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SUNY Cobleskill and SUNY Oneonta Sign Pathway Agreement

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 2/23/24 | 2/23/24


Dr. Mark Davies, Dean, School of Education, Human Ecology, and Sports Studies at SUNY Oneonta; Assemblyman Chris Tague; Senator Peter Oberacker; Dr. Enrique Morales-Diaz, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at SUNY Oneonta; Dr. Darcy Medica, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at SUNY Cobleskill; Elise Weiss, Assistant Dean and Chair of Early Childhood at SUNY Cobleskill; Erik Hage, Interim Dean for Academic Affairs and Teaching Faculty at SUNY Cobleskill; Paul Acosta, Director of Admissions at SUNY Cobleskill; Anna Miarka-Grzelak, Vice President for Strategic Enrollment and Innovation at SUNY Cobleskill. 



COBLESKILL — Administrators from SUNY Cobleskill and SUNY Oneonta today officially signed a new articulation agreement providing a seamless transition of graduates from Cobleskill’s Associate in Applied Science (A.A.S.) in Early Childhood Studies to Oneonta’s Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree program in Childhood Education/Liberal Arts as matriculated students with junior status. Oneonta and Cobleskill recognize their responsibility in helping transfer students maximize their opportunities, and to the state’s education field as it continues to experience teacher shortages. 

Cobleskill students who have graduated or will graduate with an A.A.S. in Early Childhood Studies must apply to Oneonta and meet the admission criteria to gain acceptance to Oneonta’s B.S. degree program. In turn, Oneonta will extend every opportunity to help full-time students who begin their courses in the fall semester to complete the B.S. in Childhood Education in two additional years of full-time study.

Dr. Marion Terenzio, President of SUNY Cobleskill, said, “I am proud to witness the formalization of this pivotal agreement between SUNY Cobleskill and SUNY Oneonta, denoting a significant step toward a solution in the pressing need for highly qualified educators in our state. This articulation agreement not only streamlines the transition for graduates of SUNY Cobleskill's Early Childhood program into SUNY Oneonta's Childhood Education program, but also reinforces our shared commitment to maximizing opportunities for transfer students. By offering this seamless pathway, we empower aspiring educators to easily continue their academic journey.”

Dr. Alberto Cardelle, President of SUNY Oneonta, said, “This year marks SUNY Oneonta’s 135th anniversary as an institution that began with a mission to teach educators. While our mission has broadened to prepare students for a multitude of career paths, we remain dedicated to providing the training necessary to build the future class of teachers with a special emphasis on fulfilling shortages here in our rural New York school districts."

Dr. Darcy Medica, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at SUNY Cobleskill, said, “Our two institutions see collaboration as an essential element in offering students choice and opportunity in how they achieve success along their academic journey. Partnerships like this signify to our Teacher Education-bound students that there are clear pathways to teacher certification that are attainable and accessible while providing them with diverse experiences that prepare them for the complexities of the modern classroom."

Dr. Mark Davies, Dean, School of Education, Human Ecology, and Sports Studies at SUNY Oneonta, said, “The early childhood program at SUNY Oneonta is grounded in the belief that all children can learn therefore we focus on the assets children and families bring to the classroom setting. We are committed to creating new inclusive educational pathways to diversify the teacher workforce, with particular attention to welcoming and supporting first-generation college students.”

Senator Toby Ann Stavisky (NY-11), New York State Senate Higher Education Chair, said, “This partnership between SUNY Oneonta and SUNY Cobleskill is a creative way to help address New York’s teaching shortage. I am encouraged by this decision, and I hope to see more collaborative efforts between colleges and universities in our SUNY system.”

Assemblymember Patricia Fahy (NY-109), Chair of the Assembly’s Standing Committee on Higher Education, said, “New York will need to hire thousands of teachers in the next decade just to meet current demand. I commend SUNY Oneonta and Cobleskill for getting creative in addressing what’s becoming a workforce crisis and opening up new pathways for prospective students hoping to enter the field. Innovative, local partnerships like this are exactly what will deliver the highly skilled workers and teachers we need in Upstate New York to continue delivering the nation’s top quality public education.”

