence of numbers and letters. Alzheimer’s patients
who scored average or better on those types of written tests
were likewise no worse behind the wheel than other older drivers
- but those who scored worse than average tended to commit about
50 percent more errors on the road.
More research is needed but the ultimate goal is an easy doctor’s-office
exam to help guide when patients should give up the keys.
K To Register
Kindergarten Pre-registration and screening for the 2009-2010
school year will be held in the Onteora Central School District
during the month of April. This event will be held for all three
elementary schools. Registration will be held on the following
dates and places:
Monday, April 20 and Tuesday, April 21 (backup date –
Monday, May 4) at Phoenicia Elementary School.
Wednesday, April 22 and Monday, April 27 (backup date –
Wednesday, April 29) at Bennett Elementary School.
Thursday, April 23, and Tuesday, April 28 (backup date –
Thursday, April 30) at Woodstock Elementary School.
Parents of children whose names appear on the district kindergarten
census lists will be contacted before or during the week of
April 13th to set up a Preregistration/screening appointment.
Parents who are not contacted by this week and believe their
child is eligible for kindergarten in September should contact
the Registrar at 657-6383.
To be eligible for kindergarten, a child must be 5 years old
by December 1, 2009. For Pre-registration, parents must bring
identification, the child’s original birth certificate
as evidence of birth date, immunization and health records,
and proof of residence. A physician’s certificate proving
that the child is properly immunized must be presented at registration
or at some time prior to the first day of school in September
of 2009.
In order to assist parents, the Ulster County Health Department
periodically operates immunization clinics. Information about
the scheduling of these clinics may be obtained by contacting
the Health Department. Students entering Kindergarten in September,
2009, must have a physical within one year prior to the first
day of school attendance in 2009. Parents may opt to have the
physical done by the School Physician in school.
Bad Loans…
Banks nationwide hold $41 billion in loans to directors, top
executives and other insiders, a portfolio that experts say
should be stripped of secrecy. Insider lending to directors
is particularly troublesome because it could cloud the judgment
of people charged with protecting shareholders and overseeing
bank management, the experts say.
At Charlotte-based Bank of America, those loans more than doubled
last year, to $624.2 million - the biggest dollar jump in the
country. The largest of them likely went to three directors
or their companies. The surge came during the third quarter
as credit markets froze, the government prepared to infuse banks
with billions in tax dollars and the board approved the purchase
of troubled Merrill Lynch.
Bank of America ranked fourth on the list of biggest insider
lenders. At the top was JPMorgan of New York, which held $1.48
billion in insider loans, mostly by directors or their companies.
At No. 2, Charlotte-based Wachovia, which was sold to Wells
Fargo of San Francisco at the end of 2008, finished the year
with $747 million in insider loans. All of the loans were held
by the bank’s directors or their companies, with just
five holding the largest.
Insider loans, ranging from home mortgages to multimillion-dollar
lines of credit for big companies, are legal but are largely
shrouded from public scrutiny. Banks don’t have to explain
increased insider lending. They don’t have to disclose
individual loan amounts or terms for any insiders, including
executives. Directors and their businesses, often the largest
insider borrowers, are completely shielded. Directors must approve
insider loans greater than $500,000, so they sometimes vote
on loans for each other or the executives they oversee.
Insider favoritism is against the law. Bankers and regulators
say the loans are subject to greater scrutiny to ensure insiders
aren’t getting better terms and are creditworthy. But
top corporate governance experts contend that insider lending
carries serious potential for conflict of interest among bank
officials and must be stripped of secrecy. They argue that lending
to directors, the watchdogs of management, must be revealed
so shareholders can gauge their independence.
Seven of the 10 banks with the largest insider loans received
a total of more than $50 billion in the banking bailout late
last year, banks’ federal filings show.
The majority of the nation’s 8,000-plus banks make insider
loans, some very small. At the end of last year, banks had $41
billion of insider loans, up 5.7 percent from a year earlier,
according to the filings.
Most publicly traded companies were banned from making insider
loans in 2002, part of the regulatory rush following the collapse
of Enron and other accounting scandals. But banks were excluded
from the ban, partly because they’re in the business of
lending and also because the loans have been subject to extensive
regulation for more than 25 years.
The loans were blamed for bank problems during the nation’s
S&L crisis in the 1980s.
Keep an eye on this…
Be Kind To All
The recession may lead to more than just financial problems,
it could lead to an increase in domestic violence, according
to federal, state and now even county officials.
