Thursday, December 16, 2010

Hey, It'll Be A Bargain In 2042





Sen. Larkin, Assemblywoman Calhoun collect pensions early
Payments go to pair while still on the job
By John Sullivan
Times Herald-Record
State legislators Nancy Calhoun and William Larkin are among 11 legislators who recently filed retirement papers, which will allow them to receive pensions while still working and collecting public paychecks.

Calhoun, R-C-Blooming Grove, a 10-term assemblywoman, said she will be collecting a $60,400 annual pension starting next year. Larkin, R-C-Cornwall-on-Hudson, a 10-term state senator and former state assemblyman, declined to reveal his pension payment amount.

The payments come on top of the lawmakers' base salaries of $79,500 and the stipends they collect for other legislative duties. The arrangement is permitted under a pension-law loophole.

"It is legal, but it looks terrible," said Blair Horner, legislative director for the New York Public Interest Research Group. "We're at a time when the economy is tanking and state employees will be laid off; I think it rubs salt in the wounds of taxpayers when state officials exploit rules for their own benefit."

In addition to her base salary, Calhoun collected an additional $18,000 this year for serving on committees. Larkin said he did not know his current-year stipend. He received $20,500 in 2007. He currently serves as the Senate whip, as well as on eight legislative committees.

Legally collecting retirement benefits while still working is a perk for civil service workers in New York state. Hundreds of workers have received waivers allowing them to earn more than the $30,000 salary limit on their second civil service job after retiring from their first one.

State and local politicians are exempt from the waiver requirement, though they do have to be at least 65 years old to return to their previous jobs after filing for retirement.

Calhoun turned 65 in July. Larkin is 82.

Both emphasized the legality of their actions under state pension rules.

"This is something that can be done by any government official of New York state," Calhoun said. "I'm not the only person doing it."

"The people who say it's not right, then they should try to change the law," Larkin said. "I earn every single penny I make. I don't have to take a backseat to anybody on my hours of work or on serving my constituents."

Asked why he waited so long to file for the benefit, Larkin said, "I'm just preparing myself for whatever might happen in the future."

Calhoun said that by collecting now, her pension payment will be smaller, thus saving the state money. If she waited until the end of her upcoming two-year term, she said, the payment would be some $4,000 higher per year.

Based on the numbers Calhoun provided, the state will break even and begin saving money in roughly 2042, when Calhoun would be about 97.







Rep. NANCY CALHOUN
R-C-Blooming Grove


Pension: $60,400


Base salary: $79,500


Payment for serving on committees: $18,000

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Luck and Gratitude


I hope that all of us are lucky enough to have some reason to be thankful.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Discuss Amongst Yourselves

Elections board gives victory to Calhoun in 96th Assembly DistrictBy John Sullivan
Times Herald-Record

Goshen — Ten-term incumbent Nancy Calhoun said she felt "vindicated" after discovering that she won yet another two-year term as 96th District assemblywoman.

An official from the Orange County Board of Elections reported Calhoun, R-C-Blooming Grove, with 633 of the 1,200-or-so absentee ballots by the end of counting at 1 p.m. Wednesday.

The results left Calhoun with a 541-vote margin over Democratic challenger Roxanne Donnery. The results of the election won't be certified until Wednesday at the earliest. Calhoun said she was "very happy, very relieved and very vindicated. The people who really know me through the years still supported me," she said.

She had reason to worry. By the end of election night, Nov. 2, Donnery led in Orange County by 320 votes. Calhoun has enjoyed decades of support in the Orange County portion of her district. Uncertainty about Calhoun's support in Orange County arose after she lost the support of Republican Frank Fornario, the Blooming Grove supervisor. Donnery still ended up ahead of Calhoun in Orange County by a total of 16,990 votes to Calhoun's 16,566.

But that was not enough to overcome Calhoun's substantial lead in Stony Point, in Rockland County.

The overall tally at the end of the day Wednesday was 19,460 votes for Calhoun and 18,919 for Donnery.

