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Published: May 01, 2008 12:43 pm
Letters for May 1, 2008
Letter needs
clarification
This letter is in response
to a misleading letter written
by Doug Hallberg and
published in last week’s Crier.
Mr. Hallberg, who does
not own property in the proposed
sewer district, has expressed
views that indicate a
lack of understanding of the
Otsego Lake septic system
management program and
the proposed Hickory Grove
sewer project.
The septic system management
program for Otsego
Lake, which is led by the Watershed
Supervisory Committee
(WSC), and is considered
a model program across
the state, was developed
based on needs expressed by
a watershed management
plan developed in the 1990s.
A combination of water quality
data and an inventory of
existing systems formed the
basis of the program. In developing
the approach to upgrading
septic systems
around the lake, all options
were investigated, from a
sewer line around the lake to
systems being replaced individually.
Consideration of
economic factors, area topography,
and site constraints,
led to the solutions being
proposed, which include the
use of advanced technology
systems for both individual
and shared use. This solution,
which obviously considers
the “whole lake,” has the
approval of DEC and DOH,
and is being sought after as a
model by municipalities on
other lakes.
The DEC awarded a grant
to the WSC to install a number
of advanced technology
lakeside septic systems in
recognition of its wastewater
management program. The
SUNY Biological Field Station
(BFS) has partnered
with the WSC to provide
monitoring of these systems.
The BFS is also a partner
with the WSC on a project to
develop a low-cost phosphorus
removal system. However,
to be clear, the WSC has
the lead role as far as the
septic system management
program is concerned. SUNY
Delhi’s Onsite System Training
Network (OTN) is also
involved because of the
WSC’s program, and utilizes
the program as part of their
student training.
The Hickory Grove sewer
project is part of an overall
approach for Otsego Lake to
reduce the number of failed
septic systems around the
lake through sharing, and to
use the best long-term technologies
available to protect
the lake. The currently proposed
district of 56 properties
represents 16 percent of
the total systems around the
lake. The proposed treatment
system includes primary
treatment at each camp
followed by shared secondary
treatment and sub-surface
disposal. It is a large septic
system, not a “sewage treatment
plant” as one would
find in the City of Oneonta.
It is an underground system
that will not be seen, heard,
or smelled. It is primarily a
passive system requiring
minimal maintenance. A
similar, smaller system has
already been installed on the
lake and is currently serving
two camps.
Of the 56 camps, 39 have
been inspected and 17 remain
to be inspected. Inspection
letters were sent to all
property owners, but not all
have responded. Additional
letters will be sent in May requesting
inspections, and if
not responded to, the septic
systems will be considered to
be in failure. The Hickory
Grove area has a failure rate
of 74 percent, the highest of
any area around the lake.
The disposition of the 17
camps not inspected will be
known by the end of July,
which is when the process for
sewer district formation will
be finalized.
Mr. Hallberg also asserts
in his letter that “by law anyone
residing in the sewer district
will pay a significant
annual fee if they are hooked
up or not.” This is a misleading
statement. The local municipality,
in this case the
Town of Otsego, has a high
degree of latitude regarding
those in the district who do
not hook up initially. It is
true that the town is required
by town law to collect a fee
from those not hooked up,
but it can be a nominal fee as
low as $1 per month, which
is certainly not a “significant
annual fee.” Those not required
to hook up initially
include those who passed inspection
and those who recently
installed a replacement
system as part of the
inspection program.
Mr. Hallberg’s further assertion
that the district will
have to expand and that
costs are unknown is false.
As part of the sewer district
formation process, user fees
are known up front. All potential
users know exactly
how much they will be paying
for operation and maintenance
and repayment of
debt, and they get to decide if
they want the district or not.
Also, the district cannot simply
“expand over time.” If an
expansion is proposed, the
new potential users will get
to approve or reject the expansion
by the same process
used to originally establish
the district.
In closing, the Watershed
Committee has developed a
comprehensive plan for addressing
all septic systems
around Otsego Lake. The
formation of a sewer district
is being offered as an option
to those residing in the Hickory
Grove area. They will get
to decide whether or not the
district is formed. By law,
failed septic systems within
500 feet of Otsego Lake and
100 feet of a tributary stream
must be replaced with a system
approved by the WSC.
