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Local History by Dede Terns-Thorpe - SKETCHES OF CATSKILL – RECORDER AND DEMOCRAT OFFICE – 1868 – Author

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 1/19/26 | 1/19/26



JAMES D. PINCKNEY, with articles by Thurlow Weed, Edwin Croswell, S. Sherwood Day, and Joseph Hallock.  (This article is abbreviated for space concerns.)

As you walk among any of our local cemeteries, you’ll probably see your own family name (or relatives) and think about the ways they may have altered our history. Whether businesspeople, teachers, craftsmen, policemen, hospital workers, or workers in other fields, they made a difference. As Justine Hommel, our past historian always said, “It’s people who made our history.” As an example, the Haines Family Association (spearheaded by Nancy Haines McGowan) placed new markers near 5 or 6 headstones in the Evergreen Cemetery: reminding people of the history brought by the Haines Family to the Town. Above is one of the new markers for Samuel Haines Gravestone, the first settler in the Town of Hunter.

August 6, 1863 –

A section from this small booklet is about a cemetery that we frequently pass. This cemetery, the Village of Catskill Cemetery, is on the corner of Thompson and Spring Street (Route 385), sitting high about the village.

The author talked about his first memory of a Catskill Cemetery, an old graveyard at the corner of Broad and Livingston Streets. He said the remains of those buried were moved to the ground on the hill. The author remembers assisting his father in surveying and laying out lots on Thompson and Spring. This cemetery has frequently increased its boundaries in this “City of the Dead.”

The author talked about how the present Cemetery must have been selected by a person possessing a love for beauty in Nature. Looking West takes in the whole range of mountains; up the hillside rises the hum of the busy Catskill Village, and Northwest a view of which Thomas Cole would paint.

Cemeteries and Death reduce all men, and here the rich and the poor, the haughty and the humble “lie down, alike, in the dust.”

Next week we’ll continue with some further information from the Sketches of Catskill, and share the author’s thoughts on the Hop-o-nose.

Thanks for reading.

Dede Terns-Thorpe/Hunterhistorian@gmail.com


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ASF Welcomes Brian Cahalan and Jason Heller to Advancement and Development Advisory Board

WINDHAM – The Adaptive Sports Foundation (ASF) has announced that Brian Cahalan and Dr. Jason Heller has been accepted to its Advancement and Development Advisory (A&D) Board. 

Cahalan is very familiar with the ASF and its mission, as he is currently in his fourth season volunteering as a snowboard instructor with the organization. Cahalan serves as a Managing Director in BMO Capital Markets’ Global Prime Finance and U.S. Securities Finance business, where he leads prime brokerage and securities finance relationships with institutional clients. He brings decades of experience in equity finance, funding and capital markets, and is widely recognized in industry associations and trade publications as a senior leader in the securities finance space. 

Like Cahalan, Heller also has personal ties to the ASF. Heller is a first-year ASF volunteer instructor and has son who is a student in the program. A doctor in veterinary medicine, Heller is the driving force behind East Northport Animal Hospital, bringing over 30 years of experience and a strong commitment to preventative medicine. He is dedicated to providing exceptional care to every pet and actively contributes to the community by supporting local shelters, mentoring students and advocating for animal welfare. Heller previously worked as a snowboard instructor at Hunter Mountain.

The ASF's Advancement and Development Advisory Board is an advisory board whose members serve as ambassadors for the Foundation and is focused on fundraising, advancement and broadening the reach and brand of the ASF.

About the Adaptive Sports Foundation

For over 40 years the ASF has been providing sports and recreation opportunities to thousands in the disabled community. Since then, it has grown into what it is today, an organization that provides year-round services out of its own slope-side lodge, the Gwen Allard Adaptive Sports Center. All this has been accomplished over the years thanks to many donors and an impressive legion of volunteers, who can be seen in their iconic green jackets sliding down the snow-white slopes. The ASF's mission is made possible through the generous support of Windham Mountain Club. 

