Saturday, July 30, 2022
Friday, July 29, 2022
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 19 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is 4 fewer than yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 23 county residents have recovered from the virus. There are 3 fewer county residents hospitalized with COVID today than yesterday, but the number in the ICU remains the same. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since Monday, July 25.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 4 new cases of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,330, and the number of active cases was 24. There were 27 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 2 were hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
On the Topic of Street Furniture
It's no secret that the street furniture Arterial is proposing for the BRIDGE District is not beloved by Gossips readers or any number of other people in Hudson. Critics have not been shy about expressing their opinion that the wood and metal benches look like something more appropriate to a shopping mall in New Jersey than the streets of a city known for its historic architecture, but that message seems not to have reached the folks at Arterial or the decision makers in City Hall.
In February, James Ribaudo of Arterial told the Historic Preservation Commission that, at the suggestion of someone he did not identify, they now planned to use the Central Park settee, the bench design being used at Promenade Hill, in locations along Front Street.
Recently, the Hudson Dog Park purchased benches for its new pergola. The benches are metal, they have a clean and handsome design, and they are comfortable. Although not exactly the same, they are reminiscent of the benches in Henry Hudson Riverfront Park, and they are available in different lengths, with and without a back rest.
The benches at the dog park made me wonder why similar benches could not be used as street furniture instead of the suburban-looking stuff Arterial was proposing. Speaking to the HPC in February, Ribaudo defended their choice of benches by saying they wanted "the flexibility of having some benches with backs, some benches without backs, and smaller seats for just one person." It seems the only thing that might be unique to the design proposed by Arterial is that it is available in a backless bench that seats only one person. It wasn't clear why they thought a bench for one, or a "stool," was so desirable. At the February meeting, HPC member John Schobel suggested that all the street furniture didn't have to match and the "stool" could be of a different design.
It was decided then that Ribaudo would work "offline" with members of the HPC on the design of the benches. In the intervening months, there has been no evidence that this has been happening. In an effort to bring the public into the conversation, Gossips has launched a simple poll, which asks a single question: "Which furniture would you prefer to see on the streets of Hudson?" The options are these:
Option 1 is the street furniture Arterial has proposed. Option 2 is something similar to what is now in riverfront park and the Hudson Dog Park. You can access the poll by clicking here. The results will be shared with Arterial, the mayor's office, and the HPC.
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Thursday, July 28, 2022
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 29 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is 9 more than yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 20 county residents have recovered from the virus. There are 2 more county residents hospitalized with COVID-19 today than yesterday, and the number in the ICU remains the same. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since Monday, July 25.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 4 new cases of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,326, and the number of active cases was 31. There were 26 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
The Sidewalks of Hudson
The Common Council Sidewalk Committee met earlier this week. Having spent the better part of a year crafting the letter that went out to all property owners with the June water bills, reminding them that they were responsible for the maintenance and repair of the sidewalk adjacent to their property, the committee is now ready to focus on a sidewalk law that would somehow make the care and keeping of sidewalks a shared responsibility.
Just before that meeting, I came upon this article in Strong Towns: "Doing the Math on Sidewalks." It's a short article and well worth reading. It gives expression to a lot of the issues Hudson is facing today with its sidewalks. For example, there is this paragraph:
Once upon a time, a city had to pay for everything itself. No federal or state grants, and no borrowing. Every amenity had to be paid for up front. The same financial arrangement applied to the maintenance of those amenities. Cash up front, or your sidewalks would be left to crumble. In this environment, cities and towns were conservative. They didn't build sidewalks until they knew they had enough money to build and maintain them in perpetuity.
Thinking of Hudson in light of this paragraph, it is clear that the City solved the problem of funding maintenance in perpetuity by simply shifting the responsibility to individual property owners, and as a consequence we have ended up with the patchwork of sidewalks we have today. It is quite likely that at one time the central part of the city, excluding the Boulevards and the adjacent neighborhoods off Harry Howard Avenue, which were developed at a time when the automobile was making sidewalks less valued, had sidewalks uniformly paved with slabs of bluestone. Here and there throughout the city that bluestone still survives, in varying states of repair.