Heavily conservative Stony Point has traditionally been a roadblock for Calhoun's challengers, who have very little chance to make themselves known there. Donnery said newspaper coverage of her accomplishments as a 12-year Orange County legislator never reached Stony Point.

"Many had never heard of me," she said.

Despite her loss, Donnery took heart from the hard-fought campaign.

"I think it (the close race) was quite incredible if you think about what it's like to run against a 20-year-incumbent in an anti-Democratic year," she said.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Waiting On The Women


The Board of Elections expects a final count next week.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

License To Bitch



The Uncle has a modest suggestion.

On election day, when you show up at the polls, you'd get a card that says "I Showed Up."

You needn't actually vote, mind you.

You just have to get off your ass and go down there.

Then, anytime in the following year, when you're in a bar or at a party or wherever, and you bitch about the state of things, anyone there can ask to see your card.

If you have one, well and good.

But if you're flapping your lips but can't prove that you at least took the time to show up at the polls, the rest of us have the legal right to beat the crap out of you.

As I say, just a suggestion.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Choose or Lose, Snooze or Booze. Part Deux




Governor
Andrew M. Cuomo (Dem/Ind/Wor
Carl P. Paladino (Rep/Con/Taxpayer)
Howie Hawkins (Grn)
Jimmy McMillan (RDH)
Warren Redlich (LBT)
Kristin M. Davis (APP)
Charles Barron (FDM)
Jack Bauer (24H)

We were going to skip Lieutenant Governor due to a case of the “who cares?” but then we remembered the high turnover rate in the governorship.

Lt. Governor
Robert J Duffy (Dem/Ind/Wor )
Gregory J Edwards (Rep/Con/TXP)
Gloria Mattera (Grn)
Alden Link (LBT)
Tanya Gendelman (APP)
Eva M. Doyle (FDM)
Carter Hall (JSA)

Comptroller
Thomas P. DiNapoli (Dem/Wor)
Harry Wilson (Rep/Ind/Con)
Julia A. Willebrand (GRN)
John Gaetani (LBT)
Bernard Madoff (FCI,Otis)

Attorney General
Eric T. Schneiderman (Dem/Ind/Wor)
Dan Donovan (Rep/Con)
Carl E. Person (LBT)
Ramon J. Jimenez (FDM)
Hikaru Sulu (UFP)

US Senator 2 year unexpired term
Kirsten E. Gillibrand (Dem/Ind/Wor)
Joseph J. DioGuardi (Rep/Con/Txp
Cecile A. Lawrence (GRN)
Joseph Huff (RDH)
John Clifton (LBT)
Vivia Morgan (APP)
Bruce Blakeman (TRP)
Charles Camel (LSMFT)

US Senator 6 year term
Charles E. Schumer (Dem/Ind/Wor)
Jay Townsend (Rep/Con)
John Entwhistle (Tom/Quad/TWSO)
Lt. Governor
Robert J Duffy (Dem/Ind/Wor )
Gregory J Edwards (Rep/Con/TXP)
Gloria Mattera (Grn)
Alden Link (LBT)
Tanya Gendelman (APP)
Eva M. Doyle (FDM)
Carter Hall (JSA)
Discuss amongst yourselves.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Choose or Lose, Snooze or Booze. Part 1


OK, let's have a civilized discussion - just kidding.
Whom do you hate more and why?
Congress
John Hall vs Nan Hayworth
State Senate
Bill Larkin vs Harley Doles
State Assembly
Nancy Calhoun vs Roxanne Donnery
Next up: County Wide and State Wide

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Uncle Betty's Thought For The Day

If marriage is outlawed
only outlaws will have in-laws.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Welcome To Woodbury




Welcome To Woodbury

Please respect our local customs. Be polite. Drive carefully. Do not litter. Do not disrupt any weddings. Please do not set any homes or vehicles on fire. Do not involve our police officers in political disputes.

If you are shopping, please wait your turn and do not use the 10 items or fewer checkout if you have over thirty items.

