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Ashland Speaks

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 4/25/25 | 4/25/25

By Lula Anderson

What a beautiful weekend for Easter.  Daffodils blooming, the sun shining brightly, all combined for a perfect day to spend with family and friends.  I went out for pizza with my sons since that's what they wanted for dinner  A bit unorthodox, but fun, and it didn't break the bank to pay for it .  And it sure beats cooking.  I hope you did what you wanted and that you had a blessed Holy Week.

Last Monday, 18 WAJPL members got together for a fun day.  Albin had a pattern for an Easter Bunny cake and several people worked with him to make one for their Easter dessert.  In the kitchen Judy and Dena were directing  a group making chocolate candy.  There were some interesting combinations including chocolate dipped prunes, and chocolate covered Oreos.  The third group painted eggs.  We have tentative plans for making bidhouses in June, along with some beading classes.  Starting at the end of June will be our regular stained glass, art and ceramic classes.  We must keep busy. On June 28th, we will be sponsoring a blood drive.  Please sign up to donate.

Sympathy to the family of Jean Casazza who ran the K & J campgrounds.  

AS I REMEMBER IT

As we remember our youth and our many Easter traditions, I remember Easter being a special day of feast.  We just concluded Lent and Holy Week, and the reflections of our faith, and now were ready do don our Spring finery and celebrate.  Because of the variation of the dates of Easter (The first Sunday following the Paschal Full Moon which is a calculation based on the first full moon on or after the vernal equinox) our weather can be wintry or hot and summery.  Easter of, I think, 1966 started out a beautiful day.  Spring coats were put on, Easter hats and summer gloves.  Pictures taken before church were in front of early blooming daffodils and tulips. While in church, the temp started to drop.  By the time Easter Dinner was over, we had two feet of snow.  

April 7th was my Grandmother's birthday.   My mother was pregnant with my brother Franklyn and as she made a cake for her mother in law and climbed the stairs to deliver it, she went into labor and my brother was born on grandma's birthday.   My sister Louise was born on Easter in 1937, March 28th, but my mother's aunt was a midwife and always in control.  I guess anyone who has a late March or April birthday can be sure to have at least one Easter birthday.  

Thinking of other Easter traditions, I think of the Easter Egg hunts we had at the church hall and the year Pat Ferris hid the eggs and thought that all were found.  Oops, the last one was found at Mother-daughter dinner the day after Mother's Day.  Not a very pleasant discovery.  

I miss the days when we couldn't wait to dress up for church and put on our new bonnet.  We'd all preen before the mirror singing "In your Easter bonnet, with all the frills upon it", admiring our new, lacy clothes.  Such an homage to Spring and warm weather.  Now jeans seem de rigueur for church.  Does anyone even own a dress or suit anymore?  

Easter Blessings to all

 

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Community Theater at its Best: True West a Hit

By Max Oppen

HUNTER – The Catskill Mountain Foundation's Maude Adams Theater Hub's (MATH) latest community theater production, True West by the late Sam Shepard, was so successful that an extra performance had to be added. Initially scheduled for two nights, the show quickly sold out, prompting a third performance on Thursday, March 27. All shows were held at The Apex Lounge, part of Scribner's newest lodgings, The Rounds—a fittingly circular venue that perfectly suited the immersive "theater in the round" experience.

Directed by Jake Shipley, associate creative director for MATH and a rising talent in the local arts scene, the production drew crowds of nearly 60 per performance, including prominent guests such as Peter and Sarah Finn, founders of the Catskill Mountain Foundation (CMF), Scribner's owner Marc Chodock, and other CMF and Scribner's staff.

"I was excited that we had to add another night," Shipley said, reflecting on the show's strong demand. "It's a dream to see this kind of enthusiasm for live theater."

I attended Thursday's show and was immediately struck by the intimate staging. The actors at ground level and the audience encircling the performance space created a visceral, up-close experience unlike any I've seen before. The dynamic use of the round setting heightened the play's tension, making the audience feel like they were in the middle of the drama. And yes—for fans of domestic chaos—this is the play for toaster lovers.