Curious to know when the bluestone sidewalks first appeared in Hudson and how the installation was financed, I consulted the minutes of the Common Council, all available online at the City of Hudson website. The minutes are not searchable, so I decided to start with 1867, two years after the Civil War ended and a bit of a postwar economic boom was fueling some new development in Hudson. Perhaps this was a year that saw the installation of some of the bluestone sidewalks in Hudson.
I was wrong, but reading the Council minutes for that year yielded some interesting information. In 1867, there was a standing committee on the Common Council called the Street Committee, and sidewalks were in the purview of this committee. The following excerpt is from a meeting that took place in October 1867 and reveals that property owners at this time in Hudson history could petition the Council for sidewalks.
The Mayor from the Street Committee to which was referred the petition of H. Macy and others for a sidewalk on the south side of Union st., westerly of the lot of Hiram Macy, reported in favor of deferring the work until another season.
The Hudson city directory for 1866-1867 indicates that Hiram Macy lived at 309 Union Street, which, became 547 Union Street after all the house numbers were changed to implement 100 blocks in 1889. (The mayor at the time was J. W. Hoysradt, who then lived at 59 Allen Street.)
The previous excerpt suggests that Union Street from Sixth Street west to some undefined point, possibly as far as the courthouse, did not have sidewalks in 1867, but the next excerpt, also from October 1867, suggests that there were sidewalks on Fourth Street in 1867 and had been for long enough for the sidewalks to require some repair.
Resolved, That the Street Committee are hereby authorized to have and cause the side-walks from Warren-street to Long Alley, on the westerly side of Fourth street to be re-laid and re-paved under their direction, and in case of a refusal of lot owners to comply with this resolution, then that said Committee be authorized and directed to present an Ordinance for the re-laying and repaving of said side-walks, at the Regular Meeting of the Common Council; the same to be re-laid and re-paved on a grade to be fixed and given by the City Surveyor.
The terms re-laid and re-paved suggest the sidewalks in question were bluestone. It is not clear from the previous excerpt what constituted refusal to comply, but following excerpt clarifies what was expected from property owners if the Street Committee deemed their sidewalk in need of repair.
Resolved, That the side-walk on the easterly side of City Hall Place, between Warren street and Cherry Alley, also the side-walk on Warren street in front of lot now occupied by Abram Harris be re-paved and repaired under the direction of the Street Committee, and in case of a refusal of the owners of said lots so to repair and repave, then the Street Committee be and are hereby directed to report by Ordinance at the next Regular Meeting of the Council for such repairing and repaving, and that the Clerk be directed to serve the necessary action on such lot owners.
The final excerpt, from the minutes for a Council meeting in November 1867, clarifies that, although we are assuming the sidewalks being relaid and repaved were bluestone, not all the sidewalks in Hudson in 1867 were bluestone.
Resolved, That the plank sidewalk on the easterly side of Fifth street be repaired and relaid under the direction of the Street Committee, and that the Clerk cause copies of this resolution to be served on the several lot owners.
The Common Council minutes from 1867 provide a picture of a vigilant Street Committee, one that seems to have been unusually active in months of October and November identifying sidewalks in need to repair and getting the Council to pass resolutions directing property owners to fix them. Obviously that kind of vigilance ceased sometime in the ensuing century and a half, and today's Council is trying to make up for lost time.
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Wednesday, July 27, 2022
Another Isherwood
I thought I'd spotted this sculpture by Jon Isherwood on the truck delivering the sculptures to Hudson yesterday, and I was right. But I was wrong in assuming it would be installed in Courthouse Square.
Photo: West Side Rag |
The exhibition of Isherwood sculptures in Hudson is part of this year's The Hudson Eye, THE2022, the ten-day artist-driven festival that begins on August 26.
