eedition Daily Mail November 22 2019

Page 1

CMYK

The Daily Mail Copyright 2019, Columbia-Greene Media Volume 227, No. 231

All Rights Reserved

Contract on hold Common Council wants time to review police pact Inside, A3

The nation’s fourth-oldest newspaper • Serving Greene County since 1792

Price $1.50

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2019

County buys temp sheriff’s office

nFORECAST WEATHER FOR HUDSON/CA TODAY TONIGHT

SAT

By Sarah Trafton Columbia-Greene Media

A couple of showers; windy

Clear

Partly sunny; ice at night

HIGH 49

LOW 27

43 32

Complete weather, A2

n SPORTS

CATSKILL — In an 8-5 vote with one absence, the Greene County Legislature on Wednesday authorized the $400,000 purchase of a building in Coxsackie that is being used as a temporary sheriff’s office. Legislator William B. Lawrence, R-Cairo, was absent from the meeting. An absence is counted as a negative vote. Last October, the county entered into an agreement to lease the building, located at 370 Mansion St., while the new Greene County jail is under

Bluehawks are ready

construction. Under the lease agreement, the building would serve as a temporary sheriff’s office until the department could move into the new jail complex. The building is the former home of the Bank of Greene County and Flach Real Estate. This month the Legislature discussed whether it would be more economically feasible to purchase the building than to continue to lease the building for another two years. “We paid $3,800 a month plus tax, which is another $1,000 for the first year,”

Sarah Trafton/ Columbia-Greene Media

County lawmakers passed a resolution to purchase a building in Coxsackie for $400,000 in an 8-5 vote, with one absence counted as a negative vote, Wednesday night.

See OFFICE A2

INQUIRY REVEALS PRESSURE ON UKRAINE

Hudson’s Isaiah Maines puts up a shot during a recent practice. The Bluehawks season opens Nov. 30 PAGE B1

n THE SCENE

A dirty rat finds meaning in life Concrete Temple returns to Bridge Street Theatre with “Packrat,” inspired by “Watership Down” PAGE A8

n THE SCENE

Courtesy of The Washington Post News Service

A ‘semi-opera’ 3 centuries old Chorus and orchestra to perform Handel’s “Acis and Galatea” at Van Buren Hall in Kinderhook PAGE A8

n INDEX Region Opinion State/Nation Obituaries Sports Classified Comics/Advice

A3 A4 A5 A5 B1 B4-B5 B7-B8

On the web www.HudsonValley360.com Twitter Follow: @CatskillDailyMail Facebook www.facebook.com/ CatskillDailyMail/

Fiona Hill, the former top Russia expert on the National Security Council, testifies at the public impeachment hearing of the House Intelligence Committee.

By Massarah Mikati Johnson Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Closing out a week of public hearings for the impeachment inquiry, two foreign service officers

delivered riveting testimony Thursday. Fiona Hill, the former top Russia expert on the National Security Council, and David Holmes, an aide in the U.S.

embassy in Kiev, detailed in their testimonies clear understandings that President Donald Trump, with the assistance of his personal attorney Rudolph Giuliani, pressured

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to conduct investigations into his political opponent and the 2016 elections in exchange for an Oval Office meeting and a lift on

nearly $400 million in security aid. “On a June 28 call with President Zelensky, Ambassador Taylor, and the Three See UKRAINE A2

Lawmakers adopt $122M budget, flycar in hand By Sarah Trafton Columbia-Greene Media

CATSKILL — Lawmakers adopted a Greene County budget of $122.35 million for 2020 Wednesday night including an amendment to add a fifth flycar. Mountaintop officials have been pushing for the paramedic vehicle, which preps patients for transport prior to the arrival of an ambulance, since 2017. The budget increase from $119 million in 2019 to $122.35 million for 2020 reflects a tax rate increase of 1.7%, with eight of the 14 towns experiencing tax rate reductions, according to the budget proposal. The increase in the budget

is due to a variety of factors such as the debt service for the new Greene County jail, increased personnel associated with Raise the Age legislation, bail reform and evidentiary discovery changes, Greene County Administrator Shaun Groden said at the public hearing on the budget Nov. 4. For example, the county is estimating these new laws will require one additional full-time employee for the probation department, one full-time employee in emergency services to help with the discovery process, two full-time employees in the district attorney’s office, one full-time employee with the See BUDGET A2

Sarah Trafton/Columbia-Greene Media

Robert Janiszewski, of Tannersville, addressed the Legislature at the public hearing for the county budget Nov. 4. The Legislature adopted the 2020 Greene County budget Wednesday.

December 7

www.hudsonhall.org


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