Thursday, April 9, 2026

HCSD Community Budget Workshop Next Week

Last week, Roger Hannigan Gilson reported in the Times Union that the proposed 2026-2027 budget for the Hudson City School District has gone from $61.4 million to $63.1 million. (The budget for the current school year is $58.5 million.) The following is quoted from Gilson's article:
Even if the school board were to approve a budget that would raise taxes by the maximum allowable amount this year--5.8 percent--and spend the maximum allowable amount of the unassigned fund balance, the district would be $2.58 million short, or more than 4% of the total proposed budget of $63.1 million.
Mark DePace, president of the Board of Education, asked the district to prepare plans for cutting $2.5 to $4.5 million from the proposed budget. The results of that effort are expected to be reported at the BOE meeting next Tuesday, April 14. On that day, the Policy Committee will meet from 5:00 to 5:50 p.m. The Community Budget Workshop will begin at 6:00 p.m. Apparently, not a lot of people are expected to show up since the meeting is set to take place in the high school library.

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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Intel from the IDA

At the Hudson Industrial Development Agency (IDA) meeting on Monday, Mike Tucker, the administrative director, reported on the current ownership and leasing status of Hudson Depot Lofts, 76 North Seventh Street.


This recently completed apartment building is one of the properties that the Galvan Foundation is giving to Bard College. Although there has not yet been a closing on the transfer of ownership, there is an agreement in place that allows Bard to manage the property. Tucker reported that he had met with the person from Bard responsible for leasing the apartments in the building, who indicated that Bard had hired a leasing company to carry out the task. Tucker reported that the building is almost fully leased up, although Zillow still indicates there are 47 available units.

The IDA's interest in the building is clear. In 2021, the IDA approved a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) and other financial benefits for the construction of this building with the understanding that the building would provide "workforce housing" at two income limits: up to 80 percent of area median income (AMI) and up to 130 percent of AMI. Of the 64 units in the building, only 12 were designated for the lower income level; the other 52 units are designated households with incomes between 80 and 130 percent of the AMI.  At that level, the rents start at $2,275 for a one-bedroom unit, $2,775 for a two-bedroom, and $3,400 for a three-bedroom. 

The 12 apartments meant to the lower income bracket were leased quickly. Not so the other 52 units. Tucker explained, as he has before, that the combination of the credit requirements and the income cap "makes for a very small band of eligibility." There is a contingency in the PILOT agreement that allows apartments to be rented to people with incomes above the 130 percent AMI cap if eligible tenants cannot to found within the income limits, but Tucker said Bard was committed to maintaining the income levels and suggested they might considering lower the rents to make them more affordable. He also suggested the people from Bard involved in managing the building might attend the next meeting of the IDA.
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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

A Modest Proposal for HCSD

In January, the Hudson City School District Board of Education began its search for a new Superintendent of Schools, using the same search organization they have used in the past with less than satisfactory results, HYA. Addressing the question of doing the same thing and expecting a different outcome, Mark DePace, school board president, maintained that this time would be different because they would be working with Kaweeda Adams, an HYA associate based in Albany who, according to DePace, was chosen "because of her familiarity with the district." 

At a school board meeting in late January, a woman identifying herself as a "proud graduate of the Hudson City School District" who has worked for the district for the past sixteen years questioned the need to look outside the district for a new superintendent, asserting, "The strongest leaders the district has known came right up through the ranks right here." She cited as examples Neil Howard, who retired in 1995; Jack Howe, who served as superintendent from 2009 to 2012; and Maria Suttmeier, who succeeded Howe and retired in 2022.

