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The Eastwick Press Newspaper

Eastern Rensselaer County's Community Newspaper

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New Lebanon

The New Lebanon Country Market Opens July 6

June 27, 2014 By eastwickpress

submitted  by Tistrya Hamilton

The New Lebanon Country Market at Windswept Farm will be hosting a special fundraising event on Sunday, July 20, from 10 am to 2 pm!  Come join us for a day of fun for the whole family featuring music by The Limbshakers (old-school jazz, blues and swing), a silent auction, kids’ arts and crafts, kids’ play area with bounce house, hay rides, delicious hot foods, locally crafted beer and, of course, all of our wonderful vendors.

The country market will be held every Sunday in the month of July at Windswept Farm from 10 am to 2 pm at 36 Old Route 20, New Lebanon. Come enjoy your Sunday with us while supporting your local farmers and artisans and filling up your fridge with locally grown fruits and vegetables, locally raised meats and fresh baked goods. And don’t forget to stock up on handcrafted soaps and body care products, beautiful jewelry and amazing wood furniture.

Entertainment At The Market

Our entertainment calendar for July is as follows:

• July 6 – Divinitress featuring a kids’ music set and instrument making – http://www.sonicbids.com/band/divinitress/audio/;

• July 13 – The Peters Brothers – acoustic duo;

• July 20 – Special Fundraising Event featuring The Limbshakers, and

• July 27 – Abby Lappen – www.reverbnation.com/abbylappen.

Filed Under: Local News, New Lebanon

Experts On Lyme Disease At The New Lebanon Library

June 20, 2014 By eastwickpress

Integrative health care professional Jennifer Baer Enos and veterinarian Carolyn Sanford will speak on Lyme Disease treatment and prevention at the New Lebanon Library on Tuesday, June 24, at 7 pm. New York State is a hot bed of tick borne diseases, and Columbia-Rensselaer County is among the highest areas in the nation with the problem. The speakers will discuss new developments in Lyme and other tick-borne diseases and also be open to general questions from the audience.

Jennifer Enos has worked in Integrative Health for over five years, employing a combination of traditional and holistic therapies. She specializes in Lyme Disease and has gathered a wealth of knowledge from conferences, patients and her own personal experiences with the disease.

Dr. Carolyn Sanford is a veterinarian and animal behavior consultant at the Nassau Veterinary Clinic. She will focus on tick borne diseases and how they affect pets and people.

This program is free and open to the public. The New Lebanon Library is located at 550 State Route 20, ¼ mile north of the yellow blinking light at the intersection of Routes 20/22.

Filed Under: Local News, New Lebanon, Rensselaer County, Stephentown

The Proposed Gas Pipeline Meeting

June 20, 2014 By eastwickpress

The Stop the NY Fracked Gas Pipeline Steering Committee will hold an organizational meeting to discuss the Proposed Gas Pipeline through Columbia County on Wednesday, June 25, at 7 pm at the Canaan Firehouse on Route 295. We will be discussing the formation of committees to accomplish the tasks we have thus far identified. Please bring ideas for work you would like to do.

We will need to form committees pertaining to the following areas:

• State petition;

• Town engagement;

• organizing a landowners meeting with lawyer(s);

• political lobbying;

• trying to form committees from areas between Columbia County and Wright, NY, getting addresses for those landowners and sending them information;

• researching about pipelines and fracking including what others are doing;

• connecting with other pipeline, environmental groups;

• organizing a meeting about alternative energy;

• creating a website (or putting information on nofrackedgasinmass site);

• fundraising, and

• writing letters/preparing materials.

Specific tasks that need to be done include:

• taking attorney names that we have collected, possibly identifying others, and organizing a meeting between landowners and a lawyer specializing in landowner rights vis a vis a utility company;

• identifying the landowners who abut the pipeline in Rensselaer, Albany and Schoharie counties, and

• receiving the information from the various anti-fracking and anti-pipeline groups and distilling what is important for us to know.

We have spent $500 so far on copying and mailings. Any contributions would be greatly appreciated.

Please invite your neighbors and friends. If you are unable to make this meeting but wish to be involved, please let us know, particularly about what areas you are most interested.

