Newsbriefs
7/3/2008
Town Workshop...
Shandaken’s Town Board held its first workshop meeting
June 30, a week in advance of its regular July meeting set for
7PM Monday the 7th, albeit without much publicity beforehand.
Discussed amongst many issues were the town’s ongoing
wireless saga, liability concerns regarding the use of church-owned
but town-leased land for a private summer camp program, and
a possible new “fly car” for the town’s ambulance
service.
The big news came in the form of an announcement from the Coalition
of Watershed Towns that the New York City Department of Environmental
Protection was willing to expand all hamlet boundaries within
the watershed, including Shandaken’s six hamlet areas
designated in the 1997 Memorandum of Agreement by up to one-half
mile in every direction. The city is also amenable to the designation
of entirely new hamlet areas within the town, without any initial
preconditions or limitations.
While some started talking about what the expanded hamlet designations
might mean for zoning and other issues, Shandaken supervisor
Peter DiSclafani was quick to clarify that within these “no-buy”
zones, the City would be prohibited from purchasing additional
lands.
Senior town planner Beth Waterman requested a map showing the
currently designated hamlets, along with new ones showing what
they’d look like a hypothetical mile wider. A quick, collaborative,
post-meeting read suggested two likely new uber-hamlets in the
making, one stretching from Mt. Tremper through Phoenicia and
north to Chichester, and another nearly joining Pine Hill, Big
Indian, and Shandaken.
In neighboring Olive, similar mapping has come up with similar
stretches along the Route 28 corridor.
In the end, DiSclafani said he’d like to put together
a committee to look at the issue in detail and make recommendations
to the board. He asked anyone interested in serving to call
his office.
On the wireless service front, DiSclafani announced “”there’s
a tower up at Glenbrook Park.” That 180’ structure,
erected under town contract with Maine-based Mariner Towers,
is expected to provide a platform for emergency communications
services along with, at present, cellular service for a single
wireless carrier, Nextel, for a limited stretch of Routes 28
and 42 in Shandaken. Whether other carriers will make use of
it remains uncertain at this time.
According to DiSclafani, prospects for a second tower, a Verizon-proposed
monopole at the Town Hall property, also remain uncertain given
the lack of a
“fall zone” and other potential regulatory impediments
which Verizon is now exploring. Former Comp Planner and Big
Indian resident Chuck Perez took issue with the lack of any
clear and integrated plan for townwide cellular coverage. DiSclafani
agreed with that assessment, but explained that ultimately the
quality of coverage is in the hands of the carriers and the
marketplace.
In The Clear
Ken Pasternak, a partner in the Crossroads Ventures effort to
build the Belleayre Resort at Catskill Park, celebrated recently
when U.S. District Judge Joel Pisano cleared the Fleischmanns
native of all charges brought by the Securities and Exchange
Commission. Pisano ruled that the SEC failed to prove its fraud
case against Pasternak, the former Knight Trading Group chief
executive, and another former executive.
The SEC had alleged in the case, originally filed in 2005, that
Pasternak and others at Knight engaged in a scheme designed
to conceal from their institutional customers the manner in
which they were working their orders in 1999 and in 2000. As
a result, Knight failed to provide the best execution for its
clients, and the company and the defendants received profits
that far exceeded the industry norm, the SEC said.
“I am grateful to finally have been vindicated so completely,”
Pasternak said in a prepared statement. “I am looking
forward to returning the total of my focus to reengaging in
the industry with my reputation fully restored.”
According to published reports the verdict came after a 14 day
bench trial.
”It was gratifying to hear the judge confirm that the
SEC did not have a case against me,” said Pasternak.
Crossroads managing partner Dean Gitter said that it would have
been easier and far less costly for Pasternak to have just settled
the case out of court to make it go away. “But our system
is supposed to be predicated on a concept of innocent until
proven guilty and this just goes to show that making charges
is one thing and proving them is another,” Gitter said
in a story announcing his backer’s win.
Knight itself paid $79 million to settle the case.
Flood Controls?
The House Appropriations Committee has approved funding for
flood control projects in the upper Delaware, Esopus and Rondout
watersheds The committee cleared $835,000 for the continuation
of a flood mitigation study in the Upper Delaware River Watershed
for the development of a flood alert system for the entire region.
House Members Maurice Hinchey and John Hall secured $600,000
with Hinchey also winning approval for $235,000 for the Delaware
River Enhanced Flood Warning system.
“Repeated and devastating flooding over the last several
years has made it clear that serious flood control is a high
priority,” said Hall. “This study is going to help
determine the best ways to protect communities from destructive
floods.”
