Rensselaer County

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Ivan Lajara at The Daily Freeman thinks it is no joke that LAFTOR is the acronym for the New York State Legislative Task Force on Demographic Research and Reapportionment. Their “proposals are laughable” according to Lajara’s headline in the paper, over a story about the redistricting proposals released Thu., Jan. 26. Common Cause/NY Executive Director Susan Lerner said, “These maps appear to continue the long tradition of partisan gerrymandering we’ve come to expect. There are major demographic changes that are simply not reflected on these maps.” Governor Andrew Cuomo has vowed to veto any redistricting that is not created by an independent body. This plan was created by the the legislators themselves, so, as almost everyone is pointing out, they have drawn the lines to ensure their own re-election. Republican-leaning districts, now lean more. Democrat-heavy districts are heavier. They have created a new 63rd Senate seat, pairing Greene County with Albany and other points north in Senate District 46. Lajara quotes an AP news account and says, “The story continues, ‘The added Senate district would include part of Ulster County (including the city of Kingston), all of Greene County and parts of Albany, Schenectady and Montgomery counties.’ So imagine my surprise when a total of zero public meetings were scheduled in the area.”

Local effects

• Ulster County may be in the worst situation in the entire state. The proposal cuts the county into four Senate Districts, up from two. The people of Ulster County will have almost no representation in the Senate, as those four politicians will care little about its collective well-being, and not even cater much to the few voters they will have there, focusing on their majorities elsewhere.

• Greene County would see much change. Republican James Seward would, under the plan, not be Greene County’s senator anymore, but would retain a very safe seat to the west. The new seat includes all of Greene and Montgomery counties, and most of Albany and Schenectady counties, and several towns in Ulster County to the south. In the Assembly Greene is being split into two separate districts. Assemblyman Pete Lopez would continue to represent Ashland, Windham, Durham, Greenville, New Baltimore, Coxsackie, and Cairo in the proposed 102 District which now also includes Coeymans, Westerlo, and Rensselaerville in Albany County, all of Schoharie County, and towns in Otsego, Herkimer, and Oneida counties in what will continue to be a very safe district for him. The southern half of Greene County — Athens, Catskill, Hunter, Jewett, Lexington, Halcott, and Prattsville — would be in the proposed 101st Assembly District, which also includes much of eastern Delaware County, four Ulster County towns, and two Orange County towns, and Germantown and Clermont in Columbia County.

• In Columbia County, the Senate District used to be dominated by Dutchess County, as Poughkeepsie Steve Saland currently represents the area in Albany. In this proposal, Columbia County moves to Senate District 43, paired with all of Rensselaer County and parts of Washington and Saratoga counties to the north. In the Assembly, most of Columbia County is represented by the 106th District including Stuyvesant, Stockport, Hudson, Greenport, Ghent, Claverack, Livingston, Taghkanic, Copake, Ancram, and Gallatin. Millbrook in Dutchess County, interestingly, is no longer in the district, and the candidates (Republican Richard Wager and Democrat Didi Barrett) trying to replace Marc Molinaro for the 103rd Assembly, which is similar to the proposed 106th, live in Millbrook. So while they may fight for the seat in March, they may be in 105th District election in the fall. As mentioned before, Germantown and Clermont join the proposed 101st District, stretching across southern Greene County to parts of Delaware, and Ulster and Orange counties. The rest of Columbia County — Kinderhook, Chatham, Hillsdale, Austerlitz, Canaan, and New Lebanon — join most of Rensselaer County and two Washington County towns in the proposed 107th district, which is similar to the area Republican Steve McLaughlin represents, though without any of the Greene County towns it used to include.

Public hearings
No public hearings between Albany and New York City. The closest public hearing to our area is this Mon., Jan. 30 at 10:30 a.m. in the Legislative Office Building, Second Floor in the Hearing Room. (See the complete list of all public hearings after the link below.)

Read the rest of this entry »

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The National Weather Service issued a Wind Advisory for Western Greene County and Eastern Columbia County through 1 p.m., Fri., Dec. 16. The warning also covers all of Albany and Rensselaer counties, and Western Ulster County. Winds of 15 to 30 mph are expected, with gusts up to 40 and 50 mph.

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New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) police officers recently set up “saturation patrols” to target illegal deer shooting using artificial light, a practice commonly known as deer jacking. “The vast majority of hunters pursue and take game legally,” said DEC Law Enforcement Major Tim Duffy. “We work closely with the sporting community to stop individuals from illegally taking game to the detriment of wildlife populations and the legal efforts of honest hunters.” In Columbia County, they charged the following folks:
• On November 10, Todd Hall, 44, of Austerlitz and David Hall, 43, of Chatham were charged with possession of an unsecured firearm in a motor vehicle while spotlighting, a misdemeanor. Both were issued an appearance tickets returnable to Austerlitz Justice Court and face up to $1,000 in fines and up to 90 days in jail.
• On November 24, Dominick Popp, 74, of Gallatin was issued appearance tickets for the illegal taking of deer and shooting over a bait pile. Popp appeared in Gallatin Town Court, apologized for his actions and paid a $750 fine.
In Albany County, DEC recorded 14 incidents of deer jacking, 11 in Rensselaer County, and one in Schenectady County. If you have information regarding illegal hunting activities, please contact the DEC Turn in Poachers & Polluters (TIPP) line at 1-800-847-TIPP (7332).

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Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a state of emergency for Greene, Columbia, Albany, Dutchess, Delaware, Rensselaer, and Ulster counties, along with others farther south, because of Saturday’s large snowstorm. Saturday around 10 p.m. there were no major road closures in our area, according to the Governor’s press release.

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Emilia Teasdale reports in The Columbia Paper that the Ichabod Crane and Schodack School Boards met Tuesday, October 11, and will meet again at 6 p.m. October 24 at the Maple Hill School Library in Schodack to consider merging school districts to save money. The districts are conducting a “Functional Consolidation Study” and began outlining the possible timeline:

“To merge the two districts, both boards would have to agree, make formal motions and hold public hearings. They would hold a non-binding “straw vote” in their communities as well. If the straw vote is in favor of merger in both communities there would have to be a binding vote. In the time line presented to the board this week, a binding vote could be held as early as the fall of 2012. If voters approve a merger, consolidation could take place as soon as July 2013,” Teasdale wrote.

Read the full story in The Columbia Paper.

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Cuomo announces $175,000 for Greene farmers; $44,000 for Columbia County
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced $2.4 million from the state’s Agricultural and Community Recovery Fund (ACRF) to 125 New York farms to help recover from Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee. Specifically, money will go locally to:
Greene County Soil & Water District – $174,650
Projects: Debris removal, fence repair, and grassed waterway repair.
Columbia County Soil & Water District – $44,000
Projects: Access road, stream crossing, fencing repair, debris removal from crop fields, and stream bank stabilization.
Albany County Soil & Water District – $30,250
Projects: Replacement of alternative water supply and reconstruction of an access road, fencing, and gravel deposition removal.
Delaware County Soil & Water District – $101,214
Projects: Debris removal, milk house waste treatment system replacement, fencing, access road replacement and repair, stream bank stabilization.
Dutchess County Soil & Water District – $17,403
Projects: Debris removal from pastures, access road repair, fence repair, downed tree removal, and vegetative buffer planting.
Rensselaer County Soil & Water District – $184,060
Projects: Fence replacement and repair, stream bank stabilization, debris removal, and access road repair.
Ulster County Soil & Water District – $190,252
Projects: Stream crossing for equipment repair, critical area seeding, irrigation system repair, fencing, orchard repair, debris removal, access road repair, and cover cropping.
The Conservation Program is administered by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets in consultation with the New York State Soil and Water Conservation Committee. Applications for funding will be accepted from County Soil and Water Conservation Districts within the eligible counties.

From DEC.

