Beacon Dispatch

Local correspondents exploring history, politics, commerce, and culture in Beacon, NY

Issue 28: December 2006 / January 2007

  • Article Archive
  • Beacon Rivers and Estuaries Institute Teaches As It Learns
  • Beacon School Board Update
  • Editorial: Thriving Business in Beacon
  • Highland Wanderer: Walking in a Winter Wonderland
  • Holiday Shopping in Beacon
  • Recipe: Traditional Christmas on a Worldwide Scale
  • Send Us Your Pictures!

Recent Posts

  • The Dispatch Moves On...
  • An Open Letter to Mayor Gould, City Administrator Joseph Braun, and Members of the Beacon City Council
  • Editorial: Thriving Business in Beacon
  • Highland Wanderer: Walking in a Winter Wonderland
  • Holiday Shopping in Beacon
  • Beacon Rivers and Estuaries Institute Teaches As It Learns
  • Beacon School Board Update
  • Recipe: Traditional Christmas on a Worldwide Scale
  • DIA:Beacon Hits the San Francisco Chronicle
  • Open Space Initiative Passes

Photo Albums

  • Beacon Hat Parade: 2006
  • Beacon Hat Parade: Your Pictures
  • New York Rubber Co: Beacon, NY (1 of 10)
    Broke Down Beacon
  • Dsc_0144
    Inside the Woody Guthrie
  • On the Commute
  • People Powered Plowing: Stony Kill Farm, 5/6/06
  • 1
    Verplanck Cemetery
  • VFW Post 666: Bingo Night


Editorial: On the Waterfront

Scenic Hudson has been a champion of the Hudson River, guaranteeing that the River that Flows Both Ways will remain alive, thriving, and flowing for years to come. Over the last several years this commitment to the River has also resulted in a more specific commitment to the City of Beacon and it’s waterfront.

This month’s focus on Beacon —via The Great River Sweep—is just one of literally dozens of initiatives that Scenic Hudson has made to help recreate Beacon and its waterfront as a destination point for outdoor enthusiasts from throughout the state, the country, and, quite possibly, the world. But Scenic Hudson’s focus on Beacon’s riverside assets also highlights one of this City’s major weaknesses.

Continue reading "Editorial: On the Waterfront" »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 03, 2006 at 07:05 AM in Editorial, Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (5)

Online Update: Progess on Water Pressure

City of Beacon’s council recently approved fourth ward councilperson Steve Gold’s request for a new proposal by the City’s engineers on installing 12-inch water lines halfway up Mountain Road. Gold requested the proposal after discovering from Chief Joseph that installing a fire hydrant connected to a 12-inch water main running halfway up the mountain would eliminate the need for mutual aid during a neighborhood house fire. If approved, the new plan could save some $500,000 on the cost of the project, while ensuring a timely response to area fires, Gold said.

~ Karen Maserjian Shan

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 02, 2006 at 10:30 PM in Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Highland Wanderer: Sweep the River Clean

Scenic Hudson’s 9th Annual River Sweep Sets its Sights on Beacon and Beyond

On April 22nd, Scenic Hudson will kick off their 9th annual Great River Sweep, a nine-day event that brings thousands of people together—from Manhattan to the Hudson headwaters in the Adirondacks—in an effort to clean up the Hudson River and its tributaries. This year, the first day of cleaning will end with an event at the Beacon waterfront, featuring food, live music, and the celebration of a cleaner River.

In 1998, when the River Sweep first began, Scenic Hudson was making plans to set up a volunteer program, when they received a letter from six-year-old Josh Taubes, who wrote to Scenic Hudson, asking if the environmental group could clean it up. “At the time,” says Scenic Hudson’s director of Education and Volunteers, Andy Bicking, “we were looking for a way to mobilize volunteers to have them work with our organization and to support the environmental issues in the Hudson Valley. We wrote back to Josh and told him that we could only have a small impact by ourselves, but we could help to organize Josh and other people to clean up portions of the waterfront.” That year one thousand volunteers came together to cleanup thirty-seven sites up and down the Hudson.

Continue reading "Highland Wanderer: Sweep the River Clean" »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 02, 2006 at 09:46 PM in Highland Wanderer, Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Beacon Police Blotter

edited by Michael Daecher

 
This month’s police blotter covers the period of February 15 to March 24. During the month the Beacon Police Department responded to 1317 total calls, 352 of which were traffic stops. A total of 67 arrests were made.

What’s the difference between larceny, burglary, and robbery?

According to the Merriam Webster dictionary, larceny is the unlawful taking of personal property with the intent to deprive the rightful owner of it permanently; burglary is the act of breaking and entering a dwelling at night to commit a felony (as theft); and robbery is larceny from the person or presence of another by violence or threat.

DATE        LOCATION        CALL TYPE      
2/15/06    Church St        Fight      
2/16/06    101 Matteawan Rd    Fight      
2/16/06    Melio Bettina Pl    Disorderly Group      
2/16/06    S. Cedar St    Disorderly Group      
2/17/06    Main St    Criminal Mischief      
2/17/06    Rt 9D    Assault      
2/18/06    Beekman St    Attempted Burglary      
2/18/06    Robert Cahill Dr    Burglary      
2/19/06    Cross St    Disorderly Group      
2/19/06    North St    Burglary    

Continue reading "Beacon Police Blotter" »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 02, 2006 at 09:16 PM in Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Beacon Voices: Abdullah Wajid, Imam

by Michael Daecher

Abdullah_1 Sitting on Main Street, across from the post office, is Beacon’s Masjid Ar Rasheed Islamic Teaching Center. The building serves as a community center and mosque for about 200 Muslim families in town. You may not have noticed the mosque itself on Main Street, but you may have heard the distinctive call to prayer reminding all Muslims to bow towards Mecca and pray.