Shipley noted the Friday and Saturday shows were even more intense, thanks partly to a few additional props. He also shared plans to launch "MATH ACTS," a scene study acting group and book club under the Maude Adams Theater Hub (MATH) umbrella, which will be open to the community.

The Cast

Leo Gilmore, who played Lee, shared a deeply personal connection to the play.

"Three decades! I've wanted to perform True West since my late friend Ryan Laden introduced me to it in April of 1996," Gilmore said. "We never got around to it, and Ryan tragically passed away in 2003. I've wanted to do it ever since, not only because it's a great play but to honor his memory."

Gilmore called working with Brian Flynn and Jacob Shipley "nothing short of magic." He praised the collaborative energy, especially the contributions of co-stars Elisabeth Henry and Phillip X Levine. He credited producer Amy Scheibe with orchestrating the complex logistics of the unique venue. "While I was originally skeptical of doing the show in the round, the final product was the best theater experience of my life."

A veteran of both music and theater, Gilmore holds a BA in Theater from Spring Hill College in Alabama. He first appeared locally in Yo Ho Ho! A Pirate's Christmas at the Tannersville Orpheum in 2013 and has since been active in MATH productions, including Into the Woods and The Rocky Horror Show.

Brian Flynn, who played Austin, Lee's brother, echoed the excitement.

"The theater in the round we created at Apex Lounge is an exceptional venue for an intense, intimate play," Flynn said. "The audience is in the story, rather than just watching it."

Flynn, a longtime member of the mountaintop theater community, shared a powerful personal connection to True West. "The fierce and complicated sibling rivalry spoke to me. I grew up just 18 months apart from my brother J.P., who was killed in the 1988 Pan Am 103 bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland," he said. "His death led me to discover theater. This performance is dedicated to my big brother and all who've lived with unfinished rivalries."

Flynn credited Gilmore for pushing him to take on the role finally and expressed deep gratitude for the entire cast and crew, primarily producer Amy Scheibe.

Elisabeth Henry, who portrayed the brothers' mother, called True West "a wild ride. No better pack of rascals to cover that ground with than Brian, Leo, Phillip, and Jake," she said. "It's a tough role for a woman, but the collaborative spirit made it joyful. Jake's intelligent, sensitive direction helped shape the entire shootin' match."

Henry also dedicated her performance to her dear friend and director, Chris Cade. "His wit, intelligence, and talent continue to inspire so many of us. Mountain Top theater is Chris Cade."

Phillip X Levine, a seasoned actor and stage manager with deep ties to NYC and the Catskills, brought gravitas to Saul, the Hollywood producer.

Levine's history with True West dates back to 2001, when he played Austin opposite Dechen Thurman (Uma Thurman's brother) just days after 9/11. "During those dark times, creating art helped me stay conscious and alive. These times feel similarly polarized, and I'm convinced that striving to be creative keeps our humanity intact."

A prolific contributor to MATH, Levine is also the poetry editor of Chronogram and president of the Woodstock Poetry Society. He dedicated his performance to his 20-year-old daughter Piper, "and all of her generation, in the hope they have the wondrous world they deserve."

Amy Scheibe, Creative Director for MATH, said,

"Jake Shipley moved to Tannersville a year ago to work on a comedy act. I knew instantly he had ambition and untapped potential due to living in NYC, which is overcrowded with young actors. Jake has impressively taken on challenge after challenge in the past twelve months, growing into responsibilities at incredible speed. Leading the cast of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory as Willy Wonka, directing three plays, and co-starring in Barefoot in the Park are just the front-facing work Jake does for MATH. On the admin side, he has also taken on the responsibilities of securing rights, stepping in when needed on tech, teaching after-school classes at Hunter Tannersville Central School District, and co-founding an acting workshop. 

True West was a joy to produce, and we couldn't have done it without Jade Sinskul at Escape Hospitality and the great people at Fellow and CMF. We love finding unusual places to create theater. Still, the more traditional avenues like The Little Mermaid at the Orpheum over the 4th of July weekend are equally crucial to growing our community theater performances and audiences.

The Director

Jake Shipley, just 23 years old, is already making waves in the local arts scene. American Academy of Dramatic Arts graduate, he first read True West as a student and disliked it—because he saw too much of himself in the characters. Revisiting the play for this production, he fell in love with it.

