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Honoring MacGregor

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 2/28/25 | 2/28/25

WINDHAM - If ever there was an infinitesimal fact that would somehow end up being integral,  Billy MacGregor was your guy to have figured that out, already have found it and be busy putting it to right use.

MacGregor passed away on February 20, his birthday, something he might have found worthy of a smile, since he was fond of joking, and him sort of arriving and leaving in the same sunrise.

There were 96 years in-between, of course, although that didn’t seem the case, a few months ago, when he made his still spry presence felt at a Windham town board public hearing that swirled with controversy.

A former town councilman himself, Billy sat in the front row of the crowded meeting room, patiently awaiting his turn to speak. 

It is irrelevant what the issue was, but Billy had his hands folded gently atop  a book in his lap, looking for all the world as if seated in a church pew.

He was that reverent even if what he held was no heavenly Bible. It was a a much more mundane copy of Municipal Law and Practice.

When it came time to share his thoughts, he flipped to a book-marked page and began reading in his high-pitched, slightly scratchy voice that was never hesitant and proudly loud enough to be heard in every corner.

People who didn’t know him rolled their eyes at first, seeing this frailish, white-haired man painstakingly and word-for-word, recite some legal mumbo-jumbo or government particularity.

Billy could have been a schoolboy giving an oral report, he was that precise and properly intent on being certain he quoted it correctly.

People got sincerely respectful when it dawned on them the nonagenarian was making darn good points, switching to some hand-written scrawl on wrinkled paper to finish adding his two cents. 

That wasn’t the only occasion Billy MacGregor said his piece. There were many such nights in 15 years as a councilman and as a private citizen.

MacGregor made his living in the printing trade, a lithographer, earning his credentials attending night school at Hofstra University. 

He was born in Queens, loved American history and served in the Army in the early 1950’s, stationed in Germany during the Korean War.

Billy also loved skiing which took him from the Big Apple to the mountains where his Letters to the Editor in the local newspaper were clever and unwaveringly erudite.

He was -  and probably still is - nothing if not fastidious and if truth be told it could be exasperating, him honing in on the tiniest smidgeon of a detail as the clock ticked…and ticked.

Small towns like Windham are lucky to have folks like him, though, because the unequivocal actuality is Billy did it from the heart.

“Before he would make a statement on whatever it was, he would do all the research to back up what he was talking about,” Windham town supervisor Thomas Hoyt says.

And hitting a more meaningful nail on the head, Hoyt says, “Billy didn’t have a mean bone in his body. He was who we mean when we say someone is a true gentleman.”


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County Funds Upstreaming to Mountaintop Historical Society

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - Reconfiguring gravity, money will be flowing up from the Greene County Legislature to the Mountaintop Historical Society.

Lawmakers, led by Daryl Legg (District 7, Hunter, Lexington, Halcott), have approved a pair of resolutions directing funding to the archives center for current operations and future possibilities.

The first measure provides $15,000 annually for the MTHS, “in their efforts to provide tourists from around the State, the nation and the world, as well as local residents, opportunities to learn more about what is happening in the Catskill Mountaintop Region of Greene County.”

Lawmakers also authorized the county’s Economic Development, Tourism

and Planning Department to, “prepare and solicit proposals for an evaluation for the expansion of the MTHS parking facilities.”

That expansion would be done, “in an effort to accommodate the high number of tourists who frequently visit the Clove, Kaaterskill Falls, the mountaintop resorts and the numerous hiking trails” in the high hills.

And with an eye toward the horizon and beyond, the county will look closely  at increasing its presence in ski country, potentially creating a tourism-based center on the MTHS grounds.

It would function as a branch of the existing county Tourism Center located adjacent to the New York State Thruway entrance outside Catskill.

If that occurs, county officials will seek to partner with the State Department of Environmental Conservation on the project, noting DEC has been similarly enmeshed in developing the popular Kaaterskill Rail Trail.

All the puzzle pieces are aimed at “enhancing and accommodating” more tourism, the resolution states, while recognizing the vital and significant economic contributions of the mountaintop region.

The multi-phased actions come in the aftermath of massive parking issues the past few summers along Route 23A, leading to the mountaintop from the valley, and a series of talks involving the MTHS and county leaders.

Lawmakers have set a precedent for the support, financially helping the Bronck House, in the town of Coxsackie, with preservation and modernization, along with backing of other historic sites.

