Millerton on tap for $2 million wastewater grant

MILLERTON —  Rep. Pat Ryan  (D-18) has requested funding from the House Appropriations Committee for a Community Project Funding grant in the amount of $2 million to be used toward the Village’s proposed wastewater system project.

The proposed system will encompass the village’s general business district, commercial areas along Route 22, the Town of North East’s boulevard district along Route 44, and a few surrounding residential properties in the village.

The village applied for the funding in March, and village Mayor Jenn Najdek, along with North East Town Supervisor Chris Kennan, met with Ryan in his office in Newburgh on April 7 to talk about the importance of the project.

“This is an application from the village, not from the town, but we’re all kind of joined at the hip on this thing,” said Kennan. “The village’s wastewater project needs the town to connect to it, and the town can’t have a wastewater district without the village.

“It doesn’t mean that it is a guaranteed grant,” continued Kennan, “because it becomes part of the budget process of the Congress. It’s somewhere between highly likely and extremely likely that this is reality.”

According to Najdek, the grant will move through the legislative session of the House of Representatives in Washington in June and July. The village has been working on the wastewater system project for at least seven years.

“Whether in a big city or a small town, every family in the Hudson Valley deserves access to clean water, air and soil,” said Ryan. “I’m proud to have nominated the Village of Millerton for this crucial funding to construct a new wastewater system, which will both improve water quality and allow for continued economic development in the area.”

The engineering firm of Tighe and Bond has been engaged by the village and town to map out a sewer system, and senior project manager Erin Moore presented the subsequent “Town of North East Sewer District Map, Plan and Report” at a March 29 informational meeting. The report can be found on the front page of the town’s website at townofnortheastny.gov

The total cost of the system, including both the village and the town, will be approximately $13.8 million, with an estimated $144,000 per year in operation and maintenance costs. Operation and maintenance fees will be based on increments of 225 gallons per day for both the village and town. Fees for the system will be based on a benefit-use assessment.

“The numbers in the Map, Plan and Report are the worst-case scenario,” said North East town attorney Warren Replansky. “They’re only going to get better as we get grants.”

The design period for the system is estimated at about nine months, with possibly three months for approval by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and then a 12-month construction period with service starting immediately after that.

On Monday, April 24, Replansky presented a petition to the town board to be circulated within the proposed district to be signed by property owners representing at least 50% of the assessed value of the district. Once the signatures are collected, a public hearing can be scheduled on the formation of the district. The board also accepted a resolution to accept the Map, Plan and Report.

The village has already gone through the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQR) process, adopted a resolution to accept its own Map, Plan and Report (drawn up by Tighe and Bond at the same time as the town’s document) and completed a Monroe balancing test to determine that the project is in its best interests. Najdek is working on an intermunicipal agreement between town and village, and said that sewer use laws and rates will also be  forthcoming.

“This is very, very much likely to happen, and it is a really important step forward on the shared wastewater system project,” Kennan said.

Latest News

Keane Stud developers present environmental impact analysis

A preliminary draft of an impact analysis study for a Keane Stud subdivision application drew residents to a Planning Board meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 22.

Photo by leila Hawken

AMENIA — Residents had the opportunity on Wednesday, Oct. 22, to weigh in on the proposed Keane Stud subdivision, a plan that would divide roughly 605 acres into 27 mostly residential lots, during a meeting of the Amenia Planning Board.

The session was part of the State Environmental Quality Review Act process, following the board’s decision that a Draft Environmental Impact Statement should be prepared to evaluate potential environmental and scenic impacts from the project.

Keep ReadingShow less
Local, county candidates gather for NorthEast-Millerton Library forum

Millerton and North East residents crowded into the NorthEast-Millerton Library Annex on Friday, Oct. 24, to hear from 10 candidates seeking office.

Photo by Christian Murray

MILLERTON — A crowd of about 60 people filled the NorthEast-Millerton Library Annex for a political Q&A session with candidates for local and county offices on Friday, Oct. 24.

Panels of candidates rotated across the stage, answering questions submitted beforehand and impromptu questions from audience members in the room.

Keep ReadingShow less
Rural Health Fall Fest highlights care options

The Sun River Health Center in Amenia welcomed visitors to its Rural Health Fall Fest on Wednesday, Oct. 22. Assembling for a photo at Sun River’s booth were, left to right, Cherise McDaniel, Director; Crystal Marr, Associate Vice-President of Substance Use Disorders; Yvette Ramirez, Outreach Coordinator; and Elizabeth Phillips, Vice-President of Community Engagement.

Photo by Leila Hawken

Photo by Leila Hawken

Representing Astor Services of Poughkeepsie was Athena Galarza, the home-based services coordinator, visiting with Alexa Cruz, 10, who had come through Astor’s Head Start program some years earlier.

Public Hearing on 2026 Amenia town budget scheduled for Nov. 6
Amenia Town Hall on Route 22.
Nathan Miller

AMENIA — Following weeks of meetings and review, the 2026 Preliminary Town Budget is scheduled for a public hearing on Thursday, Nov. 6, during the Town Board meeting beginning at 7 p.m.

The 2026 proposed budget shows total appropriations of $3,355,262 for the General Fund and $1,338,902 from the Highway Fund, or a total of $4,694,165, an increase of $543,570 over the current year.

Keep ReadingShow less