An increase in reported cases of domestic violence is of concern
to officials in Ulster County and how to educate and inspire
a more progressive attitude toward the violence was the topic
of a recent forum in Kingston where Investigator James McCoy
of the New York State Police Ulster County Family Violence Unit
spoke of a large increase in the number of domestic incident
reports from 2007 to 2008. According to McCoy, based on the
amount of reports so far this year, the increase in those reports
from 2008 to 2009 will far surpass that of previous years.
“We have a domestic violence problem here in the United
States which is of epidemic proportions,” said Ulster
County District Attorney Holley Carnright before he emphasized
the need for action with some startling statistics.
“We estimate that approximately 6.2 million Americans
every year are victims of domestic violence,” he said.
“There are more women who are victims of domestic violence
than women who are injured in car accidents, muggings, and rapes
combined. Approximately four women a day are killed as a result
of domestic violence across the United States.”
Carnright said about half of all men who commit domestic violence
against female partners also abuse their children and one out
of every 20 individuals 60 years or older is the victim of elder
abuse.
Go To Jail!
One in every 31 U.S. adults is in the corrections system, which
includes jail, prison, probation and supervision, more than
double the rate of a quarter century ago, according to a report
released by the Pew Center on the States. The study, which said
the current rate compares to one in 77 in 1982, concluded that
with declining resources, more emphasis should be put on community
supervision, not jail or prison.
The United States has the highest incarceration rate and the
biggest prison population of any country in the world, according
to figures from the U.S. Department of Justice.
Most of those in the U.S.. corrections system - one in 45 -
are already on probation or parole, with one in 100 in prison
or jail, the Pew study found.Those numbers are higher in certain
areas of the country, and Georgia tops all states with one in
13 adults in the justice system. The other leading states are
Idaho, where one in 18 are in corrections and Texas, where the
rate is one in 22. In the nation’s capital, Washington,
D.C., nearly 5 percent of adults are in the city’s penal
system.
This was the first criminal justice study that took into account
those on probation and parole as well as federal convicts, Pew
said.
The numbers are also concentrated among groups, with a little
more than 9 percent of black adults in prisons or jails or on
probation or parole, as opposed to some 4 percent of Hispanics
and 2 percent of whites.
Pew compiled the report as states consider cutting corrections
spending during the recession. The research group said that
by changing sentencing laws and probation programs states can
lower incarceration rates and save money.
Penitentiary systems have been the fastest-growing spending
area for states after Medicaid, the healthcare program for those
with low income. Over the last 20 years their spending on criminal
justice has increased more than 300 percent, the study found.
During the last 25 years prison and jail populations have grown
274 percent to 2.3 million in 2008, according to the Pew research,
while those under supervision grew 226 percent over the same
span to 5.1 million. It estimated states spent a record $51.7
billion on corrections in fiscal year 2008 and incarcerating
one inmate cost them, on average, $29,000 a year. But the average
annual cost of managing an offender through probation was $1,250
and through parole $2,750.
Hero Luncheons
Seven Ulster County restaurants have agreed to host special
Red Cross Hero luncheons as part of the year-long celebration
of the 100th anniversary of the American Red Cross Ulster County
Chapter. Luncheon parties at Mariner’s Harbor, Kingston;
The Peekamoose, Shandaken; New World Home Cooking, Saugerties;
White Wolf, Ellenville; The Plaza Diner, New Paltz;, Holiday
Inn, Kingston and Mariner’s on the Hudson, Highland, will
showcase the wide variety of great dining opportunities in the
county and support the work of the Ulster County Red Cross.
Luncheons will all be priced at an affordable $25 with all non-food
costs being donated to the organization’s year-long Century
of Service celebration.
Each participating restaurant has agreed to prepare a special
single entrée luncheon in April. Leaders from local businesses,
politics and social organizations will become Red Cross Heroes
by replacing the restaurant’s wait staff for the event.
The Heroes will donate their “tips” to the Chapter.
In addition to the non-food cost of the luncheon tickets will
be donated to the Chapter.
Mary Beth Mills, whose Peekamoose Restaurant in Shandaken is
known as much for its community support as for its great food,
was the first to sign on.
“This is a really great idea,” she said. “A
great way to give back and lots of fun for everyone involved.”
Dates for the luncheons are April 10 the Plaza Diner in New
Paltz; April 16 at White Wolf in Ellenville; April 17 at the
Holiday Inn in Kingston; April 23 at Mariner’s Harbor
in Kingston; April 24 at Mariner’s on Hudson in Highland;
April 25 at Peekamoose in Shandaken and April 30 at New World
Home Cooking in Saugerties/Woodstock. The luncheons begin at
noon and end no later than 2:00 p.m.
