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Readers React to Publisher Beatty’s November 13 editorial “Freedom of Speech vs. Freedom from Harassment.”

Reader responses to Publisher Chad Beatty’s November 13 editorial “Freedom of Speech vs. Freedom from Harassment.” Click here for the original Editorial.

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Chad,

I couldn’t agree more with your editorial, today and in fact I had sent a similar email to the Mayor and Public Works Commissioner last week. We got caught walking home from dinner lat Saturday, and someone started yelling at my 68 year old wife that “you are killing us” as we walked to our car. It is beyond disturbing that our leadership allows this repetitive violation of our civil rights, after promising to stop it after the last incident. Are we going to be another Portland–afraid to do anything about such disorder? 
Regards,
Christopher 

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Beneath the Rage is Pain and Sorrow

We were deeply troubled by Chad Beatty’s editorial in the November 13-19, 2020 edition of Saratoga Today, in which he suggested that gatherings of those protesting for the rights of Black people should be condemned, and if the police are short on staff, they should “deputize community members and let them clear the streets.” As the owner of this newspaper, he is in a powerful position to help mediate. Instead, he gave voice to those who wish it would all just go away, by force if necessary. 

 Yes, there have been several organized protest events, as in many cities across the country, attended by a cross-section of our local population. Protesters have blocked Broadway and some side streets. While some drivers and bystanders reacted angrily, others honked and shouted encouragement. Yes, protesters have used megaphones to express loud support for Black lives, for justice for Darryl Mount, for police reform. They have made some people uncomfortable and affected local businesses. But before calling on the City Council and the police to close in and put an end to the interruption of our safe, convenient lives, maybe we should ask, “Why do they block the streets? Why do they sound so angry?”

It takes courage to step out, carry a sign, shout a slogan, and expose yourself to public judgment. It takes even more to walk into traffic and sit in the street. They do it, they tell us, because after all that Black people have suffered in this country, going through channels still doesn’t work. They have no choice but to shake things up. Why so angry? Look at history. Emancipation took a bloody Civil War. A hundred years later, the Voting Rights Act rose from the beaten bodies of those who walked across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma.  And in 2020, we witnessed the brutal fates of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Rayshard Brooks, and so many others who died at the hands of the police. Though it comes as a surprise to many white people, we still haven’t reached a day when Black people can put their long, painful history of oppression behind them and feel welcome in their own communities – even in Saratoga Springs. To paraphrase Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., protest is the language of the unheard. The protesters are angry, but we must understand that beneath the rage is pain and sorrow.

How should we respond to these cries for justice in our city?  Saratoga Springs has the opportunity to be a leader in police reform. Governor Cuomo has ordered cities across the state to involve stakeholders in an effort to remove racial bias in police policies and practices. In response, Mayor Kelly appointed the Police Reform Task Force, which includes a strong and dedicated group of community members. We hope their work will help prevent future tragedies, like the death of Darryl Mount, and include serious discussions about whether some incidents now handled by the police might be better addressed by social service and mental health professionals.

We cannot allow the voices of the unheard to be stifled by chants for law and order. We must be willing to listen, accept that we have much to learn, and take constructive action. The real work has to begin in the hearts of every one of us.

Holly and Rick

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Thank you for your well-thought-out, well-written expression.  Please keep up your good work showing us citizens of Saratoga Springs what’s really going on in town.

Nancy and Albert

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Dear Mr. Beatty,

Thank you so much for your editorial against the bullies terrorizing Saratoga Springs businesses and shoppers on Saturday Nov. 7th.  Your article was very well written and addressed the concerns of all those law-abiding citizens who work and patronize Saratoga Springs.  Since they now feel emboldened because of the non-action of police and government officials, it won’t be long before windows will be broken, and we will see many shut down businesses in a beautiful town.  I would like to see a follow-up as to the response of the mayor and police officials to this situation.  There are many citizens like me, sitting in the sidelines, who feel you were the only voice we had.

Thank you,
Linda 

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 Mr. Beatty,

Thank you!  Your editorial holding our cities authorities to task, for failing to act last weekend, was absolutely correct and called for!  The group demonstrating has a history of poor behavior and not allowing opposing views to express an opinion.  This same group counter protested a “Back the Blue” demonstration in early July, effectively denying the “Back the Blue” group to fully voice their opinion.  This same counter “protest in July resulted in the destruction of our communities Civil War monument, thus denying the veterans of the 77th New York Volunteers to continue to express their opinion.  Our city authorities have done nothing to prosecute the outrage of the destruction of our monument.  The authorities must have photographic IDs of last weekends “protesters”.  The authorities need not confront the entire protest, now, they can all be arrested one at a time!

