Monday, April 7, 2014

Public Input Sought on Village Tree Plan


Gratifying news & announcement by Village Hall about the work of our Tree Advisory Committee!   Please mark your calendars and come on down to the Village Board workshop on Tuesday, April 15th to hear all about the progress of the Tree Management Plan.

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"Responding to the observable need for an organized, efficient, long-term approach to caring for public trees and tree beds in the Village of Cold Spring, a Tree Advisory Committee was established January 2014 by the Village Board.  With village beautification as their motivating force, ten volunteers from the wider community have been working to compose a Tree Management Plan and a framework for establishing a permanent Tree Board to tend to the needs of village-owned trees. Only village-owned trees will be addressed by this effort, including trees between the curb and the sidewalk and those in public parks. 

All interested village residents or business owners are invited to attend the Village Board’s workshop on Tuesday, April 15 at 8:00 pm in Village Hall to view an illustrated presentation of a preliminary draft of the Tree Management Plan, offer feedback and exchange ideas.  The final draft of the Tree Advisory Committee’s recommendations will be presented to the Board of Trustees later this spring.

The establishment of a structured effort to improve village street trees follows on the heels of the gradual retirement over the last decade of the few volunteer tree stewards who had been valiantly aiding tree bed maintenance on Main Street. A recently renewed groundswell in volunteer interest in village trees saw the completion of a street tree inventory in 2011, the establishment of a Village Tree Nursery in the fall of 2013, and the planting of several dozen new street trees over the last few years. But much work is left to be done on Main Street and beyond, and coordination of these volunteer efforts with village requirements is needed in order to achieve a lovely, shady streetscape with efficient use of limited resources and to ensure such improvements over the long term. 

The overall goals of this effort are to make sure that Cold Spring's public tree stock is kept healthy and attractive through good cultural practices;  to replace dead or dying trees with ones of the appropriate species;  to plant additional trees to increase overall shade coverage;  to improve upon limitations imposed by our local site conditions like overhead wires and narrow tree beds;  and to establish a permanent voluntary Tree Board to make certain that this effort continues in the future.

Armed with appropriate expertise and a cohesive plan, a permanent volunteer Tree Board will help protect the village’s investment in its current tree stock by improving on current care and maintenance practices and by securing much-needed sources of outside funding to supplement limited village budgets for continued tree improvements. The establishment of a Tree Board and adoption of the components of a tree management plan will both achieve efficient use of resources and will open up numerous grant opportunities for the village. 

Anyone interested in getting involved in this work is invited to contact the village clerk at vcsclerk@bestweb.net or (845) 265-3611."

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Correcting the Record.... what I really said

At its April 1st workshop, the Village Board invited interested residents to send letters applying to be on the Committee on Zoning Code Updates & Amendments.

Contrary to reporting in the PCN&R on April 2, I did not say:  "any member of a standing committee should not be on the zoning code update committee"

I said:  "the idea isn't that any of the standing boards we have would do this, we would assemble a committee and I think that there are people who are on various standing boards now that have casually expressed interest." 



A Call for Village Residents Interested in Joining the Village's Committee on Zoning Code Updates & Amendments

Good News!  Because the Village expects the revised agreement from NYSERDA at the end of April, Tuesday night, the Village Board decided to send out a call to Village residents to send letters of interest in joining the Committee on Zoning Code Updates & Amendments.  Our NYSERDA grant opportunity includes a timeline; we need to assemble our committee and stay on schedule.

This is a new committee. Its work is not being handled by an existing board, however, all existing board members are also welcome to apply. I want this to be clear because Wednesday's newspaper misrepresented a statement I made about the membership of this committee.  (see "Correcting the Record")

Happily for the Village, reaching agreement with NYSERDA and appointing our Committee on Zoning Code Updates & Amendments represent real money to the Village!

This week our Village Clerk announced:

The Village of Cold Spring Board of Trustees is seeking letters of interest from Village of Cold Spring residents who would like to participate in a five member committee to develop recommendations for the Village Board of Trustees on updates/ amendments to the Village of Cold Spring Zoning Code. Please send letters of interest and qualifications to the Village of Cold Spring Board of Trustees, 85 Main Street, Cold Spring, NY 10516 prior to April 28, 2014.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Constitutionally Protected Speech Under Threat in Cold Spring, or "If we can't get this done now then a lawsuit tomorrow."

