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Outdoors with Larry DiDonato

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 3/20/24 | 3/20/24

Oldest Sportsmen’s Advocate in NY Now Struggling  

Formed in 1933, the NYS Conservation Council (NYSCC) is the oldest conservation organization in NYS striving to secure and preserve hunting, fishing, and trapping for generations to come. Their website also stresses its concern with sound management of the state’s land, water, fish, and wildlife. Composed chiefly of county sportsmen’s federations interested in issues critical to hunting, fishing, trapping, and the shooting sports, the NYSCC has traditionally been the statewide voice of NY sportsmen. Unfortunately, over the past few years it has experienced internal and operational difficulties hampering its effectiveness. Concerned sportsmen have been increasingly alarmed with the trajectory of legislation threatening hunting, fishing, trapping, and the shooting sports, and the lack of success in combating these threats. NYSCC membership has been shrinking. Of the 62 counties in NY, just 40 sportsmen’s federations remain members. Losing paying county federation member organizations certainly has not helped NYSCC as it faces financial uncertainty. Leadership challenges at NYSCC go beyond that of a sustained vacancy at the first vice president level.

Sportsmen solidarity, representation, legislative influence, and leadership are issues critical to NY’s sportsmen and women. They call for the council’s focus, direction, and leadership on a number of key issues. 

On March 14th a meeting was held by the Region 4 Conservation Council at the Middleburgh Rod & Gun Club. In attendance were representatives from sportsmen’s federations from Greene, Albany, Delaware, and Schoharie Counties, and the Region 4 Fish and Wildlife Management Board. Four of the region’s nine counties did not send federation representatives. Also in attendance were NYSCC Legislative Vice President, Pat McBrearty, Region 4 NYSCC Director, Joe Viva, and Council newcomer, Bruce McGowan. 

A stated purpose of the meeting was to introduce Governor Hochul’s newly appointed Region 4 Conservation Fund Advisory Board (CFAB), member, Nate Galimore, and the newly hired, paid employee at the NYSCC. However, CFAB member Nate Galimore was unable to attend so the meeting began with the introduction of NYSCC’s recently hired Executive Director, Bruce McGowan. Bruce is a self-described, “ex-state employee” who worked in the Unadilla School District, and was most recently employed by the “Friends of the NRA.”  Bruce’s title of “Executive Director” is somewhat of a misnomer in that, as he explained, his duties are largely administrative in nature, as was the case with his predecessors. Many county federation members and other members of the council are not familiar with the title of Executive Director for NYSCC. Some assumed it is a high-ranking leadership position, indicating potential change at that level but that is not the case. When asked about that at the meeting, Bruce said he certainly will answer any question he could for members, but he is not officially a policy maker nor is he within the chain of command of the council. He also shared that he would not have taken the position if his duties were strictly those of an office manager. He instead wishes to be heavily involved in outreach and other measures to get the word out in support of the mission and goals of the NYSCC. 

Discussion quickly turned to the many anti-hunting and anti-shooting sports bills gaining traction in both houses of the NY Legislature. When asked if NYSCC would consider hiring a paid lobbyist to combat new anti-hunting sentiment, the legislative VP replied he would if the council had the money but at present they don’t. 

A Letter of Agreement between NYSCC and the NYS Trappers Association (NYSTA) who does employ a paid lobbyist was discussed, but that agreement does not in any way share the NYSTA lobbyist. It simply ensures that the Conservation Council will consult with NYSTA on legislative matters involving trapping in NY so the two organizations do not operate at cross purposes.  

Schoharie County Conservation Alliance representative Dave Wood, who also serves as Vice Chairmen of the Region 4 Fish and Wildlife Management Board, asked why the Council no longer organizes a Sportsmen Lobby Day in Albany? No valid reason was offered and further discussion did not illicit any plans to resume a sportsmen’s presence in Albany sponsored by the NYS Conservation Council. The NYS Trappers Association holds an annual “Meet & Greet” with NY Legislators as does the NYS Sportsmen’s Advisory Council, but nothing is on the horizon on that front for the NYS Conservation Council. 