Both measures must still pass through other legislative steps
and the funding may also face a challenge from President Bush
who has said he opposes such projects.
The Appropriations Committee also approved $250,000 for the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to conduct a feasibility study
of flood prevention work along the Esopus, Wallkill and Rondout
creeks. Hinchey requested that money, as well.
Last year Hinchey obtained the authority of the Army Corps to
engage in long-term activities within the Esopus and Rondout
basins that would repair damage caused by continuous flooding,
mitigate against future flooding and remove sediment accumulated
in portions of the lower Esopus in the towns of Hurley and Ulster.
The authorization also allows the Corps to conduct other projects
with economic benefits for communities in the watersheds such
as relocating the navigable channel in the lower Rondout in
downtown Kingston, allowing for marina construction and clearing
the way for further economic activity on the waterfront.
Natural Gas…
The subject of private residents selling natural gas drilling
rights on their property drew hundreds to a pair of educational
forums last week, with a June 27 session deemed so crowded,
in advance, that it had to be moved to Sullivan County’s
Liberty High School auditorium to accommodate the anticipated
large crowd, which turned out to number over 500.
Sullivan County Legislator Jodi Goodman had asked the county
planning department to conduct the session to educate residents
about all of the pros and cons of selling natural gas drilling
rights, which has come back onto the horizon in parts of the
Catskills.
She said it is not just a drilling issue. There are a number
of questions.
“It has to do with neighboring properties; it has to do
with value of the property that is having the drill site. What
would that value do to the neighboring person and their taxes?
Can you be robbing the neighboring person of their gas when
you drill down and then you go horizontal? Can you truck out
on roads with this contaminated water when it spills?”
Gas prospecting companies have been signing up property owners
along the Delaware River.
Thursday night, June 27, some 300 people showed up in Walton
for a panel discussion on natural gas drilling. They heard a
member of the Western Colorado Congress and Grand Valley Citizens’
Alliance talk about whether the economic benefits of leasing
natural gas drilling rights outweighs the negative impact.
“Yes, there will be some people who will make a lot of
money from this industry, but, look at the people and the ways
that your community is negatively impacted, and make sure that
you’ve done everything you can to mitigate those things,
so that everybody is a winner,” came the answer.
Sullivan County Commissioner of Planning and Environmental Management,
William Pammer, noted that based on statistics and experiences
elsewhere, the high volume of Class 1 and 2 roads in Western
Sullivan County areas where drilling would occur, could factor
into a huge impact on infrastructure costs. Expect an “80
percent degradation” warned Pammer.
Another panelist noted that while some property owners have
done well, financially, with the leases, there is no guarantee
a well will be productive, or will remain productive for an
extended period.
When at one point in the program, the audience was asked for
a show of hands on how many had actually signed leases, only
one hand went up.
Department of Environmental Conservation Regional Director William
Janeway assumes the pressure will mount to change that number
quickly.
“With the energy issues being what they are now, it is
likely this issue will continue,” he said. “We are
focusing on making sure that any extraction that does occur
is done in compliance with all environmental conservation laws.”
The Catskills and the Delaware River Valley sit on top of Marcellus
Shale, which oil insiders are seeing as an upcoming boon area
for energy exploration. IN this region, it includes possible
drilling sites in the Delaware River area, stretching north
into the western and northern edges of the central Catskills.
Stay tuned… and vigilant.
Slipping Away
A precarious section of Chichester’s Silver Hollow Road
is at risk of slipping into the drink and State Route 214 is
next, residents say, and this week those that live on the dead
end road are warning a host of governments that they would be
liable if something happens.
Mack Lipkin and Bruce Barry have sent a letter to everyone from
Town Highway Superintendent Eric Hofmeister to Congressman Maurice
Hinchey and Governor David Paterson stating that the problem
is now years old and that something needs to be done.
“ Over 4 years ago the issue of the collapsing area (and
potential liability) associated with the former trestle bridge
over Stony Hollow Creek, adjacent to Silver Hollow Road in Chichester,
where Schweitzer Road originates, was brought to the attention
of the Town, County and State repeatedly and variously,”
they wrote. “The town is responsible for Silver Hollow
Road. The County owns the collapsing area. The State is responsible
for Route 214 and the health of the Creek. Nothing has been
done except responsibility shifting and passive inaction. Postponing
the inevitable is inevitably more costly. We write to ask that
you immediately act to prevent loss of life, livelihood, natural
resource, and loss of access to our two roads.”