"As much as I'm an actor and director, I'm just the youngest of three brothers," Shipley said. "I wanted to capture that descent into our former selves that happens when adult siblings come home to play, and thought the intimacy of a round stage was the perfect place to do it."

He dedicated the production to his parents, Nan and Neal Shipley, and described his move to the area as serendipitous. A few well-placed phone calls led him to Amy Scheibe, who helped him land both a job and a place to live in a matter of days.

Shipley and all the performers credited Peter and Sarah Finn of the Catskill Mountain Foundation for their ongoing support of arts and culture in the region.

A Community Effort

The production of True West was a collaboration between the Catskill Mountain Foundation, the Maude Adams Theater Hub, and Scribner's Catskill Lodge. Special thanks were given to Jade Sinskul, Carlos Bermudez, Marc Chodock, and the entire staff of Escape Hospitality and the Hunter Foundation.

This performance was not only a theatrical triumph but a testament to the rich pool of talent and collaborative spirit that defines mountaintop theater. With compelling performances, intimate staging, and passionate storytelling, True West reminded everyone in attendance just how vibrant and vital our local arts scene truly is.

 

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Forest Ranger News

Town of Hunter

Greene County

Wilderness Search: On April 17 at 3:55 p.m., Ray Brook Dispatch contacted Forest Ranger Peterson about a lost hiker on the Mink Hollow trail of Sugarloaf Mountain. The Dispatcher guided the hiker back to the trail but remained concerned. Ranger Peterson called the 61-year-old from New York City who told the Ranger he was in good health and planned to continue hiking. When Ranger Peterson learned the subject did not have a map and was unfamiliar with the area, the Ranger suggested the hiker turn around and head back to his vehicle. The hiker refused and said he would call back if he got lost. At 5:02 p.m., the hiker called Ranger Peterson to report he was lost again. At 6 p.m., Rangers Fox and Peterson located the subject and assisted him down the trail to his vehicle. 

Town of Hunter

Greene County

Wilderness Rescue: On April 18 at 5:15 p.m., four Forest Rangers responded to a report of a hiker with an ankle injury in the area of the Devil’s Acre lean-to on Hunter Mountain. Rangers reached the 45-year-old from New Jersey at 8:30 p.m. Rangers and members of the Lexington and Prattsville Fire Departments used a wheeled litter over the icy terrain to return the hiker to the trailhead. Resources were clear at 3:45 a.m.

Town of Hunter

Greene County

Wilderness Search: On April 19 at 5 p.m., Forest Rangers Commerford, Fox, and Peterson responded to a call from a hiker reporting he was lost on the south side of Twin Mountain. Ray Brook Dispatch provided coordinates and Rangers reached the 23-year-old from Brooklyn and assisted him back to the trailhead. Resources were clear at 9:30 p.m.

 

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Malcolm Bilson speaks at International Fortepiano Salon Online

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HUNTER – Renowned fortepianist and scholar Malcolm Bilson, a leading figure in the revival of historical performance, will join hosts Yiheng Yang and Patricia Garcia-Gil at the International Fortepiano Salon Online on Sunday, April 27 at 12:00 PM. “I am delighted to be asked to speak to the International Fortepiano Salon this month,” he says. “I have been working for a time on a lecture about dotted rhythms, about which I have perhaps somewhat radical ideas, and which I hope will stimulate reactions from some of you.” Celebrated for his insightful interpretations and provocative scholarship, Bilson’s presentation promises to be both engaging and illuminating, featuring musical examples and video excerpts.

