Wallkill Valley Times Jul. 20 2016

T IMES Paving the Oregon Trail WALLKILL VALLEY Vol. 34, No 29 3 WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2016 Summer rec Summer game Page 18 Page 34 3 ONE DOLLAR www.WallkillValleyTimes.net Additional state funds to complete job started last year By TED REMSNYDER Finding themselves with a more robust highway improvement fund than they originally planned for, the Shawangunk Town Board approved a plan at its July 14 meeting to pave two miles of the Oregon Trail roadway. One third of the three-mile route between Wallkill and Walker Valley was repaved last year, and the rest of the roadway will be renovated this year to the cost of $285,000. The town had expected to have $300,000 for road restorations, but additional state funding boosted that total to $385,000. The funding is coming from the New York State Department of Transportation Consolidated Local Street and Highway Improvement Program. “We never know how much it’s going to be, and we had conservatively budgeted it as receiving $185,000 as revenue,” Town Supervisor John Valk said. “With the money left over that we didn’t spend last year, we Hot rods Classic cars lined Walden’s Municipal Square last Saturday. Story, photos on page 19. have $85,000 additional, plus the PAVE NY money, which they allocated. So we’re going to put that into the roads. It’s no good just sitting around not using it.” The remainder of the highway money will be divvied up in the coming months between a handful of local roads. “We have $100,000 to spend,” Valk said. “We’re going to look at streets in the hamlet first.” The town is now accepting applications Continued on page 4 Gardiner Highway chief wants 4-year term By TED REMSNYDER The Highway Superintendent position in the Town of Gardiner could be on the verge of changing to a long-term job, as a public referendum is set for November on the proposition of switching the elected post from a two-year term to a four-year reign. After the Town Board held a public hearing at its July 12 meeting that drew no major concerns from local residents about the issue, the referendum will be on the ballot this fall. The impetus for the potential term change came from an appeal by current Highway Superintendent Brian Stiscia, who contends that giving the office holder a longer term would allow the department head to concentrate more fully on the job without having to focus on getting re-elected only two years later. “It was a request that came from the Highway Superintendent,” Town Supervisor Marybeth Majestic said. “He believes that it pulls his efforts away from the job because he has to campaign.” Stiscia has another year on his present term, and if the referendum passes in November, the new four-year term would apply to the person elected to the post in 2018. Prior to last Tuesday’s board meeting, town officials proudly showed off the newly-renovated front entranceway to the Town Hall. The refurbished entrance includes all-new concrete steps, which replaced the old setup of concrete stairs with bluestone pavers. The prior Continued on page 4 SERVING CRAWFORD, GARDINER, MAYBROOK, MONTGOMERY, PINE BUSH, SHAWANGUNK, WALDEN AND WALLKILL