During the flood of April 3, 2005 the abutment for the long
gone trestle bridge was undermined by the strong currents and
it collapsed, causing the 20 foot tall stream bank to wash away
right up to the Silver Hollow Road guide rail. The problem is
not 20 yards upstream from a 300 foot section of the road that
completely washed out in the flood of 1996. On the other side
of the stream is Route 214 atop a 40 foot cliff.
The letter was accompanied by a petition signed by 37 Silver
Hollow residents, whose key concerns include:
a. It presents an attractive nuisance— unaware adults
and vulnerable children have been observed playing on the collapsing
area at their peril.
b. Silver Hollow Road may collapse in part or entirely, rendering
it and Schweitzer Road impassable, and depriving those down
road of access to their property, homes, and livelihoods.
c. That collapse of the bank, especially during low water, could
result in stream blockage and back up flooding.
d. That the hillside between the stream and State Route 214,
above where the bank has already collapsed is evidencing weakening
which is inexorably moving up towards 214, which itself will
in due course collapse with loss of access north and south.
They ask officials to cease what they call “passive surveillance”
and take decisive action to resolve the instability of the area,
prevent damage to and loss of use of Silver Hollow Road, Route
214, and Stony Clove and Warner Creek, and ensure that no one
is hurt due to inaction.
“Please take leadership, convene the relevant parties
and act before it is too late,” the letter states. “…When
the sorts of problems described above ensue from years of failure
to act reasonably to prevent them, then the governments and
officials involved are responsible. Please protect us and yourselves.”
Route 28 Trains?
A June 25 meeting of the Central Catskills Collaborative set
to get the ball rolling for possible designation of Route 28
as a Scenic Byway in the coming years raised a lot of questions
and some vague answers, as well as a state official’s
admission that state and federal entities are starting to look
at the region’s long-dormant rail corridor for a possible
revival in light of the world’s changing energy needs.
NYS Deputy Secretary of State Robert Elliott spoke about byways
being one of several mechanisms for getting municipalities to
work together, a process that’s being increasingly supported
by new grant monies on a state basis. He said just as many say
towns do better when they get their town , planning and zoning
boards all into one room to share concerns, so regions do better
when all such entities start looking at shared problems, and
resources, on a joint basis.
After listing a handful of grants currently available to local
towns, Elliott spoke about New York’s current push beyond
simple employment towards quality of life jobs, and an emphasis
on supporting small businesses. And coming up with development
ideas from within the community itself.
“What you really want to sell is your sustainability,”
he said. “You are a recognizable region… Instead
of fighting against things, you need to start fighting for what
you want.”
NYC Department of Environmental Conservation official Bill Rudge
followed with an information session on scenic byways, noting
that money was available within the DEC should the local towns
want to pursue such designation. He pointed out how a number
of towns in Southern Ulster county had formed a Shawangunks
Byway, as had communities along the Delaware River. Hunter was
doing the same… there was plenty of precedent.
But did such designation mean a new web of regulations, folks
asked? Some brought up past uses of the scenic moniker to fight
unwanted development. Others talked about local antipathy towards
the idea.
Rudge said designations did not incur regulations. But later
he and others acknowledged that actual designations are made
based on the creation of corridor management plans judged competitively,
and that viable means of such management to ensure, say, a Route
28 scenic byway not becoming lined with self-storage units often
involved regulation. Or at least means of avoiding such problems.
Others spoke about ways in which some areas, such as Route 28
farther north in the Adirondacks, created patchworks of regulated
and unregulated sections, since the road ran through the middle
of business communities there.
“All this is is a vision, but it has to be drawn up at
a local level,” said Catskill Center Planner Peter Manning,
who chaired the recent session at his organization’s offices
in Arkville. “It’s another tool, another shared
project to look at. Education will be key…”
“Just the initiation of a byway dialogue can have impacts,”
added DEC Regional Director Willi Janeway, noting the importance
of single regional voices in bringing funding to areas like
the 28 corridor.
Everyone agreed to continue the talks and move the Scenic Byway
idea ahead.
Later, talk about progress with the resuscitation of local railroad
corridors, and rail trails, yielded further commentary from
Elliott when asked what the state was thinking about trains
these days, given the rising cost of gas.
“Remember, the whole rail trail idea goes back to the
creation of national security corridors during the Eisenhower
era,” he said, noting how the nation’s old rail
lines were to be preserved, as at least real estate, for possible
renewal in the event of an eventual disaster. “There are
lots of studies now involving mass transit, but also lots of
questions where funding would come from to bring it back.”
The news brought quiet smiles to most faces. But then the old
worry lines of concern.
