VOTE!

You probably don’t need a reminder that today is election day, but here are some helpful tips for New York voters.

You probably don’t need a reminder that today is election day, but here are some helpful tips for New York voters.

• Polls are open 6 AM–9 PM. If you’re in line by 9 PM, you’re allowed to vote.

• If you’ve voted in New York before, you don’t need to provide ID to vote in person.

• If you’re voting for the first time in New York, submitted your registration by mail, and didn’t provide a copy of your New York driver’s license, state ID card, or a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or government document that shows your name and address when you registered, you may need to show one of these documents when you vote in person on Election Day.

• To find your polling location, just google “where do I vote”.

To see what will be on your ballot, Ballotpedia, a nonprofit encyclopedia written by a staff of researchers and writers, contains a wealth of information and maintains a sample ballot lookup.

Fore more information, check out www.elections.ny.gov

 

For more local happenings, news, and events, follow ColumbiaCountyCurrent on facebook, and twitter @CoCoCurrent.

 

ECLECTIMANIAC Events – The October 2018 Show

This is the place to get more info on the events we discussed on the ECLECTIMANIAC Radio Show for October 17, 2018.

This is the place to get more info on the events we discussed on the ECLECTIMANIAC Radio Show for October 17, 2018.

FilmColumbia 2018


Hosted by The Crandell Theatre, FilmColumbia is an annual eight-day festival of world-class films representing major studios, independents, international films, animated features, documentaries and children’s short films. In addition to screening approximately 50 films, the festival also features panels, Q&A sessions with filmmakers and screenwriting workshops.

DATES/TIMES:
Saturday, October 20 through Sunday, October 28, 2018
Movies are screened throughout the days and evenings.
For the full schedule, Click Here to visit www.filmcolumbia.org/schedule-and-tickets/tickets

TICKET PRICES:
$11 – $17 per movie
Gold Pass: Access to all films and events, except Brian Cox honoring party – $275 for non-members/$220 members
All Film Pass (Access to films only, does not include events) – $250 for non-members/$200 members

Sat, 10:30 am, Crandell Theater – Children’s International Film Program – Free

LOCATIONS:
Movies are shown in three locations in Chatham Village:
The Crandall Theater (48 Main Street)
Tracy Memorial Village Hall (77 Main Street)
Morris Memorial (center of Park Row)


Hudson Valley Votes Concert & Rally

vote-WEB
With the crucial mid-term elections on November 6th, a group of concerned citizens has banded together with local and nationally recognized artists to present an evening of music, performance and activism.

Internationally acclaimed musician Natalie Merchant headlines and serves as Artistic Director for HUDSON VALLEY VOTES on Saturday, October 20th at UPAC. The impressive line-up of Hudson Valley based musicians and actors performing include: Aaron Dessner of The National, singer-songwriter Dar Williams, actress and filmmaker Mary Stuart Masterson, actors Paul Rudd and Lili Taylor, activist and author Eve Ensler and many more. Progressive Democratic candidates and elected officials will join artists on stage, including NY19 Candidate Antonio Delgado.

DATE/TIME:
Saturday, October 20 2018:  7pm

TICKETS:
$36 Adult/senior
$31 Student /Children under 12
$26 Groups of 5 or more

Visit http://www.bardavon.org/show/hudson-valley-votes/ to purchase.

LOCATION:
Ulster Performing Arts Center (UPAC)
601 Broadway,
Kingston, NY 12401

MORE:
www.bardavon.org
facebook.com/ulsterperformingartscenter/



Basilica Hudson’s Biennial Pioneering People Honors Courtney Love


Basilica Hudson’s biennial Pioneering People fundraiser celebrates groundbreaking artists, and this year’s event will celebrate the achievements and legacy of musician, songwriter, actor, and performer – Courtney Love.

Creative directed and produced by Basilica Hudson’s Co-Founder and Director Melissa Auf der Maur (former bassist of Courtney Love’s GRAMMY-nominated, certified multi-platinum, award-winning band Hole) and artist Joe Mama-Nitzberg, who was Creative Director of Hole’s Celebrity Skin and is a longtime creative collaborator and comrade of both Love and Auf der Maur, the event will be hosted by a group of creative luminaries and friends, including Aaron Dessner, Miles Joris-Peyrafitte, Natasha Lyonne, Ryan McGinley, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Elvis Perkins, Chloë Sevigny, Michael Stipe, Justin Vivian Bond, Kenny Mellman, Brandon Stosuy, Yelena Yemchuk, Jack Walls, and other special guests.

