Newsbriefs
Liquid Assets
The Pine Hill Water District might save itself some money this
fall, now that a major repair project expected to cost over
$1.3 million dollars was awarded to a local company that came
in with a low bid.
Hubbell Incorporated, a Margaretville-based company that handled
the half a million dollar Esopus stream project in Phoenicia
last year, came in with a price of $1,092,283. Four other companies
also bid, with a high of $1,377,000.
The project will take care of about half of the district‚s
distribution system identified as being most in need of improvement.
New mains will be installed, as well as the individual, three
quarter inch lines that stem from the mains located in the middle
of roadways to private property lines. Larios added that the
town had secured other funds to help homeowners pay for new
lines that run from the property lines to their homes.
The streets that will be worked on include Main Street (all
the way to Maple street), Elm Street, Bonnieview Avenue, Mill
Street, Academy Street, the beginning section of Birch Creek
Road, Parts of Route 28, and Friendship Manor Road. The three-month
project also includes new mains across some bridges in the hamlet.
One glitch in the project is that it now seems unlikely that
it will be completed before winter, as previously planned. Cross
said that crews will come in soon and work for about two months
before wrapping it up and retuning in the spring.
At a recent special meeting about the water district, Supervisor
Robert Cross Jr. said the $250,000 left over would be used to
increase the water systems storage capacity.
Siteless...
A committee charged with putting together a plan to build a
sewer system in Phoenicia is having trouble finding a spot for
the treatment plant, but so far there is no talk of condeming
private property for a site.
Supervisor Robert Cross Jr. said that about six sites have been
looked at and one of particular interest, said to be located
near the Phoenicia Plaza, might have some troubles due to a
watercourse. It appears that the site would need to be approved
by at least two agencies, the State Department of Environmental
Conservation, and the New York City Department of Environmental
Protection.
After concerns were raised about the latter agency being too
strict about keeping development away from water that makes
its way to the taps of over 9 million downstaters, it was noted
that New York City is actually the entity that wanted the treatment
done in the first place. In fact they‚re paying for its
construction as part of a 1997 deal reached between the Big
Apple and a Coalition of Watershed Towns in the Catskill Mountain
region.
Committee members agree that progress is stalled until a location
is selected.
"Finding the site is key," said committee member Ron
Ervolino.
Four years ago, when Phoenicia first took a shot at getting
the system installed, engineers had to settle on a parcel that
was actually up on a hillside because there were no other suitable
locations that anyone was willing to sell to the town for the
treatment plant site. As a result they designed a system that
called for pumping sewage up the hillside, an expensive alternative
to the more typical gravity flow systems, like the Treatment
plant in Pine Hill. Time slipped by, and other communities that
moved faster got the first round financing from New York City.
With new funds now available, Phoenicia is trying again.
Committee member Harry Jameson said that it‚s no easier
this time around. In fact that hillside parcel is no longer
available as an option.
"So far there are no willing sellers," he said.
Unclear is whether the town would condemn property for a site.
Bad Apple?
Is the farm stand along Route 28 in Mount Tremper a bad apple?
Or is it just like all the rest? Last month Pine Hill resident
Mary Herrmann made a public complaint about the stand, run by
the Higley family, claiming that it violates several conditions
of an operating permit granted last spring by the planning board.
Herrmann said there was almost an accident due to cars parked
all over the shoulder of the road, and she further complained
that the ever growing facility, now a cornucopia of several
hundred square feet, was only permitted to be a tiny ten by
ten foot stand.
Herrmann was told to file a complaint with Code Enforcement
officer Mike Malloy, but as of press time the code office had
received none.
Al Higley, who helps run the stand that is owned by his son,
said this week that Herrmann was by recently taking pictures,
but that‚s all he knows.
"And it‚s not against the law to park on the side
of the road," he added, noting that other roadside stands
have patrons park along the roadway.
More Trash Talk...
The Ulster County Resource Recovery Agency board has decided
to establish new construction and demolition debris separation
programs from consultants Clough, Harbour & Associates,
at a cost of $12,000. Agency Executive Director Charles Shaw
said the separation program would cost an estimated $2.5 million
and involve the installation of equipment to sort construction
and demolition materials. Components of the new system will
include shredding equipment that officials estimated would save
$303,000 if installed in 2005. And according to figures provided
by the agency, the county would save $150,000 in landfill costs,
$75,000 in fuel, $20,000 in wood grinding costs and a "conservative"
estimate of $13,500 in overtime expenses once the new system
is set in place. The sole no vote to the proposal, Kevin Roberts,
said he saw no immediate need to update a study that has not
been used since it was released in May 2002. Officials said
the update would be ready in November and included in presentations
to county and town lawmakers.
