Remember to recognize public servants

Public service takes on many forms. This is easy to see from recent festivals and parades, and how the strengths of our community derive from those who answer the call to service in our fire departments, libraries, citizen committees and elected office. It’s important to recognize and remember.

In June, the county remembered former Millbrook Mayor and County Department of Public Works Commissioner Michael Murphy with a dedication ceremony at the Morgan Lake Dutchess County Rail Trailhead in Poughkeepsie.

In July, we gave tribute to Allan Rappleyea with a condolence read at our legislative meeting. After the recent near-fatal heart attack experienced by an Amenia town councilman, we should all give pause and take time to value and recognize those among us who — regardless of political view or passion — strive diligently to give of themselves for the betterment of our way of life.

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In June I had the occasion to recognize with a legislative commendation several unsung heroes who work as county employees in the Health Department, whose quick-thinking prevented a national E.coli outbreak. The diligence of these sanitarians quickly zoned in on a cluster of six youngsters experiencing intestinal problems and traced it back to a common school, where a series of lab tests on cafeteria foods revealed Ohio-grown lettuce infected with E.coli.

Armed with this hard evidence, the Dutchess County Health Department manned the phones that soon resulted in a national recall, not to mention the continued care of our school children.

Some might argue legislative commendations should be reserved only for citizens, but I argue that even civil servants on the county payroll who do their jobs admirably and efficiently should be commended, and we taxpayers should be comforted knowing some of the ways that our tax monies keep us safe.

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Good works deserve recognition and public servants deserve remembering even after they pass on. Jacob Carpenter of Stanford (later Washington), who preceded me in the county Legislature (then the Board of Supervisors in 1855 and again in 1870), was a farmer who periodically answered the call to public service, serving as mayor of Poughkeepsie (1875-76), state legislator (1856, 1872) and manager of the Hudson River State Hospital while also raising a family and a farm with business ventures in the Colorado territory.

The 1888 “History of Dutchess County†fondly describes him in perhaps what could also be said of some of our modern-day servants:

“The County has at no time produced a man of higher integrity, or more solid judgment, or of more intimate acquaintance with questions of public business and private interest. Nor has it produced anyone who have been more frequently invoked, or more implicitly relied upon by individuals or by the community at large. The whole record is clear and comprehensive, every relation of life has been filled, private and public, and in all here is yet neither criticism or blemish … the office has sought the man and not the man the office.â€

Be sure to thank a volunteer or a public servant. Even better, consider becoming one.

 Michael Kelsey represents the towns of Amenia, Washington, Stanford, Pleasant Valley and the village of Millbrook in the Dutchess County Legislature. Write him at KelseyESQ@yahoo.com.

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