The best source for local news from Marbletown, Rochester & Rosendale
Published the 1st and 3rd Friday of each month | Vol. 28, Issue 23
Join the community on the Green in High Falls
December 2, 2022 | $1.00
Duchess Farms suing town for $2.4 million in damages
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SHOP LOCAL FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
BSP Holiday Section in this issue PAGES 17-25
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Live holiday performances
Nexamp and Central Hudson
Holiday Stories
• • • • Community cookbooks: More than just recipes • • • • • • • • Solstice instinct: Loving the long night • • • • • • • • My favorite Christmas movie • • • • • • • • Ukrainian Christmas traditions • • • •
Can this marriage be saved? Ann Belmont BSP Reporter
Through dance and music, “Into the Light” honors such holidays as Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Yule, Winter Solstice, Sankta Lucia (Sweden) and Diwali (India).
Vanaver Caravan and Arm-of-the-Sea Theater present ‘Into the Light,’ a live performance This live event will be held at 2 and 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, at the Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St., Rosendale with a snow date of 10:30 a.m. and noon Sunday, Dec. 11. “Into the Light” is a magical, multicultural pageant that has thrilled audiences of all ages, telling the story of a young girl named Lucia who jour-
neys around the world to find light in the darkest time of the year. Featuring Arm-of-the-Sea Theatre's giant puppets with the Vanaver Caravan's holiday songs, dances and music traditions, the performance celebrates many of the world’s traditions for bringing light, joy and beauty into the darkest part of the year. Through
SUNY Ulster Music Dept.'s holiday music concert Students, music educators, and faculty and staff will perform in a holiday concert at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 8, in the Quimby Theater in Vanderlyn Hall, at SUNY Ulster, 491 Cottekill Road, Stone Ridge. Music from around the world is the theme of this performance, including “Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy,” Gavotte en Rondeau and Cantate Domino. The event features the College Chorus, directed by Janet Gehres, with accompanist Edward Leavitt; the Mixed Instrument Ensemble with Greg Dinger, director/arranger; and the Honors Recital winners. The concert is free and open to the public. Donations are greatly appreciated. Covid-19 screening for audience members will be in the Quimby Theater Lobby on the evening of the event.
SUNY Ulster College Chorus
dance and music, “Into the Light” honors such holidays as Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Yule, Winter Solstice, Sankta Lucia (Sweden) and Diwali (India). Admission is $15. For tickets and more information, visit rosendaletheatre.org or call 845-658-8989 and/or vanavercaravan.org or 845-256-9300.
For local residents, it's not a choice whether or not to use Central Hudson, the electric utility, unless you're totally off the grid. Even if you have signed up with, say, Nexamp Community Solar for your electric power, you have to pay CH for providing and supplying that power because CH owns and maintains all the power lines in our region. CH buys the power produced by the community solar arrays Nexamp owns in the Town of Rochester. Nexamp customers have to read two sets of bills. CH bills list all the usual charges but give Nexamp customers "solar credits." Nexamp then sends a bill for kilowatts used, with a "guaranteed discount" of 10% from what CH would charge for the same. (But it's more complicated than that ... the discount varies as the sun shines.) In the best of all possible worlds, the two companies would send their bills at the same time, covering the same billing period. But in the world where we currently live, CH bills have been wildly erratic ever since the company attempted to make a system upgrade something over a year ago. Nexamp has to wait on CH data before it can estimate what to charge individual customers. So what's it been like for those who signed on with Nexamp since it went online in Rochester in 2019? People we spoke with were happy to be supporting solar energy. No question about that. The prevailing theme seemed to be the brain-busting complexity of figuring out how much money they are actually spending on electricity. Bram Kincheloe of High Falls was bothered by a lack of transparency. "Nexamp shows me that I am saving money, it is theoretically 10% in their online portal, it shows me that I have a lifetime savings of $315 and that I've avoided 25,202kg
See Power, page 8