If you are a registered voter here please attempt to vote only once and remember to use you own name.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Primarily




Elections Hoorah!

Any chance more than 2% of you will get off your asses and vote?

If so, do so between 6 AM and 9 PM Tuesday, September 14th.

Here’s who you get to choose amongst:

Republicans

Governor:
Rick Lazio
Carl Paladino

Lieutenant Governor:
Gregory Edwards
Thomas Ognibene

US Senate Full Term:
Gary Berntsen
Jay Townsend

US Senate Unexpired Term:
Joseph Dioguardi
David Malpass
Bruce Blakeman

19th Cong. District:
Neil DiCCarlo
Nan Hayworth


Democrats


Attorney General:
Richard Brodsky
Eric Schneiderman
Sean Coffey
Eric Dinallo
Kathleen Rice

US Senate Unexpired Term:
Kirsten Gillibrand
Gail Goode


Conservative
Governor:
Rick Lazio
Ralph Lorigo

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Doles Rolled




Doles' Independence Party petitions invalidated
By Michael Randall
Times Herald Record
Published: 2:00 AM - 08/19/10


A state Supreme Court ruling has removed Harley Doles from the Independence Party primary for the 39th state Senate District because of an insufficient number of valid petition signatures.

That means the incumbent, Bill Larkin, who also filed Independence petitions, will appear on that line in November. Larkin is also on the Republican and Conservative lines. Doles will still be on the Democratic and Working Families lines.

Doles said Monday that he was a victim of a deliberate attempt at fraud. Doles noted State Supreme Court Justice Thomas McNamara ruled he was blameless in the matter.

Larkin campaign manager Ralph Caruso said in addition to problems with individual signatures, the court invalidated a witness to a number of Doles' petition pages.


It seems that Doles was played by the powers that be in KJ and by Larkin.

The KJ leaders offered to get signatures for Harley's petition.


Oddly enough, it appears that:
a) many were invalid
and
b) Larkin knew that they were invalid and immediately challenged them.

It looks like Doles was set up.

Why aren’t we surprised?



Sunday, July 04, 2010

The Ladies Square Off



OK, So it's Roxanne taking on Nancy.


What are your bets and why?

Thursday, June 10, 2010

King Eddie and Our Water

Fron the Pieman:

The Orange County Water Authority is proposing to amend its Water Master Plan into the County Comprehensive Plan.

Some of us are concerned that this may give the County the ability to over-rule the Home Rule of towns and villages and take over municipal water resources.

On Monday, June 14th, there will be a public hearing on this at 7 PM at the Central Valley Elementary School.

Please come.

Friday, June 04, 2010

See You In Court

3 municipalities to sue Kiryas Joel, Orange Ccounty over pipeline, sewage
By Chris Mckenna
Times Herald-Record
Published: 2:00 AM - 06/04/10


Three municipalities plan to sue Orange County and Kiryas Joel over the village's plans to tap the Catskill Aqueduct and its legal deals with the county involving that water project and the Harriman sewage treatment plant.

The Villages of Harriman and Woodbury and the Town of Woodbury are expected to file a lawsuit in state Supreme Court on Friday that would revive the concerns about sewage treatment that the county deemed settled when it surrendered its objections to Kiryas Joel's pipeline proposal.

"All the stuff that's in there is still extremely valid," Woodbury Supervisor John Burke said Thursday, referring to the pipeline lawsuit that the county dropped in February. "All that was pushed aside."

Burke's Town Board was expected to vote Thursday night to proceed with the litigation. Woodbury village trustees voted 4-0 at a special meeting a week ago to sue and hire lawyers James Bacon and David Gordon to handle the case.

Municipal leaders saw Friday as their deadline to sue because they had 120 days to challenge two environmental documents that county lawmakers approved on Feb. 4, enabling County Executive Ed Diana to withdraw the pipeline lawsuit less than two weeks later.

Both documents amended the environmental review that preceded the last expansion of the county-run sewer plant in Harriman.

A key addition was the requirement that the county provide more sewer service once its current system reaches 85 percent of its capacity.