Please tell me how a thriving city like Saratoga Springs, with so much going on that is terrific, needs to change the form of government?  Sure, some things might be improved, sure, some mistakes are made, however,  all in all Saratoga Springs is a success story!  Four charter revision votes in a dozen or so years, enough!

Thank you.
Michael

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 The editorial by Saratoga Today publisher and owner Chad Beatty in the November 13th edition of the paper in response to the November 7th protest that blocked the intersection of Broadway and Lake Ave was written with an understandable degree of frustration. Businesses are negatively affected when customers don’t walk through their doors on a rare 70 degree Saturday in November; going into what will no doubt be one of the longest, darkest winters in recent memory, every dollar of business is crucial for keeping their doors open. The city is also negatively affected, not only from a budgetary standpoint, in that payroll and overhead for the policing necessary to manage protests costs a great deal of taxpayer money when there is a $7 million dollar budget shortfall for 2021, but from the public image projected as a city that is out of touch with its citizenry to the extent that large protests have been a regular occurrence for the past six months. However the subtext in his editorial of encouraging vigilante groups, deputized or otherwise, to confront protests such as the one that occurred on November 7th is equally dangerous to the city and is an abuse of his soapbox as publisher of the paper. Moreover it is a near perfect mirror of the same misguided frustrations voiced by protesters that night. 

I wholly agree with Mr. Beatty that the police should have acted differently that night. The claim that this was an unplanned rally is unfounded – it was indeed planned, though perhaps not sanctioned, and if the SSPD was appropriately vigilant of the social media networks used by the grass roots groups that are advocating for change in this city they would have known that. However, violence through policing is not the answer – communication and dialogue is. Understanding that each group of purportedly oppositional groups – the protesters and the police department and their supporters – are all human beings and treating them as such, and engaging in discourse with them as such, is the avenue through which change can be achieved and the frustration fueling these protests can be redirected and used to fuel more constructive efforts.

One of the core, if not the core, issues at the heart of that protest is the matter of Darryl Mount, viewed through the lens of the Black Lives Matter movement. Who was Darryl Mount? He was a young black man that had an interaction with the police on August 31st, 2013. By the end of that interaction, which involved both police witnessing Mr. Mount shove a young woman and a foot chase after Mr. Mount tried to evade them, he ended up that bottom of a scaffolding with injuries that lead to him remaining in a coma for much of the rest of his life until his death in 2014 due to complications from those injuries. There were no witnesses to how Mr. Mount sustained the injuries he received. The Saratoga Springs Police Department reported that the injuries were sustained as a result of falling from the scaffolding, however there has been a sustained contingent of people who disagree with that assessment and allege police brutality is to blame. There are also other details to the case, including a lawsuit and outside forensic analysis instigated by Mr. Mount’s family and a reckoning over the fact that the police chief at the time, Greg Veitch, admitted under oath in 2017 that he deceived a reporter from the Saratogian in claiming that an internal investigation of the event occurred when in fact no such investigation happened.

I will not comment on which position I agree with – whether Mr. Mount fell from a scaffolding while evading police or whether he was beaten, however I will hazard the guess that most of those reading this letter have merely a cursory knowledge, if any at all, of these events. Moreover, if any of those reading this wanted to learn more about the city’s record of that incident they would find only an archived PDF of an old webpage from the city’s old website, filled with dead links and non-functional videos. Certainly if someone were trying to learn about this case it might come across that the city was trying to hide something, even if they aren’t. In fact, I’d warrant that with sufficient funding, or even the efforts of a young, eager, unpaid intern if no funding were available, all of the city’s information on the case could quickly find its way to the front of the SSPD’s website, updated and polished, in short order.

My point with this is that information, communication, and dialogue will bring a close to this chapter of unrest in the history books of the city, not instigating vigilante actions from citizens because you aren’t satisfied with how the police department is handling the matter, nor patronizing protesters because you don’t understand or agree with what they’re protesting or because they’re young and may not fit the physical description of people who you think are “supposed” to be protesting. 

Currently the Police Reform Task Force is meeting on a regular basis to modernize and develop meaningful, achievable changes that can be instituted by our city’s police department. We must give them the space and time necessary to do that, and their recommendations are due by February of 2021. Meanwhile, as citizens, regardless of the color of our skin, and regardless of whether we are students of Skidmore, the high school, or matured adults, we need to educate ourselves on the reality of what happened that night in 2013, and the Commissioner of Public Safety Robin Dalton and the Saratoga Springs Police Department need to facilitate that by making the information they have on the issue of Darryl Mount more public. They should also consider issuing a mea culpa for how the event was handled by police chief Veitch at the time.

