Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Update on Underhill

City Hall just released the following statement regarding the closure of Harry Howard Avenue between Paddock Place and Washington Street.
Due to the large crack on Harry Howard Avenue as it crosses Underhill, the current road closure from Paddock Place to Washington Street remains in effect until further notice. At this time, work is being done to determine the cause and identify the fixes required to repair the road. The City will be pumping water from Underhill to help reduce forces against the roadway. We appreciate your patience and ask that everyone heed the barriers and fine alternate routes.

Of Interest

The Times Union reports today on area buildings and sites being considered for historic designation: "9 sites in the Capital Region, Mid-Hudson considered for national and state historic registries."

Photo: Tristan Geary for the Times Union
Among the nine sites are Basilica Hudson, constructed in 1905 as the Railway Steel Spring Company Foundry and Sand House, and the Stuyvesant Landing Historic District.

The press release from the NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation announcing the nominations can be found here.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Travel Advisory

The Hudson Police Department just made this announcement on their Facebook page. Harry Howard Avenue is closed between Paddock Place and Washington Street because a large crack has formed in the pavement in the area of Underhill Pond.

A Timely Analogy from Hudson Common Sense

After their victory over Peru on Saturday, the Hudson High School basketball team is headed to the Class A state semifinals. Their next game is on Thursday in Binghamton against Tappan Zee. 


Hudson's ascent to the Final Four has inspired the editors at Hudson Common Sense to compose an op/ed piece comparing varsity sports at Hudson High School with the government structure in the City of Hudson: "Hoop Dreams & Charter Schemes: What Hudson Government Can Learn from the Bluehawks Basketball Team." It is recommended reading.

One More Meeting

There is a meeting that was omitted from the weekly list published last night: the Columbia County Board of Supervisors Public Works Committee meeting, which takes place on Wednesday, March 18, at 5:00 p.m., at 401 State Street. At this meeting, the updated load rating report, prepared by the engineering firm Ryan Biggs Clark Davis, with various cost estimates for temporarily repairing the Stuyvesant Falls Bridge so that it can re-open, will be presented.


Representatives of Historic Stuyvesant will be at the meeting. In advance of the meeting, they are encouraging people to send emails to the members of the Public Works Committee, urging them to repair and reopen the bridge. Information for doing that can be found here. (Interestingly, there are no Hudson supervisors on this committee.)

Historic Stuyvesant is advocating for the County to commit to a long-term bridge rehabilitation project. To learn about the preservation efforts, click here.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Meetings and Events in the Week Ahead

With Pi Day and the Ides of March behind us, and St. Patrick's Day ahead, here's what is happening this week.
  • On Monday, March 16, the Common Council holds its informal meeting at 6:00 p.m. The agenda for the meeting includes a funding proposal and a resolution in support of the proposal for a Columbia County Recreation Center, an initiative of Chief Mishanda Franklin and Sheriff Jackie Salvatore. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at City Hall and on Microsoft Teams. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely.   
  • On Tuesday, March 17, the Conservation Advisory Council meets at 6:00 p.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at City Hall and on Microsoft Teams. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely. 
  • On Wednesday, March 18, the Hudson Housing Authority Board of Commissioners meets at 6:00 p.m. It is expected there will a report to the board from executive director Jeffrey Dodson and John Madeo of Mountco on what transpired at last week's Planning Board Meeting. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place person in the Community Room at Bliss Towers and on Zoom. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely.
  • Also on Wednesday, March 18, the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) meets at 6:oo p.m. No agenda for the meeting is yet available. The meeting takes place in person only at City Hall.
Update: No agenda for the ZBA meeting is available, because there is currently no business before the board. Hence, this month's meeting has been canceled.
  • On Thursday, March 19, Mayor Joe Ferris holds Meet the Mayor open office hours at City Hall from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m.
Update: Meet the Mayor open office hours have been rescheduled for Thursday, May 26, so the mayor can go to Binghamton to attend the Class A semifinals and cheer on the Hudson High School basketball team.  
  • Also on Thursday, March 19, Hudson Community Development and Planning Agency (HCDPA) Finance Committee meets at 5:30 p.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at City Hall and on Microsoft Teams. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely.
  • On Saturday, March 21, Camphill Players & Friends present a brand-new collaborative production called Behind the Scenes. The performance takes place at 7:00 p.m. at Hudson Hall. Click here for more information and to reserve your free tickets. 
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Saturday, March 14, 2026

HHA and the Planning Board

The Hudson Housing Authority is pursuing an ambitious redevelopment. What's being proposed will take up an entire city block, and when completed, there will be twice as many units, managed by HHA, as there are now. HHA wants the Planning Board to complete its review and grant site plan approval by May 2026, so they can meet their deadlines for funding from New York State, yet they seem to be stonewalling the Planning Board when it comes to presenting anything that gives a clear idea of what this massive development is going to look like.

