Town Board needs to decide on block grant

AMENIA — The highlight of the July 16 Town Board meeting was the presentation by the Dutchess County Water and Wastewater Authority (see front page for article), but there were plenty of odds and ends for the board to discuss.

Here are highlights.

CDBG coming up

The town will soon need to decide what project to choose for potential 2010 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funding. A public hearing was scheduled for Sept. 10; the application needs to be submitted by Oct. 2.

While town Supervisor Wayne Euvrard acknowledged that the grant had a tendency of going towards highway projects in the past, he pointed out that Highway Superintendent Stanley Whitehead and his crew will most likely be busy working on Nelson Hill Bridge repairs. He suggested maybe looking into a grant for the Amenia Elementary School building, which the Webutuck Central School District has offered to donate to the town for $1 for use as a permanent Town Hall.

Videographer may leave

Gary Bonds, the town’s videographer, made two announcements. First, he will be running against Euvrard for the Republican ticket nomination. Primaries will be held in September. Second, regardless of whether he wins the nomination, Bonds said he will probably be stepping down from his duties behind the camera next year.  Town Board meetings and other municipal events are videotaped for broadcast on cable TV’s public access channel. Euvrard said the town would need to start looking for a replacement or assistant; Bonds replied that he might have someone for the job.

Neighborhood Watch meeting

Councilwoman Victoria Perotti reported that the next Neighborhood Watch meeting will be held on July 22 at 7 p.m. Representatives from the Dutchess County Sheriff’s Office will be present.

Resident Ernie Lowell, the organizer behind the watch group, had several neighborhood safety issues to bring up. First he asked again that streetlights overlooking the basketball court be turned on to discourage nightly malfeasance from occurring, and so night games could be held. He also asked for lights to be installed overlooking the Rail Trail parking lot off Mechanic Street. Lowell was told the lighting issue was to be dealt with through the county, as the Rail Trail is a county park.

Lowell reported that vehicles are speeding down Broadway. He wondered whether the town could at least post “Children at Play� signs, as there are none now.

There was some good news on the Neighborhood Watch front, with Lowell reporting that “90 percent of the problem [meaning people] have dispersed.�

“I think [the watch group] is making more people aware,� said Euvrard, who thanking everyone involved for volunteering.

Farmers Market grant

The town officials voted to pursue a $5,000 grant that would help get an Amenia Farmers Market off the ground. Resident Rudy Eschbach is looking at Mygatt Road, near the Indian Rock Schoolhouse, as a possible location. He is working with Mike Hagerty, the town’s grant writer, to identify funding.

The grant they’re pursuing comes from the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, and Hagerty said the funds must be used for “improvements that will last for at least three years.� The grant application is due later this month.

Eschbach added that any signage the market made could be shared with the Wassaic Farmers Market, which operates on Tuesdays. The Amenia market is expected to run on Saturdays.

The next Town Board meeting is scheduled for Thursday, Aug. 13 at 7 p.m.

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