June 19,1991
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
,.------..... --------------------- ~-~--- c' - -: - " . .Voorheesville budget defeated' Rosenshontz b,rings Page3 .' Board reworks scooper law childhood {unto Latham Page 3 Coyne steps down as county chief Family Section Page 25 '. Page 4 1~0;~ t~/0~'91 8M i,{!;:f) Of ''1e 19 , 1991 BE n·! !~'UH!_ I C L r f{!':;'f:1l--.' ,,' (WE \ i. XXXV, No. 26 The weekly newspaper serving the towns of Bethlehem and New Scotland i I I Vocal residents prompt DOT action on crosswalk By Susan Graves pedestrian pushes the button to activate it. He said Bethlehem residents know how to push the" right pedestrians who fail to use the stop traffic buttons are buttons to get things done. The state Department of actually in violation of the law. Transportation is responding to concerns about "In any event, we'llbedoingthat (insta11ing the four problems pedestrians have had at the intersection of way stop button) momentari1y," he said Monday. Delaware and Elsmere avenues. The first change is There also will be sufficient time thatpedeStrianSWhOCrOSSthestreetand'~PtU~S~h~r-:~~ to cross the street, according to the traffic stop buttons on the I Taylor. poles will get a four-way stop, ~'Id!f';lllL, Taylor said DOT will also said John E. Taylor, DOT install agreen left-turn arrow for regional director. vehicles turning left from Last week, he said, he came Delaware onto Groesbeck to assess the situation himself as Place. Though he said the a result of a "whole pile ofletters" ~ intersection does not warrant sent to DOT. the arrow under DOT criteria He said· a number of - "none of the warrants come pedestrians he observed did not close to being met" - the use the existing buttons, and a arrow will be' installed number of drivers were not yielding nonetheless. "It will be done as fast to pedestrians attempting to cross. as we can do it," he said. Ken Ludlum, Skippy's music manager, gets ready to Taylor said he crossed the streetfour or five times, and Taylor said hewiU also respond to the residents who cross the intersection at Elsmere and Delaware that "A couple of times, I got pretty nervous." Still, he have written letters to DOT. avenues. Ludlum designed a stic.ker to illustrate the said, "The system as it is designed isadequate."Taylor danger for pedestrians. Susan Graves said the four-way red light will only occur when a o CROSSWALK/page 17 'C & D landfill smoldering - By Susan Wheeler ~cl"Monday that the landfill continued A privately-owned South Bethlehem to burn and that volunteers went out construction and demolition debris again in the evening. landfill, already the subject of two town The town's second lawsuit, served lawsuits, is again smoldering. ~ April 8, aims to properly closethe landfill, The 3.5 acre Spawns Hollow Road according to Michael Smith, assistant' landfill, owned by GlenmontresidentHar town attorney and senior partner at len Metz, began burning last Monday, Roemerand Featherstonhaugh in Albany. June 10, according to Richard Hummel, The suit, which names Metz and several Selkirk Fire Department district chief. waste management corporations as de He said Selkirk Fire Department volun fendants, evolved from a mid-March 1991 teers worked nine hours last Monday to fire, which also called for fire department put out the underground fires, which are volunteer cooperation in extinguishing most likely caused by spontaneous com it. The lawsuit, which will be updated to bustion. The smoldering began again, include the most recent fires, is com and the volunteers were called out Friday prised of two parts, he said. The first to dig up _and wet down the debris. He o LANDFIWpage 17 NEW SCOTLAND High bidder to do reval By Debi Boucher Assessment Board, which has mandated the townJo update its data. The New Scotland Town Board voted route wheretbesyringes were at a special meeting Monday night to Councilman Craig Shufelt expressed discOvered will be ca11ed, Secor said . contract with Cole-Layer Trumble, an "reservations," but went with the major If all ;~i~~~~~~~~~1 Ohio firm with offices in Albany, to per ity in the 3-1 vote. Peter Van Zetten pro "Whatwerea1lywantto do iseducate form a full data collection and re-evalu vided the third aye" with Supervisor this individual,"not punish him, he ation on the town's 3,700 properties. Herbert Reilly dissenting. Councilman said. In April, Empire Returns of In May, Syracuse rejected. Bethlehem's representatives Assessor Richard Law III, who made Wyman Osterhout was absent. the recommendation, argued strongly for Reilly said he based his vote on reser recyclables after an eatlier. set of ." syringeswasdiscovered. ~Fortunately, Checkth~e~~~:~~~\~:~S: f his choice, saying, "CLT is the one I can vations he has about the selection proc we