Since Friday, March 14th, I have received three (3) letters from an attorney representing the PCN&R, its publisher and staff, threatening to sue me if I don't take down a Facebook post, repudiate its content and apologize for it.   

In an effort to intimidate me, one of these letters was sent to me on Election Day as I worked hard to Get Out the Vote in our Village, another was recently sent to me at my place of employment.


All three letters make baseless claims against me, including that I have defamed and libeled the PCN&R and its ownership. 

Four (4) other of our Village neighbors received similar threats of litigation, asserting claims of defamation, demanding repudiations and apologies.  To me the most notable included prescribed wording of apology, followed by the threat, "If we can't get this done now then a lawsuit tomorrow."   

All of these assertions of defamation and legal threats are baseless in fact and law.  In light of these threats of litigation, I have retained legal counsel.  


Last week a member of the PCN&R staff attended our Village Board workshop to read a statement claiming that my FREE SPEECH and that of Trustee Matt Francisco was an attempt to "chill" the PCN&R's own.   

This week, a PCN&R article seems to suggest that my seeking legal support in the wake of its threats may result in ‘legal confrontation’ for me and the Village of Cold Spring.

I believe the PCNR's efforts to intimidate me, and these bullying tactics aimed at residents, local business people, volunteers and elected representatives have a clear purpose: To scare us out of our Constitutional rights to FREE SPEECH and disrupt our democratic process. 

According to the PCN&R "Hawkins Continues Divisive Actions"......

Free online access looks like a good indication of the week's agenda:

Hawkins Continues Divisive Actions

Monday, March 31, 2014

Sharing Village News is Part of the Job

Part of my job on the Cold Spring Village Board is communicating with residents, friends and neighbors keeping them updated on the good work of the Village Board and informed of its activities, important news and issues that affect us all.

As Trustee, this part of the job gives me great pleasure. I love talking about the many good things our Village Board accomplishes -- especially the projects I've been a part of, such as our FREE Summer Film Series run by the Cold Spring Film Society, negotiating a state grant to update our zoning and historic codes and organizing volunteers to support the care of our Village street trees.

One of the ways I share news is by using online media.  By using Facebook I am able quickly reach hundreds of residents of our community to spread the word about how good we have it here in Cold Spring.

Unfortunately, some in our community want to restrict the reporting of news and information about our Village.

Last week I was strongly criticized by the Putnam County News & Recorder and Village Planning Board Chair Barney Malloy for a sharing Village news in a Facebook post that highlighted a vital step in securing $75,000 in NYSERDA funding for our Village to use to update our zoning and historic district codes.  PCN&R columnist Tim Greco contributed his own detractions and related commentary on Facebook 'Philipstown Debate Forum' (not 'Philipstown Is Talking' - as stated in the original post).

Unfortunately, I'm sure these unfounded attacks will continue in the PCN&R and on Facebook. With one year left in my term as Trustee, I expect the negative press to grow louder and more extreme.

However, I will not be intimidated. I will keep sharing good news about the meaningful work conducted by and for the Village of Cold Spring.

For those of you on Facebook, you can continue to find my posts on my campaign page at: https://www.facebook.com/StephanieForTrustee <https://www.facebook.com/StephanieForTrustee> .

 Not on Facebook? Find my posts here:  stephanieforcoldspring.blogspot.com <http://stephanieforcoldspring.blogspot.com <http://stephanieforcoldspring.blogspot.com> >

You can email me questions directly at hawkins.coldspring@gmail.com <hawkins.coldspring@gmail.com>

I'm always happy to hear your constructive contributions to any discussion.

Friday, March 14, 2014

What's the status of the $75,000 NYSERDA grant to help fund our Zoning and Historic Code updates?

Good news to report!

Yesterday, the Village Attorney and I met with representatives from NYSERDA to discuss the terms of our contract for that grant. By the end of our meeting, NYSERDA understood clearly the Village's obligations to honor public process and agreed to make important changes in the contract, ensuring the Village's award of the $75,000 will fund our *process* without obligations to adopt specific legislation.

Many thanks are due to NYSERDA for being sensible and fair-minded negotiating partners, and to the Mayor Ralph Falloon and my fellow Trustees Matt Francisco, Bruce Campbell and Chuck Hustis for supporting continued discussions with NYSERDA. This grant helps us all.

*Protecting the Village We Love*