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When Art Meets Nature: Artists Discuss Botanical Perspectives Botanical Impressions Artist Talk Nov. 1 at Headwaters Arts Center

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 10/26/25 | 10/26/25


STAMFORD  –  Artists Andie Hope, Tracy Qiu, Ali Shockey, Kathleen Sweeney and Carol Woodin return to Headwaters to discuss their artwork, creative process and influences. This Artist Talk, offered in conjunction with the Botanical Impressions exhibit at Headwaters Arts Center, will take place on the last day of the exhibit, Saturday November 1, at 12 pm. Following artist introductions, there will be an opportunity for members of the public to ask questions and contribute to the discussion. This is a free event.


Though these artists work in different mediums and investigate their subjects in diverse ways, they reveal a common reverence for the plant world that offers an intriguing perspective on some of the challenges we currently face in our relationship with nature. This Artist Talk is a unique opportunity to explore in greater detail the works that have fascinated us all in the Botanical Impressions exhibit.

Featuring artwork by Bobbi Angell, Tracy Qiu, David Schaengold, Ali Shockey, Kathleen Sweeney, Carol Woodin and Mallory Zondag, Botanical Impressions is a group exhibition that offers different perspectives on the relationship between plants and humans. Adapting old narratives and developing new ones, these works call on us to realize our essential relationship with plants and reinvigorate our understanding of our interconnectedness with the natural world.

Visit roxburyartsgroup.org/botanical-impressions for more information and artist biographies.


Our exhibition programs are generously supported by Roxbury Wine & Spirits. All programs offered by the Roxbury Arts Group are supported by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the NYS Legislature, the A. Lindsay and Olive B. O’Connor Foundation, the Robinson Broadhurst Foundation, The Community Foundation for South Central New York, the Tianaderrah Foundation, The Delaware National Bank of Delhi, and individual supporters.



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Collage of artwork on show at the Botanical Impressions exhibit at Headwaters Arts Center in Stamford, NY. The exhibit features work by Bobbi Angell, Andi Hope, Tracy Qiu, David Schaengold, Ali Shockey, Kathleen Sweeney, Carol Woodin and Mallory Zondag.

 

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Local History - The Autumn of 1913 in Gilboa

By Wildert Marte

GILBOA — The autumn of 1913 brought politics, farms, and everyday concerns to the front pages in Gilboa. With Election Day approaching, the Monitor devoted whole columns to the Republican ticket, introducing candidates from across Schoharie County and urging voters to back “clean politics” over Tammany Hall. George C. Hemstreet of Carlisle was praised as a reliable Assembly nominee, Alonzo Hinds of Seward as a farmer businessman trusted by neighbors, and Edgar Jackson of Gilboa as a lawyer ready to serve as District Attorney. Elias Babcock, running for Superintendent of the Poor, was described as humane and practical, promising kindness in a role often associated with hardship. 

But election news was not free of controversy. Superintendent Huse of the county almshouse faced questions about the death of an inmate, George Smith. Reports suggested Huse admitted to kicking the man before he died, though no official explanation was offered. The State Board of Charities conducted an investigation, but its findings were withheld until after the election, sparking frustration. District Attorney Coons was also criticized for failing to qualify properly for office and neglecting indictments, leaving some cases unresolved. The paper pressed for accountability, reflecting a community unwilling to let such matters pass quietly.

Beyond politics, the Monitor pages were filled with rural advice and farm talk. Farmers were warned against overbuying machinery, with one story describing a man who owned nine gasoline engines and still added an expensive tractor proof, the writer said, that “a fellow can have too many engines”. There were notes about feeding hens mangels and beets in winter, using acorns to fatten hogs, and the dangers of driving horses too hard. Strangers stopping at farmhouses were treated with suspicion, a reminder of the era’s caution in isolated areas. The push for better roads appeared throughout the fall of 1913. A widely circulated study from Minneapolis calculated the staggering cost of bad highways to both farmers and merchants, losses that could have been avoided with proper construction. Locally, Gilboa farmers echoed the call, pointing out how poor roads slowed trade and wore out teams. Some even built experimental stretches, mixing sand, mulch, and gravel to create firm tracks praised by automobilists.

