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DUANESBURG
Fire, vandals cause damage to park
Police charge four young people; a fifth cited with providing alcohol

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter
Reach Gazette reporter Justin Mason at 395-3113 or jmason@dailygazette.net

   State police investigating vandalism and a fire that leveled a large pavilion in Van Patten Mill Park arrested three young men and a young woman Wednesday, charging them with arson.
   Duanesburg Fire Chief Ken Griffin said the fire ripped through a 24-foot by 45-foot pavilion sometime between the evening hours Tuesday and early Wednesday morning. He said the blaze also consumed a 10-by-12-foot storage area in the structure, which houses the pavilion’s water pump and a few park games.
   “It’s going to be hard for them to recover even with insurance,” he said. “It’s a pretty big blow to a small town.” Police estimated the damage as exceeding $30,000.
   Police charged the following individuals: Patrick Emery, 18, of Guilderland Avenue, Schenectady; Randall Anderson, 21, of Youngs Road, Delanson; Christopher M. Olson, 20, of Vanpatten Road, Duanesburg; and Rhiannon Gati, 17, of Okara Drive, Schenectady. All were charged with 3rd degree arson, a felony, and Gati, the female, was also charged with criminal mischief, a felony. All were sent to the Schenectady County Jail on $10,000 bail.
   The investigation also resulted in a charge against Ann Marie Roberts, 25, of Guilderland Avenue. She was charged with obtaining alcohol for underage persons, a misdemeanor. She was issued an appearance ticket for Rotterdam Town Court.
   Griffin said the fire was first discovered by a pair of neighbors around 8:30 a.m. But by the time it was noticed, flames had already consumed the bulk of the pavilion.
   “It was ashes by the morning,” he said.
   Schenectady County Fire Coordinator John Nuzback visited the site with county investigators.
   In addition to the fire, the park off Depot Road also suffered vandalism. Griffin said someone apparently drove a vehicle in circles around a pair of baseball fields adjacent to the pavilion.
   “They rutted it up pretty bad,” he said.
   Town Supervisor Rene Merrihew was stunned by the park damage. She estimated the damage to exceed $75,000.
   “It’s really disheartening,” she said. “I don’t understand why people would do this.”
   In addition to losing the pavilion and damage to the fields, Merrihew said some equipment that the town recently purchased for Shafer Park also was destroyed. She said the pavilion is insured but was unsure of when the town could rebuild the structure.
   “It’s not in the cards for this season,” she said.
   Merrihew hopes to save a bronze plaque that was hung in the pavilion after it was constructed by the Duanesburg Lions Club during the late 80s. “It survived the fire,” she said. “It’s the only thing.”



  
  
  

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Shadow
June 21, 2007, 3:51pm Report to Moderator
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This is what happens when the town builds a park with all the facilities some bored kids burn it down for fun.
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June 21, 2007, 4:15pm Report to Moderator

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They were just tired of the cow tipping......


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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bumblethru
June 21, 2007, 10:47pm Report to Moderator

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And don't think for a minute that if Rotterdam 'insists' on building this magnificant park...that what happened in Duanesburg and worse will happen in Rotterdam.


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June 22, 2007, 12:18am Report to Moderator

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never....there are always the railroad overpasses,,,,the walmart fence and,,, right now Schalmont school,,just to mention a few...there is just so much more to do here....

I think there should be a law for "grafitti/vandal offenders"....not the waste of time law they are working on now....but how about folks caught drawing grafitti or vandalizing are now relegated to live atleast 2000yards from any public place where there could be a wall or sign or fence etc, and they are only allowed to purchase food/clothes etc via the internet and the only place they can recreate would be in a supervised caged in area,,,like the skate board park in Rotterdam.....yeah, that's it.....