When I moved to Beacon four years ago, the call to prayer was one of the first things I heard. Along with the bells of St. John’s church, it was a reminder of how important faith is to so many people living in Beacon. Since then I’ve heard sporadic reports of vandalism and harassment at the mosque. But after speaking with Imam Abdullah Wajid, I found that those incidents have done nothing to shake his faith in Islam or in his non-Muslim neighbors.

Continue reading "Beacon Voices: Abdullah Wajid, Imam" »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 02, 2006 at 09:00 PM in Beacon Voices, Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (1)

Mountain Lane Hydrant Pressure Still An Issue

City pursues options for upgrading water lines

by Karen Maserjian Shan

Low water pressure in Beacon’s Mountain Lane area may be mildly bothersome for people living there, but a recent house fire in the neighborhood has given rise to serious concerns about the area’s availability of adequate water and water pressure to deal with fires.

Late last summer a house fire on the corner of East Main Street and Mountain Lane had firefighters accessing two fire hydrants as they combated the blaze; one located across the street from the house and another, .25 miles down the road at the DePuyster/Howland/East Main intersection. The second hydrant, which was tapped as a precautionary measure, per City of Beacon’s fire chief, Tim Joseph, is connected to a 12-inch water main, providing the firefighters with a greater volume of water at a higher pressure than was available through the first hydrant, which is situated at a higher elevation and feeds off 6-inch water pipes.

Continue reading "Mountain Lane Hydrant Pressure Still An Issue" »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 02, 2006 at 08:54 PM in Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Comprehensive Planning Update

by Sara Pasti

On March 15th, David Stolman and Chris Holme of Frederick P. Clark Associates presented to the Comprehensive Planning Committee the second in a series of two presentations related to the Basic Studies document that will used as the basis for Beacon’s planning efforts.

The March presentation included a summary of land use, demographic, housing and community service findings originally presented in November 2005, as well as new information related to Beacon’s infrastructure. Because the earlier findings were published in the February issue of the
Beacon Dispatch
, they will not be presented here. A copy of the entirety of the Beacon Basic Studies Document described below is available for viewing and printing at www.cityofbeacon.org.

Continue reading "Comprehensive Planning Update" »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 02, 2006 at 08:43 PM in Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Wee Play Children’s Park: A dream becomes a reality

by Jack Sine

Dsc_0045 All parents have experienced it when their children were toddlers – the terrifying moment when you take your eye off the little one for just a second and the child puts him or herself in danger. One of my more vivid memories is of my then two-year old daughter jumping into the deep end of a swimming pool and sinking straight to the bottom with me in close pursuit. The little imps are way too curious and way too quick for their own good.

That’s why Julian Cobb started taking her little son to the toddler’s park in Cold Spring instead of the local Beacon parks. “There just weren’t any parks closer that were designed for children under six,” she said. “The parks that were available had dangers for little ones if the parent took their eyes off of them.” That was what inspired Julian to come up with the idea for a park designed for children six years old and under. That story of her dream for Beacon was detailed  a little over a year ago in the Dispatch. But now more has happened. Now, thanks to Julian and her team, Beacon has its very own toddlers playground, aptly named Wee Play Children’s Park.

Continue reading "Wee Play Children’s Park: A dream becomes a reality " »

Posted by Michael Daecher on April 01, 2006 at 01:46 PM in Issue 20: April 2006 | Permalink | Comments (1)

Links

  • beacon artist union
  • Beacon Arts Community Association
  • Beacon Botanicals
  • Beacon Dispatch Ad Rates
  • Beacon Now
  • Beacon NY Discussion Board
  • Beacon School District
  • Beacon Sloop Club
  • Beacon Weather
  • Chthonic Clash Coffeehouse
  • City Council Meeting Agendas/Minutes
  • City of Beacon Fire Department
  • Common Ground Farm
  • Dia:Beacon
  • Fishkill Creek Watershed Committee
  • Friends of Hiddenbrooke
  • Howland Public Library
  • Hudson Beach Glass
  • Hudson Fisheries Trust
  • Hudson Highlands Trail Maps
  • Hudson Valley Sojourner
  • Key Food Grocery
  • Long Dock Beacon
  • maykr
  • Metro-North Railroad
  • Mid-Hudson Progressive Alliance
  • Minetta Brook
  • Mountain Tops Outdoors Gear
  • Mt. Beacon Fire Tower
  • Mt. Beacon Incline Railway
  • OII Restuarant
  • Piggy Bank Restaurant
  • River Pool at Beacon
  • Riverkeeper
  • Second Saturday Beacon
  • Southern Dutchess Bowl
  • Sukhothai Restaurant
  • The Beacon Institute For Rivers & Estuaries
  • The Randolph School
  • TheHvScene.com
  • true north theatre
  • Wayne-William Creative, Inc.
  • Wee Play Children's Park

Archives

  • February 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
Subscribe to this blog's feed