A Mayor In Ohio's Community Message Recognizing The 500,000 Lives Lost to COVID-19 In The U.S.

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Every now and then, my mom passes to me and my extended family email messages about the pandemic, as they are happening in Ohio, which is where I grew up. As mentioned in other articles about Ohio, weather from Ohio tends to travel to New York, so I often use that state as a predictor for what will happen in Beacon.

During this week of the lives lost from COVID-19 reaching 500,000 in this country alone, she forwarded to her children an email from the Mayor of Pepper Pike, OH, which is where my grandfather lives. My grandfather is in his 90s, and lives with the support of his children and caregivers who go to his home to make sure he has his needs met. My mom subscribes to Pepper Pike’s emails to keep tabs on the temperature of his community, and how the pandemic is viewed there.

I appreciated the memorial this Mayor Richard Bain wrote to this community. As we receive what news headlines and articles of the improving case count, lower hospitalization rates, continued struggle to get the vaccine, etc, which can cause conflicting feelings, I thought you might appreciate his words too. They are below.

From my mom (in case you need just a little more Chicken Soup for the Soul):

I know you’ve appreciated other missives that Pepper Pike Mayor Bain has sent to Grampa’s email.

Here’s one more, with perspective on where we are in this long pandemic. And what we still have to do. Even after getting our two shots.

Science rules. Miss you all.


From Mayor Richard Bain
Pepper Pike, Ohio
In Cuyahoga County, Northeast, OH, east of Cleveland, in the suburbs
February 22, 2021

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

Tonight, and for the next five days in Pepper Pike, and around the nation, we commemorate and honor the over 500,000 lives lost to the plague of Covid-19, the disease which has torn through our country, destroying lives and the families who loved them. It continues as a scourge across our land and the world and many more will die. The flags at City Hall and Morgan Park have been struck to fly at half-staff as a reminder of those who have been lost.

In comparison and to provide perspective, 405,000 members of the “Greatest Generation” were killed in 4 years of World War II. The enormous Arlington National Cemetery has 400,000 graves. The entire population of the City of Cleveland is now just over 380,000. In the future, more permanent memorials to the lives lost will certainly be erected in our nation, but for now, we pause in the midst of the battle to remember those souls who are abruptly gone, literally just months after this all began.

It was less than a year ago, March, 9, 2020, that I first wrote to alert you that the first 3 cases of Covid-19 had been identified in Cuyahoga County. Since that time, Cuyahoga County has recorded 94,021 cases and 1,695 deaths. Ohio has recorded 955,378 cases and 16,874 deaths. COVID-19 became a leading cause of death in the U.S. in 2020, particularly for people over age 35. That remains the case in 2021.

Although the vaccine has arrived, it is scarce for the great proportion of the country, including here. In Ohio, the vaccine distribution, for the time being, is limited to the “1B” population, 65 years and older. The next group of people who will be given access to the vaccine are those 60 years and older, which will be followed by those 55 years and older and then those 50 years and older.

Until the day arrives when we all have access to the vaccine, hopefully in the next months ahead, when the disease has finally been beaten back, we must remain vigilant in protecting those around us from the infection which still stalks us. I thank and congratulate you all who have joined the fight and intelligently battled during the last year. Now, with but some months ahead, we must finish strong!

COVID -19 has not quit or finished and neither must we. The disease mutates and seeks to start afresh as it infects new hosts as the disease continues to spread and exact its awful toll. Stay vigilant and we shall reach the end of this awful challenge. We have no choice but to forge ahead and together reach the end. Take a pause to reflect on what has happened, to think about the lives well lived, but lost nonetheless. They deserve that. This defining time in all our lives deserves no less. Please continue to stay safe and be well!

Sincerely,

Richard Bain

Snow Day Won't Stop Retail Therapy :: Issue 2/19/2021

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Today was a Snow Day in Beacon! But that didn't deter the visitors from coming in for a weekend stay and stocking up on groceries, and for locals enjoying a leisurely stroll in the big flakes of snow on an early Friday evening.

If you find yourself overheating in line while you're shopping, or suffocating under your mask and hat and scarf, consider going out in just a sweater or hoodie - many of which you'll find right here on Main Street! See A Little Beacon Blog's Shopping Guide for ideas you hadn't thought of.

THE RETAIL THERAPY GUIDE
Edited and Written By: Marilyn Perez and Katie Hellmuth Martin

New Reopening Announcements:

  • Restaurants/Bars can stay open until 11pm
  • Family Entertainment Centers can open at 25% capacity on March 25th, 2021
  • Amusement Parks can open at 33% on April 9, 2021
  • Large Sports Venues  can open at 10% capacity on February 23, 2021.
  • Summer Day Camps are looking like they may also open...
  • Details Here >


Two Founders Discussing Black Owned Businesses In The Local Community
Days
: February 24th, 2021
Time: 12pm
Location: Instagram! IG Live
Digital branding producer Lauren Johnson, CEO and Founder of The Hyacinth Group will chat with Editor and Founder of A Little Beacon Blog, Katie Hellmuth Martin. This will be a fun and energetic chat, so join in on the IG Live! 
How to Listen: Super easy. Go to @thehyacinthgroup just before 12pm on Wednesday, and hit their circle logo.
PS: Isn't this flyer for it pretty? It was designed by The Hyacinth Group, who is based in Beacon. Hire them for your next small or large branding project! Their lead designer, Perry Crosson, designed he Black Owned Business logo for A Little Beacon Blog's Business Directory.

Howland Public Library presents The Roots Of Black Music In America
Days
: February 7-20, 2021
Location: Vimeo
Join Karlus Trapp for a 100 year journey back through time to hear, experience and learn about the music of America’s Black musical giants. While the show is geared towards children and teens, it can be enjoyed by all ages.This joyful show encourages singing and dancing!

The Vimeo link and password will be posted on the library's Facebook page, and the show can be enjoyed at your own convenience Feb. 7th - 20th.
Information >


African American Art Show at the Howland Cultural Center
Dates
: Opens February 6th-28th
Time: 1pm-5pm Saturdays and Sundays
The Howland Cultural Center presents is annual African American Art Show. Featured artists include Jean Benoit, Ronald Brown, Rhonda Green-Phillips, Arnold Hayes, Kyra Husbands, Corey Lightfoot, Thelma Lightfoot, Marline A. Martin, Richard Outlaw, Symantha Outlaw, Myles Pinkney, Sandi Pinkney, James Earl Ransome, Lesa Cline-Ransome, Eddison Romeo, Oliver Spearman, and Donald Whitely.
Information >


Food Drive For Pantry At Beacon Rec Center - Operated By Open Arms Christian Ministries
Dates
: Right Now
Time: Open Hours of Key Food (268 Main Street) or Barb's Butchery (69 Spring Street)
Key Food and Barb's Butchery have teamed up to collect donated food for the Open Arms Christian Ministries, which runs the Food Pantry each Saturday at the Beacon Recreation Center. See the large donation bin at Key Food checkout, and ask about Barb's while you're there. Non-expired, non-perishables please. Food items you would also eat!


Check our Calendar and Events Guide regularly for upcoming events throughout the week!

 

 
 

EAT CHURCH
3091 U.S. 9, Cold Spring, NY

You missed it, and Eat Church heard you! The Bang Bang Menu is BACK! Friday - Saturday 4pm-8pm at Marbled Meat Shop. That's in Cold Spring in Vera's Marketplace. This is a delicacy, folks.
Order Online Now >
Eat Church is an ALBB Sponsor!
 
   


MEYERS OLDE DUTCH
184 Main Street, Beacon, NY

If this doesn't hit the spot for you: Meyers Olde Dutch Risotto Balls: "Roasted Butter squash and provolone in the balls, and a squash and onion sauce sauce." But they don't last long. That's why you need to order online immediately - click here and order for takeout or delivery! Or call them at 845.440.6900.
Meyers Olde Dutch is an ALBB Sponsor!