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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DUANESBURG
Spirit still alive after 29 years
Thousands attend Harley Rendezvous

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter

   Every year, someone asks Frank Potter to describe the Harley Rendezvous.
   And every time, the longtime organizer of the motorcycle rally finds himself searching for words.
   “They ask me to describe the rendezvous with words,” he said, scanning the bustling grounds of the Indian Lookout Country Club Thursday, “Well, I really can’t.”
   The event Kemp O’Connell started as a parts swap 29 years ago rolled into the hamlet of Mariaville again this week, bringing with it thousands of custom bikes, droves of leather-clad riders and a large extended family.
   “We’ve been doing it for so many years, it’s like a family,” said Steve Salerno, a food vendor from Cobleskill who has attended the rally for nearly two decades.
   Having grown from the about 1,200 riders who first attended the event in 1979, the rendezvous now attracts upwards of 6,000 aficionados and a roaring carnival-onwheels atmosphere that is — as Potter insists — almost indescribable. But despite its throngs of bikers and raucous reputation, the rendezvous is run like a tight ship. Potter says for every 100 rendezvous attendees, there will be at least one person on his support staff.
   “This is like a big ship that’s coming to port,” he explained. “Without [the volunteers], it ain’t coming to port.”
   Campers and riders enter the event through what Potter calls his “holding field,” where they wait to file through a security checkpoint about a quarter-mile away. At the checkpoint, nearly two dozen security volunteers are directed to search every bike, camper and vehicle.
   Potter said he has a zero-tolerance policy toward drugs, weapons and explosives at the rally. Those found with contraband surrender them or in some cases get their money back and leave.
   “We want to assemble in an orderly fashion,” he said. “We don’t need police because we police ourselves.”
   Once inside, patrons are treated to what has made the event renowned among bikers. Dozens of bands flood Indian Lookout with rock music throughout the weekend, including acts like King Noris, Blackfoot and Edgar Winter. The rally also features motorcycle pulls, bike rodeos and an assortment of Harley-related events that any gearhead could appreciate.
   The idea for a rally first came after an infamous 1973 meet-up in Westfield, Mass., turned violent, recalled Chuck Schmidt, a biker from northern Massachusetts who has attended the rendezvous since its inception. He said O’Connell and a group of bikers decided to seek a more peaceful place to gather.
   “We decided there had to be a better way to enjoy ourselves,” he said.
   O’Connell eventually purchased the 177-acre plot of land from a pair of Duanesburg farmers and dedicated the property to hosting the rally. During the early days, Potter said, the rendezvous was focused on trading motorcycle parts and making new friends.
   “It was a place for us to come together during a time when bikers weren’t exactly socially acceptable,” he said.
   O’Connell, suffering from cancer, passed the torch to Potter shortly before his death in 1994. In his memory, Potter pledged to run the event for as long as he can.
   “I promised I’d do my very best to make sure his dream stays a reality for as long as it can,” he said.
   Nearly three decades after the first event, most veterans agree the riders are a bit older, the beards a bit shorter and there are fewer people concerned with swapping parts. But still, Schmidt said the group carries on the same feeling of camaraderie that brought them all to Indian Lookout many years ago.
   “The spirit is still here,” he said.
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There was also an accident with a couple of these riders involved last night right by the Stewart's, at Burdeck St. and Mariaville Rd.  I think they were turning to head to the mall when one rider stopped and the other rider didn't see him and ran into him, the second getting thrown and shook up a bit.  I left before they figured exactly what was going on, figured I was better out of the way than being another onlooker.


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DUANESBURG
Town appeals for park donations
Recreation program gear destroyed by fire

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter

   Town officials are hoping an appeal to the community will help repair some of the damage caused when fire ripped through the pavilion at Van Patten Mill Park last month.
   In addition to destroying the town’s largest public pavilion, the fire also consumed a storage shed containing all the supplies used for the town’s youth recreation program. The program will be moved to Shaffer Park, about 3 miles away, but the town still lacks much of the sports equipment and art supplies destroyed.
   “Right now, it hasn’t been in the town budget to do this,” Parks Commission Chairman Peter Watrous said Tuesday. “The town is trying to recover what it can, but we’re also looking for donations.”
   And with less than three weeks to go before the program begins, Recreation Director Caitlin Kremler said the donations could be anything from sports equipment to construction paper and scissors. She said donated equipment, such as croquet sets or basketballs, doesn’t need to be new.
   “Pretty much everything you can think of was lost in the storage unit,” she said.
   For more than twenty years the town has hosted the mid-summer program at the park off Depot Road. The large pavilion, ball courts, playground and baseball field proved ideal for the three-week session, which can draw upwards of 80 elementary and middle school children.
   “With the loss of the park we’re used to having, the program that was routine, we’re now having to plan differently,” Watrous said. “It will mean quite a change for the park program.”
   The park has been closed since the fire. Little remains of the pavilion and storage shed, save for a half-filled dumpster of charred wood and a soot-stained concrete slab.
   State police arrested Patrick Emery, 18, of Schenectady, Randall Anderson, 21, of Delanson, Christopher Olson, 20, of Duanesburg and Rhiannon Gati, 17, of Schenectady and charged them with felony 3rd degree arson. Investigators estimated the damages to the park at more than $30,000.
   Watrous said the amount of coverage on the pavilion doesn’t appear to be enough to cover the cost of the damage.
   “The allotment in the insurance for pavilions is rather small,” he said.
   Meanwhile, the Duanesburg Lions Club is organizing a fundraiser later this month to rebuild the pavilion, which they built during the 1980s. Club President Mary Grimm said the Lions will raise money for the effort at a “Firefighter Muster” slated for July 21 at the Indian Lookout Country Club.
   “[The park] is very important to us,” she said. “Our main goal is to do things for the community,”
   Grimm said the Lions are hoping to raise enough money to start rebuilding the structure sometime before next summer, as long as the town gives consent. However, she didn’t rule out a project later this summer, provided there’s enough community support.
   “If they could give us the goahead and we could get the money, then we’ll do it,” she said. “I learned along time ago, never say never.”  



