Municipalities to share resources 

The Putnam Legislature on Tuesday (June 3) approved the county’s participation in a blanket agreement calling for its six towns and three villages to share road equipment and personnel.  

The agreement covers road maintenance, repair and construction, and weather emergencies such as snowstorms and flooding. Participants agree to share vehicles and other equipment and allow access to their highway facilities. According to a draft of the proposal, the goals are efficiency and cost savings.

Thomas Feighery, the county public works commissioner, told the Legislature’s Physical Services Committee last month that the pact is the first intermunicipal agreement of its kind in the state. “We’re pretty excited about it,” he said. 

Richard Othmer Jr., the highway superintendent for Kent, pitched the proposal to the Cold Spring Village Board in April. He said it will eliminate the “ridiculous amount of paperwork” needed for separate agreements with each municipality. 

“I consider it like NATO,” said Othmer, who cited the cooperation between Kent and East Fishkill during major flooding in July 2023. “Let’s create one document that we all sign, and we’re all for one and one for all.” 

Philipstown has yet to sign the agreement. Kathleen Foley, Cold Spring’s mayor, said on Wednesday (June 4) that the village attorney is reviewing the proposed contract but the board supports “signing in principle and, in fact, is happy about this move to share services. It just makes sense.” 

While Nelsonville does not have a highway department and contracts for road maintenance and services like snow and ice removal, its board approved the agreement last month. “The spirit is amazing, and the effort put in to do this is great,” said Mayor Chris Winward. 

Secret purchase

Legislators on Tuesday approved a request from the Sheriff’s Office to use $531,563 in seized assets to fund an unspecified equipment purchase for its emergency response team. When the Protective Services Committee took up the request last month, Sheriff Kevin McConville asked its members to discuss the purchase in a closed-door session “due to the sensitive nature of the procurement.” 

Before calling for the executive session, committee Chair Paul Jonke said he had an “offline conversation” with McConville and decided that “discussion of the nature of this procurement would imperil the safety of our officers.” On Tuesday, Jonke said the equipment “would make our law enforcement personnel safer when they come upon a scene where there’s a crisis” but did not offer specifics.

Under state Open Meetings Law, legislators can hold closed sessions for matters they determine “will imperil the public safety if disclosed.”

Election security

Legislators approved $56,000 to replace a chain-link gate at the entrance to the Board of Elections’ property in Carmel with one that opens and closes automatically. 

A security assessment of the property, which also hosts a Sheriff’s Office facility, flagged the gate as a risk. In addition to being in disrepair, it must be left open during snowstorms for plowing, according to the county. 

The Board of Elections building was renovated last year with a new roof, landscaping, siding, drainage and Americans with Disabilities Act accessibility and signs. 

D.A. bonuses

A portion of a $266,192 grant from the state Department of Criminal Justice Services awarded in 2024 to implement reforms to evidence sharing with defense attorneys will fund bonuses at the district attorney’s office because the D.A. says the reforms increased workloads by nearly 30 percent. The Legislature approved $60,000 in bonuses, with each prosecutor receiving $4,000 to $10,000 and the chief of staff getting $5,000.

District Attorney Robert Tendy wrote in his 2024 annual report, released in February, that grant money is also used for personnel retention, on-call stipends, equipment, training and travel expenses. About a third of the DCJS grant was shared with local law enforcement, he wrote.

Behind The Story

Type: News

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

Leonard Sparks has been reporting for The Current since 2020. The Peekskill resident holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Morgan State University and a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Maryland and previously covered Sullivan County and Newburgh for The Times Herald-Record in Middletown. He can be reached at [email protected].

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