Senator Peter Oberacker (NY-51) said, “Teachers play a vital role in developing our young people and preparing them for future success.  It is crucial that we address the ongoing teacher shortage and break down barriers that are making it more difficult for individuals to enter the education profession.  The collaboration between SUNY Cobleskill and SUNY Oneonta is a winning concept that will offer a major advantage to early education students. Additionally, this is a model that should be duplicated throughout the state university system in other disciplines to maximize opportunities and ensure that New York students continue to receive exceptional, affordable education.”

Assemblyman Chris Tague (NY-102) said, “It is so refreshing to see two administrations come together to conquer a mutual issue. As our state continues to struggle with teacher shortages, this articulation agreement is going to provide new opportunities and experiences to better prepare our future teachers. Thank you to both SUNY Cobleskill and SUNY Oneonta for taking the initiative to address this shortage. These students have a bright future ahead of them!”

Education is SUNY Oneonta’s oldest academic program, and one of its largest. The university offers 25 educator preparation programs, including bachelor’s degrees in early childhood, elementary and adolescence education. At the graduate level, SUNY Oneonta offers in-person master’s degree programs in school counseling and special education, online master’s degree programs in literacy education and educational technology, and online certificate programs in bilingual education and school counseling. SUNY Oneonta’s education programs have been continuously accredited since 2000 and recently earned accreditation by the Association for Advancing Quality in Educator Preparation.

Students in SUNY Cobleskill’s Early Childhood programs have multiple opportunities to interact with infants through 5-year-olds while observing how early childhood professionals work with, guide, and present lessons to the children. Current research from the fields of developmental psychology, early education, infant mental health, cultural anthropology/family studies, and pediatric science is woven throughout the curriculum to ensure students understand the complex nature of early development and learning.

In addition to our conventional classrooms, the College operates two excellent early childhood laboratory schools, the Cobleskill Campus Child Care Center and a half-day preschool program at the Child Development Center. It bears noting that, while many colleges have either just one lab school or none at all, the fact that SUNY Cobleskill has two helps set our programs apart.



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SUNY Cobleskill Fighting Tigers Weekly Recap

The SUNY Cobleskill women’s basketball team captured the 2024 North Atlantic Conference (NAC) Western Division Championship over the weekend in games hosted by the Fighting Tigers. On Friday evening Cobleskill defeated the Mustangs of SUNY Morrisville by a score of 68-43 in the opening round then taking the title on Saturday with a 76-33 drubbing of the Kangaroos of SUNY Canton. Junior forward Cara Walker, Phelps, N.Y., Midlakes High School, was the catalyst to the wins posting a pair of double/doubles averaging 14.5 points, 10.5 points, 3.0 steals and 2.0 assists per game as the Fighting Tigers improved to a program record 25-1 overall on the year and increased their program record longest winning streak to 15 games.

The Fighting Tiger men’s basketball team won the 2024 North Atlantic Conference (NAC) Western Division Championship over the weekend in games played at SUNY Morrisville, N.Y. On Friday evening Cobleskill topped the Wildcats of the SUNY Polytechnic Institute 90-74 then winning the divisional title on Saturday with an 84-82 victory over the Broncos of SUNY Delhi to improve to 17-10 overall on the year. Sophomore guard Kobe Long, Rochester, N.Y., McQuaid Jesuit High School, was the driving force to the title averaging 29.0 points, 4.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game shooting 60.0% from the field including 58.8% from three-point range and 92.3% from the free throw line.

Senior distance runner Nick Logan, Queensbury, N.Y., Queensbury High School, was the Fighting Tiger men’s indoor track & field team’s top placer at the 2024 West Point Tune-up Meet hosted by the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. Logan placed second overall in the Mile Run in a time of 4:22.09 and third in the 1000-Meter Run in a time of 2:35.12 at the non-scoring qualifying event.

Junior distance runner Kathrine Ledermann, Altamont, N.Y., Guilderland High School, was the Fighting Tiger woman’s indoor track & field team’s top finisher at the 2024 West Point Tune-up Meet hosted by the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. Ledermann won the 1000-Run at the non-scoring qualifying event in a time of 3:33.56 to go with an eighth place finish in the Mile-Run with a time of 5:56.68.

Sophomore Sydney DiLascio, Highland, N.Y., Highland High School, earned individual Reserve Point Rider honors at the semester’s opening Intercollegiate Horse Show Association (IHSA) Region 3 Zone 2 event hosted by Skidmore College at the Van Lennep Riding Center in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. on Saturday. Led by DiLascio’s efforts the Fighting Tigers placed second overall in a 10-team field at the event.

