Letters to the Editor - The Lakeville Journal - 5-14-20

Why would you head straight for the moose?

The air is awash with the splendid aromas of Spring. The soil is warming up and starting to percolate with life again. Critters above, on and below the ground are energizing the landscape, each with their unique signature presence. A whispered rustling of dried leaves from the steady, ever-forward burrowing moles and voles (our dog, Jasper’s ears are like two tilted radar dishes scanning the mysteries below) is soft terrestrial counterpoint to the spicy elongated screeches shouted by a gang of flashy nearby blue jays darting for their next pilfered meal. 

All kinds of bird species having packed their bags in distant lands are winging there way into and through our ever more vital landscape just long enough to tease an amateur birder and nature photographer like me. It happens every year. 

And then, every once in a while, out of the blue, something crosses your path, literally, that makes your jaw drop. Yesterday, I was driving slowly on our little road in Cornwall, going up over a little rise and wow, standing motionless in the middle of the road, as tall as a stilt-walker, chiseled, and calm as could be — was a moose! I slowed to a crawl (and put my hazard flashers on) and inched to the side of the road. 

The moose turned its massive head to look at my car and me, and, as if to say “OK, OK, I’ll move along, there’s nothing good to eat in the middle of the road anyway.” And off the moose trotted into the woods to a nearby secluded wetlands. Ain’t Spring great!

These days, among us human members of the animal kingdom, change seems far less about the percolation of life and much more about rolling the dice to see what lady luck thinks of our current predicament. Decisions taken to re-energize the business landscape seem far less about life than about the almighty dollar being on life-support. 

Now, the whispered rustlings below the surface are not steady and ever-forward looking, rather they seem stationary, pensive, watchful and yes — increasingly fearful. My own two radar dishes have detected very little intelligent life-leadership in this biologic/economic mystery, save for some serious, steady governors and most all the relevant scientists. 

We seem to have settled, in large part, on “rule of the bluejays” — a cacophony of flashy, staggered lurches filled with screeching and inane political allegiances, pedestrian re-election prospects and second rate political-science — without the science.

When you’re driving your car and something massive, unusual and out of the blue crosses and blocks your path,  you have a couple of choices. You can cautiously and safely pull over (clearly signaling as you go), take in all the new information, assess the situation and come to a well-informed course of action and proceed with caution.

Unfortunately, it seems that we’ve decided to back off a bit on the gas, and head for the moose! (Roadkill is for vultures.)    

Michael Moschen

Cornwall

 

Part-time residents care about their communities, too

This is in reference to The Lakeville Journal article, “Reminding newcomers, up here we all work together,” Thursday, April 30, 2020.

Is it possible that people in Litchfield County believe that New Yorkers need to develop a sense of community when they move to the area? That we don’t volunteer? That we don’t care about our city and our neighbors as much as they do theirs? Is it possible that people from New York need to be lectured that we “need to respect the locals and the way of life if they want to be happy here?” 

Are the barbarians at the gates?

My husband and I have been property owners — and property tax payers — in Lakeville for more than 30 years. From time to time we’ve encountered resentment, from a merchant refusing to sell our teenage daughter a Sunday paper — “only for locals!” — to blatant anti-Semitism toward a friend. Last week, my son-in-law, baby in backpack, dog on leash, was twice stopped while walking on a public road and asked where he is staying, even followed, presumably to check his story. It is hard to fathom such suspicion and disregard for personal privacy; to a city person it’s a breach of etiquette.  

The Journal’s story, a hefty promotion for the local real estate establishment, Elyse Harney in particular, was laced with self-satisfaction and generalized snobbism — Litchfield County doesn’t have the “flash of the Hamptons.” It may come as a surprise to hear that most part-timers out there spend their time the way people do here, in jeans and T-shirts, swimming and hiking, reading, gardening, cooking, enjoying small casual gatherings of friends. 

We are grateful to be able to weather this awful time in our house here, but we also are longing for our own way of life, and even more are worried for less fortunate friends and relatives left behind, some of them alone, a few who have been ill with COVID-19. 

Absent from The Journal’s “reminder” was any sense of empathy, that we New Yorkers might love our city as much as people here love their towns and villages, that we are mourning what may be lost for a long time — the energy, the diversity, the culture, the civility, the street itself, the pleasures of daily interactions with good neighbors and perfect strangers. 

Carole Lalli

Lakeville

 

Fought for and believe in the USA

As a veteran of the Vietnam and Korean Wars, I am shocked and saddened by what I see in our country. I am 81 years old and have seen many presidents come and go. I have always voted and been a proud Democrat, but kept an open mind toward the Republican Party. I cannot do it anymore.

I am here to say, “shame” to the GOP. As a black man, I have had to fight many battles, but kept my faith in the justice system of my country, but the Michael Flynn situation is the last straw. Our Department of Justice is dropping charges against a man who lied for Donald Trump and betrayed his country as most of the Republican Party has.

The United States has lost so much since Donald Trump became president. His blatant disregard for the coronavirus pandemic is frankly horrifying. I love my country and I am in fear we will sink to a level we cannot come back from.