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COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 18 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is 10 more than yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 8 county residents have recovered from the virus. The number of county residents hospitalized with COVID-19 and in the ICU remains the same as yesterday. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since Monday.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 9 new cases of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,322, and the number of active cases was 31. There were 21 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
About the Proprietors
The founders of Hudson called themselves "the Proprietors," and it always seemed there was something unique to Hudson about that particular application of the term. That turns out not to be true.
A reader who is spending a few days in Nantucket, where many of Hudson's Proprietors came from, sent me this picture of the sign for a restaurant there.
As it happens, Nantucket had its own Proprietors, more than a century before Hudson came to be, and the role of the Proprietors there and here was quite similar. Here's story of Nantucket's founding as told on the Nantucket Historical Association website.
In 1659, Thomas Mayhew, a Puritan leader, purchased a portion of Nantucket directly from the Wampanoags who inhabited the island. Mayhew, in turn, sold the island to a group of nine English settlers from Massachusetts and New Hampshire who wanted to develop their own community outside the boundaries of Puritan control. Among the buyers were Thomas Macy, Mayhew's cousin, and Tristram Coffin, father of the Coffin family in America. This group of families became the "original proprietors" of Nantucket.
Compare the story of Hudson's beginnings. The land was purchased from the Mohicans in 1662 by Jan Frans Van Hoesen. More than a century later, Van Hoesen's descendants sold the land on which Hudson is situated to a group, primarily from Nantucket, who called themselves "the Proprietors." Among Hudson's Proprietors are two with the same surnames as some of the Nantucket Proprietors: Reuben Macy and Alexander Coffin.
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Hudson in 1985
The City of Hudson was incorporated on April 22, 1785. On April 7 of that year, The Gazette, the newspaper from which the Register-Star traces its roots, began publication.
The bicentennial issue of the Register-Star, published on April 8, 1985, celebrating its own 200th anniversary not the city's, can now to viewed in its entirety online, on the Hudson Area Library's page at nyheritage.org.
This historic issue of the Register-Star is definitely worth perusing. (Yes, that's a congratulatory letter from Ronald Reagan, then President of the United States, reproduced on the front page.) The first section provides a snapshot of life in Hudson and the surrounding area in 1985. The later sections (this paper was 34 pages long) provide a fascinating history of journalism in Hudson. Click here to start exploring.
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Tuesday, July 26, 2022
Public Art in Hudson: Following Up
Earlier today, Gossips published pictures taken by a reader of work by sculptor Jon Isherwood being unloaded at the Columbia County Courthouse: "Public Art in Hudson." I was wrong in believing there was only one sculpture; there are two. But I was correct in speculating that the sculpture was from the exhibition Broadway Blooms: Jon Isherwood on Broadway.
The sculpture now installed in Courthouse Square along Union Street near East Court Street is called "Given and Received." In Broadway Blooms, it was exhibited at Broadway and 96th Street.
Photo: Broadway Mall Association |
The sculpture now installed in the square along West Court Street is called "As Always Yours." In the exhibition on the Upper West Side, it was installed at Broadway and 117th Street.
Photo: Broadway Mall Association |
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Special Meeting Tomorrow
Tomorrow, Wednesday, July 27, the Planning Board is holding a special meeting at 6:35 p.m. The purpose of the meeting is to review and select a consulting engineer with which to enter into a master service agreement. The meeting will take place virtually. Click here to join the meeting.
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 19 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is 10 fewer than yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 29 county residents have recovered from the virus. There are 2 fewer county residents hospitalized with COVID-19 today than yesterday, but the number in the ICU remains the same. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since yesterday, July 25.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 10 new cases of COVID-19 after a two-day weekend. The total number of cases was 4,313, and the number of active cases was 22. There were 16 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
Public Art in Hudson
Earlier today, a reader sent me a picture of a Jon Isherwood sculpture being unloaded at courthouse square, along with a picture of Isherwood himself at the site along West Court Street.
Gossips' guess is that this is one of the Isherwood sculptures from Broadway Blooms: Jon Isherwood on Broadway, a public art exhibition installed on the Upper West Side, in the malls on Broadway between 72nd Street and 157th Street. That exhibition was in place until July 15.
