Shuttered Venues Closer To Applying For Money From Grant Launching April 8, 2021

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has opened an intake form for the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) application portal to process applications for the much-anticipated critical economic relief program that launches on Thursday, April 8, 2021.

Venues must have been in operation by February 2020, and include the following:

  • Live venue operators or promoters

  • Theatrical producers

  • Live performing arts organization operators

  • Relevant museum operators, zoos and aquariums who meet specific criteria

  • Motion picture theater operators

  • Talent representatives

  • Each business entity owned by an eligible entity that also meets the eligibility requirements

“The SBA’s new Administrator, Isabella Casillas Guzman, said about the grant “The SBA knows these venues are critical to America's economy and understands how hard they've been impacted, as they were among the first to shutter. This vital economic aid will provide a much-needed lifeline for live venues, museums, movie theatres and many more.”

The SVOG program was established by the Economic Aid to Hard Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits and Venues Act, which appropriated $15 billion for it. The American Rescue Plan Act, signed into law by President Joe Biden on March 11, 2021, appropriated an additional $1.25 billion, bringing the program funding to a total of $16.25 billion, with more than $16 billion allocated for grants.

Applying for both SVOG and PPP Program

To ensure eligible venues do not miss a window to receive assistance through the Paycheck Protection Program, the American Rescue Plan Act also amended the SVOG program so entities that apply for a PPP loan after Dec. 27, 2020, can also apply for an SVOG, with the eligible entity’s SVOG to be reduced by the PPP loan amount. The PPP loan applications have been updated to reflect this. SBA is currently offering PPP loans until March 31, 2021.

To prepare in advance of the SVOG application portal opening on April 8, potential applicants should get registered in the federal government’s System for Award Management (SAM.gov), as this is required for an entity to receive an SVOG, and reference the preliminary application checklist and eligibility requirements.

Information Webinar March 30th

The SBA will be holding a SVOG Application Information Webinar on Tuesday, March 30th. You can register for this free event by clicking this link.

Loan Extension for all disaster loans, including the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program, until 2022

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The U.S. Small Business Administration recently announced extended deferment periods for all disaster loans, including the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program, until 2022.

All SBA disaster loans made in calendar year 2020, including COVID-19 EIDL, will have a first payment due date extended from 12-months to 24-months from the date of the note.

All SBA disaster loans made in calendar year 2021, including COVID-19 EIDL, will have a first payment due date extended from 12-months to 18-months from the date of the note.

Existing SBA disaster loans approved prior to 2020 in regular servicing status as of March 1, 2020, received an automatic deferment of principal and interest payments through December 31, 2020. This initial deferment period was subsequently extended through March 31, 2021. An additional 12-month deferment of principal and interest payments will be automatically granted to these borrowers.

Borrowers will resume their regular payment schedule with the payment immediately preceding March 31, 2022, unless the borrower voluntarily continues to make payments while on deferment. It is important to note that the interest will continue to accrue on the outstanding balance of the loan throughout the duration of the deferment.

Questions on SBA COVID-19 EIDL and disaster loan payments can be answered by email at DisasterCustomerService@sba.gov or by calling SBA’s Customer Service Center at 1-800-659-2955 (TTY: 1-800-877-8339).

Cupcakes and the Retail Therapy Guide 3/19/2021

Happy Weekend To You!

We are going to kick this weekend newsletter off with a picture of...carrot cake cupcakes, because cupcakes are good and happy. These are from Homespun, and available to order online to reserve yours (we swiped 3 of them after taking this photo, so...)

Most importantly, however, we wanted to address Atlanta and what our Asian friends in Beacon are experiencing as reactions to this unfold. What hasn't been spoken about much locally is how friends whose families are from Japan, or China, or the Philippines or other areas are feeling, or what kind of encounters they have endured while walking on sidewalks since the pandemic started and a former president attempted to connect a pandemic with a region.

We are quietly hearing from our friends, and they are asking for support. They want to see their friends say supportive things in social media, and to denounce things like a police captain explaining that a murderer had a "bad day." That captain was later discovered to have posted his own belief of the region connection to the pandemic, and even supported t-shirts of it.

Not sure where to start? Try asking your friends where their families are from, to get more comfortable with regions. Next, listen to this webinar with Moraya Seeger DeGeare, a Beaconite who is Black, Japanese and white, and engages in talking about race issues in a safe space.

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

If you'd like to guarantee to see your entertainment event listed here, help us help you by advertising it here.

Sloop Clearwater presents She Sailor Sea Stories Webinar
Days
: Mondays, March 22 & 29, 2021
Time: 7pm
Location: Online via Zoom
The National Women’s Sailing Association and WomenWhoSail are excited to host a Women’s History Month Special Edition of She Sailor Sea Stories, celebrating Clearwater's legacy of creating a community aboard for women to lead and to belong. Find out what happens when six former Captains found themselves at the helm of the fine and splendid Sloop Clearwater, from 1980 to present, during two episodes of storytelling on March 22nd and March 29th, 7:00PM EST.
Information >

Inequity in Education
Days
: Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Time: 6:30pm - 8pm
Location: Webinar
Organized by Next Step Hudson Valley. Tune in this Wednesday for a vital conversation about New York's education funding model and why Black, Brown, and low-income students are left in underfunded schools. Presentations from Alliance For Quality Education and Citizen Action NY about education inequities and how they can be resolved.
Information >


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

 

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

Calling all taco lovers! The perfect spring (fever) weekend food is here! Eat Church will be back at Marbled Meat Shop, 3091 Route 9 in Cold Spring Friday & Saturdays, 4-8pm. Stop by and pay them a visit! 
Order Online Now >
Eat Church is an ALBB Sponsor!   


 


MEYERS OLDE DUTCH
184 Main Street, Beacon, NY

FRIED CHICKEN POP-UP this Sunday, March 21, 2021. Back by popular demand - Fried Chicken Dinner!  Served with MOD's famous mac and cheese, coleslaw, cornbread and their world famous salted chocolate chip cookie! That's right! For limited time only, that salted chocolate chip cookie is back! You will want to pre-order to save your meal.

How To Pre-Order: Order today for Sunday, March 21. When ordering online, be sure to choose SUNDAY as your day to pick up and the fried chicken dinner.  Pre-orders will be accepted through Friday, March 19 at 1 pm.  There will be limited availability on Sunday.

You can peruse and order from their regular menu or the special fried chicken dinner by clicking here
Follow on Instagram >
Meyers Olde Dutch is an ALBB Sponsor!


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

Homespun Foods is hiring! They are looking for a few good people to join their team. Hiring for both kitchen and front of house, this is a great place for people who love food and wine and good teamwork in a friendly, inclusive environment.
Learn more >
View Homespun Menu >
Homespun is an ALBB Sponsor! 


HUDSON VALLEY FOOD HALL
288 Main Street, Beacon, NY
Check out this video recently shared on Hudson Valley's Food Hall Instagram! Featuring vendors and special pop-up artisans, giving you a great idea of what to expect when you check out this eatery.
Information >
Hudson Valley Food Hall is an ALBB Sponsor!





BAJA 328
328 Main Street, Beacon, NY
On a recent visit to @baja328 and had the most delicious fajitas! They never disappoint! Try their Chicken, Steak, Shrimp, or Tex Mex!

Our new favorite drink from them right now: the Ginger Paloma⠀⠀
BAJA 328 is an ALBB Sponsor!
 



BRETT'S HARDWARE
18 West Main Street, Beacon

Your yard needs these accessories! 🦩Flamingo solar lights, flamingo stands, frogs, and bell solar lights! They are beautiful & will look fabulous with the sunlight! Now available at @bretts_hardware - check it out! 
Brett's Hardware is a Sponsor, thank you!





LUXE OPTIQUE
181-183 Main Street, Beacon
You know you got it going on when your frames match your dog  These frames are from Leisure Society. Stop by Luxe Optique and look over their collection and design options. Furry friend approval not required but strongly recommended.

 @gertie18 ⁠

Walk-ins welcome.
Shop Online >
Luxe Optique is a Sponsor, thank you!


