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The Eastwick Press Newspaper

Eastern Rensselaer County's Community Newspaper

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Grafton

Grafton Planning Board Action – New Faces

January 30, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Kieron Kramer

In spite of the weather hysteria, the Grafton Planning Board held its regular meeting on Monday at 7 pm under the guidance of Planning Board Chairman Tom Withcuskey. There were two new faces at this meeting. Linda Laveway was appointed at the Organizational meeting on January 5 to fill the vacancy caused by Pete Gundrum’s resignation in early June for personal reasons. Allison Kirchner is the new Secretary to the Planning Board, replacing Jessica Crandall, who left in order to concentrate on her job and her academics. There was no one in the audience, probably because of the dire weather reports. All Board members were present except Arthur Surprise. There was no snow.

[Read more…] about Grafton Planning Board Action – New Faces

Filed Under: Front Page, Grafton, Local News

Letter To The Editor – In Response…

January 30, 2015 By eastwickpress

To the Editor:

I am writing in response to the attack made upon me by Mrs. Cathy Goyer in her letter to the editor published in last week’s Eastwick Press.

I wish to assure our residents that the allegations & statements made by Mrs. Goyer are false & self serving. She called me a liar & stated that I “con” people with my statements, anyone who knows me or has dealt with me knows this is very far from truthful. Friends have suggested that I file a defamation suit against Mrs. Goyer for these accusations, I want our residents to know that I am not going to do so, if I did I would have to file against the town as well because Mrs. Goyer is an appointed town official, I will not penalize the town for her poor repetitive actions. It was her actions as Deputy Town Supervisor that resulted in our former supervisor Mr. Sawyer suing the town & obtaining a lucrative settlement in Mr. Sawyer’s favor. I believe that the letter was written in an ongoing attempt by Mrs. Goyer to discredit me in any manner available to her. The actions of Mrs. Goyer & her husband during the past year bear this out, Mrs. Goyer went to the town bank & attempted to declare me a forger, her husband has verbally accosted me twice (once during a town board meeting) in the past few months using false accusations, Mrs. Goyer has filed a false report with PESH against me, again using false accusations & now last week’s letter to the editor. I believe the reasons for this to be twofold, first, upon appointment I had to replace one of her family members as town bookkeeper resulting in the vindictive actions she & her family have demonstrated.

The replacement was necessary to improve services to the town & make our vendor payments in a timely manner thus reducing late charges on invoices.

Secondly, I suspect she is party to a small clique of people in town who are attempting to influence our voters, their members are easily identified, just read their nonsense on facebook, watch their actions at the town board meetings & read the letters sent in by their “wives”.

The town clerk’s office issues are many, I listed them publicly during the December town board meeting, the Eastwick published several of them in their article covering that meeting, unfortunately Mrs. Goyer the acting deputy town clerk choose to omit them from the meeting’s minutes even though she was given a copy of them.

The reason for all these issues ? Mrs. Putnam our elected town clerk hasn’t performed her full duties for several years, many of our residents who have had need of the services usually provided by the clerk’s office can attest to this, additionally, sporting license’s are no longer available which places the town in violation of Environmental law.

Mrs. Putnam & Mrs. Goyer do not keep posted hours making it very difficult for resident’s to obtain services. Revenue’s generated by the clerk’s office are down as well resulting in an increased tax burden on our residents.

I have been asked by many residents why the town board hasn’t done something about the lack of service by our Town Clerk.

The answer is the town board cannot take action because the clerk is elected, to have the clerk removed a citizen / resident must file a petition with the State Supreme Court Appellate Division proving misconduct, malfeasance, malversion or maladministration. Unfortunately the law manual further states that the court is reluctant to reverse the will of the electorate so this becomes an expensive time consuming process. Mrs. Putnam is very aware of this, so she continues to fail to perform most of her duties yet she continues to draw her full salary every pay period, a truly sad way for such a beloved long tenured individual to end her lengthy career.

I sincerely hope that both of these women either come to their senses or get whatever help they may need in resolving their issues, our residents deserve much better.

In closing I wish to assure all our residents that I will continue to make the best decisions possible for the benefit of all our residents & I will not allow attacks by vindictive self serving people to sway my actions for our residents.