The NYSCC has come a long way from the days when sportsmen gathered by the hundreds on the Capitol steps, garnering television media coverage, and holding planned meetings with legislators addressing legislation critical to sportsmen. It's good to see some sportsmen’s and trapping organizations are making a good effort, putting their resources lobbying Albany to combat the many threats facing sportsmen and women today, but more needs to be done to get NYSCC to bring statewide issues to bear with a strong presence in Albany.

The high-water mark for sportsmen’s influence in Albany seems to hearken back to the days when the NYS Conservation Council had their legislative vice president appointed as a “Special Legislative Assistant to the Commissioner of DEC.” His sole function was to address issues most critical to sportsmen at the top echelon of NY government. 

Discussion at the recent meeting turned to what could be achieved if sportsmen sought and fought for issues they all agree upon, but got sidetracked when some present pushed support of what appears to be a DEC Agency bill, S08644.  It would establish e-tagging and eliminate carcass tags and back tags altogether. A motion was made in support of the bill but in the end, discussion resulted in a lack of consensus so the motion was tabled. 

The NYS Conservation Council must once again get itself into a position where it can effectively be the collective voice of NY sportsmen in Albany. It is holding its spring meeting at the Middleburgh Rod & Gun Club on Saturday, April 6th. The legislative agenda for that meeting is clearly missing the mark, however. It is looking back on a bill the governor has already signed into law, banning wildlife contests for certain species. The ship has sailed on that issue as there is little to no chance to have the law repealed. The opportunity to fight that has passed, and there are new threats that need to be addressed. 

The Council needs to look forward, not back. Yet, there is no mention on the upcoming meeting’s legislative agenda of the many active bills threatening hunting and the shooting sports. For instance, one piece of current proposed legislation that was brought up at the Region 4 meeting threatens skeet shooting at gun ranges. S8461 calls for an 1800-foot by 900-foot buffer zone at skeet ranges. That, and many other bills that go after hunting and firearms are not on the current legislative agenda for NYSCC’s spring meeting. 

Coupled with the lack of a plan to organize the sportsmen and women of NY to be activists for their traditional recreational pursuits, the council needs to get itself together, regain lost members in addition to new members, stabilize financially and organizationally, so it can focus on the important issues threatening every aspect of hunting, trapping and shooting for sport. The issues of today.

What does the future hold for the oldest sportsmen’s activist group in NYS? What is NYSCC’s plan for succession of its leadership?  The name of NYSCC’s newsletter is “Grassroots.” Its name foreshadows what average sportsmen and women on the street are now public wondering; how do we, as sportsmen stick together, organize, and effectively preserve our way of life of hunting, trapping, fishing, and recreational shooting in NYS? Nature abhors a vacuum. If that niche’ is not filled by the established organization created for that purpose, some other group will fill the void.  

If you would like to attend NYSCC’s upcoming meeting on Saturday, April 6, the cost is $35.00. If you would like more information on how to attend, go to the council’s website at www.nyscc.com.  

Happy Hunting, Fishing, and Trapping until next time.

News and Notes

Hunter Safety Class to be held on March 30th at Norton Hill Wildlife Club

Greene County Hunter Safety Coordinator, Bill Burger, will be presenting a firearms hunter

safety class on Saturday, March 30th from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm at the Norton Hill Wildlife Club at 946 Big Woods Road in Greenville, NY. Just in time for the upcoming youth turkey season. You must register for the class at DEC’s website, www.dec.ny.gov and complete required homework to attend the free in-person class. Once on the website home page, scroll down to “Quick Links,” then select “Take  a Hunter Education Course.” For more information, call Bill Burger at 518-622-3795.

Youth Turkey Hunting Weekend is April 20th and 21st 

The 2024 youth turkey hunting season begins on Saturday, April 20th and ends Sunday, April 21st. The Norton Hill Wildlife Club is holding a “Youth Turkey Hunting Orientation Day” at their club on Saturday, April 13th beginning at 10:00 am. All youth hunters and their parents/guardian/mentors are welcome. The event will include a chance to “talk turkey” with local Conservation Officers and other turkey hunting experts, and includes an opportunity for the youth hunters and their mentors to pattern shotguns at the club’s range. Youths will receive instruction on turkey tactics to increase their chances to bag a gobbler safely. (Youth hunters must be accompanied by an adult at the orientation on April 13th)

Norton Hill is also holding an “After the Hunt BBQ” for all youth hunters, parents, mentors etc. at the conclusion of the first day’s hunt on Saturday April 20th. (Time TBD).