The issue of what happened to Mr. Mount will likely never be resolved. It was seven years ago and there were no witnesses to the event besides Darryl himself and the police that interacted with him. However we can, as a city, put right effort into trying to understand what the protesters were trying to tell us on November 7th, even if their delivery was misguided, timing poor, and energy aggressive; there is room for us to change, evolve, and learn from our history in this city, and it is the responsibility of both the city government and the citizens to make that happen in a constructive way. Because that is what democracy looks like.

Jake

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 Hello Chad,

I just read your excellent editorial regarding the “protest” that kept our beautiful  city hostage for 6 hours!  My husband and I retired here from Newburgh, NY to enjoy living in Saratoga – and specifically moved to live on Broadway to enjoy the dining and shopping.  We had seen a sad and steady decline in the quality of living here that will continue to decline, I’m afraid if significant change doesn’t happen.

We too witnessed the horrible event(s) over the summer with “protesters” taking over the park and streets.  When the city administration made a strong statement (that you quoted) we were relieved that finally the city would address the illegal marches and laying down on the streets to block traffic and the harassment of visitors and citizens. What is being done – nothing!! And it never will.  Same with the homeless situation – nothing has been done – it’s escalating out of control and yet if anything is done it will be too late.

Here are (2) other instances that I know of where nothing will be done.  Graffiti.  It’s a growing issue and concern throughout the city and continues to grow unchecked.  In the alley between Putnam Market and the building that houses Union, Piper, etc. the amount of graffiti is ugly and appalling.  Written in white spray paint is “f..k the (518) pigs”.  The same graffiti was painted on the wall behind The Washington (where we live) and was immediately painted over by the management.  I texted about the graffiti in the alley to the city and the relpy…we’re contacting the building owner about it!!!! Nothing was done…I believe it was finally painted over but not before many families visiting Saratoga saw it.

Another disturbing and growing issues is a “gang” of teen skateboarders and others hanging out downtown and harassing the pedestrians.  They continually ride on the sidewalks (which is illegal!) and we’re hanging out in the walkway between Kilwins and Cantina this summer…it took many calls and complaints to the police to have them “moved”…where did they go…top of (they board down it which is an accident waiting to happen) Caroline Street where they harass shop owners and people to such a disgusting extent – they are afraid to shop on Broadway!  Afraid to be on Broadway Saratoga in broad daylight!  They police were called and they were harassed too by these teens!  Again – nothing has been done!

Smaller incidents but will add up to the downfall of our city…at the start of my letter I mentioned we were from Newburgh so I’ve witnessed what will happen first-hand and I really fear for Saratoga.

Anyway – thanks for your recent articles and reading this. I needed to vent!

Take Care,
Debby

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Editor:

We are writing in response to Chad Beatty’s editorial in the November 13-19 Saratoga Today objecting to a protest held downtown on Saturday, November 7. The editorial is deeply disturbing in its initial assertions and tone. Its conclusion, articulated in the final sentence, is deeply distressing.

The assertions framing Beatty’s views are open to question.  They are not the basic truths that he implies.

The author begins by characterizing the protests as a simple matter of young people engaging in public harassment. His editorial comments do not explain the protestors’ reasons or motivations. He does not acknowledge that these non-violent protests are part of a larger protest movement across the country that aims to bring about long-needed changes to the systemic racism that pervades this country.

The editorial assumes that the protesters are somehow not “us”: “we” need to protect ourselves (and “our” women and children) from “them.” But in truth, no one was harmed by that Saturday’s action, and many members of the community sympathize with the protesters’ fundamental concerns, whether or not we take part in public protests. We recognize that racism, both conscious and unconscious bias on the basis of race, is a major problem.

Beatty also asserts that a more aggressive response by the police would make the protest go away. Arresting the protesters would get them temporarily off the street. But historically, and right now in other cities, aggressive police response tends to polarize people and result in more anger, more protests, and escalating tensions.

The editorial asserts that Skidmore students are “guests” in the community and implies that they thus have no right to protest. But citizens of this country—whether Skidmore students or others—have every right to participate in democratic processes, including non-violent, active dissent.

And Beatty takes issue with the way the police handled the situation: he seems to assume the only good outcome would have been arrests.  “Start arresting these kids as soon as the roads are blocked and let’s see how long their resolve lasts,” asserts Beatty. We say that the collaborative process between the Skidmore President and City officials was effective. Wasn’t the peaceful dispersion of the crowd–with no harm inflicted on anyone–desirable?

The editorial’s tone is biased, dismissive, and menacing. It gives a few business owners’ concerns fairly lengthy treatment, while it caricatures the protest as “undesirable behavior.” It makes no attempt to represent a variety of community perspectives. It asks, “Do we want a community where women and children feel threatened?” Which women and children does this refer to? We answer: Women and children of color, and men too, do feel threatened in our community. And they are threatened. That is what the protests are about.