“This is the same concept, and this may morph into more of a discussion about the county taking over a building as a tourism center,” legislature chairman Patrick Linger says. 

“It would let the Historical Society concentrate on what it does best, and the hope is the county could do the parking and perhaps put up kiosk for economic development,” Linger says.

The county’s yearly funding will “benefit everyday operations,” Linger says. “We see this as a way to develop the campus further. Parking is just the first step,” a plan expected to quickly gain momentum.

Legg, the former Hunter town supervisor, was in the thick of the problem, at the height of the pandemic, when parking along twisting and climbing Route 23A became a law enforcement and safety nightmare.

Efforts were made to get the mayhem under control, including the MTHS opening its lands for paid parking, teaming with local organizations.

While the end of the pandemic eased the vehicular congestion, the Clove and Kaaterskill Falls remain internationally-renowned destination spots.

“People come here from all over the world,” says Legg, who serves as chairman of the legislative Economic Development committee.

“The Historical Society depends on donations and fundraisers. It is getting more expensive to operate, like everything else,” Legg says.

“But this doesn’t just help them. It will help the county as a whole. It’s not the first time the county has done this. It’s the first time here,” Legg says.

Harry Lennon, the legislative Minority Leader, praised Legg and his fellow colleagues for bipartisan movement forward on the project.

“This is a win-win for the county and the mountaintop,” Lennon said. “The county receives a lot of revenue from tourism on the mountaintop.

“We, as a board, recognize that and if we can improve the parking and the [MTHS] grounds, and have a tourism center on that end of the county, it would be even better,” Lennon said.

“Daryl was in the middle of this from the start, before he became chairman of Economic Development, and I commend him for seeing this through,” Lennon said.

The county’s planners will be tasked with beginning the pre-design phase related to building and user requirements, space programming and conceptual design, as well as giving input on probable costs.

County administrator Shaun Groden said DEC will likely be asked to lend physical and fiscal support with parking lot excavation and asphalt costs.


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LEGISLATURE STUFF An Unusual Awarding

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - An unusual situation called for an offbeat solution when the Greene County Legislature announced its “Employee of the Year.”

County lawmakers, at their 39th Annual Employee Recognition Night, last Wednesday, announced that one of their own, legislature clerk Tammy Sciavillo, was the awardee for 2024.

While her selection was not surprising, given Sciavillo’s lengthy and loyal career, the trick was keeping it a surprise.

Sciavillo, as part of her job, is the person through whom virtually every document and piece of paper must pass prior to becoming official.

It is Sciavillo’s task, therefore, to type up the annual Employee Recognition information which in this particular case involved hers truly.

Slipping into stealth mode, lawmakers “sent her a fake story,” legislature chairman Patrick Linger revealed, following the presentation.

The pseudo story reported the recipient was Warren Hart, director of the county’s Economic Development, Tourism & Planning department.

Hart, who also serves as the deputy county administrator, is in the midst of gradually retiring so the choice was perfectly logical and deserved.

Linger says Sciavillo diligently “typed it up,” with another administrative staffer stashing the imposter in Hart’s conference room drawer.

If the legislature clerk was aware beforehand or not, the jig was up as soon as the award ceremony began, according to Linger.

“Tammy knew something was going on the minute she saw her father walk in the door” to the meeting room, Linger said, good-naturedly laughing.

“She started shaking like a leaf. We felt horrible doing that to her because we count on her for everything but we had to think outside the box.”

Accepting the professional kudos with her customary quiet, the legislature clerk soon thereafter returned to her post, resuming her duties.

Sciavillo began her career in 1994, initially with Economic Development before moving to Human Resources and finally the legislature.

Since the spring of 1999, “every resolution, every minute of every meeting taking place at Greene County government bears testimony to her tireless work ethic, focus and dedication,” Linger stated, reading the award.

“Every agenda, every notice, every advertisement, every local law, every legislative memorandum and countless other documents and emails emanating from the legislature have her fingerprints on them.”

Having been the acting clerk of the legislature for a quarter century, Linger said Sciavillo, “applies a wealth of institutional knowledge every day and willingly shares that knowledge with all other departments.

“You can walk into the legislative office anytime and find her either wearing a headset and carefully typing minutes or searching records from the distant past looking for the proverbial needle in a haystack.

“She is always amenable to interruption, always with a welcoming smile  and always asking what it is she can do to help you,” Linger said.