Save-the-date for New York Bowhunters Banquet in Greeneville – May 18th 

New York Bowhunters will hold their 33rd Annual Banquet and Rendezvous on Saturday, May 18th 2023 at the Sunny Hill Resort and golf course at 352 Sunny Hill Road in Greenville, NY. For early birds arriving the day before, there will be a BBQ on Friday night at 6:00 pm with a 50/50 raffle. Discounted rooms that include breakfast at Sunny Hill are available. Go to www.sunnyhill.com or call them at 518-634-7642 to make your discounted room reservation. Registration for the day’s activities start at 9:00 am with their General Meeting scheduled for 1:00 pm, cocktail hour at 5:00 pm, and dinner and silent auction at 6:00 pm. The keynote speaker this year is Colorado big game hunter and guide, John Gardner. The event includes 3D archery and novelty shoots, antler scoring, contests, prizes, and free golf for NY Bowhunter members. Genesis bows will be provided for participants. There will be vendor tables, raffles and plenty of fun things to do. Tickets are $55.00 for individuals with kids under 12 are free. To purchase tickets and for more information, contact Annie Jacobs via email at nyboffice@newyorkbowhunters.com , or by regular mail: 5937 County Road 33 Canandaigua, NY 14424. You can also give Annie a call at 585-229-7468 for more information.  Local NY Bowhunters representative Ed Gorch reminds all attending to bring a gift box for their “Camo to Camo” program supporting our veterans.

Remember to report poaching violations by calling 1-844-DEC-ECOS.



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St Patrick’s Day at the Middletown American Legion

Eleanor Barrack, Deana Pereira, Saira Faye Pereira who all worked on putting this St Patrick’s Day celebration/fundraiser together 


Dawn Periera and Dawn Maxim who began the day at 6 am with coffee 



By Robert Brune

MARGARETVILLE — Deana Pereira, who spends months on Facebook collecting donations with her troop of volunteers preparing for the St. Patrick’s Day meals/buffet, came through with approximately one thousand meals, according to Periera. “The way our (Margaretville) community comes together is like nothing else. Our neighbor for neighbor commitment is stronger than ever. We are a unified mountain community” says Periera. At the start of the day this past Saturday, there was a line out the door of local residents and members of the American Legion, all gathered for the meal, fellowship, and community.

Speaking with Eleanor Barrack who helps run the Middletown American Legion, she says the weekly Bingo Night has been struggling with attendance since losing members over recent years. The board will be meeting soon to decide if Bingo Night will switch to every other week instead of every week. Barrack says, ‘We need new people to keep this open.”  The American Legion Post 216, which has served as a vital meeting place for veterans and families in the Margaretville area, once held benefit events for scholarships for local students graduating from Margaretville Central School, birthday parties, and veteran recognition dinners but has fallen on tough times, just as many American Legion posts in New York and throughout the country. Community members such as Periera and her crew have played a critical role in organizing events for various holiday fundraisers which signals the continued viability of this historic site established soon after World War I, for details see Ethel Bussy’s ‘History and Stories of Margaretville and Surrounding Areas’.



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Ashland Speaks

By Lula Anderson

Last week I wrote a little blip about the dog poo in the Ashland Park, then I had lunch with Jackie K and realized what I said was not strong enough.  Whether the Windham Path or the Ashland Path, the towns have worked long hours and put in tons of money to make safe walking paths.  Ashland put in a beautiful gazebo, a play yard for children and a doggie park.  Jackie tries to walk every day, she has her dog on a leash, and has bags ready for picking up.  Then she tries to deposit it in the proper receptacle, only to have to sidestep poop to get to the trash.  Seriously?  You let your dog poop IN FRONT of the refuse station and don't have the courtesy to grab a free bag and put it in.  The children's playground is a mine field.  The path itself is an obstacle course.  I've had people tell me it's natural, it'll decompose.  Oh, we're in the country and with so much land around, I don't have to worry about cleaning up after my pet.  WRONG!  Judy has been working in her gardens and has seen people open their car doors to let their dog out to go—right in front of her.  She makes them clean up while she watches.  One person actually let her horse make a deposit in the post office parking lot then ride away, twice.  When confronted, she said it was a public building and she could do what she wanted—including riding her horse on the lawn.  As a pet owner, you have many responsibilities, including cleaning up after them.  Whether you are a year-round resident, part time resident, or just a visitor, your responsibility is the same.   It's on the ground, you pick it up.