At the February meeting of the Planning Board, HHA presented elevations of the proposed buildings--drawings that show the facades of the buildings in two dimensions.


Ron Bogle, who chairs the Planning Board, put off any discussion of the design of the buildings because the elevations did not provide enough information, and he requested renderings to show what the buildings would actually look like. 

On Tuesday, March 10, just hours before their meeting started, the Planning Board received a set of "presentation visuals." The visuals, which can be viewed here, were made up of a Google Earth image of the current site, a site plan we've seen several times before, two renderings also seen before, and two 3D renderings. Bogle again postponed discussion of the design because the materials had not been submitted in a timely fashion. (The deadline for submitting things to the Planning Board is two weeks before the next scheduled meeting.) He could have postponed discussion because the renderings do not provide enough information about what the buildings will actually look like.


Presenting the visuals at the Planning Board meeting on Tuesday, Quncie Williams, the architect at Alexander Gorlin Architects who is working on this project, explained that the intention was to articulate the facades of the buildings so that they "read as townhouses" and "align harmoniously into the community." Williams said the architectural vision had three major aspects:
  • Buildings that create the narrative of Hudson by lining the streets
  • Buildings that are scaled to be harmonious with the town houses of Hudson
  • Creating a pedestrianizing atmosphere 
Williams also said they wanted to bring the language of Hudson architecture to this village--meaning the HHA development, which he also referred to as a "microcosm" of Hudson. According to Williams, the materials to be used--brick, siding, and a "sprinkle of bay windows"--are emblematic of Hudson and its historic architecture. Williams' entire presentation can be heard here, starting at 53:12. 

The renderings presented are confusing, because it's not clear exactly what is being depicted. In talking about the rendering below, Williams spoke of the "pedestrianization" of State Street.  


If you look at this 3D rendering of the site as it is proposed (below), there is no point at which there are buildings on both sides of the "pedestrianized" State Street, except possibly right at the corner of Second and State, where the end of the proposed third building (part of Phase 2) would be on the left and Building B1 would be on the right. The rendering above might also show the end of Building A1 across from Building B1, but the image would have to be flopped.


Similarly, it's impossible to know the vantage point for this rendering. It seems to show an L-shaped building, but the only L-shaped building in the plan that seems to match this rendering is the one proposed for Phase 2 of the project.


Toward the end of the meeting (1:21:27), Planning Board member Peter Spear asked if they could have renderings that were closer to reality. Following up on Spear's question, Bogle asked of the renderings, "Are they conceptual illustrations, or do they really reflect what is currently planned to be built?" Williams responded to Bogle's question by saying the renderings showed "the intent of what we expect to be built here." Spear pointed out, "Those are two different things, though. Intention and expectation are very different degrees of certainty." To which Williams responded, "Architects deal with intent. . . . My intent is to have this built as it's shown."

These renderings have been around for a long time. Gossips published the first one for the first time in October 2024. The second one (and perhaps also the first) was part of presentation made by Alex Gorlin at the "greenspace workshop" held at Bliss Towers in September 2024. (The playground area that was the focus of the rendering then has been cropped off.) Since then, there's been a lot of value engineering to bring down the cost of the project. It's hard to imagine that effort had no impact on the facade design. In his presentation, Williams talked about "siding." Siding could be anything, but it usually means wood or some imitation wood shingles. The renderings show nothing of the kind.

It is not unreasonable for the public to want to know what this new development will look like. In his comments to the Planning Board on Tuesday, Jeffrey Dodson, HHA executive director, recalled his first walk down Warren Street, thinking this was a beautiful, historic place, "Only to take a right on Second Street and go, 'My god, what is that?'" He was reacting to Bliss Towers, which he described as "hideous." Given that, it seems reasonable for people in Hudson to want to know what in future they will see when making that same turn off Warren Street, but none of the renderings provide any idea. The one 3D rendering that shows the project with any architectural detail shows it from the west, a vantage point from which it will only be seen by residents parking their cars and folks who live in Schuyler Court.


