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Today's local headlines
Aug 24, 2009 4:03 pm
Brown replaces Scheer as deputy on county board
From Parry Teasdale in The Columbia Paper
Copake board finds ways to agree except on the deficit
From Diana Valden in The Columbia Paper
New parties make ballot for November
From Jim Planck in The Daily Mail
State parks in Columbia County fare better than most
From Mike McCagg in ccScoop
Farmland Protection on the way
From Francesca Olsen in The Register-Star
Mario’s moves forward with new warehouse
From Paul Crossman in The Register-Star
From Parry Teasdale in The Columbia Paper
HUDSON — Chairman of the Columbia County Board of Supervisors Art Baer (R-Hillsdale) shuffled the leadership of the board, with Germantown Supervisor Roy Brown (R) replacing Gallatin Supervisor Lynda Scheer, as a deputy chairman of the board. Baer’s announcement of the move Friday said that Ms. Scheer resigned from the post “for personal reasons.” Brown stood with Baer on his controversial plan to buy the Ockawamick School building on Route 217 in Claverack and, initially, move much of the Department of Social Services there from Hudson. The change takes effect September 1.
Copake board finds ways to agree except on the deficit
From Diana Valden in The Columbia Paper
COPAKE - This is the sort of amazing story about local town meetings that is almost never written 'round these parts. Instead of deciding one of the night's actions constituted a story and the rest did not, Valden bullet points 10 items that the usually contentious-across-party-lines town board agreed on last week. Then she writes how Councilman Bob Sacks, who has advocated cutting the town's police force to cover the recently discovered large deficit, reported he was told by the Sheriff's Office that patrols from that office cover Copake and all of Columbia County 24/7. Sacks also quoted the supervisors of other towns saying they could not afford their own police force and had no need for one because of coverage by the Sheriff's Office and State Police. Copake Town Police Commissioner Jeff Nayer, then shouted, “Other towns don't set what we do!” Mr. Nayer said that the Police Department had offered to cut 17 percent of its budget to help the town deal with the deficit, while other departments offered nothing.
New parties make ballot for November
From Jim Planck in The Daily Mail
Have A Voice candidates Karen Deyo, Keith Valentine, Linda Overbaugh, and Joseph Izzo will appear on the November ballot, as will Grassroots of Durham candidate Les Armstrong. The Have a Voice folks are Republicans, joining fellow GOPer Overbaugh in this bid to stay on the ballot for the four Catskill Greene County Legislature seats, after errors in her previous petitions kept her off the Republican line. Likewise with Armstrong, a Republican attempting to primary against Elsie Allan but now facing Allan and Democrat Sean Frey for the Durham seat on the legislature. Overbaugh and Armstrong's third-party bids went unchallenged by opponents.
State parks in Columbia County fare better than most
From Mike McCagg in ccScoop
The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation shows attendance at parks in the Taconic Region of the state park system, which includes Columbia County, is down 3.7 percent in the period from July 2008 through July 2009. Across New York, park attendance is down 4.5 percent, to 27.2 million visitors. Attendance dropped at the Clermont State Historic Site 18.5 percent to 43,456 visitors, at the Clermont State Historic Site 4.1 percent to 61,896 visitors, at the Olana State Historic Site 14.1 to 61,896 visitors, and at Lake Taghkanic State Park, 5.2 percent, to 95,862. At Taconic State Park in Copake attendance was up 12.9 percent to 13,313, and in Copake Falls attendance rose 5 percent to 73,066 visitors.
Farmland Protection on the way
From Francesca Olsen in The Register-Star
Last Tuesday the Planning and Economic Development Committee passed a resolution to apply for state grant funding for developing a Farmland Protection Plan, with matching funds to be provided by the Columbia Economic Development Corporation (CEDC), as Columbia County is one of the few in the state without such a plan. The Columbia County Agricultural and Farmland Protection Board submitted drafts of a plan to the state Department of Agriculture and Markets, but was not approved.
Mario’s moves forward with new warehouse
From Paul Crossman in The Register-Star
VALATIE — Mario’s True Value Home Center is planning a new 20,000-square-foot lumber supply warehouse, and hopes to have closed on the new location by sometime in early September, with winter construction.