The Fighting Tiger baseball team was ranked first in the season opening 2024 NAC Western Division Coaches Poll.

The Fighting Tiger men’s lacrosse team was ranked seventh overall in the season opening 2024 NAC Coaches Poll.

UPCOMING HOME CONTESTS:

Men’s Basketball hosts the 2024 NAC Championship Game versus Husson University on Saturday Feb. 24 at 1:00 p.m.

Baseball vs. SUNY Canton 4/5 & 4/6, SUNY Oneonta 4/10, Eastern Nazarene 4/12

Softball vs. VTSU-Castleton 4/2, MCLA 4/9, SUNY Poly 4/16 & 4/17


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Open Mic at First Friday

CHERRY VALLEY — The Telegraph School is pleased to present the March Open Mic taking place on Friday, March 1st from 6 pm to 8 pm, located at 83 Alden Street, Cherry Valley, NY. This is also during the March Cherry Valley First Friday!

Join us for an evening of community and creative expression during Open Mic! Come share your poetry, music, stories, comedy, dance, or whatever stirs your spirit. Doors open at 6:00 PM and the cost is by donation.

“Sharing your art at an Open Mic is a great way to invite people into your world. The evening is a new adventure each time, as we sail the seas of collective emotion,” says Telegraph School founder and performance artist Angelica Palmer.

This event coincides with Cherry Valley First Friday, which is a lovely evening of gallery openings, live music, restaurant specials, and more throughout the quaint Village of Cherry Valley!

For more information on upcoming Telegraph School events please visit their social media, telegraphschool.com, or call (607) 264-3785.


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Ashland Speaks

By Lula Anderson

Another February day ahead of me, but it's already the 20th, so only one more week until blustery March.  Not that we need any more windy days and nights.  I have a huge tree by my house that is ready to fall down, but it is on the neighbor's property, and they don't want to deal with it, so with every gust of wind, I pray that it will not fall on my house.  We have been very lucky with the last few storms that never happened.  Last Tuesday everything  was cancelled and we had nothing.  It was a good excuse to stay in and sort through more of my memories.  

I am still getting phone calls and messages regarding my "Glowing award".  but, as you know it is only with God's help and the people around me that I do what I do.  

WAJPL Golden Age Club has finally given up the keys to their old headquarters in the Town Hall building in Hensonville.  Thank you to all the town employees who helped pack and move our final belongings.  Now we have to sort through and find room for all of our supplies. March will be busy starting with the WAJ production of Peter Pan with the Senior Citizen dinner theater rehearsal on March 7th.  This is open to all Senior Citizens of the WAJ school district, but you need to let us know how many are coming so the Drama Club can have plenty of food available.  Call me at 518-734-5360 or the school office to reserve your seat.  For all others, the play will be on Friday and Saturday night and Sunday afternoon.   On March 11th, the club will be having a fun day of painting eggs in the Ukranian style in our room at the Ambulance building starting at 10am.  The following Monday, March 18th is our monthly meeting starting at 1.  We have pot luck refreshments , casseroles, soup, sandwiches, salads and plenty of desserts.  All over the age of 50 are welcome to join our club.  

We have two important "Pay it forward" projects that we participate in and you can help.  The first is cards for Veterans.  Vicky makes for holidays to send to Vets in nursing homes   If you would like to assist her, please email her at mtsunflower@aol.com.  Right now she is working on St Patrick's Day and Easter or Spring cards.  The more cards she gets, the more people will get.  Sometimes a simple card will let a stranger know that they're not alone.  The club also fills baskets for nursing homes with little goodies:  word search books, coloring books and pencils, individual toiletries, bed socks, individually wrapped candies, jig saw puzzles for those who need help with eye/hand coordination (40-100 pieces).  We will be putting the baskets together in the middle of April.  Last year we sent 2 baskets apiece to each of the 5 area homes.  Just a little something to help brighten a lonely day.  

I had a joy last week when Dustin and Garrison Partridge were in town.  They called and asked if they could come visit with me.  They are now 31 and 32 and live in residential homes.  My how time flies.  

Sympathy and prayers to the family of Mary O'Hara the sister of Annie Jakubowski, and to Sheila and Paul Trautman on the passing of her aunt, Inga, and to the family of Beverly Cook Payne (WAJ class of "60). Healing prayers for Opal, Christine Newcomb, and those facing surgery, or with recurring RSV or COVID.  