Otsego Lake is a drinking
water “reservoir,” and failed
septic systems polluting the
lake cannot be allowed. Replacement
of the failed systems
in the Hickory Grove
area will be either with a
shared system or with individual
systems, whatever the
people there decide.
Next steps in the process
include a review of an amended
engineering study at the
May Otsego Town Board
meeting (May 14), and a public
information meeting in
June (date to be announced
at the May 14 meeting).
Win McIntyre
Cooperstown
Work together
on pesticides
We attended the Village
Board of Trustees meeting
on April 21 because we had
heard some questions were
going to be raised about the
abundant use of pesticides
and herbicides in and around
Cooperstown. This matter
has concerned us for a number
of years, and we have
made some enquiries and
been assured that all is safe
and well. However, the public
at large now has too much
awareness that it has become
classic for a chemical to be
widely used only to find out
down the line that, indeed, it
was toxic to those who were
exposed to it.
While we should not make
``chemical’’ a dirty word since
homo sapiens depend on all
kinds of chemical interactions
to live a normal life, we
should not assume that all
chemicals introduced unnaturally
to our environment
are safe. The testing and
proof of safety has so often
turned out to be insufficient.
Therefore, we citizens have a
right to raise questions, to be
concerned, and to seek reassurance,
even though we
may lack the knowledge base
to understand all the information.
I was pleased to observe
how Mayor Waller and the
Board listened and received
the information and questions
presented by Andy Mason
and Michael Whaling,
both known for their commitment
to keeping our environment
safe. However, since
that time those responsible
for proof of safety seem to be
reacting as if some terrible
sham has been unleashed.
Angry defensiveness seems
to be in the atmosphere.
Why?
Why should we citizens
have the burden of proof and
not they? If these are truly
benign chemicals, I say,
``Fine — use them!’’ However,
at the April 21 meeting a
physician presented some
upsetting information to the
effect that the incidence of
autism is drastically higher
in this area than it is nationally.
Why? There may be no
connection between the high
use of unnatural chemicals
in this area and our higher
incidence of autism, but
there may be. Lay people just
do not know. It should not be
an upsetting social gaff to
ask for truth and scientifically
sound information
about what we are putting
into the environment. Our
progeny may one day be
grateful that some cared
enough to seek the truth
about what is safe for us human
beings.
Hilda and Sam Wilcox
Cooperstown
Borgstrom
running for
school board
I am running for a term
on the Cooperstown Central
School Board of Education.
The Board of Education has
a great responsibility to its
students and the community.
I am confident that my background
and abilities will enable
me to live up to that responsibility.
Our future lies with our
children. Providing them
with the necessary skills,
motivation, and opportunity
to grow is critical to their
success, both within the Cooperstown
schools, and beyond.
Our school board has a
duty to provide the best educational
experience possible
to all the children of our district.
Without a positive
learning environment, Cooperstown
would not have the
ability to attract high quality
educators and other professionals
to our community. I
have devoted much of my
professional life to the education
of physicians and surgeons,
so I am quite familiar
with the need for quality education
at all levels of personal
development.
The Board of Education
also has a duty to the members
of the community. I
have demonstrated my fiscal
responsibility as the President
of Cooperstown Youth
Baseball, where creating a
positive athletic and personal
growth experience with
limited funds has been essential.
As a member of the
Board, I will ensure that the
Board of Education maintains
a continued dialogue
with the residents of our
school district in order to facilitate
positive communication
between the Board, staff
and faculty, and the community.
This positive relationship
is essential to allowing
the Board to fulfill its commitment
to our students.
Through my experience,
both as a volunteer and a
surgeon at Bassett Hospital,
I have been able to assess
the needs of our school and
our community.
Through my work with
other boards, both professionally,
and as a volunteer,
I have come to understand
the dynamics of group decision-
making. I will bring my
experience to the Board of
Education to further the
goals of the students, parents,
and taxpayers in the
district.
David Borgstrom, M.D.
Cooperstown
Stop chemical
use now
It is encouraging to read
that the Village of Cooperstown
has enlisted the help
of Dr. Ted Peters to look at
the golf course pesticide situation.
Missing from this discussion
is the answer to some
questions, Why not stop using
these chemicals now?