This editorial doesn’t just assume that the protests deserve a violent response. It menaces the protestors, saying: “Deputize community members and let them clear the streets.” We have already seen how badly that goes.

What is missing is any sense that we need “real, institutional change,”  that we should make real “efforts to foster communication, dialogue, and trust,” as President Marc Conner wrote (quoted in a recent story in the Albany Times Union). We do not need citizen militias. We do need to envision together a world in which George Floyd and others would not have been killed. A more just world.

Susan & Sarah
Residents of Saratoga Springs and Skidmore Professors emeritae

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Dear Sir:

Both the New York State and Federal Constitutions permit state and local governments to impose reasonable, time, place and manner regulations on street demonstrations.

If local officials will not enforce constitutionally qualifying ordinances, the remedy is at the ballot box As a resident of Saratoga Springs, I intend to exercise my franchise accordingly at the next election.

(For what it’s worth, I taught state and local government law for 44 years and have published extensively in that field)

Sincerely Yours, Michael

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Mr. Beatty,

Great editorial this week.  I couldn’t agree more with your article.  And the fact that not only are the businesses suffering, but the opposite page also mentions a 7 million dollar shortfall in revenue which will affect the city greatly.  That will mean less money for police at a time when we need more; and higher taxes for residents who can ill afford it during this ongoing fiscal crisis caused by the government shutdown.  Perhaps the protestors should be paying fines and damages for the lost business and the cost of overtime for law enforcement in trying to protect the citizens.  When this behavior is tolerated it emboldens the perpetrators and leads to more frequent occurrences with escalating consequences. 

Sincerely,
Melanie

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Chad,

I very much appreciated your editorial, Freedom of Speech vs. Freedom From Harassment. I’m glad that you put in print what I have been feeling since the stunt last Saturday. I happened to be driving on the east side of Lake Ave trying to get across Broadway to the West Side. I was stopped at Maple Ave and forced to re-route. A small inconvenience but I couldn’t understand why Broadway was closed to traffic. When I found out later why Broadway was closed I was quite upset and you touched on most of the reasons why. Why was this allowed? 

This kind of stunt only angers me. It does not help any cause. They could have assembled in many other locations, Skidmore, The State Park and Congress Park come to mind.

Whoever organized this event was only after shock value and not real change. 

John

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Mr. Beatty,

I am disgusted to see that you used the platform of your newspaper to spout racist rhetoric.  In your article you mock and threaten protestors, who are practicing their right to peaceful protest, by encouraging citizens to “take back the streets” and then referencing deputizing citizens at the end of the article.  Businesses losing 6 hours of business does not compare to the hundreds of years of injustices that have faced Black people in our country and in our hometown.  Your inability to recognize this only shines light on your privilege and ignorance.  Educate yourself and do better. 

Melissa

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Dear Mr. Beatty,

I just want to thank you for one of the best opinions I have ever read.   Please don’t let this matter drop.  We need more people to speak up if we are ever going to be living in a free and just society.  I am an old lady and all I can do is pray for peace in our cities, states and country.  I am sick and tired of all these protests and esp. the BLM protesters.  When these protests impact on the freedoms and rights of other people, something is radically wrong. 

Sorry I will step down from my soapbox and just say thank you again for the wonderful editorial.  Keep up the good work and do not let anyone intimidate your freedom of speech.

Sincerely,

Sally

Individuals Experiencing Homelessness to Receive Services via New Homeless Court

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Mayor’s Office and Community Development Department, together with City Court Judge Francine Vero, and Transitional Services Association (TSA) worked together to design a Homeless Court which assists individuals who are homeless and charged with non-violent offenses. 

Individuals who are eligible and agree to participate are provided with individually tailored, case management services and connected to human service providers. This will assist a person with a mental health diagnosis or substance use disorder who is also experiencing street-homelessness from continuing the cycle of street, to jail, and back into the courts. 

The Homeless Court was designed in response to the concern by Saratoga Springs City Court officials of an increasing pattern of individuals experiencing street-homelessness and frequently failing to appear in Court or re-offending shortly after being convicted. City Police echo the Court’s concerns. The pattern results in a backlog of warrants, as well as a significant amount of law enforcement time and resources spent policing individuals experiencing street-homelessness for minor, yet disruptive, offenses.

The Honorable Francine R. Vero presides over the Homeless Court which is scheduled for the second and fourth Tuesday of every month. 

New Commissioner Takes the Reins at Saratoga County Public Health; January Could Be “Dark Time” Fauci Warns, Vaccine Coming

BALLSTON SPA — Dr. Daniel Kuhles, the county’s new Commissioner of Public Health, held a live forum Dec. 4, when he provided a regional and state overview related to COVID-19 strategies, as well as an update of the pending federal vaccination program. 