For more information or to register for the luncheons, please
visit www.ulsterredcross.org or call the Red Cross office at
338-7020.
Bad Trout News
This past winter, Gary Shaver’s Beaverkill Trout Hatchery
in the Sullivan County community of Lew Beach was barred from
delivering trout for stocking, at least this year, after his
fish had tested positive for three pathogens—Infectious
Pancreatic Necrosis Virus, Aeromonas salmonicida, and Yersinia
ruckeri (Enteric Red Mouth). Shaver’s fish have long been
used to stock a number of local creeks and streams, including
that which runs through Woodland Valley just outside Phoenicia.
Then, on March 13th, Shaver suffered a massive heart attack
and died before he could be admitted to the hospital.
“The poet might weave limpid lines about the sublime beauty
of nature—its gentle rains, the verdant mountains, the
fiery sunsets. But try to wrench a living from the tempestuous,
unpredictable vagaries of nature and you will soon discover
that it is a hard road to travel in the best of circumstances,”
wrote the organizer of the WV trout stocking each Memorial Day
weekend, Mike O’Neill, in announcing the news this past
week. “It takes a special person to carry it off, and
Gary was just such a person—one with heart and solid resolution,
and a droll sense of understated country humor that saw him
through when others might falter. But this terrible year, this
annus horribilis, was too much, even for him. To his wife Betty,
mother Gloria, his children Sherry, Fred, Kevin, and Lisa, their
spouses and their children, we send our profound commiserations,
and love.”
Save a catch for Gary…
Stream Cleanups
The Catskill Watershed Corporation (CWC) will once again support
groups and individuals who clean litter and other debris from
stream banks in their neighborhoods. Youth and school groups,
church organizations, civic and business associations, neighborhood
groups and teams of friends are encouraged to scour stream and
riversides for trash and to dispose of it properly. The CWC
will provide trash bags, gloves and tokens of appreciation for
those who choose to serve their communities in this way. Call
Mary Jane Oppenheimer at 845-586-1400 to arrange to get these
items.
Volunteers might wish to do a cleanup in observance of Earth
Day April 22, or to coordinate their efforts with National Stream
Clean-up Day sponsored by Trout Unlimited on June 13. For information
on this event, part of TU’s 50th anniversary observance,
go to www.tu.org.
American Rivers is also calling for groups to participate in
a National River Cleanup effort this spring. To register your
cleanup activity and to get more information, go to www.americanrivers.org
State Of News?
“Imagine someone about to begin physical therapy following
a stroke, suddenly contracting a debilitating secondary illness.”
This is how the Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism describes
the “State of the Media” in its 2009 report.
The one sunny area in the news business, according to the report,
is the fact that cable “shined” in 2008. Its audience
grew by 38 percent. CNN, Fox News and MSNBC gained viewers and
expected to see record profits. But… if cable news is
more profitable than before, that’s because, increasingly,
it features less and less news, the report found.
According to the report, obsessive, often irrelevant horserace
coverage of the election eclipsed all other news. It accounted
for 59 percent of the cable newshole in 2008, while coverage
of the economy accounted for only 10 percent. (That number is
opposed to 36 percent and 15 percent, respectively, in the media
overall..) Meanwhile, coverage of Iraq War fell everywhere,
but it positively crashed on cable, where it fell nearly 90
percent, and ended up accounting for just 2 percent of overall
coverage.
However, while CNN, MSNBC, and FOX’s audiences may be
hungry for news, they may not be satisfied with the product
they’re getting. According to PEJ’s report, a mere
44 percent of the public believed that news organizations (over
all) “protected democracy” in 2007, down from 60
percent in 2001, directly following the September 11th attack.
Meanwhile, a bill was introduced in the U.S. Senate recently
that would let newspapers become tax-exempt non-profit organizations
as long as they don’t endorse political candidates. A
subsequent Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey showed
37 percent of Americans favoring federal government subsidies
to keep newspapers in business, with 43 percent saying it’s
better to let the papers go out of business, and 20% not sure
what to do.
Nearly two-thirds of Democrats (65%) and 50% of unaffiliated
Americans think the failure of the U.S. newspaper industry is
a national tragedy. Forty-one percent (41%) of Republicans feel
the same way, but 45% don’t agree.
Half (51%) of Democrats support subsidies for newspapers, but
66% of Republicans think it’s better for the papers to
fail. Adults not affiliated with either party are fairly evenly
divided.
Adults ages 30 to 64 are far more inclined to let newspapers
go out of business than are those older and younger than they
are.
Good thing you’re reading this newspaper, eh?