Home-repair grants have county residents ‘Rebuilding Together’

DUTCHESS COUNTY —  In accordance with its mission of “Repairing homes, revitalizing communities, rebuilding lives,” Rebuilding Together Dutchess County (RTDC) is currently taking applications for its 2024 Rebuilding Day until the deadline of Aug. 31, 2023.

Neil, a resident  of Amenia, recently had his roof repaired by RTDC. The relief he felt at having this done was immense. He no longer had to worry about leaks. He said, “I would recommend RTDC to anyone who needs help with problems with their homes and doesn’t have the means of doing it on their own.”

RTDC began in 1991 when local contractor Ron Stein decided to bring Christmas in April, a program started in 1973 in Texas, to Dutchess County. The name of the local branch changed to Rebuilding Together Dutchess County in 2006. Since its incorporation in 1992, 15,000 volunteers have helped with repairs in 1,100 homes in Dutchess County. They have done projects in the towns of Amenia, Clinton, Dover, North East, Pine Plains, and Washington and the villages of Millbrook and Millerton.

Volunteers perform the repairs and include carpenters, electricians, and plumbers. Local companies and organizations donate materials and services. There is no charge to eligible homeowners.

Organizations like Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (BTCF) supply grants to fund the work. The Northeast Dutchess Fund of BTCF awarded a grant of $6,000 to RTDC this year; BTCF has been a supporter since 2012. Darcy McCourt, executive director of RTDC said, “Their ongoing partnership empowers us to rebuild homes and improve lives year after year. Together, we will create a community that is safer, healthier, and more resilient.”

RTDC “takes a whole house approach.” The work it does can consist of putting a new roof on a house or replacing windows, fixing plumbing or electrical problems. It will fix porches or lay walkways, and make homes more accessible to those with disabilities by installing ramps, grab bars and rails, or modifying bathrooms. It will also do fire safety and fire prevention in homes.

There are two types of repairs RTDC does and there are applications for each. The Rebuilding Day program deals with large-scale repairs such as roofs, electrical and plumbing problems, and installing ramps. The other is the Handyman Program for repairs that are smaller and can be completed in four hours or less. Rebuilding Day takes applications from June 1- August 31, 2023. The Handyman program accepts applications year-round.

To qualify, applicants must be income-eligible homeowners in Dutchess County, which includes older adults, people with disabilities, veterans, and parents with school-aged children.

For questions or an application, call RTDC at 845-454-7310. To find out more information and details of the programs and get an online application, visit the website at  rebuildingtogetherdutchess.org. The website also has information on volunteering and donating.

Latest News

Village trustees appoint new police recruit, set date for ICE law discussion

The Village of Millerton office on N. Elm Avenue.

Photo by Aly Morrissey

MILLERTON — The appointment of a new village police recruit and the approval of a communications platform were among the key items discussed at the Millerton Village Board of Trustees meeting on Tuesday, June 10.

The board also set a date for a follow-up to the recent special meeting regarding Immigration and Customs Enforcement. That meeting will be held Tuesday, July 29, at 6 p.m., with the village’s legal counsel expected to attend.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kevin Kelly’s After Hours

Kevin Kelly

Photo by Christopher Delarosa
“I was exposed to that cutthroat, ‘Yes, chef’ culture. It’s not for me. I don’t want anyone apologizing for who they are or what they love.”— Kevin Kelly

Kevin Kelly doesn’t call himself a chef; he prefers “cook.” His business, After Hours, based in Great Barrington, operates as what Kelly calls “a restaurant without a home,” a pop-up dining concept that prioritizes collaboration over competition, flexibility over permanence, and accessibility over exclusivity.

Kelly grew up in Great Barrington and has roots in the Southern Berkshires that go back ten generations. He began working in restaurants at age 14. “I started at Allium and was hooked right off the bat,” he said. He worked across the region from Cantina 229 in New Marlborough to The Old Inn on the Green at Jacob’s Pillow before heading to Babson College in Boston to study business. After a few years in Boston kitchens, he returned home to open a restaurant. But the math didn’t work. “The traditional model just didn’t feel financially sustainable,” he said. “So, I took a step back and asked, ‘If that doesn’t work, then what does?’”

Keep ReadingShow less
Books & Blooms’ tenth anniversary

Dee Salomon on what makes a garden a garden.

hoto by Ngoc Minh Ngo for Architectural Digest

On June 20 and 21, the Cornwall Library will celebrate its 10th anniversary of Books & Blooms, the two-day celebration of gardens, art, and the rural beauty of Cornwall. This beloved annual benefit features a talk, reception, art exhibit, and self-guided tours of four extraordinary local gardens.

The first Library sponsored garden tour was in June 2010 and featured a talk by Page Dickey, an avid gardener and author. This year’s Books & Blooms will coincide with Ellen Moon’s exhibit “Thinking About Gardens,” a collection of watercolors capturing the quiet spirit of Cornwall’s private gardens. Moon, a weekly storyteller to the first grade at Cornwall Consolidated School and art curator for The Cornwall Library, paints en plein air. Her work investigates what constitutes a garden. In the description of the show, she writes: “there are many sorts...formal, botanical, cottage, vegetable, herb...even a path through the woods is a kind of garden. My current working definition of a garden is a human intervention in the landscape to enhance human appreciation of the landscape.” Also on display are two of her hand-embroidered jackets. One depicts spring’s flowering trees and pollinators. The other, a kimono, was inspired by Yeats’s “The Song of the Wandering Aengus.”

Keep ReadingShow less