HOMESPUN
232 Main Street, Beacon, NY
and the Cafe at the Dia : Beacon

Homespun is only open Thursday-Sunday, so Now. Is. Your. Chance! Food is takeaway only for now for safety, so order online and take with you a delicious Quinoa Bowl of with Roasted Carrots, Dried Cranberries, Pepitas, Feta, Chives, Arugula, Yogurt Tahini Dressing, or their Wagyu Burger. 
Order Now >

Check out their $20 Wine Table for exquisite wines!
Take-Out Available.
View Menu >
Homespun is an ALBB Sponsor! 

HUDSON VALLEY FOOD HALL
288 Main Street, Beacon, NY
There's a pop-up shop experience happening in the HV Food Hall this weekend! Custom made tailored suits, from The Tailory New York, which is is a women-owned and operated, appointment-only custom clothing company. The process is simple: customers will choose your fabric, design your suit, get measured, and receive your very own custom suits 4 to 6 weeks later. If you need ideas on what your suit could look like, or to expand your mind on what shapes a suit can take see right here right now.
Book Your Weekend Appointment >
Hudson Valley Food Hall is an ALBB Sponsor!



BAJA 328
328 Main Street, Beacon, NY
This year, Baja328 has decided that just one day for National Margarita day isn’t enough! They tell their Instagram friends: "That’s why we’re celebrating for an ENTIRE WEEKEND!! Join us February 19-21 for $1 off Margs & $2 off pitchers to celebrate the Baja Way!!"
BAJA 328 is an ALBB Sponsor!
 



BRETT'S HARDWARE
18 West Main Street, Beacon

Snow Day Fun Galore. Is it us? Or does the Kids Section at Brett's keep growing? While owner Brett  does have a young family, his store is also located next door to a kids learning center, Be Creative As Possible (BCAP), the influence of which must be rubbing off on him! From crayons to paints to spray paints to glues. Kids (or you - admit it - you want to sink into a project) won't be bored this Snow Day.
Brett's Hardware is a Sponsor, thank you!








LUXE OPTIQUE
181-183 Main Street, Beacon
Cuties! These little frames with the eyelet cat-eye flutter  are head-turners, and ones people may not see elsewhere - except on your face. Do check these out in person in the store, but you could also see the sisters of this frame in the Boz Collection on Luxe Optique's ever-changing website.

Have you made an appointment with @luxeoptique to find you the perfect pair? What are you waiting for!?
Shop Online >
Luxe Optique is a Sponsor, thank you!


BINNACLE BOOKS

321 Main Street, Beacon
“Black Futures” by Kimberly Drew, Jenna Wortham:
“Kimberly Drew and Jenna Wortham have brought together this collection of work—images, photos, essays, memes, dialogues, recipes, tweets, poetry, and more—to tell the story of the radical, imaginative, provocative, and gorgeous world that Black creators are bringing forth today. The book presents a succession of startling and beautiful pieces that generate an entrancing rhythm: Readers will go from conversations with activists and academics to memes and Instagram posts, from powerful essays to dazzling paintings and insightful infographics. In answering the question of what it means to be Black and alive, Black Futures opens a prismatic vision of possibility for every reader.”
Grab your copy at @binnaclebooks today!
Binnacle Books is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!


LA MÉRE CLOTHING AND GOODS
436 Main Street, Beacon
La Mere is never without the Snow Day Sweaters! Yes you need one more, and yes you can play this video to see how to style your Snow Day Sweater with a skirt. Because you are getting dressed at home, right? Snow Day Sweaters are how you stay in PJ mode, but in your best threads.

Download the La Mére app now!  It is available for iOS users and coming soon for Android users. Download our NEW app now and receive 10% off your first in app purchase. Apply code 10OFFAPP in checkout to receive the discount. Visit https://lamereclothingandgoods.com/ to download. 
Shop Online >
La Mere is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!

             
 

HIRING: SEO Copywriter At Local Digital Agency, Hyacinth Group
The Hyacinth Group is looking to add a talented SEO Copywriter to our team. The position is part-time, but will ideally grow into a full-time position in the future.
Details >

List your job in ALBB's Job Listings >
NEW BUSINESS FEATURE - TUTORING
Heads Up Learning offers courses in French literacy, English literacy, and academic support, grades 1-9. Students learn best when given the opportunity to make discoveries, find patterns, and think critically about new ideas, which is why their curriculum is built on student-centered pedagogies, and themes of citizenship, activism, and environmentalism. .
Details >
https://www.alittlebeaconblog.com/tutoring
List your business in ALBB's Business Directory >

ANTALEK & MOORE INSURANCE AGENCY
340 Main Street, Beacon

Closing out Mentor Month at Antalek & Moore would not be complete without this highlight of this mentor!

Today we feature Susan Antalek Pagones. Susan serves at the Chair of the Go Red for Women event for Dutchess County as well as an Executive Leader for the American Red Cross Eastern New York

Susan is pictured here with fellow members of her #HVBetterU class of 2019.

Antalek & Moore is a Sponsor, thank you!
 

TIN SHINGLE
Do you need to send a press release? Of course you do! You can send a press release about anything. It's a great way to start the process that is building buzz about your business. Tin Shingle offers a Press Release Writing service, and works with two publishing industry stars who live in Beacon to get this written for you! Beth McDonough, former publisher of Traditional Home, and Olivia Abel, former editor-in-chief of Hudson Valley Magazine. Don't you want those publishing brains behind your brand?
Learn More >
 
KATIE JAMES, INC.
After many years of eating Miz Hattie's Southern Style soul food, Katie James, Inc. is so excited to welcome Miz Hattie's BBQ as a website client! Located inside of the Hudson Valley Food Hall, the customers of Miz Hattie's wanted to tap and order online, and they couldn't. Well they can now! Miz Hattie's jumped into the Toast online ordering platform, and Katie James Inc. designed the main website in Squarespace where you can order online, with room for more photos, catering inquiries, and future ecommerce options for swag, bottled sauce, and more. Final tweaks of the menu and organization of sides and your favorite things are underway. Twist our arm to hang out at this BBQ spot more often! Do you have favorite food pics from Miz Hattie's? Tag her in Instagram and she might repost them!
Do You Need A Website Too? >
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Full Closure Snow Day Friday In Beacon - The Balance Between Snow & Remote Continues

For kids, a Snow Day is usually an undebatable Good Thing.

For parents, it is usually a disruption, with kids being home, making getting to work or medical appointments or other destinations for other kids difficult.

However, for some families, Snow Days in the time of Remote Learning during the pandemic, is a welcomed Day Off. It’s a day off from making sure kids are logging into their different classes during the day, and is possibly a day to actually get more work done. This flip was never imagined during previous years - possibly any previous year - of a parent’s Snow Day.

The Thinking Behind The Day Off Snow Day vs The Remote Snow Day

Beacon’s School DIstrict’s Superintendent Matt Landahl has been communicating his strategy behind when to go Remote during bad weather, and when to just stay home without anyone driving anywhere, and not doing any school supplied learning.

“We moved to a full closure with no remote instruction today for a couple of reasons,” he told parents via email.

“We have 6 snow days built into our calendar and we have only used 3 full closures so far this year. We can still use a couple of more Snow Days without impacting things like Spring Break. Second, for a longer-term move to Remote Learning, many of our teachers need access to their classrooms to provide remote instruction for longer periods than a day or two. I was thinking yesterday, perhaps optimistically, that the 1 Hour Delay would get us in person today and I had not thought through the Remote part of this.”

While the past two weeks have been stop and go with Remote Learning due to weather, the Snow Day Friday for this blogger was a welcome one.

Party! Restaurants/Bars Can Stay Open 'Till 11pm; Amusement Parks 33% Capacity; Indoor Family Entertainment Centers 25%

Caution-first of course, but this week, Governor Cuomo has signed an Executive Order “extending closing times for bars, restaurants, gyms and fitness centers, casinos, billiards halls, as well as other State Liquor Authority-licensed establishments, from 10 p.m. to 11 p.m. statewide, effective immediately,” according to the Dutchess Business Notification Network.

Family Entertainment Centers

Beginning March 26, 2021, New York State announced that indoor family entertainment centers can reopen at 25% capacity.

Living indoors with young kids and teenagers with nowhere to go has been very difficult. More difficult, however, is hearing about a family who got COVID-19 and had family members go to the hospital. While these centers may open, businesses will need to show how safe they are being, and not exceed capacity.