Malcolm Bilson has been in the forefront of the period-instrument movement for over fifty years. A member of the Cornell Music Department from 1968, he began his pioneering activity in the early 1970s as a performer of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert on late 18th- and early 19th-century pianos. Since then he has proven to be a key contributor to the restoration of the fortepiano to the concert stage and to fresh recordings of the “mainstream” repertory. In addition to an extensive career as a soloist and chamber player, Bilson has toured with the English Baroque Soloists with John Eliot Gardiner, the Academy of Ancient Music with Christopher Hogwood, the Philharmonia Baroque under Nicholas McGegan, Tafelmusik of Toronto, Concerto Köln and other early and modern instrument orchestras around the world. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by Bard College and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Mr. Bilson has recorded the three most important complete cycles of  works for piano by Mozart: the piano concertos with John Eliot Gardiner and the English Baroque Soloists, the piano-violin Sonatas with Sergiu Luca, and the solo piano sonatas. His traversal on period pianos of the Schubert piano sonatas (including the so-called incomplete sonatas) was completed in 2003, and in 2005 a single CD of Haydn sonatas appeared on the Claves label. In the fall of 1994 Bilson and six of his former artist-pupils from Cornell’s D.M.A. program in historical performance practice presented the 32 piano sonatas of Beethoven in New York City, the first time ever that these works had been given as a cycle on period instruments. The New York Times said that “what emerged in these performances was an unusually clear sense of how revolutionary these works must have sounded in their time.” The recording of this series garnered over fifty very positive reviews.

In addition to his activities in Cornell’s performance-practice program, Professor Bilson teaches piano to both graduate and undergraduate students. In the 1990s he was Adjunct Professor at the Eastman School of Music. He has given annual summer fortepiano workshops at various locations in the United States and Europe as well as master classes and lectures (generally in conjunction with solo performances) around the world. In his educational video entitled “Knowing the Score,” released in 2005, Bilson discusses the question: Do we really know how to read the notation of the so-called ‘classical’ masters?

Bilson will speak at the International Fortepiano Salon Online, a program of the Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Piano Performance Museum in Hunter, New York, on Sunday, April 27 at 12 PM. Click here to watch on Facebook and here to watch on YouTube. Ask questions and comment on Professor Bilson’s presentation to join the conversation. www.catskillmtn.org

The following salon entitled “Trailblazers: A New Generation of Asians in Early Music”, will be on May 18 at 2 PM, featuring guest artists Ruiqi Ren, baroque violinist, Hilda Huang, fortepianist, and Alison Lau, vocalist. For Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month (API month) this May, the International Fortepiano Salon engages in conversation with, and highlights the creativity and vision of the next generation of early music leaders who come from an Asian background. Enjoy performances by the guest artists, as well as conversations about their unique journeys and sense of identity and purpose in the classical early music field. 


About Catskill Mountain Foundation
The Catskill Mountain Foundation’s (CMF) aim is to provide educational opportunities in the arts for youth and lifelong learners, to bring the experience of the arts to the Catskill community, and to support artists and art organizations in the development of their work through residencies. Since its founding in 1998, CMF has presented hundreds of music, dance, and theater performances; screened over 1,000 films to tens of thousands of audience members; provided studio arts classes to thousands of students of all ages; and served thousands of art-loving patrons in the Catskill Mountain Foundation Gift Shop. The Catskill Mountain Foundation operates the Doctorow Center for the Arts in Hunter, the Orpheum Performing Arts Center in Tannersville, and the Sugar Maples Center for Creative Arts in Maplecrest, NY.


Since 1998, CMF has raised, generated, and invested close to $16 million in facility development and an excess of $42 million in programming operations, for a total investment in the Catskill community of over $58 million. Catskill Mountain Foundation is supported in part by New York State Council on the Arts, the Greene County Cultural Fund administered by the Greene County Legislature, The Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, The Royce Family Foundation, The Samuel and Esther Doctorow Fund, The Orville and Ethel Slutzky Family Foundation, Platte Clove Bruderhof Community, Bank of Greene County Charitable Foundation, The Greene County Youth Bureau, Marshall & Sterling Insurance, All Souls’ Church, Stewarts Shops, Windham Foundation, and by private donations. CMF believes that the arts can transform the lives of those touched by it and can transform the community. Like us on Facebook, follow us on Instagram, and subscribe to our YouTube channel.


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Mountain Top Library Events

Spring / Summer 2025

Ongoing Events 

Mondays

  • 2-5pm: Monday Meet-Up: Spend the afternoon sipping coffee & socializing - We’ve got games, puzzles, programs, and more! Join us every Monday afternoon to share stories, play games, learn about local history, and enjoy conversation. All ages welcome.

