Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Public Hearing Tomorrow

Tomorrow morning, Wednesday, March 26, the Hudson Industrial Development Agency (IDA) holds a public hearing on 75 North Seventh Street. The hearing takes place at 9:30 a.m. in person at 1 City Centre, Suite 301, and on Zoom. Gossips now has the link to the Zoom meeting. Click here to access the meeting remotely.


The proposed building will have 75 units: 15 reserved for households with incomes of less than 80 percent of the AMI (area median income); 5 units for households with incomes of less than 130 percent of the AMI; the rest of the units (55) will be market rate. The application for a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) and other tax abatements submitted to the IDA by Galvan Initiatives Foundation can be found here. The financial review done by BJH Advisors can be found here.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

PSA: City Website

Although the fate of the domain cityofhudson.org is unknown, you can still access the City of Hudson website by using hudsonny.gov

Meanwhile, on Instagram, Mark Allen muses about who might have acquired the lapsed cityofhudson.org.


I can tell you with certainty it was not The Gossips of Rivertown.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

Monday, March 24, 2025

WTF?!

Tonight, I thought I would check the City of Hudson website to see if the Zoom link for Wednesday's IDA public hearing was now available, as I was told it would be. When I clicked on cityofhudson.org, this is what I got.


You gotta wonder if this sort of thing would happen if we had a city manager.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

Breaking News

It is not known what inspired the change--if it was public criticism or the fact that one of the councilmembers needs to be in Colorado on that day--but it was announced this morning that the Common Council public hearing on the Citizens' Initiative for Charter Change, scheduled for Monday, March 31, at 6:00 p.m., will now be a hybrid meeting, taking place in person at City Hall and on Microsoft Teams. To confirm this is true, click here.

COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Meetings and Events in the Week Ahead

In the past week, we experienced the first day of spring and what seemed like the first spring day. Here is what's happening this week.
  • On Tuesday, March 25, the Common Council ad hoc Parking Study Committee meets at 6:00 p.m. Chances are the meeting will provide more information about the rollout of the kiosks coming to Warren Street above Eighth Street and below Third Street. 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 26, the Hudson Industrial Development Agency (IDA) holds a public hearing on 75 North Seventh Street at 9:30 a.m. The application for a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) and other tax abatements submitted to the IDA by Galvan Initiatives Foundation can be found here. The financial review done by BJH Advisors can be found here. The hearing takes place at 1 City Centre, Suite 301. It will also be accessible on Zoom, but the link to the Zoom meeting has not been published on the city website. When the link is available, Gossips will share it.
  • On Thursday, March 27, Hudson Community Development & Planning Agency (HCDPA) meets at 5:00 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 Friday, March 28, the Historic Preservation Commission meets at 10:00 a.m. The meeting includes two public hearings: (1) on the accessory dwelling unit (ADU) proposed for the rear of 123 Union Street; and (2) on the alterations proposed for 537 Warren Street, formerly Mexican Radio. 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. 
COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

Another Proposal for Partition Street

The westernmost block of Partition Street, from Second Street to Front Street, is seeing a lot of proposed development. Gossips has been covering proposal for an accessory dwelling unit behind 123 Union Street and the proposal to build an addition and an accessory building behind 105 Union Street. Both these projects have been before the Historic Preservation Commission, but there is a third project that would have a significant impact on the character of the street and the immediate neighborhood being proposed for 9 Partition Street.

The proposal, which is now before the Zoning Board of Appeals, is to demolish this little building and construct in its place a three-story building--garage at the bottom, two floors of living space above.


These renderings, which are part of the application before the ZBA, show the building from different perspectives, which are juxtaposed here with Google images of (more or less) the same settings.


The proposed building will occupy 100 percent of the lot and will require nine variances--for lot area and lot coverage, depth and width, front yard, side yards, rear yard, and building height. Chip Bohl, the architect for the project (who served previously as the architect member of the Historic Preservation Commission), argued that Partition Street is a street not an alley. Hence, it is appropriate to build a house there. In this, he is of like mind with Walter Chatham, architect for the ADU proposed for Partition Street behind 123 Union Street, who envisions Partition as "a street of nice little houses."

Partition Street is actually the oldest street in Hudson, predating the arrival of the Proprietors, the founders of Hudson. It was originally known as "waggon-way," because it was the road from the farms in the east to the wharves of Claverack Landing on the river. It got the name Partition Street because it was the boundary between the lands of two of Jan Franse Van Hoesen's heirs, Jan Franse being the European who in 1662 purchased the land on which Hudson was founded from the Mohicans. Despite the name Partition Street, it has the same status as the alleys--Cherry Alley, Prison Alley, Long Alley, Rope Alley--in the grid pattern laid out by the Proprietors, and over time, Partition Street has developed like an alley, with carriage houses, garages, and outbuildings associated with the houses on south side of Union Street and the north side of Allen Street.

Needless to say, neighbors in the vicinity of 9 Partition Street are not happy about what is being proposed. They predict, justifiably, that the building proposed will reduce the quality of life for nearby neighbors, both during construction and after. In a letter submitted to the ZBA, a resident of lower Union Street argues, "Zoning codes are intended to define and unify neighborhoods and should only be bypassed in unique circumstances when they have little or no impact."   