Photo: West Side Rag |
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Gratitude to Peter Meyer for providing the photographs
Yesterday's HCDPA Meeting
Hudson Community Development and Planning Agency (HCDPA) held a special meeting yesterday, the principal purpose of which was to authorize a contract with BFJ Planning to serve as consultants for the Housing Trust Fund. Before the vote was taken to authorize the contract, Mayor Kamal Johnson called it a "very important contract," explaining that BFJ "offered services to the City that Michelle [Housing Justice Director] cannot provide." Although Johnson spoke of seven tasks, only four appear to be defined in the contract. They are:
Task 1 BFJ will assist the Housing Justice Director in analyzing the financial feasibility of an inclusionary zoning or set-aside policy by looking at the baseline feasibility of multifamily development under the Section 325-28.2G Affordable Housing Bonus [in the city code].
Task 2 BFJ will look at the City's existing Vacant Buildings law and make suggestions on potential changes based upon best practices from other municipalities around the country. Potential fees from the vacancy law could be used to provide revenue for the Hudson Housing Trust Fund.
Task 3 Community Land Trusts provide an instrument for creating long-term affordability for affordable housing ownership opportunities. BFJ will provide an outline for a governance structures [sic] based upon best practices for community land trust that could help the City to create permanently affordable housing that could be used in the analysis of the five multifamily rental sites identified as part of the 2021 Affordable Housing Development Plan.
Task 4 BFJ will look at potential for any temporary affordable housing overlays in the interim while the City pursues a new comprehensive plan and zoning code update.
According to the contract, the fee for these services is $11,000, which will come from the $1 million Anti-Displacement Learning Network grant.
After the vote was taken to authorize the contract, Christine Chale, HCDPA legal counsel, said there have been discussions with the Hudson Housing Authority about an agreement that would allow HHA to purchase property owned by HCDPA. Chale reported that an agreement has been drafted and that agreement would be an agenda item for HCDPA's August 9 meeting.
Happening This Weekend
This Saturday, July 30, the Hudson Festival Orchestra (HFO) presents Hudson in Concert: A Community Celebration.
The free event takes place from 4:00 to 9:00 p.m. in Henry Hudson Riverfront Park. Gwen Gould, founder and artistic director of HFO, says of the event, "I believe that music and culture can bridge divides and build community. I envision this as an annual musical event bringing area residents together through a live musical celebration of our shared American and diverse cultural heritages in a glorious natural setting on the Hudson River!"
The program for the afternoon and evening is in two parts. At 4:00 p.m., there will be "Opening Acts" in the gazebo, which will include:
- Trio Candela playing lively traditional Latin music from around world
- Bangladeshi Songs sung by Haroon and Valina Rashid
- Tony Kieraldo, pianist and composer, performing his Hudson Ragtime Piano Suite
During the intermission, children are invited to join "The Teddy Bears' Picnic" parade, following a larger-than-life teddy bear (a brave volunteer in a bear costume) to a picnic blanket where there will be treats for all.
To express solidarity with Ukraine, the second half of the concert will begin with the Ukrainian National Anthem. Click here to see the entire program for Saturday's Hudson in Concert event.
The Hudson Festival Orchestra is supported in part by CREATE Council on
the Arts, Alexander & Marjorie Hover Foundation, Bank of Greene County Charitable Foundation, Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, Broadway Cares, Churchtown Dairy, Columbia County Tourism, Columbia Memorial Hospital, Francis Greenburger Charitable Fund, HRBT Foundation, Hudson Business Coalition, Hudson Hall, J. M. Kaplan Fund, The Spark of Hudson, and corporate and individual donors from across the region.
Monday, July 25, 2022
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. There has been another death from COVID-19, bringing the total deaths to 150. Since Friday, there have been 31 new cases of the disease. The number of active cases being reported today is 2 fewer than on Friday, from which it can be inferred that, since Friday, 32 county residents have recovered from the virus. There is 1 fewer county resident hospitalized with COVID-19 today than on Friday, but the number in the ICU remains the same.
