Experts and volunteers bring 2022 achievements and a full agenda for 2023

MILLERTON — The Town of Northeast and the Village of Millerton have seen a year of significant firsts and projects completed, and they look to be on track for more of the same in 2023. The accomplishments are many, but three especially notable ones are the resuscitation of a beloved Village park; a step-by-step milestone in a New York state climate initiative; and ongoing preparation and plans for a town wastewater treatment plant and sewer system.

Five-plus years ago, longtime Millerton resident Stephen Waite, a Village trustee,  felt it was past time to rehabilitate Eddie Collins Memorial Park (ECMP), and gathered a group of like-minded people to make it happen. Waite and his forebears grew up in Millerton and made use of its fields, as did others for decades before.

With project manager architect Jeanne Vanecko and a dozen or so other dedicated residents, the new park’s Phase 1 opened to 500 members of the public on Oct. 1 “much to the astonishment of all,” according to project team member Jennifer Dowley.  The Village raised $2.2 million to see the project to completion. Kevin Hasselwander, senior landscape architect with LaBella Associates of Latham, continues as the lead architect for Phase 2, a swimming pool and pool house already in the planning stages.

That money, said Waite, included grant funds from Dutchess County and New York state as well as individual donors.  He added that as with all such projects, there were challenges: The Village Department of Public Works (DPW) had some tough work to do in clearing out the site prior to the start of the project; and the entrance to the park and differences of opinion with the state  caused a slight time delay.

ECMP, so named in the early ‘60s and previously known as Homestead Racing Park, boasts a soccer field, two basketball courts, trees now totaling 65, picnic tables and benches throughout; and this spring, it will be home to a newly formed Webutuck Little League — good news for children and families.

Apart from those features, ECMP  is a “future-proofed” park, owing to the planning group’s focus on what may be needed and available in years to come. As an example, conduit has been installed under the newly paved parking lot to provide electricity for eventual lighting and for 27 electric vehicle (EV) charging stations as well as fiber optics for internet.

Volunteerism is also the driving force behind Millerton’s Climate Smart task force. Kathy Chow, leader of the group, highlighted the group’s big push that culminated in earning Climate Smart bronze status for the Town.  Right behind that for 2023, the Village is on the path to secure its own separate bronze status, which will further attest to our joint communities’ commitment to making Millerton/North East fully resilient and prepared for climate changes. The recent installation and activation of the first public EV charging station, the upcoming conversion of streetlights to LEDs, and the revival of the 2010 solar array that pumps water to the water tower are among the many actions that will earn points toward Millerton’s bronze designation.  Watch this space for more reporting on Climate Smart Communities’ projects as they move ahead in our Village and Town, especially the annual Earth Day celebration in April.

As to the very significant joint Town-Village wastewater treatment plant project, “There has been real traction,” Dowley said, adding that the surge of infrastructure funding by the federal and New York state governments make success a likelihood in the next two years, after 35 years of on-and-off activity on the issue.  This improvement should lead to a revitalization of commercial properties, the first districts being those in which stores and businesses are located, roughly Route 44/Main Street from Route 22 to the Connecticut line.

Until now, businesses have been unable to develop because of insufficient septic capacity; with a Village- and Town-wide system, real estate values should increase significantly.  “At this point, no restaurant in the Village can seat to capacity,” said Vanecko, and removing this limitation will be a win-win for businesses and the area in general.  In addition, the system would address the potentially serious issue of some older buildings with cesspools, which could cause trouble for the region’s aquifers.  All in all, the project will be “transformative.”

The wastewater system, a hybrid system which uses septic tanks at individual buildings and remote wastewater filtration plant, is being designed by Tighe & Bond, a Rhinebeck engineering firm.  The Village and the Town are in the process of approving their sewer districts and will shortly progress to a preliminary design of the system. The Village and the Town have received a municipal investment grant (MIG) to cover the cost of the preliminary design.

From left, North East Town Supervisor Chris Kennan, State Rep. Didi Barrett, Stephen Waite, chair of the park project, Millerton Mayor Jennifer Najdek and State Sen. Sue Serino at the opening of Eddie Collins Park on Oct. 1, 2022. Photo by Olivia Valentine

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