Ads and notices gave a window into daily life. Horses, wagons, pigs, and even potatoes were listed for sale, while landowners posted stern warnings against trespassing to gather nuts. A Gilboa merchant advertised fall goods “piled high” on shelves, while Clinton Wyckoff of Gilboa promoted the new Ford Model T, proudly announcing that demand far exceeded supply. Milliners offered hats and feathers in Conesville, and undertakers advertised their services in Gilboa’s growing business district. Not all the news was local. National pieces slipped into the columns, a note on Queen Victoria’s dinner table manners, stories of grouse hunting in Britain and reports of Vermont's marble quarries leading the world in production. These snippets sat beside small-town items like church socials and bank notices, a mix that tied rural readers to both their neighbors and the wider world.

Looking back, Gilboa in October 1913 was a village balancing politics with plowing, campaigns with corn harvests. The Monitor captured that dual life pressing candidates to account for their records while offering tips on silage and poultry feed. In its pages, you see a town working through national arguments about Tammany and Albany while also preparing for winter in the Catskills. It is the blend of urgency and routine that made small papers essential watchdog, bulletin board, and companion for long autumn nights.


 

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Why Art? - SURFING THE APOCALYPSE AT BIRDSONG

Summer 2025 Program Concludes

Friday, October 3rd saw the conclusion of the Public Art for Dialogues Summer 2025 Program at Birdsong Farm, in Hamden. 

About 40 to 50 people showed up from different parts of Delaware County, Ostego, from Woodstock, Dutchess County and New York. 

They gathered in a wide circle formation, in chairs circumscribing a comfortable looking Persian rug and spoke about social engagement in the Oneonta, Delhi, Andes, Margaretville and Bovina area. 

Friends spoke about Tribal Link, an organization for Indigenous people that was begun at the first Climate Summit in Rio De Janeiro, in 1991, that has since protected biodiversity and human rights for Indigenous Peoples, worldwide. 

Others from a drumming and Kirtan singing group that regularly performs at the Unitarian Church in Oneonta, shared their work. 

Following this gathering of cross-silo individuals and the feeling community and conversation everyone entered into an immersive cinematic environment constructed from five projection screens somewhat above head height.

The films that were projected there had a collagist feeling that spanned images from book burning, forest fires, mass climate migration, ocean pollution, ocean clean up, huge choirs singing, eco art performance, micrometeorite flying particles, all sewn together like a panoramic tapestry. 

Members of the Bobcats, a Bob Dylan tribute band from Woodstock, headed by Bruce Milner and Rob Stein, led participants through several Dylan hits, George Harrison and Beach Boys songs. 

The group sang in unison, as has been the sensibility and artistic style of the Institute for Cultural Activism International (ICAI) curated exhibitions from this past June through September. The message seems to be “ We are all interdependent, interconnected with nature and our future depends on the harmony we create.”

As explained by John Halpern of Delhi, Co-founder of ICAI with artist Emily Marie Harris, WE DO: SURFING THE APOCALYPSE KARAOKE originated in Capri, Italy in 2022. Together, with Margret Wibmer from Austria, the team captured the attention of passersby in the highly touristic squares of Capri, brandishing QR codes printed on their elegant surgeon’s costumes and on their iPhones. As participants on the street snapped the QR codes on their mobiles, they saw the five films mentioned earlier, comprising utopian and dystopian imagery. The sensation was – they were part of an international, virtual narrative about healing the world in troubled times. The performance was meant to engage and empower the community and its inherent creative forces for good.

WE DO: SURFING THE APOCALYPSE KARAOKE was sponsored by the Roxbury Arts Group through a re-grant from New York State Council for the Arts.  

Communal singing has traditionally accompanied gatherings of worship, ritualistic magic and healing. The videos shown were projected from a central column positioned at the core of the five cinema screens. Imagine a bonfire warming the room with a complex narrative, a hub in the center of a whirling cosmic wheel. 

In ancient Greek, APOCALYPSE means “revelation, unveiling, or disclosure of something previously unknown or hidden.” Here, this art event offers a promise evident in the choir of diverse voices heard and felt that evening, a secret love and care for each other, the world, a potential to heal, to create another narrative, unknown, unanticipated or predicted by “the powers that be.” A constantly surprising revelation of humanity and its capacity to shape its world and future.

Thanks to local artists, Tom, Nancy, Risdon, Beth from NYC, so many more, and to the amazing roster - the community of sponsorship.

As co-author of WE DO: SURFING THE APOCALYPSE KARAOKE and the Summer Program for Public Art and Dialogue at Birdsong 2025, on behalf of myself, Emily Harris and all the artists and hundreds that came to the events this summer, we wish everyone a beautiful winter. 