  
  
  
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DUANESBURG PICNIC
   DUANESBURG — The public is invited to the Duanesburg Historical Society’s annual picnic at 6 p.m. Monday at the Collins home, 147 Larson Lane off Schoharie Turnpike.
   Participants are asked to bring their own place setting, a drink and a dish to share. Meat and rolls will be provided. Those planning to attend should contact the Collins in advance at 895-2328
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DUANESBURG
Couple sues to block photo supply business

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter

   A Duanesburg couple has filed a lawsuit against the town in an attempt to block a wholesale photography supply business from establishing in a vacant garage off Esperance Station Road.
   Ronald and Laura Shepard fi led the lawsuit in state Supreme Court in Schenectady County last month, claiming that the town and its Planning Board unlawfully issued a special use permit for Michael Jacobson’s business. The town unanimously granted Jacobson a permit to establish a professional office at 140 Esperance Station Road in what was previously a garage.
   In the lawsuit, the Shepards claim the town approved a business that should have been designated for a manufacturing or light industrial zone because of the toxicity of the products Jacobson is proposing to sell. Among other allegations, the couple claims the town failed to interpret the municipal zoning ordinance, the comprehensive plan or the state Environmental Quality Review Act in approving the business in a residential area.
   “There is no reasonable interpretation of ordinance which would permit the storage, repackaging or sale of chemicals by anything close to a ‘professional’ use,” Ron Shepard stated in court documents. “Any other interpretation would lay the town open to a precedent where virtually any use could be a professional office, which would have a seriously detrimental effect on land use and codes in the town.”
   Town attorney Jeffrey Siegel said he could not comment on pending litigation.
   In April, Jacobson told the Planning Board that 95 percent of the chemicals he sells are not regulated and are nonhazardous, according to town records. He said the chemicals, which are used for black-and-white photography, would all be prepackaged and kept in small amounts.
   Five months after Jacobson’s initial application, the board unanimously approved the special use permit, stipulating that Jacobson install both a water well and a septic tank on the property, which lacks both.
   But the Shepards argue Jacobson misrepresented his business to the planners. They claim he intends to sell up to 216 different chemicals at a site that is within the Schoharie Creek watershed.
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July 18, 2007, 12:45pm Report to Moderator

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A friend of mine used to decontamination work, traveling all over the country.....'cleaning up' radioactive garbage.....and all those drive thru photomats were on that list.......also for info pulonium is used to remove static electricity from the plastic use on disposable diapers during assembly........


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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bumblethru
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Sounds like the Shepard's have a strong case. Duanesburg is just a simple little township, where most people move and live there to have a simple little life and the board perhaps thought this was just a simple little business.

I think that perhaps Jacobson should try the city of Schenectady to set up business and perhaps he can get a loan from the Metroplex!


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DUANESBURG
Firefighters to compete for community causes

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter
Reach Gazette reporter Justin Mason at 395-3113 or jmason@dailygazette.net.