“Simply put, Tammy Sciavillo is essential in steering this ship that we all call Greene County and I can think of no one more deserving of this honor.”

Recognition was also accorded to the Greene County “Team of the Year” and the “Chairman’s Award.”

A trio of Department of Social Services workers were named “Team of the Year;” Laura Becker (director of eligibility), joined by Stacey Smith and Maureen Grupe (principal examiners).

The team implemented AI technology during the COVID-19 pandemic to help overcome staffing shortages, earning praise from State officials who dubbed them one of the “Fab Five” counties to go “above and beyond.”

Picked for the “Chairman’s Award” were three county Early Intervention Program staffers; Kelly Kircher (director) with Sandra Dauski and Jillian Fitzgerald (service coordinators).

Linger noted the team has, “remained unwavering in their commitment to serving the community” in the midst of a complete turnover in staff and in-house electronic system failures, severely complicating daily workload.


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“The Vanishing Elephant” Coming to Orpheum Theater

By Michael Ryan

TANNERSVILLE - An elephant getting lost in these Catskill mountains for nearly two weeks, 68 years ago, ain’t no big thing compared to what’s happening to a pachyderm at the Orpheum Theater, this weekend.

A traveling thespian troupe will be performing “The Vanishing Elephant” on March 2, at 2 p.m., inside the Tannersville performing arts center.

It is no secret that Janu, the huge star of the show, is not a living, breathing behemoth. Then again, try telling that to your eyes and ears and heart.

“We can let the cat out of the bag. The elephant isn’t real,” says Paul Bosco Mc Eneaney, the director and artistic director of the play with Irishy music that enchantingly entwines imagination and reality.

It is a fact, however, that The Vanishing Elephant is rooted in actual events, brought to theatrical life with puppets and good old hocus pocus.

“I’m a magic nut,” says McEneaney with an Irish brogue thicker than any mastodon’s skin, and whose theater company, CAHOOTS, is based in Belfast, Ireland.

“Magic has always been a part of who I am. I was never able to pull rabbits out of hats but I use magic in a different way, integrating it with theater storytelling.

“This production is based on a true story,” McEneaney says. “A few years ago, I was in New York City for a show on Broadway.

“I was being shown around the space for the first time when the man said to me, ‘On this very stage, Harry Houdini vanished an elephant.’”

As hard as it may be to believe, in 1918, master magician Harry Houdini caused a five-ton elephant named Jenny to disappear on stage at the Hippodrome Theatre.

The theater was gifted with the world's largest stage and a cast of trained elephants. Houdini utilized a humungous cabinet, a team of a dozen strongmen and, of course, the massive main attraction.

“Houdini was way before his time,” McEneaney says. “Never before had anyone put an elephant on stage ad have an audience believe it had vanished. It was incredibly new.

“Our inspiration came from that moment. For me, it wasn’t about the trick. I wondered what it must have been like for the elephant to be on stage, every night, in the middle of New York,

“My whole journey home, I couldn’t get it out of my head. That was much more interesting to me. That was the story that needed to be told.

“So we’ve created a story that starts in a little village in Bengal, India, and a beautiful relationship between a young boy and Janu, a baby elephant,” McEneaney says.

“The elephant is captured for the village to do labor. The boy had always dreamed of being an elephant trainer and befriends the animal.

‘A spiritual bond is quickly formed between the boy and elephant which is where the quest begins,” McEneaney says.

“The elephant is taken from the village and brought to America to join the circus. The location changes in the play and we are suddenly on a mad journey of the circus world.

“We see Janu develop and learn tricks. During one poignant moment, the elephant, who is now older, rescues an elephant trainer, resulting in a newspaper review which goes worldwide.

“Which is where Harry Houdini steps in,” McEneaney says. “Houdini buys the elephant and the young boy, who is now an old man, reads the description of the elephant and realizes it is Janu.

“The old man makes his last journey, to America, to reconnect. It’s an epic story told with an amazing ensemble of puppeteers, many moving parts,  and three elephants in different stages of life.”

A tiger may also appear as the puppeteers spin their magic and serve as storytellers. “We pull off vanishing a life-sized elephant on stage,” McEneaney says with a liltingly laugh.

“That took a lot of time to work out but this is our passion. We are grateful that audiences around the world like it, and we are very excited about bringing the show to the Orpheum and the Catskills.”

