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EDITORIAL

Just The One Boat
            School's out, and it's certainly been a long semester for the adults. Come fall, a new administration will be taking over at Onteora, with trustees that have gotten some pretty clear messages on fiscal accountability that we doubt will be lost. We have a budget, maybe not the one most folks with school age kids would have hoped for, but not the end of the world. At the same time, the worst of the problems the district's facing are still to come, and they'll be playing out right through August, when most of us are usually hoping to decompress a bit. That seems unlikely though, with the summer ahead promising heat for sure but not necessarily light.
            There's no question our towns have got some atypical stresses compared to most, and topping the list, especially in Olive, is the large parcel bill.  Most people understand at least, that looking at the issue from either Olive's or the Shandaken-Woodstock viewpoint, everybody's got valid positions, and a claim, some stronger than others, on issues of fairness. Yes, Olive does have to do a reval because its equalization rate is so out of sync with the rest of the district. But the underlying issue here is that it's not the people's half of Olive but the City's half of Olive that's the problem. So regardless of how fast Olive completes its reval or where its equalization rate ends up, until the assessed value of the reservoir is fixed, the city's only paying about one third the taxes it should be paying. And that continues because that's how the New York State Office of Real Property Services says it's going to continue. This newspaper herewith offers a reward of two gallons of local maple syrup to anyone who can tell us why that is.  
            One thing that's often missed here is that the reservoir valuation doesn't just affect Olive financially, it affects taxpayers in Shandaken and Woodstock and Hurley as well. If the City were to start paying taxes on an assessed value of say, $360 million, it appears Shandaken's taxpayers would see their school taxes drop over 8 percent, and Woodstock's over 11 percent, about the same direct benefit to those taxpayers as enacting the large parcel bill.  So if we don't enact the large parcel bill and we keep the reservoir properties within our local taxing authority, every town's taxpayers will benefit when the City does finally have to pay fairly.  We're not saying that's an answer, but not factoring it in just doesn't make sense.
            The truth is that collectively and for a very long time, we haven't been thinking very clearly about these tax issues, because most of us, elected officials especially, think of them as municipal problems limited by town boundaries. They are that, but they're also issues whose solutions often lay beyond those boundaries. And that's key if the good of the whole community is what we're trying to achieve. Because working collaboratively is the only way we can gather the influence to solve some of these problems for each of our towns individually and for our school district.
            There are plenty of missed opportunities to look back at, which we think validate this approach. In retrospect, Onteora should have backed Olive on its reservoir fight  - yes, with money and lawyers - from day one, but nobody even talked about that.  In retrospect, maybe we shouldn't have signed off on the MOA with the city, well, not in exchange for a one-time $8. an acre anyway. Perhaps the time will come when better compensation will be forthcoming. But the only prayer of that is if we stand together as communities with common issues, working for what we need. 
            For instance when Shandaken's finally ready to stop getting run over by the State on the assessed value of its vast wilderness and wild forest lands, it shouldn't have to try and get up from the pavement alone; Olive and Woodstock should be there as well: there's plenty of under-assessed state land there too. All our towns should have been there when Hardenburgh, population 208, tried to fight this battle alone a few years back. If we'd stood with them then with our full faith and moral credit and a combined legal fund, chances are all of our towns would have benefited a hundredfold from a reasonable negotiated solution. Instead, ORPS wiped the floor with Hardenburgh's taxpayers, and they're doing it now with Olive, and Shandaken's next on their list. That one's coming soon, and Shandaken will need all the help on it that Olive never got from its neighbors or its school district.
            So our view is that Shandaken, Woodstock, and Hurley should all be backing Olive in its fight for a fair valuation of the reservoir properties, because that's a problem that right now is costing every one of our taxpayers.  And our school district should be there too as a full partner in the issue, which it certainly is. Just as it's also a full partner in Shandaken's problem with ORPS on the assessment of state land.
            Problem is, most people keep thinking oh that's Olive's problem or that's Shandaken's problem and nobody's willing to even try and think very far across town lines. And the longer we let that continue, the longer we let state government and other financially powerful interests divide and suppress our  municipal and communal interests, the more ineffectual we end up at keeping our communities and our school districts fiscally whole. It might just be that the silver lining in the large parcel bill's dark cloud, is that people will start to understand this at some point.  But to do that, we're going to have to stop thinking so reflexively, and really consider whether the reactionary component of our communal soul is serving us very well. Our take is it's not, because it's what prevents us from creatively solving some of the problems the big bad world out there keeps throwing at us. We think home rule is critical to our future,  but we're not going to have any if we keep thinking home ends where the backyard stops. It doesn't.