WAJPL Golden Agers are keeping busy.  Last Monday around 15 ladies came together to paint Easter Eggs .  While cleaning, I found a case of the largest eggs, bigger than a typical goose egg, and already blown out and ready to go.  These gave an excellent medium for painting.  We had a lot of fun, too.  If you have a crafty idea that you would like to try, let us know.  Right now, I'm looking for someone to teach us how to make wooden bird houses and feeders.  In April we resume our twice monthly meetings.  Remember, the first and third Mondays at 1PM.  

There will be an ALL YOU CAN EAT BREAKFAST at the Ashland Town Hall 12094 State Rt 23 , on Saturday April 6th to benefit Greene County EMS Week.  Eggs cooked to order, bacon, sausage, pancakes, potatoes, toast, juice coffee breakfast sandwiches for  $12  adults and $6 for kids.  Eat in or takeout.  Delivery available within a 10 mile radius.  Call 518-734-3636 to place your order.  Take a tour of our Mountain top ambulances.  Stretcher demo and equipment demo.  Check out the Greene County EMS  Fly Car.  Come out and add your support.

Prayers for Bob Exum, Craig Benjamin and Billy Matthews.  

If you have any news or dates for this column, I have to know at least two weeks prior to publication.  I used to be able to put in news up until Wednesday, but I now have to have it in no later than Tuesday early to get it published.  I had a change in last week's column and it was too late for the Windham Weekly when I sent it in on Wednesday morning.  That's why there were two different versions.  

AS I REMEMBER IT

The old adage If you don't like the weather here, wait 15 minutes and it'll change, is definitely the order of the day today, Sunday.  When I went to church it was raining, and by the time I was driving home, the sun was shining, the sky was blue, and it was beautiful.  I got home, called Judy, and during that conversation, it started snowing so hard we couldn't see out the window.  I got thinking about the fickleness of the weather.  When I worked for Ma Bell, Ivan DeHoff was the repair man.  There were no cell phones then, only way to contact him was via walkie talkie.  When the March winds blew, many times he had to don snowshoes and walk through the woods to find the downed wire.  Now, they have ATVs to go through the woods and I have even seen helicopters flying over the wires to check them out. 

This is Maple Weekend in the area, and there are many demonstrations on making syrup from sap.  Tours of the modern sap house show stainless steel pots and vats with controlled heating and boiling.  Plastic lines are set up in the bush and the sap is pumped directly into a holding tank which is connected to the evaporator.  All clean and tidy.  Back in the day, the men had a special sled for sapping.  If there was snow on the ground (hopefully), the horses would be hitched up and off they'd go into the woods.  All the equipment needed was on this sled.  The men would drill the hole using a hand auger, then a spiel would be inserted, a bucket would be hung, and a cover put on it.  This happened at each tree.  The next day, a large vat would be put on the sled and the men would stop, remove the cover, take the bucket off the tree and pour the sap into the vat, return the bucket to the hook, cover it and go to the next.  On a good running day, this would be repeated twice daily.  Back in the sap house, someone was waiting and feeding the fire underneath the boiler.  The sap would be dumped into the boiler and had to be watched as there were different chambers in the evaporator.  when it got to a certain point, the valve would be opened, and the sap would be moved to the next chamber and new sap would be added to the first chamber.  

This went on all night until the last chamber produced the perfect consistency of maple syrup.  Until the sap stopped running, there was always at least one man in the sap house boiling and testing while the rest of the crew went out daily to collect more sap.  At the end of the season, all of the buckets, covers and spiels had to be collected, washed, dried and put away until next year.  A far cry from today when the biggest problem is squirrels chewing the plastic lines.

