Letters to the Editor - The Millerton News - 4-14-22

Rest assured, Sharon Hospital ED not closing

Recently, we have seen an increase in concerns from patients who think our Emergency Department is closing or reducing its hours.

I am writing today as the Medical Director for the Emergency Department and the Chief of Staff for Sharon Hospital to clarify misinformation and reassure the community that our Emergency Department remains open and ready to care for you and your family.

The planned updates and changes to Sharon Hospital will not impact the hours provided in our Emergency Department.  We remain open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year — and this will not change.

Since Sharon Hospital’s founding in 1909, our Emergency Department has been here to help patients in our region with everything from broken bones to heart attacks and strokes.

We remain committed to fulfilling the legacy that began more than 100 years ago, while staying up-to-date with the most modern and advanced standards of care to ensure we can continue providing highly skilled care right here in the community.

On behalf of the entire ED team, I would like to thank our patients and neighbors for your unwavering support, especially over the past two years.

We feel incredibly lucky to have the privilege to care for such a wonderful community.

All the best,

Ron M. Santos, DO, JD

Medical Director,
Department of Emergency
Medicine Chief of Staff, Sharon Hospital

Sharon

 

Let’s help keep Amenia beautiful

The Amenia Democratic Committee arranges through the Dutchess County Department of Transportation (DOT) to hold a cleanup twice a year on a mile stretch of Route 343 in the town of Amenia.

The committee will be joining the town of Amenia’s Clean Up Day on Saturday, April 23. Meet at Fountain Square (across from Four Brothers Pizza) at the intersection of routes 22, 343 and 44 that day at 10 a.m. to sign in. Trash bags will be provided but please bring your own gloves.

Last year, there was a great turn out for the morning of the clean up and I hope there is an even bigger group this year.

The thing is, the roadside trash this year is out of control! Please join the town’s clean up day, April 23.

I also plan on picking up trash on Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. Meet me at Peggy’s in Amenia on Route 343, across from the Amenia Free Library. I have a box of DOT bags and there are plenty of roads in the town that need our help.

It blows my mind that people still throw trash on our roads. What to do? Pick up the garbage.

We live in a beautiful town. Please join me on Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. and for Amenia’s Clean Up Day, Saturday, April 23.

Thank you,

Polly Pitts Garvin

Amenia

Latest News

Graceful stitching at the altar

An assortment of kneelers and pillows in needlepoint’ there are some done in crewel as well. Note the symbols used throughout the items.

Judith O'Hara Balfe

So much of what we know about religion comes from the written word, but much can be found in paintings, sculptures — and needlework.

Famous tapestries hang in castles and museums around the world, but some of the most beautiful pieces can be found on altars, on kneelers, and in the vestments and hangings found in great cathedrals and in some small country churches.

Keep ReadingShow less
Spanish sonatas and serenades for Easter

José Manuel Gil de Gálvez, left, took a bow with members of the Málaga Chamber Orchestra at The Hotchkiss School Music Center.

Alexander Wilburn

Adding some international vigor to Easter Weekend — or Semana Santa, “The Holy Week,” as it’s known in Spain — The Hotchkiss School held a performance by the Spanish string ensemble the Málaga Chamber Orchestra in the Esther Eastman Music Center on Saturday evening, March 30. Featuring six violins, two violas, two cellos, and a double bass, the chamber music orchestra, which has performed across Europe and the U.S., is led by violinist and Grammy-nominated music producer José Manuel Gil de Gálvez. He has shared the stage with renowned musicians like classical and flamenco guitarist Pepe Romero and South Korean classical cellist Hee-Young Lim and performed at locations like The Berlin Philharmonie, The Laeiszhalle in Hamburg, and The Seoul Arts Center.

With a flamboyant head of long ringlet curls and a mustache/goatee combination reminiscent of Colin Firth’s Elizabethan lord in “Shakespeare in Love,” Gil de Gálvez is a theatrical violinist to take in live, infusing his playing with a passionate performance that heats up lively numbers like the opening Spanish serenade, “Impresiones de España” by 19th-century composer Joaquín Malats. Gil de Gálvez was in full command during his captivating violin solo, “Adiós a la Alhambra” by composer Jesús de Monasterio, who served as honorary violinist of the Capilla Real de Madrid. “Adiós” is an example of de Monasterio’s Alhambrism style, the 19th-century nationalist romantic movement, which, like the contemporary Málaga Chamber Orchestra, was keenly interested in the restoration of music from the Spanish popular heritage.

Keep ReadingShow less
Harp guitar, hoops and hops at the brewery

Stephen Bennett

Photo by John Coston

‘I hope you like guitars,” was Stephen Bennett’s opening line on Saturday, March 30 as he launched a two-hour solo performance flanked by guitars on all sides.

Bennett’s self-effacing humor peppered his brilliant finger-picking at the Great Falls Brewery in North Canaan as he played many familiar pieces ranging from “Oh Shenandoah” to the Cowardly Lion’s tune from the Wizard of Oz, “If I Only Had the Nerve.”

Keep ReadingShow less