The Adaptive Sports Foundation is a non-profit organization that provides profound and life changing experiences for children and adults with physical disabilities, cognitive disabilities and chronic illnesses through outdoor physical activity, education, support and community. For more information about the Adaptive Sports Foundation please visit www.adaptivesportsfoundation.org.


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Ashland Speaks

By Lula Anderson

We're halfway through January, and according to the weathermen we're halfway through meteorologist winter.  We've had a brief January thaw which is good for morale.  We had time to take down, and put away, our outdoor decorations.  Stakes came out of the ground so even they are stored.  Have you been following through on your resolutions?  I think most of us have resolved to have a healthy year ahead.  Get up and  move more.  When it's nice go out for a walk, eat healthier, and develop a healthy sleep pattern.  Maybe consider volunteering more.  There is a great need for those of us over the age of 80 , and especially those over 90, for transportation to doctor appointments, going to church activities, and even shopping.  You don't realize the need for medical transportation until your spouse dies and you have no one to take you to eye appointments or anything that needs sedation.  Just an extra pair of eyes and ears at the doctor's office is a big help as we tend to forget important issues.  

Thinking about doctor appointments, the WAJPL meeting for January was cancelled due to the flu outbreak.  We figured that we didn't need to be in a group of people at our vulnerable age.  Hopefully we will be able to meet in February. In the meantime, remember that the money for the trip to VA International Tattoo in April is due plus dues for 2026 .  Checks should be mailed to WAJPL Golden Age Club  PO Box 96 Hensonville, NY 12439. 

Kaaterskill UMC is still holding Soup Tuesday, every other Tuesday in the Blue Room of the church in Tannersville.  Plus the Jewett Nutrition Center is still serving meals Monday thru Friday.  Call a day ahead to make your reservation at 518-236-4392,  It's open to all residents over the age of 60, and a good place to meet for a reasonably priced ($4)  nutritious meal, served by a very friendly staff on china plates and real flatware.  See the monthly menu in the Greene County RoundTalble available at your local Post Office or on line.  

Prayers to Sandy and Barry Esbin, Phyllis Hillis-Thorpe, John O'Brien, Greg Beckmann, Tricia LoPresti.Opal DeLong, Nellis and Christine Newcomb.

AS I REMEMBER IT

I watch a lot of television since I am lo longer able to drive, and I keep seeing car commercials where for only a couple of thousand sown and monthly payments you can own a brand new car.  I think that's great, but where do I have to go to get this car?  Remember when we had car dealerships here on the Mountain Top?  Who didn't go to Ashland and get their brand new Chevy from George Dodge?  Were you a Buick fan?  Crandall's in Windham could get you one.  Lyle Sokoll sold Fords, Fancher's in Hensonville sold Oldsmobiles and Stewart's in Maplecrest had GMC trucks.  Most sold new and used vehicles, and you didn't have to travel far to look around.  

The older I get, the more I bemoan the loss of business on the Mountain Top.  Where do we go for groceries?  Jim's Great American in Prattsville, Topps in Tannersville, Hannaford in Cairo.  No "I ran out of ---- and need it for the recipe I'm making.  All shopping trips have to be planned in advance and heaven forbid you leave your list at home.  The local stores are priced with the weekend visitors in mind.  Many places have delivery service, but we're just a hair too far away for it.  I've done pick-up orders, but that means I still have to travel to get it.  

Wouldn't it be nice to be able to support our local merchants without breaking the bank?


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Cairo Receives Grant for Canna Park

CAIRO — The Town of Cairo will rehabilitate two Little League ballfields at Angelo Canna Town Park to improve drainage, expand access, and enhance recreational opportunities for youth and families with $646,500 from a state grant. 

The project will address long-standing flooding issues that have often caused game cancellations by upgrading field conditions and supporting inclusive community use through accessible improvements and park amenity enhancements.