BINNACLE BOOKS
321 Main Street, Beacon
Available at @binnaclebooks, Elizabeth Kolbert, “Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future”. “In ‘Under a White Sky,’ Elizabeth Kolbert takes a hard look at the new world we are creating. Along the way, she meets biologists who are trying to preserve the world’s rarest fish, which lives in a single tiny pool in the middle of the Mojave; engineers who are turning carbon emissions to stone in Iceland; Australian researchers who are trying to develop a ‘super coral’ that can survive on a hotter globe; and physicists who are contemplating shooting tiny diamonds into the stratosphere to cool the earth.

Visit their Instagram for more details.

Binnacle Books is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!


LA MÉRE CLOTHING AND GOODS
436 Main Street, Beacon
Spring has arrived to La Mére Clothing And Goods, and you need that denim jacket. With the unique pieces available at La Mére Clothing And Goods, you'll be sure to find something no matter what your style may be contemporary casual, boho chic, or something else. They have new items that arrive weekly so visit often! Can't make it in person? Shop Online >
La Mere is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!

             
 

A Little Beacon Blog's Summer Camp Guide is Open For Sponsorships!
All camps who are providing a safe, socially distanced summer experienced are encouraged to reserve their spot now in ALBB's very popular Summer Camp Guide.
Details >

NEW Junior Farmer's Program
Stony Kill Farm is excited to announce this new program for ages 8-12! Break out the boots, its time to get dirty!

Join their Livestock Caretaker on Monday mornings (9-11am) for some feeding, mucking and hands-on lessons in animal husbandry. Learn how to clip hooves, halter train and incubate eggs. Limited spots available.
Information >

Stony Kill Farm
79 Farmstead Lane, 
Wappingers Falls, NY

Looking for some community service hours? The Poughkeepsie Public Library (@poklibny) is looking for teen bloggers !

Use their guidelines to create your own content for a teen Café blog then send your post to teencafe@poklib.org for their review!

For questions email teencafe@poklib.org
 
HIRING: Brett's Hardware in Beacon
Brett's Hardware in Beacon is hiring! Go inside the store to apply. Good luck!

List your job in ALBB's Job Listings >
BUSINESS FEATURE - HOME INSPECTIONS IN REAL ESTATE
A Little Beacon Blog's Business Directory contains categories in Real Estate for business features like Staging, Realtors, Mortgage Lenders, and House Inspections. People can find businesses on Google, but ALBB readers like going to our directory to see which businesses have listed themselves in this space. Help your business stand out by advertising your business in ALBB's Business Directory.

Featured Business: Rizzi Home Inspection Services, Inc. is who you can call to inspect a house before you buy it. If you're a first-time home-buyer, the House Inspection is part of the process. Says owner Louis Rizzi Jr.,: "As Owner and Operator, I provide professional Home Inspections while educating you on the condition of the home by answering any questions or concerns you may have, relieving you of stress and allowing you to make an informed buying decision."
Learn More >

List your business in ALBB's Business Directory >

ANTALEK & MOORE INSURANCE AGENCY
340 Main Street, Beacon

Join Antalek & Moore in wishing Vince Lemma a Happy Anniversary with the agency. Vince is a partner and has almost 20 years of industry experience specializing in Employee Benefits, Life Insurance and Property & Casualty Insurance. His primary focus as an independent agent is to be an advocate for his customers. "Thank you for the leadership and commitment you bring to our office, our clients, and our community."

Antalek & Moore takes care of you. Give them a call today: 845-831-4300 and visit their website.
Antalek & Moore is a Sponsor, thank you!
 

TIN SHINGLE
Renowned relationship therapist, Moraya Seeger DeGeare, MA, LMFT, specializes in Emotionally Focused Therapy in gender and race identification in one's self. While she herself is Black, Japanese and white, Moraya had not been that outspoken about race, outside of her private work with clients. This year has changed that. In this Tin Shingle TuneUp webinar, Moraya speaks with Tin Shingle and ALBB owner Katie Hellmuth Martin about how to talk about race out loud, when you don't know how to talk about it. While people want a safe space in which to practice speaking, others need to feel a safe space coming from silence.
Watch The Replay >
 
KATIE JAMES, INC.
Sneak Peek! Meyers Olde Dutch is "refreshing" their Main Street Location (that's an understatement...we've seen pictures of the concrete being poured) and connected with Katie James, Inc. to give their print and website branding a refresh too. We are so thrilled, because in between eating their fried chicken sandwiches, we get to test new designs on them. Like this one for their future "Cocktails" menu!
How Can We Help You? >
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Coming in April to Howland Public Library - Applying to College: From Getting Started to Finding Your Fit With Adam Kendis

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The Howland Public Library is offering a free workshop for students starting the college application process. The workshop, Applying to College: From Getting Started to Finding Your Fit, will be led by Adam Kendis and will be held via Zoom on Thursday, April 8th, at 6pm.

The college application process can seem overwhelming to students and families. But deciding on your next steps in life doesn’t need to produce anxiety. Instead, it can be a fun and powerful journey. This workshop will offer tips and practical resources that will help students and families learn:

  • How to start the college search process;

  • How to find colleges that are a great fit - academic, social and financial- for you;

  • What resources can help you confidently navigate this journey;

  • How to make yourself and your applications stand out in the process;

  • How to approach this journey in a way that emphasizes self-discovery and fun over anxiety and pressure.

This workshop is designed for students in 11th grade and the adults who support them but is open to all students and parents. To register, email Michelle Rivas at community@beaconlibrary.org .

About Adam Kendis

Adam Kendis is the Director of College Guidance at a small, independent school in Fairfield County, CT and a local Beaconite. He has been working in college guidance for 15 years and has worked with hundreds of students and families. In 2011 Adam was named a Counselor That Changes Lives by the Colleges That Change Lives.

City Administrator Chris White Refuses To Answer Questions From ALBB After Questions Confirming Employee Job Titles

After a series of articles highlighting hiring practices in the City of Beacon’s Water and Highway Departments, in March 2021, Beacon’s City Administrator Chris White declined to answer any questions from A Little Beacon Blog unless a face to face meeting was held. City Administrator White has also instructed all staff to not take questions sent via email or voice mail, including the Park and Recreation Director, Mark Price. The previous City Administrator Anthony Ruggiero continued to answer questions from ALBB, even when the questions were about employment and grew uncomfortable.

Beacon’s former Mayor Randy Casale, known for his brazen and outspoken style, told ALBB when asked if he ever declined to answer reporter’s questions: “Not during my administration unless the lawyer advised him because of litigation, but that would only be about that subject. I do not believe it wise if you want transparency!”

Later, when Mayor Kyriacou participated in a COVID-19 vaccination event, City Administrator Chris ignored questions seeking comment about the event, to encourage others to get vaccinated.

Chip Rowe, the Managing Editor of the Highlands Current, a leading newspaper in the region had this to say when asked by ALBB if having a standing no-comment policy from a local government administration was normal: “There have been politicians who said they won't talk to certain outlets, Obama did that to Fox for a while.”

When A Little Beacon Blog was researching disciplinary action taken by the City of Beacon on Highway Department employee Reuben Simmons, after he was put on paid leave the first time in January 2021, and was seeking confirmation of the unpaid leave from the Highway Department’s CSEA Union Representative, Paula Becker, I left two voicemails with Paula seeking confirmation of the unpaid leave status. At the time, I did not know that Paula was an employee with the City of Beacon in the Finance Department.

City Administrator Chris emailed me in response, saying: “I received notice from other staff that you had called regarding a personnel issue. As I mentioned previously, the City does not comment on personnel issues. I would appreciate you contacting me if you have questions in the future.”

Paula Becker is an employee of the City of Beacon, and the President of the CSEA for Beacon. That combination, in this case, has led to a conflict of interest for pursuing research for employment articles.

Reuben Simmons, the City of Beacon employee in the Highway Department on unpaid and paid leave, was also at one point the President of the CSEA for Beacon, and says he understands the pros and cons of having an employee be a Union President. While in that leadership position, he recalls how he as the president needed to advocate for employees, as well as give them answers they did not like.

To get the background on Reuben’s employment situation, listen to ALBB’s podcast with him here. The podcast also provides an employment and demotion timeline.