That Jail Again?
Ulster County lawmakers approved the spending of an additional
$8 million for cost overruns and claims settlement caused by
delays in work on the new county jail last week by a 24 to 3
vote, with Democrats Tracey Bartels of Gardiner, Richard Parete
of Accord, and Brian Shapiro of Woodstock opposed on the basis
of general opposition to the runaway nature of the entire project.
At the same time, all in the legislature seemed to agree that
final construction costs on the project will end up being at
least double the approved amount. Current estimates put the
$71.8 million project, which is roughly a year behind schedule,
as much as $21 million over budget: $4.7 million to complete
construction, and the remainder to settle claims and pay consulting
and legal fees. Consultants Hill International had recommended
appropriating $15.6 million to give them a pot of money from
which to settle claims filed against the county by contractors
who say they‚ve incurred additional costs due to the project
delays. Meanwhile the County is saying that they now expect
to get back some of the overruns through litigation once the
project is finished. There is ongoing dissension as to how such
claims will be handled over the coming term, as well as how
open any discussion of cost overruns need be.
Tech City∑
Ulster County officials recently reached a settlement of a lawsuit
New York City developer Alan Ginsberg had filed over the town‚s
assessment of 23 properties he owns at TechCity, the former
IBM complex. County Treasurer Lewis Kirschner said the settlement
between the town of Ulster and AG Properties calls for the assessment
on Ginsberg‚s TechCity holdings to be lowered from more
than $50 million to approximately $30 million, the figure previously
offered by the town. Ginsberg had pressed for the assessment
to be lowered to $20 million. The owner, who had owed $7.5 million
in back taxes on the properties, must now pay $2.8 million in
back taxes, with $1.4 million due by the end of December and
the balance by May 2005. Under the terms of the settlement,
the town will be required to pay $492,000 to the county, which
by law had covered the town for the delinquent tax bills. The
Kingston school district will also have to refund a portion
of county funds used as reimbursement for back taxes. Ulster
town Assessor James Maloney, who is facing removal from either
that position or his role as a county legislator for conflict-of-interest
matters involving the vote, declined to comment on the settlement.
Small Farms!
NYS Commission of Agriculture Nathan Rudgers will address the
importance of small farm enterprises to the state and regional
economies, and highlight the Northeast Small Farm Expo being
held Sat. & Sun September 18th & 19th at the Ulster
County Fairgrounds in New Paltz. Representatives from Cornell
Cooperative Extension of Dutchess, Orange, Sullivan and Ulster
Counties with staff from Cornell, Penn State and Rutgers Universities
are hosting the press conference. The Secretaries of Agriculture
for New Jersey and Pennsylvania have also been invited to attend.
For more information about the Expo or press conference please
contact Les Hulcoop, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Dutchess
County at (845) 677-8223 or Lisa Berger, Cornell Cooperative
Extension of Ulster County, 845-340-3990 or via email at lp41@cornell.edu.
Roundtable∑
The Catskill Business Roundtable will meet Thursday, Sept. 16
at 10:30 a.m. at Catskill Watershed Corporation offices, 905
Main Street, Margaretville. The Roundtable consists of area
business owners and economic development representatives who
have been working to improve the business climate in the five-county
Catskills region. The agenda for the Sept. 16 meeting includes
an update on the development of a web site which will promote
the Catskills as a place to do business. The site will also
offer instant connection to the First Stop Shop compiled by
the Roundtable and the New York State Department of State last
year. The First Stop Shop provides information on services and
guidance available to existing and start-up businesses from
governmental agencies and non-profit organizations. It is available
in print form by calling the CWC, but the web site will make
the data searchable from computers anywhere. A progress report
on the GIS network that is being developed will also be provided
at the Roundtable meeting. To learn more about the Roundtable,
as well as the CWC and its economic development programs, go
to www.cwconline.org, or call toll-free, 1-877-WAT-SHED.
Second Estimate The Ulster County Legislature recently
called for a second estimate of renovation costs for the Golden
Hill Health Care Center in Kingston. Its Golden Hill Subcommittee
voted to authorize Director Sheree Cross to spend up to $40,000
to retain a second architect to review plans and specifications
for the proposed renovation of the county-owned nursing home.
In April, county lawmakers were told that the 280-bed facility
is at risk of a "major piping failure" at any time
due to degradation of the water and sanitary sewer systems throughout
the facility. Three options were presented: a $24.4 million
renovation to replace just the water and sewer systems; a $44
million overhaul of the building; or building a new nursing
home at a cost of roughly $81 million. A fourth option to close
the facility altogether was unanimously rejected. The state
recommended breaking the project down into several components
because projects under $3 million are subject to a faster review
and approval process than larger jobs. About 75 percent of the
tab for the $24.4 million pipe-replacement proposal may be reimbursable
by the New York State Medicaid program, leaving the county to
pay about $6.1 million.