Cell phones, pipelines, ATVs, what a change in our environment.  This year there was no snow, while out west had snow in places where they've never had it before.  But it's only March, 10 years ago we had a huge storm in March.  I remember 40 years ago we had a big one at the end of  April.  We take what we get, and when someone asks what the weather is like, I tell them to look out the window.  



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ECO Officer News


Youth Ice Fishing Derby – Greene County

On Feb. 25, ECOs Smith and Palmateer attended a youth ice fishing derby at Tannersville Lake in the village of Tannersville. The event, sponsored by the Catskill Mountain Fish and Game Club and Stony Clove Rod and Gun Club, drew more than 70 young anglers who found an abundance of pickerel and blue gill. Organizers awarded trophies to youth anglers for catching the largest fish of the day, smallest fish of the day, and most fish throughout the day, as well as other prizes. 

ECO Smith speaks to an angler at youth ice fishing derby on Tannersville Lake in Greene County


Youth anglers and families attend ice fishing derby on Tannersville Lake in Greene County


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Ladies of Hip-Hop onstage at the Orpheum


The Black Dancing Bodies Project:  Speak My Mind

Hunter –  Catskill Mountain Foundation in partnership with Works & Process presents Ladies of Hip-Hop in a performance of authentic street and club dance on stage at the Orpheum Performing Arts Center in Tannersville on Saturday, March 30.

Part of an ongoing performance and documentary effort focused on Black women in street and club dance culture, this session of Black Dancing Bodies continues to explore the power of the choreopoem; first coined in 1975 by writer Ntozake Shange (for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf); Each member of the collective responds to the question, “If I could speak my mind, what would I say?” In this world premiere, experience new writings, music, and movement spanning dance styles from African, to waacking, vogue, Hip-hop, and house; all curated under the direction of Michele Byrd-McPhee.

“Each woman’s voice stands powerfully on its own.”     —Dance Enthusiast

Ladies of Hip-Hop is an all-female intergenerational dance collective that creates dance works illuminating the strength, power and diversity of  women in Hip-Hop.  Ever present in the work are the freestyle, cipher, and call and response aspects of  the origins of street and club dance culture, while exploring the space of proscenium performance. 

Under the direction of founder Michele Byrd-Mcphee, Ladies of Hip-Hop Dance Collective (LDC) builds on the shapeshifting paths laid out by generations of Black women artists and activists on and off the stage. As a nonprofit organization, LOHH’s mission is to provide artistic opportunities for women of color through female-empowered workshops, performances, public talks, and professional development training. 

Byrd-Mcphee is a street dance activist who works to decolonize hip-hop culture regarding gender, sex, and cultural and socio-historic racial lines. With a BS from Temple University and an MS from Drexel University, Byrd-Mcphee has worked in many sectors of the entertainment industry, having been a Production Coordinator at Brooklyn Academy of Music and a Senior Music Coordinator at Late Night with Seth Meyers, and now a leader of LOHH. Additionally, she has been awarded the Integrated Arts Residency Fellowship at University of Wisconsin-Madison, teaching her course “Hip-Hop, Women and the World” to further enforce the idea of re-contextualizing hip-hop spaces. Byrd-McPhee currently serves as a Bessie Award Committee Member along with her ongoing commitment as Executive Director for Ladies of Hip-Hop 501c3 and artistic director of LOHH Dance Collective.

Ladies of Hip-Hop performs on Saturday, March 30, 2024 at 7:00 pm at the Orpheum Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main Street, Tannersville, NY. Tickets are available at www.catskillmtn.org or boxoffice@catskillmtn.org or call 518 263 2063. For information about Catskill Mountain Foundation’s upcoming programs, please visit www.catskillmtn.org

SpeakMyMind was commissioned by Works & Process, developed in Works & Process LaunchPAD residencies at Bethany Arts Community (2022, 2023, and 2024) and Catskill Mountain Foundation (2022), and Office Hours Residency at The Kennedy Center (2023) with performances at the Guggenheim Museum, Jacob’s Pillow, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the National Gallery of Art, SummerStage, Dancers Responding to AIDS Hudson Valley Dance Festival, and New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.

SpeakMyMind is a 2023 New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project grantee, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Foundation and Mellon Foundation.