To learn more about the event, see films and support ICAI, visit www.studioicai.org

 

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“Stronger Together,” Joins Together, Once Again

By Greg Madden

HAINES FALLS — “Stronger Together” will once again gather for just the second time this Saturday, October 18th at Peace Village.  The reason we gather again is because you, our beloved mountaintop neighbors, who frankly demanded it.  

You decided that more was needed, more was desired. Not a lot more, but more nonetheless, and you, good folk, choose our/your agenda. That matters deeply. Having a voice that is heard, and that leads us to find solutions, means so much. Bring your valuable ideas.

There is clearly off the charts worldwide unrest, both locally and globally and there are as many valuable opinions about such unrest as there are stars above, and yet we share many common goals.  “Stronger Together” is a vehicle to unify and strengthen our precious community. 

So why have you/we demanded it and why now? Most of us feel that we all know why, but specifics vary for each of us.  So, what is it we feel, individually or collectively, and what do we need to happen to get past these feelings and why do we feel this way and just what are we feeling anyway? 

Our times, and earthly experiences, have clearly grown grossly unsettled for most of us and we are all looking for a stronger connection to take us through to the gentler times again.  Are those times ahead for us, some think so.  Let’s talk about it civilly and try to see as we all have things we all agree on. 

No one seems to know, but what we do know for sure, is it will be better if we share this journey as one, and so you/we created “Stronger Together” and we need more of you to join us on this mission.

The story of "Stronger Together" here on our Mountaintop is not a dramatic headline; it’s quieter and, in many ways, more important. It’s the story of neighbors, making conscious decisions to show up for each other and, in doing so, weaving a stronger social fabric. 

When regions, countries, and the world feel so vastly unstable, the one reliable place to congregate is often locally, nearest to you. A safe and familiar place where we share weather, schools, issues and coffee pots.

What’s ahead for us is not guaranteed for anyone, for life’s realities will continually test us, but the practices we’ve cultivated by listening, practical help we share, inclusive stewardship and ownership are indeed durable. 

"Stronger Together" will focus on smaller, community focused projects and to share what we learn can become a model for other localities and small towns near and far, just like ours, and to help them navigate what’s to come for themselves and theirs.

Our Mountaintop offers a useful reminder as big change begins with small, sustained acts of care and kindness. "Stronger Together" is not a slogan here, it’s our way of living. It is love.

Our community has proven it is ready to take the next step.  So please again join us for a free community event “Stronger Together” this Saturday, October 18th, 2025 from 1:00 pm - 4:30 pm, followed by a meal (included) at Peace Village, 54 O’Hara Road, Haines Falls, Ny 12436. 

Please come, bring a neighbor or family members and register for the day and the meal at www.StrongerTogetherMTNtop.com.


 

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CREATE Announces New Chapter for Organization

CATSKILL — CREATE Council on the Arts, the regional arts council serving Greene, Columbia, and Schoharie Counties, announces the sale of its longtime home at 398 Main Street in Catskill. The move marks both the closing of an important chapter in the organization’s history and the beginning of a new phase of regional activation.

The decision to sell 398 Main Street and relocate administrative offices reflects CREATE’s vision for the future: to bring more programming and arts activations throughout the three counties it serves. 

“This move allows CREATE to fully embrace its role as a connector and pollinator within our creative ecosystem,” said Stella Yoon, Executive Director of CREATE. “We see a great opportunity to activate existing venues by collaborating with local organizations and businesses to bring creative engagement opportunities for artists and the public throughout Greene, Columbia, and Schoharie Counties.”

CREATE has moved into its new administrative office in Catskill, which will serve as the organization’s operational hub. An office open house event is planned for Sunday, November 16 from 1-4pm at 453 Main Street (alley-side entrance).

In the coming months, CREATE will host a series of community listening sessions across all three counties to present its vision and invite input from artists, partners, and residents. These gatherings will help shape the next phase of programming and partnerships, ensuring that CREATE’s work reflects the needs and aspirations of the communities it serves.

“We are thrilled to share that the new owners of 398 Main Street are 3 local artists," Yoon shared. “It’s great to know that the building will remain a creative space and continue to support the development of local artists.”

For more information about CREATE’s programs, upcoming community sessions, visit www.createcouncil.org.

ABOUT CREATE COUNCIL ON THE ARTS

CREATE is a nonprofit arts service organization advancing regional arts and culture through grant programs and resources for artists, arts organizations, cultural and educational institutions, civic groups, community agencies and the general public. Founded in 1975 as the Greene County Council on the Arts (GCCA) and became CREATE Council on the Arts in 2019 to reflect the evolution as a tri-county arts council serving Greene, Columbia and Schoharie counties.