A little story from Paul Mead.  When he went to Mary Maben's funeral, a gentleman came up to him and Joan at the fellowship and asked how they knew Mary.  Joan went to school with her from 1rst thru 12 and they both happened to wind up in SC as neighbors.  The man asked if they knew where Jewett was----He had worked on Connie Christian's farm for a couple of summers in his youth and they spent time reminiscing about former residents of Jewett.  

AS I REMEMBER IT

A couple of weeks ago, Patti Morrow asked me what I remember about the Windham Centennial and if I had any information about it.  I KNOW I have pictures, but the ones I want are carefully put away, but I have many of my family to go through.  My grandfather married a Tuttle  and they lived on a farm on Beigle Rd which was over 200 acres of land.  They had two sons, Edwin and Fanklyn  who decided to move to Schenectady when they grew up, leaving the farm behind.  Money was tight in our house, and we had already moved to the farmhouse, so my father went to work in Schenectady with his cousins doing wallpapering and painting.  He left on Monday morning and came home Saturday.  My mother was left, as many women at the time, to tend to the farm, family, cooking, cleaning, 5 children from 3 - 14 years of age.  Can you imagine?  

How many people, today, commute on a daily basis to Albany?  Now it takes an hour plus to get there.  Back then it was several hours with back roads and cars that went very slowly.  A trip to Albany was planned for an entire day not just "run up and go to the doctor."  

Now a days I hear women complaining that they don't have time to do anything what with work and cooking.  They are always tired, and get take out for dinner on the way home because its too much to cook.  HA!  What wimps.  

Anyhow, the Tuttle family also owned a farm on West Settlement across from Miller Rd.  Now, all the land has been sold, farms broken up to  make room for housing developments and condos. The  only Tuttle left with a farm is Scott and we thank him for keeping up the tradition and carrying on the family name.


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Sgt. James F. Carty, DSC - VFW Post 1545


Well, I just want to mention that I became ill last Thursday after a trip to Albany to pick up provisions for our pancake breakfast.

I got home and made a sandwich and at about 6:30 became violently sick. I am not sure if it was the sandwich or some flu-like symptoms that got me to the point where I got so weak that I collapsed to the floor.

Lynn called 911 and Windham PD and the ambulance EMT’s came to the rescue. Upon them checking my vitals, I was allowed to stay home instead of going to the emergency room.

After a day or two I was almost back to full strength. I want to thank the first responders for their concern and care. We on the mountaintop are very fortunate to be able to get qualified responders to help in these situations. I am very grateful and thankful for their care. 

I want to thank all who attended our pancake breakfast this past Saturday. The snow that came flying in I believe held the crowd down although it was a success. We all enjoyed ourselves putting this on and will be doing a few more soon. 

Our Post is working with the committee headed by John Giordano that are working to have a veteran’s monument in Jewett honoring all veterans of Jewett and East Jewett. 

Our Post will be working with them to gather names of residents that served our nation in all wars from the Civil War to today.

We went through our archives of information and gathered names of veterans on our rolls from WWI and the Spanish American war. 

It was very interesting finding this information in some old ledgers that we have at the Post. This project will be looking for donations to help finance the completion. 

Should you want to donate to this effort, please contact me at vfwpost1545@gmail.com or contact Blue Mountain Excavation, 11287 State Route 23, Ashland, NY 12407 or call 518-734-5173.

Make checks payable to VFW Post 1545 with Jewett Monument in the memo line. All donations are tax exempt as we are a 501c19 veterans organization. 

The following Information regarding the GI Bill that affects a veteran and their families was posted: 

GI Bill Stifled by OverregulationVFW National Legislative Deputy Director Kristina Keenan spoke on a legislative panel at the midwinter meeting of the National Association of State Approving Agencies. 

These agencies have responsibility to review, approve, and monitor all programs and schools to ensure quality education for those using VA benefits such as the GI Bill. 

Keenan presented the VFW's concern that overregulation has caused too many schools to stop participating in the GI Bill program due to increasingly burdensome requirements. 

She also stressed the need for student veterans who take some or all college courses online to receive a more realistic monthly housing allowance, currently set at half the national average.

The VFW supports increasing this amount to ensure that veterans do not experience housing insecurity while pursuing an education. The VFW is always working to alleviate the struggles for veterans to receive their rightful benefits. 