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BETTER THAN HEARSAY - More Things than Dreamt

CATSKILL - There is a guy named Bill Shakespeare who probably wishes he’d dreamed up the drama unfolding in Catskill over a high school play.

It’s a musical actually, “Cinderella,” and the Catskill school district usually isn’t within our radar but another reporter, Andrea Macko, has been covering events in the river town and doing it splendidly.

Andrea is the pen behind “Porcupine Soup,” an online newspaper, and a crackerjack investigative journalist who’s just doing her job.

Catskill school administrators haven’t made that easy, not even leaving a trail of breadcrumbs for Andrea to follow to the facts.

She has gotten to them anyway. This all started for our newspaper a couple of weeks ago when I got a phone call from a source tipping me off that students at the school were going to stage a walkout.

I knew nothing about it at the time so I reached out to Andrea, knowing that is her regular beat. She was already on it and brought me up to speed.

We published a story here, at that time, and since then we have been waiting to see the ending before doing any more writing.

It may not be over yet but the two central characters have returned to their respective positions at the school and it seems, in the words of the Great Bard, to be much ado about nothing.

But don’t tell that to high school principal Junait Shah and musical director Michelle Storrs-Ryan who were suspended on February 28 amid the investigation of an incident involving tape on a student’s mouth.

“That student [an eleventh grader] has maintained that no harm was done and said that she placed tape on her own mouth as a joke during musical rehearsals,” Andrea reported.

Storrs-Ryan had playfully suggested she was going to start taping the kids’ mouths if they didn’t hush and one eleventh-grader did it for her, or so the story goes, which sounds simple but somehow it got very complicated.

Before getting into the weeds on all that, the students did their walkout and parents protested in the streets and outside a closed-door school board meeting, demanding Shah and Storrs-Ryan be reinstated.

School administrators were tiptoeing through the tulips, not revealing any specific allegations, not directly naming Shah or Storrs-Ryan and never confirming that either educator was formally suspended.

A light through yonder window broke when Andrea learned via postings by Sara Pickens Verdon, the president of the Catskill Music Parent-Student Association, that Shah was being investigated for alleged “inaction.”

Storrs-Ryan was under district scrutiny for allegedly “harming a child.” It all surrounded the mouth-taping and it was initially looked into, with Shah reportedly determining it was kids harmlessly kidding around.

Life went on and then it didn’t. Shah and Storrs-Ryan, who is also the chorus teacher, were put on the shelf and then life got worse.

Marcus McGregor, a choreographer and contracted employee who stepped in to direct the musical in the absence of Storrs-Ryan, was fired by the district after a TV news interview where he named alleged names.

McGregor purportedly identified the source of the official complaint, the parents of another student who is part of the “Cinderella” production.

Truth or fiction, it has caused many theories to pop up over the possible irony surrounding one of the oldest motivations in show biz.

Which is where the plot thickens related to the complaint-filing parents (who purportedly have close ties to the school district), the Human Resources department (and how it came to its in-house conclusions) and school superintendent Dan Wilson (now being cast as the “villain”).

Nobody is explaining anything. A petition is being circulated and a letter has been sent by other parents calling for a “no confidence” vote from the school board and the dismissal of Superintendent Wilson.

Andrea, meanwhile, has submitted Freedom of Information Law requests to the district and the show must go on. “Cinderella,” originally scheduled for March 15-17, was postponed during the mayhem with Storrs-Ryan.

It has been re-scheduled for sometime in April, and with both Shah and Storrs-Ryan back in the fold, one must wonder why this ran so amok.

Which calls to mind some lines from “Romeo and Juliet,” that little ditty Bill scratched out that contains a scene with Romeo and his pal Horatio.

Romeo and Horatio see a ghost. Horatio is awestruck by the strangeness of it. Hamlet comforts him, saying, “there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

And when the fairy dust settles on “Cinderella,” it will be interesting to see who the glass slipper fits and who it does not. (And any resemblance to actual persons in this tale is literary coincidence).



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BETTER THAN HEARSAY - A Couple of Keepers

By Michael Ryan

EAST DURHAM - Among other things, such as their lilting music and literary mysticism, the Irish are well known for their blarney.