Courtney Love will be in attendance as the honored guest. Love and special guests will be featured in conversations, readings, and performances. The evening’s program will shine a light on all of the ways that Love has influenced culture and inspired women and marginalized people for almost three decades. An exciting lineup of contributors will illuminate the impact of Love’s vital and inspiring art and energy and the inspiration her work continues to instil in the next generation of artists and musicians. The evening’s performances will demonstrate the incredible power and the lasting legacy of Love’s iconic explorations and subversions of femininity, and honor her unapologetic, fearless protest of the patriarchy.

Pioneering People will feature a private benefit dinner followed by the public performance.

DATE/TIME:
Saturday, October 27, 2018: 7pm to 11pm

ADMISSION:
General Admission – $75.00
Student/Senior/12534 resident – $60.00
Special Seating  (1st 10 rows) – $175.00
Preferred Seating + Gift Bag – $250.00

Tickets to the public performance can be purchased here. For information, tickets and table purchases for the private benefit dinner, contact Jasmine Dreame Wagner, Development Manager at jasmine@basilicahudson.org.

LOCATION:
Basilica Hudson
110 S. Front St.,
Hudson, NY 12534

MORE:
basilicahudson.org
facebook.com/BasilicaHudson
instagram.com/basilicahudson

 

 

For more local happenings, news, and events, follow ColumbiaCountyCurrent on Facebook, and twitter @CoCoCurrent.

Jeff McKinney is a Realtor in Columbia County, NY. Connect with him on Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, or Pinterest.

Columbia Land Conservancy & Partners Conserve Artemis Farm in New Lebanon

Some exciting news from the Columbia Land Conservancy (CLC) about a recently established conservation easement to help a local farmer preserve a rare breed of purebred cattle. 

Following is some exciting news from the Columbia Land Conservancy (CLC) about a recently established conservation easement to help a local farmer preserve a rare breed of purebred cattle.

Cynthia Creech first established Artemis Farm more than 31 years ago in Tennessee. At the time, there were only 16 Randall cattle remaining in the country. She moved the farm north to 120 acres in New Lebanon so the critically endangered cows—first developed in Vermont and descended from the local cattle common in 19th-century New England could be in a climate more suited to their breed.

Now, thanks to a partnership between the Columbia Land Conservancy, Scenic Hudson and Equity Trust, and with funding from Equity Trust, Scenic Hudson, the State of New York’s Hudson Valley Agricultural Enhancement Program, and the USDA’s Agricultural Land Easement program, Cynthia Creech’s Artemis Farm will continue providing a home for critically endangered Randall cattle.

Cynthia is passionate about conserving this breed: “Preservation of the Randall Cattle, and all heritage breeds of livestock, is important as it provides several benefits to our everyday world. They are the connection in civilization to livestock history and heritage. Because they have not been manipulated by humans through single trait selection, these animals carry a full complement of characteristics and genes. In the event of a catastrophic failure in the livestock industry, those characteristics and genes would be of value to re-establish breeds and herds.

The Randalls exhibit old world traits…they are hardy, long lived, thrifty, able to eat grass,
weeds, leaves, acorns, raise a calf and live 20 years. These characteristics make them perfect for the returning small, diversified farms today. And, if a person does not need, or want, to follow a large, commercial, or industrial livestock paradigm on their farm, the Randalls, and all heritage breeds, provide an interesting and capable animal to share farm life with. While the conservation easement does not guarantee someone will continue to farm with the Randall Cattle, it does guarantee that a struggling farmer, like me, will have affordable farmland available to them, land that will not be sucked up and ruined for farming by development, land on which someone can start out with their dream of owning a farm and raising their livestock on it. Equity Trust, Columbia Land Conservancy and Scenic Hudson have made this possible going forward. I am genuinely grateful to all three of these remarkable organizations for the work they have done for me, for the Randall Cattle and for what they are doing for all farmers of the future. It is noble work.”

Since the cattle made their journey north in 2004, Cynthia has been responsible for growing the population to over 300 cattle. She’s worked with more than 20 herds, both large and small, and has sold single cows to homesteaders looking for a sturdy house milk and/or beef cow. In 2000, she was honored by the American Livestock Breeds Conservatory with an award for heritage breed conservation. She also supplies grass-fed beef to consumers via local farmers markets.