Below is City Administrator Chris’ email outlining his position. I declined to meet him for the conversation, as I do not think it necessary to outline or negotiate editorial standards with a governmental entity, or any subject a publication is reporting on. Other reporters may have chosen to meet, in order to warm a relationship. With three kids in Remote Learning at the time, and 3 jobs I hold down, this is not something I wanted to make time for. All I need are answers to simple questions, and those can be sent via email. It should also be noted, with regards to the “simple conversation” he referred to below, I had asked him these questions via email. The opportunity to clear anything up had already happened

 

Katie,

Thank you for your response. I am unable to respond to further questions until you and I have some discussion about journalistic standards for your articles. Since I replaced Anthony, I have tried to treat you as I would a news outlet, but I’m realizing that your blog does not operate in the same manner. I have to say that I also liked your blog’s focus on small businesses in Beacon so I tried to give you the benefit of the doubt in responding to you as time allowed.

The article that you just published on City hiring, which is referred to as a “hot mess,” certainly does not meet basic journalistic standards for unbiased reporting. If you would like the City to respond to you as we do with news media, we will need to establish some comparable reporting standards. With a simple conversation, we could have cleared up some of the inaccuracies and misleading assertions in this article, which is what the local papers would have done before publishing.

If you would like to have a conversation at some point to discuss this further, please let me know, and I will try to be available to you. However, until we can establish some sort of standards, I am not able to respond to further questions.

Best regards,

Chris

 

High Winds Cause Power Outage And Traffic Lights Out In Beacon Along Wolcott At Main Street and Others

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As spring pushes through 2021, March’s winds are coming in like a lion, blowing around a few snow flakes on Sunday in between a glorious sun surrounded by dark clouds holding what could be more snow at any moment. At 3:29pm, Central Hudson reported that at least 2,218 customers in Beacon were affected by an outage, and that crews were on site repairing.

Some traffic lights were out along Wolcott, including the intersection of Main Street, and the intersection at Beekman (the road to the train station), as well as the intersection at Verplank. At least 1 Highway Department employee was out on Sunday, and Stop signs had been placed at dark traffic lights.

Trucks from Central Hudson were repairing a line in the trees at Verplank at Wolcott, and cars were routed around the area, causing backups on side streets.

People who have allergies may want to have medication for itchy noses and watery eyes on hand as the wind blows new spring buds around the block.

Left: Intersection of Wolcott (9D) and Beekman
Right: Intersection of Wolcott (9D) Main Street.

Filming In Beacon; Ice Cream! Retail Therapy Guide 3/12/2021


CSA ALERT! 

2021 CSA signups are open! Field and Larder is offering weekly produce and fruit out of their farm in Chester, NY. 22 weeks of organically grown, chemical-free produce for $550. Early Bird signup available for $525 until May 1st.  This includes weekly delivery to Beacon.  Program is May-November 2021. You also have the option to pick up locally at Meyers Olde Dutch. Learn more about this great mini-farm share program on their website.

Follow Field and Larder on Instagram @fieldandlarder

SPORTS: If you organize a kids sports program and want it listed in A Little Beacon Blog's Kids Sports Guide, please email us with registration information so that we can get it all in one place for parents and caregivers to utilize. Same goes for fundraisers for all schools, no matter how small or defined a fundraiser. This listing is free.

SPONSORS: We are looking for business sponsors for the Kids Sports Guide and Fundraising Guide. Sustaining sponsors allow us to pay our staff to keep this information current, and further promoted on ALBB's social media. Thank you for your consideration.

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

If you'd like to guarantee to see your entertainment event listed here, help us help you by advertising it here.

"Severance" Films In Beacon's East End - Storefronts Are Dressed - Here's What We Know
If you were walking past your favorite cafe down on the East End of town near Mt. Beacon and saw that it was called something else, your heart may have skipped a beat as you thought: “Oh no! Not another business moving out!” But this time it’s not another business moving out! It’s a film production coming to town. Dressing the storefronts in costume for the Apple TV+ produced show “Severance.” This production is the the real deal - it's a union gig employing set dressers, camera operators, etc. from NYC and elsewhere. Some locals have been able to slide into the gig as well. If you're one of them, send us a tip! Meanwhile, here's what we know.
Read This >



Live TV Streaming Saturday Nights, Then On Demand Limited Time Only
Beaconite and singer Tara O’Grady has been busy since moving to Beacon from NYC after she survived her long battle with COVID-19 one year ago, which did weaken her voice, thereby canceling her singing career. Upon moving to Beacon, she searched around for new creative income opportunities. Since then, she has been selling her vintage clothing collection from the 1940s-1960s at Jaz On Main; as well as her 5 albums of jazz, blues and folk music; hosted a book signing for her memoir “Migrating Toward Happiness” at Draught; making music videos with collaborator  and film maker Jon Slackman of Five Corner Films; and this week, aired their first live-streamed TV show, “Howlin’ at the Howland," also created with Jon, currently streaming On Demand for limited time.
Learn More >


Ice-Cream Time!
While Beaconites know that this spring weather can easily turn on us, the instinct for ice-cream is awakened. Hyacinths may be emerging from the ground, but well-seasoned locals know that snow could fall on those soon to be blooming magnolia trees one last time, thereby killing the beautiful bloom. Will it happen this year? Tune in to the weather outside to find out! While licking ice-cream out at a park or picnic table.
Learn More >


Recycle Lots Of Kinds Of Plastic Bags At Key Food & VFW Hall
Day
: All Days
Beacon's Conservation Committee has announced a new initiative to make recycling different kinds of plastic bags (i.e. sandwich bags, toilet paper packaging bags, produce bags, etc.) easy and possible. Drop your plastic bags at Key Food 7 Days/Week, or the VFW Hall during the Farmer's Market on Sundays.
Learn More >

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



Sallyeander Spring Pop-Up
Day
: Friday & Saturday, March 12-13, 2021
Time: 10am-3pm
Location: Sallyeander, 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!
FOUR customers at a time. Masks required.
 

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

We could not resist featuring this little love today in Eat Church's spot. As they say: "Did someone say NOODLES?! Come get yours Friday and Saturday at our food truck at Marbled Meatshop from 4-6pm. Cali has already placed her order...
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Find them at Marbled Meat Shop, 3091 Route 9 in Cold Spring Friday & Saturdays.
Order Online Now >
Eat Church is an ALBB Sponsor!   


MEYERS OLDE DUTCH
184 Main Street, Beacon, NY

Check out this selection of beverages at Meyers Olde Dutch! Amazing to see options from Beacon, Newburgh, Fishkill, New Paltz, Warwick, and Brooklyn.

Open everyday for take out and delivery 11:30-9pm.  Click here and order for takeout or delivery! Or call them at 845.440.6900.
Follow on Instagram >
Meyers Olde Dutch is an ALBB Sponsor!



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

Available now! The Wine Trio Subscription! Hand-selected bottles of wine ready for you to pickup once a month at Homespun. Of course, you can buy bottles of wine in between, but for this monthly subscription, you at least guarantee yourself that a wine of your liking has been set aside just for you.
Learn more >
View Homespun Menu >
Homespun is an ALBB Sponsor! 




HUDSON VALLEY FOOD HALL
288 Main Street, Beacon, NY
What's a good drink to pair with oysters? At Hudson Valley Food Hall, try the amazing Snow Island Oysters with a Tom Collins. 
Pop-Ups This Weekend In The HV Food Hall:
- Tommy Empanada (selling in the First Stall)
- A Little Wild Soul Co. (she makes jewelry, oils, and wrapped crystals...find her in the Projection Room)
- Will Teran (an artist based in Newburgh, who will open his show in the HV Food all. Find his art on the walls.)
- Local 30s (a Newburgh-based clothing company...you'll have to go inside to find it if they really are popping up here!)
 
Information >
Hudson Valley Food Hall is an ALBB Sponsor!




BAJA 328
328 Main Street, Beacon, NY
The garage door has been open at BAJA 328! You can dine inside in the spacious and ventilated restaurant, and/or order a cocktail to go. Pictured here is a margarita made with Don Julio. Enjoy!
BAJA 328 is an ALBB Sponsor!
 



BRETT'S HARDWARE
18 West Main Street, Beacon

It's that time of year! The weather is getting warmer, the sun is setting later, AND grass seed is on sale at @bretts_hardware! The outside of your home deserves just as much love and care as the inside. Brett's Hardware got you covered there too!
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Brett's Hardware is a Sponsor, thank you!