Amusement Parks Can Open This Spring

Outdoor amusement parks are allowed to open on April 9, 2021 at the limited capacity of 33%.

Sports Venues Can Open At 10% Capacity

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced on 2/10/2021 that sports and entertainment events in major stadiums and arenas with a capacity of 10,000 or more people can re-open with limited spectators beginning February 23. “Following the model established as part of the successful Buffalo Bills pilot program, venues and events must follow similar guidelines, including Department of Health approval for venues and events, capacity limitations, testing requirements, mandatory face coverings, temperature checks, and assigned, socially distanced seating.”

Venues will have to institute a 10% capacity limit in arenas and stadiums, as well as ensure all staff and spectators receive a negative COVID-19 PCR test within 72 hours of the event.

According to the Dutchess Business Notification Network: “New York State and Empire State Development are looking to help vendors set up low-cost rapid COVID-19 testing sites for asymptomatic individuals with the idea being this will allow the state to begin the process of opening large gatherings/events. As such, the focus is on spaces near city centers/areas that will attract crowds.”

Location details include: “No or low cost 6-month lease immediately available; Street level store fronts with walk in access; About 750-1500 square feet (no additional charge for larger space). They are, on average, using 1200 sq. ft.” Email Deanna Robertson at drobertson@hvedc.com with questions.

Summer Day Camps Looking Probable To Open

The Dutchess Business Notification Network reports that “the New York Department of Health will release reopening guidance for day and overnight summer camps in the coming weeks. It is recommended that camps begin to develop their procedures and safety plan.”

Safety Measures

According to the Dutchess Business Notification Network: “All facilities must submit their plans to reopen, including the health protocols the facility will implement, to the local health department. Face coverings and social distancing will be required for all customers and staff, and customers will be required to have a health screening with temperature checks prior to entry.”

Additionally, the following guidelines must be followed:

  • Contact information must be collected from each party to inform contact tracing, if needed;

  • High-touch areas, attractions, and rides must be cleaned and disinfected frequently throughout the day;

  • Attractions must close if they cannot ensure distancing and be frequently cleaned/disinfected;

  • Sufficient staff must be deployed to enforce compliance with rules, including capacity, distancing, and face coverings;

  • Tickets should be sold in advance, and entry/exit and waiting times should be staggered to avoid congestion;

  • Indoor areas must meet enhanced air filtration, ventilation, and purification standards; and

  • Retail, food services, and recreational activities must abide by all State-issued guidance.

Nursing Home Workers At 20+ Nursing Homes Demonstrate For Transparency and Investment - Including The Grand Rehabilitation and Nursing at River Valley

According to a press released issued by 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East:

“1199SEIU nursing home workers in Poughkeepsie are among the hundreds of members of 1199SEIU Healthcare Workers East, the nation’s largest healthcare union, who will be holding demonstrations and vigils at more than 20 nursing homes across New York State, calling for greater transparency and investment in quality resident care.

“Actions will also be held at nursing homes in Schenectady, Erie, Jefferson, Monroe, Nassau, Niagara, Onondaga, Oneida, and Suffolk counties and New York City. Many of these facilities have low average hours of care per resident, use a high number of related parties to hide profits, or otherwise rank poorly in care quality.

“‘For far too long, nursing homes around New York State have made investment in resident care an afterthought,’” said Milly Silva, Executive Vice President of the Nursing Home Division.

“‘We are calling on these for-profit nursing homes to prioritize and invest in people – the residents and the workers who care for them day in and day out. Our members have been battling COVID-19 for the last year, but issues like low wages and a lack of adequate time to devote to individual patient care existed pre-COVID. Our goal is to enact real reforms to raise standards within the industry, and ensure that meaningful investment is made in residents and workers once and for all,’” Silva continued.

“The demonstrations are the latest actions led by the union to call attention to the need for systemic reform of the nursing home industry. Last week, 1199SEIU launched a multi-million dollar ad campaign, Invest in Quality Care, to press the legislature to ensure nursing homes focus on quality care to protect residents and the dedicated workers who care for them, rather than maximizing profits. On Valentine’s Day, members across New York engaged in a virtual “sticker” campaign, using social media to urge their State Assemblymembers and Senators to enact key reforms and ensure the most vulnerable in the state get the investment and care they need.

Lourdes Torres, an LPN at The Grand Rehabilitation and Nursing at River Valley, said: “Forty residents. Two aides. And me. How is it possible for me to meet the needs of my residents? Today, I tried to spend time with a very scared man who recently almost died from COVID and still has a lot of anxiety. He has no family other than those of us who take care of him at River Valley. But there were 39 other people who needed my attention, and I had to walk away. He was upset. And I was upset. So many co-workers have left or are planning to leave. That’s terrible for continuity of care. It’s terrible for those of us left. But I understand. It feels unbearable so often. The state needs to make changes in how nursing homes owners do business.”

“1199SEIU’s Invest in Quality Care campaign points out that Instead of investing in enough staff to ensure quality care for residents, many nursing home owners are hiding their profits by sub-contracting services to companies they own, often at inflated prices.

“1199SEIU and its members are calling on Governor Cuomo and the State Legislature to pass systemic reform for the nursing home industry to improve transparency, hold operators accountable for misconduct, and ensure they prioritize resident care over maximized profits.

“As New York Attorney General Letitia James found in a shocking new report on the impact of COVID-19 on nursing homes, “the current state reimbursement model for nursing homes gives a financial incentive to owners of for-profit nursing homes to transfer funds to related parties (ultimately increasing their own profit) instead of investing in higher levels of staffing and PPE.”

About 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East

1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East is the largest and fastest-growing healthcare union in America. We represent over 450,000 nurses and caregivers throughout New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Florida. Their mission is to achieve quality care and good jobs for all.

Nursing Home Workers Stage Picket Calling For Owners To Be Transparent in Staff Treatment and Quality Care - In Poughkeepsie Thursday

Since the pandemic, the employees and residents of Nursing Homes have been in the national spotlight, out of concern for their physical and emotional safety. The pandemic has brought what may be systematic problems within the nursing home industry to light. Said Milly Silva, Executive Vice President of the Nursing Home Division: “Our members have been battling COVID-19 for the last year, but issues like low wages and a lack of adequate time to devote to individual patient care existed pre-COVID. Our goal is to enact real reforms to raise standards within the industry, and ensure that meaningful investment is made in residents and workers once and for all,”

In a prepared statement to the Legislature during hearings, which is published on NYSenate.gov, Milly stated: “The nursing home industry is not going to be the same after this pandemic. Resident census is lower, and it is unclear how quickly it will recover. Returning to the status quo pre-pandemic is impossible. More than that, it is not morally acceptable. New York ranked 31st in the nation for nursing home quality according to CMS surveys, and in the bottom 10 nationally for persistent pressure ulcers. Residents are only getting 2.38 hours of hands-on care per day, earning our state a ‘D”’on a national scorecard. Nursing home caregivers are forced to work multiple jobs to make ends meet, leading to staff turnover and burnout. We can, and must, do much, much better.”

Picket In Poughkeepsie By Nursing Home Employees

Today, Thursday, February 18, 2021, nursing home staff represented by the United Healthcare Workers East (1199SEIU) are hosting a picket and holding vigils in Poughkeepsie, calling for nursing home reform, transparency and investment in quality care.

According to the press release announcing the picket, “1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East is the largest and fastest-growing healthcare union in America,” it says. “We represent over 450,000 nurses and caregivers throughout New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Florida. Our mission is to achieve quality care and good jobs for all.”

What follows below is the press release sent by 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East 2/16/2021:

1199SEIU Nursing Home Workers Stage Statewide Pickets and Vigils, Call for Nursing Home Reform, Transparency and Investment in Quality Care

Hundreds of workers in the nation’s largest healthcare union will hold vigils and demonstrations outside nursing home facilities to demand investment in people over profits.

New York ranks 45th in the nation in an important quality metric due to the large number of nursing homes with below-average hours of care per resident 

When:      Thursday, February 18 | 2:30p.m.- 4p.m.

