Village addresses Rail Trail, grants

MILLERTON — From keeping an eye on the coronavirus pandemic to reviewing grant applications for local projects, the Village Board held a virtual meeting on Monday, April 20.

Due to social distancing rules, the meeting was live streamed to the “Village of Millerton VOM” Facebook page.

Millerton Police Officer-in-Charge Mike Veeder submitted his report and fielded a question about whether his department plans to patrol the Harlem Valley Rail Trail on weekends. He acknowledged a recent concern that was brought to his attention regarding people littering on the trail. From what she’s observed from the back window of her home on South Center Street, Trustee Jennifer Najdek said she’s seen groups of 15 to 20 people walking back and forth on the trail. After receiving a complaint about people congregating there, Mayor Debbie Middlebrook said she called Veeder and asked for an officer to patrol the trail on the weekends. She added the police should concentrate on the center of the village and the Rail Trail since those tend to be the primary areas where people don’t seem to be adhering to the social distancing rules or wearing face masks as mandated by the state.

Najdek brought the Northeast Dutchess Fund (NDF) grant application up for discussion. According to the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation website at www.berkshiretaconic.org, the grant is available to nonprofits, municipalities, community organizations or civic entities in northeast Dutchess County. 

Najdek said the village wouldn’t need to match grant funds as it’s not a matching grant. If they receive the grant, she said the board should hear back as early as June. Even though the village was hoping to obtain more than $11,000 for the revitalization of Eddie Collins Memorial Park, Najdek said the NDF grant is capped at $10,000. After further discussion, the board authorized Middlebrook to sign the grant application on behalf of the village.

The board then engaged in a lengthy discussion about whether the village would have to go out to bid to have the park project’s engineers to complete the Environmental Assessment Form (EAF) as part of the required State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) process for all three phases of the project. Middlebrook later reported the board is currently waiting to get direction from Dutchess County on how to proceed in that regard.

Trustee Alicia Sartori reported that she and fellow Trustee Matthew Hartzog planned to meet with Tighe & Bond Senior Project Manager Erin Moore on Tuesday, April 21, to review a new grant opportunity for its wastewater project. Reviewing the proposed 2020-21 village budget, Hartzog recalled the board allocated $26,000 for street lighting and shared his plans to look into converting village lights to LED to bring lighting costs down.

Meanwhile, Trustee Joshua Schultz updated the board about the joint highway garage between the village and the town of North East. During the North East Town Board meeting on Thursday, April 16, Schultz said the Town Board accepted bids for the garage’s sand and salt storage building and for its fuel storage facility.

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