LUXE OPTIQUE
181-183 Main Street, Beacon
"Using my sense of emotion enables me to bring an extra layer of softness, emotion, poetry and warm sensuality to these spaces." ⁠

Architect @daniellesiggerud shares what makes Danish architecture unique in the latest #OPStories featuring Copenhagen creatives.⁠

Danielle wears Oliver Peoples Gregory Peck 1962. ⁠: @tibods // 🕶️: @oliverpeoples

Walk-ins welcome.
Shop Online >
Luxe Optique is a Sponsor, thank you!


BINNACLE BOOKS
321 Main Street, Beacon
Deesha Phillyaw, “The Secret Lives of Church Ladies” 

“‘The Secret Lives of Church Ladies’ explores the raw and tender places where Black women and girls dare to follow their desires and pursue a momentary reprieve from being good. The nine stories in this collection feature four generations of characters grappling with who they want to be in the world, caught as they are between the church's double standards and their own needs and passions.”

Find this and more at @binnaclebooks. Visit their Instagram for more details.

Binnacle Books is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!


LA MÉRE CLOTHING AND GOODS
436 Main Street, Beacon
When you shop at a small, local boutique like La Mére, you can browse and shop knowing that each item on display has been carefully selected with the customers in mind. They bring you the most up to date fresh trends.
Shop Online >
La Mere is a ALBB Sponsor, thank you!

             
 

Sound Healing Workshop
Day:
Saturday, March 13, 2021
Time: 6:30-7:30pm
Location: beBhaki Yoga, 89 Dewindt Street, Beacon, NY - also on Zoom
Join sound healer, Lisa Knowles for a 60 minute sound bath using singing bowls and other healing instruments. You’ll leave the workshop feeling relaxed, balanced, and rejuvenated.
Information >

Beacon Performing Arts Center
- Spring Classes Available in person and on zoom
- Registration for the Summer Camp is Open!
Information >

Looking for some community service hours? The Poughkeepsie Public Library (@poklibny) is looking for teen bloggers !

Use their guidelines to create your own content for a teen Café blog then send your post to teencafe@poklib.org for their review!

For questions email teencafe@poklib.org
 
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 >
BUSINESS FEATURE - LAWN CARE
Looking for Lawn Care, Painters or Gutter companies? You'll find locals who might work in A Little Beacon Blog's Home Improvement section of the Business Directory. Check out Blue Green Lawns for your landscaping needs.
Details >

List your business in ALBB's Business Directory >

ANTALEK & MOORE INSURANCE AGENCY
340 Main Street, Beacon

Join Antalek & Moore in wishing Vince Lemma a Happy Anniversary with the agency. Vince is a partner and has almost 20 years of industry experience specializing in Employee Benefits, Life Insurance and Property & Casualty Insurance. His primary focus as an independent agent is to be an advocate for his customers. "Thank you for the leadership and commitment you bring to our office, our clients, and our community."

Antalek & Moore takes care of you. Give them a call today: 845-831-4300 and visit their website.
Antalek & Moore is a Sponsor, thank you!
 

TIN SHINGLE
Editorial Calendar Season has delivered! Tin Shingle has the Editorial Calendars of several magazines in the Idea Center Database for members of Tin Shingle to search through as they see where a magazine is in their print production schedule. It is a nice way to force a business to think so far in advance and pitch an idea for the right month, which is how they get print features.
Learn More >
 
KATIE JAMES, INC.
The farm fresh eggs and beef from Eggberts Free Range Farm aren't only available on Sundays at the Beacon Farmers Market anymore...Owner Carrie Sabins went online to let you order 24/7, and is offering Free Delivery to Beacon, Cold Spring and Newburgh. Katie James, Inc. was happy to enable Carrie to stay connected with her customers through COVID, some of whome have long-term COVID and need regular delivery. This website was designed in Shopify, which allows Carrie to run the whole thing from Shopify's app on her phone.
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New Creative TV Show From A New Beaconite Streamed Live From Inside The Howland Cultural Center - And Her Survival From COVID

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TARA O'GRADY HOWLIN' AT THE HOWLAND

Under the ornamental rafters of this historic landmark building, Tara will be interviewing Jon Slackman of Five Corner Films about their music video collaboration, and also performing with guitarist Tony DePaolo.
DATE:
ON DEMAND: March 11-25
ORDER TICKETS HERE >
WATCH PROMO HERE >

Beaconite and singer Tara O’Grady has been busy since moving to Beacon from NYC after she survived her long battle with COVID-19 one year ago, which did weaken her voice, thereby canceling her singing career. Upon moving to Beacon, she searched around for new creative income opportunities.

Since then, she has been selling her vintage clothing collection from the 1940s-1960s at Jaz On Main; as well as her 5 albums of jazz, blues and folk music; hosted a book signing for her memoir “Migrating Toward Happiness” at Draught; making music videos with collaborator and film maker Jon Slackman of Five Corner Films; and this Saturday, March 11, 2021 at 8pm, is airing their first live-streamed TV show, “Howlin’ at the Howland," also created with Jon.

The singer/songwriter moved to Beacon, New York in August 2020 and “discovered the jewel of her new town, the Howland Cultural Center,” she says. The show will be performed live from within the Howland Cultural Center and then streamed On Demand for limited time, showcasing the Howland’s revered, architecturally ornate backdrop. Viewers can buy tickers here to support the show.

In each episode, Tara will be interviewing a local artist and co-creating with them using their artform, whether it be filmmaking (episode one), music, painting, writing, dress making, photography, etc. In addition, between the art making interviews. Tara will then perform live with different musicians.

Tara tells A Little Beacon Blog: “The show airs a full year and a day after I last performed live in front of an audience in Manhattan. I have not been able to sing since last March when all my gigs and my income ceased. It took me all year to gain back my strength and my voice after having COVID.” Musicians and other live performers have felt the emotional withdraw from connecting with a live audience in the same room, as we heard with the Beacon-based Wynotte Sisters.

About The First Episode

The premiere of Episode One is called "Seasons of Love" featuring the 4 seasons Tara has experienced in the Hudson Valley through cinematography and classic jazz songs about summer, autumn, winter and spring.

Under the ornamental rafters of this historic landmark building, Tara will be interviewing Jon Slackman of Five Corner Films about their music video collaboration, and also performing with guitarist Tony DePaolo.

And Inside Look At This Beaconite’s Battle With COVID

Tara, a writer, shared with us her experience surviving COVID in the early months of 2020 that it was recognized in this country. This is her story:

 

I just moved to Beacon two weeks ago. It was love at first sight. I had never been here before July when I decided to escape NYC. I stepped on to Main Street and within seconds said out loud, this is my new home. I'm a jazz singer. My last day performing in Manhattan was March 10. I didn't know it would be my last. I didn't know how serious the virus was. My fever started March 24. It lasted 21 days. The shortness of breath lingered for 5 weeks. I couldn't sing. I couldn't even walk half a block to a store. It took me all summer to build up my strength to be able to walk two miles and not get out of breath, to be able to ride a bike up a low incline. But I'm better now. Despite being an unemployed musician. My unemployed neighbors in Queens were also struggling. They are still lining up daily at community centers to receive free food. They are sleeping on mattresses on the sidewalk. Crime has increased. So has suicide. I wanted to get out and find a place where I felt safe. I've only been here two weeks and I've been able to attend live music in the Towne Crier, outdoor yoga at the Stony Kill Farm, and connect with musicians and other artists in town who are as open and friendly as my family back in Ireland. I've never felt so embraced by a community so quickly, except for Donegal where I spent every summer on a farm with my grandparents.

Before I even found an apartment, Jaz on Main, the vintage store, offered to host a book signing for me when I went in to try to sell them my vintage clothing collection that I wear when I perform. I'm also an author with a published memoir. I had plans to continue to perform at book launches and teach writing from here to Europe, but all was put on pause. Living in Beacon for me will me more than a pause to wait out the global pandemic. I have finally found a place to call home, something I've been searching for my entire life. I really love it here.

 

"Severance" Films In Beacon's East End - Storefronts Are Dressed - Here's What We Know

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If you were walking past your favorite cafe down on the East End of town near Mt. Beacon and saw that it was called something else, your heart may have skipped a beat as you thought: “Oh no! Not another business moving out!” But this time it’s not another business moving out! It’s a film production coming to town. Dressing the storefronts in costume for the Apple TV+ produced show “Severance.”