Check out an array of fire equipment and enjoy an afternoon of live music. The event is open to the public and the competition to any company that can muster a squad of firefighters at the country club.
   “We will take people from every fire department there is,” she said. “It’s an open invitation. Show with trucks or just show up.”
   One competition will have teams of fi ve firefighters transfer 50 gallons of water 20 feet in the fastest time. The crews will use 2-gallon buckets to pass the water from hand to hand.
   During the “waterball joust,” crews will train their hoses on a ball suspended in the air. The winner will be the team that pushes it past a red flag tied to a cable.
   There will also be a tug-of-war competition, where the victorious team wins both bragging rights and remains dry, while the losing team will end up taking a dip in a stock pond. Other competitions include a “best truck” contest and a race to see who can suit up the fastest in protective gear.
   “We just want to have a lot of fun,” Grimm said.
   The events are free. There is a $5-per-car admission to the country club. The gates will open at 9 a.m., and the competitions will run until 4 p.m. Besides several live musical acts, the muster will also feature an assortment of vendors and demonstrations.
   Some of the proceeds will go to help Jennifer Davis, a mother who has battled brain cancer since 1999. Davis, who has a young son, found that the tumor had spread last year and has been struggling to cover her expenses ever since.
   The Ruthers will also receive some of the money raised during the muster. Though the family was able to rebuild their barn, Grimm said, they lost a significant number of their cows from health afflictions related to the fire.
   Grimm said the Lions also plan to help replace anything torched in the pavilion fire last month and not covered by the town’s insurance. The Lions built the structure during the 1980s and donated it to the town.
   But above all, Grimm said, she wants area residents to enjoy a day of fun.
   “We want the community to come together,” she said. “Hopefully, this will get bigger and bigger every year.”
   When the Duanesburg Lions Club decided to host its first Firefighters’ Muster, it didn’t take long to find a worthy cause to support with the proceeds.
   The Lions quickly decided any revenue from the muster, a series of skills competitions among fi refighters, would go to benefit the Ruthers. The local family has struggled to recover ever since fire ripped through their main dairy barn in January.
   But just a few weeks into the planning, another worthy cause came up. And then another.
   Now, the inaugural event will raise money for three benevolent causes — the Ruther farm, a young cancer-stricken mother and rebuilding the pavilion at Van Patten Mill Park. It may sound like a lot to take on for the first event, but that’s what the Lions do, explained Mary Grimm, the club’s president.
   “That’s what we’re here for, and that’s what we want to do,” she said.
   Ten fire companies and hundreds of area fi refighters are scheduled to gather at the Indian Lookout Country Club on Saturday to compete,



  
  
  
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Quaker Street; Duanesburg  

  
By MICHAEL LISI, Special to the Times Union
First published: Sunday, June 3, 2007

There's no Quaker Street in the historic Duanesburg hamlet known as Quaker Street.
  
There's Quaker Lane and, on Duanesburg Road, the Quaker Meeting House -- which was built in 1807 and still hosts monthly Quaker meetings. A few Quakers even still live in the area, which more than 50 Quaker families called home after moving here from Dutchess County in the late 1700s.

But you won't find a Quaker Street in Quaker Street.

"Quaker Street is a misnomer," said Duanesburg Town Historian Arthur D. Willis, a Quaker and a longtime Quaker Street resident. "When the Quakers came up in the 1780s, they settled on what is now Quaker Lane. The term Quaker Street came because so many Quakers lived along the avenue."

These days, Quaker Street is a quiet rural neighborhood, its streets dotted with century-old farmhouses and rolling lawns landscaped with colorful spring flowers. A flagpole circled by small flowers sits on a small grass island at the hamlet's only intersection, at the junction of Quaker Lane, Duanesburg Road, and Darby Hill Road.

In 1984, the Quaker Street Historic District -- the area bounded by the Schoharie Turnpike, and Gallupville and Darby Hill roads -- was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

A mix of older residents and young families live in the hamlet, which stretches about two miles along Quaker Lane and Duanesburg Road, taking in the cross streets of Maple and Bull streets, and Darby Hill, Gallupville, and Thousand Acre roads. Parents and grandparents waited for the school bus with their kids on a recent weekday morning.

Schools

Children who live in Quaker Street are enrolled in the Duanesburg Central School District; the Duanesburg Elementary School is located a few miles northeast of the hamlet, on Chadwick Road. Pupils attend the Duanesburg Elementary School from kindergarten through fifth grade.