Kuhles, a resident of Saratoga Springs and a medical doctor, was appointed to the newly created Commissioner position in November following a four-month-long search for candidates by the county Board of Supervisors. The position carries a base salary of $132,446 and a term of six years. Job responsibilities include directing, managing and regulating the Department’s delivery of public health services throughout Saratoga County. 

The 53-minute forum, first broadcast live on Dec. 4, may be viewed at the Saratoga County Public Health Services Facebook page.

Infection percentage rates in Saratoga County have doubled each month since August, and topped 4% this week on a rolling 7-day average, marking the highest infection rate since mid-May. 

“The overall trend is going upwards in a direction we do not want to see it go,” Kuhles says. 

Regional hospitalization rates due to COVID-19 – one of the biggest criteria the state says it now will use to determine potential shutdown strategies – was at an all-time high this week, with over 220 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in the eight-county Capital Region designation, of which Saratoga County is a part.

During his presser Dec. 7, Gov. Andrew Cuomo was joined by Dr. Anthony Fauci, longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who warned of a potential “dark time” in January if public health measures such as mask-wearing, social distancing and attention to detail during even small gatherings are not followed. The result of gatherings during the Thanksgiving holiday will become evident Dec. 15-20, he said, followed by a potential surge if additional gatherings are held during the December holidays.   

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“Potentially, a surge upon a surge,” Fauci said. “If those things happen and we don’t mitigate well, we don’t listen to the public health measures we need to follow, we can start to see things really get bad in the middle of January…the middle of January could be a really dark time for us.”

Regarding vaccinations, Fauci said he anticipated a substantial number of health care providers and people in nursing homes will begin receiving vaccinations later this month, with essential workers and those at high-risk due to health issues having the ability to be vaccinated in the early months of 2021. 

The vaccination(s) require two shots.  “Say you get vaccinated today, then you get a boost 28 days later, and 7 to 10 days after that second shot, you’re optimally protected,” Fauci explained. 

“I would think by the time you get to the beginning of April, you’ll start getting people who have no priority, just a normal person who has no underlying conditions. If we get them vaccinated, a full-court press, and you do that through April, May and June, by the time you get to the summer, the end of the summer and the start of the third quarter of 2021 – we should be in good shape. That’s what I’m hoping for,” Fauci said.   

$1 Million Donation: Franklin Community Center Gets New Home

SARATOGA SPRINGS — A cutting-edge center of 21st century global technology and a venue honoring the traditional offerings of helping those in need met at the intersection of Franklin and Washington streets this week in a collaborative effort for the betterment of the local community, and all points beyond. 

Elliott and Cathy Masie built the Masie Center on the east side of Saratoga Springs 20 years ago. This week, Franklin Community Center – which serves thousands of people every year locally – has purchased the Masie building and will be expanding their services. The new building, to be renamed the Michael & Stacie Arpey Family Community Center, will allow the Franklin the space it has needed to grow their programs.   

Franklin Community Center has served as a social service hub for the less fortunate in and around Saratoga since 1983.

The Center’s programs include a food pantry, a free after-school prevention program for local students and affordable housing for low-income individuals, as well as assisting with furniture, clothing and household needs, among others. 

“At the beginning of 2019, our board really committed to obtaining more space,” explains FCC Executive Director Kari Cushing.  “We were at a point where the space didn’t provide confidentiality for the people we serve.” A fundraising campaign was initiated with the idea of building an addition to an existing building to create more space. 

“We were in the middle of it and had raised about $1 million toward our $2.5 million goal when the world stopped and COVID happened,” Cushing says. “We were no longer able to use our volunteers, so we repurposed all of our staff and since March we’ve been filling grocery bags, unloading trucks, delivering supplies and just doing what needs to get done.”    

At the same time, she says, the need for services increased exponentially. 

“The numbers have just gone through the roof. The need usually ebbs and flows and goes with the economy, but right now people are in dire need of just basic services. Since the start of the pandemic, just the food pantry has served 2,300 families – and of those 588 of them were brand new, they’d never been to a food pantry before. Those numbers are staggering,” she said. 

“In September. I looked across the street and saw a For Sale out in front of the Masie building. It seemed way too good to be true, but we had to at least explore our options.” The building was listed at $2.6 million, and members of the board visited the location. 

“When I tell you it’s perfect, that’s an understatement. It’s wide open and we could do whatever we need to do with the interior space, but we were still too far from our fundraising goal. We only had $1 million raised and being a non-profit we’re not comfortable taking out a loan for more than a million dollars. Our Steering Committee met to go over our options and that’s when Stacie Arpey, who’s on our board stepped up to increase her pledge from $100,0000 to $1 million and make it a reality for us. The Masies lowered their original asking price, and a deal was struck. “Between the two of them, it became possible.” 

