Village Trustees approve new police cruiser and clarify trash responsibility

MILLBROOK — Purchase of a new police cruiser and an adjustment within regulations governing trash were two major items resolved at the regular meeting of the Village Trustees on Wednesday, Sept. 11.

By unanimous vote, the trustees approved the purchase of a new police vehicle described by Chief Keith Dworkin as a 2023 Dodge Charger at a cost of $52,000 to be funded by a five-year bond issue. The cost includes the purchase price of the car and additional outfitting of the vehicle for use in law enforcement, such as lights, sirens, graphics, computer equipment and the protective barrier between the front and back seats.

Adjusting the town’s littering code to require landlords to be responsible for trash containment and disposal for their residential or commercial properties was unanimously approved by the Trustees. Under the regulation, building owners will need to provide and maintain trash receptacles and implement regular removal services.

The landlord will be permitted to pass along the cost for trash disposal service to the tenants.

Before the change, regulations required receptacles but failed to specify that those containers are the responsibility of the commercial or residential building owner, not the tenants.

The next meeting of the Village Trustees will be held on Wednesday, Oct. 9, beginning at 6 p.m.

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We seek to help readers make more informed decisions through comprehensive news coverage of communities in Northwest Connecticut and Eastern Dutchess County in New York.

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Photo by Nathan Miller

NEWBURGH, N.Y. — The Pine Plains Bombers were knocked out in second round of the Section IX regional tournament after a hard fought game against the Tuckahoe Tigers on Tuesday, March 11.

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Dan Aymar-Blair

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The Stissing Center was bustling just before the show on Sunday, March 9.

Photo by Alec Linden

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“Selected Shorts,” a product of Manhattan-based performing arts powerhouse Symphony Space, features prominent actors who recite works of short fiction. The full program usually revolves around a theme; Sunday afternoon’s focus was “transformations.”
Comedian, writer and actress Ophira Eisenberg — or “renaissance woman of storytelling,” as Stissing Center Executive Director Patrick Trettenero introduced her — assumed hosting duties, warming up the crowd with jokes about Brooklyn egg prices and doctors with self-esteem issues — “I want a megalomaniac with a god complex and no hobbies.”

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