Sixth- through eighth-graders go to the Duanesburg Middle School and graduate to the Duanesburg High School, with which had 319 students enrolled in the 2005-06 school year. According to the 2005-06 Report Card on the Schools, 77 percent of students graduating from Duanesburg High School earned a Regents diploma.

Commuting

Quaker Street is served by several thoroughfares -- Duanesburg Road, the Schoharie Turnpike (Route 74), Route 395 (Main Street, Delanson) that leads into the village of Delanson, and Darby Hill Road (Route 133).

Route 7 heading northeast leads to the Exit 24 of Interstate 88, which links with the state Thruway; the exit is located about five miles away. Quaker Street is about a 5-mile drive from I-88 Exit 23, which leads to Cobleskill (about a 25-minute drive) and points south and west.

Shopping and recreation

Wolfe's Market & Pizza sits on the north side of Duanesburg Road, across from Quaker Lane. The shop is attached to the Quaker Street Post Office -- the hamlet's one-room postal facility. From there, you can walk across Route 395 to the Quaker Street Volunteer Fire Department. Gibby's Diner, a retro 1940s-style diner, and the Quaker Inn tavern, are a short drive away.
A Stewart's Shop is close by, as is a Dunkin' Donuts and a selection of small restaurants and shops located along Route 7 heading east into Quaker Street. Route 395 north leads to the village of Delanson, where more shops and restaurants can be found. A Hannaford supermarket is on Western Turnpike in Duanesburg, about 10 minutes away.

The Robert B. Shafer Memorial Park, at Duanesburg and East Shore roads, has three tennis courts, two basketball courts, soccer and softball fields, and a nature trail. The Community Playground, a wooden playground for grade schoolers, is set across the street at Duanesburg Elementary School.

The Quaker Street Library, a branch of the Schenectady County Library system, is located at the intersection of Bull Street and Route 7 in the hamlet.

Mortgages and rents

One- and two-family houses can be found in Quaker Street. A two-family, 2,500-square-foot home at 129 Darby Hill Road is selling for $169,000; it has been on the market since April 30. Both units have two bedrooms and one bathroom. Rents are $775 for the lower unit, and $675 for the upper unit.

A single-family, 2,000-square-foot home at 121 Quaker Lane sold for $157,900 -- about $3,000 below its asking price -- in May. The 130-year-old farmhouse is renovated, with three bedrooms, a computer room, two bathrooms, and a detached garage/barn.

Taxes

Homeowners pay $27.31 per $1,000 of assessed value (currently 31.7 percent) for town, county and special district property taxes; they pay $49.26 per $1,000 for school taxes. For a home valued at $100,000, the yearly tax bill will be about $2,430.

Michael Lisi is a freelance writer from Schenectady and a frequent contributor to the Times Union.


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Gibby's Diner, a retro 1940s-style diner


I love Gibby's Diner. We go there frequently for breakfast. It's home made, you get tons of it and it is the best. My favorite time of the year to go is in the fall when we the leaves are at their peak. Even though the drive isn't that long, it is breath taking. And when you go into Gibby's, you can see that everyone just knows everyone and you really see and get the feeling of community there. Nice  place...for sure!


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DUANESBURG
Grant helps outfit new community center