Frank Higgins

Grafton Town Supervisor

Editor’s Note: This letter is unedited at the request of the writer. It also marks the last time letters about the claims and counterclaims by the Grafton Deputy Town Clerk and the Grafton Town Supervisor will be published in this paper. The squabble is not determinative and serves no useful purpose.

Filed Under: Grafton, Letters & Comments, Local News

Social Media 101 At The Grafton Library

January 30, 2015 By eastwickpress

On Saturday, February 7, at 10:30 am, the Grafton Community Library will host the next program in its “Get Savvy about Computers” series. Digital Literacy Coordinator Sarah McFadden will be talking about all different kinds of social media, like Facebook®, Twitter®, Instagram®, professional sites like Linked In®, and more. She will explain what they are, how the work and help attendees know how to use them safely and effectively.

For more information call the Library at 279-0580 or visit graftoncommunitylibrary.org.

Filed Under: Grafton, Local News

Early February Events At GLSP

January 30, 2015 By eastwickpress

• Monday, February 2 – Almost Full Moon Outing at 6 pm. Savor winter under the glow of the moon. Meet at the Shaver Pond Center. Space is limited so please pre-register at 279-1155; let us know if you need snowshoes for the outing. This event is sponsored by Friends of GLSP

• Thursday, February 5 – Friends of Grafton Lakes State Park Meeting at 7 pm.  Join this wonderful group of outdoor enthusiasts as they make plans for trail improvements, Park events and new amenities for the public.  Meet at the Park Office.

• Monday, February 16 – Snowshoe Explore at 1 pm.  Learn to use snowshoes and head out into GLSP on an adventure.

Filed Under: Grafton, Local News, Sports Outdoors

Free Workshop: Care And Conservation Of Scrapbooks And Photo Albums

January 23, 2015 By eastwickpress

On Saturday, January 31, from 11 am to 12:30 pm, the Grafton Community Library and Grafton Historical Society will team up to offer a free workshop taught by local expert Anne Kiely that will address the care and conservation of scrapbooks and photo albums.

The workshop will be held in the Library’s program space. It will cover topics including identifying problems with the items and how to rectify them, proper handling, use of archival products to conserve photos and other ephemera, storage and use of fasteners. This is a beginners’ workshop. No prior knowledge of these procedures is necessary.

For more information and to sign up, contact the Grafton Community Library at 279-0580 or email director@graftoncommunitylibrary.org.

Filed Under: Grafton, Local News

Grafton Library To Train Workforce Development Volunteers

January 23, 2015 By eastwickpress

Thanks to a grant from Upper Hudson Library System, the Grafton Community Library will be offering eight free programs this spring designed to help local residents find and apply for jobs online, strengthen their resumes and their interview techniques and learn important computer skills that are essential for job seekers today. The Grafton Library staff will also be trained to assist patrons one on one with their online job searches, as well as with creating resumes using free resume software available at the Library.

The Library will also be training Workforce Development Volunteers to assist patrons, by appointment, with the basics of online job searches and applications, as well as basic computer skills, including creating an email address and word processing. Volunteers will need to attend a 1½ hour training session and then be available as the need arises to assist patrons. For more information on all aspects of this program contact Library Director Christian Collins at 279-0580 or director@graftoncommunitylibrary.org.

Filed Under: Grafton, Local News

Letter To The Editor – Now It Is My Turn

January 23, 2015 By eastwickpress

To the Editor:

I have correspondence and documents to show proof of just about everything I will be addressing in this letter to the Editor. I will be more than happy to share it with anyone.

The [Grafton] Town Supervisor has stated that he has removed the Town Clerk personnel from the voucher process because there are too many late bills. First I will state that we are not incurring late charges. The bill paying process of a municipality is very lengthy and bills/checks do cross in the mail many times due to the process not any one person.

When I took over the bill paying some time in July an email was sent to the Town’s attorney on 8/4/14 describing how as of July 4 different independent companies had bills dating back to 3/14 which I was working on getting paid. One vendor no longer allowed the Town to charge. The Supervisor’s response was “I didn’t get the bill.” This vendor faxed their bill to us each week. One of our County Waste accounts is billed through their website. I had to email the Town Supervisor 4 times asking him to either open up and print out the bill or give me the information so I could. Finally I gave up and called County Waste, explained the situation and reset the contact information so I was able to access the bill myself. Is this cooperation?