Burke argues that before dropping the suit, county officials should have consulted with the municipalities that use and pay for the Harriman plant and given at least a rough plan for how additional treatment capacity would be provided.

Woodbury Mayor Michael Queenan concurred: "They're making deals with no regard to anyone else. They don't listen, and there's no communication."

In an op-ed piece in the Times Herald-Record on Sunday, Diana defended his decision to end the pipeline litigation, saying it was part of a settlement that freed up additional treatment capacity for Woodbury and other contractual users of the Harriman sewer plant.

Kiryas Joel had sued to block those communities, but dropped its case when the county stopped its pipeline suit.

Saturday, May 08, 2010

When the Shit Hits the Harriman Sewage Plant

Camp LaGuardia swamped by sewer issues
Kathy Kahn
Wesrfair Onlione

More than Canada geese are flying over Orange County these days. Lawsuits have also taken wing.


Orange County is currently enmeshed in two lawsuits regarding sewer capacity, one of which could conceivably send a plan to redevelop New York City’s former homeless shelter down the drain. The second suit involves Kiryas Joel and its quest for greater capacity.


Mountco Construction of Scarsdale, the successful bidder for the county-owned parcel, needs triple the property’s current sewer capacity in order to move forward to develop the 260-acre site.


Mountco’s proposed project calls for more than 800 homes, nearly a quarter-million square feet of retail/commercial space and a “town square” that would be the focal point of the new community. Mountco is also negotiating to have a satellite campus for Mount St. Mary College at the site, pledging to give the school an initial 10,000 square feet of space and more if the college needs it going forward.


But nothing can move forward unless Mountco has the sewer capacity for the project, “and we don’t have it to give,” said town of Chester Supervisor Steve Neuhaus.


When the sewer bill came due for Camp LaGuardia, both Blooming Grove and Chester refused to pay what the county considered to be the municipalities’ portion, sending the county to court to recover a total of $65,400 on the $140,000 in charges.


“We’re all upset,” said Neuhaus, referring to himself, town of Blooming Grove Supervisor Frank Fornario and developer Joel Mounty. “Rather than sit down and discuss this in a healthy manner, the county filed a lawsuit.”


Fornario said he would confer with Neuhaus over how to proceed with the county.


Neuhaus said the county cannot put Mountco into Sewer District No. 1, the county’s recently expanded sewage treatment plant in Harriman, because others have waited for sewer capacity before Mountco’s project was proposed. “We can’t give away sewer capacity pledged to others so this project can proceed. It’s not only a bad precedent, it’s literally opening the floodgates for more litigation,” said Neuhaus. “There’s a real lack of communication going on here. Why can’t we all just sit down and discuss this?”


Camp LaGuardia’s need for more capacity is not the only hurdle the county is facing. It is being sued by the village of Kiryas Joel for more sewer capacity in the same sewer district.


Mountco did not return calls for comment, nor did the county executive’s office.


Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Hoorahs, Horseshoes and Handgrenades

Congratulations to Neil Crouse and David Sutz, and in Monroe: James Purcell, Teddy Wright and Wayne Chan, winners in their village elections.

Congrats also to Lorraine McNeil, John Karl, Charlie Lesser and Inda Stora, both for past service and their willingness to put themselves out there.

Congrats, lastly, to the few hundred who managed to get down to the polls and vote.

And to the vast majority, who couldn't be bothered, who knew for a fact that one vote doesn't make any difference, we'll point out that David won by eight votes and James won by two.

If you'd voted the winning margins might have been larger or the outcomes different, no one will ever know because it just wasn't worth your time.

To quote Ken Starr as he logged Monica's dress into evidence: "Clothes, but no cigar."

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Village of the Damp

The Election Results:

Crouse: 237
Sutz: 177
McNeil: 169


Write Ins:
Meyers: 1 (see I told you)
Kling: 2

Monday, March 15, 2010

Vox Populi


Anyone who may wish to complain about the Village of Woodbury during the next 12 months has to earn the right to do so by dragging his or her ass down to Village Hall (above the Highland Mills Fire House), Tuesday, March 16, between noon and 9 PM and vote.