What is the justification for
applying 1,600 pounds and
137 gallons of pesticides on
the southwest shore of Cooperstown’s
drinking water
source? Does the creation of
artificially perfect playing
conditions take priority over
public drinking water protection?
More frequent, targeted
water tests are certainly necessary,
but to really get
ahead of this, we need to follow
the precautionary principle,
which puts the responsibility
and proof of the safety
of an action on those proposing
it — rather than waiting
for the public to prove the
harm later.
Totally organic maintenance
of the Leatherstocking
Golf Course would be a point
of pride for the Otesaga and
the first village on the
Susquehanna River as well.
Michael Whaling
Sharon Springs
Sewer
moratorium
needed
We urge the Otsego Town
Board to place a moratorium
on the proposed sewer district
until all septic systems
in the district have been tested.
The Watershed Supervisory
Committee (WSC) is entering
year four of a five-year
inspection program of all
septic systems within 500
feet of Otsego Lake. Failed
systems are required to be
replaced by the end of 2009.
The proposed district encompasses
only one half-mile
of Otsego Lake, but what is
more troubling is that costs
for this enormous infrastructure
are based on the projected
number of users.
The WSC February 2008
newsletter states that the
town of Otsego will own and
operate the system, and assess
only users of the system
an annual fee which will cover
debt repayment and operation
and maintenance.
However, the April 2,
2007 Town Board approved
minutes state that ``all properties
in the district will be
taxed even if they’re not connected
to the system.’’
We have asked for an
amendment to these minutes,
but to date they remain
unchanged.
We urge the board and
the Watershed Supervisory
Committee to complete the
remaining 30 percent of inspections
and to reconsider
the proposed plan.
We must find a “whole
lake” solution. Then and only
then can residents make an
educated decision on whether
the creation of a sewer district
would be in their best
interest.
The next Otsego Town
Board meeting will be
Wednesday, May 14, at 7
p.m. in Fly Creek. Become
involved in the process.
Tom and Kathy Chase
Marcia and Bob D’Amico
Veronica Gil Seaver
Sarah “Sash” Seaver
Schatzi Hall
Kay Additon
Jim Bell
Time for change
at CCS?
The headline of Cooperstown
Central School’s recent
newsletter appears to
be one more step in a lengthy
journey of deceit. ``Quality
Education While Controlling
Costs.’’ Certainly, it would be
unfair to cite it as a blatant
lie.
Yet, I believe it would
have been more responsible
of the Superintendent and
Board of Education had they
added some adjectives.
Perhaps, ``Below Average
Quality Education While
Loosely Controlling Costs’’
might have been more appropriate.
Seem harsh? Perhaps,
what is harsher is the fact
that Cooperstown has declined
academically over the
past 10 years.
Currently, CCS ranks
12th out of the 12 school districts
in Otsego County, according
to the New York
State Department of Education’s
data. Furthermore, on
a statewide basis, CCS ranks
below average. Should one
wish to reference this data in
assembled format, they can
visit www.itbeskool.com.
As far as budget control,
Cooperstown is seeking percentage
increases in excess
of her neighboring districts.
Most of us are proud in supporting
our children’s education.
Many of us moved to this
area with the realization
that our tax burden would be
higher.
We accepted this due to
the belief that CCS stood
above other area schools.
Now, when we see our dollars
being pumped into a faltering
school, we have reason
to be angered.
Last year, I wrote a similar
letter addressing these
very issues.
Forty-five faculty and
staff members responded
with a claim they were performing
above average.
This was not true. I wish
someone would respond now.
No need to be defensive. Just
please provide a plan. We
want our school to get back
on track.
Perhaps, each of the three
Board of Education candidates
could respond with
their assessment of CCS’s
current academic status.
As newly elected board
members, will there be anything
they can do to return
Cooperstown to its previous
academic standard?
Do they believe that we
(the taxpayers) should be
satisfied with the status
quo?
Is it wise to continue on a
plan for ``greatness`` when
the school is below average?
Should the school attempt
to raise their current academic
standard before they
reach for new whimsical programs?
Do they have the courage
to stand up for our children
even though it will likely require
less than pleasant tactics?
School turnarounds often
require administrative
change.
Eric Rheinhardt
Cooperstown
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