New Billboard
Catskill Rural AIDS Services (CRAS) is starting a publicity
campaign in September promoting HIV/AIDS awareness in Delaware
and Otsego Counties through billboard and radio advertisements.
The campaign is the result of a cooperative effort between CRAS,
the AIDS Institute of the New York State Department of Health,
the KNOW HIV/AIDS initiative, and the Southern Tier AIDS Program.
Starting in early September there will be billboards in Oneonta,
West Davenport, Delhi, Sidney and Pine Hill advertising the
AIDS Hotline and promoting the idea that "knowledge"
is an important component in HIV/AIDS prevention. Also
there will be a week of radio announcements both in September
and in late November leading up to World AIDS Day on December
1st. The Hotline is prepared to answer any question related
to HIV/AIDS including questions about HIV/AIDS transmission,
local test sites and both support and medical services available
in our area. The Hotline is available Tuesday through
Friday 9am ˆ 3:30 pm and can be reached at (607) 436-9554
or (800) 976-2727. All calls are strictly confidential.
CRAS is an agency of The United Way.
Depressed Drunk
Scientists say they‚ve identified a gene that appears
to be linked to both alcoholism and depression, a finding that
may one day help identify those at higher risk for the diseases
and guide new treatments. Previous studies of twins and adopted
siblings have suggested there likely are genes in common underlying
alcoholism and depression, and that the two disorders seem to
run in families. But the lead researcher of the new study says
this is the first report of a specific gene that seems to increase
risk for both disorders. Follow-up research might help reveal
the underlying biology that makes some people susceptible to
alcoholism, others to depression, some to both diseases, and
others to neither. Scientists are saying that if the finding
holds and is replicated by others, it will provide another potential
target for developing new drugs to treat depression and alcoholism.
Alcoholism affects 7.9 million American adults, and 18.8 million
suffer from depression, according to the National Institutes
of Health.
Civic Assembly
On September 18, a number of area groups will be sponsoring
a Mid-Hudson Valley People‚s Assembly, A "Social
Forum about Reclaiming Democracy, Understanding and Acting on
Local, National, Global Issues at the Central Valley Elementary
School on Route 32 in Central Valley, across from Woodbury Common
at the intersection of Exit 16 of the NYS Thruway and Route
17. The People‚s Assembly will focus on ways to create
an informed and active civil society. The aim is to demonstrate
and showcase what works in achieving a peaceful society that
offers social, economic and environmental justice, to explore
what distorts democratic procedures, and to learn what people
can do together today and after the upcoming elections. The
keynote speaker will be Scott Ritter, the former Marine who
headed the UN‚s Iraqi weapons inspections program, and
author of "Endgame: Solving the Iraq Problem Once And For
All." This assembly will begin to answer some very
basic questions: What kind of future do people want for the
Mid-Hudson Valley? For the nation? For the world?
For further information visit www.midhudsonvpa.org, email info@midhudsonvpa.org/
or phone 845.987.2321.
Bucharest Bears
Some 30 brown bears have been terrorizing a Transylvanian mountain
village and could delay the start of the school year, Romanian
authorities said recently. Villagers are afraid to let their
children go outside, with the bold bears are making off with
domestic animals in broad daylight, mayor Nicolae Codreanu told
state radio from Poiana Marului, 106 miles north of Bucharest.
Animal experts were seeking a solution before the start of the
school year on September 15. Stay tuned∑
Bad Energy
In a new rate-setting tactic for the electric-utilities industry,
TXU Energy of Texas plans to impose a bigger rate increase for
its customers with the lowest credit scores, which are numeric
rankings of credit-worthiness that take into account a customer‚s
history of paying electricity, telephone and cable bills. TXU
defends the use of credit scoring as an accurate predictor of
future payment performance. But the additional increase for
customers with bad credit will wipe out the 8% to 10% savings
TXU had offered as incentives to sign up for service. And consumer
advocates warn that the practice eventually could lead to even
greater differences between the rates charged to different groups
of consumers and could tempt energy suppliers in other deregulated
states to follow suit. A state-funded consumer advocate in Texas
said her office intended to file a formal complaint with the
Texas Public Utility Commission asking it to issue an emergency
order preventing TXU, which is both the biggest utility and
biggest competitive supplier in the state, from implementing
the rate changes. Many states have laws restricting the use
of credit scoring, including New York, where insurers can‚t
deny coverage based on low scores.