MIA Update: The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency announced four burial updates for service members who have been missing and unaccounted for from World War II and the Korean War. Returning home for burial with full military honors are:

-- Marine Corps Sgt. Harold Hammett, 24, of Avery, Mississippi, was a member of L Company, 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, Fleet Marine Force. He was among 1,000 marines and sailors killed in action at the Battle of Tarawa, and reportedly died on Nov. 20, 1943. He was buried in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on Feb. 16, 2024...

-- Army Tech. 4th Grade Elmo F. Hartwick, 38, of Onaga, Kansas, was assigned to Company C, 149th Engineer Combat Battalion. He was killed in action enroute to Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944. He will be buried in his hometown on a date to be determined.  

-- Army Air Force Staff Sgt. Jack W. Coy, 20, of Toledo, Ohio, was assigned to the 703rd Bombardment Squadron, 445th Bombardment Group, 8th Air Force. He was killed in action on Feb. 24, 1944. He will be buried in Oregon, Ohio, on a date to be determined.  

-- Army Cpl. Charles R. Patten, 24, of Lebanon, Missouri, was a member of Headquarters & Headquarters Company, 34th Infantry Regiment, 24th Infantry Division. He went missing in action on July 20,1950, and the Army issued a presumptive finding of death on Dec. 31, 1953. He will be buried in Lawson, Missouri, on a date to be determined. 

Let us remember their sacrifice and the families that have waited so long for their loved ones to come home. 

God Bless America and remember our troops that are now serving throughout the world and keep them safe. 

Marc Farmilette, PDC – Commander Post 1545


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BETTER THAN HEARSAY - Making Things with Many Lives

By Michael Ryan

HUNTER - The only question, when Pete Preston did some hocus-pocus before your eyes at the Doctorow Center for the Arts, this past  Saturday evening was, “are the flowers real?”

They were. 

Virtually everything else came from Preston’s skilled hands and imagination as “God of Carnage” was performed, one of three staged-readings produced by the Maude Adams Theater Hub.

Preston somehow managed to create a set that merely had to be shifted a little bit, here and there, making it also work for two other performances; “The Women” and “The Gin Game.”

His magic act of nuts, bolts and many screws let the small troupe elasticate their budget, serving a vital role in the survival of community theater.

Maude Adams Theater Hub and producer Amy Scheibe were on a roll all last week, staging the annual “V Season” series of readings over five separate nights and afternoons, starting on Valentine’s Day.

The stage was a mess with tulips strewn in the aftermath of the humorous “God of Carnage,” Saturday evening, but Preston had the place looking ship-shape for the Sunday matinee of “The Gin Game.”

He then returned when the premises were emptied of excitement to “strike” the set, tearing down everything, returning things to normal, salvaging pieces and props to use for possible future shows.

One never knows what comes next but this is not Preston’s first theatrical rodeo, getting his start in unexpectedly multiplicitous ways.

“I started out as a wandering vagabond,” he says, venturing to the States from Sydney, Australia (a dead giveaway the moment he speaks).

He was a teacher at Greenwich County Day School in Connecticut for 40 years, giving the 8th Graders a unique perspective on Science.

“It’s a private school and I was allowed to create my own program,” Preston says. “I wrote my own text books. There were lots of hands-on projects.

“Once a year, the Drama Club did a big, splashy musical. I started working with the director on the sets and I found that my Science curriculum and building sets went hand-in-hand.

“I’m no actor but as a kid, I was always dabbling in things so it was a natural transition for me. Doing it right became important to me.”

Preston moved to Haines Falls in 2022, crossing paths with and becoming entwined with Scheibe and her thespian gang, the beginning, as Bogart might say, of a beautiful friendship.

“I laugh at my efforts, thinking back to when I got started in Greenwich,” Preston says. “But I let myself say I can do better than this.

“Now I am sort of a perfectionist. It is all about making the sets memorable. I talk to Amy and the directors, listen to their ideas, figure out what they need, go buy a bunch of lumber and start building stuff.”

Mixing and matching three-sets-in-one, “was a good little challenge,” says Preston. It was an evolving vision, as usual, not unlike crafting a very believable make-believe background for “Cabaret,” last summer.

“Obstacles are the fun of it,” Preston says. “It takes me back to my school days. Greenwich is a town with money so it was easier is some ways.

“But getting from nothing to Opening Night is the same no matter where you are or what show you are putting on.