As it turned out, Mike O’Connor was not spreading it on thick when, many months ago, he promised this St. Patrick’s Day would be 45 degrees and sunny, hardly a safe bet for early spring in the Catskills.

O’Connor, though, was on the money and better, reviving the St. Patrick’s Day parade down in East Durham, last Sunday, after a 32-year hiatus.

In a way that it hasn’t been for a long, long time, the once bustling, valley resort town was jam packed from one end to the other.

Hundreds of spectators lined the parade route for volunteer firefighting departments, children’s Irish dance companies, high school marching bands, pipe & drum corps and extremely green floats.

“I had no idea it would be this big,” O’Connor confessed, watching the start of the hour-long procession, noting he went to church Sunday morning, seeing the thermometer was at a heavenly 45 under clear skies.

The warmth rose to over 50 degrees by step off although that changed in the blink of a leprechaun’s eye as a chilly and rainy squall rushed in, coming neither as a surprise nor a deterrent to anybody.

“We knew it would all depend on the weather and we lucked out,” O’Connor said, mentioning something else famously Irish.

“I’ve been going to St. Paddy’s Day parades since I was boy,” O’Connor said, telling why he decided to bring back the East Durham shebang.

“When I moved here full time, one of the first questions I asked was, ‘why isn’t there one here?’ and no one could give me a good answer.”

That was all it took, which is pure blarney. It required many hands and a joint effort from bunches of people working toward a common goal.

In April, 2023, the Greene County Ancient Order of Hibernians Mass Rock Division 2 and members of Our Lady of Knock Ladies Ancient Order of Hibernians banded with the community and its business owners. 

The initial meeting was at the iconic Shamrock House, a cornerstone of the town’s tourist trade since the late 1930’s, founded by Patrick and “Winnie,” Kellegher, the mom and pop to parade grand marshal Neil Kellegher.

Neil Kellegher strode up Route 145 in the brisk breezes waving to the crowd and the whole scene again got me thinking about my family.

Last week, I wrote in this column about how my mother and father (who came over from Ireland, alone, when he was 19) met in East Durham, around the same time the Shamrock House was getting going.

I also had fun with my sister Buttons, whose given name is Eileen although we’ve never called her anything but her nickname, given to her by my parents, lovers of the song “Buttons and Bows.”

The column included a photograph of Buttons looking like she saw a ghost, posing with another sister and my brother in the early 1950’s.

What I didn’t know until now was there is more to the story. “I’ve always wondered why mom and dad kept me after that picture,” Buttons says, laughing, something the Irish in her does with ease.

I’d sent her my writeup and what I didn’t know beforehand was Buttons met her first husband in the exact same spot my parents first locked eyes, a place called Hillside Farms, an old East Durham resort.

My mom lived there in the 1930’s and 40’s, then moved back to East Durham following the death of my father on Valentines Day in 1968.

My mom felt at home here in the mountains. Buttons and my younger sister Moe were helping her get settled in her new digs, in the summer of 1969, when they went to hear two Irish singers performing at Hillside Farms (which was then operating as Connelly’s).

When the show was over, they gave the lads a ride home, stopping along the road to keep singing and that was that, romantically speaking.

Buttons married the one named Brendan and a person has to wonder if what maybe caused the eventual change in their relationship was him seeing that picture of her from the 1950’s.

That would scare the wits out of anybody but like the Irish are wont to do, my sisters and brother found the humor in it, replicating the photo years later, making it easy to see why my mom and dad kept the lot of them.


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Bates Correction

We want to announce a correction to the recent article entitled "Hunter-Tannersville CSD Announces Open Board Seat for 5-Year Term" By Max Oppen, published on March 15. The article suggests that Mrs. Bates, a current H-T School Board member, is not running for re-election. We also utilized inaccurate information about her candidacy this year in our article.

We want to clarify that Barbara Bates is a candidate for the upcoming school board election in the Hunter-Tannersville-Central School District. We apologize for any confusion or inconvenience this error may have caused Mrs. Bates and our readers.

We strive for accuracy and transparency in our reporting, and we regret any misinformation conveyed in the previous article. Thank you for your understanding.