Where:      The Grand Rehabilitation and Nursing at River Valley | 140 Main St, Poughkeepsie

1199SEIU nursing home workers in Poughkeepsie are among the hundreds of members of 1199SEIU Healthcare Workers East, the nation’s largest healthcare union, who will be holding demonstrations and vigils at more than 20 nursing homes across New York State, calling for greater transparency and investment in quality resident care. 

Actions will also be held at nursing homes in Schenectady, Erie, Jefferson, Monroe, Nassau, Niagara, Onondaga, Oneida, and Suffolk counties and New York City.  Many of these facilities have low average hours of care per resident, use a high number of related parties to hide profits, or otherwise rank poorly in care quality. 

“For far too long, nursing homes around New York State have made investment in resident care an afterthought,” said Milly Silva, Executive Vice President of the Nursing Home Division.

“We are calling on these for-profit nursing homes to prioritize and invest in people – the residents and the workers who care for them day in and day out.  Our members have been battling COVID-19 for the last year, but issues like low wages and a lack of adequate time to devote to individual patient care existed pre-COVID. Our goal is to enact real reforms to raise standards within the industry, and ensure that meaningful investment is made in residents and workers once and for all,” Silva continued.

The demonstrations are the latest actions led by the union to call attention to the need for systemic reform of the nursing home industry. Last week, 1199SEIU launched a multi-million dollar ad campaign, Invest in Quality Care, to press the legislature to ensure nursing homes focus on quality care to protect residents and the dedicated workers who care for them, rather than maximizing profits. On Valentine’s Day, members across New York engaged in a virtual “sticker” campaign, using social media to urge their State Assemblymembers and Senators to enact key reforms and ensure the most vulnerable in the state get the investment and care they need. 

Lourdes Torres is an LPN at The Grand Rehabilitation and Nursing at River Valley.

Forty residents. Two aides. And me. How is it possible for me to meet the needs of my residents? Today, I tried to spend time with a very scared man who recently almost died from COVID and still has a lot of anxiety. He has no family other than those of us who take care of him at River Valley. But there were 39 other people who needed my attention, and I had to walk away. He was upset. And I was upset. So many co-workers have left or are planning to leave. That’s terrible for continuity of care. It’s terrible for those of us left. But I understand. It feels unbearable so often. The state needs to make changes in how nursing homes owners do business.”

1199SEIU’s Invest in Quality Care campaign points out that Instead of investing in enough staff to ensure quality care for residents, many nursing home owners are hiding their profits by sub-contracting services to companies they own, often at inflated prices.

1199SEIU and its members are calling on Governor Cuomo and the State Legislature to pass systemic reform for the nursing home industry to improve transparency, hold operators accountable for misconduct, and ensure they prioritize resident care over maximized profits.

As New York Attorney General Letitia James found in a shocking new report on the impact of COVID-19 on nursing homes, “the current state reimbursement model for nursing homes gives a financial incentive to owners of for-profit nursing homes to transfer funds to related parties (ultimately increasing their own profit) instead of investing in higher levels of staffing and PPE.”

1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East is the largest and fastest-growing healthcare union in America. We representover 450,000 nurses and caregivers throughout New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Washington, D.C. andFlorida. Our mission is to achieve quality care and good jobs for all.

City Of Beacon Plans To Prioritize How To Spend The $25K Food Grant Money From CARES ACT

Picture of pre-packed food prepared by the Beacon City School District Food Services Department. Example of free food distribution happening in Beacon since the pandemic, due to federal funding to all public school districts regardless of proving mo…

Picture of pre-packed food prepared by the Beacon City School District Food Services Department. Example of free food distribution happening in Beacon since the pandemic, due to federal funding to all public school districts regardless of proving moderate or low income thresholds.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

While this Valentine’s Day was an extra heavy one to bear, being that the pandemic continues and there was report of one little friend in an elementary school who did not bring classmates Valentine’s cards because both parents lost their jobs, the safety net for food insecurity showed signs of strengthening in Beacon, while affordable housing in a booming real estate market remains a threat to those looking to stay here.

During Monday’s City Council Meeting, after which the council discussed once again and voted on a years long recurring agenda item of viewsheds (ie what constitutes as a protected view when a developer or property owner is looking to build upon their land), as well as other items, the $25,000 CDBG (Community Development Block Grant) that Beacon was awarded from the CARES ACT via Dutchess County in December 2020, made its debut as a planned talking point for the City Council.

Councilmember Dan Aymar-Blair, who is an advocate for affordable housing and community services, asked the new City Administrator, Chris White, for an update on any progress made to get a study created and funded in order to see what kind of needs the people want for an expanded Recreation Department and possible new public building for activities and services. It was discussed during Budget Season (October-December) that a study on the Recreation Department could range from $25K-$50K. Another study on Digital Broadband access was also considered.

The Unspent $25,000 Food Grant Makes It To City Council’s Attention

Chris White responded by saying: “We are trying to work through all of the budget initiatives that you put into the 2021 budget, for now we had prioritized the Mental Health Worker, and we are then trying to do the Food Program. Mark Price from our Recreation Department is trying to figure out a mechanism for doing that, and for meeting the CBDG guidelines. I’ve talked to Mark about doing the Recreation Plan next, and both that and the Broadband study I think should come back to Workshop so that we can get our goals and what you envisioned there…I do want to get the Food Program off the ground first.”

Pictured here is City Administrator Chris White, and below him, Councilperson Dan Aymar-Blair. Photo Credit: Screenshot of City of Beacon council 2/16/2021 meeting.

Pictured here is City Administrator Chris White, and below him, Councilperson Dan Aymar-Blair.
Photo Credit: Screenshot of City of Beacon council 2/16/2021 meeting.

Dan said that he had forgotten about the grant, and applauded Chris for taking it. Chris added: “We [Chris and Mark] were trying to think ‘What can we do, and what makes a difference?’”

How Food Access Is Working Elsewhere In Beacon; Elevated Systems With Lower Red Tape Since The Pandemic Started

The Community of Beacon and the Beacon City School District have been pulling together to provide free food to people as easily as possible. For example, the Beacon City School District designed a system to deliver pre-prepped or made cafeteria food via their Remote Bus Delivery to any registered child in the District.

When that federally funded food service was started, it was pick-up only. Many families did not go to pick up, as they were working at home on digital meetings, or weren’t home. Community members volunteered to pick up for each other. Some families who were scarce in emergency savings felt like they didn’t deserve the food and didn’t want to take from others who needed it more, yet they themselves had lost their jobs. Delivery made a difference for food reaching people.

Groups such as Fareground, Beacon’s Salvation Army by way of Captain Leilani Rodríguez-Alarcón who used to actually cook and deliver food to children years ago when Beacon lost qualification for its Free Summer Meals Program, I Am Beacon (see their Thanksgiving story) and others have been working together to continue to circulate food to the community.

Bureaucracy In Free Food Distribution with Federal Or Local Requirements

Back in December 2020 when this grant was awarded, A Little Beacon Blog followed up with Mark to inquire as to any movement on the spending of the grant. At the time, he spoke of a time consumption of organizing the required income survey.

“Of the groups in Beacon who work in food security, everyone would need to give assurance. They would each need to do an income survey.” When asked by A Little Beacon Blog if this grant’s required documentation of proof of need made it difficult to spend, Chris expanded: “Grant funds are to be utilized for low to medium income families, like all CDBG funding. There is no proof of need that has to be validated. We will have to administer a income survey to insure the appropriate population is being served.”

While this may not account for families newly unemployed or economically stressed who would otherwise not fall into the low to medium income bracket on paper yet, Mark and Chris hope to use the existing food distribution point on Wednesdays at Memorial Park to collect information before the funds can be distributed. Said Chris to A Little Beacon Blog: “We plan to focus the funds on expanding food provided at the Wednesday food distributions so that we can simplify implementing the necessary income survey.”