“Everything is vague the first day. Then I read the script and toss around a few thoughts in my mind until I get a good image of what I want to do.

“Me losing sleep is part of it, and there is stuff piled all over the place for a while but it’s all really a pure pleasure,” Preston says.

“Amy does her production part and the actors do their part and everything comes together and then everything comes apart again.

“We save things like doors and walls so they can come together again. I am making things that have many lives. I just love it.”


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New Wastewater Treatment Structured To Be Installed in Jewett

By Michael Ryan

JEWETT - Taking their cue from Jiminy Cricket, government leaders in Jewett wished upon a sewer system star and their dream came true.

Town supervisor Greg Kroyer, at a meeting last week, reported that a new wastewater treatment structure will be installed at the municipal building, located along Route 23C.

The facility includes town offices, the highway department and the meeting place for the Meals on Wheels program, providing warm food for elderly and homebound residents across the mountaintop.

An underground septic tank is not exactly what Geppeto had in mind when he longed for his wooden puppet Pinocchio to become a real live boy.

But going beyond what town officials and local taxpayers ever imagined, the modernization will cost the community nothing. Zilch. Zero.

“The Catskill Watershed Corporation will pay for the whole thing,” Kroyer said, noting the savings could be between $70,000 and six figures.

“They have a replacement program [for entities and individuals within the watershed]. We decided it would be crazy not to go for it and we got it.

“We found the system, they came and pumped it out and declared it was failing. It has never backed up but it is definitely old,” Kroyer said.

The current septic tank and leechfield are located behind the three-building municipal complex, not far from the Townhouse Brook.

It is hoped that soil testing will begin this spring, completing the design and construction with the two-year window for spending the grant dollars.

“That’s the dream,” Kroyer said. “They will change the location because trucks have driven over it for years, compacting it.

“The engineers have factored how many people are in the building on any given day with the highway department, the town officials and the lunch program which brings in many more.

“A lot of planning has gone into this, of course, coming up with the right size and the right spot. The town is very appreciative of the CWC assistance. This will serve the community for a long, long time,” Kroyer said.

In a separate but related matter, the Greene County Legislature, at a recent meeting, approved an agreement between the town and County Department of Human Services.

The one-year pact is a rental renewal for the use of the municipal hall as a senior service center for senior citizens and Meals on Wheels program.

Negotiations between the town and county resulted in a slight rent increase to $1500 per month, the legislature resolution states.

The county’s payment includes the cost of garbage removal and internet service. The town is responsible for heat, water, lights, electric, propane, pest control and normal wear and tear on equipment.

Also, the town, “ensures that the grounds, structure, building and furnishings, including the water purification system (i.e. ultraviolet) are maintained in good repair and free from any danger to health and safety,” the resolution states.

Further, the town “ensures that the building complies with all applicable laws regarding, but not limited to zoning, building, health, and sanitation and fire safety,” the resolution states.

And, “in the event [the county] is unable to use the facility for any reason, [the county] obligation to pay a monthly consideration will be cancelled until such time that [county] uses the facility for the purposes as set forth.”

The agreement “can be terminated by either party upon ninety (90) days written notice,” the resolution states.

In another matter, Kroyer reported the town’s Code Book is being updated following approval given by the council, last month, to invest up to $5,600 to accomplish the task.

“I didn’t want to spend the money but when anyone goes online now to look at the books there are twelve amendments not there,” Kroyer said, explaining why the upgrade was necessary.

Several officials, including the town supervisor, town attorney, town clerk, sole assessor, planning board, zoning board, etc., as well as the public, access the Rules on a regular basis.

The job, expected to be finished within 6 to 8 weeks, consists of an electronic version on the town website and eight hard copies.



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LEGISLATURE STUFF - Counting on the Count

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - A fissure was revealed when the Greene County Legislature was visited by representatives of New York Citizens Audit, last week.

Lawmakers, at a County Services committee meeting, heard from  NYCA executive director Marly Hornick for what was listed on the agenda as a “brief presentation” that instead lasted roughly forty minutes.

Hornick, who also founded the group, was seeking support from the local legislature for a statewide scrutiny of voter registration rolls.

NYCA claims that an open-source audit of the 2020 State general election uncovered evidence of massive inaccuracies that violate both State and federal law, terming them a “dirty voter roll.”

“We are not saying these anomalies represent fraud. We are not saying that elections are per se invalid,” Hornick said.