According to the Poughkeepie Journal: “Severance" is a drama featuring Adam Scott, Britt Lower, Patricia Arquette, Christopher Walken and SUNY New Paltz graduate John Turturro. Ben Stiller is listed as an executive producer and director of several episodes. According to IMDb.com, the show is scheduled to premiere sometime this year.” As stated on IMDB, the premise is: “Lumen Industries, a company that's looking to take work-life balance to a new level.”

Beacon business owners in the area could not confirm or deny if filming was happening, but for those of us window browsing at night, onlookers were puzzled by the newly named storefronts, and were trying to piece together the mystery. Facebook was of course lighting up with speculation. Couples walking along the sidewalk stopped in front of storefronts to ask each other: “Wait, this vintage piece of furniture looks very similar to that piece of vintage furniture in that storefront over there….What is going on?” A person walking their dog really wanted to go inside of a shop, even though the shop was closed.

Storefronts who seem to be selected to be Main Street stars are Beacon Bath and Bubble, Reservoir, The Vault, 13 Floor Mod, Beacon Realty, Beacon Falls Cafe, La Mère Clothing and Goods, Raven Rose, and possibly others. No one would confirm, however, as they alluded to agreements that required disgression.

The boutique, for instance, that is normally called La Mère Clothing and Goods is now called The Midcentenarian. A Little Beacon Blog knows that owner April has not moved her business, as La Mère is an advertiser with A Little Beacon Blog, and we have a shopping date coming up!

Photo Credits: Ruby Martin, a 10 year old photojournalist, taken during a Remote Learning day.

A Little Beacon Blog reached out to the City of Beacon for confirmation that film permits had been granted and paid to the City, however, City Administrator Chris White reminded us (me) that we are not on speaking terms based on last week’s employment articles that had racist undertones, and would not answer any questions.

A white Haddad truck, which is usually a sign of a big movie production nearby. Photo Credit: Ruby Martin

A white Haddad truck, which is usually a sign of a big movie production nearby.
Photo Credit: Ruby Martin

Thankfully, a Citizen Reporter called in to the Mayor’s Office, and received confirmation that the production is “Severance,” a production from Apple TV+, and will be filming on Monday and Tuesday. Set dressers have visited storefronts who will be in the scene. April of Le Mere’s shop employee called her to suggest she might want to come in to see the new items in the store, after many antiques were deposited into the store. April had been tending to her three children and mother.

“My employee Facetimed me the situation, and I came in right away. You know me - the store has to be perfect, and all of these antiques were here in the front of the store.” We do know April quite well over the years, and could see that she was twitching. The evening we encountered her, she was pulling a late-nighter in order to make her shop presentable to the public in order for them to shop the weekend before the Monday shoot.

Courtney of Raven Rose says she is a huge fan of Adam Scott, and told A Little Beacon Blog she is very happy that the East End of town is getting this filming action.

The City of Beacon issued a robo-call on Friday evening, listing what street closures would be happening (see below for the street closure list). The City’s robo-call did not mention the film production or the purpose for the street closures. The coordination of rolling street closures may be due to the parking of large film production trucks from Haddad’s, a truck rental company that is used for several union productions in New York City and elsewhere, as well as camera positions for different takes of the scenes.

What We Know About The Scene Being Filmed

Earlier reporting from the Poughkeepsie Journal revealed that scouts had visited Beacon Bread Company and Hudson Valley Food Hall earlier in February 2021, which are storefronts on the other end of town.

We know that the producers are keeping this production very hush hush, that it is episodic, and may have a “futuristic mind-bending” kind of twist to its storyline. However, the set dressing of Beacon’s storefront windows for this upcoming week are set back in time. This particular scene may only be one minute in the episode.

Excellent reporting from Geoffrey WIlson in the Poughkeepsie Journal revealed that the production is currently going under a different name, “Tumwater," which is common in the early stages of filming in order to not attract attention. According to the article, some residents had received a letter from the Location Department: “The Location Department for ‘Severance’ listed 'Tumwater"‘ as the project's working title in its letter to Beacon residents.'“ The article went on to say: “Laurent Rejto, director of the Hudson Valley Film Commission, confirmed that a project titled "Tumwater" is starting filming in the City of Kingston Wednesday, and that project was filming at the Rondout Friday.”

According to the resident letter, the production will be filming in Beacon late into the night, with cameras positioned on the rooftop of the 1 East Main Street building in order to take night shots of a couple walking on Main Street down below. 1 East Main houses lofts, Lambs Hill Bridal, Urban Links Design, and Trax Coffee.

According to locals on the ground, the scene filmed on Monday and Tuesday will be a “walk-and-talk.” According to an anonymous source, the “script is awesome” and may have “a futuristic, mind-bending” element to it. Which is interesting, since the storefronts in Beacon are currently set decorated to have a much older look from the past.

Photo Credit: Charlie Martin

Street Closures:

Sometimes during a big production, there are members of the film crew called Production Assistants (PAs) who will close a street or sidewalk, and tell you to not cross the street just now. We do not know if there will be PAs closing the streets, or if Beacon Police officers will be closing the streets.

For those interested in the City’s income on this, usually when Police Officers are used to close the streets and direct traffic for film jobs, they are paid by the production company. Usaully the officers used are off-duty, so an Overtime Rate is paid. Additionally, the City is paid a day-rate for a union-produced show permit. A Little Beacon Blog reached out to the City of Beacon’s City Administrator Chris White to inquire as to the game-plan and income stream, but he did not respond.

If you, Citizen Reporter, get the answer on what was paid to Beacon, let us know! We are also inquiring via our other sources re the details of the City’s contract.

According to the City of Beacon’s robo-call, parking and street closures will be impacted as follows:

The following streets will be closed and parking will not be allowed on Monday, March 15th from 3pm - 7am Tuesday morning. And from Tuesday March 16th from 3pm - 7am Wednesday morning.

Municipal Parking Lot on Churchill Street
North Street from Main Street to Locust Place
South Street from Main Street to Locust Place
Leonard Street from Amity Street to East Main Street
Verplanck Avenue from Davis Street to Main Street
Churchill Street from Main Street to Spring Valley Street where there will be local traffic only

On Monday March 15th there will be rolling closures, and parking will be allowed on the following streets:

Russell Avenue
Spring Street
Locust Place
Falconer Street
Boyce Street
Grove Street
Liberty Street

On Monday, March 15th from 3pm - 7am Main Street from Tioronda Avenue to Ackerman Street will be closed and parking will not be allowed.

On Tuesday, March 16th from 3pm- 7am Main Street from Teller Avenue to Ackerman Street will be closed and parking will not be allowed.

Have fun, everyone! High fives to the participating businesses.

It's Time...Ice Cream Shops In Beacon!

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The weather is getting warmer and you know what that means… it’s time for ICE-CREAM (although we are truly big fans all year round)! A reader already wrote to us about it on Thursday: “Urgent question: When is Ron’s opening?” By Friday afternoon, the Beacon Creamery had happy patrons sitting outside of it on their carved wooden bear bench.

People are gearing up to stand in socially distant lines (remember, don’t over-crowd!) to begin practicing how to order ahead from an ice cream shop, if they offer it. It is time to revisit Beacon’s ice-cream shops, as the spring weather has everyone itching to get outside in the sunshine.

Pictured: Mocha Crunch Photo Credit: Beacon Creamery via Yelp

Pictured: Mocha Crunch
Photo Credit:
Beacon Creamery via Yelp

The Beacon Creamery

The Beacon Creamery is located at 134 Main St in Beacon, NY and they have mouth-watering flavors that you need to try now! Some include, “New York, New York” which includes cappuccino Kahlua, hot fudge, whipped cream, and raspberry sauce. They also have floats, ice cream sundaes, specialties, tipsy shakes, and regular ice cream with an option to add WINE ice cream for $2.00!


Pictured: Blue Panda

Pictured: Blue Panda

Ron’s Ice Cream

Ron’s Ice Cream is located at 298 Fishkill Ave in Beacon, NY and they have all of the fun flavors you want like Birthday Cake or Cookies and Cream. And always sprinkles. Some special flavors include Chocolate Moose Tracks, Graham Central Station, Crazy Vanilla, Cookies n Cream, and many more! They also carry sundaes, specialty sundaes, flurries, milkshakes, slushies, and more. Oh, plus, they have hotdogs, burgers, snacks, sandwiches, and sides!

The parking lot is small for line crowding during a pandemic. Last year, Ron’s initiated a call-in service with no walk-up service. ALBB does not have word yet on how they will do it this year. Stay tuned!