Over a half-century ago, Siam the elephant wandered off from the Vidbel Farm in Windham, the winter home of the Vidbel Circus.

Her twelve-day perambulation in a non-digital Age generated a nationwide stir until she was gently captured and returned to the farm, “taking rum in her food and water to get rid of chills,” a news report noted.

No such imbibing will be necessary to experience the warmth of The Vanishing Elephant, presented by the Catskill Mountain Foundation. Telephone (518) 263-2063 for information.


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Sgt. James F. Carty, DSC VFW Post 1545

Over the past few weeks, I, like many of you, have been inundated daily with news from our nation’s capital about the current administration’s new way of doing business. 

Between mass employee layoffs, funding freezes, program cuts, and agency restructures across the entire government, it is hard to know exactly what to sound the alarm about.

Upfront, I want to tell you the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) know our members and other veterans are concerned. 

We’ve received a multitude of calls and emails from veterans worried about what’s happening with federal benefit programs and the federal workforce, including 1,000 VA probationary employees who were let go yesterday. 

They’ve asked if their VA benefits will be cut, or health care and services be diminished because of the confusion in Washington, D.C. 

Make no mistake, the staff at the VFW Washington Office is working hard behind the scenes to protect you and ensure you receive the care and benefits you have earned. 

When the hiring freeze was announced earlier this month, the VFW intervened to make sure that critical VA positions were left alone. 

When the funding freeze was announced, VFW worked around the clock to ensure the Office of Management and Budget maintained all 44 critical VA programs.

When the federal buyout and reductions in force were announced, we insisted that VA communicate which critical positions would be exempt. 

Each step of the way, we have received the answers we’ve needed. VA payments for disability and education went out on time.

Hiring for critical positions resumed, and more than 43,000 VA employees were exempted and retained in critical care and benefit delivery positions. 

In December, we put our stake in the ground, insisting that leaders “Honor the Contract” for veterans’ benefits. In his confirmation hearing, Secretary Collins refuted the notion that veterans would be means tested to receive their earned disability. 

He reiterated this point in a public statement earlier this week. VFW is going to hold him to this. We will make sure that Secretary Collins “Honors the Contract.”

I will keep all veterans updated as any developments happen. Our post will be holding a pancake breakfast on Sunday March 16th. We will have pancakes (blueberry if you desire), sausage, bacon, fruit, coffee and juice. 

Start off your St. Patrick’s Day with a nice breakfast. The cost will be a good will offering starting at 8 am till noon. Hope to see you all. 

This coming March the District 3 of NY will be holding its Gold Chevron Dinner along with a business meeting at the Hilton Garden Inn in Clifton Park, NY.

At this affair the District winners of the Patriot Pen and Voice of Democracy contests be awarded. Next year I hope that WAJCS will be in attendance.

This week’s MIA report from the Defense Accounting Agency announced  that U.S. Army Pvt. James C. Loyd, 19, of Brilliant, Alabama, missing in action during World War II, was accounted for March 14, 2024. In January 1944, Loyd was assigned to the Company F, 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 3d Infantry Division. On Jan. 31, Loyd was reported missing when his unit was engaged by German Forces near the town of Cisterna di Latina (Cisterna), Italy. He was last seen during a reconnaissance patrol north of the village of Conca. His body was not recovered, and the Germans never reported him a prisoner of war. The War Department issued a finding of death on Apr. 19, 1945. 

Following the war, the American Graves Registration Command (AGRC), Army Quartermaster Corps, was the organization tasked with recovering missing American personnel in the European Theater. In 1945, AGRC investigators recovered a set of remains designated as X-834, near the small hamlet of Ponte Rotto thought to be associated with Loyd. The investigators didn’t have enough identifying data to positively ID the remains, and they were interred at U.S. Military Cemetery Nettuno, which is now Sicily-Rome American Cemetery. He was declared non-recoverable in 1948.

While studying unresolved American losses in the Anzio battlefield, a DPAA historian determined that one set of unidentified remains designated X-834 recovered near Ponte Rotto possibly belonged to Pvt. Loyd. The remains which had been buried at Sicily-Rome American Cemetery, Nettuno, Italy, in 1948, were disinterred in September 2021 and sent to the DPAA laboratory for identification To identify Loyd's remains, scientists from DPAA used dental and anthropological analysis. Additionally, scientists from the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System used mitochondrial DNA analysis. Loyd will be buried in Elwood, Illinois, in May 2025.

