Meet the new chief
Chief Joseph Olenik has already retrieved the police car that was left in the North East Ford lot during the police department’s administrative leave. 
Photo by Christine Bates

Meet the new chief

MILLERTON —  Joseph Olenik has been appointed the chief of police in the Village of Millerton. His hours will vary throughout the week at a salary of $25,000. Throughout his career, Olenik has enjoyed holding at least two jobs at once, sometimes three, with a current full-time day job as the director of facilities, operations and support services for Putnam Hospital in Carmel and Sharon Hospital in Connecticut – both part of Nuvance Health.

His past law enforcement positions include 32 years part-time with the North Salem Police Department where he oversaw all departmental training and worked on the road as a corporal with 14 part-time officers. Simultaneously he was the chief of the State University Police at SUNY Purchase for 19 years, supervising an assistant chief, deputy chief, four lieutenants, one criminal investigator, one inspector and 20 officers.

His first job was as a police officer/deputy sheriff with Westchester County in 1979. In his 44 years in law enforcement, he has pulled his gun just once.

Olenik hopes to bring his background in community policing to Millerton and the Town of North East, and believes police should be part of the community and know its residents. Since his selection by the village trustees, he has spent weekends walking around the village, and talking to business owners and residents.

He has begun conversations with Millerton’s police force, examining police activities, training and the backgrounds of the current officers as well as inventorying village police equipment.

His stated desire is to “work hand in hand” with members of the department and lead by example. He hopes that the town of North East will once again provide funding for a police department that emphasizes community policing and will also investigate grants for training and equipment.

Olenik plans on being out and about on the weekends setting an example. Since he gets up at 4 a.m., residents shouldn’t be surprised to see him checking on the village in the early morning hours.

Olenik’s educational background includes a bachelor’s degree in facilities and property management from Iona College and a mechanical engineering degree from Manhattan College. Certifications that Olenik has earned during his police career include master police instructor for the Division of Criminal Justice Services along with specific instructor certifications in Field Sobriety, Firearms, Radar, Pepper Spray and General Topics.

He continues to be a regular instructor at various police academies as well as assisting with the in-service training of local municipal law enforcement agencies.

Olenik understands the issues confronting small, part-time police departments. At this point he is uncertain about whether the police budget will be sufficient to attract new officers to the force — with standard security guard positions paying $25 an hour — and philosophical about hiring and training young officers who move onto better positions after gaining experience.

He believes that body cameras, which officers now wear,  should help the liability threat faced by all police departments. Asked how he would handle complaints about the police, Olenik said that any investigation rests with the chief of police, who would report his findings to the board of trustees if necessary.

As a regular matter, Olenik plans on reporting what’s “good and bad” and what needs to be changed. He also wants to update the department website to explain what the department is doing, include the names of the officers and issue safety warnings.

A Dutchess County resident, Olenik moved from Yorktown Heights after 25 years and has lived in Hopewell Junction for the past 16 years with his family – wife Stephanie and  children Emily, 11, Colin, 12, and Bradley, 19, who’s in college at SUNY Cortland. His married daughter, Katie, lives in Bedford with her two children, Mason and Mia.

Expect to see Olenik wearing his vest inside his uniform to be less intimidating but still safe as he patrols the streets of the village.

Latest News

Webutuck defeats Housatonic softball team on the road in Falls Village

Webutuck's Olivia Lopane-Wickwire, no. 2, eyeing a pitch as she steps off first base.

Photo by Riley Klein

FALLS VILLAGE, Conn. — Webutuck High School softball defeated Housatonic Valley Regional High School 14-9 on Thursday, May 15.

The non-league game was played in Falls Village, Connecticut, in what is a becoming an interstate rivalry. When these teams met last year, Housatonic won 16-3.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hillsdale flea market returns May 24
to Hamlet Park

The annual Columbia County event draws hundreds of bargain hunters to Hillsdale’s Hamlet Park.

Provided

HILLSDALE —The town of Hillsdale’s flea market returns Saturday, May 24.

Dozens of vendors will be selling things at Hillsdale Hamlet Park, southwest of the intersection of routes 22 and 23 in Columbia County.

Keep ReadingShow less
Webutuck Community Day — indoor and outdoor fun festival

Producing a blizzard of bubbles, the Bubble Bus delighted visitors to the annual Webutuck Community Day at the high school on Saturday, May 17.

Photo by Leila Hawken

AMENIA — Outdoor and indoor fun activities awaited area families who attended the Webutuck Community Day at the high school on Saturday, May 17. The popular annual event was co-sponsored by the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation and the Webutuck PTA.

In addition to outdoor displays including a car show, large trucks, a helicopter, a state police water rescue vehicle and a bubble bus producing blizzards of bubbles, the indoor displays numbered more than 60 local and area organizations, vendors, demonstrations and volunteer opportunities, nearly all giving things away for free.

Keep ReadingShow less
$125K grant funds NorthEast-Millerton Library repairs

Funding for repairs to the NorthEast-Millerton Library were secured Assemblymember Didi Barrett (D-106).

Photo by Aly Morrissey

MILLERTON — The NorthEast-Millerton Library is set to receive a facelift thanks to a $125,000 grant to support overdue repairs and necessary upgrades to the library’s Annex.

NorthEast-Millerton Library Director Rhiannon Leo-Jameson said the repairs are scheduled to begin around mid-June and conclude in early August. The grant will be used to repair structural and cosmetic damage, including rotting wood, chipping paint and damaged siding. Leo-Jameson said if there is any budget remaining, the library will replace an exterior door and window.

Keep ReadingShow less