A Little Beacon Blog reached out to Fareground to see if they had been approached about assisting in this grant. While they had not directly, co-founder Kara Dean-Assael, DSW said that their members do participate on regular calls with other food groups. Kara also provided guidance on how to implement a survey, stating:

“Our recommendation is to not make our community members 'prove that they are in need of food. The scarcity mentality or the thinking that people may take advantage is not something we want to support. However, i do understand that bureaucratic processes often require 'evidence' and so if it's truly required, we recommend these 2 questions which have been proven to indicate food insecurity:

To easily assess for FI, Hager et al. (2010) recommend the use of a 2-item screen that utilizes questions 1 and 2 of the Household Food Security Scale (HFSS), asking:

  • “Within the past 12 months, we worried whether our food would run out before we got money to buy more” and

  • “Within the past 12 months the food we bought just didn’t last and we didn’t have money to get more.”

Kara continued: “Of late, this screen is used more often than the lengthy HFSS to assess FI risk (Garcia-Silva, Handler, & Wolfe, 2017; Helton, Cross, Vaughn, & Gochez-Kerr, 2018; Makelarski, Thorngren, & Lindau, 2015).”

Mark confirmed earlier that the Wednesday distribution at the Memorial Park location serves 150-200 cars per week, with the 9:30am Beacon Recreation Center distribution serving 75 families. Distribution lasts until the food runs out, which is early.

How does Mark envision the funding being used? “I would like to see it utilized to supplement and enhance the work already in place.” In terms of boots-on-the-ground knowledge of how people are needing the food, and best ways of getting it to them, Chris confirmed: “Mark participates in a bimonthly call with lots of the folks doing the work here in Beacon.”

Ice Storm Starts Monday Night - Warnings Issued For Tuesday - How School Will Handle

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Ice began covering the Midwest on Sunday, impacting Virginia, continuing in Ohio, and now is in the Hudson Valley. In Beacon on Monday at around 4pm, driveways started to get slick. By 5:30pm while misty rain fell and froze, as if Beacon were in a cloud, some neighbors attempting to take their trash out reported slipping on the steps, like @yaya_love_312: “OMG I almost died at the bottom of my steps taking the trash out 🤦🏾‍♀️.”

As we approach the year anniversary of when the COVID-19 pandemic became official, we are reminded that Disney+ was one of the first to make a blockbuster more easy to stream - Frozen 2, and almost broke the Internet as newly stressed people began binging TV: ”The Internet Is Getting Overloaded. Netflix Limits Streaming In Europe To Preserve Bandwidth”

Hudson Valley Weather forecasts for Tuesday: “Freezing drizzle mixed with sleet and plain rain... tapering off by mid morning. Temps in the low to mid 30s. NE wind 3 to 7mph. Treacherous conditions possible north of I-84 due to icing.” Central Hudson issued a warning to customers for power outages, which is reprinted below.

The Beacon City School District Superintendent Dr. Landahl announced on Monday morning that normally for an icy morning, a 2-Hour Delay would be probable. However, he explained the difference the pandemic induced Remote Learning schedule has on the traditional delay: “This year, due to the differences in our school schedules, we do not have a 2-Hour Delay, so on those days, we will offer remote instruction. However, one of the things we will have to take into account is if teachers and students have access to the internet. Power outages and internet outages across the region could make remote instruction impossible for us. This all becomes more real to us when we have a potential ice storm coming in on us.”

The District’s decision for the Remote Instruction will be announced at around 5am after the district team inspects the roads.

Message From Central Hudson:

Central Hudson is advising residents to prepare for wintry conditions that could bring snow, sleet and freezing rain to the Mid-Hudson Valley on Monday night into Tuesday. These conditions have the potential to cause service interruptions in the region, especially in Orange County and southern portions of the area.

The National Weather Service has issued an Ice Storm Warning for Orange County until Tuesday afternoon while Albany, Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, Putnam, Sullivan and Ulster counties are under Winter Weather Advisories.

“We are closely monitoring the incoming weather system and have a full complement of crews as well as our core contractors ready to respond if power outages occur,” said Ryan Hawthorne, Vice President of Electric Engineering and Operations at Central Hudson. “Our customers, too, are also advised to take precautions. Icing can damage trees and cause limbs to break and fall, bringing down power lines and causing outages and hazardous conditions.”

The current forecast is calling for a mix of snow, sleet and freezing rain to move into the area on Monday night. Higher snow totals are expected in the northern and western parts of the Mid-Hudson Valley while ice accumulations of up to a quarter of an inch are possible further to the south. Visit Hudson Valley Weather for the latest forecast information, or follow them on Facebook.

Our crews and support staff are practicing social distancing in an effort to keep employees and communities safe.

Remember to stay at least 30 feet away from downed power lines and remember that lines may be entangled and hidden in fallen trees and limbs. Assume all downed lines are live and keep a wide distance from fallen trees and limbs. Motorists should also be aware of the potential for downed limbs and power lines that may block roadways and should never attempt to drive over or around downed power lines.

Please review the preparedness and safety tips below and use the resources listed in the right column of this message to report an outage and seek restoration estimates should you lose power.


People are reminded to avoid trees, as branches could fall, and to avoid standing under anything. Central Hudson also advises people not to use a grill or stove for heat, and other tips which you can read here.

Many Days Of Something; The Retail Therapy Guide - 2/12/2021

The Lunar New Year starts Today!

Beacon's Second Saturday is...Saturday!

Valentine's Day is Sunday!

You have many ways to celebrate in Beacon this weekend. From dining in at your house with a "Quinn's Vibe" shared here, there is the RAMEN-tic meal with a build-your-own 6-pack of mix-and-match craft beer.

Or the Factory Outlet Sale at SallyeAnder this weekend, or the semi-perma pop-up from NFP that ends this month. NFP is high-fashion store that sells unusually shaped sweaters, pants and arm cuffs has their flagship in Beacon, and expanded next door to the former Joe's Irish Pub (honor given to that pub). They are holding a very rare sample sale of not-to-be-missed low price opportunities.

Pictured here is the Kitty & LT's Altar from Beacon Natural, who wish you a "Happy Lunar New Year, or as they say in Tibet: Losar Tashi Delek!!"

Numbers are lower in Dutchess County, with 35 active reported cases in Beacon at moment. Bringing some manufacturing back to the Hudson Valley, there is a N95 mask-making company in Newburgh - Hudson Valley Mask Makers. Plenty of Beacon shops to find a fashionable mask in when you mask up to walk Beacon's streets!

THE RETAIL THERAPY GUIDE
Edited and Written By: Marilyn Perez and Katie Hellmuth Martin

 


Writerly Happenings, From Phoebe Zinman, February Blizzard Edition
Days:
Lots of Dates
Time: Lots of Times
Location: Bookstores or Zooms Near You
Oh dear readers, our dear writer Phoebe Zinman is back for a February installment of Writerly Happenings! In typical Mercury in Retrograde spirit, her first draft disappeared - poof! - and here is her second draft. She gives a loaded rundown of what to read - and where to go to hear readers recite.
Read This >


Open Barn Is Back at Stony Kill
Days:
Saturdays & Sundays through November
Time: 11am-1pm
Location: Stony Kill Foundation, 79 Farmstead Lane, Wappingers Falls, NY
Come visit the animals any Saturday and Sunday through November! Visitors sign up for a time slot between 11am-1pm to come inside, learn about the animals, and take all those sheep and cow selfies you've been waiting for. Register for a time by clicking here
Information >


Howland Public Library presents The Roots Of Black Music In America
Days
: February 7-20, 2021
Location: Vimeo
Join Karlus Trapp for a 100 year journey back through time to hear, experience and learn about the music of America’s Black musical giants. While the show is geared towards children and teens, it can be enjoyed by all ages.This joyful show encourages singing and dancing!