Please keep all who have given the ultimate sacrifice, in your  thoughts and prayers, along with all who have served our country and those still serving. May God Bless America.

Marc Farmilette – Past Commander Post 1545 


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Told Locally - History & Mystery

By Bradley Towle

UPSTATE, NEW YORK — The Hudson Valley and Catskill Mountain Region encompass an area of rich and seemingly bottomless history. Tales, both factual and fictional, lurk around every river bend, stone structure, and mountainside that dapple the landscape. To tackle any of the stories alone can be a daunting (but rewarding) research task; to tackle many all at once is somewhat herculean. Yet that is what Michael Adamovic has done with his 2020 book, Hudson Valley: History and Mystery. "From every untimely death can rise a ghost," he writes in his introduction. "Behind the veil of a shadowy, uncertain past, grand tales of fancy flight may or may not contain a hint of the truth." Adamovic plunges headlong into many of the area's lingering mysteries, including the legend of Depression-era bootlegger Dutch Schultz and his buried treasure. In the case of Schultz, Adamovic does not offer answers—how could he? Instead, he gives clues based on facts, rumors, and theories to entice and excite the reader into exploring the area equipped with a knowledge of its history and potential. "It's my hope that the reader will take advantage of the directions listed in this book," he writes. In doing so, Adomivic believes the reader may have a chance to crack a code that others have not and "perhaps figure out where the cutthroat gangster Dutch Schultz hid his loot." 

Other topics explored by Adamovic include the 18th-century spy intrigue tale of Major John Andre, the history of Huguenot Street in New Paltz, The Legend of Bish Bash Falls, vampires on Overlook Mountain, and more specifically to our Mountain Eagle readership area, Kaaterskill Falls, and a chapter entitled "Devil in the Catskills." Each chapter concludes with a "Getting There" section with directions and relevant landmarks to facilitate the reader's exploration. Folklore, petroglyphs, and a famously picturesque region await the adventurous, and Adamovic wants to help you. "The Devil in the Catskills" chapter includes the legend of Dutch Schultz's hidden treasure, but Adamovic can't quite get you to the location. 

With the FBI on his tail after busting his underground Pine Plains distillery and the New York Attorney General eager to bust him for tax evasion, Schultz and his bodyguard "Lulu" Rosenkrantz hastened their way up to the Catskills in to bury somewhere between five to nine million dollars. Schultz felt his luck was close to running out. J. Edgar Hoover had declared him public enemy number one, and by burying the loot, he could protect his money from government seizure and use it as a nest egg following a likely prison sentence. His luck was indeed about to run out, but not how he envisioned it. On October 23, 1935, hitmen shot Schultz and Rosenkrantz at the Palace Chop House in Newark, New Jersey. Schultz and Rosenkrantz died from their injuries within days. They were truly tough humans and held on much longer than some may have. With that, the only two people who knew the treasure's location were gone. In his fever-induced delirium, a stream-of-consciousness rambling recorded by a stenographer left what some feel was Schultz giving a clue about where he buried his fortune. "Don't let Satan draw you too fast" has been interpreted as a reference to the Devil's Tombstone in Greene County. Others believe Schultz buried his retirement fund in Phoenicia near railroad tracks or at the base of a poplar tree marked with an "X" on private land. Many have searched, and if any have been found, they kept it quiet. "If it does exist," writes Adamovic of the fortune, "the treasure might just be under the protection of the Devil and not likely to be discovered until a bargain is struck." 

However, one does not have to strike a Faustian deal to explore the Catskills. In Hudson Valley: History and Mystery, Michael Adamovic provides an informative and fun guide to exploring the area. And who knows? Maybe you'll make off with the loot. 


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Local History with Dede Terns-Thorpe - OUR POLICE GUARDIANS

A New York City Policeman, ” Officer 787, Author John J. Hickey’s 1925 book included an interesting chapter about the infancy of the Platt Clove Police Camp. (An abbreviated story.) 

 “HISTORY OF THE POLICE DEPARTMENT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, AND THE POLICING OF THE SAME FOR THE PAST ONE HUNDRED YEARS.”   