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LEGISLATURE STUFF - A Place to Call Home

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - It is merely a thought at the moment but establishing a local Oxford House has been presented to the Greene County Legislature.

Lawmakers, at a recent meeting, were visited by county Mental Health Department director of community services Jason Fredenberg.

Fredenberg provided details on the mission of and maintenance for an Oxford House which is a “concept in recovery from drug and alcohol addiction,” according to their website.

While an Oxford House would not be a county-run entity, the legislature would need to approve startup spending by Mental Health.

Fredenberg said the upfront money would likewise not come from the county, coming rather thru the settlement of a major lawsuit against pharmaceutical companies related to their role in the opioid crisis.

No wrongdoing was admitted but billions of dollars have been set aside for health care and addiction treatment programs.

Mental Health would access their share of that payout pie to help bring an Oxford House here, Fredenberg said, painting a disturbing picture of everyday realities revolving around alcohol and drugs.

“There is a serious problem with addiction in our county,” Fredenberg said. “We are already dealing with this issue and have been for a long time.

“We may hear more about the opioid epidemic because opioids are more deadly. Alcohol is more widespread. They both impact many people

“This would really fill a gap. It is especially hard during the early recovery stage to find suitable housing for people that promotes ongoing sobriety. Oxford House offers a model that has been shown to work well.

“The house is fully self-supported. There is a zero tolerance for drugs and alcohol. If they relapse, they are expelled,” Fredenberg said.

“Oxford House describes a democratically run, self-supporting and drug [and alcohol] free home,” their website states.

“This publicly supported, non-profit 501(c)3 corporation is the umbrella organization which provides the network connecting all Oxford Houses.

“It allocates resources to duplicate the Oxford House concept where needs arise. The number of residents in a house may range from six to fifteen.

“There are houses for men, houses for women, and houses which accept women with children. Oxford Houses flourish in metropolitan areas such as New York City and Washington D.C,” their website states.

“They thrive in such diverse communities as Hawaii, Washington State, Canada and Australia, but they all abide by the basic criteria.

“Each House represents a remarkably effective and low cost method of preventing relapse. This was the purpose of the first Oxford House established in 1975 in Silver Springs, Maryland.

“This purpose is served, day by day, house after house, in each of over 2000 houses in the United States today,” their website states

“From the beginning the group rejected ownership of any property and continues to rent – not purchase – single-family houses in good neighborhoods to establish new Oxford Houses.

‘In the years between 1975 and 1988, eighteen Houses were established by and for recovering individuals. The men and women in Oxford Houses pay all expenses to maintain the individual Oxford Houses.

“During 2017, residents paid rent, utility and other household expenses of over $116,000,000. During the same period of time, Oxford House Inc. spent $7,240,189 to start 263 new houses,” their website states.

Funds are used to “keep the national network of approximately 2,300 houses on track through utilization of trained outreach workers, publications, monitoring, organization of chapters and state associations, workshops and the annual national convention.

“In the seven years between 1989 and 1996 the accomplishments of Oxford House World Services included an average rate of relapse maintained at less than 20% of all residents.

“Between 1997 and 2007, Oxford House continued to grow and thousands of recovering alcoholics and drug addicts demonstrated that recovery without relapse could become the norm rather than the exception.”

Fredenberg informed lawmakers that an initial fee of $180,000 would hire an outreach worker to find and furnish a house, in a yet-unspecified location, while also initiating relationships within the community.

There would then be a $140,000 annual fee, split evenly between Greene and Columbia counties with residents coming from both counties.

Some concerns were expressed by lawmakers about the long term capability of Mental Health to pay the yearly fees and whether the population pool would ever extend outside the two counties. 

Those items would need to be clarified before this county okays the startup spending. “I don’t think this is a bad thing,” legislature chairman Patrick Linger said in a followup interview.

“Right now, the county has a hodge-podge of ways to treat these folks and find places for them to stay. I do question how much is accomplished by having, let’s say, only five or six people in a house.

“But [legislature Majority Leader] Matt [Luvera] talked to ]Congressman Marc Molinaro about a place like this in Dutchess County.

“The word is this is a better program as far as effectiveness. I was kind of on the fence when I first heard about this but if it is effective, I would be inclined to support it,” Linger said.


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