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Cairo-Durham Announces Assessment Results



CAIRO — The Cairo-Durham Central School District is proud to announce that students have exceeded both New York State and regional averages on the 2024–25 assessments, demonstrating remarkable academic growth across multiple grade levels and content areas. Significant gains in mathematics, English Language Arts (ELA), and science highlight the district’s continued commitment to high-quality instruction and collaborative teaching practices.

Among the most notable achievements:

Grade 4 Mathematics proficiency increased dramatically from 44% in 2022–23 to 82% in 2024–25, nearly doubling in just three years. During that same period, Cairo-Durham’s regional rank improved from 14th to 1st place out of 21 districts.

Grade 5 Mathematics proficiency rose from 20% in 2018–19 to 65% in 2024–25, representing outstanding growth over six years. The district’s rank climbed from 19th to 3rd out of 21 districts.

Grade 8 Mathematics showed significant gains in a short timeframe, with proficiency increasing from 12% in 2023–24 to 43% in 2024–25. Regional rank improved from 19th to 10th place in just two years.

Grade 5 English Language Arts emerged as the district’s most improved area since 2018–19, with proficiency increasing by 50 percentage points and regional rank rising from 17th to 4th out of 21 districts.

Grade 5 Science proficiency increased from 24% in 2023–24 to 52% in 2024–25, a 28-point gain in one year, with regional rank improving from 16th to 8th place.

Overall, the district’s average regional rank improved from 15 in 2023–24 to 11.25 in 2024–25, reflecting consistent progress across grade levels and subject areas.

District and school administrators attribute this success to the implementation of Professional Learning Communities (PLCs). Cairo-Durham educators meet weekly to identify essential standards, analyze student learning data, and collaboratively adapt instruction to meet student needs.

“For years our teachers have committed themselves to being collaborative, focusing on learning, and tracking student results,” said Mr. Christopher Stein, Cairo-Durham Elementary Principal. “By ensuring high-quality instruction for all of our students, they are now performing at higher levels than ever before. As the building principal, I am very proud of the work of the teachers, and the achievement of our students.”

“It’s incredible to see the hard, collaborative work of our teachers coming to fruition in the success of our students,” added Ms. Catherine Dodig, Cairo-Durham Middle/High School Principal. “I’m so proud of both our instructional staff and our students for the noticeable progress that is being made.”

“These outstanding results are the product of focused instructional practices, regular assessment review, and strong collaboration among our Grade 5 teachers,” said Ms. Gretchen Flubacher, Grade 5 Teacher at Cairo-Durham Elementary School. “Most importantly, they reflect our students’ hard work and our educators’ commitment to high-quality and rigorous teaching every day.”

The Cairo-Durham Central School District remains committed to continuous improvement and looks forward to building on this momentum to ensure all students achieve academic success.


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Dilbert Comic Strip Creator and WAJ Grad Scott Adams Dies at 68

Scott Adams passed away on Tuesday after a battle with cancer. AP photo.


By Andrea Macko

WINDHAM―Long before he created the world famous comic strip Dilbert, Scott Adams called the mountaintop of Greene County his home. Adams, who grew up in Windham, died Tuesday after a battle with cancer. He was 68.

Adams’ ex-wife, Shelly Miles, confirmed his death on a livestream posted to his social media accounts.

“Unfortunately, this is not good news,” Miles said, reading a final message written by Adams.

“I had an amazing life,” Adams stated in part. “I gave it everything I had.”

Adams announced last year that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer that had spread to his bones. He was under Hospice care in his Northern California home.

A 1975 graduate of the Windham-Ashland-Jewett Central School District, he was valedictorian of his class. Adams, who had been doodling and drawing comics since he was a kid, went on to earn a bachelor’s degree from Hartwick College and an MBA from the University of California.

By the 1980s, he found himself in the corporate world of the Pacific Bell telephone company where idiosyncrasies and office politics inspired him to create Dilbert, a white-collar engineer whose sarcasm resonated with frustrated cubicle workers.