 

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BETTER THAN HEARSAY - The Windham Town Supervisor Race

CONNOR EXUM
 

THOMAS HOYT


           

By Michael Ryan

WINDHAM - Incumbent Republican town supervisor Thomas Hoyt has been unopposed the past two, 2-year terms, facing a challenge, this Election Day, from Democratic Party nominee Connor Exum.

Hoyt has been in office six years. “I have lived in Windham my entire life. My family settled here in the 1840’s. I love this town and serving the people of Windham which is why I am running again,” he says.

Exum, born and raised in Windham, seeks his first elected office. “I feel I can give the town a different, forward thinking perspective, developing strong community programs to combat future problems before we feel their impacts.”

The candidates were asked the same questions regarding their platforms and issues facing the town, responding as follows:

MT. EAGLE: Identify 3 key issues in Windham and your view on them.

EXUM: (1) “Lack of transparency in local government, based on a lot of personal experiences. There have been issues for me, asking for and receiving public documents that should be available to all citizens. Documents should be easily accessible.

(2) “Zoning. I am opposed to the current zoning law [being considered by the town] for several reasons. As I read the proposal, [I believe] it segregates the community economically. We need a more organic method [of land use regulations], one that doesn’t push costs down to our Main Street business owners and our residents.”

(3)  “Multi-generational growth. Windham has seen a 4.2-year increase in our median age per decade since the 2000 Census, an extraordinary rate of aging. At this rate, by 2050, our community’s median age will be 65.3

years.

“We need policies in our community that will retain and attract young people and families who want to make this wonderful community their home. This means creating jobs that develop into a middle-class community with a housing market that is supported by these

jobs.”

HOYT: (1) “Ambulance service and how to continue providing the [paramedic level of care] the town currently provides for its citizenship. This means working within sustainable budgetary costs and working closely with our peers in neighboring communities.

“I am in favor of consolidating our best resources for all of Greene County, putting everything under one roof [within a unified county ambulance system being considered by the county], getting standardization of operations and materials to provide the best care for the entire county.”

(2) New York City Department of Environmental Protection. “Dealing with DEP and the New York City watershed is a big deal. If we don’t keep a finger on the pulse of DEP, we can’t keep a finger on the pulse of continuity and good growth in our own communities” [linked to ongoing DEP land acquisitions that stop those tracts from future development].

(3) “Keeping Windham affordable, doing whatever local government can do, and knowing what government cannot do, to give our people the ability to afford their taxes while not overly regulating on our end.”

MT EAGLE: “What has prepared you to serve as Windham town supervisor?

EXUM: “My business career [in a family enterprise] and education [at Louisville University] offer a solid base. I have worked with State entities and understand the underpinnings of local government.

“During my 12-year tenure as the Operations Manager of my family corporation, I was able to grow the business by more than 350% before the pandemic. 

“During this period of expansion, we moved our primary business from smaller single-owner establishments to large Fortune 500

corporations, medical facilities, Universities and State Institutions. 

“I oversaw all aspects of the business, from strategic planning to marketing and finances. In addition, I negotiated multi-million dollar contracts.”

“I am very interested in developing new approaches to solving problems, looking at what other people and communities have done that works in their community, and how we can make that work for Windham.”

HOYT: “I started at a young age with real responsibilities. I was sixteen years old when [the late Windham town supervisor] Pat Meehan had faith in me to be manager of the town park, overseeing daily operations.

“He had confidence in me, starting simple, being where I needed to be on time and working with a set budget. I then took the next step, working for the Slutzky family in Hunter. I started as a laborer and at the ripe age of twenty, moved up to job foreman on major [infrastructure] projects.

“I brought that sense of responsibility and work ethic to the job when I was elected highway superintendent in Windham, and I have been a public servant for twenty-seven years.

“When I was highway superintendent, Mr. Meehan made sure I was closely involved in the building of our wastewater treatment system and the reconstruction of Main Street. I was there every step of the way.

“As supervisor, I have been able to continue that commitment with the modernization of the water system, and linking the Windham and Hensonville water lines.”

MT. EAGLE: Why should voters give you their support?

EXUM: “I am semi-retired and can be dedicated completely to the job.

We are losing generational families and families that came to Windham over the years because of what we offer.