How Long Now?
When asked recently how long the U.S. military is likely to
remain in Iraq, Senator John McCain replied "probably"
10 or 20 years. "That‚s not so bad," he said,
adding, "We‚ve been in Korea for 50 years. We‚ve
been in West Germany for 50 years." If Senator McCain is
correct (and the belief in official Washington is that he is),
then boys and girls who are 5 or 10 years old now will get their
chance in 2015 or 2020 to strap on the Kevlar and engage the
Iraqi insurgents.
Stay Fit!
When it comes to heart disease, being fit may be more important
than being thin, according to a study of more than 900 women
published recently. When analyzed by categories of weight and
activity, women who were at least moderately active were less
likely to develop heart disease or related problems than women
with low activity scores, no matter which weight category they
were in. The American Heart Association endorses at least 30
minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity for women on
most or all days of the week.
A second study published at the same time, however, found that
being overweight is a bigger risk factor than inactivity when
it comes to adult-onset diabetes among women. "Because
physical activity is a significant individual predictor and
has a beneficial effect on body mass index, it remains an important
intervention for diabetes prevention. Our study suggests that
to further reduce the risk of diabetes with physical activity,
it should be performed in conjunction with achieving weight
loss,"
Bush Leagues
At the largest annual convention of American Muslims, a pro-Bush
booth recently stirred anger among attendees who believe the
president‚s actions since Sept. 11, 2001, have hurt more
innocent Muslims than terrorists. The display was funded by
Muhammad Ali Hasan and his mother, Seeme, who recently created
the group "Muslims for Bush." Seeme Hasan said in
a phone interview that she and her husband Malik, a Colorado
physician who earned his wealth in the health care industry,
have donated more than $1 million to Bush and Republican causes
since the 2000 campaign.
Muslim leaders say the domestic war on terror and the USA Patriot
Act, which extended controversial law enforcement powers, have
cast so wide a net that all Muslims and their institutions have
become suspect. Many also saw the war in Iraq as the extension
of a misguided U.S. policy in the Mideast that foments terrorism
instead of stopping it. Leading American Muslim organizations
endorsed Bush in 2000 over Democrat Al Gore, expecting the Texas
governor would be more sympathetic to their concerns. But Muslims
have said since that they regretted their decision.
Recent surveys of U.S. Muslims indicate a majority will vote
for Kerry, even though they fear he will not go far enough in
repealing parts of the Patriot Act.
Not Medicare!
The Bush administration recently announced, late on the Friday
afternoon before the Labor Day holiday, that older Americans
will have to pay about 17 percent more next year for their government-run
Medicare health insurance, the largest increase in Medicare‚s
history. Starting in January, the elderly will pay $78.20 per
month for non-hospital services, up $11.60 from $66.60 this
year. Most of the increase will cover the program‚s new
prescription drug coverage and preventive services, including
an initial physical exam and other tests. The remaining amount,
about 25 percent, will be used to help build up Medicare‚s
trust fund, with the government saying that the higher upfront
costs will "help save money elsewhere." Robert Hayes,
president of Medicare Rights Center, called the increase "a
body blow to millions of older Americans living on fixed incomes"
and blamed it on poor management. The Congressional Budget Office
estimated the bill would cost less than $400 billion over 10
years. But after the bill was signed by President George W.
Bush, the administration revealed that its own expert put the
cost at $534 billion. Last year, Medicare premiums rose about
13 percent from $58.70 to $66.60, the second largest hike. People
have questioned the timing of the administration‚s annual
announcement, which since 2001 has come in October but this
year came late on Friday before the Labor Day holiday weekend
and just as Hurricane Frances was hitting Florida, home to many
retirees.
World Poll∑
The world wants President George W. Bush out of the White House,
according to a poll released on Wednesday that shows in 30 of
35 countries people preferred Democrat candidate John Kerry.
Kerry was particularly favored in traditionally strong U.S.
allies and beat Bush on average by more than a two-to-one margin,
46 percent to 20 percent, the survey by GlobeScan Inc, a global
research firm, and the University of Maryland, said. The only
countries where Bush was preferred in the poll of 34,330 people
that was conducted mainly in July and August were the Philippines,
Nigeria and Poland. India and Thailand were divided. Asked how
the foreign policy of Bush has affected their feelings toward
the United States, a majority or plurality of respondents in
30 countries said it made them feel worse about America, while
in three countries more respondents said they felt better. The
survey‚s margin of error was plus or minus 2.3 to 5 percentage
points.