Adams eventually pitched his comic strip to publishers and in 1989 it was picked up by United Features Syndicate.

A mainstay of the funny pages for more than three decades, at its peak Dilbert appeared in 2,000 newspapers in more than 65 countries and two dozen languages.

In 1997, Adams won the National Cartoonist Society’s Reuben Award, one of the most respected recognitions for cartoonists. Later that year, Dilbert became the first fictional character to be named among Time magazine’s list of the top influential Americans.

But in 2023, Dilbert was dropped by numerous newspapers and its distributor, Andrews McMeel Universal, after Adams made comments that many deemed to be racist in one of his YouTube videos.

Adams described black Americans a "hate group" in response to a Rasmussen Reports’ poll in which people were asked to agree or disagree with the phrase: "It's OK to be white." According to the purported results, 53% of black respondents agreed with the statement, but 26% disagreed and others were not sure.

"Based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from black people,” Adams had said in part.

His cancellation is still addressed today on his website, Dilbert.com, where Adams states, “No news about public figures is ever true and in context. Never.”

“I was speaking hyperbolically, of course, because we Americans don't have an option of staying away from each other,” he wrote. “But it did get a lot of attention, as I hoped. (More than I planned, actually.)”

Adams began self-publishing his daily comic strip under the new name Dilbert Reborn via subscription through the platform Rumble and continued to host his podcast, "Real Coffee With Scott Adams," discussing current social and political issues.

Over the years, he authored numerous books, including How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big, Win Bigly: Persuasion in a World Where Facts Don't Matter and God’s Debris: A Thought Experiment.

"If you can come to peace with the fact that you're surrounded by idiots, you'll realize that resistance is futile, your tension will dissipate, and you can sit back and have a good laugh at the expense of others," he wrote in his 1996 book The Dilbert Principle.

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump remembered Adams as a “Great Influencer.”

"He was a fantastic guy, who liked and respected me when it wasn’t fashionable to do so. He bravely fought a long battle against a terrible disease. My condolences go out to his family, and all of his many friends and listeners,” the president said.

In Adam’s final message, written on New Year’s Day and read Tuesday by Miles, he stated, “If you are reading this, things did not go well for me.”

“Next, many of my Christian friends have asked me to find Jesus before I go. I'm not a believer, but I have to admit the risk-reward calculation for doing so looks so attractive to me, so here I go,” Adams continued.

“The part about me not being a believer should be quite quickly resolved if I wake up in heaven. I won't need any more convincing than that,” he wrote. “I hope I'm still qualified for entry.”


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Finneran Endorsed by Third Act

ALBANY — Third Act voted to endorse Mary Finneran for the democratic primary for Assembly District 102.  Finneran said that she felt very honored, especially as primary endorsements by this group are not common, chapter leader Michael Richardson informed Finneran, except in cases of strong climate advocates.

On January 12th Mary was highly honored again with an endorsement from the NY Progressive Action Network (NYPAN) which was born out of the Bernie Sanders' campaign.   

This makes six total endorsements, three from organizations and three from elected officials. 


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BETTER THAN HEARSAY - Timeless Time

“This is not a choice. I do this because I have to,” says artist Joseph Zito, undertaking a marble sculpture that will take two years to finish. For more information visit josephzito.com or email josephzito57@gmail.com.



“First I had to build the gantry with chain hoists just to get it in the studio and move it around,” says Joseph Zito of the 2,500 pound marble block he will transform into a feminine sculpture, continuing to forge his legacy.



An abstract/conceptual of the artist’s weight in aluminum (above) and copper (below), inside his former loft studio in Brooklyn.



By Michael Ryan

IN THE MOUNTAINS - There is an art studio in the mountains between the towns of Durham and Windham where wind-swooshed pine trees and wisening oaks cloister the timeless, inner fulfillment of Joseph Zito.