“We are saying that these inaccuracies are inexplicable, not acceptable, and need to be investigated and explained one by one,” Hornick said.

Hornick cited multiple examples of what she suggested were questionable voter records, including a box on the rolls stating that identification was required to vote, next to a box stating identification was not verified.

“These are only four votes but these are four illegal votes in Greene County that counted in the vote for the 2022 election,” Hornick alleged.

There are also instances of people with seemingly fictitious names, people 118 years old and older voting, and a person being born in the same year they registered to vote, Hornick claimed.

While there are levels of acceptable inaccuracy built into such a large and ever-changing system, Hornick said, “we are saying New York needs to open the books to find out how the system is broken.

“We need to repair any gaps. Without confidence the voter rolls are clean…there is no need for anyone in New York State to trust the outcome of our elections,” Hornick said.

Greene County Board of Elections (Republican Party) commissioner Brent Bogardus did not share the same view, reading a letter sent by the State Board of Elections to the NY State Association of Counties.

“There isn’t a lot that Democrats and Republicans agree upon at the State level but they agree on this,” Bogardus said, noting the letter is signed by both co-executive directors at the State Board of Elections.

The letter states, “you have likely seen recent news coverage of a group of misinformed individuals purporting to have found major deficiencies in New York State's voter registration database.

“This group has alleged that countless fake voters have been inserted into the registration database in order to create invalid votes to sway elections. 

“They claim that no elections should be certified in New York State because of alleged counterfeit registrations and actions by those who run elections.

“Over the last year and a half, the group - New York Citizens Audit - has presented their fabricated claims throughout our state,” the letter states.

“More recently, they have brought their embellished and misleading reports before local Town Boards and County Legislatures requesting that these bodies take up resolutions to support their cause.

“The resolutions are framed around their ill-informed reports, misinterpreted passages of state and federal law and an allegation that the 2020 and 2022 elections were fraudulent.

“They represent, at best, an ignorance of the voter registration process in New York State, and, at worst, a willful disregard of basic fact.

“It is our hope that your organization can assist us in arming your members with information to help dispel these malicious claims,” the letter states.

Local lawmakers did not take a vote on the NYCA request for support. The issue is expected to arise again later this month or in March.

“I had a resolution ready to be introduced tonight,” legislature chairman Patrick Linger said in a followup phone interview, noting NYCA had contacted the county, requesting the opportunity to speak.

“I was asked by a majority of this board not to put it on the agenda yet, giving them time to look into this more deeply. There is a lot here if anybody looks at this objectively,” Linger said.

Responding to a question about the NYCA claims being directly connected to ongoing allegations that the 2020 Presidential election was riddled with fraud, Linger said, “this is not tied to any specific claim.

“It is tied to numbers that don’t jive with things like the number of voters who voted compared to the number of registered voters. It is a large number, a number that could impact a State election.

“Maybe there are easily explainable reasons for all of this. But what [Bogardus] said tonight is verbatim from the State. 

“He gave us nothing specifically about Greene County. If I had to vote on this today for our county, I would support it,” Linger said.

Lawmaker Daryl Legg (District 7, Hunter, Lexington & Halcott), expressed confidence in the county Board of Elections and the voting process. 

“I have all the faith in the world in our people, Democrats and Republicans,” Legg said. “If I ask them, ‘do we have a problem?’ and they say no, I have to stick with them.

“Is there going to be somebody out there trying to do something? Maybe. But the numbers [NYCA] were throwing out, they didn’t really have solid facts to say this is exactly what’s happening.

“It’s great to see that somebody has concerns, but people asking questions doesn’t mean there’s a problem. I don’t see the need for Greene County to do something like this at this time,” Legg said.

Greene County district attorney Joseph Stanzione, attending the session, said, “the integrity of our elections is a legitimate concern,” referencing a report from a neighboring county he said he would give to lawmakers.

Lawmaker Michael Bulich (District 1, Catskill), in a followup phone interview said, “I’ve got to get a look at the report [Stanzione] mentioned and call around to other people, but on face value this seems to have merit.

“There needs to start being no question about our elections on both sides. Otherwise this stuff is going to pull our country apart. 

“Let’s just say this was an interesting presentation. I don’t know what it is with government officials. If there are mistakes, nobody wants to admit it and say, ‘I‘m correcting it.’  We have to let the sunlight in,” Bulich said.


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