New At CCCD
After a nationwide search, Lisa Rainwater has been named the
new Executive Director of the Arkville-based regional nonprofit,
The Catskill Center for Conservation and Development. Formerly
the Policy Director at Riverkeeper in Tarrytown, Rainwater will
be introduced to members of the organization at The Catskill
Center Annual Meeting on July 19th and take the helm in early
August.
“I am pleased to hear that The Catskill Center has selected
Lisa Rainwater as its new Executive Director,” said Congressman
Maurice Hinchey of the 22nd Congressional District. “For
years, she has been a strong community leader in the Hudson
Valley. It is exciting to see that someone of great talent and
background will now be working on behalf of Catskill communities
by continuing the outstanding work of The Catskill Center at
this momentous time in the region.”
Rainwater’s journey to The Catskill Center began in the
Midwestern farm community where she grew up. Coming from three
generations of dairy farmers who instilled in her a passion
for community and place and an innate connection to the land,
she fondly remembers fishing and hunting with her father, grandfathers
and great grandfathers. There she also experienced first hand
the struggles rural communities face to survive economically
and the need for people to work together to maintain their community
character during changing economic realities and development
pressures.
Infused with these core values, she went on to undergraduate
and graduate degrees in psychology, sociology and cultural studies,
and taught at the Universities of Oregon and Wisconsin. Most
recently she has served as the Policy Director for the Hudson
Valley group Riverkeeper, where she has worked since 2003 leading
their Indian Point Campaign with a broad-based grassroots coalition.
Rainwater has recently joined her new husband in his Catskills
home where she found immediate connection and inspiration in
the mountains and valleys of the region. “I am so fortunate
to call the Catskills home.
“At a time when many feel isolated from one another, the
Catskill region offers us strong communities and shared values,”
she said recently. “Whether it’s a family spending
an evening at the foothills of Overlook Mountain, children hearing
tall tales from their grandparents, or local farmers producing
bounty from the region’s soil, we hold one thing in common
– to preserve and uplift the powerful sense of place that
is the Catskill region.”
Interim Executive Director Deborah Meyer DeWan who is The Catskill
Center’s Director of Policy and Program Development noted,
“We’re thrilled to welcome Lisa to the Catskills
and to The Catskill Center at this momentous time in our nearly
40-year history.”
Local Poverty…
The worsening economy, including how rising fuel costs will
effect those already scrimping to keep up with worsening forceasts
next winter, surfaced in a new regional economic report as well
as a county forum on local poverty last week.
The Marist College Bureau of Economic Research released a report
that found that despite a growing population throughout the
Hudson Valley, there are fewer and fewer jobs to go around in
the region forcing more people to find work outside the region.
People in Columbia and Greene counties are gravitating toward
the Capital region and residents of the Lower Hudson Valley
are finding jobs in New York City, the report said, with Ulster
residents caught in between.
“We are going to see more of an integration with New York
City and therefore with New York City prices, and I think that
is basically the future, unless there are monumental changes
and I don’t know what they would be,” said Bureau
Director Christy Huebner Caridi, who authored the report.
The report found that employment gains in the service sector
compensated for the ongoing loss in manufacturing jobs, but
service sector jobs are lower paying – by 62 percent –
than the average wages in manufacturing.
Across the region, the bureau also found the cost of buying
a home is rising faster than income. At year-end 2007, the average
selling price of an existing home in the region was more than
$601,000, or 126 percent above the national average, and more
than 73 percent above the average for New York State. Average
wages ranged from a high of $58,000 in Westchester to $28,000
in Greene County.
“The consequence of this mismatch between income and housing
costs is increased outward migration – 28,653 households
left the Hudson Valley since 2000,” said Caridi, who added
that early indications for 2008 are that the economy won’t
get better, but in fact, may get worse.
Meanwhile, at a recent panel discussion on poverty in Ulster
County held at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Ulster,
local experts in the field worried about what was to come.
“I have greater fear for the coming winter than I have
ever had for the people of Ulster County,” said Michael
Berg, executive director of the human services agency Family
of Woodstock, who shared the panel with Rev. Darlene Kelley
of the Clinton Avenue United Methodist Church, which runs a
soup kitchen in Midtown Kingston, and Roberto Rodriguez, Ulster
County’s commissioner of social services.
“We are looking to what I believe will be a very challenging
fall and winter,” Rodriguez said, referencing strains
on the local heat assistance program he helps run. “The
challenge is that we may have more need than we have allocation
for. We’re seeing caseloads going up.”
