BOE president responds to ‘outrageous’ comments

PINE PLAINS — During the Pine Plains Board of Education (BOE) meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 7, board president Bruce Kimball started the meeting by addressing three points that were raised during the public comments segment of the previous BOE meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 24.The first comment that Kimball addressed was about the length of the new bus routes. The speaker said that his child spends 40 minutes on the bus even though he lives only a few blocks from the school.Kimball said that he does not doubt the length of time that particular child spends on the bus, but pointed out that “as a result of the efforts of our transportation department, the average bus run today is actually shorter than the routes prior to the reconfiguration.”Kimball went on to say that the primary concern for bus routes is safety, but the district also tries to keep the route short and efficient. Kimball further explained that the district would need to purchase more buses and hire more drivers to shorten the bus route any more.The second comment that Kimball responded to was one that called the reconfiguration of the elementary schools a “disaster.” Kimball strongly disagreed with that description.He said that the reconfiguration improved the programs and saved the district roughly $280,000 per year by using staff members and materials more efficiently.“To me, this is a win-win result and far from being a disaster. It is a real success story,” said Kimball.The third comment alleged that the majority of the community was opposed to the reconfiguration of the elementary schools.Kimball said that the Board of Education members voted unanimously in favor of the reconfiguration. During the election that followed the reconfiguration, three board members were re-elected to their positions by the public.“I believe that election was indicative of the support we had for our decision,” said Kimball.While addressing those points, Kimball also explained the board’s feelings toward the public comments segments of the meetings.“We believe communication with the public is essential. Communicating is, however, a two-way street. It requires both speaking and listening,” he said.Kimball said that as a member of the board, he is constrained in how he can respond to comments made during the public comments portion of the meeting, but he felt that he needs to respond to “outrageous” comments.

Latest News

Water main break disrupts downtown Sharon

Crews work on a broken water main on the town Green in Sharon on Sunday, Feb. 1.

Ruth Epstein

SHARON — A geyser erupted on the town Green Friday afternoon, Jan. 30, alerting officials to a water main break in the adjacent roadway. Repair crews remained on site through the weekend to fix the damaged line.

About 15 nearby homes lost water service Friday while crews made repairs. Water was restored by Sunday afternoon. The water system is overseen by the town’s Sewer and Water Commission.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hayes tours new affordable home in recent visit to Salisbury

John Harney, president of the Salisbury Housing Trust, presents Jocelyn Ayer, executive director of the Litchfield County Centers for Housing Opportunity, center, and U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes, 5th District, with local maple syrup. Hayes was in Salisbury Thursday to tour one of the trust’s latest houses on Perry Street.

Ruth Epstein

SALISBURY — Congresswoman Jahana Hayes (D-5) admired the kitchen cabinets, the sunlight streaming through the large windows and an airy room well suited for flexible living space.

She toured the new affordable home at 17 Perry St. on Thursday, Jan. 29. The house, recently completed by the Salisbury Housing Trust, is awaiting a family to call it home. The modular home is one of four erected in Salisbury through the Litchfield County Center for Housing Opportunity’s Affordable Homeownership Program for scattered sites. Houses were also built in Norfolk, Cornwall and Washington.

Keep ReadingShow less
Judge throws out zoning challenge tied to Wake Robin Inn expansion

A judge recently dismissed one lawsuit tied to the proposed redevelopment, but a separate court appeal of the project’s approval is still pending.

Alec Linden

LAKEVILLE — A Connecticut Superior Court judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed against Salisbury’s Planning and Zoning Commission challenging a zoning amendment tied to the controversial expansion of the Wake Robin Inn.

The case focused on a 2024 zoning regulation adopted by the P&Z that allows hotel development in the Rural Residential 1 zone, where the historic Wake Robin Inn is located. That amendment provided the legal basis for the commission’s approval of the project in October 2025; had the lawsuit succeeded, the redevelopment would have been halted.

Keep ReadingShow less
A winter visit to Olana

Olana State Historic Site, the hilltop home created by 19th-century Hudson River School painter Frederic Edwin Church, rises above the Hudson River on a clear winter afternoon.

By Brian Gersten

On a recent mid-January afternoon, with the clouds parted and the snow momentarily cleared, I pointed my car northwest toward Hudson with a simple goal: to get out of the house and see something beautiful.

My destination was the Olana State Historic Site, the hilltop home of 19th-century landscape painter Frederic Edwin Church. What I found there was not just a welcome winter outing, but a reminder that beauty — expansive, restorative beauty — does not hibernate.

Keep ReadingShow less