DEC releases pheasants for 2011 hunting season
Hurricane Irene is taking another victim this fall: pheasant hunters. Greene and Schoharie counties may not get any pheasants released on hunting lands, “due to flooding in some areas and other logistical problems, there are currently no stocking sites in Greene County; however, if conditions improve birds may be released during the regular season,” according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). The DEC just announced it is releasing 30,000 adult pheasants on lands open to public hunting for the upcoming Fall pheasant hunting season.
In Columbia County there are four release sites:
• Kinderhook – County Rte. 21 southeast of Dahlgren Rd. (RS)
• New Lebanon – South side of Cemetery Rd., west of Royce Hill Rd. (RS)
• New Lebanon – County Rte. 5A and Old Post Rd.- Ask permission (RS)
• New Lebanon – South side of Rte. 20 east of Old Shaker Rd. Access with limited parking on farm road just east of Stewart’s Shop (RS)
Albany County
• Berne – Partridge Run WMA – See maps at all informational kiosks. (YH, RS)
• Knox – Margaret Burke WMA – west side of Cty Rte 254. (YH, RS)
• New Scotland – West side of Diamond Hill Rd. north of Clipp Rd. (RS)
Delaware County
• Colchester – Bear Spring Mtn. WMA – Trout Brook Rd. (YH, RS)
• Franklin- Off Rt. 357 across from Merrickville Rd. on Town property. Must obtain permission to hunt surrounding private land. (RS)
• Harpersfield – Peters Rd. northwest of Bruce Hill Rd. Park at designated parking sign. Two vehicles maximum. (RS)
• Walton – Bear Spring Mtn. WMA – West Trout Brook Rd. (RS)
Dutchess County
• Amenia – Wassaic Multiple Use Area (RS)
• Milan – Lafayetteville Multiple Use Area (YH, RS)
• Red Hook – Tivoli Bays Wildlife Management Area (YH, RS)
Rensselaer County
• Nassau – North and south of Jefferson Hill Rd. at the intersection with Middle Rd. – Must ask permission by calling 518-766-4346 after 5 PM. (YH, RS)
Ulster County
• Hurley – Gill’s Farm – Must obtain permission from landowner. (RS)
• Rochester – Davis Farm – Must obtain written permission from landowner. (RS)
• Rochester – Kelder Farm – Must obtain written permission from landowner. (RS)
• Wawarsing – Ver Nooy Kill State Forest (Lundy Estate), access from Lundy Road off 209 (RS)
The pheasant hunting season begins on October 1 in our area.

Gibson: I’m disappointed in [Wednesday] night’s vote
Jimmy Vielkind in Capitol Confidential reports that Rep. Chris Gibson (R, Kinderhook) voted unsuccessfully Wed., Sept. 21 to pass a larger House spending bill directing storm aid to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, an agency with open offices in Greene and Columbia counties, and an agency that may run out of money this week. “I was disappointed to see my colleagues on both sides of the aisle vote against this CR, which provided critical aid money for FEMA and our district,” Gibson said in a statement. “Helping our communities rebuild is far more important than playing political games. I will continue to advocate for immediate passage of FEMA disaster relief and urge leaders from both parties to come together and get this done. I will vote for any legislation we consider in the House that provides disaster relief funding.” Read the full story in Capitol Confidential.

Cuomo announces food stamp benefits for local storm victims
Governor Andrew Cuomo announced The Disaster Food Stamp Benefits Program for residents in counties affected by Hurricane Irene became available as of Thu., Sept. 22. Greene and Columbia county residents affected by the recent storms are covered by the program, as are those living in Albany, Delaware, Dutchess, Schoharie, and Ulster counties. The federal government oversees the Food Stamp Program, which is operated in New York State by the Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance (OTDA). To qualify for disaster food stamp benefits, applicants:
· Must have lived in one of the designated counties at the time of the disaster. Applicants may be eligible if they are temporarily living outside of the disaster area but within the State at the time of the disaster.
· Must plan on purchasing food during the month of September.
· Must have experienced at least one of the following:
o Loss of food or food stamp benefits.
o Damage to, or the destruction of, the household’s home or self-employment business.
o Disaster-related expenses not expected to be reimbursed during the month of September (e.g. home or business repairs, temporary shelter expenses, etc.).
o Loss or inaccessibility of income including reduction or termination of income, or a delay in receipt of income for half a month.
o Inaccessible liquid resources (e.g. banks are closed due to the disaster).
Call 1-800-342-3009, or contact your local department of social services for more information.

FEMA Disaster Recovery Centers to close on Sundays
Lissa Harris in the Watershed Post reports that the Federal Emergency Management Agency and New York Office of Emergency Management Disaster Recovery Centers operating in New York State will now be open only six days a week. Hours are now Mon-Sat, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. at these locations:
Greene County: Main Street, Prattsville.
Delaware County: Sidney Civic Center, 21 Liberty Street, Sidney.
Schoharie County: Cobleskill Fire Department, 610 East Main Street, Cobleskill.
Ulster County: Belleayre Ski Center, Route 28, Highmount.
Read the full story in The Watershed Post.

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Repair work on Route 73 near Keene, being repaired Mon. Sept. 5. Photo from NYS Governor's Office.

Enter Tropical Storm Lee
If the storms associated with Hurricane Irene weren’t enough, there were heavy rains late Sunday night and late Monday night, and more rain is expected Wednesday and Thursday as what is left from Tropical Storm Lee dumps more water on overly saturated ground. Last time that happened, with Irene, Western Greene County was devastated, and is still digging mud out, repairing bridges, and assessing unfathomable damage. The National Weather Service has issued a Flash Flood Watch for Greene, Columbia, Delaware, Schoharie, Rensselaer, Ulster, and Albany counties through 7 a.m. Tuesday morning.

Greene Grime
Dick May, in his Seeing Greene blog, reports yet another local business has abandoned downtown Catskill. Last Wed., Aug. 25, Jeffrey Meyers closed Café 355 telling May, that “I can’t afford to stay open” and is working in Albany. Read the full story in Seeing Greene.

Hundreds turn out for Republican caucus
Melanie Lekocevic reports in The Greene County News that Greenville Republicans picked justice candidate Jens Lobb, incumbent Town Supervisor Paul Macko, Tax Collector Mary Yeomans and Councilman Greg Davis, town clerk candidate Jackie Park, and incumbents Highway Superintendent Richard Hempstead and Councilman John Bensenat at the Greenville Public Library Monday Aug. 29. Macko, Davis, and Bensen were unopposed. Lobb defeated Walter Schelling 110 to 97. Christine Wickes. For town clerk, Park beat Christine Wickes 120 to 85. Hempstead defeated Joseph Licata 118 to 84 for Highway Superintendent. Read the full story in The Greene County News.

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The New York State Department of Labor released unemployment figures for April on Tue. May 24 that show joblessness fell in both Greene and Columbia counties, as well as Ulster, Dutchess, and the Capitol Region. In Greene County, the unemployment rated was 8.6 percent, down from 8.8 percent last month and a year ago. In Columbia County, the rate was 7.3 percent, down from 7.9 percent in March and down from 7.5 percent a year ago. In Ulster the rate was 7.7 percent, and Dutchess it was 7.3 percent, down from 8.1 and 7.7 a month ago, respectively. The Capitol Region (Albany, Schenectady, Rensselaer, Saratoga, Schoharie counties) fell to 6.8 percent, the lowest in two years, and down from 7.2 percent last month, and 7.1 percent last year. Looking closely at the numbers, there were fewer employed as well as fewer unemployed in Greene County in April. Now, only 20,900 roughly are employed, where in March there were 21,600 jobs, and a year ago 21,400. In Columbia County the number of employed rose slightly to 27,500 from 27,300 in March, but down from 28,500 jobs a year ago.

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Fiske declared winner of 3rd open board seat
Jim Planck in The Daily Mail reports that William Fiske was indeed elected to the Catskill School Board Tuesday. Fiske was leading Ward Osborn by six votes at the end of election night, with 14 affidavit ballots (the voter was not on the district’s voter registration roll, but cast a provisional ballot) left for the Greene County Board of Elections to sort out. Wed. May 18, they ruled eight valid, and counted those with these results: Karen Haas, went from 578 votes to 582, Michael Maloney increased five from 511 votes to 516, Fiske went from 490 to 494, and Osborn also added five votes from 484 to 489. So Fiske remains the winner. Read the full story in The Daily Mail.

Cool, wet Spring raises potential for late blight in tomatoes, potatoes
New York State Agriculture Commissioner Darrel J. Aubertine warned gardeners and growers Wed. May 18 that the never-ending rain this Spring makes conditions ripe for late blight. Late blight is a plant disease that spreads rapidly from plant to plant in wet, cool weather and causes tomato and potato plants, primarily, to wilt and die. “The exceptionally cool, damp spring we are experiencing throughout New York State this year heightens our concern for late blight,” Aubertine said in a press release. “We saw the devastation it can do to a tomato crop in 2009, and we have already received reports of early late blight detection in neighboring states. Therefore, we want to remind our growers of this possible plant disease and alert them of the precautions they can take and how we, as a regulatory agency, are working to protect our plants.” More than 150,000 tomato plants have been inspected in New York this year with no signs of late blight detected, according to Aubertine’s press release.

Columbia County DA confirms candidacy for County Judge
WNYT reports District Attorney Beth Cozzolino confirms she is running for Columbia County Judge, which fellow Republican Paul Czajka vacated last week. He announced he was running for Cozzolino’s job; a job he held for seven years before being elected judge in 1994. Cozzolino became DA in 1995.