If you are writing-in, remember it must be done with a Crayola Crayon.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Natural Splendour


Woodbury is about to undergo one of the most beautiful transformations of the year as Winter ends and Mud Season begins.

This weekend, when we turn our clocks sideways and rotate the batteries in our smoke detectors, torrential rains will melt the remaining foot and a half of snow and magically transform the saturated layer of earth, sitting atop the impenetrable frozen layer of earth, into soup.

Come witness nature at its most wondrous. Hip waders a suggestion.

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Guarding The Border



By the by, why are the Citizens for the Perversion of Woodbury so interested in "the Ancestry of People in Woodbury" and "Place of Birth of People in Woodbury?"

It concerns them enough to link to that data from their Home page:
http://www.preservewoodbury.org/


As a Damned Furriner himself, the Uncle finds those perversionist folks to be just a tad spooky.

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Invisible Writing


Can you run a write in campaign without telling anyone?

If you're Ralph Caruso the answer may be: "yeah, well, sort of."

Ralph is that rare creature who would be more successful as a candidate if hardly anyone knew he was running.

Here is how it would work:
First, you have your herd of zombies memorize how to spell Ralph's name.

You keep mum about the whole deal.

On election day you cart all your zombies down to the voting booths and have them write in Ralph and make sure they don't also vote for anyone else.

Then, when it turns out that hardly anyone else got off their butts to go vote --- you win!

Why keep mum?

Well, aside from the zombies, pretty much no one else wants to see Ralph on the village board.

If folks thought there was any real chance that Ralph could win they might actually drag themselves down to Village Hall to vote for someone else.

Low turnout + dedicated zombies = Trustee Caruso.


Just a thought.

Friday, February 26, 2010

A Couplet

Paterson a no-go
Clears the way for Cuomo

Any thoughts?

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Great News

It's not expected to snow on Sunday.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

A New Topic -- as requested

Diana would be good choice for Gillibrand's seat, GOP says
Orange exec brushes off Senate talk as 'a rumor at this point'
By Chris Mckenna
Times Herald-Record
February 16, 2010
GOSHEN — Diana for Senate?

Only six weeks into his third term as Orange County executive, Ed Diana is being talked about as a potential candidate for the U.S. Senate seat that Kirsten Gillibrand was appointed to fill just over a year ago.

He brushed aside that chatter as "a rumor at this point" when reached by phone on Monday. But the Republican chairmen of Westchester and Rockland counties both said that Diana, a Republican, is thinking about challenging the Democratic incumbent.

"I understand that he is," said Rockland County Republican Chairman Vincent Reda, who is also first vice chairman of the state Republican Committee. "He'd be a great candidate. I think Eddie Diana would be on anybody's short list."

A plethora of state and federal offices at stake in New York this fall, combined with a sense that incumbents are in trouble nationwide, has emboldened a wave of candidates. Republicans, buoyed by recent election victories, seem especially confident.

"The Republican brand is good right now," said Douglas Colety, the Westchester County Republican chairman. "Everybody wants to run."

Six Republicans have stepped forward to challenge Rep. Nita Lowey, a Democrat who represents parts of Westchester and Rockland, Colety said. And the Republican field for the neighboring congressional district represented by Democrat John Hall has three declared candidates and other potential ones, including Orange County Republican Chairman William DeProspo.

Jonathan Jacobson, chairman of the Orange County Democratic Committee, dismisses the GOP enthusiasm as misguided.

"I think they're overreading the status of American politics," said Jacobson, arguing that frustrated voters don't necessarily want a power shift in Washington.

"People don't want Congress to be controlled by people who just say 'No,'" Jacobson said.

Diana, 61, a former gym teacher and restaurant owner with 26 years in politics, has also been mentioned in recent weeks as a potential candidate for lieutenant governor. Supporters consider him a strong candidate for higher office because of his experience and fiscal record. He handily won re-election in November.