Filed Under: Local News, New Lebanon, Stephentown

Grover And Worster At The New Lebanon Library

June 20, 2014 By eastwickpress

Local favorites David Grover and Linda Worster will be performing together at the New Lebanon Library on Friday, June 27, from 6 to 8 pm.  All are welcome, and the event is free

David Grover has earned countless awards including a Grammy nomination and Artist of the Year. He spent many years as Arlo Guthrie’s lead guitar and band leader. Grover and his Big Bear Band have performed at the White House, opened the Goodwill Games, appeared on The Today Show, performed with the Detroit Symphony for their Youth Series and played for the delegates of the United Nations.

Linda Worster has toured as a solo musician throughout New England, New York and New Jersey, performing in many coffeehouses, colleges, churches, healing centers, cafés and clubs. She has opened for many well-known artists including Livingston Taylor, Harry Chapin, Paul Stookey, Leo Kotke, David Bromberg, Bill Staines, Dave Mallett, Jonathan Edwards, Joan Baez, Richie Havens and Taj Mahal.

For further information, please call the Library at 518-794-8844. The Library is located at 550 State Route 20, ¼ mile north of the yellow blinking light at the intersection of Routes 20/22.

Filed Under: Local News, New Lebanon

New Lebanon Town Board Action – Concern About Gas Pipeline Percolates

June 13, 2014 By eastwickpress

by Thaddeus Flint

The few first blades of a new grass roots movement started to take root Tuesday night at the New Lebanon Town Board meeting when some residents began to question a proposed high pressure natural gas pipeline that could one day pass through the Town. The seeds, so to speak, had been sewn at a meeting in Canaan the week before by a new group called the Columbia County Citizens for a Sustainable Future, who have begun to organize against the project which would follow the route of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline that already cuts through the area.

[Read more…] about New Lebanon Town Board Action – Concern About Gas Pipeline Percolates

Filed Under: Front Page, Local News, New Lebanon

An Informational Meeting In Chatham On A New Gas Pipeline Proposed For Columbia County

June 13, 2014 By eastwickpress

by Thaddeus Flint

Back in March, Becky Meir of Canaan was at the Project Native environmental film festival in Great Barrington. One of the speakers at a discussion session was Bruce Winn, President of the Berkshire Environmental Action Team. Winn was speaking about a proposed new natural gas pipeline that would run from Wright, NY, to Dracut MA, cutting through Richmond, Lenox, Pittsfield and Dalton in Massachusetts.

“There’s no way of getting there without going through Canaan,” Meir said at the time.

Less than three months after that revelation, Meir was holding the first public information meeting of the Columbia County Citizens for a Sustainable Future, a group created to inform residents of the impact the pipeline could have on the area.

Around a hundred people came to the Canaan Congregational Church last Saturday to learn more. About twenty of those people were from New Lebanon. “It’s just a beginning, but we have to start somewhere,” said Meir.

One could say that all this really started back in the 1950s when the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company installed the first of three pipelines through Columbia County. The other two pipelines were installed sometime in the 1970s and in 1992. Easements were purchased from local landowners, with about eight abutters (people whose property it crosses) in Canaan and about 23 in New Lebanon. Meir cautioned that that number might not be absolutely correct as the maps she used to determine it were not entirely accurate and Kinder Morgan, the owners of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, aren’t exactly helpful when asked for such information.

So, there are already three pipelines, what difference would a fourth make? Well, plenty it seems. This newest planned pipeline would be pushing a much larger amount of gas through at much higher pressures. Environmental groups also believe that the gas would be a product of fracking – extracting gas through high pressure water and chemicals injected deep underground – and that the chemicals used in fracking could also flow through the pipeline and possibly out of it into the area through leaks, accidents and cleaning.

Another difference, it turns out, is the internet. Back in the 50s, 70s and 90s towns and landowners had to pretty much rely on the information handed to them by the pipeline owners. Obviously they were selling a product, so some little details might not have been mentioned. Now, however, anyone can research the most minute of details. Someone could type say, ethyl-methylethyl disulfide or tetramethyl benzene or methyl pyridine into Google and see some of the problems, both to the environment and to humans, these chemicals might cause. All three are used in fracking, as are hundreds more, the problem being that the public really doesn’t know which ones exactly because company recipes are secret. Instead of just believing that pipelines are completely safe, one could research accidents, leaks and explosions. Typing “natural gas pipeline explosion” into YouTube for example rewards the viewer with over 9,000 videos of natural gas pipeline explosions.