“The impact of the cost of housing, utilities, gasoline,
the cost of food and the cost of health care are all hitting
at the same time, and there doesn’t seem to be any sign
of relief coming from the major governments,” Berg said.
“We have a lot of people that were rent-burdened three
years ago. How are they going to survive this year?”
“There’s an increasing working poor class in this
country,” added Kelley. “If you’re working
40, 50, 60 hours a week without benefits, and you can’t
feed your family, there’s a problem.”
Back From Iraq
Seventy-nine Army National Guard soldiers and dozens of their
family members celebrated their return from Iraq in March, and
late last month they were honored for their service overseas
when the New York State Army National Guard paid tribute to
Kingston’s 104th Military Police Battalion with a ceremony
at the Kingston Armory.
The detachment’s mission had been the security of Camp
Bucca, one of the largest operating bases and the largest detention
facility in Iraq. The battalion coordinated and commanded nearly
1,600 security patrols in the Southern Iraq region and $14 million
in base defense improvements.
Guest speaker at the ceremony Congressman Maurice Hinchey applauded
the unit’s efforts. “The National Guard operations
across the country are very important to all of us. These people
are great. They do a lot of very good work.”
Hinchey focused his speech on increasing the efficiency of veterans’
healthcare plans for both physical and mental health. He noted
a bill that is currently in Congress that will streamline the
application process and get veterans quicker service.
State Senator William Larkin also welcomed the unit home. “There
was not a man lost in action. That tells you the unit was well
trained and that they understood their mission. Everyone looked
out for everyone else. I’m very proud of this unit.”
Teen Employment
The Ulster County Office of Employment and Training (OET) has
announced that applications for the 2008 Summer Youth Employment
Program are now available. This program will provide approximately
100 eligible youth in the County with a summer work experience.
The program is scheduled to begin on July 07 and run for 7 weeks.
Youth will be paid $7.15 per hour for up to 28 hours per week.
Jobs will be at public and private not-for- profit agencies
throughout Ulster County. To be eligible for the program youth
must be Ulster County residents and have family income that
is at or below 200% of Federal poverty income standards, and
be between the ages of 14 – 20 years old.
Applications are available at the YMCA, 507 Broadway - Kingston
and 257 Main St.- New Paltz; the YWCA, 209 Clinton Ave, Kingston;
Ellenville, Highland, New Paltz, Onteora, Rondout, Saugerties,
and Wallkill high school offices; all town halls; youth commission
offices in Marbletown, New Paltz, Rochester, Rosendale, and
Pine Hill; Ulster BOCES and the Boys & Girls Club of Kingston
& Saugerties.
Additional information is available by calling the Office of
Employment and Training at (845) 340-3170.
Writers Awarded
Five local high school seniors received the Catskill Heritage
Alliance (CHA) writing prize at graduation ceremonies held by
the four area high schools. The winners were Anthony Mincarelli,
Andes, with a futuristic science-fiction view of his putative
great-great grandson considering the 21st century generations
from now; Brandon LaBumbard, Margaretville, writing about a
life-changing experience gained in a summer naturalism program;
Alyssa Fane, Roxbury, with an essay about how wide a world one
can find in a small town; Hannah Connelly, Onteora, in a rhythmically
lyrical exploration of what the Catskills means; and Meaghan
Harper, Onteora, with a richly poetic two-part evocation of
the harshness and magnificence of a Catskills childhood.
The prize, open only to graduating seniors, is awarded for the
best written entry on the subject of My Catskill Heritage. Typically,
only one prize is awarded per school, but this year, says Susanna
Margolis, who chaired the CHA’s jury committee, “there
were so many entries from Onteora, and the quality of the entries
was so excellent across the board, that we felt we needed to
take a more proportional approach. In truth, we were sorry we
could not award more prizes this year.”
Each student received $100 in scholarship money and a copy of
A Catskill Woodsman, Mike Todd’s Story, published by Purple
Mountain Press.
The winning entries can be read on the CHA website, http://www.catskillheritage.org
More Water…
The flexible flow management program that is now being used
to manage the water releases from the three New York City reservoirs
on the upper Delaware River must be changed immediately to release
more water into the river, according to three organizations
that say the high water temperatures could kill off fish.
Trout Unlimited, Theodore Gordon Flyfishers and The Delaware
River Foundation say with the current amount of water being
released from the Cannonsville reservoir into the West Branch
of the Delaware, water temperatures get too high and could be
lethal to some trout. Ron Urban of Port Ewen, chairman of New
York State Trout Unlimited, said more water can be released.
