‘We’re just getting started!’
HVRHS Class of 2021

FALLS VILLAGE — The Class of 2021 at Housatonic Valley Regional High School’s (HVRHS) graduation ceremony was as traditional as could be managed, given the restrictions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The graduation was held under a large tent on the grass in front of the high school on Thursday evening, June 17.
HVRHS Principal Ian Strever noted that the seniors specifically asked for the most traditional event, and contrasted this year’s graduation with last year’s, a drive-in event held at Lime Rock Park.
Strever praised the seniors for their adaptability and willingness to work with the administrators during the pandemic.
“Everything has been different,” he said. “And they’ve adjusted to every challenge.”
Strever said valuable lessons can be taken from the pandemic experience.
“We learned something about control. We have a lot less of it than we think.”
Salutatorian Mia Tittmann said her success in high school was not a solo endeavor.
“I did not do it without the help of many people,” she said. “Our collective efforts will make change. Please keep working together to make this world — our world — a little brighter.”
Region One School District Superintendent Lisa Carter started by saying how nice it was to see everybody “in 3D.”
“Kudos to all of you for your perseverance and patience over the last 16 months,” she said.
And she reminded the seniors that their peers have all been through the same disruptions.
“You will be poised to rebound from this experience with confidence.”
Former class president Aidan McCarthy said that looking back, her school career “feels like a sprint.”
“We’ve had great triumphs and failures,” she continued. “And we maintained a sense of community.”
Class president Sara Upson said during the pandemic the seniors missed out on things like the prom and field trips.
But “this day isn’t about what the pandemic took from us. It’s about what we took from it.”
She said there was only one way to meet the challenges of the pandemic — or anything else: “Head on.”
Essayist Emerson Rinehart had the crowd laughing as he issued a “confession,” admitting to damaging a ceiling tile in the auditorium, promoting a rumor that a teacher was actually a “Lizard Man,” and using a bench as a toboggan, among other misdemeanors.
Commencement speaker Kianjai Huggan (HVRHS Class of 2017) told the graduates to “open yourselves up” as they move through the next phase of their lives.
She said when she first came to HVRHS from Georgia, she resisted joining the FFA.
But she did join, and counts her participation as a valuable experience.
She urged the seniors to remember that “there is so much we don’t know.”
Realizing this will “allow you to see the variability in people’s lives.”
“I am confident each of you will be an advocate for positive change.”
Valedictorian Charlotte Clulow said she struggled to find the “golden words” for her remarks, only to “realize I have yet to find answers.”
She praised her classmates for their hard work and accomplishments in and out of school.
“Are we there yet? No, we’re not. We’re just getting started.”
Class of 2021 Awards:
Good Sportsmanship Medal: Micah Matsudaira, Marguerite Bickford
Good Citizenship Medal: Justine Allyn and Brandon Sorrell
Chamberlain Arts Achievement Award: Cassidy Knutson and Aidan McCarthy
Community Award of Merit: The faculty, staff and administration of HVRHS (accepted by Social Studies teacher Peter Vermilyea).
HVRHS Class of 2021 essayist Emerson Rinehart, left, with class salutatorian Mia Tittmann, center, and valedictorian Charlotte Clulow. Photo by Alexander Wilburn
Senior Jacob Ellington of Sharon accepted his diploma from his father (and Housatonic Valley Regional High School Network Administrator) Mike Ellington. Photo by Alexander Wilburn
AMENIA — The first day of school on Thursday, Sept. 4, at Webutuck Elementary School went smoothly, with teachers enthusiastically greeting the eager young students disembarking from buses. Excitement was measurable, with only a few tears from parents, but school began anyway.
Ready for her first day of school on Thursday, Sept. 4, at Webutuck Elementary School, Liliana Cawley, 7, would soon join her second grade class, but first she posed for a photo to mark the occasion.Photo by Leila Hawken
Millerton Police Chief Joseph Olenik shows off the new gear. Brand new police cruisers arrived last week.
MILLERTON — The Millerton Police Department has received two new patrol cars to replace vehicles destroyed in the February 2025 fire at the Village Water and Highway Department.
The new Ford Interceptors are custom-built for law enforcement. “They’re more rugged than a Ford Explorer,” said Millerton Police Chief Joseph Olenik, noting the all-wheel drive, heavy-duty suspension and larger tires and engine. “They call it the ‘Police Package.’”