Farm bill update
On Wed. May 18, New York State Agriculture Commissioner Darrel J. Aubertine announced updates on his series of Farm Bill work groups and changes to two previously announced sessions – the commodities and nutrition titles. Since late April, the Commissioner has been hosting a number of discussions with stakeholders to help identify and prioritize New York’s areas of concern and interest with the upcoming 2012 Federal Farm Bill. The Federal Farm Bill is negotiated every six years and sets the parameters for America’s agriculture, nutrition, forestry and conservation policies and affects New York’s 36,000 farm families in the dairy, apple, vegetable, and wine industries.
Friday, May 20, 2011 – Commodities Title (including Milk Pricing)
This session will meet from 10 a.m. to noon. During that time, invited stakeholders will have an opportunity to present, which will then be openly discussed with a panel of subject-matter experts. Members of the public may also participate and may submit written questions during the session in the Bistro of the Arts and Home Building at the New York State Fairgrounds in Syracuse.
Friday, May 27, 2011 – Nutrition Title
There will be two sessions to cover the wide range of nutrition provisions included in the Farm Bill. Panel member and invited stakeholder discussions will address, but are not limited to, the following topics. Members of the public may also participate and may submit written questions during the sessions in the Bistro of the Arts and Home Building at the New York State Fairgrounds in Syracuse.
• Morning Session – 10 a.m. to noon – food stamps and food distribution program issues, community food security grants
• Afternoon Session – 1 to 3 p.m. – fruit and vegetable promotion, farmers’ markets and community programs, school meal issues
Sessions are open to the public, RSVP by calling 518-457-8876. The information gathered at the sessions will be compiled into a working document that the Commissioner will use to communicate New York’s positions on federal agriculture policy.

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Taconic Hills budget doesn’t say how many jobs might go
Debora Gilbert in The Columbia Paper reports that while the Taconic Hills School Board’s budget plan has a modest 2.78 percent increase in the tax levy, officials so far do not know how many jobs will be cut. “Two-thirds of the budget goes to pay salaries and benefits, but it remains to be seen whether the teachers’ union, now in contract negotiations, will make any concessions like a salary freeze or larger contributions to the union’s healthcare plan. One board member said collective bargaining is not going well, and the head of the support staff union said that unit could not get the superintendent to sit down and talk with union negotiators,” Gilbert writes, quoting school officials but no union representatives. She does cite David Luck, a parent from Ghent who suggested at the April 13 meeting of the board that District Superintendent Mark Sposato take a 20 percent cut to his $187,000 salary. In the Albany Times-Union, Scott Waldman writes that, “200 of 700 school districts statewide have negotiated concessions, although some of those talks did not go anywhere, according to New York State United Teachers.”

Greene jail population soars as US figures drop
Colin DeVries in The Daily Mail digs into data from a report released earlier this month by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics. The Greene County Jail in Catskill had an average daily jail inmate population in 2010 of 78 with the highest daily count being 94. That increased by 12 inmates from 2009. In 2008, the average was 62 inmates. In 2010, 914 inmates were received, up 59 from a year earlier and 106 more than in 2008. “The New York State Commissions of Corrections restricts capacity of local jails to 80 percent, according to the Greene County Sheriff’s Office, meaning there couldn’t be more than 45 inmates per day housed in Greene County Jail. The average number of inmates housing in the jail per day in 2010 was 51.5,” DeVries reports. “Fees to board out Greene County inmates ranges from $75 to about $125 depending on the county.” Read the full story in The Daily Mail.

Docks blindside HFD
John Mason reports in the Register-Star that Hudson’s expanded tour boat dock now under construction on the Hudson River abuts the city Fire Department’s docks, which might have to be removed. At Monday night’s Police Committee meeting, the issue came up. “The Hudson Powerboat Association owns the line of docks north of the tour boat docks,” Mason wrote. “The HFD, Greenport Rescue Squad and Columbia County Sheriff’s Office all use the three HPBA docks closest to Hudson’s docks.” First Assistant Fire Chief Craig Haigh said the construction makes it difficult for HFD boats to maneuver, dock, or embark and Fire Chief Robert Pulver Jr., said they will have to sit down with all involved to resolve the problem. Read the entire story in the Register-Star.

Exotic animals lost in fire
Doron Tyler Antrim reports in The Daily Mail that a fire destroyed a reptile enclosure at Bailiwick Ranch and Discovery Zoo in Catskill Monday evening, killing baby chicks, ducks, a couple of small turtles and a snake. Kiskatom Volunteer firefighters doused the fire, Antrim reports was blamed on an electrical unit for heat lamps. The riding ranch became a zoo in 2006, shortly after the closing of the nearby Catskill Game Farm. The entire story is in The Daily Mail.

Capital Region patent applications even
Hoffman Warnick LLC (HW), an intellectual property law firm based in Albany, NY, announced its Tech Valley Patent Indices for First Quarter 2011, tracking the number of patent applications from technology firms in Albany, Schenectady, Saratoga and Rensselaer counties including IBM and GE as an indicator of the area’s economic health. In the first quarter, “the Tech Valley Patent Index was up again compared to last quarter, while the Capital Region numbers were down slightly” Hoffman Warnick’s Spencer Warnick said. “I don’t believe the slightly lower numbers are anything to worry about for the Capital Region. Most likely a mild beginning of the year slow down within the US Patent and Trademark Office.”

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Viewshed Symposium shines light on valley
Paul Crossman reports in the Register-Star that about 200 people packed into Columbia-Greene Community College for the first annual “Framing the Viewshed: The Transformative Power of Art and Landscape in the Hudson Valley” symposium, hosted by CGCC and Olana on Saturday, April 16. The symposium featured a number of speakers discussing the importance of the aesthetic aspects of Columbia County and the Hudson Valley, the various changes that have occurred since artists first began to paint the region’s beautiful landscapes, and the importance of keeping this viewshed area pristine. The event itself focused on three different aspects of the viewsheds — artistic, environmental, and historical, and the various speakers addressed each point in different ways, using powerpoint presentations, example artwork, historical examples, question and answer sessions, and even a panel discussion. “We think that this event is the first of its kind,” said Olana Partnership President Sara Griffen. “The idea is to explore the subject of viewsheds in a serious, historical, and holistic way.”

Carlucci introduces legislation to promote local farms
Mid Hudson News Network notes that State Senator David Carlucci (D-Rockland-Orange counties) has proposed legislation to preserve, promote and grow New York’s local farms by suggesting that any restaurant that buys produce from within a 100 mile radius of their establishment would receive tax credits, he said. Under his legislation, restaurateurs would receive a $100 tax credit for every $1,000 worth of local produce purchased.

East Durham pair charged in check fraud
Colin DeVries writes in the Daily Mail that Shannon T. Higgins, 45, and William K. Marino, both of East Durham, were arrested April 15 in a scheme to cash a Columbia-Greene Community College check made out to Marino’s roommate. State police allege that Marino forged the name of the CGCC student on the back of the check worth more than $2,000 and deposited it into Higgins’ personal bank account. Both suspects were charged with fourth-degree grand larceny, a class E felony, and Marino was charged with second-degree forgery, a class D felony. Higgins was issued an appearance ticket returnable to Cairo Town Court. Marino was arraigned in Cairo Town Court and remanded to the Greene County Jail in lieu of $10,000 cash or $20,000 bond.

The importance of school food
Lynn Sloneker has a link on her Unmuffled education blog to a fabulous piece by Kim Marshall about the nation’s need to pay more attention to school food. Amongst what’s there: School food affects student achievement; Studies are increasingly showing a link between good nutrition and academic success. School food affects teaching; Many educators eat school food, so its nutritional value is important to their performance. Food affects school spending; The money earned from junk food sales benefits schools, which is why some administrators are unwilling to curtail such sales. Schools teach children about food; There’s a “hidden curriculum” in current practices, which can be counteracted by more explicit teaching (and actions) on nutrition. School food is a window into identity and culture. Furthermore, the piece notes how school food affects the environment because of the massive number of meals served in schools every day; making up a significant (and stable) part of the economy; and school food can be a wedge issue, politically. Read this.

ICC looks at district merge
John Mason reports in the Register-Star that talk of merging the Ichabod Crane and Schodack school districts inched forward recently with a joint meeting of districts’ board members at Maple Hill Middle School. The two districts received a grant from the Department of State to study the possibility of consolidating services and potentially merging the districts. The study is scheduled to be completed Oct. 31.Questions discussed focused on whether the possible merger would take the form of a centralization or an annexation, with the assumption being centralization. That led to talk about school identity. Advisory committees for the process, which will each include 15 to 18 members, are still being appointed. According to a tentative timeline, their first meetings will be on or about May 3, and they will continue to meet until July 15.