“This isn’t a choice. I do this because I have to. If I didn’t, I would die,” says Zito of his sculpting, such as the feminine form he has undertaken that will easily occupy the next two years of his existence.

Pinpointing precisely when this latest project began requires a grasping of eternity, a seeming impossibility in mere words and thought. 

The work itself is the answer, but not the master carpentry jobs Zito does to pay the bills in the outer world which he says is real and, then again, not.

His greater task is letting the solitude of his remote studio passionately and patiently guide his hands in the finding and experiencing of the sculpture, himself and the unknowable - or is it?

In everyday terms, Zito’s artistic journey started in childhood in Brooklyn. “Michelangelo was my hero from when I was five years old,” he says, initially delving into painting.

He studied at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan and in Paris before coming to a realization in the mid-1980’s.

“I had been painting on wood structures and I asked myself, ‘why do I paint on them when I can make them?’” Zito said in a recent studio interview.

A fresh means of expression burgeoned, described in a review of his work, titled Tempus Fugit (Time Flies), exhibited at Lennon Weinberg Gallery in 2013, one of multiple international shows in his lifetime, thus far.

“This is the fourth in a series of thematic exhibitions in which Zito further examines the confoundhuman condition of what it means to live, to love, and to lose,” the review states.

“The works…function as testaments of both acknowledgement and defiance that time cannot be stopped, the past cannot be retrieved, and what has been lost cannot be gained back.

“To be both living and dying simultaneously is a conundrum that cannot be blindly accepted and explained away,” the review states.

“Zito confronts and grapples with this paradox by creating mechanized sculptures such as Inversion, 2012, and Untitled (Clock), 2012 which operate backwards and counter-clockwise, respectively.”

The pieces “seek to turn back time, to travel in reverse, to head towards the beginning instead of the end,” such as a series of hourglass sculptures “that have been rendered inert; not even one grain of sand is permitted to pass and mark a second gone by,” the review states.

Zito, born in 1957, is anything but motionless. A book has been written about him. His artistry is included in many museums and private collections. His latest sculpture harkens both to and fro.

He has imported a ton-and-a-quarter block of Carrara marble requiring a special gantry, he built, simply to get it in the studio, which he also built.

The stone arrived in the mountains from the legendary quarries of Italy, “the same place Michelangelo got his marble,” Zito says.

“I am 69 years old. I don’t even know if I can accomplish what I must but I will just keep pushing. You are either an artist or not. You can’t choose to be one,” he says.

“I need to do a few more great pieces for my legacy. It is about ego, I understand, but that’s what we do. We want to be part of history.

”I work seven days a week,” Zito says. “When I am sculpting, I need my Baroque classical music and nothing else. I’m never in such peace as when I am in my studio, sculpting. I lose sense of time.”






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LEGISLATURE STUFF - The Same Old and the Very New

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - The old adage about something or someone moving slower than molasses in January cannot be applied to the Greene County Legislature and construction of the new Justice Center.

Mid-winter is traditionally a sluggish news period, legislatively speaking, taking care of routine annual designations and appointments..

Those details are being mundanely but necessarily accomplished including the appointment of Tanya Ernst as Clerk of the Legislature for the remainder of a 3-year term set to expire on December 31, 2027.

Ernst, in November, had been named temporary Acting Clerk following the sudden passing of longtime and highly respected clerk Tammy Sciavillo.

Ernst will continue in her role as confidential assistant to county administrator Shaun Groden.

Lawmakers, upon the recommendation of county treasurer Keith Valentine, designated the official bank depositories and the maximum amounts of money which may be kept on deposit in each as follows:

National Bank of Coxsackie ($25 million), Greene County Commercial Bank, Catskill ($125 million), JP Morgan Chase, Saugerties ($25 million), NBT Bank, Windham ($25 million) and Key Bank, Catskill ($25 million).