African Oil
Soon after arriving in Equatorial Guinea in 1991, the U.S. ambassador
discovered an unusual arrangement involving the country‚s
despotic president and the first successful oil company operating
in the poor, West African nation. Walter International Inc.
was paying to send the president‚s son to study at Pepperdine
University in Malibu, Calif., company employees told the ambassador,
John E. Bennett. The staff of the Houston company told Bennett
about the arrangement, grousing that the son was "spending
at will," bringing the tab for a year in Southern California
to at least $50,000, the former ambassador said. But after Walter
Inc. lured some of the biggest names in oil to drill off the
shore of a country the size of Maryland, they expanded their
graftm according to new reports. The companies paid for scholarships
for children of the country‚s leaders, formed business
ventures with government officials, hired companies linked to
the president and rented property from government officials
and their relatives, according to a U.S. Senate report released
in July that reveals the companies‚ operations in striking
detail. A current Securities and Exchange Commission investigation
includes the three companies with the largest presence in the
country ˜ Exxon Mobil Corp., Amerada Hess Corp. and Marathon
Oil Corp. ˜ along with ChevronTexaco Corp., Devon Energy
Corp. and CMS Energy Corp. Such activities were thought to have
beem outlawed in 1977 under the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act, after SEC investigations led more than 400 U.S. companies
to admit that they had made questionable or illegal payments
in other countries. The act outlaws payments to foreign officials
for the purpose of obtaining or keeping business. But officials
at the Justice Department and SEC, both of which are responsible
for enforcing the act, will not provide statistics on the number
of oil companies that have been accused of violations. And Senate
staff members would not say whether they referred any possible
violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act to the Justice
Department for investigation, citing policy not to disclose
such information. The oil companies named in the Senate report
have since declined to answer specific questions about operations
in Africa or did not return phone calls.
Defense Noir
The Defense Department spent $70,500 to produce a Humphrey Bogart-themed
video called "The People‚s Right to Know" to
teach employees to respond to citizen requests for information.
But when it came to showing the tape to the public, the Pentagon
censored some of the footage, saying they did so because they
were worried the government didn‚t have legal rights to
some historical footage that was included. Citing the U.S. Freedom
of Information Act, The Associated Press asked the Pentagon
for a copy of the video nearly 18 months ago. The Defense Department
released an edited version of the tape and acknowledged the
irony of censoring a video promoting government openness.
The 22-minute video features a trenchcoat-clad narrator resembling
Sam Spade, the detective played by Bogart in the 1941 classic
"The Maltese Falcon." The narrator follows mysterious
characters known only as "veiled lady" and "large
man" as he describes Pentagon rules under the open records
law, which mandates disclosure of most federal documents, e-mails,
photographs and videotapes. "Releasing or denying access
to records can be a tricky business," the narrator says,
impersonating Bogart. "In the end it will be up to you
to do the right thing and provide as much help as you can. And
remember, I‚ll be looking at you, kid."
Rising Taxes∑
Œ‚Taxes are going up next year no matter who wins
the presidency in November,‚‚ says conservative
economist Bruce Bartlett, who advised both Ronald Reagan and
the first President Bush. Œ‚It‚s out of the
hands of politicians,‚‚ Bartlett said. He goes on
to note that the annual $400 billion deficit leaves little room
to maneuver. The shortfall was exacerbated by two earlier tax
cuts as well as rising costs for Iraq, Afghanistan, homeland
security and a major expansion Medicare. Furthermore, the Federal
Reserve has embarked on a course of raising interest rates from
their recent 40-year lows. Higher interest rates combined with
a continued weak dollar will put more pressure on the government‚s
balance sheet.
County Trash?
An Oct. 6 public hearing has been set on a proposed $14.85 million
Ulster County Resource Recovery Agency budget that would increase
county taxpayers‚ subsidy of the agency by more than 28
percent. The operating budget portion of the plan totals $11.92
million shows a hike up from $9.3 million this year. The balance
of the spending plan is set aside for debt service. Overall,
the proposed budget is up 34.64 percent. Under the proposal,
the county would pay the agency $3.21 million for its services
in 2005, an increase of $713,176, or 28.55 percent. Agency Executive
Director Charles Shaw attributes the increase to higher gas
prices, which have driven transportation costs higher for both
the agency and its contractors. The second big cost increase
is the New York State Retirement System. The cost of the
agency‚s contracts with private trash haulers are expected
to increase by $574,830, or 38.75 percent, to $2.62 million.
