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Roads and roadblocks on agenda for BOS

CORNWALL — Several ongoing agenda items were addressed by the selectmen at their Aug. 5 meeting. 

A parking area that provides access to the Housatonic River on River Road is still blocked by large logs placed by a property owner at Push ’Em Up Farm.

First Selectman Gordon Ridgway said the owner was concerned about erosion caused by use as a public access. The deed says the property goes to the water’s edge — a pretty nonspecific description. 

More answers are expected at the next meeting.

The town is concerned because the pull-off is used to maneuver road equipment on the narrow dirt road, and could be vital for emergency equipment. 

Cornwall resident Joanne Wojtusiak asked why the owner was not forced to remove the logs while the matter was investigated. She compared it to the gate erected by John and Wallace Harding, and removed at the town’s request, during the ongoing land dispute connected to the proposed HouBike trail. 

Ridgway said that in this case the owner has refused, and they do not want to cause an antagonistic situation by having the logs removed.

Getting on top of a delayed project that had raised some public concern, a contract was approved for backing up computer files in Town Hall offices. 

Currently, town officials back up information to flash drives and lock them in the vault at the end of the day. The selectmen will heed advice from consultant Okie Dokie LLC in Litchfield to have vital information backed up off-site via Carbonite for $299.99 per year, plus a $500 set-up charge.

Cornwall resident Richard Griggs expressed concerns about Carbonite because it uses iCloud, which has had security issues. He wondered about using external hard drives for backup, which could hold a large amount of information and be locked away.

Ridgway said the approach was considered, but that they are also trying to eliminate the time it takes to back up files.

Installing speed signs around town has not been a speedy process. The town allocated grant funds for solar-powered, radar-equipped signs that remind drivers of their speed, but the state still has to give approval to put them on the state roads where they are needed.

There will be two on Route 7 in Cornwall Bridge — one just south of the firehouse and the other in front of the Cornwall Package Store. 

Only one could be sited in West Cornwall, and the exact location remains an issue. Ridgway was to meet with a state Department of Transportation engineer and was hoping to convince him to move that sign about 40 feet farther down Route 128, away from its location under a pine tree and in front of a home. 

That sign is considered crucial in efforts to slow drivers coming around the final downhill curve into the center of the village.

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