All funds deposited in designated depositories will be in the form of

checking accounts, Money Market accounts or Certificates of Deposit and savings accounts,” the legislative resolution states.

Lawmakers selected the Mountain Eagle, a weekly publication based in Schoharie, and the Times Union, a daily publication headquartered in Albany, as official newspapers for the county. 

The Mountain Eagle was chosen by Republican Party members of the legislature as the official Republican newspaper to publish Election

Notices and the Official Canvass for 2026.

Republicans, who number eleven on the 14-member legislature, also chose the Mountain Eagle to publish Concurrent Resolutions and Laws for 2026.

The Mountain Eagle was named by Democratic Party members of the legislature to publish Concurrent Resolutions and Laws for 2026.

Democrats, numbering 2 on the 14-member legislature, chose The Daily Freeman, based in Kingston, as their official paper to publish Election Notices and the Official Canvass for 2026.

Lawmakers in both parties declared that the Mountain Eagle, Times Union and Daily Freeman are, fairly representing the principles of the Party to which we belong,” a fine journalistic tribute.

Legislature committee membership is staying the same as 2025, as follows (with the chairperson of the committee listed first):

—COUNTY RESOURCES, Michael Bulich (District 1, Catskill), James Thorington (District 6, Ashland, Jewett, Prattsville & Windham) Sherry True (District 8, Cairo), Jay Lucas (District 1, Catskill), Thomas Hobart (District 2, Coxsackie);

—COUNTY SERVICES, Sherry True, Patty Handel (District 9, Durham), Daryl Legg (District 7, Halcott, Hunter, Lexington), James OConnell (District 3, Athens) Michael Lanuto (District 1, Catskill) and Lucas;

—ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND TOURISM, Daryl Legg, Handel, True, Thorington, Bulich, Lanuto;

—FINANCE, Charles Martinez (District 2, Coxsackie), Greg Davis (District 4, Greenville),  Legg, Bulich, True, Lanuto;

—GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS, Greg Davis, Martinez, OConnell, Hobart, Lucas, Legg;

—HEALTH SERVICES, Patty Handel, Davis, True, Hobart, OConnell, Lanuto;

—PUBLIC SAFETY, James Thorington, Martinez, Handel, Davis, Lanuto, Hobart;

—PUBLIC WORKS, James OConnell, Thorington, Martinez, Bulich, Handel, Legg.

Legislature chairman Patrick Linger, the Majority Leader Matthew Luvera and the Minority Leader, Harry Lennon, have input on every committee.

All of the above appointments and designations have been approved in committee, earlier this month, awaiting passage by the full board on January 21, which is expected.

Meanwhile, work on the Justice Center is progressing on schedule and well within the original $28.8 million project budget, officials say.

The new wing on the county courthouse was deemed necessary to provide more room for the public defender and district attorney offices that are squeezed for space and still growing.

They are being joined by the New York State Office of Court Administration, a most welcome partner in terms of their $5 million up front contribution to the initial cost and accompanying $140,000 yearly lease.

Occupancy of the 3-story addition, including a bottom floor parking garage, is still scheduled for early April, marking a year since groundbreaking.

Moving-in could commence prior to April, according to county administrator Shaun Groden, noting furniture and equipment are being purchased.

Construction crews were slated to blast through the walls of the historic courthouse in December, creating a glass-lined, elevated walkway connecting the structures, a task that is now nearly completion.


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Out Lexington Way

By Christine Dwon

There is a free workshop in West Kill/Lexington on Saturday, Jan. 17 from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.  For information and location call Helle Thorning at 518-255-8657 or hellethorningwine@gmail.com.  These free workshops are designed to give you practical strategies for coping with stress and change; tools to support emotional well being; ways to stay socially connected and access to information about mental health support.  The workshop facilitators are Dr. Helle Thorning, a licensed clinical social worker, author, educator in behavioral health and teaches mental health professionals locally and abroad and Gail Spindell, a Psychotherapist in private practice with individuals, couples and groups.  She specializes in treating anxiety, depression and other emotional states that distract from living fully.  