The agency‚s own transportation costs are projected at
$732,839, an increase of 106.62 percent, or $378,164. At the
same time, the proposed budget projects a 17.57 percent decrease
in landfill fees the agency pays to dump county trash at the
upstate Seneca Meadows landfill. That‚s a reduction of
$438,670, for a total of cost of $2.06 million. The agency has
projected a decrease in landfill fees because it expects to
be separating more waste for recycling markets, including construction
and demolition debris. Also included in the budget are:* $3
million in personnel expenses, an increase of $372,865, or 14.19
percent.* $752,438 in insurance costs, an increase of $126,215,
or 20.15 percent. Public comments on the budget will be taken
at 2:30 p.m. Oct. 6 at the agency‚s headquarters at 999
Flatbush Ave., state Route 32 in the town of Ulster.
Fat Like Dad
Apart from upbringing and environment, scientists are discovering
that genes and biology are more important in the fight against
obesity than previously believed. Experts are investigating
couch potato genes, stop-eating genes, can‚t-resist genes,
and even the possibility of a party platter gene - which turns
people into opportunistic eaters, who eat whenever they are
offered food. Each person has a unique profile of genes, biology
and lifestyle; a slight tweak in any of those influences could
make the difference between fat and thin, experts say. Where
they disagree is over how powerful each individual factor is
alone. "There are about 340 genes involved in weight control.
Most of them increase the likelihood of your being fat, but
there are actually genes that protect against being fat,"
said Dr. Stephan Rossner, head of the obesity unit and professor
of health behavior research at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm,
Sweden. "You can have muscles that react just a little
slower; a mental setting that makes you just a little more prone
to use food for comfort or a body temperature that is just one-tenth
of a centigrade higher. If you have 20 of these factors all
going in one direction - but still each and every one of them
is normal - that can explain why people who live in the same
environment weigh different amounts."
While the laws of physics - which dictate that you cannot get
fat unless you eat more calories than you burn - are inviolable,
a person‚s genetic makeup influences the decisions made
about eating and exercising, experts say. Eating increases the
levels of the calming brain chemical dopamine. Brain scans have
indicated that obese people have a lower concentration of dopamine
receptors in their brains than lean people do. "It‚s
possible that some people need to eat more to get the same level
of pleasure," said Dr. Kishore Gadde, director of obesity
clinical trials at Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina.
There is also growing evidence that fatty high-fat foods might
dull the appetite control signals in the brain.
Yet it is still unknown whether the appetite threshold is raised
by a lifetime of overeating or whether the overeating is due
to the threshold being higher. However, scientists believe it
could be linked to chemicals in the gut that are stimulated
by fatty food and signal the brain when the belly is full.
Judgements∑
A third federal judge ruled recently that the Partial-Birth
Abortion Ban Act is unconstitutional, saying it fails to include
an exception when a woman‚s health is in danger. U.S.
District Judge Richard Kopf of Lincoln said that Congress ignored
the most experienced doctors in determining that the banned
procedure would never be necessary - a finding he found "unreasonable."
"According to responsible medical opinion, there are times
when the banned procedure is medically necessary to preserve
the health of a woman and a respectful reading of the congressional
record proves that point," Kopf wrote. "No reasonable
and unbiased person could come to a different conclusion."
The abortion ban was signed last year by President Bush but
was not enforced because three federal judges, in Lincoln, New
York and San Francisco, agreed to hear constitutional challenges
in simultaneous non-jury trials. Last month, U.S. District
Judge Richard C. Casey in New York said the Supreme Court has
made it clear that a banned procedure must allow an exception
to preserve a woman‚s health - even as he called the abortion
procedure "gruesome, brutal, barbaric and uncivilized."
In June, U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton in San Francisco
also found the law unconstitutional, saying it "poses an
undue burden on a woman‚s right to choose an abortion."
The three rulings are expected to be appealed to the Supreme
Court. The federal law bars a procedure doctors call "intact
dilation and extraction," or D&X, and opponents call
partial-birth abortion.
More Pre-emption
Russia is prepared to make pre-emptive strikes on "terrorist
bases" anywhere in the world, the Interfax news agency
cited the country‚s chief of staff as saying in the wake
of the recent school kidnappings and killings. General Yuri
Baluyevsky said: "With regard to preventive strikes on
terrorist bases, we will take any action to eliminate terrorist
bases in any region of the world. But this does not mean we
will carry out nuclear strikes." Already coined as
Russia‚s September 11 by various Russian pundits and editorials,
the tragic slaughter of hundreds of innocent people in a middle
school in Beslan has the potential to trigger a major tremor
in the foreign policy charted by President Vladimir Putin, perhaps
even as far as heralding a new chapter in US-Russia relations,
much to the chagrin of the so-called Eurasianists around Putin
who have for a long time been advising him to steer clear of
the US‚s "war on terrorism". In his first post-Beslan
interview, Putin, in a tone reminiscent of President George
W Bush‚s post-September 11 behavior, has declared Russia
to be in a "war" with enemies that his defense minister,
Sergei Ivanov, has branded as "unseen" and "borderless".
