With Winter Walk now behind us and the end of the year in sight, here is what's happening.
- On Monday, December 8, the Common Council holds its informal meeting 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 Tuesday, December 9, the Planning Board meets at 6:30 p.m. No agenda for the meeting has yet been published. The meeting takes place in person at City Hall. It will be livestreamed on YouTube. The link to the livestream can be found here.
- On Wednesday, December 10, the Housing Trust Fund Board 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 Thursday, December 11, the Public Works Board 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 Friday, December 12, the Historic Preservation Commission meets at 10:00 a.m. No agenda for the meeting is as yet available, but it is possible that the Galvan Foundation's plan to demolish 14 and 16 North Fourth Street in order to build an annex to the Hudson Public Hotel may be on the agenda. 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.

https://www.hudsoncommonsense.com/clearcalendar
ReplyDeleteThe status quo In Hudson this week:
One meeting every day of the week,
every meeting is at a different time of the day, every meeting has a different virtual login (different Zoom rooms and login code or Microsoft Teams),
and at least half of the meetings do not have public agendas available,
less than 5 working days in advance...
leaving the most informed person in Hudson (Gossips) to have to speculate what multi-million dollar issue or project might be on the docket.
No one would run their own company this way, and no serious City concerned about its future would keep this up.
How can anyone go to all these meetings, or plan to attend an important one, if you have a full-time job / household, and do not even know what will be discussed and decided?
Gossips, thank you for the rundown. This is genuinely helpful, and Hudson would be at a loss without this kind of summary.
Our *uncommon* question of the day, part of our 15 Ideas in 15 Days for Hudson:
What would a fixed civic calendar that cuts waste, widens participation, and restores a productive republic in miniature actually look like?
Read more here:
https://www.hudsoncommonsense.com/clearcalendar
Those are two nice historic houses that could be restored and put back into service. It seems like a waste, like the houses demolished up on N 7th St for no apparent reason. I wouldn't let anyone demolish any more houses in Hudson unless they were decayed beyond an ability to restore them, which is a very high bar as even a decaying decrepit house can be recovered up to a point.
ReplyDeleteAgree with that!
ReplyDeleteWhich meeting do you get to voice no more pilots for developers?
For all the bougie stuff we have here why will we the few remaining residents drown in property taxes?