J.M.W. Turner's "Chichester Canal" at the Tate Gallery, London

Friday, June 26, 2015

Maverick opens its 100th season

Article from the Recordonline:

NEXUS kicks off the official opening of Maverick's 100th season.NEXUS kicks off the official opening of Maverick's 100th season.


 

The traditional summer concert series kicks off this weekend. Following the Actors & Writers workshop on June 26, which features a reading from Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer’s Night Dream,” is a Young People’s Concert the next morning featuring the world-renowned percussion group NEXUS. The Young People’s Concert is free for children; their parents pay $5.
“Two of the four Young People’s Concerts this year have the same artists in the morning working with the children as are performing later in the evening for the adults,” says Segal. “Garry (Kvistad of NEXUS) will bring instruments for the children that even I haven’t seen before. …
“Then that evening, there will be the world premiere of Peter Schickele’s work,” says Segal of Percussion Sonata No. 3, “Maverick,” which was commissioned for Maverick’s centenary by Garry and Diane Kvistad and the Woodstock Chimes Foundation and will be performed by NEXUS.

Maverick website: http://www.maverickconcerts.org/

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Owners of closed Shandaken farm stand are again seeking town approval to operate

Story in Daily Freeman.

ALLABEN >> The owners of the farm stand forced out of business in Mount Tremper are going to try once again to gain town approval to reopen.

At a Shandaken Planning Board meeting June 10, owner Al Higley asked the board to help him restart the approval process.

Higley’s representative, Don Brewer, who is also chairman of the town Planning Board, said the proposed farm stand would require several variances from town zoning law to be approved.

With a new application, Higley would be seeking a waiver from laws that he says restrict the size of the business. A surveyor by trade, Brewer said town law allows only 2,687 square feet of structure, parking, septic field, and other activity.

“The size of the farm stand is bigger than what’s allowed,” he told the board, adding that Higley is looking to use almost 7,000 square feet instead.

On Nov. 27, 2013, state Supreme Court Justice Mary Work gave the Hanover Farms owners 60 days to take down their farm stand, which is located on state Route 28.

That gave Higley and his son, Alfie, until Jan. 25, 2014, to remove the structure and end the legal battle between Hanover Farms and the town of Shandaken that began in 2012 when the Higleys filed a lawsuit against the town and former Shandaken code enforcement officer Richard Stokes.

The removal of the part of the farm stand that was rule to have been illegally constructed was tabled while the Higleys attempted to go through a new application process last year with the town’s Zoning Board. On Oct. 15, 2014, that application was denied “due to a lack of response from the applicant and failure to submit the required documentation from the Department of Transportation as requested by the [Zoning Board].”

Shortly afterwards, the Higleys moved their operation out of town, setting up shop in a former bank branch building in the town of Olive and calling it Greenheart Farms.

As requested by Higley, the town Planning Board voted last week to send the matter to the town Zoning Board of Appeals for review.

As was the case previously, the Zoning Board would need to grant the zoning variances before the Higleys could move ahead with any further review by the Planning Board.

Friday, June 12, 2015

MARK Project will help Pine Hill and Phoenicia

Article in Daily Freeman:


The hamlet of Pine Hill is in the Ulster County town of Shandaken. Photo by Tony Adamis
SHANDAKEN >> The town of has taken steps to get financial help from the MARK Project for two hamlets.

At the June meeting of the Shandaken Town Board, MARK Executive Director Peg Ellsworth asked for and received full support from the four board members present. That support allows MARK to take a more regional approach to fundraising for Main Street revitalization projects.

Ellsworth said that, in the past, such projects were isolated efforts that benefited one town at a time. But now, MARK will prepare a truly regional proposal for a territory that not only crosses town lines but also the border of Ulster and Delaware counties.

MARK is preparing a grant application for costs associated with a regional NY Main Street Façade Program. MARK will propose to assist at least four mixed-use or commercial structures in Grand Gorge, Arkville, Halcottsville, Margaretville, Fleischmanns, Andes, Pine Hill and Roxbury. If successful, MARK will allocate up to $15,000 per façade and up to $75,000 to help fund an “anchor activity.”

Also, Shandaken Supervisor Rob Stanley has asked MARK to prepare a grant application for the Phoenicia Water District to secure funds for four separate projects: the connection of a water main on upper High Street, relocating a pump station out of the Esopus Creek floodway, reclaiming an infiltration gallery and installing a third filtration pump for Phoenicia’s water system.

Ellsworth said MARK would prepare the grant application at a cost of $3,500. It must be submitted by July 31.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

2014-2015 photos


A look at the Chichester-Silver Hollow neighborhoods across the months, from road work on Route 214 near the entrance to the CPOA grounds, across early 2014, the Phoenicia Voice Festival, autumn, the reopening of the Phoenicia Library, into 2015.


Route 214 work (Autumn-Winter 2013-2014)


January-February 2014

March 2014

April 2014

May 2014

Summer 2014

Phoenicia 2014 festival of the Voice



September 2014

Autumn 2014

November 2014

Phoenicia Library reopens


Winter 2014-2015


Article in Woodstock TimesByrdcliffe, VOICETheater collaborate on renovation of Theater.

This summer, there will be only one production, Our Country’s Good, based on a Thomas Keneally novel about a play performed by prisoners in one of the first penal colonies in Australia. The show opens in July. Committed, as ever, to educational outreach, Kanter is setting up scene-based workshops in local schools to address the problem of bullying.