  • 2-4pm: Mahjong: All levels are welcome to join in – instructions are available on-site!

  • 4pm: Yoga with Jessa is back! Conquer Your Case of the Mondays & Start The Week Rejuvenated!

Third Mondays

  • 2pm: “Write Here, Write Now” Would you love to write more often, but find it a little intimidating? Bring your notebook or laptop and join us for these monthly, free-form sessions, led by Pete Preston. Refreshments served! Registration not necessary. Next meeting is Mon. April 21st.

Tuesdays

  • 10:30am: Learn English with Kathleen 

  • 2pm: Scrabble Club: Come play a friendly game of scrabble! All levels welcome.

  • 3:30pm: Qigong Classes with Olympia Ward- Associate YOQI Instructor. YOQI is a combination of Yoga and Qigong (Qigong is an ancient Chinese energy cultivation practice). All levels welcome- the practice can be done sitting or standing, by anyone of any age. Please bring a mat if possible. (Tuesdays, April 8 – May 27)

Thursdays 

  • 2pm: Story Time: Come join us for a story and a craft or playtime. 

Introducing the new Mid-Hudson Library App- Your library, now in your pocket!

Download now to explore the catalog, borrow digital titles, manage your account, and stay connected to your community—all from your phone. Available on iOS and Android. (Search for Mid-Hudson Libraries in your Apps Store.) Search the Catalog, Download eBooks & Audiobooks, Manage Your Account

Place Holds Effortlessly, Connect to Your Home Library

Looking for Tech Help? Our Mountain Top Library Digital Navigators are ready to assist!

Digital navigators are trained, trusted guides who help deal with a variety of technology needs.

To schedule an appointment for FREE individualized support, contact us at 518-589-5707. 

Try Indoor Walking at Mountain Top Library. Is the cold weather keeping you from meeting your daily step goals? Stop in any time the library is open! Take advantage of our open gallery space for a warm, safe, self-paced workout. Tips to optimize your workout will be displayed on site.

Book Sale Extravaganza by Friends of the Mountain Top Library - Fill a Tote for $5! *Includes Books, CDs, DVDs, Puzzles, and Games!

Special Events 

April

Wednesday, 4/16- 1:30-4:30pm: Twin County Family Support Navigator. Open Hours for confidential one-on-one support, groups, resources, referrals, and education on your path with someone with substance use disorder. Contact Bryan Zimmerman, Family Support Navigator @ 518-502-4379 bryanz@twincountyrecoveryservices.org

(Following Wednesdays from 1:30-4:30pm – 5/7, 5/21, 6/4, 6/18, 7/2)

Thursday, 4/24- 6-7:15pm: Family Learning Series- Office of Aging, Youth Bureau & Veteran’s Services / MHA Programs. **Presented by Twin Counties, we are partnering with Hunter-Tannersville School District for this important & informative initiative, which will help families in our community access the resources they need

Saturday, 4/26- 10am-2pm: Earth Day Celebration! Join us for a wild day, as we celebrate our favorite planet and all the life we share it with!

  • 10am-2pm: Chill with Mellow- Our Neighbors from Friends of the Feathered & Furry will be visiting the library. Be sure to make some time to meet Mellow the Owl, and wildlife educator, Genevieve.

  • 11:30am: Robinson’s Wildlife Presents: World of Animals- Part of our annual earth day celebration, Robinson’s Wildlife show has have become one of the mountain top library’s most treasured traditions. 

*This program has been possible thanks to the continued support of Stewart’s Holiday Match Grant & the Friends of the Mountain Top Library

May

Wednesday, 5/21- 1:30-4:30pm: Twin County Family Support Navigator. Open Hours for confidential one-on-one support, groups, resources, referrals, and education on your path with someone with substance use disorder. Contact Bryan Zimmerman, Family Support Navigator @ 518-502-4379 bryanz@twincountyrecoveryservices.org

(Following Wednesdays from 1:30-4:30pm – 6/4, 6/18, 7/2)

Thursday, 5/15- 1-4pm: Mobile Office Hours with the Office of Senator Michelle Hinchey. Meet a constituent service specialist from Senator Hinchey’s team. Appointments are suggested- please call 845-331-3810.