caught thiscan before itwent Gutt() work with most easily and get the most ess; about the firm, which apparently ran Syracuse,· Secor. said F'riday- One of results from." Already in his court was into problems in its revaluation project in the needles has been sent to the State councilman John Sgarlata, who had sat in the neighboring Town of Knox; and his Police lab for analysis, he said. on meetings between CL1; Law and rep resentatives of the state Equalization and o REVAVpage22 Labor commissioner enforces wage laws One-car accident kills New York State LaborCommis- partment attempts to negotiate a Res budget flies one, wrecks house sionerTholIlilsEHartnettrecently satisfactory schedule of payment Investigators from the Albany announced that he has ordered 15 with delinquu:t employers. If no County Sheriff's Department re: area firms to pay over $100,000 in agreement is reached, or if an in face of storm sorted to fingerprints to identify back wages, minimum' wages, employer fails to honor an agree. the victim of a fatal one-car acci benefits. interest and civil penal- ment, the department issues an By Regina Bulman Satin; Sarah Hafensteiner and dent that destroyed the front por ties for violating state wage laws. order to comply. Despite a sudden storm and Russell Sykes were elected to fill tion of a home on Route 85A early Theorderswereissuedduringthe ' power outages throughout the three vacant board of education Sunday morning. first quarter of 1991. Ifthe amount owed is paid within district, the 1991-92 Ravena-Coey seats. Sgt. Scott Giroux said finger An employer who fails to pay 10 days of receipt of the order, mans-Selkirk school budget was In what has been termed the prints of the fatality, identified as wages, benefitsorminimumwages satisfactory compliance with the approved by one of the highest most difficult budget year in his George McGough, 37, of 1464 may be asses~d a civil penalty order is met. If the total amount is margins in the district's history. tory and with some neighboring Dorwalt Blvd., Schenectady, were and is assessed interest when an not paid within 10 days, interest Last Wednesday, voters ap school district budgets being faxed to the FBI, which keeps order to comply is issued. An or will continue to accrue. An em proved the $18.5 million budget, turned down, RCS officials were criminal and civil records. der to comply lists wages due and ployer receiving orders to comply which represents a 5.4 percent concerned about budget approvaL McGough was identified at ap owed, interest assessed to the date also has 60 days after the order is increase over last year and includes Last year, the budget was defeated proximately 4:30 p.m. Sunday. of the order and any civil penalty. issued to appeal to the state Indus some teacher and staffreductions. but passed on its second' vote. Thevaninwhich McGough had Before issuing an order, the de- trial Board of Appeals. Before that, the last time a budget been a passenger crashed into the District officials said that a wind was defeated was in 1982. front of the Voorheesville home and rain storm and the loss of elec District officials struggled to owned by David and Lisa Thack tricity from early afternoon until present a budget to voters this year, rah after the driver, Claude Kim 10 p.m. didn't discourage voters cutting the original budget pro ball, 29, of 3 Lincoln Square, Al from turning out at the polls. posal by $740,000 and pushing bany, failed to negotiate a curve,' I The tally was 977 yes votes, 713 back the budget vote by a month according to the sheriff's depart- no votes and 41 blank votes. A because of delayed state aid fig ment. .j special proposition concerning the ures. RCS officials were report Kimball, who suffered a frac purchase of new buses also passed edly "relieved and pleased" by the tured spine and other injuries, was I by more than 150 votes. Maurice budget approval. charged with driving while intoxi- . cated and numerous traffic viola- '1 Rensselaer man indicted on sodomy charges tions. He was admitted to Albany Daytime Summer Classes Medical Center Hospital, along 1 FoUowing his arrest by Albany complaint was made by one of the with a second passenger in the ' . for Kids County Sheriff's Department in child's relatives. Stafford was an van, Maria Argomedo, 38, of 44 vestigators, a 44-year-old Rensse acquaintance of the girl's family, HackettAve., Albany, who received July 15th-9th 9:30-12:00 laer man was indicted June 11 for according to Giroux. head injuries. A sheriff's depart July 22nd-27th 9:30-12:00 3uegedly sodomizing a 5-year-oId Stafford was arraigned by New ment report said both were unco girl in New Scotland, according to Scotland Town Justice Kenneth operative in identifying the dead $3500 per week all supplies and snacks included Sgt.