In addition to preserving the breed, Cynthia also wanted to make sure her land would continue to be part of the important fabric of Columbia County’s agricultural heritage. She worked with multiple partners and funders to place a conservation easement on her land, which will protect the property from future development. In addition, she also worked with partners to enhance this land protection tool with resale restrictions that ensure the property will always remain in agricultural production, and affordable for farmers. Funds for the resale restrictions were contributed by Equity Trust., which also provided financing from its Hudson Valley Farm Affordability Fund to secure a portion of the land until it was protected.

“The Columbia Land Conservancy is grateful to all of our project partners and funders for the deeply collaborative effort that resulted in the protection of this important farm. Thanks to their help, and the long-term vision of Cynthia Creech, the land will remain not only protected from development, but in the hands of farmers into the future,” said Columbia Land Conservancy Executive Director Peter Paden.

“Scenic Hudson is delighted to collaborate with Columbia Land Conservancy, Equity Trust, the state and USDA—and, of course, Cynthia Creech—to protect land critical for sustaining her visionary work to bring back Randall cattle, almost from the point of extinction. In addition to preserving an important aspect of our nation’s heritage, working farms like Artemis are essential to the Hudson Valley’s future because they supply us with healthy food, safeguard important habitat, and contribute so much to the region’s natural beauty,” said Steve Rosenberg, executive director of The Scenic Hudson Land Trust.

“Equity Trust is very pleased to have been able to join the other project partners and Cynthia Creech to ensure that Artemis Farm will remain a working farm forever. Our Hudson Valley Farm Affordability Program was set up to support exactly this outcome: the preservation of farms that feed our communities in a way that keeps them affordable to the farmers who do the hard work of growing that food,” said Jim Oldham, Executive Director of Equity Trust.

Artemis Farm was ranked a high priority for protection in Scenic Hudson’s Foodshed
Conservation Plan, a data-driven blueprint for ramping up collaborative farmland-protection efforts to create a secure source of fresh, local food for the Hudson Valley and New York City. Scenic Hudson used funds from its Lila Acheson and DeWitt Wallace Hudson Valley Land Preservation Endowment to contribute to conserving the farm.

 

MORE:
http://clctrust.org
facebook.com/ColumbiaLandConservancy
Columbia Land Conservancy Inc.
49 Main Street Chatham, NY
info@clctrust.org
518.392.5252

www.scenichudson.org

http://equitytrust.org

facebook.com/artemis.farm.new.lebanon

 

For more local happenings, news, and events, follow ColumbiaCountyCurrent on Facebook, and twitter @CoCoCurrent.

State and Local Primary Elections, Sep 13

Voters in New York, that are affiliated with a political party, have several primary races to vote for.

Voters in New York, that are affiliated with a political party, have several primary races to vote for. These Primary Elections give voters the chance to select candidates for state and local level offices (Governor, State Senator, State Assembly, County Clerk, Town Justice, etc.).

Though elections are typically held on Tuesdays, this year’s primary election was moved to Thursday, September 13, after Cuomo signed a bill to move the date back two days. The previously announced date—September 11—would not only conflict with the end of Rosh Hashanah, but would also present a conflict for those who may be commemorating the 17th anniversary of 9/11.

DATE/TIME:
State/Local primary election: Thursday, September 13

General election: Tuesday, November 6

LOCATIONS:
Visit the Columbia County Board of Elections site (here) for locations.

MORE:
www.elections.ny.gov

 

For more local happenings, news, and events, follow ColumbiaCountyCurrent on Facebook, and twitter @CoCoCurrent.

Stargazing – The Perseids Meteor Shower

The annual Perseids Meteor Shower, which runs from July 17 to August 24, is typically one of the best of the year, and can produce anywhere from 60 to 100 meteors an hour at its peak.

The annual Perseids Meteor Shower, which runs from July 17 to August 24, is typically one of the best of the year, and can produce anywhere from 60 to 100 meteors an hour at its peak. The meteors, which are mostly the size of raisons, are historically bright and produce great streaks through the sky. This year’s shower peak will be even more visible because a thin crescent moon should make for dark skies.

The Perseids are produced by the comet, Swift-Tuttle, which was independently discovered by Lewis Swift on July 16, 1862 and by Horace Parnell Tuttle on July 19, 1862. The meteors fall between the constellations Perseus and Cassiopeia, but just look up and you should be able to see them from anywhere in the sky.

DATES:
Peak – August 12-13, 2018

 

For more local happenings, news, and events, follow ColumbiaCountyCurrent on Facebook, and twitter @CoCoCurrent.

Jeff McKinney is a Realtor in Columbia County, NY. Connect with him on Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, or Pinterest.