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City picks GAR for reval after last year’s controversy
Jamie Larson reports in the Register-Star that the city of Hudson is trying again to underfgo a reassessment of local tax values, this time working with the real estate appraisal firm GAR Associates. In 2010, the release of the Hudson assessment roll lead to a much higher than average number of grievances, a lawsuit from a group of building owners and residents crying foul about the values of their homes. That reval was attempted in house. “GAR project manager for the Hudson reassessment, David M. Barnett, said that they aim to be as transparent and public with their process as possible, reaching out to home owners, providing them with information and resources and holding public workshops to explain the process,” Larson writes. “Common Council President Donald Moore said that GAR’s bid on the project was accepted for a number of reasons but their stated commitment for community outreach and involvement was a big part of why they were selected.” There will be no major revaluation in 2011. The results of GAR’s assessment will be released in 2012.

Board still working to finalize school budget
Michael Ryan reports in the Windham Journal on ongoing talks to determine a 2011-2012 school budget for the Windham-Ashland-Jewett school district. “A draft version of the budget, released by the board of education in early February, showed that the total for mandated expenses and contractual commitments represents a leap of $348,000 from a year ago,” Ryan writes. “Combine that with an anticipated $263,265 decrease in State aid and it is small wonder WAJ administrators have been searching every nook and cranny for ways to ease the seemingly inevitable pain for taxpayers.” Board of education members are expected to approve a spending package in late April, giving them less than a month to figure out what goes and what stays before sending the numbers to taxpayers for a May 17 vote.

Delayed Master Plan for Martin Van Buren
Mike McCagg reports in CCScoop that a long overdue master plan for the Martin Van Buren Historic Site in Kinderhook is still on the drawing boards, but has been delayed by federal budget impasses. “The first-ever general management plan for the three-decade-old historic site – the site known as Lindenwald that was home of the eighth president of the United States – was expected to be made public in late 2010, but now is on hold until later this year – at the earliest,” McCagg writes. “Site Superintendent Daniel Dattilio said funding for the plan is still in place, but cut backs among planners and agency personnel at the national level has delayed the work.”

Town awards $93,000 re-val bid
Melanie Lekocevic writes in the Greene County News that the Athens Town Council recently awarded a $93K bid from Appraisal Consultants to perform a revaluation of the town and village. The motion was approved by a 3-2 vote. The Town Council awarded the bid after four re-val companies submitted bids in response to the RFP, or Request for Proposal. Appraisal Consultants was the lowest bidder. “Supporters of conducting a townwide revaluation, or re-val, say it is a way to level the playing field and make sure all property owners are paying their fair share in property taxes,” Lekocevic writes. “Over the years, property values change and some may be paying too much, while others may be paying too little.”

Lebanon Valley Speedway owner’s plan for motocross still not on track
Gail Heinsohn has a story in the Chatham Courier about pending questions regarding an application to build a motocross track on land adjacent to the Lebanon Valley Speedway. The application was put in to the Stephentown Zoning Board of Appeals in Rensselaer County last year for a variance for about 10 acres of residentially zoned property, to be turned into a “world-class” motocross facility, with a goal of attracting 30,000 spectators. The land contains state-regulated wetlands and archeologically significant areas.

Fire breaks out in Hudson

Jamie Larson reports in the Register-Star on the fire in Hudson this morning at 754 Columbia Street, within site of the WGXC studios. The fire occurred in the second floor apartment of the building next door to Melino’s Pub at around 10:00 a.m., Larson reported. The apartment sustained significant visible damage to the exterior side wall. Firefighters used a chain saw to cut into the roof and the blaze was put out within a half hour. It was unknown what damage local businesses sustained as of this newscast.

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Board unveils $37.1M draft school budget
Jim Planck of the Daily Mail reports on the presentation of a budget to an SRO crowd in Catskill on March 30. It calls for a spending package of $37,191,010, up from the current year’s of $36,699,599. The $491,411 difference — a 1.34-percent increase — is part of a $781,565 tax levy increase, with projected revenue for next year is $290,154 less than needed. The draft tax levy represents a 4.89-percent increase. Cuts include Pre-K transportation, now up to parents, an expansion of the no-busing zone around the school to one mile for all 6-12 graders, and seven staff positions for art and music, science, foreign language and social studies teachers, plus a social worker. Most, however, involve early retirements. The ski team was also eliminated.

Schodack, ICC merger study moves forward
John Mason of the Register-Star writes that the Ichabod Crane Board of Education has agreed to conduct a feasibility study on a potential merger with the Schodack Central School District in Rensselaer County. In August 2010, Schodack and Ichabod received a state grant for the study in the amount of $49,500. The districts issued an RFP for a qualified contractor to do the study and received three responses. Total cost of the study is $54,500. The $5,000 over and above the grant amount will be shared between the two districts. Also Monday, the board approved the closing of two elementary schools, Martin Van Buren and Martin H. Glynn, and created a committee to explore all possible uses of the buildings. Elementary students will move to the district’s main campus in Kinderhook.

Disgraced horse breeder Paragallo loses appeal
The Times Union reports that horse breeder and owner Ernie Paragallo lost his appeal of a March 2010 conviction for starving thoroughbreds at his Center Brook Farm in the Greene County community of Climax. Paragallo, 52 of Long Island, asked the Appellate Division of state Supreme Court to overturn his conviction because of questionable things that were included in a probation report compiled before his sentencing. The appeals court said Greene County Judge George J. Pulver Jr. did not consider the issues Paragallo objected to when he imposed a two-year sentence to local jail on May 18. He was convicted on 33 counts of misdemeanor animal cruelty. The Columbia-Greene County Humane Society and the Equine Rescue Resource cared for the 177 emaciated horses after they were seized.

NYSEG plans new 115 kV lines
Kristi Berner of The Columbia Paper writes that NYSEG, the power company which serves much of northern and eastern Columbia County, is planning a new power substation in Ghent and a new electricity transmission line that could run through parts of four towns in the county. The idea is to alleviate power outages. “The project faces multiple hurdles in various federal, state and town approvals, but if all goes as NYSEG officials expect, the new substation and transmission line would be in place by the fall of 2012,” Berner writes. The new transmission line would connect NYSEG’s existing Klinekill substation in Chatham, National Grid’s existing 115-kV transmission line and a new NYSEG substation proposed for Ghent. The new 115-kilovolt (kV) transmission line would likely through the towns of Ghent, Chatham, Kinderhook and Stockport. Town officials have been speaking with NYSEG, but public review still needs to happen.

Hannaford confirms attendance at meeting
Doron Tyler Antrim has a story in the Daily Mail that confirms that Hannaford Supermarkets owill be on the agenda at next week’s Cairo planning board meeting on Wednesday, April 6. This will be its inaugural meeting with local officials, and the Cairo public, since the grocery store chain announced in January that it will acquire Slater’s Great American and build a new store on the property.

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Town court prepares to take village cases
Melanie Lekocevic reports in the Daily Mail that preparations are underway in the Town of Athens for the town court to take over the Village Court’s cases with that department’s impending dissolution at the beginning of April. Grants will help provide things from new furniture like chairs, lecterns and filing cabinets, to computers and a new security system, saving Athens taxpayers money.

Holcim port’s future cloudy
Jamie Larson of the Register-Star has a story about how the announcement that Holcim Cement Company will be closing its Catskill plant and laying off its remaining workers has spurred discussions in Hudson and Greenport about the company’s deep water port on the waterfront in the city of Hudson, which it currently leases to the O&G Industries trucking company for the storage and shipment of limestone aggregate. “Many Hudson residents feel the current operation at the port is incongruous with the city’s development plans for the waterfront outlined in the Draft Local Waterfront Revitalization Plan, a document currently being reviewed by the New York state Department of State,” Larson writes. “Those in opposition to the current use of the port and the proposed new truck route to the port through an abandoned railroad bed causeway in the South Bay wetlands foresee a day when the city owns and regulates the large and visible port, but none believe that Holcim’s mothballing of the Catskill plant will lead to a speedy decision to sell the port.”

AG tells feds Indian Point relicensing process must account for seismic, other safety risks
How safe is Indian Point, the nuclear plant 75 miles south of us at the north end of the Tappan Zee? Mid Hudson News Network reports that New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said Friday, March 18 that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission must take an even closer look at the Hudson Valley’s only nuclear power plant as it continues the license renewal process. The AG called for incorporation of an immediate, full and open assessment of all public health and safety risks posed by the Indian Point nuclear power plant, including those posed by potential natural disasters such as seismic activity, into its relicensing process.