“Our modeling shows there is plenty of water still available
if we can release up to 350 cubic feet per second or even 450
CFS under a new proposal we are working with,” he said.
“This would greatly improve the habitat and protect it,
even in the hot weather. There’s plenty of water and as
we know, the reservoirs right now are around 93 percent capacity
with the Rondout about 96-97 percent.”
Resistance to increased water releases come principally from
New York City, say the environmental and sporting groups.
In recent years, the same entities pushed for less releases
into the Esopus Creek, where added water was raising turbidity
levels to dangerous levels for localized trout populations.
Plant A Row…
The vegetable growing season is in full swing, and the Master
Gardener program at Cornell Extension is looking for gardeners
to help feed people who are hungry in Ulster County by joining
their Plant A Row for the Hungry (PAR) campaign. They are asking
vegetable gardeners to grow a little extra this season to help
feed the hungry right here in Ulster County.
Fresh produce can be dropped off at the following designated
locations: Cornell Cooperative Extension of Ulster County, 10
Westbrook Lane, Kingston between the hours of 8:30am and 4:30pm,
Monday – Friday; Family of New Paltz, 51 North Chestnut
Street, New Paltz between the hours of 10:00am and 5:00pm, Monday
– Thursday; or the Caring Hands Soup Kitchen, Clinton
Avenue in Kingston at the Methodist Church between the hours
of 9:00am and 2:00pm, Monday – Thursday. All donations
should be washed prior to delivery.
This season’s co-sponsors include The Garden Writers Association,
The Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program, and Eat Smart
New York.
For further information, call the Master Gardener Program at
Cornell Cooperative Extension Ulster County at 845-340-3990
or visit http://counties.cce.cornell.edu/ulster.
New INDIE Funds
The Woodstock Town Board recently pledged to help fund Onteora’s
Indie program - which, in recent years, has provided services
under a contract with the district –in its use of media
arts to help students become more engaged in academics.
Onteora school district officials have credited the 9-year-old
program with improving attendance and academic scores, but support
from Board of Education members has been mixed during annual
district budget discussions. Indie program officials say the
organization has a $220,000 budget to handle referrals for about
115 high school students throughout the county, including 85
in the Onteora district. Of the budget, the Onteora district
provides about $145,000 annually.
Town Board members voted unanimously to determine if a donation
could be made to the organization and suggested including Indie
programs as part of the town’s recreation budget.
Celebratory $$
Former county legislator Tara Sullivan has been busy of late
making plans for next year’s anticipated statewide Hudson-Fulton-Champlain
Quadricentennial Celebration, marking anniversaries for the
Half Moon’s voage of discovery up the river later given
its captain’s name, similar explorations down the great
northern lake given its explorer’s name, and Robert Fulton’s
inaugural voyage in a steamboat.
Among events being outlined for funding in Ulster County, with
the state receiving $45,000 to offset its own costs currently
earmarked at $70,000, will be a countywide tulip bulb giveaway
(100,000 bulbs have already been purchased), a fall planting
day, an international conference at SUNY New Paltz featuring
Dutch scholars ,and a three-site site historical exhibit and
series of special events featuring historical documents and
artifacts. There also will be various exhibits and performances,
a Dutch artist-in-residence/exchange program, a Native American
Conference and Ceremony (Kingston and New Paltz), an African-American
cultural event (Kingston), and participation in Video Legacy,
Poster Legacy and Publication Legacy projects whose details
are currently being worked out.
Congressman Maurice Hinchey, meanwhile, announced that he has
secured initial approval of $1 million in federal funding for
the celebration, for which he anticipates large numbers of visitors
to the region next year. “
We think we will be attracting a substantial number of people
from other places around the United States and from other places
around the world, particularly from Europe, and particularly
Western Europe, from the Netherlands, Great Britain, France
and elsewhere,” he said.
Of the $492,000 Hinchey has secured in federal funds so far,
the money will go toward teaching about the quadricentennial,
a trail system, posters, banners along the Hudson, a maritime
project and money for the Hudson Valley and Champlain Valley.
The largest chunk of the money — $152,000 – will
be used for the Canal Schooner Lois McClure’s Voyage to
Quebec City, Canada later this year.
Not For Oil?
The Iraqi government has set itself to award a series of key
oil contracts to British and US companies, fuelling criticism
that the Iraq war was largely about oil. The successful companies
are expected to include Shell, BP, Exxon Mobil, Chevron and
Total. Non-Western companies, notably those in Russia, lost
out.
