The Beacon Elks held its 10th annual dinner on Feb. 2 to honor first responders. This year’s recipients included Dale Plumer from the Beacon Volunteer Ambulance Corps (honored for his 50 years of commitment), Steve VanBuren from the Beacon Fire Department (recognized for his 50 years of service to city, county and state fire services), Brian Lawrence from the Beacon Police Department (recognized for apprehending a perpetrator in the act of a felony and recovering a loaded weapon), and John Miller from the Dutchess Junction Fire Department (recognized for his 50 years of service to Dutchess Junction, the Castle Point Fire Department and police agencies), along with 10 others. (Photo provided)

The Beacon City School District launched an employee recognition program by naming its first two honorees. Tracy Gida has been with the district for 18 years, first as a teacher’s assistant at JV Forrestal Elementary and for the past 13 years as a math teacher’s assistant at Sargent Elementary. Mike Pennacchio, with 35 years of service, works on the night crew at Rombout Middle School and has been known to check on the building on his days off. Gida, Pennacchio and Superintendent Matthew Landahl (front row) are shown with members of the Board of Education. (Photo provided)

The Putnam History Museum announced the winners of its annual Jean Saunders History Contest for Philipstown seventh-graders. The contest, which has been conducted annually for more than 30 years, is named for the museum’s first curator. Julie Shields of Haldane won first place for “Early Schools of Philipstown,” Ella Mekeel and Olivia Scanga of Haldane won second for “Main Street Then & Now,” Mac Lake and Peter Pitaleff of the Garrison School won third for “Railroads in the Hudson Highlands” and Maggie Gordineer and Emily Tomann received honorable mentions for “The Cornish Estate.” From left: Putnam History Museum director Sarah Johnson, Lake, Scanga, MeKeel, Tomann, Shields and Gordineer.  (Photo by Jen McCreery)

The New York State Farm Bureau recognized its Dutchess-Putnam-Westchester (DPW) chapter for its participation with FeedHV, which rescues food that would otherwise go to waste from places such as restaurants, grocery stores, produce markets, farms and dining facilities and delivers it to food pantries, soup kitchens and shelters. Shown are Mark Doyle, manager of Fishkill Farms and DPW treasurer; Martha Elder, executive director of Second Chance Foods; Isaac Coon of Coon Brothers Dairy Farm and DPW president; and Carrie Jones Ross, food security development manager for HVADC and FeedHV administrator.

Behind The Story

Type: News

News: Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

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