Mid Hudson Times Jan. 17 2018

T IMES MID HUDSON Vol. 30, No 3 3 JANUARY 17 - 23, 2018 Dogs of Newburgh Page 4 Lady Goldbacks win SERVING NEWBURGH AND NEW WINDSOR City water mains break under pressure of deep freeze By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] Continued on page 4 ONE DOLLAR Page 36 Coping with winter The extreme cold is giving the city’s water infrastructure a beating. A total of 14 water-main breaks took place during the deep freeze earlier this month. “The water-main breaks haven’t stopped,” City of Newburgh Water Superintendent Wayne Vradenburgh said in an email Monday, when crews were working on a new main break on Courtney Avenue. Other water main breaks have occurred on Hasbrouck Street, Ann Street, William Street, Broadway, Lutheran Street, Third Street and Liberty Street, among other streets. Vradenburgh described interruptions in water service as “minimal.” As of Tuesday, all service had been restored, he said. “This winter has been (harsher) than previous winters, due to the low temperatures and the drastic fluctuations in temperatures,” the water superintendent said. In addition to the extreme cold, he said, the city’s 100-year-old infrastructure is “a recipe for break after break.” Water- department staff have been “pushed to extreme levels” with the breaks and the city’s water-plant shutdowns due to Catskill Aqueduct repair work. “They have met the challenge and excelled,” Vradenburgh said. The city has embarked on numerous water-infrastructure improvement projects in recent years. In 2017, the city purchased a valve-turning truck to allow water-department staff to begin a valve-exercising program, city Engineer 3 Return of skating on the Polly? Thick ice on the pond sparks hope By LAUREN BERG Courtesy City of Newburgh Water Department A City of Newburgh crew works on a water-main break on William Street this month. WWW.MIDHUDSONTIMES.COM After several years of warm winters, ice skating may finally return to the City of Newburgh’s Downing Park pond, the Polly, as early as next week. Stephen Sinnott, a volunteer with the Downing Park Planning Committee and the driving force behind the future Shelter House Café, spoke at the city’s council meeting January 8 to propose the return of open skating at Downing Park. Downing Park officially opened in 1897, and the history of ice skating on the Polly goes back just as far. Newburgh was a major hub during the origin of speed skating in the late 1800s. Joseph F. Donoghue, the first “declared” world speed skating champion in 1891, hailed from Newburgh. In fact, the Eastern championship speed skating races were held on the Polly in Downing Park in January of 1900. The stone building adjacent to the Polly, known to longtime residents as the Shelter House, was added in 1934 to be used by local skaters in the winter to warm up, change into skates, and even enjoy cups of hot chocolate. However, annual ice skating on the Polly declined sometime after the late 1960s, and by the 70s and 80s the Shelter House became neglected and abandoned. Continued on page 3