DiNapoli: NY home foreclosures down in 2010, but threat looms
The Albany Business Journal reports on how the number of new home foreclosure filings in the state fell sharply last year, but a growing number of mortgages are delinquent and could wind up in foreclosure, according to a report by state Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. The percentage of mortgages delinquent by 90 days or more averaged less than 1 percent before the housing crisis, but delinquencies grew fivefold to nearly 4.7 percent by the first quarter of 2010, DiNapoli said. He added that although the percentage of homes in 90-day delinquency has eased, the overall share of mortgages in the foreclosure process continued to rise to 5.2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, five times higher than the share before the crisis. The problem is most severe in New York City, especially certain neighborhoods in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

State may trump town in motocross case
The Register Star has a story about a Stephentown Zoning Board of Appeals meeting in neighboring Rensselaer County over planned changes, and the addition of motorcross events, at the Lebanon Valley Speedway, conceded that the tougher state standard would probably prevail. The speedway would have to prove hardship to get the zoning variance it wants to build a new course away from its main track on Route 20.

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Where to find shelter, supplies
The Register-Star reports that the Red Cross Shelter at the Taconic Hills High School on County Route 11 in Craryville will close at 8 a.m. today so school can resume there, with a two hour delay. Two new shelters will be opening at the Taghkanic Fire Company on Route 82 in Taghkanic and the second one will be at the Copake Community Building located at the Copake Town Park on Mountain View Drive. Additionally, dry ice and water will be available at the Copake Fire Department located at 390 County Route 7A Copake or the Ancram Firehouse at 1306 County Route 7 Ancram. Several thousand are still without power in the area and local fire companies have been going door to door in the northeastern portion of Columbia County to check that folks are alright.

School officials look into future of employment
Colin DeVries of The Daily Mail reports that a delegation of Greene County school officials and economic developers toured the $4.6 billion GlobalFoundries semiconductor manufacturing facility being constructed north of Albany, getting a first-hand look at “the future of employment in the region.” GlobalFoundries, an international computer chip producer, will be hiring about 1,400 people by the end of 2012, many of whom will be educated at community colleges, receiving two-year degrees in electronics, science and semiconductor manufacturing. The Greene County Industrial Development Agency accompanied officials and school board members from Cairo-Durham Central School District, Coxsackie-Athens Central School District, Greenville Central School District, and BOCES Questar III.

Dems fire first volley at Molinaro

Mid Hudson News Network notes that regional Democrats have started firing shots at the just-announced candidacy of State Assemblyman Marc Molinaro for Dutchess County executive, with that county’s party chairwoman, Elisa Sumner, saying Molinaro is “unfit” to be county executive. Sumner pointed to an audit of the Village of Tivoli, where Molinaro served as mayor for 11 years after first being elected to the village board at the age of 18, noting the state comptroller’s office was critical of the municipality’s “financial condition.” She added that a few potential candidates have expressed interest in running for the county’s top job, some in government and others in business. New York State Bridge Authority Executive Director Joseph Ruggiero and Beekman Town Supervisor Daniel French have been mentioned as possible candidates on the Democratic ticket.

More snow days might mean canceled days off for schools
The Times Union looks into the situation regarding weather days in the Capitol District… as we’ve known here, none are left… meaning special days off are gone for the remainder of the year, with the probability growing that we’ll be pushing the 2011 school year up to its end-of-June legal limit this year.

Union, TH board relations deteriorate
John Mason of the Register-Star reports that relations between Taconic Hills school officials and its employee unions, already strained, took a turn for the worse last week when a board member claimed he was being personally attacked by the union, and a union president said he was physically threatened by the board member. On Friday, March 4, many teachers wore orange to school to signify “anti-bullying,” after Faculty Association President Kevin Reis filed a complaint with the police and the district alleging Board Vice-President George Lagonia Jr. had threatened him. The chain of events began with union officials filing a petition with the board seeking the removal of three Taconic Hills school board members for being employed by the district as sports coaches, or having siblings also on the board… citing State Education Law that stipulates that board members cannot be employed by the school board they belong to, and that no more than one family member shall be a member of the same board of education.

Changes seen for Farmers’ Market
The Daily Mail reports on a recent discussion about the coming Catskill Farmers Market by village officials, including the possible appointment of a market manager, which market participants don’t see the need of, and prospects of opening the market to those receiving federal assistance for food purchases.

Cops look for flasher
The Register-Star reports that New York State Police at Livingston are looking for a man who allegedly exposed himself to minor children while inside the Walmart department store at Greenport Commons on Feb. 24 between the hours of 7 and 8 p.m. The man was observed, authorities said, driving a red or maroon medium sized hatchback or small SUV style vehicle.

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Flooding, outages strike the county
The Register-Star reports, with text and plenty of images, on the weather damage caused by raging creeks, ice, and nearly six inches of snow in some areas. Over 11,000 were without power on Monday afternoon, March 7, with states of emergency declared in Ancram and Livingston. For those remaining without power Monday night and today, “warming centers” were opened at the Kinderhook Fire Station and Niverville Fire Station 1, and a Red Cross station set up at Taconic Hills School in Copake. Roads, which were blocked off into Hudson from most directions at one point, were being cleared for today as much as risen creeks would allow. Those who require more information about the Red Cross shelters should call 518-458-8111. Residents who need transportation to a shelter can call 518-828-1212.

Ice, snow, flooding batter Greene
The Daily Mail’s storm report is a simple photo of a car pulled over on the side of a road. Travel was difficult but, at least in valley towns, no power was lost, or major flooding reported.

Storm leaves outages, flooding; 2 rescued in New Paltz
The Daily Freeman highlighted downed trees and power lines in northern Dutchess and southern Columbia counties, as well as closed roads and a car rescue outside of New Paltz, in its storm coverage. About 6,500 were without power in Dutchess County, and two in Ulster. The worst part? They quote a meteorologist who notes that, ““Coming in Wednesday night through Thursday, another complicated storm, possibly becoming a Nor’easter. It could be another significant one.”


Thousands go to bed in the dark

The Times Union adds on to the power outage news, reporting National Grid’s estimate of hundreds of homes without power Monday evening, March 7, in Rensselear, Saratoga and Washington counties, as well as Columbia. NYSEG noted another 7,300 without power and suggested some might not get their lights back on until Wednesday.

Agency head raps release of Catskill man who later killed wife, cop
The Daily Freeman reports that Michele McKeon, chief executive officer of the New York State Coalition Against Domestic Violence, is saying that the Catskill man who fatally shot his wife and a Poughkeepsie city police officer before killing himself last month should not have been released on bail after he violated a court order mandating him to stay away from his spouse. More focus needs to be placed on perpetrators of domestic violence crimes and on holding them accountable for their actions, McKeon said, noting that as it stands now, more emphasis is placed on the victim and what they did to possibly cause violence or fail to escape from an abusive situation. The legal system tells the victim what they have to do to keep themselves and their children safe in such situations, but in no other crime do people look at the victim and ask them why they stayed or what buttons they pushed to cause the violence. “I think the systems involved need to take domestic violence much more seriously,” McKeon said, adding that proposed cuts to domestic abuse programs in Gov. Cuomo’s budget proposal could prove disastrous.

Kohl’s grand opening slated
John Mason of the Register-Star reports that Kohl’s Department Store, the newest store in Greenport Commons, will hold its grand opening Wednesday. The ribbon-cutting ceremony, with Kohl’s executives and local officials, will be at 7:45 a.m., followed by the official store opening at 8 a.m. The 64,000 square foot store is located next to the Lowe’s Home Improvement store.

Financial troubles may force choices
The Daily Mail has a story about how Cornell Cooperative Extension has combined its Columbia and Greene county offices to save money as a key means to keeping its ambitious Agroforestry Resource Center in Acra afloat. “It’s challenging times for all of us,” said Andrew Turner, executive director of Cornell Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene counties, noting that things are no different the academic organization devoted to providing agricultural, environmental, health and youth programming to communities around the state, which has seen a $13 million decrease in the organization’s $100 million statewide budget over the past two years.

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Local police delegation to honor hero cop
The Daily Mail, like all Hudson Valley newspapers today, has a story about local police agencies sending reps for the giant service being held in Dutchess County for Poughkeepsie police officer John Falzone, who was killed on duty January 18 after wrestling a three year old child from the hands of Catskill resident Lee Welch, who also killed his wife and then himself in the tragedy near the train station.