Thursday, 5/15- 6-7:15pm: Family Learning Series- Greene County Sherriff’s Office. **Presented by Twin Counties, we are partnering with Hunter-Tannersville School District for this important & informative initiative, which will help families in our community access the resources they need.

June

Monday, 6/2 – 1-3pm: Poetry Workshop with Jerrice J. Baptiste. Sacred Name- Discover & Name Your Most

Authentic Self. Attend In-Person or Virtually- call 518-589-5707. All Levels Welcome- Ages 16+. **Made possible through CREATE Grant.

Wednesday, 6/4- 1:30-4:30pm: Twin County Family Support Navigator. Open Hours for confidential one-on-one support, groups, resources, referrals, and education on your path with someone with substance use disorder. Contact Bryan Zimmerman, Family Support Navigator @ 518-502-4379 bryanz@twincountyrecoveryservices.org

(Following Wednesdays from 1:30-4:30pm – 6/18, 7/2)

Saturday, 6/14 – 1am-1pm: Poetry Workshop with Jerrice J. Baptiste. Fire of Desire- Learn What Makes You Burn. Attend In-Person or virtually- call 518-589-5707. All Levels Welcome- Ages 16+. **Made possible through CREATE Grant.

Wednesday, 6/18- 1:30-4:30pm: Twin County Family Support Navigator. Open Hours for confidential one-on-one support, groups, resources, referrals, and education on your path with someone with substance use disorder. Contact Bryan Zimmerman, Family Support Navigator @ 518-502-4379 bryanz@twincountyrecoveryservices.org

(Following Wednesday from 1:30-4:30pm –7/2)

Monday, 6/30 – 2-3:30pm: Taiko Drumming Workshop - two beginner workshops (6/30 & 7/1) open to adults and children ages 9 & above. Have a great time learning a traditional art form in a modern way and have a fun afternoon of movement, rhythmic expression, and camaraderie. **Made possible through CREATE Grant.

July

Tuesday, 7/1 – 2-3:30pm: Taiko Drumming Workshop - two beginner workshops (6/30 & 7/1) open to adults and children ages 9 & above. Have a great time learning a traditional art form in a modern way and have a fun afternoon of movement, rhythmic expression, and camaraderie. **Made possible through CREATE Grant.

Wednesday, 7/2- 1:30-4:30pm: Twin County Family Support Navigator. Open Hours for confidential one-on-one support, groups, resources, referrals, and education on your path with someone with substance use disorder. Contact Bryan Zimmerman, Family Support Navigator @ 518-502-4379 bryanz@twincountyrecoveryservices.org 

Wednesday, 7/10 – 11:30am-1:30pm: Mosaic Series with Christine Moss (7/17 & 7/24) Register in advance for all three sessions. **Made possible through CREATE Grant.

August

Thursday, 8/21 – 12-2pm: Nature’s Palette with Laura Leigh Lanchantin. Learn the traditional method of creating watercolor paint from Catskill Mountain rocks and minerals. Workshop includes an open-paint session with pigments, charcoal and watercolor mediums. All levels welcome. Adults only. All materials included. **Made possible through CREATE Grant.

Wednesday, 8/27- 2-3pm: Cardboard Kingdom- A Unique Workshop & Performance. Presented by Paper Heart Puppets. Kids of all ages & their families are invited to build their own simple puppet characters, and then perform with their characters in a new story!

**CREATE Grant: This project is made possible with funds from the Decentralization Program, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature and administered in Greene County by Greene County Council on the Arts dba CREATE Council for Resources to Enrich the Arts, Technology & Education.

 

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New Tannersville Administration Holds First Public Sessions

By Max Oppen

TANNERSVILLE – The setting was familiar, but there were several new faces at the Village of Tannersville's April 7 regular board meeting — the first to be held under the newly elected administration.

The meeting marked the return of Mayor Lee McGunnigle, who reclaimed the office after losing his previous term by just one vote in 2023 to David Schneider. In the recent election, McGunnigle defeated former Deputy Mayor David Kashman for the mayoral role.