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter

   Piece by piece, the stone facade of the new Duanesburg Area Community Center is coming together.
   The concrete is set for the six-lane indoor swimming pool and the interior of the gym is almost built. And with a $315,000 state grant, community center officials now have the money in place to outfit their 26,000-square-foot facility, slated for completion this fall.
   State officials announced the new funding through the Office of Small Cities’ Federal Community Development Block Grant Program. The grant will go toward furniture, fixtures and other equipment for the center, which was originally envisioned by community leaders nearly eight years ago.
   “This is a long-awaited community center, which will bring important services to children and families in the rural Duanesburg area,” said state Sen. Hugh T. Farley, R-Niskayuna, in a news release. He has already secured more than $350,000 in grants for the project.
   The community center project is expected to create 35 new jobs and retain the existing 11 jobs at the old facility off Mott Road. The new building about 6 miles away off Cole Road includes a gymnasium, aquatics and fitness centers, child care centers and community meeting space.
   “These grants hold the promise of new, goodpaying jobs, which means more New Yorkers will have a secure economic future,” Gov. Eliot Spitzer said in a statement.
   Patrick Ciraulo, the community’s executive director, could not be reached for comment Tuesday,
   The idea for a community center was first put forward in 2000, when a group of local residents began seeking a place to host cultural, recreational and educational activities. Initial discussions envisioned a 20,000-square-foot structure on property owned by the Duanesburg Central School District in the village of Delanson.
   But after nearly three years of fundraising, the organization decided instead to invest in the former site of Fitness Fanatics on Mott Road. Opened in April 2003, the smaller building was able to support many of the programs initially projected, while the organization continued to seek other sources of funding.
   In July 2005, the push for an expanded community center facility received a major boost from a $250,000 matching grant through the state Environmental Protection Fund. The grant brought the community center fund up to $2.7 million.
   Construction on the building began in December 2006 on a 9-acre property by the Normanskill that was donated by the Romanski family. Once completed, the community center is anticipated to represent a $5 million investment, including the value of the donated land, infrastructure improvements by the village of Delanson, engineering and construction costs. So far, the community center has raised more than $4.5 million of this cost and is aiming to raise an additional $500,000, according to figures provided on its Web site.

ANA N. ZANGRONIZ/GAZETTE PHOTOGRAPHER Jeremiah Stuart of Nancy’s Painting sprays an interior wall white at the new Duanesburg Area Community Center on Tuesday.

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Tony
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What a good thing for Duanesburg. I wonder if this new facility will be one that can be counted in the sex offender law. And I wonder if folks outside of Duanesburg can use it too.
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The community center will be a great asset to D'burg.  It is named the Duanesburg AREA Community Center in the hopes that people in other towns would use it also.  It will have an array of programs for everyone from children to senior citizens.  The Senior Meal Site through Catholic Charities will be located in the building.  
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The idea for a community center was first put forward in 2000, when a group of local residents began seeking a place to host cultural, recreational and educational activities. Initial discussions envisioned a 20,000-square-foot structure on property owned by the Duanesburg Central School District in the village of Delanson.
   But after nearly three years of fundraising, the organization decided instead to invest in the former site of Fitness Fanatics on Mott Road. Opened in April 2003, the smaller building was able to support many of the programs initially projected, while the organization continued to seek other sources of funding.

Quoted Text
“These grants hold the promise of new, goodpaying jobs, which means more New Yorkers will have a secure economic future,” Gov. Eliot Spitzer said in a statement.


Church used to be the community centers of the past....now the government/companies have to make them.....I thought folks moved to the country to get out of the 'city mouse habits'..it supposed to be 'healthy' just to live in the country...but, that is only if you grow/kill/gather your own and not at BJ's.........

like the locust we spread.....


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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Rene
August 23, 2007, 12:14am Report to Moderator
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Like I said in one of my other posts, D'burg is a changing community.  For better or worse remains to be seen.  My personal opinion is that it was "the country" 40 years ago when I was a kid growing up here.
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bumblethru
August 23, 2007, 1:31am Report to Moderator

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We here in Rotterdam still consider Duansburg 'the country'. I go to Gibby's Diner once in awhile where you clearly still get the country folk feeling. But they are usually the older folks. I'm sure, as with all communities, that when the last generation dies off, the young ones move up and things change.

Rotterdam doesn't really have much left to change. Pretty soon it will just be a tear down and rebuild community. Not so with Duanesburg. There is beautiful country there that would be a developers dream. As well as Princetown. I just hope that both municipalities take it REAL slow!!!

Although I know it will become a reality someday soon, Rt7 will be developed and that corridor will open the flood gates to Princetown and Duansburg for future development.


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BIGK75
August 23, 2007, 4:50am Report to Moderator

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I do agree, as a person who for a short time lived in the hills of Duanesburg, the people of Rotterdam do still consider Duanesburg / Delanson as "country living."  I believe for anyone that lives in Rotterdam, the most likely definition of "country living" would be if you have to drive more than a mile to the nearest convenience store.  Except for the 2 right at 7 and 20, this is pretty much the way that Duanesburg is set up.  

I remember that I did go to the previous DCC, which if I remember was actually in Princetown, or darn close to it.  Is that right, Rene?  Well, anyway, while this still won't be in "Downtown Duanesburg" (which I would guess is signified by the actual intersection of 7 and 20, or Delanson, whichever way you look at it), it will be much closer and much easier for people to gather at, won't it?  