County space studies abound
In the wake of this week’s county decision not to fund another space study for the proposed move of Social Service and other county services to the former Wal Mart facility in Greenport, Francesca Olsen of the Register-Star has a story about all the other space studies completed in recent years… and the time restraints county DSS has in its present home in Hudson.

FBI requests records from Kingston school district in Matthews probe
That case involving a Kingston city cop caught double-dipping for his private and public beats keeps stretching deeper into local governance, involving the local school district, but also possibly the way drug task force funding got spread among participating municipalities. We’re waiting for this one to cross county lines before long…

Hundreds pepper DRBC with comments on drilling
The Watershed Post has some strong aggregate reporting on how those new hearings on gas drilling in the Delaware River basin are going, including video of the less-well-attended but still volatile and emotionally-wrenching events that are likely to shape state and federal regs concerning this controversial new energy industry.

RPI student on the inside for a ‘first’ in space
The Times Union has a piece up on a student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute student, 21-year old Nathaniel Quillin, who is among a team of scientists that will soon put the first mechanical humanoid robot into space aboard space shuttle Discovery, which is scheduled to launch at 4:50 p.m. Feb. 24 after four months of mechanical and weather delays. The robot essentially looks like the top half of a person, or the video game character Metroid, and combines human dexterity with mechanical strength, and could eventually work outside the space station or on other risky jobs now performed by astronauts.

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Power outage at Windham Mountain ski area
The Times Union reported on the afternoon of February 19 that shortly after 3 p.m. Saturday, the ski area posted on its website that high winds had caused a power outage. Crews were working to restore power and were hoping to do so within 30 to 45 minutes. It was unknown, as of press time, whether anyone had been caught on any ski lifts.

Poughkeepsie cop killer suspect from Catskill
The Daily Mail has a story on how the deceased suspect in a Poughkeepsie shootout that resulted in the death of a city police officer on February 18 has been identified as Lee Welch, 27, of Catskill, who also fatally shot his wife, Jessica Welch, at 1:07 p.m. near the train station, after Welch was found holding the couple’s 3-year-old child and waving around a pistol. The officer pulled the child child from Welch’s arms, handing it to the care of a nearby civilian, before another chase and struggle during which both men shot each other in the head. More on this tragedy following a February 20 press conference on the matter.

Community rallies behind Pulver’s at fundraiser
The Register-Star reports that hundreds came out to support the Hudson glass business whose roof collapsed earlier this month, helping it to get back in business in a matter of weeks.

Feds reject Stockbridge Munsee Tribe’s proposed casino compact

Those dreams of casinos in the Catskills, and Sullivan County in particular, finally got the kibosh on February 18 when the US Department of the Interior said it just wasn’t kosher to be okaying reservation privileges to a Wisconsin tribe in New York.

CSEA: Wisconsin is Ground Zero
The repercussions of Midwestern anti-union actions and current national news hit home Friday, February 18 when union employees held a solidarity demonstration at CSEA headquarters in Albany and provoked a large story in the Times Union by veteran reporter Rick Karlin.

Police kill dog after it attacks baby at sitter’s Saugerties home
The Daily Freeman has a piece about a pit bull that attacked a 3 month old and cable guy at the child’s baby sitter’s home, resulting in reconstructive surgery for the baby and euthanasia for the dog, which allegedly belonged to the baby sitter’s son.

Rough winter leaves mounds of trouble in its wake
The Daily Mail has a piece about how property owners in Coxsackie have been reminded that there are sidewalk clearance laws, and seven have been fined up to $250 for not shoveling. They’re saying it’s time to get the problems of winter cleared up.

Police chase crosses county, state lines
The Register-Star has a thrilling piece by Andrew Amelincks about a morning car chase on February 18 that started in Rensselaer County, wound through CHatham and out Route 295 to Route 22, sidestepped into Massachusetts, and ended on Route 20 in New Lebanon where this morning ended with Gerald Felitti Jr., 40, of Troy, being charged with a number of crimes, including drug possession. The best details? His teenage son was in the truck with him… and the chase included a helicopter.

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Cascino pays fine for open burning
The Columbia Paper has a story on the latest fine paid by the owner of Bronx Recycling for burning wood pallets in a Copake drainage ditch in mid-December, around the same time he was being acquitted of illegal dumping in Clermont.

RPI revives business incubator
The Albany Business Journal has a piece about how Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is shifting back from a virtual to a brick and mortar incubator program located in downtown Troy, which nurtured more than 250 software, video game design, technology and pharmaceutical companies in its 30 years of operation and now hopes to do more.

Two men charged with operating marijuana grow house
Mid Hudson News Network is running a story about two Ulster County residents, 36 year old Jay Debberman, 36 and 64 year old Joe Barton, charged early February 4 with operating a marijuana grow operation in an apartment in rural Saugerties where officers found two pounds of processed marijuana, 26 marijuana plants, drug packaging material and scales. What makes this story interesting, and missed in its MHNN coverage, is that Barton is a longtime proponent of legalizing pot who has faced numerous similar arrests and built a history fighting each one through the courts, claiming a need for medical marijuana, as well as a veteran’s wish to simply make a living.

Family displaced by fire
A Greenport home on Route 23B suffered fire and smoke damage Saturday afternoon, February 5, after a couch burst into flames from a faulty electrical outlet, leaving three homeless for the time being… and closing the highway for several hours.

Icy roads cause multiple accidents
The Daily Mail’s Jim Planck takes a look at the numerous fender-benders, roll-overs, and other mishaps caused by yesterday’s icy rains, albeit without too many details, due to the ongoing nature of the messy weather.

What Could Hudson Do With $10 Million?
Gossips of Rivertown references a North Country Public Radio News story about Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s possible plans to sell up to ten state prisons and reimburse their host communities with cold hard cash.

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The attempt to brand Albany, Schenectady, Saratoga, and Rensselaer counties, all just north of Columbia and Greene counties, as “Tech Valley” may be self-fulfilling, according to the 2010 Tech Valley Patent Indices Annual Report from Hoffman Warnick, an intellectual property law firm based in Albany. The report says the number of patents issued from the four counties keeps increasing. Spencer Warnick, a partner at Hoffman Warnick, said, “the most impressive numbers to us are the Capital Region without GE indices. Both the quarterly average and total number of issued patents have continued to rise over the nine years that we have done the index. These are prime indicators that the region continues to get stronger technically and that the region is clearly no longer just IBM and GE. We are technologically diversified and are stronger for it.”

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A staff report in The Columbia Paper says the U.S. Department of Agriculture has designated Columbia, Greene, Dutchess, and Rensselaer counties in the state as natural disaster areas due to losses caused by a drought that began June 13, 2010 and continues. Columbia is also among 19 counties around the state designated by the USDA last week as natural disaster areas due to losses caused by frost, freezing, high winds, hail, excessive snow, excessive rain and cold temperatures that occurred from February 15 to May 12, 2010. “President Obama and I understand these conditions caused severe damage to a wide variety of crops including fruit and vegetable crops, and we want to help,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a December 20 press release announcing the drought declaration, as reported in The Columbia Paper. “This action will provide help to farmers who suffered significant production losses,” said the secretary. He visited the region earlier this year during the campaign season at the request of Congressman Scott Murphy. All counties listed above were designated natural disaster areas December 17, 2010, making all qualified farm operators in the designated areas eligible for low interest emergency (EM) loans from USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA), provided eligibility requirements are met. Local farmers have eight months from the date of the declaration to apply for loans to help cover part of their actual losses. FSA will consider each loan application on its own merits, taking into account the extent of losses, security available and repayment ability. FSA has a variety of programs, in addition to the EM loan program, to help eligible farmers recover from adversity. Interested farmers may contact their local USDA Service Centers for further information on eligibility requirements and application procedures for these and other programs. Additional information is also available online at http://disaster.fsa.usda.gov. The Department of Enviromental Conservation says current drought conditions are normal.

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Map of Rensselaer Plateau, from Rensselaer Preserve Alliance website.

A geologically unique section of the East of Hudson part of our listening area, in eastern Rensselaer County, is now part of a federal program designed to protect forest lands from conversion to non-forest use. The Times Union reports today that the 196,000-acre Rensselaer Plateau, an upland area about 20 miles long and nine miles wide that stretches over several Rensselaer County towns, has been designated a U.S. Forest Service Forest Legacy Area. The area includes all or parts of the towns of Berlin, Brunswick, Grafton, Hoosick, Nassau, Petersburgh, Pittstown, Poestenkill, Sand Lake and Stephentown, and touches on Columbia County. An escarpment steeply rising from the surrounding lower elevations marks the plateau’s boundary. The program, overseen by state Department of Environmental Conservation, would allow the state to seek federal funds to help pay private landowners on the plateau who are willing to sell either development rights or land as a way to preserve the forest, all on a completely voluntary basis. The region hosts the area’s only permanent moose population.
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New York State Assemblyman Steve McLaughlin at a campaign event in Spiegletown. Photo from his Facebook page.