Today, Peter Meyer, who was a member of the school board that hired Suttmeier in 2012, sent the following letter to recipients he described as "Friends of Hudson Education." Gossips received the letter and permission to publish it here.
Dear Friends of Hudson Education,
I'm happy to say that as a result of my delay sending this message out, I can include reference to Roger Hannigan Gilson's story in last Friday's Albany Times Union: "Hudson school board faces tough choices amid huge budget gap." 
Unfortunately, Hudson City School District (HCSD, which includes the communities of Hudson, Claverack, Greenport, Stockport, Ghent, and Livingston) was already in crisis: reading and math test scores are among the lowest in the state; graduation rates are embarrassingly low; enrollment numbers are at a historic low (under 1,500 K-12 students); all amid administrative and classroom turmoil caused by having three different superintendents in just the last four years.
As a former board member, parent, longtime resident and education journalist, I am not happy about the HCSD crisis or Gilson's "huge budget gap" story, but, dear friend of education, you should be alternately alarmed, troubled or mad about what's happening at 215 Harry Howard Avenue. Gilson quotes HCSD board member Diana Howard saying, "I'm just in panic mode right now."
In fact, the board of ed has been a bit panicked for the last several years and I am attaching a suggested letter that I encourage all residents, taxpayers, and parents to send to Ms. Howard and her colleagues on the board as soon as possible--to help them get our dear school district back on the tracks.
There is still time for them to do the right thing: stop using tens of thousands of our dollars searching for yet another superintendent when we have one already working for us (i.e. can the consultants); set up a task force to figure out why two-thirds of our kids read below grade level (hint: it ain't the kids'--or their parents'--fault).
We all know it's not easy teaching kids. But we should also know that it's not impossible if we do what our boys basketball team just did: work hard practicing the skills that work to learn and win.
The board can get started today. And it can certainly be mostly done before May if they decide to do it. See the budget timeline here. We don't need another year of chaos. And we don't need another stack of invoices payable to out-of-state consultants.
Please send a version of the attached to to the Board of Education (via email or USPS) as soon as possible.
Thank you so much for your time and concern. The kids will thank you.
Peter Meyer
Founder & Executive Director

The sample letter Meyer mentions can be found here. The information about the superintendent search provided by HCSD can be found here

Of Interest

Roger Hannigan Gilson has an article of interest today in the Times Union: "Hudson Valley continues decades long population slide after brief pandemic bump." The article provides this information specifically about Columbia County:
In the northern Hudson Valley, income gains occurred even as population declined, because those moving in tended to earn more than those leaving. In Columbia County, for example, new residents between 2019 and 2021 reported average household incomes of about $166,100, compared to $68,800 for those who moved out--roughly 240% higher.
That gap narrowed in the most recent data. Households moving into Columbia County reported average incomes of $114,885, while those leaving earned $95,936.

It's Confirmed

What Gossips reported on Saturday has been confirmed. The following is a press release just received from Tiffany Martin, mayor's aide.
Mayor Ferris is pleased to announce he will be appointing Sara Black--a research scholar and Lecturer at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute--to the Planning Board. A Ph.D. in Geography, Sara conducted work funded by the National Science Foundation at the University of Georgia on gentrification and the Hudson Valley political economy. She moved to Hudson in 2012 to work in agriculture, followed by various positions in the service and retail industries. Since 2019, Sara has been active in local affordable housing initiatives. She contributed qualitative and quantitative research to Hudson’s successful $1M Anti-Displacement Learning Network grant (2019-2020), served as the Administrative Coordinator for the Hudson Community Development & Planning Agency (2021-2024), developed cooperative governance and finance models for Hudson Dots (2024), and served as the Treasurer of the Board of Commissioners for the Hudson Housing Authority (2025-2026). In addition to teaching, she works part-time as the Administrative Director for Sweet Freedom Farm. She is the proud aunt of a Montgomery C. Smith kindergartener (and one soon-to-be preschooler).

The Mayor thanks Gaby Hoffmann for her service to the Planning Board and commitment to the Hudson community.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Happening Later This Month

The History Room's current exhibit at the Hudson Area Library, The Patriots of Hudson in the Revolutionary War, continues through June 30. On Tuesday, April 28, the library is offering a workshop for teachers based on the exhibition. The workshop takes place in person at the library, 51 North Fifth Street, from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. A light dinner will be provided, and 3.0 credits are available through the Greater Capital Region Teachers Center.   


To learn more about the workshop and to register, use the QR code on the poster above. Click on the image to enlarge.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Meetings and Events in the Week Ahead