“Their kids can’t find jobs, they can’t find that niche with the proper amount of employment to allow for proper growth and rural space to keep the character of Windham

“This means creating jobs that develop into a middle-class community with a housing market that is supported by these jobs. “I have a strong desire and willingness to really build and work with the whole community on these issues, and not just if you are a Democrat or a Republican.”

HOYT:  “My proven track record and loyalty to the town as supervisor and highway superintendent [for eighteen years prior to being elected town supervisor].

“I have worked with elected officials in the Greene County Legislature and the New York Senate and Assembly, on both sides of the aisle, garnering financial support from those entities for needed projects in our town.

“I am extremely proud of our ambulance and senior citizen center [built under his administration] and working with the Windham Foundation for improvements to our town park and future endeavors, such as a new little league ballfield [on lands deeded to the town by the Foundation].

MT. EAGLE: What is your message to the residents of the community?

EXUM: “Let's Make Windham Local Again!. A vote for me is a vote for taking on the hard issues that face our community in the 21st century.

“It's a vote for the building of a community that will exist for another 100 generations with names we all know and recognize today.

“I stand for building Windham Stronger Together, no matter the political party because these aren’t political issues, these are community Issues.”

HOYT: “Go with a proven commodity. People know me. They know what I’ve done as their highway superintendent and town supervisor. 

“People know what I stand for and what we, as a town, have been able to accomplish. I stand on my record.”

Editor’s Note: Due to Election Law changes, the victor in the 2025 vote for Windham town supervisor will serve a one-year term, rather than two years, needing to run again in 2026 for a fresh 2-year term.

 

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LEGISLATURE STUFF - Good Old Same Old Budget

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - It has been a while, six straight years to be precise, since there was a tax levy increase contained in the Greene County budget, and that financial fun fact will very likely be repeated.

County legislature members are expected to make it seven in a row after a public hearing on the proposed 2026 spending plan is held on October 27 in the auditorium at Catskill Central School.

Tentative figures were revealed by county Budget Officer Charles Martinez during a legislative Finance Committee session, earlier this week.

Martinez, the ranking member of the legislature with over four decades of public service, noted that keeping taxes at an even keel wasn’t easy.

“The development of this year’s budget has been more difficult than usual due to potential fiscal changes from both the Federal and State governments,” Martinez said.

Over the past several months, lawmakers have been forewarned that dollars usually coming in to help offset costs for various programs, particularly within Social Services, may be substantially cut.

In addition to those forecasted slashes, resulting in the county needing to find the money to maintain services, “there is much uncertainty as the Federal government is currently in shutdown,” Martinez said.

And meanwhile, “the State will not address budget reductions until after January 2026,” Martinez pointed out. “This leaves many unanswered questions that may very well compromise our financial plan.”

Despite the doubts, Martinez expressed optimism, saying, “absent those dilemmas, this Tentative Budget will not result in any property tax levy increase for fiscal year 2026.

“Once again, the overall property tax levy will remain at $27,404,370,” Martinez said. “This is the same levy amount as Fiscal Year 2020,” uninterruptedly continuing to today.

“That is a remarkable accomplishment and one that we should all be proud of,” Martinez said, noting concerted effort was required to stay put.

“Overall, the budget expense line has increased approximately $5,670,000, or 4.17 percent,” Martinez said.

“However if we adjust for known changes being made by the Federal and State, and just factor in county expense increases, the growth is only $3,870,000 or 2.8 percent,” Martinez said.

Some of the significant changes to expenses are payroll increases subject to collective bargaining agreements and inflation rises along with retiree pensions and health insurance expenses, the tentative budget shows.

Decreases in Federal and State aid would most directly impact HEAP (the Home Energy Assistance Program and SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance  Program).

County Social Services Commissioner Kira Pospesel has been preparing local officials for the painful-to-swallow pecuniary pill, allowing county administrator Shaun Groden and his office to proactively adjust.

And there’s good news. “On the other side of the ledger, revenue increases have been gained from sales tax receipts, interest earning from investment yields and mortgage taxes,” Martinez said.

“Certainly, sales tax receipts continue to rise each year, and they remain our primary source of revenue.  As past budget messages have outlined, at some point soon we must determine where the apex of sales tax receipts may lay,” Martinez said. 

As has been true since 2020, “while the property tax levy will not change overall, the amount to be raised by each town does,” Martinez said.

“Based upon adjustments made by New York State and the town’s equalization rate, eight of our fourteen towns will see a tax rate reduction while six towns will experience an increase,” Martinez said.

“This reality is driven by real estate market activity as compared to town assessing practices and is outside the control of the county. This change is consistent with previous years’ adjustments,” Martinez said.