Renderings are typically a bit deceptive. They show things idealized. Not long ago, a reader told me about a site called AntiRender. There can you upload a rendering and download the reality--how it will look when the leaves are off the trees and there is no idealized landscaping or idealized people. I tried it out with the two HHA renderings, and here are the results.


The discussion of the project at the Planning Board meeting on Tuesday brought up a couple of things that are a bit worrisome. As we all know, Bliss Towers and Columbia Apartments cannot be demolished until the new buildings have been completed and the current residents of Bliss Towers and Columbia Apartments have been relocated. What was revealed on Tuesday is that there is no money for the demolition in Phase 1, and therefore the demolition will have to wait until funding is secured for Phase 2. 

The "pedestrianization" of State Street is also not part of Phase 1. Instead it is part of Phase 2. Given that the parking plan submitted to the Planning Board in October 2025 includes parallel parking on both sides of State Street in order to meet the parking requirements for all the tenants of the project, it's hard to imagine how closing the street is going to happen. 


There's another unanswered question that did not come up at the Planning Board meeting: Are the townhouses proposed for the lot at the end of Warren Street part of Phase 1 or Phase 2? If they are part of Phase 1, their design will have to go before the Historic Preservation Commission because the proposed location is in a locally designated historic district. That hasn't happened yet.  

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Friday, March 13, 2026

As Seen on Facebook

These are the kinds of emergencies we like seeing reported.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Olana Webinar Tomorrow

Tomorrow, Friday, March 13, at noon, The Olana Partnership presents its Annual Ida Brier Archival  Webinar. The webinar this year offers an opportunity to learn about the recently published book by Annik LaFarge, Composing Olana. The book is devoted to illustrating why Frederic Church's designed masterwork matters so profoundly in the history of American art and public parks. The webinar will feature a conversation between LaFarge and Olana's archivist, Clare Flemming, exploring LaFarge's process of revealing the history of what we can and cannot see throughout Olana's historic carriage roads. Discover how LaFarge unpacks Olana's greater landscape by drawing on archival letters, diaries, and historic accounts, revealing everything from the site's Ice Age geology to the artists and conservationists who preserved it. 

The webinar is free. Click here to register.

Annik LaFarge is a writer, editor, photographer, and lecturer who has been writing about American parks and landscapes since 2008. Author of On the High Line and Chasing Chopin, her work has appeared in numerous publications including the New York Times, Publishers World, Huff Post, and the Library of Congress's National Recording Registry. She is a Trustee of the Waterfront Museum in Brooklyn.

Clare Flemming is the Research Archivist for The Olana Partnership where every day is a new discovery into current scholarship about Frederic Church, his life, his land, and his legacy, as well as the exciting records of the Partnership and its visionary predecessors. Flemming has served as archivist in a wide range of collections from Philadelphia to Albany, mostly in natural history settings, from tiny historic societies to huge government archives and as an adjunct professor in the Archives Management tract at SUNY, University at Albany.

News from the County Board of Supervisors

We all recall last summer's suppressed initiative to get the issue of having a county executive on the ballot.

Photo: Columbia County Forward
Yesterday, Matt Murell, chair of the Columbia County Board of Supervisors, who connived successfully to keep the question off the ballot, announced in a press release that a committee has been formed to explore the notion of having a county manager/administrator. The press release follows.