And “safety is dropping,” said Rosemary Wessel, of No Fracked Gas in Mass, a group dedicated to stopping the pipeline in Massachusetts. According to Wessel, there have been over 990 “significant incidents” involving gas pipelines since 2000, with 34 deaths, 137 injured and $1.5 billion in damages.

Explosions, of course, are relatively rare when one considers that there are over 300,000 miles of pipelines in the U.S. Noise and vented methane, however, are much more common. Wessel explained that more compressor stations are needed along a high pressure route in order to keep the gas moving. The stations, lit up in a blaze of lights at night, are barn sized facilities with exhaust fans that “run 24/7…with a residential noise rating of 50 to 90 decibels,” she said. The stations also sometimes have to vent gasses and environmentalists say that those secret fracking chemicals could be released into the air as well.

There are, however, a few benefits that come with the pipeline. Some jobs might be created, though a handout from the meeting says these would be “very few short term jobs during the pipeline’s construction…there is no guarantee these jobs would be local.” Unless something goes wrong. In regard to their oil pipelines, Kinder Morgan once told a Canadian regulator that “spill response and cleanup creates business and employment opportunities for affected communities, regions and cleanup service providers.”

Landowners whose property the pipeline goes though would also be compensated. The exact amounts are not known. What is known is that the easements stay with the property if it is ever sold and might decrease property values in the long run due to increased selling difficulty and subsequent problems in obtaining mortgages and insurance.

Well, at least there is the gas, right?

Actually there is also no gas, not for the average resident or landowner.

“You guys aren’t getting the benefit of this gas,” said Jane Winn of the Berkshire Environmental Action Team, “it’s going right straight through to New England.”

The gas is for power generation in New England. Well, it’s supposed to be for power generation, anyway. That’s how Kinder Morgan is selling it. The gas users of New England are the ones who would be paying for the pipeline with higher tariffs. The problem with that argument, according to No Fracked Gas in Mass, is that “if current levels of state energy [in Massachusetts] efficiency programs continue, there is no need for additional natural gas infrastructure even with economic growth taken into account.”

So why build a pipeline if the gas is not needed?

To export it.

“The price for natural gas in Europe and Asia is much higher,” said Jane Winn. “Three to four times what it is in the United States.” A plant already exists in Nova Scotia that could be used to process the gas for export. A pipeline already exists going south to the U.S. It just needs lots of gas now to make it profitable. And why would Kinder Morgan pay to build a pipeline if it could get taxpayers to pay for it instead? That was one of the theories discussed. There are others of course. Perhaps Kinder Morgan really just wants to sell gas to New England as they say. The problem with accepting the word of Kinder Morgan is that its CEO, Richard Kinder, is an ex-top Enron executive. The Wall Street Journal actually called him “the luckiest ex-Enron employee,” because he was one of the few Enron heads who didn’t end in jail.

Whatever the reasons, Meir, Wessel and the Winns want the public to at least be educated before they make the decision to allow, or not allow, this pipeline to come through their towns. Kinder Morgan is reportedly already contacting land owners in New Lebanon and Canaan, asking them if they can come onto their properties and make surveys. Landowners in NY are allowed to say “no” and keep surveyors out. If they already said yes, they can still rescind previous permission. Landowners with easements are not automatically forced to accept a new pipeline. The project is still in the planning stage and could possibly be stopped if enough landowners and towns opposed it. Should the project succeed, construction is currently slated to begin in April 2017 with the pipeline operational by the end of 2018.

The next meeting of Columbia County Citizens for a Sustainable Future is scheduled for June 25. The location will depend on the expected attendance so those interested are asked to contact Becky Meir or Bob Connors at 518-781-4686 or raconnors@yahoo.com or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/stopnyfrackedgaspipeline.