The Vimeo link and password will be posted on the library's Facebook page, and the show can be enjoyed at your own convenience Feb. 7th - 20th.
Information >


African American Art Show at the Howland Cultural Center
Dates
: Opens February 6th-28th
Time: 1pm-5pm Saturdays and Sundays
The Howland Cultural Center presents is annual African American Art Show. Featured artists include Jean Benoit, Ronald Brown, Rhonda Green-Phillips, Arnold Hayes, Kyra Husbands, Corey Lightfoot, Thelma Lightfoot, Marline A. Martin, Richard Outlaw, Symantha Outlaw, Myles Pinkney, Sandi Pinkney, James Earl Ransome, Lesa Cline-Ransome, Eddison Romeo, Oliver Spearman, and Donald Whitely.
Information >


Food Drive For Pantry At Beacon Rec Center - Operated By Open Arms Christian Ministries
Dates
: Right Now
Time: Open Hours of Key Food (268 Main Street) or Barb's Butchery (69 Spring Street)
Key Food and Barb's Butchery have teamed up to collect donated food for the Open Arms Christian Ministries, which runs the Food Pantry each Saturday at the Beacon Recreation Center. See the large donation bin at Key Food checkout, and ask about Barb's while you're there. Non-expired, non-perishables please. Food items you would also eat!


 

Valentine’s in Beacon with The Beacon Hood Chicken
Day
: Sunday, February 14, 2021
Time: 11am-2pm
Location: Your Front Door!
Free Valentine’s gifts donated to the children of Beacon. In December 2020, Beacon came together to make the holidays special for their children. In February there is another opportunity to brighten the lives of so many kids who have been affected by issues they endured as a result of the pandemic.

On Sunday, February 14 gifts of FREE chocolate will be distributed by volunteers to hundreds of children 16 and younger who live in Beacon, NY.

For every $7 donated, another child will receive a personally delivered, beautifully wrapped chocolate , along with other goodies.
Information >

Blood Drive - American Legion Post 203
Dates
: Friday, February 19, 2021
Time: 10am - 3pm
Location: 413 Main Street, Beacon, NY 12508


Check our Calendar and Events Guide regularly for upcoming events throughout the week!


Sallyeander Factory Pop-Up
Day
: Friday & Saturday, February 12-13, 2021
Time: 10am-3pm
Location: 18 W. Main St #6, Beacon, NY (Enter the door between Brett's Hardware and Two Way Brewing and following the signs down the hall!)
10% off your purchase + a complimentary screen printed pouch for all sets! Four customers at a time. Mask required.
Information >
 

 
 

EAT CHURCH
3091 U.S. 9, Cold Spring, NY

It's that time of year again and the Chronogrammies are back for 2021! Nominate Eat Church for readers’ choice “Food Truck” from January 1- February 15! The more nominations they get, the closer they are to moving on in the voting round!

Nominate Eat Church at: chronogrammies.com
Information >
Eat Church is an ALBB Sponsor!
   



MEYERS OLDE DUTCH
184 Main Street, Beacon, NY

Have you ever tried the dirty fries from Meyers Olde Dutch? A magic combo of pimento cheese, house made chili and coleslaw all pilled up on their twice cooked fries!

Open for Take-Out and Delivery 11:30am-9pm everyday. 
You can order online by clicking here or call them at 845.440.6900.
Meyers Olde Dutch is an ALBB Sponsor!


HOMESPUN FOODS
232 Main Street, Beacon, NY
and the Cafe at the Dia : Beacon

Well lookie here! Homespun Foods website got a makeover by our super editor and many hat wearer >>> @katiejamesdesign. ONLINE ORDERING is now available through @toasttab for Homespun, and menus for both Dia and Homespun updated daily. And guess what's coming next? WINE SUBSCRIPTIONS. Check out their wine and farming blog Farms Akimbo, too!
View Menu >
Homespun is an ALBB Sponsor! 

HUDSON VALLEY FOOD HALL
288 Main Street, Beacon, NY
MomaValley was celebrating the Lunisolar on Friday, February 12th, and are back on Saturday! "Happy Losar Tashi Dhelek, first day of Lunisolar 2021"
Information >
Hudson Valley Food Hall is an ALBB Sponsor!





BAJA 328

328 Main Street, Beacon, NY
How many wings did you consume last Sunday? You didn't know Baja 328 offered wings? Now you do so keep this tasty nugget of information stored in your brain the next time you are craving some tasty wings! 
BAJA 328 is an ALBB Sponsor!
 



BRETT'S HARDWARE
18 West Main Street, Beacon

You know what snow on your roof means? Dripping water. Icicles. Weight. What does weight do to your gutters? Pulls them off. That's why there's Brett's Hardware just down the street (next to the SallyeAnder pop up!). For all of that dripping water, you can get the accordion pieces too that help the water travel further out from your house, instead of right next to the foundation.
Information >
Brett's Hardware is a Sponsor, thank you!






LUXE OPTIQUE
181-183 Main Street, Beacon

These are so you - the VIVID line at Luxe Optique. Starting at $150 for lenses and frames, you have a lot to choose from, including wire frames, circles, ovals, and different pattern and color combinations. A durable frame that can last you, maybe while you're out shoveling.
Shop Online >
Luxe Optique is a Sponsor, thank you!


BINNACLE BOOKS

321 Main Street, Beacon
Brontez Purnell, “100 Boyfriends” 

“Transgressive, foulmouthed, and brutally funny, Brontez Purnell’s ‘100 Boyfriends’ is a revelatory spiral into the imperfect lives of queer men desperately fighting the urge to self-sabotage. As they tiptoe through minefields of romantic, substance-fueled misadventure—from dirty warehouses and gentrified bars in Oakland to desolate farm towns in Alabama—Purnell’s characters strive for belonging in a world that dismisses them for being Black, broke, and queer. In spite of it—or perhaps because of it—they shine. 

Armed with a deadpan wit, Purnell finds humor in even the darkest of nadirs with the peerless zeal, insight, and horniness of a gay punk messiah. Together, the slice-of-life tales that writhe within ‘100 Boyfriends’ are an inimitable tour of an unexposed queer underbelly. Holding them together is the vision of an iconoclastic storyteller, as fearless as he is human.” 

Grab your copy at @binnaclebooks today!
Binnacle Books is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!


LA MÉRE CLOTHING AND GOODS
436 Main Street, Beacon
It's 2021 and mixing patterns is totally acceptable, but you don't need our permission to play with your fashion. Express yourself and have fun!

Download the La Mére app now!  It is available for iOS users and coming soon for Android users. Download our NEW app now and receive 10% off your first in app purchase. Apply code 10OFFAPP in checkout to receive the discount. Visit https://lamereclothingandgoods.com/ to download. 
Shop Online >
La Mere is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!

             
 

HIRING: Online Publishing "Working Owner Partners Wanted", Main Street Beacon
MainStreetBeacon.com is a new local Hudson Valley Online Site, showcasing local makers, business’s, events & more. They are looking writers, social media producers, and more.
Details >

List your job in ALBB's Job Listings >
NEW CATEGORY! CHILDBIRTH
ALBB has added a new category to our Business Directory: Childbirth!
In it, find "Classes," "Midwives," "Doulas," "Feeding," and "Sleeping." The first sponsor of this category is Jennifer Polk, founder of Juniper Empowered Birth. Jennifer is a Labor & Delivery RN, Certified Lactation Consultant, and Evidence Based Birth® Instructor. She offers classes and private sessions that you or a friend may want to take.
Details >

List your business in ALBB's Business Directory >

ANTALEK & MOORE INSURANCE AGENCY
340 Main Street, Beacon

We have got some SNOW! And there may be more on the way so here's some friendly reminders from Antalek & Moore as you head out and shovel:

*Push rather than lift. Pushing the snow with the shovel instead of lifting can help reduce the strain on your body. Bend your knees and use your legs when possible.
*Choose your shovel wisely. Ergonomically-designed shovels can help reduce the amount of bending you have to do.
*Hit the pause button. Pace yourself and be sure to take frequent breaks. Consider taking a break after 20 to 30 minutes of shoveling, especially when the snow is wet.
*Wear layers. Dress in layers and remove them as you get warm to help maintain a comfortable body temperature.
*Stay hydrated. Drink plenty of water to stay hydrated while shoveling.

Antalek & Moore is a Sponsor, thank you!
 

