Lloyd Schliesser will give an illustrated talk on covered bridges at the Stephentown Historical Society meeting on Monday, April 1, at 7:30 pm. The meeting will be at the Stephentown Heritage Center on Garfield Road, Stephentown. It is free and open to the public. The building is handicapped accessible. For directions or information, phone 518-733-0010.
Schliesser, a Poestenkill resident, has been studying and photographing covered bridges for many years. He is interested in the design and uniqueness of each bridge and will tell about the architecture and history of these useful structures, which originated in the Alpine region of Europe. He displays some of his photographs and information on his website, lloydsbridges.com.
Stephentown
Join The Fun At The Stephentown Memorial Library
There’s plenty to do at the Stephentown Memorial Library this week. Join the fun!
• Easter Event – Saturday, March 30, at 2:30 pm. The Stephentown Youth Commission and the Stephentown Memorial Library invite you to an Easter Event at the Stephentown Memorial Library. Activities will include crafts, games, a movie and some treats! To ensure we have enough materials, registration is requested. Please call the Library at 733-5750 to register your child. All are welcome!
• Comics Workshop with George O’Connor – Monday, April 1, at 4:30 pm. Do you doodle? Draw comic characters on your class notes? Bring your talents and ideas to our workshop where illustrator George O’Connor will help you produce a polished comic to keep. He’ll share a behind the scenes look at his comic making process, from first sketches to finished books. Some of his popular books are the Captain Awesome series and graphic novels like The Olympians, which you may have seen in the Library. Don’t miss this awesome opportunity to learn from a master artist. Please register in advance. Comics Connect, a collaborative project of the Mohawk Valley Library System and the Upper Hudson Library System, is supported by funds from the New York State Library’s Family Literacy Library Services grant program.
• Story Time – Wednesdays at 10 am. Calling all preschoolers (and their caregivers). Join us each Wednesday for some story time fun. In this half hour session, we read aloud, sing songs, move about and explore the world around us through literature. Parents and children are encouraged to stay after story time so children have time for free play while grown-ups browse for books and socialize. Story Time is led by Jane Halleck, a local educator.
• Zumba Classes at SML – weekly on Wednesdays at 7 pm. Zumba is an exhilarating Latin-inspired dance fitness class designed to benefit anyone, regardless of age or fitness level. Zumba Instructor Kim Conley is also a Certified Kripalu Yoga Teacher, Pilates Instructor and Personal Trainer who works with people of every age and ability all over the Berkshires. She will lead us in a one hour weekly class. Each class costs $5 per participant. Class will be held in the main room of SML. Wear comfortable clothing and shoes. There is additional parking at the school across the road. Zumba is a blast – come join the party! Class size is approximately 8 to 10. Work out in air conditioned comfort at the Library.
• Let’s Go Fly a Kite at the Library – Thursday, April 4, at 6:30 pm. April is National Kite Month, and we invite you to join us for a kite making workshop for kids using easy to assemble Tyvek Scott sleds. A variety of kites will be on display. Our presenter, Phil Dixon, is a member of NYKE (New York Kite Enthusiasts). There will be a short presentation of how kites have been used through history, the different types and what makes kites fly. If the weather cooperates, we’ll take our kites and fly them in the space behind the Library. You must sign up in advance as space is limited.
• Teen Night with Magic Man – Join us on Friday, April 5, at 6:30 pm. Teens age 13 and up are invited to come and learn about magic. Bring a friend and enjoy this one hour course in the basic art of magic. Participants will learn the science and psychology behind magic through tricks that they can bring home and master. Space is limited, so please register in advance.
For more information, call the Stephentown Memorial Library at 733-5750. Check our website,www.stephentownlibrary.org for regular updates.
Veterans of Stephentown Texas Hold’em
The Veterans of Stephentown will hold a Texas Hold’em Tournament on Saturday, April 13, in the Stephentown Fire Hall, located at 35 Grange Hall Road in Stephentown. The doors will open at 5 pm and close at 6 pm. Play begins at 6:15 sharp.
A free buffet will be served at the first break.
No advance registration is required, and a donation of $35 per player will be accepted. Players can make an additional $10 donation at the door for 1,000 extra chips. This tournament will pay one place for every ten players with a minimum of four places and a maximum of nine places.
For further information, please call Tom McVeigh at 518-658 2448.