Columbia County Board of Supervisors Chairman Matt Murell today announced the members of the County Manager/Administrator Committee, to be tasked with getting answers to the question of the advisability of establishing a county administrator position in the county's governing structure.
"The last time this idea was looked at was back in 2011 by a county committee," said Chairman Murell in December, when announcing the planned committee formation. "It seems there's no better time than the present to re-visit this subject. Fifteen years later, I for one am keenly interested in seeing how such a position could work for us now."
Named committee members are as follows:
James Guzzi, Deputy Chairman and Livingston Town Supervisor; Robert Lagonia, Deputy Chairman and Austerlitz Town Supervisor; Craig Simmons, Ghent Town Supervisor; Tistrya Houghtling, Minority Leader and New Lebanon Town Supervisor; Brenda Adams, Canaan Town Supervisor; and Richard Wolf, Copake Town Supervisor.
Also, Art Bassin, private citizen, former Ancram Town Supervisor and member of the 2011 County Manager Initiative Subcommittee; Susan Sharpe, CPA, private citizen, former CFO Greater NY Insurance Companies and former CFO of the NYS Insurance Fund; Rick Cummings, private citizen, is currently vice president of Mulhern Gas Co., Inc., a position he has held since 1990--he is fourth generation of the 100-year-old family business based in Hudson, and prior to that, Cummings was a financial consultant with Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., for four years; and Robert Fitzsimmons, County Attorney and former member of the 2011 County Manager Initiative Subcommittee. 
Serving on the committee's Panel of Experts will be Chairman Murell, who also serves as Stockport Town Supervisor; County Treasurer P. J. Keeler; County Controller James Breig; County Human Resources Director Michaele Williams-Riordan; and representatives from the Columbia County Economic Development Corporation and the Columbia County Chamber of Commerce.
In a nutshell, a County Administrator differs greatly from a County Executive, in that a County Administrator would serve as the Chief Operating Officer, with the key distinction that the position would report to, and work under the direction of, the Board of Supervisors;
A County Executive, on the other hand, places political power and day-to-day county operations in the hands of a single elected official, rather than the current system of 23 elected town and city supervisors working together as a governing unit. A County Executive effectively strips the County Board of Supervisors of its authority.
A date has yet to be set for the committee's first meeting.

Fifteen Years and $20 Million Later

The Hudson City School District is at the beginning of its budget process. The staggering $61,449,000 budget proposed for 2026-2027, with a 10 percent increase in the tax levy, may not be the budget we are asked to vote on in May, but then again it may be. 

The predicted 10 percent increase in the tax levy and calls in the comments on last night's post to reject the budget reminded me of 2011, when HCSD voters rejected a $41 million budget and a 9.8 percent increase in the tax levy. Below are the links to Gossips posts from that time, so you can recall those thrilling days when, for the only time in Gossips' memory, the people told HCSD no

May 24, 2011  Not to Be Missed
May 26, 2011  HCSD Budget
May 27, 2011  The Talk Continues
May 31, 2011  Unbelievable

The links to Register-Star articles and to documents on the HCSD website no longer work, but the links to Lynn Sloneker's excellent blog Unmuffled do.
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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

News from HCSD

At last night's meeting of the Hudson City School District Board of Education, some alarming news was revealed. The budget for the 2026-2027 school year now being proposed is $61,449,000--5.1 percent more than the budget for the current school year ($58,544,000), which apparently translates into a 10 percent increase in the tax levy.


There was a time when the HCSD budget seemed to increase regularly by $1 million a year. Last year, the increase was $2.5 million. This year, the proposed increase is very close to $3 million. 

Last night's school board meeting, as well as the presentation of the plans for the reconstruction of the tennis courts on Paddock Place, which took place at the February 24 meeting, inspired Ken Sheffer, alumnus and critic of HCSD, historian and champion of the Depression Era achievement that was the Chancellor Robert R. Livingston Educational Center, and accomplished tennis player, to write this piece: "A 10% Tax Levy Increase and the Hudson Board of Education Can't Even Spell 'Tennis.'" It's long, and much of it has to do with the restoration of the tennis courts, which may or may not be of interest to all readers, although it should be of interest to anyone who cares about preserving Hudson history, but I encourage everyone to read it. It provides insight into the workings of the school district we pay dearly to support.
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First News from the Planning Board Meeting

At last night's Planning Board meeting, it was announced that Gaby Hoffmann is resigning from the board because of work engagements that would cause her to miss the next six months of meetings. (It will be remembered Hoffmann is an actress.)

This is a significant loss for the Planning Board. Hoffmann's determined and well-researched attempts to get the Planning Board to respect and protect the city's long-held aspirations for the waterfront during the Colarusso review were memorable and admirable, especially given the hostile and demeaning reception her efforts met with from former chair Theresa Joyner and other members of the Planning Board. Mayor Joe Ferris has made three good appointments to the Planning Board so far--Ron Bogle, Peter Spear, and Nathan Woodhull. We hope he can find yet another serious, thoughtful, and well-informed person to replace Hoffmann on the Planning Board.  
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