Neighbors have expressed concern about the number of zoning code restrictions that have to be ignored for this structure and about the precedent it would set. They also object that the proposed building is out of character with its setting, both in design and use. Residents of lower Union Street, whose properties back up on Partition Street, have voiced concern about the negative impact the proposed building will have on their quality of life and on the value of their property. In a letter to the ZBA, one Union Street resident had this to say:
The scale of the proposed structure would obliterate my privacy, light, and view. The multiple windows of the proposed house would look directly into my whole yard, back porch, kitchen, bathroom, dining room, and bedroom windows. When we bought our home, it was marketed as having, "Stunning views of the mountains and river. High ceilings, flooded with light and floor-to-ceiling windows . . . ," and we bought it for those, among other, reasons. We did our due diligence to inquire about the zoning laws while considering the purchase so we could rest easy knowing the view would not be taken away by a large building. From the back of our house, we watch the Amtrak trains coming into and out of the station, the foliage changes on Mt. Merino, and evening sunsets over the Catskills. If this project is allowed to be built, that will no longer be the case as the view, privacy, and light we now enjoy will be severely, if not completely, compromised by a house of this size.
The letter writer provided her own renderings, showing how the proposed building would obscure the view from her home. 




She also included a rendering that shows how the view from the patio at the Half Moon would be impacted.


At Wednesday's meeting, the ZBA acknowledged that they had never approved 100 percent lot coverage. They decided to keep the public hearing open so that the applicant might submit revised plans.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Beware Botanical Vandals

Last year, in June, Gossips reported about the savage "pruning" of the smoke bush at 446 Warren Street: "A Different Kind of Vandalism." 


Today, a resident of the 100 block of Warren Street told Gossips she discovered (and foiled) two men trying to steal bamboo from her backyard. They were equipped with an axe and a variety of clippers. According to the would-be victim of today's attempted vandalism, one of the men looked very much like one of the men captured by security cameras in last year's smoke bush mutilation, and the vehicle involved was a dark SUV similar to the one in the smoke bush incident. 

Gossips shares the following warning: "Local people should keep their eyes open if they have smoke trees or other valuable/unusual shrubs on their property." It is speculated that the botanical vandals may be selling the clippings to designers in the New York City's floral district.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CAROLE OSTERINK

Friday, March 21, 2025

Mark Your Calendars

A public hearing on the petition for charter change has been scheduled for Monday, March 31, at 6:00 p.m. The hearing, which is being held by the Common Council, will be in person only at City Hall. To review the petition for charter change that has been submitted to the Common Council, click here.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Money for Festivals and Events

Every year, the City allocates a sum money--in recent years, it's been $30,000--to support "events and projects that encourage the promotion of Hudson as a destination for overnight and day-trip visitors." 

Photo: David McIntyre | Chronogram
The Common Council Finance Committee, which decides how the money will be divvyed up, is now accepting applications for funding. To be eligible, the event must take place between May and December 2025. The maximum award for any project is $5,000. Requests for amounts greater than this will not be considered. Applications are due by Monday, April 14, at 5:00 p.m. Applications must be submitted online, using the form found here

To see what events were funded last year, click here. Questions about the application process can be addressed to Rich Volo, chair of the Finance Committee, at richvolo@cityofhudson.org.

Rally for Ukraine

On Saturday, March 22, at 11:00 a.m., there will be a rally in the Public Square, a.k.a. Seventh Street Park, in support of Ukraine's independence. 

  
On February 28, the U.S. voted against a United Nations resolution condemning Moscow's actions and supporting Ukraine's territorial integrity. In doing so, the U.S. voted with Russia, North Korea, and Belarus and not with our European allies. This shocking vote was a wakeup call for those invested in maintaining the world order established with the formation of NATO in 1949, which has largely maintained peace in our lifetimes. The rally on Saturday calls on the U.S. government to continue its support for Ukraine in its struggle to resist Russia's illegal invasion of its country.

Speakers at the rally will include Malcolm Nance, a national security expert who has been a contributor to MSNBC and who served in the Ukrainian Army's International Legion. Other speakers will be members of the local Ukrainian-American community and representatives of groups supporting Ukraine.

The rally is sponsored by IndivisibleColumbiaNY, Columbia County Democratic Committee, Medical Relief for Ukraine, Ukraine Solidarity Capital District, and THIRD ACT Upstate New York.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Of Interest

Since just about everyone Hudson lives in an old house, this may be of interest. The iconic series This Old House is coming to Radio Catskill (WJFF 90.5 FM) with a new weekly show called This Old House Radio Hour. The following is quoted from a press release:

Starting Sunday, March 23, Radio Catskill brings a beloved staple of home improvement to the airwaves with This Old House Radio Hour, airing at 7 a.m. every Sunday. For over four decades, This Old House has been America's go-to source for expert advice on home improvement, craftsmanship, and restoration. Now, listeners can tune in for a weekly hour-long dive into the spirit of do-it-yourself culture, inspiring people of all skill levels to take on projects big and small.
Jenn Largesse, longtime This Old House personality and editor, will serve as host of This Old House Radio Hour. In addition, episodes will feature fan-favorite talent from This Old House, including general contractor Zack Dettmore and plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, as well as a new generation of craftspeople.
Recurring segments include:
    • Ask This Old House: Have a question about plumbing, electrical work, roofing, or landscaping? This Old House experts will tackle real listener queries, solving household mysteries and offering step-by-step advice.
    • My Old House: Prominent figures like American Pickers' Mike Wolfe, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, musician Rosanne Cash, filmmaker Ken Burns, and actor Alessandro Nivola share heartfelt stories about the homes that shaped their lives.
    • Save This Old House: In collaboration with Ethan and Elizabeth Finkelstein, whose popular Cheap Old Houses social accounts boast over three million combined followers, listeners explore the potential of historic properties—some available for as little as $10—and debate what it takes to bring them back to life.
    • What's That Sound?: A fun, interactive game where listeners guess the sound of a tool or job site activity for a chance to win prizes.
    • A Simple Fix: Quick, simple, and actionable solutions for common household problems such as clogged drains, squeaky hinges and fridge doors. . . .
Learn more at www.thisoldhouse.com/radiohour.