My wife, Gretchen, has spoken out so many times, but I am now, because I fought for my country and believed in what it stood for. The United States is a shadow of what it once was. Vote Trump out!

Jack Gordon

Sharon

 

Here’s one more front line

First, I would like to commend the owner and employees at LaBonne’s Market in Salisbury for a remarkable job of keeping consumers and employees safe while we are in this pandemic, and how wonderful at the Salisbury General Store and pharmacy also. Thank you all for your good consideration of the elderly and disabled. 

So my hat’s off to the town of Salisbury. We spend much time taking things for granted, but let’s honor the store owners and workers, as well las the doctors and nurses. Because these people are on a front line also, keeping people fed and their daily needs available. 

But one thing does irk me, is some customers’ behavior. Instead of being rude to the hard-working employees, be thankful. The life they’re saving may be yours, and the person they’re feeding could be you. 

So God bless the staff and owners of LaBonne’s Market in Salisbury. They set a fine example of how a market should operate in times of despair.

Michael Parmalee

North Canaan

 

Your volunteer ambulance squads are here for you

The Volunteer Emergency Medical Services of the Northwest Corner, including our New York neighbors, has always depended on mutual aid to assist in 911 calls.  Now more than ever, we have been able to count on Amenia,  Cornwall, Falls Village, Kent, North Canaan, Salisbury, Sharon, Warren and Southern Berkshire to help each other during the COVID 19 situation.   

Residents are also served by Northern Dutchess Paramedics North Canaan Paramedics and Trinity Medic 4 —  paid services — to respond with our ambulances.  

Our Mutual Aid companies respond whenever a squad needs assistance, we are sharing information and we are coordinating PPE distributions and pickups. All squads are answering calls 24 hours a day, 7 days a week — and are fully trained and protected to serve our communities. 

Jamie Casey

 for the Ambulance Squads of 

Amenia, Cornwall, Falls Village, Kent, North Canaan, Salisbury, Sharon and Warren

 

Poetry to make you smile

In Writing Workshop, first and second graders in Lee H. Kellogg’s K,1,2 multi-age class studied and wrote poetry. Recently, they tried their hand at writing parodies, using Mother Goose rhymes as a springboard. First-grader Dutch Dekker wrote the following parody based on the nursery rhyme and song, “I’m a Little Teapot.”  

Quarantine

By Dutch Dekker

I’m a little teapot

In quarantine.

Stuck in my house, 

Like a bean.

Laying on my couch

Feeling lazy

Let me out 

So, I don’t go crazy!

Submitted by Robin Faust, K,1,2 Teacher

Falls Village

 

An appeal to Ben Metcalf

In late April the court ordered a site modification plan to be approved for your “warm mix asphalt plant” in North Canaan. So from one person who “believes strongly in protecting our environment” to another, I ask you Mr. Metcalf to act on what you believe. I have to trust you at your website words on this; so please do not build this “$4 million Green Mix” asphalt plant in our town - or any town for that matter. 

Although I do not live as close to your site as the dozens of adjacent and nearby residences nor the Beckley Furnace State Park and Blackberry River that are within a third of a mile of your site or even the Congregational church almost right across the street, I do have a stake here as everyone in town does.

As it clearly states on your website, “Owner Ben Metcalf is a long-time conservationist and a former Land Trust President and Founding Member of The Pomperaug River Watershed Coalition. Ben believes strongly in protecting our environment and would never construct a plant that would have any detrimental effect upon our water resources.” As a stated “protector” of our environment, I think, maybe Ben you certainly would add, “protector” of our air quality and health and safety to this website statement. All of us know that asphalt is not Green. The use of the word Green is not to be associated with “unqualified general environmental benefit claims”. Maybe you need to review the Federal Trade Commission Guides for the Use of Environmental Marketing Claims that help marketers avoid making deceptive claims.

Ben, so much confusion with this case exists. Like warm mix and hot mix. Ask any environmentalist, are either of these “Green”?  When the Journal of Cleaner Production and ScienceDirect compared environmental impacts the study showed the use of “...warm-mix asphalt (WMA) instead of hot-mix asphalt (HMA) yields a reduction of about 33%.” ” Spoiler alert: “Warm-Mix leaves 67 percent of dangerous Asphalt Fume (inhalable benzene) and crystalline silica in the air.

Maybe it was your life’s dream to build a warm mix asphalt plant. I’m sorry about that, but as someone who “believes strongly in protecting our environment” and while we are at just the start of the COVID-19 respiratory virus pandemic and economic crisis, maybe you need to reconsider. Even in the GemPatch safety sheet you presented it warned that there is sufficient evidence for the carcinogenicity of asphalt fumes. It’s not the time for a business venture that may risk our air quality. Maybe better yet how about using the site for solar power generation like O&G’s 1.3 megawatt solar array at a Southbury quarry! Ben Metcalf Solar Power! Brilliant.

Please Ben if you are the person who “believes strongly in protecting our environment” you can do this. Stop the asphalt plant.

Bernard Re, Jr.

North Canaan

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