He [the Supervisor] stated that he receives no cooperation from the Deputy Town Clerk. I have asked him a question on a certain voucher and his response was “You are handling the bills, do whatever you want.” Is that cooperation from him? That is just one example. He states I posted the Standard Work Day resolution for 120 days. Actually he tried to get me to sign an affidavit stating the resolution had already been posted. No one had recollection of when so I chose to post the resolution. I dated it when I posted it (9-29). I removed it when I returned from vacation in early November which means it was not posted for 120 days as the Supervisor stated.

I was accused of changing vouchers after they were signed by the Board. One voucher was signed by the Supervisor and Councilwoman Messenger. The other Board members questioned one of the charges on the bill. The vendor agreed to drop that charge. Now the Supervisor and Councilwoman Messenger refuse to sign the lower bill. They prefer to spend more of our tax dollars just because it was I who got the bill lowered.

Yes, when Joe Allain told me he now had to count the recycle cash before it could be given to the Clerk’s office, I did use profanity in making the comment “This is bull s—-.” Then I picked up the money on the table that he had just taken out of an envelope. Is that “attacking Mr. Allain?” Joe Allain made a complaint that I used profanity; odd that a highway employee said exactly the same thing in the conference room in Joe’s presence a few days earlier. Joe made no complaint about that. That leads me to believe that it is alright for a man to use profanity at the Town Hall but not a woman! I never “attacked” Joe Allain nor did I rip money from his hand. Another lie told by our Town Supervisor. I will no longer take the recycle cash from the Supervisor’s office because it has gone through too many hands before I would see it. That is not a “proper procedure” as he put it.

There is a limited amount of petty cash in the Town Clerk’s office. I can’t always reimburse every receipt he gives me. He turned in 2 receipts, and I wanted to pay out the one but was told “if you aren’t going to fill both then you can’t do any”.

He complained that I haven’t gone for the DEC training. I do not get paid for this job. I choose to spend as much time with my family as I can. Before he complains a deputy clerk isn’t spending enough time or going for training maybe he should look at the pay scale. I consider myself as doing as much as I can when I can.

As far as threatening the Supervisor, he is right on that count. I threatened to seek legal action against him if he didn’t stop harassing me.

The Supervisor is very good at conning people into believing he is a victim in all these situations, that he hasn’t had a functioning Town Clerk since he started. The Town Clerk has many job functions and has to almost daily keep the Town Supervisor at bay because he is constantly trying to undermine everything coming from the Clerk’s office. He fails to admit he has bullied our Town Clerk to the point of tears, stood in the Clerk’s office yelling, “I don’t care about the law” and on occasion has said, “I have Barbara right where I want her, I knew exactly what I was doing when I made her Deputy Supervisor.”

I could go on and on with more underhanded deeds and comments, but I stand with the law which is why I have won every battle I have had with the Supervisor. Again he fails to talk about that!

The Eastwick Press keeps interviewing the Supervisor after each meeting and puts in print all these negative things, but no one from the Press has ever asked for the other side of the story.

Cathy Goyer

Deputy Town Clerk

Filed Under: Grafton, Letters & Comments, Local News

Updated Schedule: Grafton Lakes State Park 30th Annual Winter Festival

January 23, 2015 By eastwickpress

Grafton Lakes State Park and the Friends of Grafton Lakes State Park will host the 30th Annual Winter Festival and Ice Fishing Contest on Saturday, January 24. Despite last weekend’s thaw, Grafton Lakes State Park has ample snow and ice for their annual celebration of winter. The Winter Fest will feature outdoor events along with indoor exhibits, food vendors and family-friendly and recreational activities. The event is free of charge and main events run from 10 am to 4 pm.

New offerings this year include free snowmobile rides, a kid-friendly ice skating rink along with a designated ice hockey oval and several new exhibitors. Demonstrations of geocaching and loom weaving, local conservation efforts from birders and animal tracking volunteers and a rare chance to view the sun with a solar telescope are among the new exhibits at the Festival. For the kids, Winter Fest offers its popular snow bowling hill, snowshoe races and a snowball toss, fun kids crafts, as well as rides with the charming Northland Newfoundlands. Adults can join in a guided snowshoe or cross country ski outing or borrow snowshoes for a free demo around the park. Fans of four-legged creatures will enjoy the horse drawn carriage rides from Indian Creek Farms, a guided morning walk for dogs, as well as the tail wagging canines from Rensselaer County Search & Rescue and Out of the Pits Pitbull Rescue.