The Masie Center has served for a generation as an international Learning LAB working with global organizations.

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“We’ve probably had tens of thousands of executives come from around the world. We helped launch E-Learning there. When the pandemic hit, I looked at my staff and said, ‘OK, go home.’ I gave them computers and lights and screens and after a couple of months predicted, well, we’re not going to go back to regular work soon. We looked at each other and said: maybe this is the time to sell the building. 

“After we put the building up for sale, Franklin Community Center was intrigued and one of their board members, Stacie Arpey, and her husband Michael decided they really wanted them to have it and gave them a million dollar donation to get to the price, and Cathy and I lowered (the asking price) by many hundreds of thousands of dollars because we couldn’t think of a better buyer for it than Franklin,” Masie says. 

“What I like about Franklin is that they service people who have deep and continuing needs as well as people who have newly arrived at the point of need,” Masie says. “I think we need to be quick to respond to people when they enter that and help put them on a pathway to becoming more self-sustaining. And Franklin does that. The other thing is they work a lot with kids.” 

For Masie, the present world continues via video, having conducted keynotes for tens of thousands of people during the pandemic, right from his piano room at home in Saratoga Springs. 

“They do so much in that cramped building they’re in now – to have that 10,000 square feet of space, it’s going to be exciting to see what they can do,” said Masie, who conducted a walk-through with FCC staff this week.

“This new home for FCC will help ensure that families in Saratoga Springs having an inviting place to receive the resources of FCC for years to come,” Stacie Arpey said in a statement.

The transition will happen gradually allowing FCC to ensure there are no disruptions to the services provided. The plan is to maintain the current venues and begin adapting some of the organization’s programs into the new venue. “In the beginning of 2021 our goal as a Board will be to really delve into that and see how we can be more efficient and make things easier to access for the folks who use our services. We want to make sure that we make things better for Franklin and for the entire community,” says Cushing, who has been with FCC for 18 years. 

“COVID has obviously turned everything upside down and has disrupted all of our lives, but we have a unique perspective: we get to see the other side of it, and I have to tell you how heart-warming it has been to see our community come together to make sure that nobody has to go without,” Cushing says. “We were scared to death when it started and we saw our numbers going through the roof. We didn’t even know if we would be able to serve everyone that came to us. 

“Every day we would post our biggest needs on social media and we have a contactless drop-off in the front of our building and every day when we would come in, it would be overflowing with the things we had asked for. We never had to turn anybody away, because people were so generous. This community is absolutely amazing. I think Stacie and Mike embody everything hat our community is and Cathy and Elliott – everybody made it possible, it’s such a group effort and it’s wonderful to see.” 

The Michael and Stacie Arpey Family Community Center /Franklin Community Center is in fundraising mode and need just under $1 million to complete their expansion campaign which would include costs for moving and potential renovations to the space.  For more information or to contribute to the campaign go to:   www.franklincommunitycenter.org.

Vaccines On the Way Arriving in New York Dec. 15

ALBANY – New York’s first vaccine delivery – via Pfizer – is anticipated to arrive Dec. 15 and provide enough doses for 170,000 New Yorkers, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced this week. 

Additional Moderna vaccines are expected to arrive in New York later in December. Nationally, by month’s end, it is anticipated there will be sufficient doses to vaccinate 20 million people nationwide, or about 6% of Americans. 

The first vaccines to arrive will target seniors and staff in nursing homes, and health care workers, Cuomo said.  There are about 85,000 nursing home residents and about 130,000 staff in New York. “You won’t complete that with the first 170,000 (Pfizer doses) but two weeks later we’re supposed to get a Moderna tranche – they haven’t given us a number on that yet.”  There are about 600,000 health care workers in the state. Vaccine priority for health care workers will be given to those employed in ICU’s and emergency rooms. 

Some studies show a return to a “normal” economy will occur when 75% to 85% of the public is vaccinated. The hope is that may occur by mid-year 2021, although there are many variables to consider, including public skepticism regarding a vaccine, Cuomo said. To address that skepticism, a “New York panel” will review FDA approved vaccines.

Covid-19 Infection rates and hospitalization rates due to the virus have increased across the region, the state and the country during the fall months. In early October, the average weekly positive infection rate among Saratoga County residents was 0.5%. In early November that rate more than doubled, to 1.1%. This week, the rate of infection is 3.9%.     

“We hope to flatten the increase in mid-January – when social activity slows down, travel slows down and the increase of the rate slows down,” Cuomo said. “The vaccination program is really the endgame here.”    

Cuomo said a comprehensive five-point plan overall includes managing the hospital load, increase testing for the virus, keep schools open – especially K through 8 – prepare for vaccine distribution, and grow public awareness that small gatherings are currently the top cause of viral spread. 