I also wonder if the people of Duanesburg / Delanson / Princetown and the surrounding area will finally get back some of the money that they paid into the State Street Rejuvination Committee  Metroplex to help fund this.


Proud Rotterdam Resident
Proud Patriot
Proud Conservative Republican
Proud Christian
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Rene
August 23, 2007, 11:17am Report to Moderator
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I didn't mean to sound like my parents.........with my "Back in the day" kind of comment.  All the towns change and evolve, you are right we need to make sure we do it slowly and carefully.  It is still country compared to Rotterdam,  I love Rotterdam and do most of my shopping there. There is still a sense of "small town" atmosphere and yet there are many services.  The Community Center will be in the village of Delanson at the corner of Cole Road and Route #395.  It is across from the High School.  
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bumblethru
August 23, 2007, 3:09pm Report to Moderator

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I do hope that as Rotterdam develops it's 'last frontier', it does so in a manner that will still keep the small town charm. I do still question the multifamily housing that is sprouting up all around Rotterdam. My concern is infrustructure. Sewers of course is in question, but also the roads. Rotterdam is still only a 2 lane street town. Curry Road and Altamont is still congested at 5pm nightly not to mention the railroad tracks on Burdeck. We must consider our EMS and Fire dept's and our Police. We clearly would not want congested traffic debilitating an emergency call.


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senders
August 23, 2007, 4:26pm Report to Moderator

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We clearly would not want congested traffic debilitating an emergency call.


Is there this problem in NYC?


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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Shadow
August 23, 2007, 7:34pm Report to Moderator
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Rotterdam will just have to charge a congestion fee to force people to use their bicycles.
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bumblethru
August 23, 2007, 10:37pm Report to Moderator

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Shhhhhhh...shadow, don't give them any other ideas!


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DUANESBURG
Event set to feature top jam bands
32 acts to play at campground site
BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter

   PhanPhest started out pretty simple: a few bands, a couple kegs of beer and some friends in Drew Wajnert’s backyard.
   The New Jersey resident contacted a few jam band fans he had met while attending the Gathering of the Vibes festival near Mariaville Lake and invited them to his home for a weekend of music and barbecue.
   The bands jammed out on Wajnert’s patio and the intimate group of 50 or so friends enjoyed a balmy fall weekend, camping out at his home.
   “We wanted to get a bunch of people together that were likeminded,” Wajnert recalled about the first PhanPhest in October 2002. “And it just kind of blew up from there.”
   The gathering hasn’t changed much today, Wajnert explained. But it’s gotten larger, a lot larger.
   PhanPhest will make it’s New York debut at the Indian Lookout Country Club this weekend, featuring 32 bands on the cutting edge of the jam band scene on the 177-acre campground. Wajnert said the bands slated to play come from around the country.
   Bands like The Breakfast, Juggling Suns and Depth Quartet might not be the best known acts in the music business. But in the jam band scene, Wajnert said they represent some of the brightest new talent to take the stage.
   “We have a lot of up-and-comers,” he said. “We kind of have our finger on the pulse of the new musical landscape.”
   The festival hopes to attract at least 1,500 people from when the Atmosferics take the stage just after noon today and RAQ closes out the acts early Sunday evening. Wajnert said the festival will also feature an art expo, in addition to a number of family- and child-oriented activities. A three-day pass costs $90, with a Sunday-only entrance costing $40. Children under age 12 are free.
   PhanPhest will help fill the void created when the Vibes’ organizers announced in December they were moving their mammoth four-day festival back to Connecticut after five years in Duanesburg. The abrupt departure left Country Club owner Frank Potter searching for new acts.
   But between PhanPhest and last week’s Camp Bisco, a threeday concert that drew nearly 5,600 people, Potter said the country club has rebounded well. He said the smaller crowds are much more manageable on his end and tend to be a bit more local.
   “The jury is still out, but this is going to be real good,” he said.