Emilia Teasdale of The Columbia Paper spoke with incoming New York State Assemblyman Steve McLaughlin (Republican), who beat Tim Gordon (an Independent who caucused with Democrats) to represent the 108th district, includes the towns of Kinderhook, Chatham, New Lebanon, and Stuyvesant, and north Greene County towns such as New Baltimore as well as portions of Rensselaer, and Albany counties. McLaughlin, a Rensselaer County resident, told Teasdale that he is moving his district office to Castleton on Routes 9 and 20, where Gordon had his office. He also says work on a property tax cap, Medicaid fraud, term limits for legislators are on his horizons. “McLaughlin supports Governor-elect Andrew Cuomo’s proposed property tax cap proposal but says he is already getting calls from Columbia County schools superintendents about what it will mean for school funding,” Teasdale writes. McLaughlin says, “You can’t pass a tax cap without mandate relief.” He also came out quickly already against the proposed (now adopted) stricter regulations from the Department of Environmental Conservation about outdoor wood boilers. Read the entire interview in The Columbia Paper.

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Rep. Chris Gibson, R-Kinderhook, says he'll sleep in his office once in Washington, as if his new job were a military deployment.

U.S. Rep.-elect Chris Gibson plans to make his congressional office his home when in Washington D.C., eschewing paying rent on an apartment or house… and going along with his aides’ description of his upcoming first term in office as being like the deployments he’s faced as part of a 24-year military career. A Journal Register News Service story in today’s Daily Freeman describes the continuing military jargon Gibson is using as he takes office next week after having defeated one-term Kirstin Gilllibrand fill-in Chris Murphy, who he bested by touting his military background and riding the national wave of anti-government rhetoric of the past year with a large amount of financial support from forces outside the state.
“He’s going to look at it as a deployment,” Dan Odescalchi, a spokesman for the Kinderhook Republican, joked about Gibson’s accommodations.

Beneath the joking, however, is some truth. Gibson invoked his military experience often on the path to winning his first elected office in November and portrayed himself, like many other successful Republicans across the nation, as a man on a mission to bring fiscal conservatism to Capitol Hill.

“He’s a guy who is going to Washington with his eyes wide open and who believes in his stump speech, which is less government is better government, less taxes are better than higher taxes,” Rensselaer County GOP Chairman Neil Kelleher said. “He believes it, and I think he’s going to do everything he can to make it happen, too.”

For the full story click here.

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Hunter Tannersville Central Schools are among several of the region's districts looking at potential mergers as a means of overcoming the current economic climate, which seems to be pusing for greater consolidations in the name of greater efficiencies.

The effects of dissatisfied taxpayers, shrinking federal and state aid to local school districts, and the increasingly serious threat of a two percent property tax cap have seen local school districts, from Kinderhook in Columbia County to Hunter-Tannersville on Greene County’s Mountaintop, starting to look into drastic, large-scale mergers… with some prompting now from the state Boards of Cooperative Education Services, the statewide entity of 37 educational regions around the state set up to improve educational efficiency in the state in the late 1940s. Now, as regional BOCES (known as Questar III here in Columbia, Greene and Rensselaer counties) look into greater efficiencies to make it through the financing web ahead, where mandated budget increases are looking to outpace any property tax cap put in place (as has happened in neighboring New Jersey this year), local boards of education are starting to rear back and wonder about issues such as home rule, long bus rides, and empty school buildings in their midst. Today’s Daily Mail has a story about the growing concerns at HTC, which serves a rural population and is being discussed in terms of a merger with schools in neighboring Delaware and Schoharie counties. Which dovetails with stories in the Register Star over the last month about budget concerns in Kinderhook, where a merger between the Ichabod Crane and Schodack central districts has been talked about, and even today’s Daily Freeman piece about an old school building in the city of Kingston burning to the ground last night. Keep an eye on this issue over the coming year, folks… Continue HERE or HERE…

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Unemployment rates in Mid-Hudson counties were higher in November than in October, the state Labor Department reported on Thursday.
In Columbia County, the November jobless rate was 7.2 percent, compared to 6.8 percent in October. In Greene, the rate jumped from 7.7 percent in October to 8.4 percent in November.
November unemployment rates in other local counties were as follows.
• Albany: 6.9 percent, up from 6.6
• Delaware: 8.2. percent, up from 7.7.
• Dutchess 7.5 percent, up from 7.3
• Orange: 7.9, up from 7.6.
• Rensselaer: 7.3, up from 6.9
• Saratoga: 6.5, up from 6.1
• Schenectady: 7.5, up from 7.1
• Schoharie: 8.3, up from 7.6
• Sullivan: 9.4, up from 8.5.
• Ulster: 7.9, up from 7.4

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The Mid Hudson News Network, along with the Register Star, have pieces in this morning’s editions about meetings U.S. Rep.-elect Chris Gibson had with state Assemblymen Marc Molinaro and Pete Lopez, fellow Republican, in several locations yesterday, including the Elks Club in Hudson, where Gibson said growing the economy by repealing “paternalistic legislation” is his top priority and added that he would push for the building of a nuclear power plant in the area. Concerns voiced by the public during the discussions included reducing spending, managing healthcare reform, protecting agriculture and small businesses, prohibiting the addition of new taxes, and hydrofracking. Gibson said that his first priority is to grow the economy by focusing on reform of “paternalistic legislation” that inhibits economic growth, as well as developing more intelligent ways of balancing the economy and the environment.

Gibson also said he was open to the building of two nuclear power plants in the overall region, one north and one south of Albany.

The sprawling 20th Congressional District comprises all of Columbia, Greene, Warren, Washington and Saratoga counties and parts of Dutchess, Otsego, Rensselaer, Delaware and Essex counties. In Northern Dutchess, the district includes Hyde Park, Clinton, Rhinebeck, Red Hook, Milan and Pine Plains.

For full stories click here or here.

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The Times Union this morning has one of those stories that outlines how things really work beneath the idealistic veneer of modern politics. It’s about how outgoing U.S. Rep. Scott Murphy, the Democrat who lost re-election to retired Marine Chris Gibson, a Republican riding the recent wave that shifted control of Congress in November, has been evicted from his Washington D.C. office, where callers can no longer leave a message, making it hard for constituents in the 20th Congressional District to reach the representative. The story goes on to point out how Murphy, 40, “is only one among scores of politicians who still have duties to perform even after their constituents voted them out, and has had to move with another 80 or so lame duck members of the House to a cubicle city set up in a banquet room in the basement of the Rayburn Office Building. And to make matters worse, even though votes are continuing over the coming weeks, and constituents back home still want representation, the General Services Administration has told Murphy he would not be able to retrieve messages left on the voice mail in his D.C. office, and all but one of his district offices have closed by order of the GSA… leaving only the one in Saratoga Springs — where the voice mailbox was full Thursday afternoon.

In the meantime, Murphy’s office is suggesting constituents call their U.S. Senators… although that’s not an option in some other states now left without any Democrats in federal office.

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The Register-Star reports this morning that the Ichabod Crane School District in Valatie has scheduled a series of community forums for January, February and March, 2011, at which the Board of Education hopes to receive substantial community input on the direction the district should go. Amongst the options that have arisen, in the face of growing drops in state school aid, are the closure of Martin Van Buren and Martin H. Glynn elementary schools, the contraction of all high school extracurricular activities, the curtailing of interscholastic sports programs, the elimination of one classroom per grade in grades 1 through 6, the elimination of kindergarten, and the institution of a single-bell bus system. And over the summer, the district will consider another cost-cutting measure: whether it should merge with the Schodack Central School District.

Pushing the sense of immediacy to all education funding worries around the state is a proposed two percent cap on all property taxes being entertained… which would force all public schools to make drastic cuts to survive.

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ALBANY — The Times Union reports this morning that a national report has named the Capital Region one of the fastest growing areas in the country for technology jobs. The CyberCities 2010 report, released Wednesday by the TechAmerica Foundation in Washington, D.C., found that the area’s strength is its research and development labs — such as Albany NanoTech and GE Global Research in Niskayuna, and found 21,274 high-tech jobs in the Capital Region with average annual pay of $78,000, which is $37,000 more than the average local private-sector salary. The most significant finding was that the Capital Region is the third-fastest growing high-tech area in the country, behind only Oklahoma City and Huntsville, Ala, and is 19th nationally, as a region, in terms high tech employment opportunities.