Three new village trustees were also present: Kody Leach, Rebecca Fitting, and Gil Adler. In one of David Schneider's final official acts as mayor, he swore in Leach. Although Leach lost his election bid, Schneider appointed him to fill the vacant seat of Trustee Greg Thorpe, who resigned just one day after the election. Former Trustee Dylan Legg chose not to seek re-election.

Early in the meeting, Mayor McGunnigle motioned to approve village vouchers, which passed without issue.

McGunnigle then addressed the ongoing hydrant flushing in the Village, which is temporarily affecting water quality. The final day of flushing was April 22. "The main consideration is the school," McGunnigle said, emphasizing his efforts to minimize disruption to residents. Trustee Fitting expressed concern over the timing of the flushing during the Easter holiday, but McGunnigle stood by the schedule. Hydrant flushing will be over by a few days when this article goes to print.

A bid to repair the Village's skid steer was approved, followed by updates on the Upper Lake Park redevelopment project. McGunnigle reported that the project — funded by a $1.3 million grant through the $10 million Downtown Revitalization Initiative (DRI), which he had helped secure with the Hunter Foundation — is once again underway. So far, $236,000 of the grant has been disbursed, with more than $808,000 still pending.

Blue Spruce Nursery, the project contractor, has resumed work, and the mayor and village officials plan to meet with Studio A, the project's engineers, to ensure the work meets specifications. McGunnigle noted a potential issue with concrete poured at the end of last year's construction phase.

Originally, part of the $1.3 million grant was intended to pave the entrance road to Rip Van Winkle Lake's Upper Lake Park. However, McGunnigle said rising construction costs have made that goal difficult to achieve within budget. "We took some of the sidewalk conductivity funds from the DRI and added them to the upper lake project," he explained. "This is going to happen this summer."

He hoped that paving, lighting, and overall park improvements would be completed in time for summer visitors and residents to enjoy the space. He added that working with the state to streamline the award and review process would be key to opening the park on schedule. "This DRI project was supposed to revitalize Tannersville," McGunnigle said, "and we cannot have this turn into a bureaucracy that doesn't do what it was intended to do."

McGunnigle's comments reflect his campaign criticisms of the previous administration's project handling. The Schneider administration had paused certain initiatives, citing delays from the state — something Schneider publicly attributed to state-level procrastination rather than local issues.

Looking ahead, McGunnigle said he hoped the Tompkins Street and South Main Street entrances to the park would be completed by summer. Planned improvements include road widening and new sidewalks to ensure "safe access to this park" for all.

The mayor also introduced the Village Municipal Solar Project, which will bring solar power to municipal buildings including Village Hall and the RVW Lake Tanners Boathouse. The project's accepted bid was $497,000, and McGunnigle proudly noted it came in under budget, leaving about $40,000 in surplus. He said he's in talks with Hudson Valley Solar about using the extra funds for additional panels.

Although the solar initiative is not a matching grant — meaning the Village must front the full amount before reimbursement by the state — McGunnigle said he is exploring creative financing options to cover the gap and avoid passing interest costs on taxpayers. As a precaution, he introduced a bond resolution, which passed unanimously.

McGunnigle appointed Trustees George Kelly and Kody Leach as park commissioners to improve communication between the Board and the public on the Upper Lake Park project. McGunnigle named Fitting and clerk Robin Dumont in charge of events. He also named Kelly as the new Deputy Mayor.

"Thank you for the opportunity," Kelly said. "I hope to prove myself well."

McGunnigle's Board approved a motion for 17 new streetlights on Tompkins Street, Park Lane, and Spring Street in the Village due to a "historic outcry" for safer lighting, according to McGunnigle. The new street lights will be LED lighting. 

McGunnigle then brought up the Village's Sewer Law, which was recently amended back to 250 feet from a residence from 100 feet. The 100-foot law curtailed development on several parcels in the Village. McGunnigle said he was approached by the head of the NYC DEP to discuss any changes in this law before they go into effect. McGunnigle says the meeting with DEP will be in late May at the latest.

The next Village Board Meeting is at 5:30 pm on May 8 at 1 Park Lane.

 

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