A year ago, July 25 was a Sunday, and the CCDOH did not report COVID numbers. On the previous Friday, July 23, the CCDOH reported 5 new cases of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,303, and the number of active cases was 15. There were 24 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths attributed to COVID-19 in Columbia County at this time last year was 96.
New Development at the Alger House
Part of the proposal for the restoration of the Charles Alger House, at 59 Allen Street, was stuccoing the house, to create an Ashlar stone effect as appears in this engraving of the house, found on an 1858 map of Columbia County.
Today, I noticed that, behind the netting that enshrouds the house, the stuccoing has been going forward.
Amend Your Calendars
Last week, Gossips announced that NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation was going to do a Zoom presentation of the plans for the renovation of the Hudson State Boat Launch on Wednesday, August 3. That presentation has been rescheduled. The new date is Thursday, August 11. Gossips will provide the link to the meeting as soon as it is available.
Meetings and Events in the Week Ahead
The weather forecast for the week promises a minor relief from the beastly heat and a fair amount of rain. In terms of meetings in the final days of July, there's not much happening.
- On Monday, July 25, the Hudson Community Development and Planning Agency (HCDPA) holds a special meeting at 12:30 p.m. The agenda for the meeting can be found here. The principal business of the meeting is to approve paying the bills and authorize a contract with BFJ Planning, the group that did Hudson's LWRP (Local Waterfront Revitalization Program) more than a decade ago, to do consulting for the Housing Trust Fund. The meeting takes place virtually. Click here to access the meeting.
- At 5:00 p.m. on Monday, July 25, the ad hoc Sidewalks Committee holds its monthly meeting. The meeting is a hybrid--taking place in person at City Hall and on Zoom. Click here to join the meeting remotely.
- On Tuesday, July 26, Peter Frank, Kate Treacy, Hillary France, and Lucas Krump are hosting a meet and greet for Josh Riley, congressional candidate in the newly drawn NY-19. The event takes place from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. at WYLDE Hudson, 35 South Third Street. To attend, RSVP to katethedem@gmail.com.
- On Wednesday, July 27, from 5:00 p.m. until sunset, it's Waterfront Wednesdays. This week, the sloop Clearwater will be in Hudson. Performing are Ujima Drum Circle at 5:30 p.m., Kyle Marshall Choreography at 7:00 p.m., and Heard World Jazz Band at 8:00 p.m. Also this Wednesday, the team from the Hudson Valley Collaborative and eDesign Dynamics will at the waterfront to exhibit their latest design for waterfront park and gather input.
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Sunday, July 24, 2022
An Early Proposed "Formula Structure"
This morning, I went down to the train station to check out the progress on the reconstruction of the red barn that is to become The Caboose, which will house a wine shop, a makers' market, and an event space.
Hudsonians should be grateful to that Planning Commission of yesteryear. Had it not been for its vision and persistence, there would be today, midway between The Wick Hotel and the culinary native garden of The Caboose, a blue and white metal building possibly sporting the blue and white CSX logo.
Saturday, July 23, 2022
Down at the Dog Park
Since June 1, the large dog section of the Hudson Dog Park has been closed for improvements and repairs.
On Thursday, despite the heat, dogs and their humans gathered to celebrate the reopening of the park, with doggie ice cream and sparkling cider.
The project was financed by a $5,000 "Bark for Your Park®" grant from PetSafe®, which the Hudson Dog Park won last fall in a national competition. That $5,000 was matched by a generous anonymous donor, making a total of $10,000 to realize the project. Gratitude goes to the City of Hudson for allowing twelve of the concrete blocks, not needed this year on Warren Street, to be repurposed at the dog park and to the Department of Public Works for installing them there.
The Hudson Dog Park, located at 121 North Second Street, is a public-private partnership. It is situated on land owned by the City of Hudson, but it was built with $14,000 raised by the community. The Department of Public Works mows the lawn, hauls away the trash, and plows the driveway and parking lot in winter, but all other expenses for maintaining and improving the dog park are paid for by contributions from users and supporters of the dog park. Last year, $2,500 was raised to bring water to the dog park.