“This is probably the only issue President Trump’s people and Joe Biden’s people agree on. Both of their health advisors say small gatherings are the problem,” Cuomo said. “The CDC recommendation for Thanksgiving was: no more than your household. For people who say it’s political: Whose politics are you playing? It’s agreed to by both.” 

Vaccines On the Way Arriving in New York Dec. 15

ALBANY – New York’s first vaccine delivery – via Pfizer – is anticipated to arrive Dec. 15 and provide enough doses for 170,000 New Yorkers, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced this week. 

Additional Moderna vaccines are expected to arrive in New York later in December. Nationally, by month’s end, it is anticipated there will be sufficient doses to vaccinate 20 million people nationwide, or about 6% of Americans. 

The first vaccines to arrive will target seniors and staff in nursing homes, and health care workers, Cuomo said.  There are about 85,000 nursing home residents and about 130,000 staff in New York. “You won’t complete that with the first 170,000 (Pfizer doses) but two weeks later we’re supposed to get a Moderna tranche – they haven’t given us a number on that yet.”  There are about 600,000 health care workers in the state. Vaccine priority for health care workers will be given to those employed in ICU’s and emergency rooms. 

Some studies show a return to a “normal” economy will occur when 75% to 85% of the public is vaccinated. The hope is that may occur by mid-year 2021, although there are many variables to consider, including public skepticism regarding a vaccine, Cuomo said. To address that skepticism, a “New York panel” will review FDA approved vaccines.

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Covid-19 Infection rates and hospitalization rates due to the virus have increased across the region, the state and the country during the fall months. In early October, the average weekly positive infection rate among Saratoga County residents was 0.5%. In early November that rate more than doubled, to 1.1%. This week, the rate of infection is 3.9%.     

“We hope to flatten the increase in mid-January – when social activity slows down, travel slows down and the increase of the rate slows down,” Cuomo said. “The vaccination program is really the endgame here.”    

Cuomo said a comprehensive five-point plan overall includes managing the hospital load, increase testing for the virus, keep schools open – especially K through 8 – prepare for vaccine distribution, and grow public awareness that small gatherings are currently the top cause of viral spread. 

“This is probably the only issue President Trump’s people and Joe Biden’s people agree on. Both of their health advisors say small gatherings are the problem,” Cuomo said. “The CDC recommendation for Thanksgiving was: no more than your household. For people who say it’s political: Whose politics are you playing? It’s agreed to by both.” 

Collaboration and a Multi-Sector Team to Tackle the Issues of Homelessness in Saratoga County

In the on-going conversation around homelessness, a recurring theme emerges with local leaders, community advocates, committed groups and individuals, and those agencies tasked with developing meaningful solutions.

That theme is: It takes a collaborative and coordinated approach to prevent and end homelessness.

It is not the singular effort of one person or agency, and responsibility doesn’t lie with one sector or organization, it is the collective effort with purpose that creates and sustains movement forward and progress. 

For many years Saratoga County has benefited from the collective effort of the Saratoga – North Country Continuum of Care (CoC). This is a collection of agencies funded through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to provide housing solutions across the entire spectrum of homelessness: chronic, youth, families, domestic violence victims, veterans, and all others experiencing a housing crisis. The CoC serves a large region encompassing Saratoga, Warren, Washington, and Hamilton Counties; however, there is a subset of the full CoC, a local planning body known as the Saratoga Housing Alliance, that provides a committed local presence with years of experience and countless stories of success. 

Just last month, the Saratoga Housing Alliance formally combined efforts with the Saratoga Collaborative to End Homelessness to become a more cohesive and organized group that will be called the Saratoga County Alliance to End Homelessness. This new group now combines the efforts of over 12 different agencies and organizations, several faith-based partners, the Saratoga Chamber of Commerce, Department of Social Services, the City of Saratoga Springs, community advocates, health sector partners, and many others, which in practice and purpose meets the vision of the community-based response to collaboratively address and prevent homelessness for all. This presents an opportunity for coordination on an entirely new level, breaks down barriers of perceived responsibility, and sets the stage for implementation of new funding available to Saratoga County to make significant change and impact on homelessness.

On March 27, 2020 Congress passed and President Trump signed H.R. 749, the CARES Act. Included in that legislation is an emergency allocation of $4 billion to be used specifically to address the needs of individuals and families experiencing homelessness, or at risk of homelessness, that have arisen as the result of COVID-19. For Saratoga County, this allocation amounted to $975,000. Under the direction of, and in collaboration with, Saratoga County DSS developed a comprehensive community-wide plan to implement the funding with 8 different non-profit organizations, and named CAPTAIN Community Human Services as the lead agency tasked with coordinating those programs and services. The collaborative agencies include Legal Aid of NENY, Prevention Council / Healing Springs, Salvation Army, Shelters of Saratoga, Transitional Services Association, Veterans and Community Housing Coalition, and Wellspring.