Meanwhile, Time Magazine recently noted that a leading Pentagon
hawk has hinted that the doctrine of pre-emptive war could soon
apply to potential new targets. During a private Aug. 19 conference
call with Capitol Hill aides from both parties, sources say,
senior Pentagon policy official William Luti said there are
at least five or six foreign countries with traits that "no
responsible leader can allow." An outspoken proponent of
the Iraq war, Luti had declared at an October 2002 conference
that the U.S. has "the right to ... hold accountable nations
that harbor terrorists." In his recent call, Luti did not
name the nations he had in mind but said they are led by dictators
with weapons-of-mass-destruction programs and close ties to
terrorists. His remarks suggest that the Administration is looking
well beyond the current "axis of evil," which includes
Iran, Iraq and North Korea; this might put countries like Syria
in the spotlight. A Pentagon spokesman declined to release a
transcript of the call, saying Luti was stating "well-established
official policy," not advocating pre-emptive strikes.
No Recounts
Election officials said a new rule barring hand recounts in
15 Florida counties with touchscreen voting systems will remain
in place until after Tuesday‚s primary ˜ despite
a judge‚s invalidation of the rule. In April, Secretary
of State Glenda Hood issued a rule preventing manual recounts.
Hood has said the machines don‚t require a paper trail.
A coalition of government watchdogs and other interest groups
sued, however, arguing state law requires provisions for hand
recounts in every county no matter what voting technology is
used. Administrative Law Judge Susan B. Kirkland agreed, invalidating
Hood‚s rule. Kirkland wrote that state law clearly contemplates
"that manual recounts will be done on each certified voting
system, including the touchscreen voting systems." The
state hasn‚t decided yet whether to appeal, said a spokeswoman.
Florida‚s voting system has been under scrutiny since
2000, when it took five weeks of legal maneuvering and some
recounting before Republican George W. Bush was declared president
over Democrat Al Gore. Further election problems arose during
Florida‚s close 2002 Democratic gubermatorial primary.
Hidden Costs
At least two documents that seem to confirm long-standing suspicions
that the Bush administration‚s foreign policy is being
driven by the dictates of the energy industry recently emerged.
Documents recently obtained from the task force as the result
of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by public interest
group Judicial Watch indicate Cheney and his colleagues had
their sights on the black gold under the Iraqi desert well before
the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. In July 2003 the Commerce Department
finally turned over records that included "a map of Iraqi
oilfields, pipelines, refineries, and terminals, as well as
two charts detailing Iraqi oil and gas projects, and ŒForeign
Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield Contracts,‚ " according
to Judicial Watch‚s subsequent press release. There were
also similar maps and charts for Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates. The documents were dated March 2001.
Meanwhile, former Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Bob
Graham of Florida asserted that the general who ran the war
in Afghanistan said more than a year before the U.S.-led invasion
of Iraq that his resources were being shifted in preparation
for taking on Saddam Hussein. Graham said Gen. Tommy Franks
told him a year before invading Iraq that he thought the United
States knew less about the situation in Iraq than did some European
governments, and the Bush administration should ask them for
advice. Graham said on NBC‚s Œ‚Meet the
Press‚‚ that his meeting with Franks was at the
general‚s headquarters, Central Command in Tampa, Fla.
Œ‚He laid out a very precise strategy for fighting
the war on terror,‚‚ Graham said. Œ‚First,
we should win the war in Afghanistan. Second, move to Somalia,
which as he described was almost anarchy but with a substantial
number of al-Qaida cells; then to Yemen. And that we should
be very careful about Iraq, because our intelligence was so
weak that we didn‚t know what we were getting into,‚‚
Graham said.
Unfair Spending
World Bank President James Wolfensohn, a longstanding critic
of excessive global military spending, says he cannot comprehend
why the world spends only 50 billion dollars on development
aid annually while it squanders a whopping 950 billion dollars
on its armed forces. If the world‚s rich nations spend
the 950 billion dollars to really fight poverty and disease,
he argued in recent interviews, they would not need to spend
even 50 billion dollars fighting wars.
Wolfensohn‚s argument is based on the premise that the
root causes of some of the world‚s political problems
˜ including ethnic conflicts and civil wars ˜ are
primarily due to economic and social deprivation. Concurring
with this view, Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Earth Institute
at Columbia University, told representatives of non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) at the United Nations that the United States
was one of the worst offenders as far as military spending and
development aid was concerned. "This year," he said,
"the United States is spending 450 billion dollars on the
military and 15 billion dollars for all development assistance."