It’s about the Police Camp that opened in the beautiful Catskills, in the heart of Platt Clove just off what was called, the Platt Clove Turnpike! Richard E. Enright, N.Y.C. Police Commissioner, and other officers of authority had purchased the Kaplan Estate. He said, “Just imagine a 500-acre Police Camp one hundred and thirty miles from the heart of New York, situated at the foot of and under the protection of old Indian Head.” Here was the “Waldorf-Astoria” of the mountains that gave life to the estate by providing the lodging. There were the normal 1925 luxuries, along with all the activities one could want. 

The Police Camp was self-supporting;  guests paid only to eat. Disabled police were boarded free of charge.  Commissioner Enright saw to it that police widows and families were brought to the Camp for three weeks' vacation at no expense.   

Speaking as a Mountain Top local (almost) the Police Camp was a major source of summer employment for the Mountain Top. The camp needed workers in all capacities; lawn maintenance, gardeners, carpenters, lifeguards, housekeepers (The White Tornadoes-a few from Dora Morton’s book: Mickie Yager, Rose Byrne, Mabel McGinnis, Norma Byrne, Paulie Bunt, Tessie Snyder, June Lawrence, Doris Pederson, Elsie Jensen, Flo Joynce Jensen, Carol Bunt, Lana Flinn, and Cindy Vann, Doris Jensen, Barbara Curtis, Margie Jensen, Daphne Young, Stephanie White and of course, Dodie Byrne), waitresses, chefs, cooks, dishwashers, and on and on. Dora also mentioned how Elsie Jensen was found to be taking a dip in the lake, but only after she had been pushed in by June Lawrence and Mickie Yager!  

Two people who spent endless dedicated years organizing the Police Camp were John and Edna Shauger. Along with raising four children, they kept the Police Camp in operation for years.   

“ NEW YORK POLICE CENTER” A SHORT HISTORY,”  by Platt Clove resident Dora Vann Morton in 1972. 

“With tales bringing out unity and fun among the workers at the Police Centre.” 

“To the memory of David Kaplan, the original owner of this estate, and to all those who carried out his dreams through hard work and planning to make the Police Recreation Centre what it is today.”  Dora Vann Morton. 

Thank you Dora Vann Morton and Officer John J. Hickey for keeping the history of the N.Y. Police Camp alive. Dr. Kaplan, the Police Centre, and the Platt Clove Community have helped to keep the history of the beautiful Platt Clove area alive.  

Thanks for reading. Stay safe, and be well. 

Dede Terns-Thorpe/Hunter Historian


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Grant Funding Available in Schoharie Reservoir Watershed

CAIRO – Applications for the 2025 spring round of funding are now being accepted for the Stream Management Implementation  Program (SMIP). Established in 2008, the SMIP is a competitive cost-reimbursement grant opportunity administered through the Schoharie Watershed Stream Management Program (SWSMP) at Greene County Soil and Water  Conservation District (GCSWCD), in partnership with the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). 

The SMIP operates on a 5-year cycle and offers funding twice a year to implement projects, programs, or management efforts that serve to protect water quality within the Schoharie Reservoir watershed. In 2025, the SWSMP will initiate  SMIP Cycle 4, with $3.8 million dollars available in the following categories: Education & Outreach, Highway &  Infrastructure, Stream Restoration, Habitat & Recreation, Planning & Assessment, and Local Flood Analysis.  

To date, 128 SMIP grants have been awarded – bringing over $5.9 million dollars to the Mountaintop’s government agencies, individual property owners, schools, and 501(c)(3) organizations in support of flood resilience, water resource improvements, and watershed-related programming. Each year, two rounds of funding are offered with applications due  March 15th and September 15th. The SWSMP is currently accepting applications for Round 31 of SMIP. 

For more information about SMIP and to obtain a SMIP application, please contact smip@gcswcd.com or Abbe Martin at  or 518-622-3620. Interested applicants are encouraged to inquire with SWSMP staff to discuss project ideas prior to  applying. 

To be eligible for SMIP funding, projects must be located within or support the Schoharie Reservoir watershed (pictured in  the image above). The Schoharie Reservoir watershed is part of the Catskill/Delaware Watershed for the New York City  public water supply. The Schoharie Reservoir watershed includes the entirety of the towns of Windham, Jewett, Ashland,  and Prattsville as well as the villages of Hunter and Tannersville. The towns of Conesville, Gilboa, Hunter, Lexington,  Halcott, Jefferson, Stamford, and Roxbury are all partially included.


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