The funding will be directed toward increasing on-the-street presence of trained professionals for Street Outreach, strengthening and supporting Emergency Sheltering services, providing access to permanent housing for homeless individuals and families, and preventing evictions and homelessness through financial assistance. This funding allows for implementation of innovative strategies to increase access to housing and permanency in a collaborative and cooperative model that is client-focused, which ultimately benefits the entire community by decreasing the opportunity for community-spread of this debilitating disease and increasing the wellness of the most vulnerable.

Further, the City of Saratoga Springs Community Development Office received funding to create a program to address homelessness, or those at-risk of homelessness within City limits, due to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The program provides additional funding for housing services, which are administrated through partnerships with local non-profits. Those non-profits work with eligible clients to provide security deposits, rental assistance, case management, and other supportive services to help homeless individuals and families attain permanent housing or maintain their current housing by preventing evictions.

The combination of these new funding sources and the enhanced collaborative, community-based approach, Saratoga County is poised for opportunities for real and lasting positive impact on homelessness. 

More information will be available to the community on how to access these resources and eligibility for assistance in the coming weeks, but information can be found by contacting CAPTAIN Community Human Services at 518-371-1185, or on the City of Saratoga Springs website at: saratoga-springs.org/2577/COVID-19-Emergency-Housing-Assistance-Pr

City News: Saratoga Springs Adopts $46.2 Million Budget for 2021, Announces Small Biz Grant Program

SARATOGA SPRINGS — With the clock ticking to a midnight deadline that would have installed what Finance Commissioner Michele Madigan called a “skeletal budget” as proposed in October, the City Council Nov. 30  staged a Special Meeting during which it unanimously approved a less austere 2021 budget that maintains essential city services and preserves city jobs and salaries. 

The initial budget proposed in October was set at $41.9 million – a $7 million reduction to the 2019 plan. The amended 2021 budget approved this week calls for a $46.2 million spending plan. It may be further amended after Jan. 1, 2021. 

The plan calls for a 6% property tax increase, meaning a home assessed at $200,000 will require an additional payment of $72 annually; a home assessed at $400,000 will see an annual payment increase of $144.   

Commissioner Madigan said with a vaccine seemingly on the horizon, she is feeling “optimistic” about at least some form of tourism returning to the Spa City next year.

• The city announced a COVID-19 Small Business Grant Program Application period opens Dec. 7, with 25 to 51 grants of $5,000 – $10,000 to be awarded. Funds may be used for: payroll, rent or mortgage, utilities, equipment to facilitate the outdoor conduct of business during winter months, or supplies and equipment that reduce risk of coronavirus transmission.

Grant recipients must preserve at least 1 FTE job held by a low-income person – designated as less than  $33,950/year –  for at least six months.

The COVID-19 Small Business Grant Program, administered locally by the City’s Office of Community Development (OCD), was funded by a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development grant through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act. All applicants must agree to federal program requirements. For full guidelines, eligibility information, and application forms go to: saratoga-springs.org. 

• The comment period for Draft 2 of the UDO has been extended and the public is invited to submit comments through Friday, Dec. 11. 

Members of the City’s UDO project team led six public Q&A sessions during the 60-plus days that Draft 2 has been available for review.  Draft 2 documents and maps, including video recordings and presentation slides, are available on the UDO web page on the city’s website for review.    

It is anticipated that a final draft of the UDO will be released and submitted to the County and City Land Use Boards for advisory opinions, prior to being presented to Council for a vote during the first quarter of 2021.

• A meeting of the Police Reform Task Force will be held at Saratoga Music Hall and livestreamed on the city website at 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 9. 

Under Development, Under Review

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The city Land Use Boards – the Planning Board, Design Review Commission, and Zoning Board of Appeals are considering a variety of applications this month. 

Among the applications anticipated to be under consideration are an Architectural Review of exterior details and colors for the new construction of 18 townhomes at 96-116 Ballston Ave. and a Historic Review of exterior modifications at 351 & 353 Broadway with an eye to the repair or replacement of porch columns on the east side of the Rip Van Dam to address deteriorating column bases.

An approval extension of a special use permit, which was granted June 20, 2019, is sought for a 200-unit affordable housing project at Allen Drive and Tait Lane, and as per a pair of demolition requests, a Historic Review determination of historic/architectural significance is sought for a pair of vacant structures which stand at 65 Phila St. and 69 Phila St., respectively.   

The DRC is next scheduled to meet Dec. 9, the Planning Board on Dec. 10, and the ZBA on Dec. 14. Meetings are typically held via Zoom. See the city’s website at Saratoga-springs.org for more details.