If Diana were to run for higher office and win, the county Legislature — now firmly in Republican hands — would appoint a successor to serve until an election could be held a year later, according to the county charter.

Gillibrand, a former attorney elected to Congress in 2006, had just begun her second term when Gov. David Paterson appointed her in January 2009 to the Senate seat Hillary Clinton vacated when she became secretary of state. Gillibrand must run for election in November to serve the last two years of Clinton's term.

Harold Ford, a former Tennessee congressman, is considering challenging her for the Democratic nomination. The only declared Republican in the race is Bruce Blakeman, an attorney and former county legislator from Long Island; at least five GOP county chairmen have endorsed him.

The New York Times reported Friday that Mort Zuckerman, the Daily News publisher, may seek Gillibrand's seat, either as a Republican or an independent. Republicans George Pataki and Rudy Giuliani have both ruled out running.

Because of the special election, this is a rare year in which contests are held for both of New York's U.S. Senate seats. Sen. Charles Schumer will seek his third six-year term.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Sewer Suit Update

Woodbury role may be moot if sewer, water suits settled


Woodbury officials have refused to settle a lawsuit with Kiryas Joel over additional sewer service because they say it would involve them in a legal deal over Kiryas Joel's proposed water pipeline.

But their refusal may have little impact on efforts to resolve entwined litigation over the $30 million water project and the Orange County sewage treatment plant in Harriman.

Attorneys for Orange County and Kiryas Joel have been negotiating to end two court cases. In one suit, the county had blocked the pipeline proposal by challenging the village's environmental study; in the other, Kiryas Joel had stopped the county from selling expanded service at the Harriman plant to Woodbury and other communities.

Woodbury officials were enlisted in settlement talks for the second case because they joined the county in a court appeal. But they have rejected the proposal — even after lawyers revised it three times — because each draft tied the sewer agreement to one involving the pipeline.

"We decided we're not going to be roped into it," Mayor Michael Queenan said. "We're not going to sign it."

But last week, a divided Orange County Legislature approved two documents that could resolve both the sewer lawsuit — regardless of Woodbury's opposition — and the main objection to Kiryas Joel's planned connection to the Catskill Aqueduct.

The papers amended a 2001 environmental review that preceded a $26 million expansion of the Harriman plant. The new wording — accompanied by an analysis of current plant use and expected population growth — declares that the project added enough sewer service to share with Woodbury and other contractual users of the plant.

The documents also state that the county will expand the plant again once it reaches 85 percent of its capacity. That stance answers the county's own concerns in its pipeline lawsuit about how it would treat additional sewage resulting from Kiryas Joel's enlarged water supply.

County Attorney David Darwin said Wednesday that those environmental statements will be filed in court to resolve the sewer dispute. That, in turn, could clear the way for a pipeline agreement.

"Resolution of the sewer capacity issue would resolve that issue in both of the lawsuits," he said, adding that the county and Kiryas Joel are working to resolve a secondary pipeline issue involving wetlands.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Pete Swears

Woodbury official takes oath in Afghanistan
January 14, 2010 11:50 AM


Chris McKenna

It's official: Pete Stabile has been sworn in his for his fourth term as highway superintendent. But the ceremony took place far from the Town of Woodbury highway garage.

An army officer administered the oath somewhere in northern Afghanistan, where Stabile, a 58-year-old Army reservist, is serving a year-long tour of duty with the Army Corps of Engineers. He shipped out in October, about a month before he was re-elected.

In his absence, town Supervisor John Burke and Stabile's foreman, Johnny Jones, are running the 13-member department, which plows roads and collects leaves and branches, among other duties. Stabile has refused half of his $72,000 annual salary for 2010, according to a public affairs officer with the corps.

The corps is building army facilities, police stations, roads and other infrastructure in Afghanistan.

