Mid Hudson Times Jan. 10 2018 | Page 3

3 Mid Hudson Times, Wednesday, January 10, 2018 of service on city council Meyers named New Windsor justice George Meyers takes the oath of office at New Windsor Town Hall. Continued from page 1 Photo provided Regina Angelo greets then-First Lady Hillary Clinton and Congressman Maurice Hinchey in Newburgh in 2000. peace through the planting of flowers.” Angelo became a lead organizer of the Memorial Day Parade and the annual Christmas Tree lighting. She led community cleanups and was instrumental in the creation of the International Waterfront Festival, now almost 30 years old. “It is truly a legacy of selfless love for the City of Newburgh, which you’ve always called home,” said Brian Denniston, reading a letter from former Mayor Nick Valentine. “Regina knows that in a great city you have to have a Memorial Day Parade, you have to have a Christmas tree,” said city Councilman Jonathan Jacobson. Angelo was named deputy mayor and served on the boards of the local chapter of the NAACP, the Downing Park Planning Committee, the Friends of the State Historic Sites of the Hudson Highlands, the arts and culture non-profit Trestle Inc. and others. “The list goes on and on,” Gamma said Sunday. As city councilwoman, Angelo greeted First Lady Hillary Clinton when she came to Newburgh in 1998 and again in 2000. That same year, Angelo and a group of friends opened the shop Landmark Collectibles on Liberty Street. “We started out as 10 ambitious women,” Angelo said. “We were there to save the area.” Former Mayor Andrew Marino noted that Angelo dared to open a business on Liberty Street, “when no one else would go there,” he said. “You made Liberty Street so much of what it is.” Recognized by city and state “I watched how humble you are, how graceful you are,” said City Councilwoman Hillary Rayford, who said she was inspired by Angelo. “On behalf of the City of Newburgh and this entire community, and all who have enjoyed your signature events, we thank you,” Rayford said, reading a proclamation from the city. Angelo was bestowed a service award from the Orange County Legislature. Angelo was also honored by state Assemblyman Frank Skartados and state Senator Bill Larkin, who presented her with a joint proclamation from both houses of state government, as well as a letter from Governor Andrew Cuomo. “For nearly a half a century, your extensive, dynamic presence throughout Newburgh has been an invaluable resource to your fellow residents and provided a model of civic commitment to countless others across the city, the region and the state... you have set a gold service for others to follow and established a legacy of service that will continue to inspire us all,” Larkin said, reading Cuomo’s letter. Larkin later recounted one year when Angelo led the Christmas tree lighting on a cold day. “I said, ‘It’s cold,’’’ Larkin told the audience. “She said, ‘But doesn’t your heart feel better that people will come by and watch the tree?’” and incumbent town Justice Richard Thorpe each drew 2,723 votes, according to the Orange County Board of Elections. Justice Noreen Calderin was reelected to the other open town-justice seat. Meyers ran on Republican and Conservative lines. Before retiring last February, he worked for the Orange County Sheriff’s Office and the New Windsor Police Department, where he served for 23 years. Meyers’ father served as Town of New Windsor supervisor in the 1990s and 2000s. City’s new water plant goes online Continued from page 1 of clean water per day. “We designed this system to treat the contaminants of concerns in Lake Washington, compounds associated with fire-fighting foams and contamination coming from the Stewart Air National Guard Base,” he said. PFOS and a host of perfluorinated chemicals were discovered in high levels at the air base in 2016. State testing revealed the chemical traveled from the air base and into local water bodies, eventually making its way into Washington Lake, the city’s main drinking-water reservoir. PFOS was found in the lake ranging in levels of 140 to 170 parts per trillion in the spring of 2016. With assistance from the state, the city switched to the Catskill Aqueduct as a water source. In addition to paying for the water, the state paid to build the new water treatment plant, capable of filtering out any perfluorinated chemicals still leeching from the airbase. “This system can handle anything that comes down that watershed,” Brand said, “We (have) a high level of confidence this system will treat this water to non-detect standards.” The state will test the water at the treatment plant later this month, Brand said, to gauge its ability to treat water from Washington Lake. The city continues to draw on Catskill Aqueduct water. However, it is expected to switch back to the lake water in the coming weeks. “We’re still getting the same pollution from Stewart,” said Councilman Jonathan Jacobson, pointing out the fact that the U.S. Department of Defense has not taken steps to treat the still-polluted air base, which continues to deliver PFOS into the city drinking watershed. “We have to hold the DoD liable. We should not hook up to Washington Lake,” Jacobson said. “Why aren’t we suing?” asked city resident Rich Fracasse. “There is quite a bit of work that needs to be done,” said Brand, and the state has already conducted tests with the idea of designing a system that could eventually treat Recreation Pond, the chief source of PFOS still coming from the air base. “You deserve to have clean water,” Brand asserted, speaking directly to city residents Monday. “We’re not going anywhere.” According to the DEC, the city is on schedule to switch back to Washington Lake water at the end of the month or possibly sometime in February. The state will host another public information session on the Newburgh water crisis later this month. A date is yet to be announced.