TIN SHINGLE
Do you need to send a press release? Of course you do! You can send a press release about anything. It's a great way to start the process that is building buzz about your business. Tin Shingle offers a Press Release Writing service, and works with two publishing industry stars who live in Beacon to get this written for you! Beth McDonough, former publisher of Traditional Home, and Olivia Abel, former editor-in-chief of Hudson Valley Magazine. Don't you want those publishing brains behind your brand?
Learn More >
 
KATIE JAMES, INC.
A new Design Tip Video has posted for you! For websites who sell things with ecommerce, you may want to make sure that finding the "View Cart" button is super easy in a Squarespace website. We created a work-around for you, and you can watch it here.
Do You Need A Website Too? >
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Writerly Happenings By Phoebe Zinman: Blizzard Edition

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Hi lovely readers.

If shoveling hasn’t put you in traction, and you’re able to read this, I salute you!

Books From Phoebe’s Writing Group

I have a cozy little writing group that’s helping me get through this epic midwinter, and I surveyed them for what they’ve been reading of late.

They recommend the novel The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow. It's about three sisters in late-19th Century America who are descended from witches and get involved in the suffrage movement.

Also The Moth Snowstorm by Michael McCarthy, Ravens in Winter by Bernd Heinrich (a theme emerges), Piranesi by Susanna Clarke and A Swim in a Pond in the Rain by George Saunders.

Someone else is reading nonfiction like Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Hahneman, and Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez, who passed away last month. I just finished Felon by Reginald Dwayne Betts, an incredible book of poetry that takes on the American prison system, and Euphoria by Lily King, which is loosely based on Margaret Mead’s life and made me question the moral ground of whole entire field of anthropology.

Any of these could be had at either Binnacle Books or Split Rock Books or requested for curbside pickup at the Howland Library!

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What else is going down besides rock salt?

Well, the Hudson Valley Writer’s Center has a pretty serious lineup of awesomeness if you want to join on Zoom. There’s a great workshop with Karen Finley (!!!!) on February 13th called What’s Love Got To Do With It. The center also has an open mic on February 19th if you feel brave.

In conjunction with Bard College, the phenomenal Meshell Ndegocello has created this amazing project inspired by James Baldwin. Chapter & Verse “is a 21st century ritual tool kit for justice. A call for revolution. A gift during turbulent times.” You can call in for meditations, songs, readings; it’s such a creative work.

I just discovered the Albany Poets group and that’s a website you can spend some time in. They have a number of performance recordings, lots of calls for submissions, and they just published two poems by Mike Jurkovic, who is a really fun poet to hear read.

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Kingston Reads presents A Community Conversation about Race and Social Classifications on February 18th, in collaboration with one of my favorite bookstores, Rough Draft. Moderators Shaniqua Bowden, Erica Brown, and Charlotte Adamis “will hold the space for a spirited conversation about race and social classifications inspired by Isabel Wilkerson’s award-winning book, Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents. 

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For a book discussion closer to home, you can join the Newburgh LGBTQ+ Center for their Abolitionist Study Group in March. Email them to join in. And if you want to exercise your abolitionist muscles in a different way, consider the Black & Pink, a nationwide PenPal program in which incarcerated LGBTQIA2S+ people and people living with HIV/AIDS are matched with PenPals who correspond, build relationships, and participate in harm reduction and affirmation.

The Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston has some scheduled meetings to virtually write these letters with a group! In partnership with the TMI Project, the Center is also putting out a call for storytellers who self-identify as members of the Black Transgender & Gender Non-Conforming community.

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Finally, on February 25th, SUNY Dutchess Community College presents New York Times best selling author Hanif Abdurraqib. This is a great opportunity to hear a really prolific writer.

This should be enough to warm you up, dear readers! Stay safe, stay cozy, keep shoveling.

Valentine's Day Flowers; Where To Get Them In Beacon

It’s the big weekend of LOVE! 💕

Love is a theory and a feeling and exists in many forms. DO get yourself some love, and treat others with love. Could be something purchased, or really, just hanging with your loved one and doing something they love to make it really special. Give a wink. Give a nod. Give a flower. High five your pod.

As a kid, I took myself to the bookstore every Valentine’s Day to buy myself a new book. With dreams of flowers of course. If you want a flower, you need to give a flower. How else will the flowers get there? If they have any left, you have Mountain Laurel Florist, Raven Rose & Batts Florist in Beacon. And one on Spring Street on the other side of the creek.

This bouquet is from Flora Good Times and is part of their subscription program. Subscriptions are a great way to support a business, and a good way to make sure something shows up without you having to remember. But the recipient will remember!

Beacon's Fee Structure For Fines For Unshoveled or Unsatisfactory Snow On Sidewalks - As Of February 2021

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After the City of Beacon robocalled residents to remind them to shovel their sidewalks, and shovel them better or face fines after 2.5 feet of snow fell, plus a few more inches a few days later, and more snow forecasted, A Little Beacon Blog followed up with Beacon’s City Administrator, Chris White, to find out what the fines were and what was required in snow removal from sidewalks.

ALBB: What is the fee for the City to remove snow from a sidewalk?

“The fee for the city to clear a sidewalk is a $125.00 administration fee plus $1.25 per lineal foot of sidewalk cleared.”

ALBB: When the City of Beacon Highway Department clears the sidewalk of a resident, and the resident pays the fee, are the employees of the Highway Department paid additional? Or is this part of their general work description?

“No. This is part of their general work.”

ALBB: Would shoveling of sidewalks fall into overtime for them?

“No. This is done during the normal work day on regular time.”

ALBB: Regarding width of shoveling: the robocall mentioned that baby strollers could not get through. If a resident has shoveled their sidewalk, but only so much for adults to walk through, and not a stroller, is that enough? Or is there a width requirement of snow removal on a sidewalk?

“The Beacon City Code requires the width of the sidewalk be cleared. That said, the City prioritizes clearing sidewalks that have not been cleared at all.”

ALBB: Regarding plowing done by the Highway Department: the trucks do mound snow back onto the sidewalks and driveways. According to some older residents of Beacon who have been here for 20+ years, the plowing did not seem to push back onto the sidewalks as much. Can you comment as to this snow clearing strategy?

“I can’t comment on what people say. I lived here in the 1990s and remember people complaining about that in the past as well. When you have heavy snowfalls, it is difficult to deal with the volume of snow.”

ALBB: Regarding snow removal into the street: There are at times nowhere else for the snow to go. If a yard is small, or has bushes or trees, there is literally nowhere to blow the snow if a snowblower is used, or a shovel. Can you advise?

Awaiting response. Will post when updated.

ALBB: A reader asked if there are zones of the City that have little foot traffic, like a side street, that are not subject to fine?

This was a new question in addition to the original list. Awaiting response. Will post when updated

Dutchess County Exec Marcus Molinaro Stops Waiting For NYS Guidance To Vaccinate 60 People With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) In Day Facilities

Guidance on who can be vaccinated when and where has been extremely precise globally, nationally, and locally in the rollout of the vaccine to protect people against COVID-19. During the initial NYS Phase 1a, a set of vulnerable people were close to being eligible, but were left out, according to Dutchess County Marcus Molinaro, who implored the need to vaccinate them in a letter sent to Governor Cuomo on January 22, 2021.

People with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) who attend “congregate care facilities” during the day, but do not stay overnight, were not included in the initial phase. Marcus Molinaro’s daughter lives on the autism spectrum, which led him to into advocacy for people with special abilities and compelled him to start ThinkDIFFERENTLY, a programmatic foundation of Dutchess County.

According to the letter sent by Molinaro to Governor Cuomo, and confirmed by Colleen Pillus, Communication Director for Dutchess County, people age 18+ who attend “congregate care facilities” by day, and do not sleep over as live-in residents, were not eligible for the vaccination, but the staff supporting them were eligible. Staff and residents at OPWDD, OMH and OASAS facilities were granted eligibility early on. Also at issue are that “these groups are eligible but they are not prioritized for supply. They are a population that cannot easily access the vaccinations the way the supply is being currently being distributed by New York State,” Colleen clarified to A Little Beacon Blog.

Said Dutchess County Executive Molinaro to Governor Cuomo in the letter, people with IDD have a hard time understanding social distancing or mask wearing. He stated: “Individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, especially those who live in group homes or in congregate care settings, face an immense risk from COVID-19. These facilities continue to suffer from the ravages of this pandemic as the greatest protections we have are not always practical for many of these individuals, as some struggle to understand social distancing and have difficulty wearing masks. These are unique challenges that have contributed to the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on individuals living with disabilities.”