Olenik worked with The Cruiser’s Division in Mamaroneck, New York, to design the vehicles.
“We really want to thank the Pine Plains Police Department for their tremendous support,” Olenik said. After the fire, “they were the first ones to come forward and offer help.”
The new police cruisers are outfitted with lights with automatically adjusting brightness to best perform in ambient conditions.Photo by Aly Morrissey
Since February, Millerton officers have been borrowing a patrol car from Pine Plains. With the new vehicles now in service, Olenik said he plans to thank Pine Plains officers by treating them to dinner at Four Brothers in Amenia and having their car detailed
The main entrance to Kent Hollow Mine at 341 South Amenia Road in Amenia.
AMENIA — Amenia residents and a Wassaic business have filed suit against the Town Board and Kent Hollow Inc., alleging a settlement between the town and the mine amounts to illegal contract zoning that allows the circumvention of environmental review.
Petitioners Laurence Levin, Theodore Schiffman and Clark Hill LLC filed the suit on Aug. 22. Town officials were served with documents for the case last week and took first steps in organizing a response to the suit at the Town Board meeting on Thursday, Sept. 4.
The lawsuit is the latest in a multi-year long legal battle surrounding the mine on South Amenia Road. After Kent Hollow Inc. — a subsidiary of Bethel, Connecticut, based homebuilder Steiner Inc. — applied for a state mining permit in 2017, the Amenia code enforcement officer issued the business a notice of violation.
At the time, Kent Hollow Inc. did not possess a special permit to conduct mining operations as required by Amenia zoning code, and the property did not reside in the Special Mining Overlay district established as part of rezoning efforts coinciding with the 2007 adoption of the town’s comprehensive plan.
Kent Hollow Inc. appealed the violation, claiming the use of the property as a mine predates amendments to town and state regulations. The Zoning Board of Appeals denied the appeal citing insufficient evidence in 2019. That spurred Kent Hollow to file two lawsuits — one in the New York State Supreme Court and a federal civil rights lawsuit — challenging the town’s order.
In July 2025, those lawsuits were brought to a close when the Town Board voted at a special meeting to accept a settlement agreement allowing Kent Hollow to continue mining operations under limited hours and quantities.
The most recent suit alleges the 2025 settlement amounts to contract zoning that allows Kent Hollow Inc. to skirt environmental review and the scrutiny of the permitting and rezoning process. Court documents allege Kent Hollow did not adequately prove a continuous, legal nonconforming use.
Supporting the argument, petitioners have submitted the court documents and decision from the 2019 New York Supreme Court case against the town Zoning Board of Appeals, and the documents from the preceding ZBA appeals process including receipts and tax returns from Kent Hollow Inc. purporting to establish the nonconforming use.
Kent Hollow Inc. formed as a subsidiary of housing developer Steiner Inc. and purchased the property in 1971, according to state and county real estate records.
Millerton News reporting from 1971 Amenia planning board meetings detail Kent Hollow’s pursuit of a four-section, 40-unit apartment complex on the property.
The News reported Kent Hollow was granted tentative approval on July 6, 1971, to build eight units on the site with the expectation that more would be built later.
The additional units never came to fruition and Kent Hollow apparently abandoned the housing project, opting to use the property as a gravel mine.
Attorneys for the Town of Amenia or Kent Hollow Inc. have not filed responses to the lawsuit as of press time.
AMENIA — While the courage and perseverance of Revolutionary era patriots is well understood and celebrated, the stories of the fate of British loyalists in New York are not as clear.
Seen as the initial event in observance of the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution, the Amenia Historical Society will present a talk titled, “The Plight of a Loyalist in Revolutionary New York,” examining the journal of Cadwallader Colden, Jr., spanning the period of 1777-1779. The speaker will be noted author, genealogist and historian Jay Campbell.
The talk is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 27, at 2 p.m. at the Smithfield Presbyterian Church in Amenia. The handicapped-accessible church is located at 656 Smithfield Valley Road. Refreshments will be served.
Colden was the son of a New York Lieutenant Governor. He was a surveyor, farmer and mercantilist, serving as a judge in Ulster County. His fortunes changed dramatically with the dawn of the Revolutionary War when he remained loyal to the British Crown. His arrest came in 1776, just before the start of his journal.
Campbell is a historian specializing in Hudson Valley history, and the regional stories of Revolutionary era families.