The 8th Annual Polar Plunge benefitting the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation charges into Long Pond at 1 pm. This year the Plunge includes a playful prize for the silliest costume offered by the Friends of Grafton Lakes State Park so plan your best beach attire! To pre-register for the Plunge, please call Margaret Philips for more information at 479-3739 or call the Park office.

Visitors who need to warm up can savor some hot food from Brunswick Barbecue and the local Our Lady of the Snow Parish while enjoying indoor exhibits. Live birds of prey, kids’ nature crafts and a variety of regional community and conservation organizations will entertain patrons.

The annual ice fishing contest draws several hundred anglers and will run from 5:30 am to 3 pm on all the ponds in the Park except for White Lily. Participants can register starting at 5:30 am until 11 am the morning of the event at the Park’s pole barn, accessible via the Park’s main entrance. A $10 entry fee for adults 16 and older is required to participate in the fishing tournament. All first place adult winners will receive a $300 cash prize this year, awarded for the longest length catch of trout, walleye/chain pickerel and yellow perch. Children may enter at no charge and winning entries will receive gift certificates and other prizes. Last year the Park gave out over $1,500 in cash and prizes, thanks to the generosity of our sponsors. Please remember that all participants 16 and older must have a New York State fishing license to fish in the Park at any time.

Please use the Park’s main entrance on Grafton Lakes State Park Way for this year’s event and pick up event information at the ticket booth as you enter. There is no entrance fee for the Winter Festival. For more information about this event, please call the Park at 518-279-1155. A full schedule of events is available at www.nysparks.com/parks and on www.facebook.com/GraftonLakesStatePark.

Filed Under: Grafton, Local News, Sports Outdoors

Become A Wildlife Tracker And Become A Citizen Scientist

January 23, 2015 By eastwickpress

The Dyken Pond Environmental Education Center, the Friends of Dyken Pond, Tamakoce Wilderness Programs and the Rensselaer Plateau Alliance have teamed together to begin wildlife tracking surveys of mammals. There is an interest in documenting distribution and abundance of fisher, bobcat, coyote, grey fox, otter, bear and moose among other mammals. In order to do this, there is a need to train volunteers who have the knowledge and skills to help with monitoring surveys.

The goals of the wildlife survey are to:

• record the presence and abundance of these species: black bear, fisher, gray fox, coyote, bobcat, moose and otter;

• identify patterns of travel;

• identify core feeding, denning/resting, mating and birthing areas, and

• develop a sense of the relative abundance and distribution of wildlife populations and to provide the public with an opportunity to be involved in monitoring our forest mammals.

In 2015, plans are underway to monitor a 40 acre parcel at the Dyken Pond Environmental Education Center. As we gain more volunteers, more area can be monitored. Our ultimate goal is to monitor the entire Rensselaer Plateau.

To participate, you will be expected to attend tracking training provided by Tamakoce Wilderness Programs and agree to complete three surveys in one season following guidelines and submit your findings. There is a fee of $250 for this training. The training will give you skills that will last you a lifetime.

Training Schedule

January 31 – Field Day, 10 am to 3 pm

February 11 – Evening slideshow/data collection, 6 to 9 pm

February 28 – Field Day, 10 am to 3 pm

March 8 – Field Day, 10 am to 3 pm

March 21 – Field Evaluation, 10 am to 3 pm

May 9 – Field Day, 10 am to 3 pm

Become a Tracker and Citizen Scientist! For more information and to pre-register, contact Dan Yacobellis at info@tamakocewildernessprograms.com.

Filed Under: Grafton, Local News, Rensselaer County, Sports Outdoors

Grafton Town Board Action – Dog Fight? – And The Organizational Meeting

January 16, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Deb Alter

There was a somewhat heated discussion at the Grafton regular Town Board meeting on Monday, January 12, about the newly appointed Dog Control Officer. At the organizational meeting on January 5 James Goyer, Jr. (aka Jay) was appointed Dog Control Officer with the understanding that he could leave his post at the Grafton Highway Department if an animal emergency arose. Apparently that is not the case.  [Read more…] about Grafton Town Board Action – Dog Fight? – And The Organizational Meeting

Filed Under: Front Page, Grafton, Local News

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