  
  
  
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DUANESBURG
PhanPhest starts slowly, but more people expected

BY KATHY PARKER Gazette Reporter

   Half a dozen music lovers were on hand for the start of PhanPhest at the Indian Lookout Country Club Friday afternoon, but promoters were expecting thousands before the three-day event closes on Sunday.
   Drew Wajnert said it’s been three years since his New Jerseybased music promotion company has held an outdoor festival.
   “PhanPhest started five years ago as a backyard hobby and three years ago we had 550 people who maxed out four acres,” Wajnert, 33, said. “We’ve been waiting to bring it back in a big way in a big venue and this fit perfectly.”
   He compares the jam bands that will perform to The Grateful Dead and Phish.
   “We say the intention of the festival is musical connectivity. This is music you don’t hear on the radio because the airwaves are dominated by a couple of companies,” he said.
   He said the 200 acres of the country club property with a 30-year history as an event venue are expected to host up to 3,000 music fans who have been invited to pitch a tent or park a vehicle and stay through Sunday evening, when the last of 32 bands hits the final note.
   The weekend started shortly after noon Friday when The Atmosferics took the stage and warmed up to a crowd of three.
   “People are still working or are on their way here,” Wajnert said.
   Frank Potter, owner of the property, said advertising for the event was mostly conducted on the Internet.
   “We’re prepared for just about anything,” he said. “My staff will check people in and search every vehicle before it goes up the road.”
   He said if searches turn up weapons or drugs, the car and its occupants are sent back out and told not to return.
   “If we find glass, we ask them to throw it in a barrel. If we fi nd baseball bats, we hold on to them until the people leave and we give the bats back,” Potter said.
   Wajnert said that security was a big plus when he and his two partners decided to move the festival from New Jersey to New York.
   “This is a fairly pure and innocent scene and we were looking for the right location with tight security,” he said.
   He said 60,000 fliers were distributed by his company and the scheduled bands and the festival has been promoted for about six months on Web sites including postings on My Space.
   “We used the words, ‘Albany, girls, Grateful Dead and Phish’ to locate potential attendees,” he said. “If you attract the girls, the guys will follow.”
   Colleen and Vinnie White of Newburgh were among the fi rst fans to arrive Friday.
   They said they have been going to concerts and music festivals for 30 years and took their children, now 18 and 19, to many when they were younger.
   “We know some of the bands that will be here this weekend,” Colleen White said. “We’ll be here to the end.”
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senders
August 26, 2007, 11:59am Report to Moderator

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Instead of SPAC there could be M-PAC or D-PAC......start now.....


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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DUANESBURG
School district picks new leader Christine Crowley named superintendent

BY JUSTIN MASON Gazette Reporter
Reach Gazette reporter Justin Mason at 395-3113 or jmason@dailygazette.net.

   In their six-month search for a new superintendent, officials from the Duanesburg Central School District decided to look north.
   The Board of Education this week hired Christine Crowley, who has served the past six years as principal of Northeastern Clinton Central High School in Champlain. Crowley will begin her position at the district next month, replacing Lewis DeFilippo, the interim superintendent.
   “I am thrilled to join the Duanesburg community as superintendent of schools,” Crowley said in a statement released by the district Thursday. “I was very impressed with the school board, administrators, faculty, parents and community members that I met during the interview process.”
   DeFilippo was hired by the district in June after Superintendent Mark Villanti took a job with the Haldane Central School District in Dutchess County. Villanti had headed the district for nearly six years.
   Crowley comes to the district with nearly 24 years of experience in education, teaching at Paul Smith’s College in Franklin County and at Albany High School. She attended undergraduate school at the State University at Potsdam, completed her master’s in educational studies at State University at Plattsburgh and graduated from the superintendent’s development program at SUNY Oswego.
   “Christine has excellent credentials, a great personality and leadership style,” Raymond Hawes, school board president, said. “We expect that she will make our district even better than it is today, and that she will continue the growth that was made under the leadership of Dr. Mark Villanti over the past few years.”
   Hawes said Crowley was hired at an annual salary of $115,000. Board members initially started out with 22 candidates and whittled the choices down to three last month.
   “The other two finalists were very capable and strong leaders,” he said. “I have no doubt that they will each become superintendents in other school districts soon.”
   The hiring will allow DeFilippo to again retire from the district where he worked for more than 25 years. He retired as Duanesburg’s superintendent in 2001, but came back two years later as the district’s business manager.
   DeFilippo announced his resignation again in December 2006, but was called out of retirement six months later when Villanti left. He didn’t discount serving the district one more time, if the need is ever there.
   “Maybe I can do something or if someone is short-handed and they need help,” he said.