First town meeting of the new year held

WASHINGTON — Following the annual organizational meeting on Thursday, Jan. 8, the Washington Town Board met for its first monthly meeting of the new year. Councilpersons Robert Audia, Stephen Turletes, Karen Mosca, Al DeBonis, Bookkeeper Laura Hurley, Town Clerk Mary Alex and town Supervisor Gary Ciferri were all in attendance. The members voted unanimously on all motions. Highway Superintendent Michael Llanes requested approval to purchase a 10-wheel dump truck through an Onondoga County bid. Having determined that the bidding was properly conducted, a motion was passed to go ahead with the purchase. A letter was received from Bruce M. Aubin, judge for the Washington Town Court, stating he was resigning due to family obligations. A motion was passed to accept his resignation, albeit regrettably.Residents who were concerned about a new cell tower being located on Fraleigh Hill have formed the Fraleigh Hill Conservation Committee and will donate up to $110,000 to help offset the cost of and support the Planning Board’s denial of the cell tower application and the subsequent suit by Homeland Towers. Jeffrey S. Battisioni, attorney for the town, was in attendance at the meeting.The supervisor was authorized to sign the application for the town to register to become an Electronic Waste Collection Site. Jim Brownell, Transfer Station attendant, who was present at the meeting, provided details.A motion was made and passed to increase the initial search fee for real estate from $75 to $100, which would bring the fee in line with neighboring towns. There was discussion about applying for a shared services grant with Pine Plains for codification by General Code, but no approval was given.Recreation, Buildings & Grounds, and Planning and Zoning board updates were presented.When Supervisor Ciferri asked for any comments from the public, Councilperson Al DeBonis opened discussion on how Central Hudson’s tree work has devastated Merritt Avenue and will do the same to Maple Avenue. Town Clerk Alex said she has received many calls from residents about what was initially said to be tree trimming, and has become tree removal. DeBonis said he would like Central Hudson to participate, substantially, in the replacement of trees along the village’s streets. Regular Town Council meetings are open to the public and are held on the second Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. with the following dates set for 2015: Feb. 12, March 12, April 9, May 14, June 11, July 9, Aug. 13, Sept. 10, Oct. 8, Nov. 12 and Dec. 10.

Latest News

Legal Notices - November 6, 2025

Legal Notice

The Planning & Zoning Commission of the Town of Salisbury will hold a Public Hearing on Special Permit Application #2025-0303 by owner Camp Sloane YMCA Inc to construct a detached apartment on a single family residential lot at 162 Indian Mountain Road, Lakeville, Map 06, Lot 01 per Section 208 of the Salisbury Zoning Regulations. The hearing will be held on Monday, November 17, 2025 at 5:45 PM. There is no physical location for this meeting. This meeting will be held virtually via Zoom where interested persons can listen to & speak on the matter. The application, agenda and meeting instructions will be listed at www.salisburyct.us/agendas/. The application materials will be listed at www.salisburyct.us/planning-zoning-meeting-documents/. Written comments may be submitted to the Land Use Office, Salisbury Town Hall, 27 Main Street, P.O. Box 548, Salisbury, CT or via email to landuse@salisburyct.us. Paper copies of the agenda, meeting instructions, and application materials may be reviewed Monday through Thursday between the hours of 8:00 AM and 3:30 PM at the Land Use Office, Salisbury Town Hall, 27 Main Street, Salisbury CT.

Keep ReadingShow less
Classifieds - November 6, 2025

Help Wanted

Weatogue Stables has an opening: for a full time team member. Experienced and reliable please! Must be available weekends. Housing a possibility for the right candidate. Contact Bobbi at 860-307-8531.

Services Offered

Deluxe Professional Housecleaning: Experience the peace of a flawlessly maintained home. For premium, detail-oriented cleaning, call Dilma Kaufman at 860-491-4622. Excellent references. Discreet, meticulous, trustworthy, and reliable. 20 years of experience cleaning high-end homes.

Keep ReadingShow less
Indigo girls: a collaboration in process and pigment
Artist Christy Gast
Photo by Natalie Baxter

In Amenia this fall, three artists came together to experiment with an ancient process — extracting blue pigment from freshly harvested Japanese indigo. What began as a simple offer from a Massachusetts farmer to share her surplus crop became a collaborative exploration of chemistry, ecology and the art of making by hand.

“Collaboration is part of our DNA as people who work with textiles,” said Amenia-based artist Christy Gast as she welcomed me into her vast studio. “The whole history of every part of textile production has to do with cooperation and collaboration,” she continued.

Keep ReadingShow less