Zora Dora’s

Zora Dora’s Micro Batch Ice Cream And Paletas is located at 201 Main St in Beacon, NY, and makes ice creams and sorbets in the form of paletas! If you don’t know what a paleta is, it’s a frozen treat on a stick! Their handmade products are produced in small batches every day and they source and handpick the freshest seasonal ingredients available. They also offer catering and cart rentals!


Pictured: Vegan Chocolate Orange

Pictured: Vegan Chocolate Orange

The Chocolate Studio

The Chocolate Studio doesn’t only have delicious chocolates and signature treats, but they also have ice cream! Vegan flavors too. You can pick-up vegan and gluten-free treats (or nonvegan/gluten-free) OR they ship nationwide! Sadly, ice-cream is excluded from the shipping part so you will have to stop in the store for that! But you’ll want to! So many flavors, you might have to get a few.


Yankee Clipper Diner

You can also stop in the Yankee Clipper Diner for ice-cream! They have a few sundaes on their menu, including the Waffle Sundae, which is a freshly baked Belgian waffle with 2 scoops of ice cream, chocolate syrup, whipped cream, sprinkles, walnuts, and a cherry on top! I mean, this could be your breakfast! Add additional toppings for only $1.

We See You... We Know You're Out There...

To send the recently published articles about the racial discomfort happening in some departments of the City of Beacon, namely Highway and Water right now, I wrote something special to the newsletter subscribers. I wanted you to see it too - because not everyone is subscribed to the ALBB newsletter. A few notes, however, before I proceed:

  1. I do not like using first person here. And I do not like interjecting myself into these stories. There is a person commenting to me in the 30-Day Unpaid Leave story, who seems very upset at the City Administrator’s treatment in that article. This is not a drama I want to continue. We all have better things to do. Like keep our jobs and treat people with respect. But.

  2. This type of story needs a personal narrative. Otherwise, it will get glossed over. Civil Service is too boring with this slodge of requirements. And that tedium is what has given all of this protection. Boring Civil Service stuff, and decisions made in “Executive Session,” those private meetings that happen after public City Council meetings.

  3. This story is being pursued so heavily because it is not just about Reuben Simmons. It is about so many employees with the city - Water, Highway, Beacon City School District Building Department, maybe Police. And it’s not just this year. It’s decades ago. It’s part of Beacon’s fabric. And probably Wappingers. And Fishkill. And Poughkeepsie. So we’re going hard on this topic. A slap of cold water on the face because it’s not OK. I mean… What personal stories do you want us to put up here? Personnel files are denied paper trails. There are no other places for inquisitive people to go. Don’t challenge this story if you don’t want inequalities revealed, of what white employees get away with when employed, while Black employees are dismissed. Keep insisting on this, keep treating people unequally, and the stories will follow. I don’t know what else to tell you.

The Message Newsletter Subscribers Received:

On Friday, while ALBB sends the happy weekend retail newsletter, one of the City of Beacon’s employees, who normally plows snow from the streets and fixes stop signs, was in a “Hearing” with city officials, listening to how his job would be taken from him. Community organizer and volunteer, Reuben Simmons, is mixed race and identifies as Black. He has worked for the City of Beacon since 2002, coming in as “Summer Help” and at one point, making it up to Highway Superintendent. He was placed on Unpaid Leave for 30 days starting January 2021, during a pandemic, during Black History Month, and after the City of Beacon legislated a Diversity and Inclusion Mission Statement.

A Little Beacon Blog has been following this story for two years, recorded a podcast on it, and has several articles that present more of the story than what is widely known today. The story is being told because it impacts other people - people who work in Civil Service (jobs in Police, Highway, Water, etc. departments) and in many ways, how Black people are treated in an environment within those jobs.

While Reuben's professional fate at this time is unknown, he says this about his years-long experience with this issue: "Maybe I'm the best person to be in it. I'm embarrassed to be in this. I'm ashamed of the city. In my 19-year career here. It's disturbing and disgusting. Beacon is better than this."

The articles closely covering this are below. But first, we have to unpack the silent segregation in the room.

The Silent Segregation In The Room

Listen. When your family says racist things to you - thinking you'll laugh at their statement, observation, joke, whatever - you don't divorce your family. I mean, you could divorce your spouse of course, but your blood family is your family. When they say an egregiously racist thing to you - about any race - Black, Arab, Puerto Rican, Asian - anybody - it takes a tremendous amount of courage to call them out and ask them to stop. Better to get that out of their heart. To not think those statements in the first place.

The only way to do that is to call out your friend. Your family. Beacon as a community is family. We have all heard the racist statements made. To different degrees, we have heard them in our homes. In our driveways. On the sidewalk. In the grocery store. At a City Council Meeting from the Public Comment microphone to whispers or hollers in the audience area of the courtroom (listen to minute 51 of the City Council meeting years ago when the Highway Department cheered a new hire after someone or something triggered Reuben's job to get dissolved by Civil Service law).

Additionally, extremely condescending statements or chuckles count as impacting someone's life the same way direct racist statements do. Those in and of themselves are oppressive in any situation for any race or gender. Every day, every one of us - even those of us writing about it - needs to keep ourselves aware of what we say and think and do to others. Little people around you - kids in school - may have already put someone in their place. Because they are growing up right now in this open environment, are seeing their adults struggle through it, and are so far, hopefully, having clearer vision.

Black people in this community have not been heard regarding their employment opportunities and experiences. Laws exist to keep those experiences very private and confidential. Having no other official and legal avenue to be heard (lawyers are expensive, and even during that time they’re involved, rules can require something to be private; sometimes nondisclosure is a requirement for settlements, thereby locking the issue into secrecy forever), people from the Black community - mixed race, Jamaican, and people from more cultures - have started using open mics at rallies in Beacon, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, and surrounding communities to hope their voices are heard.

Beaconites cannot not hear these voices anymore. No PDF on a website or a wall is going to fix this. It has come time to say: "Dude. Bro. Girlfriend. It is time to take a deep look into your roots, into your soul, ask yourself why you are so comfortable making someone else so uncomfortable and not heard, and begin your journey to uproot that from your body."

Some of you are going to unsubscribe from this newsletter right now. We see you each time you do it when we feature something remotely Black. Others will reply with a "Thank You." And that's all we need to keep going.

The time has come to talk about this. Beacon is not alone in the treatment of people in Civil Service (aka City or County jobs). This is a nationwide issue that is currently not on the national radar, as police reform is/was. Civil Service needs a second look.

Thank you.

Related Links:

These 2 Black Beaconites Describe Being Ignored When Applying For Recent Water Department Or City Jobs

Related Links:

Months ago, a caller from the public, Stefon Seward, asked the City Council why the City of Beacon’s Water Department was “all Caucasian.” That question led to other questions and some revelation of events that you can read about here.

Additionally, another member of the public, Wendel Henson, who lives in Beacon, called in to say that he was confused, as he had applied for the Water Department job, was interviewed for the Water Department job by Beacon’s new HR Director Gina Basile, and never heard from the City of Beacon again. You can hear his voice in the video of that City Council member here.

Based on that night, which included an apparent incorrect job title posting (it was stated as Superintendent, which is the boss, but the actual position was Operator, which is lower level - and the City of Beacon won’t comment on this), A Little Beacon Blog posted an article: “Beacon's Water Department Is A Completely Caucasian Department... Some Of Their [Highway Department Employees’] Behaviors Are Questionable"

After that article, as well as the article: “During Hot Mess Of Water Department Hires, Beacon Passes Diversity and Inclusion Statement,” two Beaconites who are Black reached out to A Little Beacon Blog to share their experiences with being ignored after applying for jobs with the City.

John and Tyree gave us permission to share their stories:

John Galloway, Jr.
Beacon City School District Board Member; Co-Founder The Label

John Galloway, Jr. is known as “John John” by almost everyone in Beacon. He is very tall, very involved in the community, very much walking up and down Main Street in his pursuits of activities. I know this because I saw him often when I had my office on Main Street, and saw him interact with people on Main Street all of the time.

John most recently worked for the Gap Inc. Distribution Center, from which he was laid off. He campaigned in 2020 to be appointed to a vacant seat on the Beacon City School District; he did so at a time when the Board could have appointed 2 Black candidates to the positions that night (“What Shook The Room At Beacon's Board Of Education (BOE) Meeting: 2 Open Seats, But 1 Was Filled”), and was met with resistance from the board in the name of establishing “process.”