Filed Under: Local News, New Lebanon, Stephentown

History Of U.S. Route 20 At The New Lebanon Library

June 13, 2014 By eastwickpress

On Thursday, June 19, at 6:30 pm authors Bill and Mary Lewis will discuss their book series, Through the Heartland on US 20: Eastern New York, at the New Lebanon Library. The authors will discuss their travels and the places of significance on this scenic route which begins in Boston and travels 3,365 miles to Newport, Oregon. The event will include a film of some of the book’s Eastern New York highlights. Following the discussion, the authors will sign copies of the book.

Through the Heartland on U.S. 20: Eastern New York is Volume II in a series of local history/travel guides that follows one of two remaining roads that cross the United States from coast to coast. This volume highlights cities, towns and villages – their historical stories and attractions, recommended restaurants and campgrounds – from New Lebanon, from the site of Tilden Pharmaceuticals and the Mt. Lebanon Shaker community, to Cardiff, the site of “America’s Greatest Hoax.”

Bill and Mary Lewis met over 50 years ago at a high school forensics tournament in California. They have always loved travel and have made several trans-continental road trips across the United States. In 1995 they began their research on Route 20. To date, three books in the series have been published: Massachusetts, Eastern New York and Western New York.

For further information on this free event, please call the Library at 518-794-8844. The Library is located at 550 State Route 20, ¼ mile north of the yellow blinking light at the intersection of Routes 20 and 22.

Filed Under: Local News, New Lebanon

The Great Stone Barn Project Presented To The Stephentown Historical Society

June 6, 2014 By eastwickpress

by David Flint

David Stocks, President of the Shaker Museum | Mt. Lebanon, gave an update on Monday evening to members and guests of the Stephentown Historical Society on what is happening with the Great Stone Barn project. This architectural and agricultural wonder, Stocks said, was built in 1860 for the North Family of the Mount Lebanon Shakers. Planned by North Family Elder Frederick Evans and designed by Brother George Wickersham of the Church Family, it incorporated the latest ideas in New England mill design and scientific agriculture technology.

[Read more…] about The Great Stone Barn Project Presented To The Stephentown Historical Society

Filed Under: Front Page, Local News, New Lebanon, Stephentown

Public Forum On Proposed Fracked Gas Pipeline

June 6, 2014 By eastwickpress

from Colleen Teal, New Lebanon Town Clerk

A public forum on a proposed fracked gas pipeline through Columbia County will be held on Saturday, June 7, from 7 to 9 pm at the Canaan Congregational Church, (at the intersection of Routes 5 and 295, Canaan). Bruce Winn, of the Berkshire Environmental Action Team, and Rosemary Wessel of No Fracked Gas in Mass, will speak about the environmental impact of the proposed high pressure fracked gas pipeline, health concerns and the rights of communities.

[Read more…] about Public Forum On Proposed Fracked Gas Pipeline

Filed Under: Front Page, Local News, New Lebanon

Junior Girl Scout Troop #1101 Helps Animals

June 6, 2014 By eastwickpress

The Junior Girl Scout Troop #1101 of the Berlin Central School District is collecting donations of linens, heating pads and dog food, as well as collecting five cent refundable bottles, to benefit the Rensselaer County Humane Society.

The bottles that are collected will be used to buy the few remaining pieces of necessary medical equipment, including a Pulse Ox machine, and also help fund a new roof, which was damaged over the winter, for the Mobile Spay and Neuter clinic. RCHS is hoping to have the Mobile clinic available to residents by the end of the summer.

Drop boxes are located at the Berlin Free Town Library, the Stephentown Memorial Library and the Berlin Elementary School. Please place donations in the appropriate marked containers. If you would prefer to make a monetary donation, you may send check or money orders to:

Rensselaer County Humane Society

c/o Pondview Kennels

48 Pondview Way,

East Nassau, NY. 12062.

Filed Under: Berlin, Local News, New Lebanon, Rensselaer County, Stephentown

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38th Annual Ice Fishing Contest Rescheduled

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Celebrating Retiring Board President Deborah Tudor

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February 3, 2023 Edition

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Powers Claims Runner-Up

At Inaugural NYSPHSAA Girls Wrestling Invitational Submitted by BNL Varsity Wrestling Coach Wade Prather Tallulah Powers was runner-up at 165 pounds in the inaugural NYSPHSAA Girls Wrestling Invitational held at Onondaga Community College. She was one of only three finalists from Section 2, and the only Runner Up. The meeting of 204 of the State’s top female […]

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