Mid Hudson Times Oct. 25 2017

T IMES MID City of Newburgh to take legal action against PFOS polluters HUDSON Vol. 29, No 43 3 OCTOBER 25 - 31, 2017 Bohemian Rhapsody Ready for rematch Page 18 Page 48 Continued on page 6 ONE DOLLAR SERVING NEWBURGH AND NEW WINDSOR Learning ‘The Basics’ Newburgh program prepares kids for Pre-K By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] The Newburgh City Council passed a resolution this week to authorize litigation against “all potentially responsible parties” in the PFOS contamination of the City of Newburgh drinking water supply. The resolution was passed unanimously by the city council, nearly a year and a half following the start of the water crisis. “I feel that it’s long overdue,” said Councilwoman Cindy Holmes at City Hall on Monday. Last year, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation conducted comprehensive testing of the city’s drinking watershed and determined the source of the contamination to be the Stewart Air National Guard Base. The council provided no specifics on the litigation on Monday. No documentation on PFOS-related legal actions by the city were immediately available this week. However, residents and lawmakers alike 3 Shantal Riley Ronald Ferguson greets students at Head Start of Eastern Orange County. By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] Harvard University’s Ronald Ferguson spoke at the SUNY Orange Newburgh campus on Thursday to introduce “The Newburgh Basics,” a program focused on preparing children for pre-kindergarten. The initiative aims to improve brain development in WWW.MIDHUDSONTIMES.COM babies from birth to age three. The program also seeks to minimize student- achievement gaps. “Learning begins the moment your child is born,” he said. “Eighty percent of brain growth happens in the first three years of life,” said Ferguson, creator of “The Basics” program and director of Harvard’s Achievement Gap Initiative. “Parents literally have the ability to determine how smart their kids are going to be.” The program was launched by the Newburgh Enlarged City School District last week along with The Newburgh Basics website, which shares tools and information for parents and families on how to encourage brain development and language comprehension in babies and toddlers. The program teaches parents and caregivers five basic rules: 1. Maximize love and manage stress; 2. Talk, sing and point to “narrate life” to your baby; 3. Count, group and compare; 4. Explore through movement and play; 5. Read and discuss stories. “These are fun and simple things every parent can do from birth,” Ferguson said. “The ultimate outcome is to change the trendline in school readiness.” The district is developing a plan to support the program over the next three years, partnering with organizations such as Head Start, the Childcare Council of Orange County and Barnes & Noble. The program is in place already in six school districts around the Hudson Valley, including Ossining and Peekskill. Continued on page 24