The technical support contracts will give the companies access
to Iraq’s vast untapped oil fields. Oil production in
Iraq is at its highest level since the invasion in 2003. The
Iraqi government wants to increase production by 20%, as the
country has an estimated 115bn barrels of crude reserves.
The US state department was involved in drawing up the contracts,
providing template contracts and suggestions on drafting, but
were not involved in the “final” decisions, US officials
said.
Democratic senators last week lobbied that the awarding of the
contracts should be delayed until after the Iraqi parliament
passes laws on the distribution of oil revenues.
Last year Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal
Reserve said: “Everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely
about oil.”
Meanwhile, the US army has told of errors, poor planning and
complacency among its own top commanders in a warts-and-all
official history of the steep descent into violence that followed
the Iraq war. In a 696-page account, army historians fault military
and political leaders for focusing excessively on toppling Saddam
Hussein in 2003 without looking towards a broader transition
towards a stable society. Actions by the former defense secretary
Donald Rumsfeld and the top US commander during the Iraq invasion,
Tommy Franks, are singled out in the study, which was delayed
for six months to allow senior army figures to review drafts.
“The transition to a new campaign was not well thought
out, planned for and prepared for before it began,” says
the history, On Point II: Transition to the New Campaign, published
by an internal army think tank called the contemporary operations
study team. “The assumptions about the nature of the post-Saddam
Iraq on which the transition was planned proved to be largely
incorrect.”
The blunt language used in the army’s historical study
is effectively endorsed by the force’s present chiefs.
The document is based on 200 interviews with participants including
the present chief of staff, General George Casey.
Artists’ Tour!
From July 18 through 20, art lovers will have the rare opportunity
to visit more than 30 Shandaken-based artists in their homes
and studios, as well as many more in galleries and shops. The
one a kind event stretches from Friday to Sunday and features
plenty of time in between to let visitors take in all the rest
that the town has to offer, organizers say.
The Arts Festival begins at 7 PM on Friday with an artist slide
show, talk & snacks at the Town of Shandaken Historical
Museum. The heart of the festival happens Saturday and Sunday
from 11-5, when you can tour over 30 artist’s studios,
starting at either The Arts Upstairs Gallery in Phoenicia or
the Pine Hill Community Center, both of which have art and fine
crafts on view.
To close the eveing on Saturday there will be an art opening
and free buffet at The Arts Upstairs gallery starting at 6 PM.
Also on Saturday. At Mt.Tremper Arts, will be the group exhibition
SIGNS and a dance installation from 8-10 PM followed by a dance
party with klezmer/punk band Golem from 10 PM till midnight.
Tickets are $20.
Participating Artists Include: Barneche Designs, Joel Benton,
Durga Bernhard, Michael Boyer, Susie Brown, John Byer, Dave
Channon, Margarete de Soleil, Ric Dragon, Wendy Drolma, Bronson
Eden, Lynn Fliegel, Dana Fraser, Jim Gardner, Chip Gallagher,
Shalom Gorewitz, Wendy Grossman, Hot Stuff Blown Glass, Peggy
Kay, John Kilb, James Knight, Dakota Lane, Ken Lovelett, Mt.
Tremper Arts, Naugatuck Narragansett, James Nevin, Margaret,
Gavin and Jesse Owen, Paloma, Christie Scheele, Rita Schwab
and Salvatore Scalisi, Judith Singer, Michelle Spark, Faye Storms,
Anique Taylor, Richard Treitner, Peter Wye and Mighty Xee.
Phoenicia’s $$$?
A block grant of $7.7 million to develop a community wastewater
management system for the Greene County hamlet of Ashland was
approved by the Catskill Watershed Corporation (CWC) Board of
Directors on June 24. Lamont Engineers of Cobleskill was authorized
to conduct the pre-construction phase of the project, involving
final design of a small diameter gravity sewer with a sand filter
wastewater treatment plant. Each property in the yet-to-be-formed
septic district will have its own septic tank where solids will
be collected. Liquid effluent will then be piped to the plant,
the location of which has not yet been determined. Lamont will
also map the sewer district and compile a sewer use law for
approval by the Ashland Town Board, write bid documents, and
develop operation and maintenance plans and contracts.
In other business, two Delaware County projects were approved
for funding under the Stream Corridor Protection Program to
mitigate or correct conditions that present an imminent and
substantial danger to people or property in populated areas,
including a $100,000 award to stabilize and prevent further
erosion of Delaware & Ulster Rail Ride property along the
Bushkill in Arkville.