Apparently not hearing a response from New York State (Molinaro ran against Cuomo for the Governor position in 2018 and was defeated), the County Executive took it upon himself to set aside 60 doses of the vaccine for the IDD community in congregate care facilities during the day in a “mobile pop-up POD” in New Horizons Resources in Pleasant Valley (video here).

“Without specific direction from New York State as to which providers are to prioritize vaccinating the countless residents across the state who live with intellectual and developmental disabilities, Dutchess County has taken it upon itself to inoculate such residents locally. Hospitals cannot simply be the ‘catch-all’ for eligible groups like this who fall through the state system’s cracks; it’s not practical for them to vaccinate healthcare workers and seemingly every other eligible group. Where the state has failed our special-needs community, Dutchess County has proudly stepped up to ThinkDIFFERENTLY and serve this constituency, which has been marginalized by Albany since the beginning of the pandemic.”

When asked if the Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro thought that priorities should not exist, his office answered: “Not at the moment, due to supply restrictions it remains important to prioritize those most at risk. Currently, the vaccine is first and foremost a tool to save as many lives as possible and the quicker we can vaccinate individuals the more lives we can save. Early on in the rollout, the State’s eligibility criteria were too narrow causing delays in getting shots into arms but as they opened the criteria to include, first, people over the age of 75 and, then, those over the age of 65, it became less of a problem. The issues now are supply – access to vaccine doses – and distribution – getting doses to entities that can most efficiently vaccinate eligible individuals. There is still rigidity in the State’s requirements as to which providers should be prioritizing or not prioritizing specific groups which meet the eligibility criteria. Dutchess County is focused on vaccinating as many eligible people as possible, but also focusing on our most vulnerable. That should be our shared goal -- to vaccinate as many people as quickly possible with priority given to those most at-risk. If we hold ourselves to that goal, it will be anything but divisive, it will be simple, understandable, and unifying.”

Vaccines doses continue in short supply throughout the country, and the world, While Dutchess County and other counties across the nation are set up to vaccinate many people, the doses are not there yet from the federal government and the manufacturers.

People can sign up for email updates about vaccinations from Dutchess County here.

Update 2/11/2021: In answers to reader questions on Instagram where this article was shared, Dutchess County Executive Molinaro confirmed: “Every individual secured approval from their guardian, is under the observation of their agency and the State approves of our actions.”

After Double Blizzard, Beacon's Mayor's Office Says Sidewalk Snow Subject To Fine

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After February’s blizzard dropped 2.5’ feet of snow, the Dig Out process began. Beacon’s Highway Department drove into Overtime in order to clear the streets day and night. Residents shoveled and powered up snow blowers to clear the snow. Which snowed twice within a 24hr period. Requiring 2 rounds of snow removal for those who were trying to keep up with it.

The following week (yesterday), another snowfall occurred, with more inches of heavy, ice-like snow falling. This prompted the Mayor’s Office to call residents with a reminder to remove snow, stating that baby strollers could not get through some sidewalks. As a pusher of a stroller for 10 years, it is common knowledge that sidewalks in Beacon will never be 100% clear enough for a stroller to get through (and the sidewalks themselves are broken or in some cases, non-existent). Of strollers that can get through plowed snow, a 3-wheel jogging stroller is usually required, which compares to an off-roading vehicle, as opposed to a more common 4-wheel stroller with small wheels, which will barely get through any snow at all.

In the evening of Beacon’s 2nd blizzard, as people returned home from a commute if they have one, or turned away from Remote Learning if they had kids at home during the Snow-Day-Not-A-Snow-Day, the Mayor’s Office delivered a robo-call to residents, reminding them to clear their sidewalks, and letting them know of a fine that could happen if the Highway Department needed to clear their sidewalks for them. Instead of the Mayor delivering the message as he had hours earlier to deliver a vaccination awareness message, residents heard from his assistant regarding snow removal consequences:

 

Please help us keep everyone safe during this inclement weather.

Keep the roads clear by avoiding unnecessary travel; park in City parking lots or in your driveway. Any car parked on a city street after two inches of snowfall is subject to being towed.

Your car needs to be move out of City parking lots 24 hours after the snow has stopped falling so the Highway Department can clear the lots.

Let’s keep the sidewalks cleared for everyone, there were a lot of baby strollers struggling to get through narrow paths last week. It is your responsibility to clear your sidewalk within 24 hours after the snow stops falling. If you do not do so, the City will clear it for you and charge you a fine.

Please do not throw snow in the road as it can turn to ice and can become a hazard.

 

Sidewalk Path Width

Following up on this message, A Little Beacon Blog has reached out to the Mayor’s Office to gain clarification on the required width - if any - on how wide the shoveling of the snow on a sidewalk needs to be.

Shoveling is a lot of work. People who cannot, due to time or physical hardship, hire locals or companies to dig out for them. Blue Green Lawns, a new landscaping company serving Poughkeepsie and Beacon, dug out 10 properties for the first storm, and 4 properties for the second storm. According to Blue Green Lawns, some homeowners specified: “We need you immediately so that we don’t get fined.”

Sidewalk Snow Throwback From Highway Department Plow Trucks

While the sentiment of gratitude is there for the Highway Department to be plowing, and earning anticipated overtime during the winter blizzard season, residents do dread when the truck passes by and pushes the snow from the street back onto a freshly shoveled sidewalk. “It didn’t used to be this way,” one long-time Beacon resident stated, who has lived in Beacon for 30 years and has a corner lot. “They didn’t used to push the snow back into our sidewalk. They left it in the street.”

Also notable is the corner of a sidewalk. If a resident digs out but stops at the corner, then a person must turn around to walk back

Running Out Of Room To Put The Snow

While removing 2.5’ feet of snow, it is unclear on what to do if there is no room at the resident’s property to put the snow. One person’s yard may be spacious, another person’s yard may have large bushes or trees in front, thereby making snow placement impossible after shoveling it from the sidewalk, and forcing it into the street, as it has nowhere left to go.

After snowfall, from time to time and for certain areas, the City of Beacon does remove, or cut, snow from the street to place it in piles near Memorial Park.

Sidewalk Fines If Highway Department Digs Out A Resident

During Monday night’s City Council Workshop meeting, the new City Administrator, Chris White, and Mayor Lee Kyriacou indicated a schedule of pricing, for how to calculate how much a homeowner would be fined, depending on the area needing cleared.

Beacon's Mayor Kyriacou Robo-Calls Community With Vaccine Information

Today (Tuesday, 2/9/2021), Beacon’s Mayor Lee Kyriacou sent a health message via Beacon’s robo-call system, to tell people how to get a COVID-19 vaccination near Beacon, NY. His message is below:

 

This is Beacon Mayor Lee Kyriacou with an update on COVID-19 vaccines.

Eligibility: Those who are currently eligible for a vaccine are: people 65 and older, frontline workers including first responders, public safety and transit workerse, educators, front-facing grocery store workers, certain funeral workers, and those working or living in homeless shelters

Everyone who is currently eligible for a vaccine will be able to get one within three to four months.

There are several vaccine distribution locations in our area. All require an appointment. Please be patient, but persistent. I will list them starting with those in Beacon.

  • Sun River Health on Main Street. Visit sunriver.org or call 845 288 0850. Available wit appointment only. No walk-ins.

  • Local pharmacies are vaccinating those 65 years and older. Check RiteAid.com and BeaconWellnessPharmacy.com later this month for more information. Please do not call to schedule.

  • The former JC Penney in the mall and Dover High School. Visit dutchessny.gov/covidvaccine.

  • The Institute for Family Health in Hyde Park, Ellenville and New Paltz. Visit institute.org

  • Westchester County Center and SUNY Albany. Visit am-i-eligibile.covid19vaccine.health.ny/gov or call 1 833 697 4829

  • Castle Point, for Veterans who are either 65 or older or are essential workers, call 845 838 7668.

To sign up for these robo-calls from te City, click here to get an introduction and to get started.