Letters to the Editor 10-31-13

 

Short memory in making endorsement

 

Rick Butler’s letter endorsing Doreen Gardner for Pine Plains supervisor was hilarious. He seems to believe Pine Plains residents will have forgotten that he, Doreen Gardner and Greg Pulver were part of the misguided Town Board which gave $100,000 away in an attempt to bail out the self-​described “businessmen” whose terminal incompetence led to default on the library mortgage. This default will put the town in an additional $500,000 hole as it scrambles to have the citizens pass a bond for purchasing the building from the bank which now owns it.

Butler’s strange complaint is that Brian Coons, the current supervisor, has acted professionally in using the services of a lawyer for conducting town business. Caution on the part of Coons is obviously the wisest move, given the mess he inherited from Butler and his former Town Board colleagues. On the other hand, Butler and his colleagues drew on $100,000 without consulting the town’s residents. This represents what Butler deems “doing the job.” Any thinking person would call this reckless irresponsibility and a dereliction of duty.

Butler needs to explain why we should return to even higher office board members who have shown appallingly poor judgment in the past.

Jan Brukman
 Mary Woods

Pine Plains

 

 

What is this referendum about?

 

 

 In 2009 the Pine Plains Free Library moved into its new building at 7775 South Main St. After many months of unpaid mortgage installments, the Bank of Millbrook foreclosed on then owner, The Foundation for the Pine Plains Community Center and library. The bank has offered the building (which cost $2.6 million to build) to the town for $1 million.

The Odd Fellows, who donated the land, retain deeded rights to 1,000 square feet in the building. The town states that if it assumes ownership, the law prohibits it from providing free space (restricted from public use) to a private organization within that publicly-owned building. Thus, the town’s purchase of the building depends on the Odd Fellows relinquishing rights to that space.

On Election Day, voters in Pine Plains are being asked whether or not to approve the town’s purchase of the building and bond the amount of money needed to do so. The referendum’s passage will permit the town to seek resolution to outstanding issues before purchase. If the referendum fails, Bank of Millbrook will retain ownership; all occupants will likely be forced to move.

What does the building offer?

The first floor houses the Pine Plains Free Library, which: Serves over 1,550 patrons (55 percent of Pine Plains’ population); provides adequate occupancy (for 40 persons, as opposed to 10 to 12 in its former building); Received 12,516 visits and circulated over 18,000 items since 2002; Provides age-appropriate activities for 1,880 children since 2002; provides access to computers for email, job-search, research, E-Books and much more; meets the public’s demand for library services as only a building of this capacity and versatility can.

The elevator-accessible upper floor serves as a community center.

Heart of Pine Plains (HoPP) activities serve all ages, especially our seniors. This space also serves as: an official Red Cross Disaster Shelter during extended power outages; a warming/cooling shelter during shorter power-outages; a meeting place for town-sponsored events, programs by the HoPP, the library and FRIENDS of the Library.

Finally, this building in the town’s center is a beautiful point of pride for our community — a dynamic and invaluable resource for the people of Pine Plains.

What will this purchase cost the taxpayer?

According to current figures from the Preliminary 2014 Town Budget and tax roll, if the town bonds $500,000 allowable by passage of the referendum, the cost per $100,000 of assessed valuation (equal to $256,000 market value) would be $23 per year.

To date, $630,000 in pledges and cash have been raised; the bond amount may be below that permitted by a passing referendum, potentially reducing the projected cost.

Need additional information? Go to the following websites: www.pineplains-ny.gov; www.pineplains.lib.ny.us; www.friendsofthepineplanslibrary.org; or visit or call the library at 518-398-1927.

Remember to vote, Nov. 5!

Helene McQuade

Pine Plains

 

 

Basic STAR Exemption

 

 To all my people in the town of Amenia, to help ease the confusion of the Star Program Registration for the state I thought I would clarify a few things. The only people that are affected are the people who have the BASIC STAR. They should be getting a letter from the state with a BASIC STAR ID near the top of the letter on the right-hand side. You are to register either online or by phone and the deadline for registering is Dec. 31, 2013. 

Anyone receiving an Enhanced or Senior Exemption will follow the same process that they do every year. These applications for reapplying will be going out from our office very soon and as always the deadline is March 1. I hope this is a help to you.

Ron Gazzoli

Assessor in the town of Amenia

Amenia 

 

 

Pine Plains needs to change course

 

The upcoming election for the Pine Plains Town Board is a very important one. It could mean the future possibility of what is going to happen to this special town. 

With little or no development happening the taxpayers cannot sustain the amount of revenue needed to support the town and the school. The controls placed on anyone who tries to improve or help the town grow has driven developers away and put extra burdens on home owners. The spending incurred by the current Town Board is not possible to sustain. 

I hope the voters will take a hard look at what has happened to Pine Plains. If we do not change the course this town is going in, it will have completely lost the character the New York Times spoke about in the article they published in the 1970s.

Ann Noone

Pine Plains

 

 

Nobody is above the law

 

I want to respond to Devin Kyle’s Oct. 24 letter to the editor in The Millerton News. His statement: “a real difference in approach to public and private matters, to destroying historic buildings and or finding community alternatives, to reconciling seemingly opposite concerns … ” comes across as eloquent and educated; however he is not telling the truth about who he is and who he represents. 

Devin Kyle, also known as Eco Lake, is a spokesperson for the Arc 38 Group (www.facebook.com/The Arc 38), who illegally inhabit the barn on the Old Route 22 Bill Henry property. The “opposite concerns” he refers to are the Zoning Use violation for the barn as the property is a single-family residentially zoned parcel (not multi-family, not educational center, not retreat or commune), Department of Health violations and structural deficiencies that have led to numerous appearance tickets and court dates for property owner Bill Henry. 

There has been too much time, energy and costs to the taxpayers explaining over and over again the recommended course of action and then moving the issue back to the code enforcement officer. The law is the law, and nobody is above the law.

Victoria A. Perotti

Deputy Supervisor

Amenia 

 

Running a marathon for Millerton

 

I am planning to run in the New York City Marathon this weekend. I decided to turn this 26.2-mile challenge into something of benefit to the village of Millerton, and of Townscape. 

The traditional focus of Townscape has been on flowers, trees, streetscape and signs.  But this year its big focus is on helping the village in its effort to bury or relocate the utility lines on Main Street. 

They are such an eyesore, and even though this is a huge and complicated project, it is just so worth trying to make happen. 

While neither the village nor Townscape has the funds available for a project of this size, Townscape is planning to help pay for the grant-writers that will be needed to raise the much larger sums of money that will be required.

So to make my marathon run something more meaningful, I have set up an online fundraising account, at www.crowdrise.com/millerton/fundraiser/christopherkennan and through Facebook and emails have invited friends and neighbors and supporters of Townscape to help out. So far I have raised $950; my goal is $5,000, which is about $190 per mile.

Most marathon runners today try to make their run more personal and beneficial by raising money for a cause. For me, the cause just happens to be Millerton.

Chris Kennan

Townscape of Millerton President

Millerton

 

 

With gratitude

 

The Lutz family would like to extend our gratitude to all the community for their beautiful sympathy cards, words of comfort, the Mass cards sent and for all who attended the services. The tribute to Bill was overwhelming.

Our heartfelt thanks again and Blessings to all.

The Lutz Family: Marge, Will, Dot, Jen and Chris

Ancramdale

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