The CWC Board of Directors also approved two low-interest business
loans. Carrier Enterprises (Lina and Lubov Lerentracht) will
receive a $300,000 loan to complete renovations to the former
Liberty Hospital which has been transformed into a 135-bed adult
living center, medical offices and a day care center. Donald
and Marcella Hasenflue will utilize a $155,000 REDI Loan to
help purchase property at 4162 Route 209, Stone Ridge. The couple
will open Cherries on Top Luncheonette and Ice Cream Bar in
the commercial space currently occupied by TJ Scoops.
Cell Dangers…
Nineteen European scientists have launched an appeal to sensitize
public opinion to the risks cell phone use could pose to the
brain, notably for the young.. The scientists, mostly oncologists,
believe the risk is too great to be incurred.
“We’re in the same situation today as we were 50
years ago with asbestos and tobacco,” notes Thierry Bouillet.
“Either we do nothing and accept the risk, or we admit
that there are a cluster of worrying scientific arguments.”
The scientists agree on two things: there’s no formal
proof of the cell phone’s harmfulness, but a risk exists
that it promotes the appearance of cancers in cases of long-term
exposure.
A Swedish study shows that the risk of having a cancerous tumor
on the side where the telephone is used doubles in ten years.
The American BioInitiative report adds that there is also a
significant risk of increase in infantile leukemia and neurological
problems (including Alzheimers).
In a list of ten precautions to take they ask that parents of
children under twelve forbid their children all cell phone access,
except for emergencies.
Pure Catskills!
The 2008 Pure Catskills Guide to Farm Fresh Products, a regional
resource for buying local food, is now available as a free 60-page,
full-color guide listing nearly 200 local farms, farmers markets,
retailers, restaurants and community organizations, as well
as a searchable directory available online at www.purecatskills.com.
To have a printed guide mailed to you, contact Challey Comer
at ccomer@nycwatershed.org or call (607) 865-7090.
Pure Catskills is a Buy Local Campaign that aims to educate
people in the community about opportunities to support local
farms and forestry businesses across the Catskill region. Communities
in Delaware, Greene, Otsego, Schoharie, Sullivan and Ulster
counties are served by the Pure Catskills campaign. For more
information, visit www.purecatskills.com or www.catskillwoodnet.org.
New At MARK
Peg Ellsworth, Roxbury’s longtime community resources
director, has been named the new Executive Director of the MARK
Group, filling the spot left vacant when former director Joan
Lawrence-Bauer left weeks ago to resume a position heading public
relations for Dean Gitter’s Emerson resort and Crossroads
Ventures efforts.
The MARK Group (formerly the M-ARK Project) was originally founded
in 1978 to encourage economic development and provide affordable
housing opportunities in the Margaretville-Arkville area. Since
that time, it has expanded its mission to encompass not only
the township of Middletown, but Andes and Roxbury as well.
In recent years the MARK Group has been particularly instrumental
in generating revitalization efforts in Fleischmanns, assisting
more than a dozen business startups throughout the area, and
building and renting 30 housing units at Mountain Laurel Gardens,
including seniors’ housing.
Ellsworth’s community involvement in Roxbury began modestly
in 1999, when she was hired as a consultant on a parks restoration
project. In 2003, the entire hamlet was listed on the State
and National Registers of Historic Places, and in 2005, as a
result of its creative heritage tourism programs, Roxbury garnered
the prestigious “Preserve America Community” designation
from the White House, a distinction which made the town eligible
for an exclusive round of competitive grants. Ellsworth has
obtained more than $150,000 in Preserve America and local foundation
funding for Roxbury’s heritage tourism in the past three
years.
As a grantwriter, Ellsworth has garnered millions in funding
over the past decade for such varied community endeavors as
sidewalks, afterschool programs, Main Street facelifts and housing
assistance for both Roxbury and Grand Gorge. Prior to her work
with the Town of Roxbury, Ellsworth worked at the Roxbury Arts
Group, side by side with founder Nancy Harding where, among
other initiatives, she helped create the popular October “Fiddlers”
event.
“This is truly the time to ‘act locally, think regionally’
as we all move into a new, challenging economic terrain and
an ever evolving business landscape. To mangle Ben Franklin,
we must all move ahead into that territory together or surely
we’ll all hang together,” said Ellsworth. “Joan
[Lawrence-Bauer] is a hard act to follow but leaves a strong
organization and sets a standard of unrelenting excellence for
her successor.”
“I am really pleased that Peg Ellsworth has been selected
to succeed me,” said Joan Lawrence-Bauer. “She is
incredibly well-qualified to take the helm and I know she will
do a great job for the communities MARK serves.”