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Friday, July 22, 2022
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 13 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is 11 more than yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 2 county residents have recovered from the virus. There is 1 more county resident hospitalized with COVID-19 today than yesterday, and the number in the ICU remains the same. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since July 5.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 2 new cases of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,298, and the number of active cases was 12. There were 21 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
Wealth in Hudson
Yesterday, a reader alerted me to an article in MoneyPop titled "These Small Towns Have a Lot of Millionaires Living Within Their Borders." Notwithstanding Hudson is a small city not a town, we made the list, with a "total millionaire density of 7.2%."
The paragraphs about Hudson begin with this statement: "In Hudson, New York, there are 25,243 households and 1,810 of them have a millionaire family living inside." Huh? Hudson's population is fewer than 6,000. Every man, woman, and child in Hudson would have to maintain at least four households for there to be 25,243.
In truth, Hudson has only 2,606 households, and the article provides no information about how many of those households are millionaire families. What MoneyPop is calling Hudson is actually all of Columbia County.
Thursday, July 21, 2022
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 8 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is the same as yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 8 county residents have recovered from the virus. There is 1 more county resident hospitalized with COVID-19 today than yesterday, but the number in the ICU remains the same. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since July 5.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 1 new case of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,296, and the number of active cases was 13. There were 15 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
Wednesday, July 20, 2022
Now What?
Yesterday, Gossips published a post about the law prohibiting "formula retail uses," in other words, chain businesses, in Hudson. A formula retail use is defined in the law as "a type of retail sales or service activity or retail sales or service establishment that has four or more other retail sales establishments in operation."
Since publishing that post, Gossips learned that Westerlind opened its fourth location in Kingston last weekend. Its other locations are in Manhattan, Great Barrington, and Millertown. Here are notices about the opening in Kingston that were posted on Instagram.
With its Kingston location, Westerlind becomes, by the definition given in our city code, a formula retail use, which is prohibited in Hudson. Yet its logo appears on 417 Warren Street with the message "Coming Soon."
It will be interesting to see what the City does about this. Perhaps, it will be nothing. For at least fifty years, Hudson has had this law on the books:
§ 188-27 Fortune-telling prohibited.
No person shall use or pretend to use or have any skill in physiognomy, palmistry or like crafty science, or pretend to tell destinies or fortunes.
The law notwithstanding, a business claiming to do exactly what the law prohibits has been operating at 134 Warren Street since the beginning of 2021.
COVID-19 Update
The Columbia County Department of Health has released its numbers for today. Since yesterday, there have been 22 new cases of COVID-19. The number of active cases being reported today is 11 more than yesterday, from which it can be inferred that, since yesterday, 11 county residents have recovered from the virus. The number of county residents hospitalized and in the ICU has not changed since yesterday. There has not been a death from COVID-19 reported in Columbia County since July 5.
A year ago today, the CCDOH reported 6 new cases of COVID-19. The total number of cases was 4,295, and the number of active cases was 14. There were 9 county residents in mandatory quarantine, 1 was hospitalized, and 0 were in the ICU. The total number of deaths in Columbia County attributed to COVID-19 at this time last year was 96.
Update on the Parking Study
In May, Gossips reported there had been three responses to the RPI for a Parking Improvement Feasibility Study, only one of which had a price tag that was within the City's means. Last month, the Common Council passed a resolution authorizing the mayor to execute a contract with Fishbeck, a Michigan firm headquartered in Grand Rapids, which was the group whose price--$35,000--matched the City's budget.
Yesterday, the Hudson Business Coalition (HBCi) reported that, last week, representatives from HBCi and its member businesses had participated in stakeholder interviews with a consultant from Fishbeck. The report explains: "We provided input on the needs, challenges, and opportunities regarding parking and intra-city transport that are most relevant to Hudson business owners, as well as residents and visitors." The entire report from HBCi can be found here.
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