Four Difficult Hours For Emergency Services In Stephentown
by Rik McClave
The Stephentown Volunteer Fire Department responded to three incidents within a period of 2 hours on Tuesday, March 19. [Read more…] about Four Difficult Hours For Emergency Services In Stephentown
Stephentown Town Board Action – A Property Dispute
by David Flint
A property dispute on Brainard Road that has come up at recent meetings of the Zoning Board of Appeals was brought before the Stephentown Town Board at their regular monthly meeting on Monday. Attorney and surveyor Joanne Darcy Crum of the Albany law firm Lemery Greisler LLC, requested that a temporary Certificate of Occupancy (CO) granted to Henry Warner be revoked. [Read more…] about Stephentown Town Board Action – A Property Dispute
Bleak Prospect For The Stephentown Legislative District Library
The Election Officers for the Stephentown Memorial Library’s vote to become a special legislative district library have announced that the outcome is too close to call and will be decided based on a count of absentee ballots. [Read more…] about Bleak Prospect For The Stephentown Legislative District Library
Sparse Turn Out For Stephentown Library Public Hearing
by David Flint
The second public hearing on the Stephentown Library’s proposal to become a Special Legislative District public library with taxing authority did not draw many more of Stephentown’s voters than the first one. This hearing was held at the Town Hall, but still only 34 members of the public attended. Library Board President Sue Brisette Cass gave a detailed presentation on the reasons and needs for opting for a more stable and sustainable funding structure and then the hearing was turned over to questions and answers.
Most of the concerns expressed had to do with taking on an additional tax burden when it seems it’s becoming more and more costly to live in Stephentown. Others wanted to know why the vote couldn’t be held in the general election in November and why in the Library. The answer from Cass and other Board Members was that the vote needs to take place before the legislative authority runs out, and the Board felt that holding it in the Library would give voters an opportunity to see what they are voting for.
Are other libraries this size going this route? A: Only East Greenbush, North Greenbush and Troy in Rensselaer County, but the Association Library funding model is peculiar to New York and New England; the national norm is to fund libraries from the tax base.
Why not consolidate or centralize with other towns? A: Transportation would be a burden for many of our customers who are the poorest among us. The Upper Hudson Library System does provide a centralization that reduces costs to individual libraries.
I don’t use the Library. Why should I subsidize those who do? Charge a user fee. A: Improving the Library enhances the entire community, and State Education law prohibits libraries from charging for services.
What starts out as costing a cup of coffee a week could become over time a turkey dinner? A: Not likely but any increase in the initial budget will require a Town-wide vote on the budget. Taxpayers get to decide.
Library staff will become Civil Service employees. Does this mean benefits and retirement contributions? A: Employees will receive some benefits that are already included in the proposed initial budget. The elected Board of Trustees decides whether they become members of the State Retirement System.
Why does the Director need a Masters Degree? A: The Board decided long ago that the Director in this small community library with an all volunteer Board had better know what he/she is doing, someone who understands the structures and regulations of the State library system. We think the Town deserves this level of expertise.
Why does the Library need to tax residents for three times what it currently receives from the Town? A: The Library has expanded and card holders and circulation are up 30%. Town funding was adequate for the old library. As a proportion of the Library’s expanded budget, that funding has shrunk. The Library cannot sustain funding 39% of the budget on the backs of volunteer fundraisers.
One of those speaking up in favor of the restructuring was Tony Beverly. Cass had acknowledged his presence saying that he had championed making the huge effort to expand the Library. Beverly also subsequently led that endeavor and actually did a large part of the planning, the design and the work himself.
Beverly recalled the Board initiating the expansion project eight years ago and recognized the effort put forth by the current Board to improve the Library and arrange for the voters to decide on a better way to fund the expansion. “I know the arduous work you have done with many setbacks. And I know when I was in your position every now and then you would get a pat on the back, but not very often, so Thanks a lot!”
Candidates For Stephentown Public Library Trustees
by David Flint
Seven candidates have submitted the necessary petitions and been certified to run for the seven seats on the Board of Trustees for the proposed Stephentown Memorial Public Library. This Board will replace the current Library Board should the Special Legislative District be approved by Stephentown voters on March 19. Election of the new Board of Trustees is Proposition #2 on the same ballot. The candidates were asked to share information about their work, education, family, length of time in Stephentown and also to indicate why they want to be a Board member and why they believe the Stephentown Memorial Library is important to this community.
Sue Brissette (Cass), Dave, Libby and Annie have lived in Stephentown for 16 years. Sue has been Library Board President for this past six years of intense renovation and program building. Her grant writing has yielded over $120,000 in additional funds for the Library and community during this time. Sue has worked in healthcare for over 30 years. She operates a Stephentown-based business consulting company that helps businesses and government agencies manage their healthcare programs. She is also a local Girl Scout leader and enjoys family time, movie going and gardening. She holds a Bachelor’s in biology and chemistry from Northeastern University and a Master’s in health policy/management from the Harvard School of Public Health.
Sue wants to remain on the Library Board to continue offering the community cultural and economic growth through library resources. She sees the Library as an important part of Stephentown community life and is committed to keeping it strong.
Kristin Crouch has been a Stephentown resident for eleven years. She and her husband, a lifelong resident, have two teenage daughters.