Last week was pretty slow, as meetings go. Not so this week. 
  • On Monday, April 6, the Hudson Industrial Development Agency (IDA) meets at 2:00 p.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at 1 City Centre, Suite 301, and on Zoom. Click here to join the meeting remotely.
  • Also on Monday, April 6, the Common Council Safety Committee (Police and Fire) meets at 5:30 p.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at City Hall and on Teams. Click here to join the meeting remotely. 
  • On Tuesday, April 7, the Conservation Advisory Council meets at 6:00 p.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place at City Hall and on Teams. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely.
  • On Wednesday, April 8, the Housing Trust Fund Board meets at 5:30 p.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place at City Hall and on Teams. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely.
  • On Thursday, April 9, the Common Council Legal Committee meets at 6:00 p.m. No agenda for the meeting is as yet available, but it is likely that the proposed amendment to clarify Section 325-17.1 of the city code will be discussed. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at City Hall and on Teams. Click here to join the meeting remotely.
  • On Friday, April 10, the Historic Preservation Commission meets at 10:00 a.m. The meeting is a hybrid, taking place in person at City Hall and on Teams. Click here for the link to join the meeting remotely.
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Saturday, April 4, 2026

Ear to the Ground

Gossips
has heard that Mayor Joe Ferris is appointing Sara Black to replace Gabrielle Hoffmann on the Planning Board. Black currently sits on the Hudson Housing Authority Board of Commissioners, having been appointed to that board by Mayor Kamal Johnson in June 2025. 

According to Gossips' sources, Black intends to step down from the HHA Board to take the position on the Planning Board, apparently to avoid the perception of a conflict of interest. Still it seems more than a little inappropriate for someone from the HHA Board to serve on the Planning Board at this point in time, given that HHA's ambitious proposal for redevelopment is currently the most significant project before the Planning Board. HHA and Mountco, their development partner, have been bemoaning what they perceive as a delay in the plan site review caused by the number of new members of the Planning Board. It would seem to be quite a coup for them to have one of their allies on the Planning Board to get the board up to speed and to fight their corner. 

Sara Black at a recent HHA Board meeting
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Of Interest

Bon Appetit recently published a list of "The Most Anticipated Restaurant Openings This Spring." There are eight restaurants on the list, in such places as Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, New Orleans, St. Paul, Washington, D.C., and, you guessed it, Hudson.

The Hudson restaurant featured is Pez, "a contemporary Mexican spot from Efrén Hernández," which is coming to Rivertown Lodge. Bon Appetit says this about the new restaurant:
The menu at Pez focuses on sustainable East Coast seafood presented in three sections: frio, vegetables, and caliente. Hernández is pulling out all the stops with raw bar dishes like a Jonah crab tostada with chicatana chintextle (a smoked chile spread from Oaxaca), plus hot plates like grilled dayboat scallops with smoky chipotle and seaweed butter, or a whole dry-aged Atlantic mackerel with salsa serrano and housemade sourdough flour tortillas.
Pez is expected to open sometime in May.

Correcting the Record

On March 20, Spenser Walsh reported about the Common Council Legal Committee meeting which took place on March 12. The report was mostly about the proposed amendment to clarify Section 325-17.1 of the city code. The article contained misinformation, which is explained by Donna Streitz today on imby.com"Again? Correcting the record on Colarusso's dock." 

Dust created by Colarusso's dock operations

Friday, April 3, 2026

How Much Do You Know About Olana?

Test your knowledge of all things Olana at a special trivia night celebrating Frederic Church's 200th birthday year. 


Tomorrow, Saturday, April 4, from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m., you can join The Olana Partnership staff for a rousing game of trivia. Bring a team or play on your own. Winners and runners-up will receive a special Olana prize pack. To register for Church 200 Spring Trivia Night, click here.

The State of the HCSD Budget

It's been a few weeks since Gossips posted about the Hudson City School District budget being proposed for 2026-2027, but it seems since then things have gone from bad to worse. In a few weeks. the proposed budget has gone from $61.4 million to $63.1 million. 
Roger Hannigan Gilson tells the story in today's Times Union: "Hudson school board faces tough choices amid huge budget gap." The following is quoted from that article:
Without cuts, spending is expected to rise about 7.8% for the 2026-2027 school year, a figure that would require a large increase in school taxes and for the district to spend a significant amount of its unassigned fund balance--excess money that is supposed to serve as a rainy day fund.
But the situation is worse than that. Even if the school board were to approve a budget that would raise taxes by the maximum allowable amount this year--5.8%--and spend the maximum allowable amount of the unassigned fund balance, the district would be $2.58 million short, or more than 4% of the total proposed budget of $63.1 million.
Gilson reports that Mark DePace, president of the Board of Education, asked the district to prepare plans for cutting $2.5 to $4.5 million from the proposed budget, "allowing for different options with tax increases and using the unassigned fund balance," before the next board meeting, which takes place on April 14.