Interestingly, the largest technology work force is in metro New York City, not Silicon Valley in California. And Washington, D.C., is also ahead of Silicon Valley. The New York City area has more than 300,000 high-tech workers, while Washington, D.C., has 293,000 workers, which is roughly 70,000 more than Silicon Valley.

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ALBANY — The prolific and spot-on Brian Nearing of the Times Union reports today that state and environmental groups are warning the federal Environmental Protection Agency against releasing a plan they claim could allow more PCBs to remain behind in the Hudson River. Both the Department of Environmental Conservation and a coalition of environmental groups wrote the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last week, warning against a potential plan that could allow more PCBs to be capped over and left on the river bottom. But a spokesman for General Electric Co., which is running and paying for the massive Superfund cleanup, said both the state and the river advocates are wrong and misunderstand the plan that EPA is expected to release on Monday.

GE plants in Fort Edward and neighboring Hudson Falls discharged PCBs into the river for decades before the lubricant and coolant was banned by EPA in 1977. PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, are considered probable carcinogens. The last decade was filled with heated battles, regionally as well as in Washington, as to how to treat the cancerous pollution in the state’s main river.

The current EPA Regional Director for the region is Judith Enck, formerly in charge of environmental matters for the governor in Albany.

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WASHINGTON/ALBANY – On the same day that the Daily Mail and Register Star are running versions of a story (more conservatively for Catskill) about the current Bush Tax Bill extension fight in Washington, pitting incoming Congressman Chris Gibson, Republican, against the man he defeated, Democrat Scott Murphy, after Murphy voted along with the rest of the current House Democratic majority for limiting tax extensions to the middle class, the Times Union has a fascinating story about the amounts of outside money that came into the 20th Congressional District this past electoral cycle, and how they helped Gibson ride the underlying voter registration demographics of Upstate, briefly overturned by Kristin Gillibrand a few years back when she defeated John Sweeney, and barely maintained in Murphy’s special election 800-vote win last year.

“U.S. Rep. Scott Murphy raised and spent more money than his opponent, but it couldn’t save his job,” reporter Jordan Carleo-Evangelist writes, pulling from newly-released Federal Election Commission reports and records. “But the numbers fail to tell the whole story…. While Gibson, a retired Army colonel from Kinderhook, lagged Murphy in personal fundraising, he benefited greatly from spending by outside organizations, much of it from conservative-leaning groups opposing Murphy for his votes on controversial issues such as the health care reform bill. More than $1.7 million was spent to oppose Murphy in 2010, compared to just $696,000 to oppose Gibson.”

Carleo-Evangelist ties the Gibson outside money to the U.S. Supreme Court decision that allowed the spending of unlimited amounts of cash on election advertising. Among actual amounts charted in our region were $447,366 from American Crossroads, a group backed by Republican strategist Karl Rove, and $498,950 from the conservative-leaning 60 Plus Association.

Read the full story here.

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The National Weather Service has issued a flood watch effective late tonight through early Thursday morning for an area that includes our portion of the Hudson Valley and surrounding hills and mountains.

Rainfall is expected to start over the region this afternoon and will be heavy at times through Wednesday. Rainfall of 1-3 inches is expected, with 2-4 inches possible across higher terrain and as much as 5 inches possible in some areas.

Sharp rises of water levels are expected in smaller rivers and streams, with major river stems expected to have some minor flooding beginning late Wednesday.

A flood watch means there is a potential for flooding based on current forecasts. Residents should monitor later forecasts and be alert for possible flood warnings. Those living in areas prone to flooding should be prepared to take action should flooding develop.

The call for tomorrow is cloudy with heavy rain and strong gusty winds at times. Thunder is possible and the high is expected to be around 56F.

Thursday is predicted to be clear and seasonable.

The Times Union’s Capitol Connection reports, among much conjecture about the state legislature’s lame duck session starting behind closed doors this morning, that Congressman-elect Chris Gibson has named the man who ran his campaign in pivotal Saratoga County, Clifton Park’s Steve Bulger, as his district director.

Steve Bulger


Bulger is the second campaign aide Gibson has hired for the payroll; he named Mark Westcott as his regional representative for the northern counties of the district. Steve Stallmer, previously of the General Contractors Association and a veteran of the late Rep. Jerry Solomon’s staff, will be Gibson’s chief of staff.

Bulger is a father of three and has worked in medical manufacturing for the last 20 years, most recently for the Stryker Corporation. He currently chairs the Clifton Park Planning Board.

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Average retail gasoline prices in New York have risen 0.7 cents per gallon in the past week, averaging $3.13 per gallon Sunday. This compares with the national average, which has fallen 1.7 cents per gallon in the last week to $2.85, according to gasoline price website NewYorkStateGasPrices.com.

Including the change in gas prices in New York during the past week, prices Sunday were 29.9 cents per gallon higher than the same day one year ago and are 13.6 cents per gallon higher than a month ago. The national average has increased 5 cents per gallon during the last month and stands 22.6 cents per gallon higher than this day a year ago.

Mid-Hudson and Capital region gas prices range from a high of $3.11 to $3.13 per gallon in the City of Albany and $3.11 near Thruway exit 21 in Catskill to $3.09 elsewhere in Greene County and most of Rensselaer County, an average $3.03 and low of $2.99 in Columbia County, and under $3.00, between $2.89 and $2.95, in Massachusetts.

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The Times Union’s Capital Confidential column reports this morning that Congressman-elect Chris Gibson has named Mark Westcott as his regional representative for the northern part of the 10-county 20th Congressional District. Gibson, a Republican from Kinderhook, defeated Scott Murphy in the November election.

Westcott, who was Gibson’s Warren County coordinator during the recent election, worked for Jerry Solomon during his long rein in the Congress, which ended in 1999.

Jerry Solomon


Earlier, Gibson announced another Solomon stalwart, Saratoga Springs native Steve Stallmer, as his chief of staff. Solomon’s widow has also come out in support of the new Congressman, who she said her late husband, who died in 2001, would have seen as a kindred spirit.

Solomon, who took office in 1978, was also an ex-Marine who rose to head the powerful House Rules Committee after stepping aside in a bid for the Speaker’s position during the rise of Newt Gingrich. He later gained lasting fame as the originator and sponsor of the Solomon Amendment, a controversial amendment to United States Code that precluded the receipt of federal government funds by colleges and universities unless they provided equal access to military recruiters as they did private employers.

For more on the Times Union story click here.

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The Albany Times Union has an in-depth story today about the safety of New York State’s natural gas lines, looking at the utilities in several towns on either side of the Hudson River, as well as throughout the Capital area, in light of the September surprise explosion in the San Francisco Bay-area city of San Bruno, as well as past New York explosions in the Schoharie County community of North Blenheim, in 1990, and the Albany suburb of Colnie, recently named the nation’s second safest city with a population over 75,000, in 1979. By the end of this fiscal year in March, all natural gas pipe in Hudson will have been replaced with new, cathodically protected pipe, according to the story. For more on this key piece, visit here.

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HUDSON VALLEY… As legendary anti-nuclear activist Helen Caldicott spoke at Troy’s Sanctuary for Independent Media on November 13, the big subject on many Capital area media- and nuclear-watch minds was the late October radioactive leak from Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory into the Mohawk River at its Niskayuna site, and what went wrong with supposedly tight reporting procedures that ended up seeing municipalities along the Mohawk that use the river for their drinking water, as well as along the Hudson River, having no idea for over a week that their drinking water supply might have been contaminated.

“Instead, the public is left with an unsettling ‘who-shoulda-done-it’ following an Oct. 25 incident,” noted the Albany Times Union in an editorial this past Tuesday, indicating how this story will now likely roll along, if there’s anyone left in state govenment to follow it. “Knolls apparently thought the U.S. Energy Department would tell someone. The state Department of Environmental Conservation thought the state Department of Health would do it. So no one did.”
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From Dick May’s Seeing Greene blog:”…in GreeneLand, as usual, the job situation is worse than other nearby counties. Percentages of unemployed persons in relation to total membership of the “work force,” in April of this year as compared with the previous month and with the same month last year:

4/10 3/10 4/09
USA 9.9 9.7 8.9
New York State 8.4 7.7 8.0
Upstate NYS 7.5 7.6 7.6
Dutchess County 7.2 7.7 6.8
Ulster 7.2 7.9 7.0
Albany 6.2 6.5 6.2
Rensselaer 7.0 7.9 7.0
Columbia 6.9 7.8 6.9
GREENE 8.1 8.6 8.5

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