People in the Black community came that night to speak on behalf of the appointments, and on slow experiences with process they had experienced over the decades. John was eventually appointed and currently serves on the Board. “My role on the School Board is to speak on behalf of the community who are facing educational and financial disadvantages in our community.”

Lately, he has been fundraising for a new youth basketball league through a foundation, The Label. He describes himself as a “a co-founder of The Label Foundation Inc. but all members are co-founders.”

Here is what he submitted:

 

Good afternoon Katie,

I read your article about the Water Department positions, and I just wanted to let you know that I too applied for it. To my knowledge, it is a laborer/entry level position with a future of a career ladder.

I did not receive an interview, but I did receive a letter stating that the position has been filled. I would have loved the chance for a job and to establish a career especially right here in my hometown of 24 years.

From time to time I still question why I didn’t at least get the opportunity for an interview. An interview could have provided me with feedback I could improve on for potential future position(s).

You have my permission to use my name and the information above for your article(s).

Thank you for your time,

John Galloway Jr. (John John)

 

UPDATE 3/8/2021 10:53pm: After this article published, John Galloway commented on Instagram:
Dear Readers:
I also would like to make it another point that not getting a job for my city isn’t always a racial thing and it may not be the case here, I just think that as a member of the community, I think I speak for everyone when I say that we deserve a chance to obtain a career working for the city. It would make life easier if we were given the opportunity to work for the city we grew up in and connect and learn from others that have been doing said job and are on their way out, continuing a cycle of hiring from within, and that goes for any department, the Water Department isn’t the only issue when it comes to labor issues.


Tyree Burns

I have not met Tryee in person yet, so I’m not in a position to describe him like I did with John above, but perhaps one day soon. Tyree Burns says he has applied for jobs with the City of Beacon, and says he has never been called back or made it to an interview. The reference he used in his note below, Ed McNair, is a longtime Beaconite in the Black community who works in the Highway Department, under Superintendent Manzi, mainly assigned to the Park.

 

My name is Tyree Burns. I've applied to work for the City of Beacon multiple times, but never got a call back or an interview.

My older brother told me the city was hiring so I went & picked up an application, and filled it out. I used of the City of Beacon's employees, Ed McNair, as a reference both times I applied. I handed my application to the City office & never got an interview or even a call or email back stating they received my application & were considering me or not.

 

Elementary School Opening Info and The Retail Therapy Guide - 3/5/2021

As we head into the weekend, the Beacon City School District announced today that they have been planning for and are anticipating a re-open of the Elementary Schools to a 4-day a week schedule for those who want it, starting in April. Remote-only will continue for those who want to remain at home, while the district is hiring an additional teacher to support remote-only children, according to the Reopening Slides presented by Superintendent Landahl.

Dr. Landahl mentioned that an increase in spread in virus had not occurred with the current in-person learning model, with safety measures put into place, like masking, social distancing and contact tracing. However, he stressed that "there has been an increase of mental health concerns among our students," citing a New York Times survey of scientists and doctors who study infectious disease in young children. Access Dr. Landahl's entire presentation here, where the plan is broken down into easy bullet points.

SPORTS: If you organize a kids sports program and want it listed in A Little Beacon Blog's Kids Sports Guide, please email us with registration information so that we can get it all in one place for parents and caregivers to utilize. Same goes for fundraisers for all schools, no matter how small or defined a fundraiser. This listing is free.

SPONSORS: We are looking for business sponsors for the Kids Sports Guide and Fundraising Guide. Sustaining sponsors allow us to pay our staff to keep this information current, and further promoted on ALBB's social media. Thank you for your consideration.

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

If you'd like to guarantee to see your entertainment event listed here, help us help you by advertising it here.


Decarceration Teach-In Virtual Event
Day
: Saturday, March 6, 2021
Time: 6pm
Locationbit.ly/B4BL306
Join Beacon4BlackLives, Beacon Prison Action, and Guest Speaker Marvin Mayfield this Saturday for a Decaceration Teach-In.
"We'll be exploring THE JUSTICE ROADMAP- a comprehensive statewide plan and movement toward dismantling our racist systems of criminalization and incarceration."  Register to get the Zoom link here: bit.ly/B4BL306
Information >

The Label Foundation Basketball Club Fundraiser
Day
: Now
Location: GoFundMe
The Label Foundation started in the summer of 2020, at the height of the protest marches in Beacon. One of the founding members is John Galloway Jr., who back then decided to run for a vacated seat on the the Beacon Board of Education, and was appointed. The Label Foundation started with a bunch of young men who you can meet here in little videos, and has been busy every since doing clothing drives and other service initiatives.

This fundraiser is to introduce their Basketball Club, which includes people from all walks of life together, especially inner-city and underprivileged kids who have not had the opportunity to participate in extracurricular activities within a safe environment for nearly a year. Players will be educated and mentored on academic topics, including early financial literacy, with formidable role models within the area, and civic engagement. Money raised goes to fees for tournaments, equipment, jerseys, and gym time.
Donate Now >



Recycle Lots Of Kinds Of Plastic Bags At Key Food & VFW Hall
Day
: All Days
Beacon's Conservation Committee has announced a new initiative to make recycling different kinds of plastic bags (i.e. sandwich bags, toilet paper packaging bags, produce bags, etc.) easy and possible. Drop your plastic bags at Key Food 7 Days/Week, or the VFW Hall during the farmers market on Sundays.
Learn More >

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

 

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

The perfect winter soup. Pho. Popular Vietnamese beef broth and rice noodle soup. Try theirs with braised beef short rib and roast pork. Round it out with sides of fresh herbs, crunchy sprouts, citrus and chiles.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
See you this Friday & Saturday @marbledmeatshop 4-8pm!

Find them at Marbled Meat Shop, 3091 Route 9 in Cold Spring Friday & Saturday, 4-8pm with their Double Double Bang Bang Revue menu!
Order Online Now >
Eat Church is an ALBB Sponsor!   


MEYERS OLDE DUTCH
184 Main Street, Beacon, NY

Meyers Olde Dutch poses a very important question on their Instagram - should they bring back their Beet Slaw? We vote YES!

Open everyday for takeout and delivery, 11:30am to 9pm. Click here and order for takeout or delivery! Or call them at (845) 440-6900.
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HOMESPUN
232 Main Street, Beacon, NY
and the Cafe at the Dia : Beacon

With their new hours opening at 10am, get in on the Avocado Toast love at Homespun Foods. They make this treat with crushed avocado, sorrel, crispy chickpeas, and pickled red onion on griddled sourdough.
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HUDSON VALLEY FOOD HALL
288 Main Street, Beacon, NY
Miz Hattie had a photo shoot this week to get new food photos for her easy-to-order-online website, and donated the dishes to Fareground, a food justice organization who delivers food to people in need. Fareground will take unused food, to find a good belly for it to warm.
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BAJA 328
328 Main Street, Beacon, NY
Just wanted to show you this guy again...to get you ready for spring! And eating outside at BAJA 328 from their sidewalk patio. They open their garage door when the weather permits, and are serving dishes all winter long, until it ends. Someday it will be spring! Meanwhile, get a cocktail to-go.
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BRETT'S HARDWARE
18 West Main Street, Beacon

Canning jars from @bretts_hardware! You need them for fermenting, to put snacks in, or coffee, or whatever! They have plenty in stock and they're so good to have.  They also make nice gifts when treating your neighbors to your special-recipe tomato sauce!
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LUXE OPTIQUE
181-183 Main Street, Beacon
Desmon is your everyday statement frame and we're loving the modern Washed Lapis acetate finish on these frames from @oliverpeoples.

Stop in today to peek at all of their newest arrivals!⁠

Walk-ins welcome.
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BINNACLE BOOKS
321 Main Street, Beacon
Here's @binnaclebooks prepping a bunch more books to send off to your incarcerated neighbors. "Thanks as always to all our sponsors and remember, if you’d like to contribute to our postage and PO box and packaging fund, please PayPal us at info@prisonbooksproject.org — funds are ALWAYS NEEDED to keep this thing afloat! If you’re curious about the Beacon Prison Books Project, check out the highlight in our Instagram stories." Visit their Instagram for more details.