"If life was so devalued," Sachs asked, "how
would it be possible to win a war against terrorism?" He
also said that nothing was more important for global security
than for the rich world to finally follow through on the 0.7
percent pledge for development assistance. "A safe world
would come when everyone‚s lives were taken seriously,"
he added.
According to World Bank figures, one-sixth of the world‚s
six billion people own about 80 percent of the world‚s
wealth, while another sixth live below the poverty line of less
than a dollar a day.
Army Suicides
The Army has acknowledged giving Congress incorrect information
about use of an anti-malaria drug in units in which suicides
occurred in Iraq last year. The Army‚s top medical official
testified in February that no more than four of the deceased
soldiers could have taken the drug, called Lariam, which the
Food and Drug Administration says can cause mental problems.
But the Army now says that number may be as high as 11 ˜
nearly half the total number of suicides the Army said occurred
in Iraq during 2003. The Army says it stopped using Lariam,
also called mefloquine, in Iraq at the end of 2003. Since then,
the suicide rate among soldiers there has fallen by more than
half, Army officials also confirmed. They cited better Army
suicide prevention efforts. A spokeswoman said the Army has
told Congress of the error. The Army eventually confirmed 24
suicides in Iraq in 2003, or a rate of 18 suicides per 100,000
soldiers. The Army acknowledged that suicide rate is higher
than the Army average in recent years, of about 12 per 100,000.
Reaching Goals
One of al Qaida‚s aims in its September 11 attacks on
the US three years ago was to draw the west into military conflict
on Arab soil, Prime Minister Tony Blair‚s former envoy
to Iraq acknowledged recently. Sir Jeremy Greenstock‚s
said the allies had "suffered the consequences" in
Iraq of al Qaida‚s determination to exploit the opportunities
presented by a war on Arab soil. He added that the West could
not defeat bin Laden‚s terror network by military means
alone, but must adopt policies to reduce resentment in the Muslim
world. If the allies failed to help Iraq put an end to its current
instability, they would be left "worse off than when we
started", he warned.
"I think it was one of the objectives of Osama bin Laden
and the al Qaida leadership originally to draw America into
conflict on Arab soil as close to Saudi Arabia as possible,"
Greenstock said. "Iraq is not yet a failed state. We are
in a transition period, which has got considerable difficulties.
But if Iraq ends up as a failed state and we leave it in that
state, then we are worse off than when we started."
Police Activity
Members of the Town of Shandaken Police Department and Ulster
County Sheriffs Office held a STOP DWI Check point on Saturday
September 4th into early morning Sunday September 5th. The Check
Point was set up on State Route 28 at the intersection of State
Rt 42 in Shandaken. Interviews with over 600 motor
vehicle operators resulted in the arrest of two individuals
for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of an
alcoholic beverage. The check point also resulted in two arrests
for possession of marijuana and possession of fireworks. Additionally,
numerous vehicle and traffic violation summonses were issued.
Olive Lawsuit?
The Olive town board has voted to examine the feasibility of
a lawsuit against the Onteora School Board for discriminatory
assessment in Onteora's use of the Large Parcel Law against
the town. A vindicative use of the law against towns "hiding
behind a low equalization rate" was mentioned in the post
vote discussion. Olive was locked into its equalization rate
by a court order in 1984 that fixed the valuation of Ashokan
Reservoir properties at $115m for a 16 year period. That decision,
in turn, has understandably prevented the town from conducting
a revaluation which by law could not have effected over half
of the town's land but would have unreasonably raised the taxes
on smaller properties.
It is thought by many Olive residents that certain resentful
towns in the district spun the numbers to convince the school
board that the town's tax advantage should be shared by other
municipalities with no regard as to how and why it was created.
Olive town board members are rumored to be reading Joel Best's
new book More Damned Lies and Statistics: How Numbers Confuse
Public Issues.
The town board also discussed refounding their own school district
and seceding from the Onteora District. It was thought that
a test of public opinion on the issue was needed before proceeding
in that direction.
Strong Language
A new book by BBC broadcaster James Naughtie claims that Secretary
of State Colin Powell told British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
that Vice President Cheney, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld and Deputy
Defense Secretary Wolfowitz were " f-ing crazies."
The comment is alleged to have taken place during the summer
of 2002, when Powell and Straw spoke almost daily as they tried
to build a military coalition in advance of the war in Iraq.
According to Naughtie and other UK sources, Powell was regarded
by Prime Minister Blair's government as the most significant
voice of sanity in the US administration.
Last week the offices of both Powell and Straw contacted Public
Affairs, the book's US publisher, to say they would vigorously
deny the conversation, but as neither suggested any legal action
might be forthcoming, the book has now been released for US
distribution.