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Wallkill Valley Times, Wednesday, January 30, 2019
IN THIS ISSUE
Calendar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Dining Guide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Letters to the Editor. . . . . . . . . . 8
Obituaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Police Blotter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
School News. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Service Directory. . . . . . . . . . . 31
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Walden.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
PUBLIC AGENDA
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5
Walden Village Board of Trustees,
6:30 p.m. Village Hall, 1 Municipal Square.
Town of Shawangunk Planning Board,
7 p.m. Town Hall, 14 Central Ave., Wallkill.
Gardiner Town Board. 7 p.m. Town Hall,
Route 44-55, Gardiner.
Montgomery Village Board, 7:30 p.m.
Village Hall, 133 Clinton Street.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6
Climate Smart Gardiner Task Force. 7
p.m. Town Hall, Route 44-55, Gardiner.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7
Montgomery Town Board, 7 p.m. Town
Government Center, 110 Bracken Road,
Montgomery.
Shawangunk Town Board, 7 p.m. Town
Hall, 14 Central Ave., Wallkill.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11
Valley Central Board of Education,
6:30 p.m. Administration building, 944
Route 17K, Montgomery.
HOW TO REACH US
OFFICE:
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Newburgh, NY 12550
PHONE: 845-561-0170, FAX: 845-561-3967
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WEBSITE
www.timescommunitypapers.com
The Wallkill Valley Times, (USPS 699-490) is a weekly
newspaper published every Wednesday at Newburgh,
NY 12550, with offices at 300 Stony Brook Court,
Newburgh, NY. Single copy: $1 at newsstand. By mail
in Orange, Ulster or Sullivan Counties: $40 annually,
$44 out of county. Periodicals permit at Newburgh, NY.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Wallkill Valley
Times, 300 Stony Brook Court, Newburgh, NY 12550.
Montgomery mayoral election a rematch
By LAURA FITZGERALD
[email protected]
Village
businessowner
Maria
Beltrametti will challenge long-time
incumbent Stephen Brescia for his seat as
village mayor in the elections on March
19.
The polls will be open at the senior
center, 36 Bridge Street, from 8 a.m. to 9
p.m.
Maria Beltrametti
If elected, village business owner
Maria Beltrametti promises to abolish
the village court, oversee the budget and
monitor proposed building projects in the
village and town.
Beltrametti said she wants to focus
on daily operations
that promote local
businesses
and
improve the quality
of life for village
residents. She said
village government
should maintain and
bolster
sidewalks
and landscaping in
the village, which
will promote Montgomery as a walkable
community where residents and visitors
can shop, dine and play.
“In terms of enterprise of the village,
it’s basically a non-profit organization
that’s designed to keep our streets clean
and safe and attractive so that we can
all enjoy them so that people come to the
village and our businesses will prosper,
and to do that I think we have to focus
more,” Beltrametti said.
Beltrametti said she is collecting
signatures for a referendum that would
abolish the village court, which spends
more than it collects. The projected cost
of the court is approximately $119,000
in the 2018-19 fiscal year—about 2.6
percent of total appropriations—and is
projected to collect only $31,000 in fines
and forfeited bail, according to the Village
of Montgomery annual budget.
“That’s a very big gap,” Beltrametti
said.
If Beltrametti collects enough
signatures, the referendum might be
placed on the general election ballot. If
the vote doesn’t pass the first time, she
said she would pursue other avenues to
abolish the court.
She said she would also oppose any
attempts at consolidation with the town
or other villages, instead treating the
village as a sovereign entity.
Beltrametti said she would also like
to see an elevator installed in the village
hall to make it more accessible for village
residents. She would also like to move
the library to the larger Wesley Hall,
where the Montgomery Village Museum
is currently housed.
Beltrametti said she would also focus
village spending and request an audit by
the state comptroller.
An opponent of the Medline project,
Beltrametti said she would attend all
Town of Montgomery planning board
meetings pertaining to Medline and raise
her concerns for the project. She said she
will also make sure building projects in
the village are properly regulated.
Medline is a 1.3-million-square-foot
warehouse proposed on the east side of
NYS Route 416 and north of Interstate
I-84, just outside village limits. The
medical supplier will move 320 employees
to the facility and hire between 150 and
200 more.
This is her fourth attempt for village
office. Beltrametti ran for village mayor
in 2015, village trustee in 2017 and mayor
in 2018.
While she has never been successful
in her bid for office, Beltrametti said
she has an intimate knowledge of village
government because of her attendance at
village meetings.
Beltrametti owns Recycled Style,
a vintage and recycled clothing store
on Ward Street, and has been a village
resident for 10 years.
“I don’t have any other interest except
for the health of my family, my dog,
my business and I’m here all the time,”
Beltrametti said. “So, there’s no question
in my mind that I have more opportunities
than anybody to make a difference.”
L. Stephen Brescia
If
elected, incumbent Stephen
Brescia promises to improve village
infrastructure, revitalize the downtown
business area and keep a close eye on the
Medline project.
Brescia said he will focus on upgrading
village infrastructure, such as water
systems and sidewalks. He and village
staff will also focus on projects already
underway, such as the renovation of the
municipal lot behind village hall and the
village water works building.
“I think we’re already doing a lot of the
right things that we already do and we’re
going to continue to do them,” Brescia
said.
Brescia is also looking forward to
completing the village municipal lot
behind the village hall, which is currently
under construction.
With several businesses in the village
closing shop, Brescia said he would like
to focus on regenerating the business
district. While the details are still in the
works, Brescia said the downtown district
should be revitalized with projects such
as sidewalk repair.
“It’s already inviting, we do a lot of
business in downtown Montgomery,
but we want to try
to enhance that,”
Brescia said.
Brescia said he
would also like to
maintain a stable
tax rate for village
residents.
With
many
residents concerned
about effects of the proposed Medline
project on the village, Brescia said he
is concerned about the impact of traffic
on village residents and will continue to
follow the project at the town level.
“I’m concerned about the traffic as
well as many residents and we want
to hear that during the public hearing
process and the planning process at the
town level,” Brescia said.
Brescia joined the village board as a
trustee in 1987 and has held the position
of mayor since 1990, for a total of 32 years
on the board. Brescia said his experience
in village government gives him an
advantage because he knows how to run
a village.
“I’ve seen the lay of the land around
me for a long time and I know how to use
the resources around me as a team,” he
said.
Brescia is also the chairman of the
Orange County Legislature and secretary
for the Orange County Industrial
Development Agency. He said his
experience at the county level helps
him when running village government
because he has a strong network of people
and resources to rely on to complete
village projects.
“I know a lot of people, I have a lot
of intercourse with so many different
agencies and I know how to get things
done expeditiously,” Brescia said.
Brescia said many employees and
department heads have also worked for
the village for many years, and he works
as a team with employees to complete
projects in a timely manner.
“When you’ve been working together
that long, many workings of village
government become second nature,”
Brescia said. “It’s like you almost know
what the other person is thinking
sometimes. It’s like a well-oiled machine.”