Wallkill Valley Times Apr. 19 2017

T IMES WALLKILL VALLEY Vol. 35, No 16 3 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 2017 3 ONE DOLLAR Musical Overcoming wildflowers injury Page 12 Page 39 www .W allkill V alley T imes . net Bus company readies Maybrook plans Crawford’s By TED REMSNYDER When the Wallkill and Valley Central school districts decided to ink a joint five-year transportation contract with the Long Island-based East End Bus Lines company in January, one major unresolved issue was the eventual destination of a local bus yard to satisfy the terms of the deal. After weeks of speculation, the company’s plans are now clear, as East End owner John Mensch and company representatives appeared before the Maybrook Planning Board on April 13 in hopes of establishing a bus depot at the former OSRAM Sylvania light bulbs manufacturing plant on 201 Charles St. East End considered facilities in Montgomery and Wallkill before zeroing in on the 56,000- square-foot Maybrook site. As a stipulation of the bus contract, the company is supposed to be fully operational by July 1 and East End has already put in a bid to purchase the Charles Street building. As part of the bus deal, the company must set up a terminal that can reach all district schools within 30 minutes. The five-month time period between the completion of the bus contract and the July deadline to be ready to transport students meant the company had to find an existing bus yard instead of building their own. The company initially contacted previous contract holder First Student about potentially taking over their facility on Route 208 in Wallkill, but the Continued on page 4 Easter baskets are ready! Rachel Coleman Youngsters anxiously await the start of Wallkill’s Easter Egg Hunt, Saturday, on the grounds of the Wallkill Library. More photos on pages 20-21. solar system Proposed new law draws more interest By JESSICA COHEN The new solar law in the Town of Crawford has attracted a second solar system applicant that would, like the first, provide enough energy at a discount to power 300 to 500 homes. As the first application, from Borrego Solar, moves ahead with the town planning board, Daniel Compitello, zoning and outreach manager for Cypress Creek Renewables, based in Santa Monica, California, introduced their application at the planning board meeting last week. Both companies lease private land for solar systems that feed solar energy into the electric grid to be sold to local customers at discount rates. “This is our number two application. It’s a steep learning curve,” Rory Holmes, planning board vice chairman, told Compitello. As the planning board considered the Borrego application, ambiguities in the law’s wording on how much tree clearing would be allowed became a troublesome issue. A clarified rewording of that clause is yet to be approved. So the Borrego application will be considered with an interpretation agreed on with the Crawford Zoning Board of Appeals last week, allowing 50% of the trees on a solar system site to be cleared. Since Cypress Creek made an application under the current law, they will likely also be subject to that law, though the site is not wooded. Cypress Creek has plans to lease 23 Continued on page 4 SERVING CRAWFORD, GARDINER, MAYBROOK, MONTGOMERY, PINE BUSH, SHAWANGUNK, WALDEN AND WALLKILL