“If there [is] a central message of this budget proposal and the overall status of the county’s fiscal condition, [it is that] this proposal once again holds the line of property tax increases while not sacrificing the budget to future threats,” Martinez said.

“Our establishment of reserve funds and property tax stabilization funds marks sincere efforts and accomplishments in fiscal security,” Martinez said.

“The number of previously approved Capital projects, while using idle funds to support, outlines our use of funds outside of bonding and future debt,” Martinez said.

“We have invested millions of dollars in direct service level facilities that our community needs.  Many of our primary buildings have been replaced or improved with additional improvements pending,” Martinez said.

And at the risk of being resplendently redundant, Martinez concluded, “I trust that the community will once again embrace the results of this fiscal plan that provides no increase in property taxes. Truly remarkable.”

A copy of the 85-page tentative budget is available on the county website, showing $141,858,252 in Total Appropriations balanced by a combined total of $114,453,882 in Estimated Revenue ($108,749,955) and Appropriated Fund Balance ($5,703,927) plus the $27,404,370 tax levy.

 

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Lexington Hears Highway Garage Update

By Michael Ryan

LEXINGTON - Winds coming from the southwest are often the most wicked in Lexington which is one reason the new highway department garage will face the way it does, hopefully doing so before next winter.

Town council members, at a recent meeting, got an update on the multi-million dollar job from Jason Preisner of Lamont Engineers.

Preisner said the building design and site plans are nearing completion, setting the stage for bid-letting by January 1, 2026.

The timing is not by happenstance, resulting in “ideal pricing for the town,” Preisner said, noting the finalization of paperwork related to vital grant funding is likewise tying up loose ends.

It was announced, just before Christmas in 2024, that Lexington would be receiving $1.31 million from the State Department of Environmental Conservation Climate Smart Communities program.

The matching grant is allowing the town to move forward on a project initially estimated to carry a price tag of $2.25 million.

“Nobody can predict the bids but we’re excited about this and very grateful for the DEC assistance,” town supervisor Jo Ellen Schermerhorn says.

The need for upgrades in the highway department dates back two decades and more, to the period when the late Kenneth Becker was supervisor, searching diligently for external funding support.

It was well known the old highway garage site, located along Route 42, was hit by numerous flooding incidents, most dramatically in the summer of 2011 and Tropical Storm Irene.

Over the years, groundwork was set for selling that land to the Department of Environmental Protection as part of their flood mitigation program.

Money gained from there will be channeled toward paying off bonding that will be secured to take care of costs above the $1.31 million grant.

Lexington’s road department is currently spread out, housed primarily in makeshift quarters at Mosquito Point, along Route 23A. 

When the new garage is up and running, the Mosquito Point building will then be sold, likewise directing that money toward bond payback.

There is also a modern winter sand/salt storage building along Greene County Route 13 where the new garage will be constructed.

The garage will be situated closer to Route 23A than the sand/salt shed and perpendicular to, rather than parallel to, the main drag, for ease of truck entrance and maneuverability. 

Lexington’s new home base will be a single story 58-by-152-foot wood-framed structure constructed to the southwest of the existing salt shed, documents from Lamont Engineering state.

“The building will have six 16-foot-wide by 14-foot-tall truck bays, as well as administrative/office areas, storage, a break room, and unisex restroom with shower,” Lamont Engineering states. 

Preisner said the site will include a below-ground rainwater holding tank, noting similar tanks, “have been really successful in other facilities,” reducing strain on wells for washing trucks, interior cleaning, etc.

Solar roof panels and radiant floor pipes will be installed, making the most of precious winter heat, especially when bay doors are opened and the warmth-stealing southwest winds invade.

In other business:

—Town council members set a 2026 budget workshop for October 21, at 6 p.m., anticipating there could be the usual necessary increases.

“Insurance is a major concern,” Supervisor Schermerhorn says. “It has really taken a jump this time,” to the tune of roughly 15 percent.

Council members are expected to pass a local law, allowing the budget to surpass the State mandated 2 percent tax increase limit. 

“We have a small budget, not much to work with, so we do this every year, just in case,” Schermerhorn says, protecting the town from penalties. 

“We are doing the best we can for our people,” says Schermerhorn who is overseeing her last budget, retiring as supervisor on December 31, 2025.

—Town board members changed the date of their next regular monthly meeting, usually the first Tuesday of every month, from November 4 (Election Day) to Wednesday, November 5.

 

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