{DATE}

« August 2009 | Main | October 2009 »

September 24, 2009


Village listens, changes

By Keith Lobdell

Plans to shut down water in almost half of the village on Thursday will not be happening.

Instead, the village of Whitehall has changed the date for the replacement of a 10-inch water main control valve on Broadway and School Street from Sept. 24 until Monday, Oct. 5, at 10 p.m.


Police pepper spray Granville man during scuffle at bar

By Matthew Rice

Main Street scuffle leads to arrest

A Potter Avenue man faces two misdemeanor charges following a fight with police outside a Main Street bar in the early morning hours of Sunday.


School chief starts at $134K

By Matthew Rice

Superintendent to start at $134,000

The contract for employment signed between newly hired Granville Superintendent Mark Bessen and the Board of Education will pay the new district leader a base salary of $134,000.

The three-year and-eight-month agreement begins when Bessen takes his chair at the new district offices on Nov. 2 and continues until June 30, 2013.

Bessen will be compensated $86,667, pro rated for the remainder of the 2009-2010 school year concluding June 30.

The agreement contains language that allows Bessen to continue with his duties in the New York Army National Guard.

The contract states under USERRA or the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 Bessen can be temporarily replaced with an interim superintendent should he be deployed for longer than 30 consecutive working days.

“During an military leave absence in excess of 30 days, any compensation as set forth … herein and any benefits set forth … shall be suspended and not paid or provided to Mr. Bessen,” the contract states.

Bessen will receive 23 days vacation for full years and be credited with 15 days for 2009-2010.

The contract also contains provisions for an annual 4 percent raise.

The district will pay 80 percent of the health insurance premium for individual coverage and 100 percent of dental coverage and states Bessen must have a yearly physical. The district also pays $1,000 annually toward a life insurance policy but does not contribute towards a tax sheltered annuity although Bessen will be eligible to enroll in the district’s plan.

Bessen must move into the district on or before Dec. 31 of 2010; the agreement said he will be compensated a maximum sum of $4,000 for moving expenses upon receipt of a voucher detailing those costs. Bessen will be provided with a district laptop computer for his use.

Also included in the contract is a sum of $50 per month to cover the cost of use of a personal cellular phone provided by the superintendent for school business use.

Former Superintendent Dan Teplesky received $150,800 in salary during his final year in the position following a salary increase of $10,400 in the form of a scheduled raise and an adjustment that drew criticism from some community members.

Teplesky later chose to forego a $6,032 or 4 percent raise pending in the current budget. Teplesky told the Sentinel he informed the board he wanted the sum left out during the development of the budget for fiscal 2009-2010 considering the state of the economy. During an interview after word of his accepting a position at another school district broke, Teplesky said he thought he had risen to the maximum salary the district could pay and noted examples of the rising costs of bringing in a new superintendent around the region. The spring hiring in Cambridge of a candidate without a doctorate or experience at a salary of $136,000 as well as a candidate in Schuylerville who was also without a doctorate, but with experience, at a salary of $145,000-$150,000 showed superintendent salaries across the board had steadily been on the rise.

Initially Teplesky was hired with no experience as a superintendent for $105,000 five years ago. Teplesky will make $157,500 in his first year at the larger 2,200-student Ravena Coeymans Selkirk School District with scheduled 4 percent raises.

 

 


Winn credits volunteers, hard work

by Matthew Rice

Winn credits volunteers, newsletter with primary win

Granville native and former Washington County District Attorney Robert Winn credits a little help from his friends for an unexpected victory in the Republican primary for the position Sept. 15.

“It was a really encouraging outcome for us,” Winn said. Although the results would not be official until the roughly 190 outstanding absentee ballots were counted, Winn said he was assured the win.

September 17, 2009


Village controls VFCs

By Keith Lobdell

 

They didn’t shoot the messenger, but there were some itchy trigger fingers.

Whitehall Village Trustee Kenneth Bartholomew reported on several findings concerning the quest to consolidate the two local fire companies during the Sept. 14 village board meeting, starting with the fact that the village board was, by law, the governing body over both the Whitehall and Skenesborough volunteer fire companies.


Armstrong to face Gordan

By Keith Lobdell

 

It took a little longer than usual, but the Whitehall town supervisor Republican primary did have a winner by the end of the night on Tuesday.


Woodrufff experiences China

By Keith Lobdell

 

It took Stan Woodruff an hour to commute 20 miles to work.

That was a lot better than the 18-plus hours it took him to get there in the first place.


Politcs season kicks off

By Matthew Rice

Election shapes up for town seats 

Caucuses for Democrats and Republicans have finished and voters will get to choose three candidates for running the town of Granville in November.

Voters will have to decide on Nov. 3 who occupies two open board seats and the town supervisor’s chair for the next two years.


Horde team 'under the lights' next week

By Matthew Rice

Tradition continues under the lights

Lights Week returns to Granville for the fifth time Sept. 21 to Sept. 25 with a schedule of games under the lights for outdoor varsity sports.


Tax flaw is found

By Matthew Rice

Calculation error leads to tax ‘increase’

Granville School District officials announced Monday the suspension of school tax collection due to an error calculating the recently mailed bills. School tax collector Rose Cary used the wrong equalization rate when computing the tax bills, resulting in smaller bills for Granville taxpayers, officials said.


Village fined for discharge

By Matthew Rice 

$5,000 fine ‘Fair’ mayor says

The Granville Village Board agreed to pay a $5,000 civil fine Monday night resulting from the accidental discharge of partially treated wastewater into the Mettowee River on July 28.

September 10, 2009


Repairs start soon

By Keith Lobdell

 

Within the next month, the current Clinton Street bridge will start to be no more.

Washington County Department of Public Works Superintendent Willie Grimmke said the bid has been awarded for the work that will replace the three bridges that allow access to downtown Whitehall over the railroad tracks on Clinton, Division and Saunders streets.


Midnight vows to make headlines

<!-- /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:""; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:none; mso-layout-grid-align:none; punctuation-wrap:simple; text-autospace:none; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-font-kerning:14.0pt;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.6in; mso-page-numbers:1; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} -->

By Keith Lobdell

 

Last Tuesday was only part of the story.

Right after midnight on Sept. 1, Bob and Bill Sullivan completed a journey that started in Philadelphia when they were joined as the first same-sex couple to be married under the Vermont law that went into effect that day.


African trip was harrowing

A scary incident abroad has not deterred a Granville graduate from wanting to return to Africa in the future.

September 04, 2009


Ready for some football?

By Keith Lobdell

 

 

The Whitehall varsity football team will look to rebound in 2009 when it opens against Lake George this Saturday.

 

 


Principals set for school year

By Keith Lobdell

The school bus doors will open Tuesday, and there will be a number of expressions on the faces of those who walk up the steps.

 


Murder suspect nabbed

By Keith Lobdell

A man wanted for murder in Philadelphia was found when Whitehall police officer Daniel Price made a routine traffic stop early Tuesday.

 

 


Whitehall couple first to wed

By Keith Lobdell

A Whitehall couple was one of the first to say “I do” early Tuesday as Vermont officially started performing same-sex marriages.

 

 


Hit-hit-hit-hit-and-run accident

A driver who allegedly refused to stop despite a number of crashes in Hebron on Aug. 25 was later arrested for driving while intoxicated.


Village of Granville awaits DEC decision

By Matthew Rice

The village of Granville will soon know its fate, regarding a recent wastewater plant discharge into the Mettowee River.

 

 


Community Calendar

Photos


Sentinel: Matblog

Times: Lobster Tank



Granville

Whitehall