Saturday, Jan. 17 is National Popcorn Day.  Come to the Hunter Public Library, 7964 Main Street, Hunter, for a free bag of popcorn and make a popcorn craft.

Happy birthday to reporter extraordinaire, Michael Ryan on Thursday, Jan. 15.

Friday, Jan. 16 we wish Jannel Mellott a very happy birthday.

Bridget Osborn Watson’s birthday is Saturday, Jan. 17.

Wednesday, Jan. 21 is Kaitlin Knapp’s birthday.

Helen Kerr’s birthday is Thursday, Jan. 22.

Best wishes to all.

The Greene County Senior Nutrition Program menu for the week of Jan. 19 – Jan. 23 is as follows:  Monday—Martin Luther King, Jr. Day—Department of Human Services closed; Tuesday—Chicken Parmesan, penne pasta, Italian mixed vegetables, fruit cocktail; Wednesday—Pork chop with gravy, applesauce, green beans, sweet potato, birthday cake; Thursday—Beef barley stew, broccoli, peanut butter swirl brownie; Friday—Chef’s Choice.  All persons 60 and older are invited to attend.  Meals served at noon, suggested $4 donation for each meal.  Congregate reservations are required by noon at least a day in advance.  If you reserve a meal and are unable to attend, please call as soon as you can to cancel.  The number to call for the Senior Service Center at the Jewett Municipal Building, 3547 Route 23C, Jewett is 518-263-4392.

The next Fellowship Lunch at the Kaaterskill UMC will be Tuesday, Jan. 27 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.  Come and enjoy a free meal and fellowship.  All are invited.

On Tuesday, Jan. 27 a Medicare Representative from Greene County Department of Human Services will be at the Jewett Senior Service Center at 11:45 a.m. to help you stay informed, understand your benefits and make the most of your Medicare Coverage.  If you would like to stay for lunch, please call 518-263-4392 at least a day in advance to reserve your meal.

National Lego Day is Wednesday, Jan. 28.  You are invited to come to the Hunter Public Library and create something with the library’s Lego blocks.  Your creations will be put on display during the month of February and a photo on Facebook.

You can enjoy hot chocolate at the Hunter Public Library to celebrate Hot Chocolate Day on Thursday, Jan. 29 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Nominations are open for 2026 Greene County Senior Citizen Awards.  The Advisory Council to the Greene County Department for the Aging (Human Services) announces that nominations are being accepted for the Greene County Senior Citizen Awards.  The two annual awards are Senior Citizen of the Year and Outstanding Contribution by a Senior Citizen.  The awards are to recognize the outstanding achievements of senior citizens who have volunteered their time and energy to help other people, their communities and/or to special projects.  The dedication of these volunteers help to make Greene County a better place for all of us.  The individuals chosen on the county level will represent Greene County at New York State Office for the Aging’s (NYSOFA) annual Older New Yorkers Day Luncheon in Albany.  Any Greene County resident age 60 or older can be nominated for these awards.  Achievements must be voluntary in nature, performed in Greene County and not part of paid employment.  Past award winners may be nominated only if seven or more years have passed since last recognized.  If you know someone who deserves this recognition, contact the Greene County Department of Human Services at 518-719-3555 for an official nomination form.  Incomplete forms will not be considered as eligible.  Any inquiries for further information may also be directed to the department.  Deadline for entries is Jan. 31, 2026.

Thank you to all law enforcement, firefighters, EMS, dispatchers, volunteers, healthcare providers, veterans, actively serving military, farmers, truck drivers and so many more.

Prayers for all who are dealing with loss, illnesses, healing, difficulties, our country, our military and their families, the world.

Until next week take care, be thankful, be safe, be respectful of others and please be kind to one another.  Your act of kindness may change someone’s life.


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