Stabile, who holds the rank of master sergeant, is planning to retire from the military when he returns in October.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Board of the Village


Since you asked here are the latest rumors that the Uncle just made up.
We give all of these a definite maybe:
Rich Jackson will not run again.
Neil Crouse will.
Lorraine McNeil will run.
David Sutz will run.
Ralph wouldn't dare run.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Destruction In Haiti





Any donation at all to the relief effort in Haiti will help.

You can link to a number of aid groups at this site.

or call one of these:
UNICEF: 1.800.FOR.KIDS (1.800.367.5437)
CARE: 800-422-7385
OXFAM: 800-77-OXFAM
Doctors Without Borders: 888-392-0392

A Ford In Our Future?


























So, Harold Ford Jr. has made clear that he is looking at running against Kirsten Gillibrand for the US Senate.


Anybody got anything to say?

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Heaven Forfend!

Auditors probe KJ school financing plan
Cite cost, conflict of interest
By Chris Mckenna
Times Herald-Record
KIRYAS JOEL — State auditors are questioning the decision by the Kiryas Joel School District to lease its new school from a landholding arm of the community's religious school system rather than build it itself.

The lease arrangement could inflate the total cost for taxpayers, and it posed a potential conflict of interest for two school board members who are also officers of the lease-holding organization, the state Comptroller's Office concluded in a report released late Tuesday.

Superintendent Joel Petlin strongly disputes the findings, saying the deal made good financial sense and raised no potential conflicts.

"We were able to build a building that we could afford to move into, without having a big tax increase every year," Petlin said.

At issue is a 44,000-square-foot school built on Bakertown Road to replace a smaller building the district had used since 1989, when it was created to serve handicapped children in the Hasidic community. Some 250 kids go there for classes and therapy, including part-timers and about 40 tuition-paying students from other districts, Petlin said.

Administrators say they initially planned to bond for the new building, but changed course when the cost estimate exceeded $16 million. In 2006, voters approved a 30-year lease that put construction in the landowner's hands.

State auditors estimated that rent, which rises each year with inflation, could total $38 million over 30 years, or about $3 million more than bonding might have cost. And they pointed out the district won't own the building when the lease expires.

Petlin replies that those calculations ignore the $7 million taxpayers could save over the first 14 years, when rent is expected to cost less than bond payments would have. They may also exaggerate the total cost, since inflation so far has been low, he said.

The conflict issue was raised in connection with Harry Polatsek and Simon Kepecs, the president and vice president of Kiryas Joel's board.

Auditors argue the two men should have provided a written disclosure of their interest in UTA of KJ SC Inc., the organization that signed a lease with the district before the new school opened in May 2008. That entity lists Polatsek as president and Kepecs as treasurer.

Petlin contends that no conflict existed because a different organization owned the property when board members chose to pursue a lease in 2006. The land later changed hands.

Sunday, January 03, 2010

Shhhhh! Hibernating.


The Uncle is cold and tired and hungover (did I mention cold?).

The last thing he wants is to chat - online, off-line or even to himself.

So, continuing the current do-it-yourself nature of this blog - you want James' letter?

You got James' letter.

(and if you want something else point it out or send it to
cuzzincookie@hotmail.com)

County needs a watchdog
Chairwoman Roxanne Donnery, Republican Frank Fornario and the other legislators who joined them ought to be applauded for their efforts in bringing a watchdog accountability office to Orange County. This independent agency would not only have rooted out any corruption, but also would have saved taxpayers a great deal of money by streamlining government.

It is a sad day, however, when County Executive Ed Diana tells the voters who just re-elected him that he is above transparency and scrutiny and will instead veto the legislation. Diana and his supporters' opposition is so blatantly politically motivated that a majority of his legislative caucus chose not to even show up and cast a "no" vote, presumably because most of them know they are on the wrong side of this issue and instead want to hide from a roll call. I wonder if these same Republican legislators would've voted in favor of the office if there were a Democrat in the county executive seat.

At a time when the public's trust of politicians is at an all-time low, it is equally insulting as it is astounding that so many of our representatives in Goshen are against such a commonsense measure.

James Skoufis
Woodbury Town Councilman