Kristin graduated from Russell Sage College with a degree in Elementary Education and went on to obtain her Master’s Degree in Literacy from SUNY Albany. While in the Master’s program, Kristin was awarded the Stella R. Pietryzk Scholarship in recognition of her knowledge of and appreciation for children’s literature. Kristin has been teaching in the Rensselaer City School District for over eight years.
Kristin is running for the Stephentown Memorial Library Board because she is eager to serve her community, hopes to introduce more Stephentown residents to the Library and believes that a library is a community treasure. If elected, she promises to support the wonderful programs the Library currently offers, work collaboratively to anticipate and address future needs and ensure that funding is utilized efficiently.
Janet Ivory entered rural life in 1982 as a partner on a Delaware County dairy farm. In 2001 she and Frank May married and moved to Stephentown. Janet has served on the Stephentown Memorial Library (SML) Board of Trustees and the Upper Hudson Library Board since 2008. She earned a Master’s Degree in Public Administration at SAGE Graduate School. Janet’s career, volunteer and Board service has focused on program development and advocacy in occupational health and safety for rural populations, locally, statewide and nationally.
Janet Ivory views SML as an example of a successful community-based initiative of which she is a strong proponent. She is concerned about the quality of life and the property values in this town. She feels a responsibility to assure that SML continues to contribute to that end. Janet Ivory believes she can contribute her expertise and commitment to rural communities as a Board Trustee of the new Stephentown Memorial District Library.
Pam Kueppers moved to Stephentown in 2001 from Houston, Texas, where she owned her own business for over 20 years. She has been a Board member of the Stephentown Memorial Library for six years and is currently the Treasurer. Pam graduated from Louisiana State University in 1968. She has two grown children, one son-in-law and one soon to be daughter-in-law and one perfect grandson. Pam feels that serving on the Library Board has been very rewarding over the years and that many positive things have been accomplished during her tenure such as helping the Town of Stephentown purchase the property directly behind the Library and expanding the annual book sale. She believes that the Library has brought many wonderful opportunities to the community through employment, learning and entertainment – DVDs, musical CDs as well as live music – to name a few.
Thom Pecoraro has been a full time Stephentown resident since 2003. He graduated from Queens College of the City University of New York with a BA in accounting and was awarded his CPA license in 1991. In 2008, he founded a community garden in Pittsfield, MA, and then, in 2010, the Wyomanock Center for Sustainable Living (WyoCenter.org), an educational non profit based in Stephentown. He lives on Wyomanock Road where he is also developing the Wyomanock Farm CSA.
Thom’s concerns are focused on the creation and implementation of measures to build on the long term viability of our town. Many services and conveniences of small town living have disappeared over the past decades – except our library. In the face of this attrition, the Stephentown Memorial Library has grown due to the needs of the Town and the dedication of volunteers. With the Library’s recent purchase acquisition of adjacent property, Thom would like to contribute his expertise in the site development.
From the age of three, when Judith Pierson was first permitted to select her own books, libraries have been an essential part of her life. Since that time, she has never been without a very active library card. When she moved to Stephentown in 2000, she became a member of the Library and joined the monthly book group that meets there. Each month that group suggests other good reads which she forwards to the librarian who secures enough copies for the members.
Since the Friends of the Library formed, Judith has participated in their various activities to raise money to support the Library. These funds have been essential in funding new and continuing programs. She would like to take part in the development of a special legislative district library which would be funded by tax dollars, have elected trustees, allow library employees to become civil servants and keep the library open more hours for the service and benefit of our community.
Tom Quimby moved to Stephentown in 2010 after retiring from Cornell University and starting Strategies Unlocked, a consulting company. He and Anita were attracted by the well kept homes, the good Town roads and the beautiful scenery. As a resident, Tom realized the Library‘s importance as a service provider, gathering place and focal point. Tom believes a robust library will attract new residents and businesses to Stephentown and create a thriving community and a broader tax base. As a Library Trustee, Tom will use his experience as a mediator, negotiator and consultant to help the Library attract new residents and businesses to the Town and to serve as many residents as possible. Tom has a bachelors degree in economics and a masters degree in industrial and labor relations. He is also an associate member of the New York State Economic Development Council and a Community Stephentown member.
SVFD Corned Beef Dinner
by Chuck Riccardi
With generous donations and assistance from Kilventon Fruit & Produce, Hilltown Pork and Jiminy Peak, the Stephentown Volunteer Fire Department held its 15th Annual Corned Beef Dinner on Saturday, March 9. Volunteers from Cub Scout Pack 911 and Boy Scout Troop #222 helped out with the dinner, and the Library sold baked goods. [Read more…] about SVFD Corned Beef Dinner
TVSC Annual Meeting
Taconic Valley Soccer Club will hold its annual meeting at the Berlin Town Library at 7 pm on March 26. All members are encouraged to attend. Any player who is on a Spring travel team and who will need a new uniform needs to get their order to their coach or to Jen Burhans at 658-2096 by March 23.