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LA MÉRE CLOTHING AND GOODS
436 Main Street, Beacon
With new items arriving every week, there are only a few Brooke Blazers left in stock! Didn't think you needed a pink blazer until now did you? Spring is coming and this would be perfect! 

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. 
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Looking for some community service hours? The Poughkeepsie Public Library (@poklibny) is looking for teen bloggers !

Use their guidelines to create your own content for a Teen Café blog then send your post to teencafe@poklib.org for their review!

For questions email teencafe@poklib.org
 
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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.
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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.
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ANTALEK & MOORE INSURANCE AGENCY
340 Main Street, Beacon

The temperatures are starting to rise back up and all of the leftover snow is melting away. While it may be a welcome sight, Antalek & Moore would like to remind you that it could also lead to possible stress on your home foundation and more. They share tips on seasonal maintenance items that can help protect your home. Read more in their latest blog post.

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TIN SHINGLE
Editorial Calendar Season has delivered! Tin Shingle has the editorial calendars of several magazines in the Idea Center Database, so members of Tin Shingle can search through to see where a magazine is in their print production schedule. It is a nice way to force a business to think so far in advance and pitch an idea for the right month, which is how they get print features.
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KATIE JAMES, INC.
It's ready! Homespun has launched a Subscription Wine Box. Yes, you heard that right! Subscribe to 3 bottles a month that Homespun's sommelier picks out for you, based on your personal preferences. The e-commerce flow is designed by Katie James, Inc., and we help strategize how it will all work.
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Black Highway Department Employee & Community Organizer Put On 30-Day Unpaid Leave Since January 2021

This is the notice to the public that Beacon’s City Council will be going into a private meeting called Executive Session, after the public meeting, to discuss “Personnel.” They don’t divulge which city employee it is they are talking about. So we d…

This is the notice to the public that Beacon’s City Council will be going into a private meeting called Executive Session, after the public meeting, to discuss “Personnel.” They don’t divulge which city employee it is they are talking about. So we don’t know for sure if they will be talking about Reuben on Monday. It is notable that Reuben’s employment “hearing” after his 30-day unpaid leave was Friday, March 5, 2020. He has not returned to work, as the unpaid leave letter stated that he would not until after the hearing.

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During the winter of the pandemic.
During Black History Month.
During the traditional and budgeted-for overtime season for the Highway Department where all of the employees are in trucks day and night, plowing Beacon out, and the employees earn extra money.
During a time when Beacon’s first official Diversity and Inclusion Mission Statement got signed into law.
During the presentation given by Beacon’s first ever HR director stating that she is hearing about “discrimination, inequality, and growing tensions” in Beacon’s Highway Department.

Beacon’s new City Administrator, Chris White, in his first days on the job after he finished training with former City Administrator Anthony Ruggiero, put a Black employee on unpaid leave for 30 days in January into February, after that employee declined to resign, and declined to sign a document saying that Beacon could fire him at any time for any reason, but wouldn’t give a reason, according to that employee, Reuben Simmons.

“Civil Service” Jobs - An Employment Chess Game

Designation of an Unpaid Leave of 30 Days comes with a letter. And a packet of complaints, which fulfill an obligation of finding satisfactory grievances for a “Civil Service” job to get rid of someone. These jobs exist within a city or town. Civil Service guidelines are the rules that govern how it’s all going to work. Like a game of chess. We learned a little (OK, a lot) about this when Reuben spoke about it on a podcast the summer of 2020.

Reuben at the time was speaking about how his job title of Highway Superintendent dissolved in 2018. Disappeared. Into dust. He went back down to Maintenence Worker because Dutchess County told the City of Beacon that the job title didn’t exist for Beacon - after Reuben had been promoted by others into the job. But how or why or when did Dutchess County know that? After then-City Administrator Anthony Ruggiero recommended Reuben? And after Mayor (at the time) Randy Casale, who referred to himself as “Highway Superintendent for 16 years” every chance he got, also recommended Reuben?

Beacon’s “Highway Superintendent,” which - according to why he got the job that replaced someone else and made their job title dissolve - should be titled “Superintendent of Streets.” This word choice is what dissolved former Highway Superintendent …

Beacon’s “Highway Superintendent,” which - according to why he got the job that replaced someone else and made their job title dissolve - should be titled “Superintendent of Streets.” This word choice is what dissolved former Highway Superintendent Reuben Simmons’ job in 2018.

A technicality was triggered. Which is what made Reuben’s co-worker, Michael Manzi, get promoted to the job title that Dutchess County said was accurate for Beacon: Superintendent of Streets. This simple word change (with at least one more job qualification that came with it), dissolved Reuben’s position of Highway Superintendent. To be replaced by Michael Manzi as Superintendent of Streets. There was a lot of hooting and hollering by the Highway Department the night of the vote on Michael’s promotion back in 2019. Reuben wasn’t even demoted. His position just dissolved into Maintenance Worker. All legal. See minute 50:17 of the Beacon City Council video.

But even today, March 6, 2021, Michael Manzi is still identified as Highway Superintendent, not the job title with which he allegedly checkmated Reuben. This isn’t the only job title inconsistency on the City of Beacon’s website: See “During Hot Mess Of Water Department Hires, Beacon Passes Diversity and Inclusion Statement.” But the City of Beacon currently won’t comment on it.

Former Mayor Randy Casale spoke about this job situation also on a podcast. Off-mic, Randy called Reuben’s then-demotion the “biggest regret” of his mayoral career, because he couldn’t stop it. But he tried. Issues of Civil Service, run by Dutchess County, can be triggered by anyone who wants to switch up how a job hire or promotion is going to go, and can make a job disappear. Legally.

But that demotion was in 2018. The 30-day unpaid leave comes in 2021.

The Only Reason ALBB Knows About The 30-Day Unpaid Leave -
The City of Beacon Won’t Comment

When people are hired or promoted, there is a public vote on it by City Council. When they are put on unpaid leave, or perhaps fired or asked to resign, there is nothing public. In fact, police officers who were recently hired, fired or resigned are only traceable because of a public inquiry via a FOIL (freedom of information law) request. That link is offered here on the City Clerk page, but has not been updated since the mayor promised it would, in August of 2020.

How did I find out about Reuben’s $0 income? And how he’s looking at a career loss at the end of it?

He called me. After the first mega blizzard dumped 2.5 feet of snow on Beacon, I answered the phone and right away thanked my friend Reuben Simmons for keeping Beacon plowed. In every City Council meeting, councilmembers had been thanking the Highway Department for plowing.

Reuben had been part of the team driving the trucks clearing the streets for years. This January was another year where he would have been out in the early morning into night, earning overtime that is part of Beacon’s annual budget each year. The overtime is not a surprise. The employees count on it. And they plan for surplus salt, trying to estimate how the winter is going to go.

“I’m sorry, Katie,” Reuben responded to my appreciation. “I haven’t been in the trucks. I have been put on unpaid leave since mid-January 2021. I am embarrassed and I don’t know what is going to happen.”

This isn’t the start of Reuben’s story. His story started years ago. This is the current step.

30-Day Unpaid Leave - How That Works

In the letter sentencing Reuben’s 30-Day Unpaid Leave, City Administrator Chris White instructed Reuben to not speak to any staff of the City of Beacon, or touch any property of the City of Beacon, during work time.

Reuben, who served as the department’s CSEA Union President from 2009 to 2017, had been organizing employees - those who would listen to him, anyway, since not all of them liked him. Especially those who he gave low marks to when he was CSEA Union President, like the employee who allegedly casually brought in a gun to the workplace 6 months after Reuben filed a harassment complaint against him for circulating an unsanctioned petition against Reuben to keep him off a negotiation committee for a contract, or those who didn’t like him being their boss. And then they became his boss when his job title conveniently dissolved.

Reuben’s organizing efforts included supporting the 2 other Black employees. Contract negotiations were happening for their salaries. He wanted all employees to know about their rights, and think about their best interests. Employees of the Highway Department have been without a new contract for some time. The City of Beacon links to one from 2015. According to Reuben, the employee health insurance payments have increased, and with the rising cost of rents and property taxes, people are not earning enough to keep up.

Verifying Reuben’s 30-Day Unpaid Leave - Stonewalled

To begin researching the story, I sought verification from the City of Beacon. I emailed City Administrator Chris White. Chris replied: “We do not comment on personnel matters.”

I then pursued the CSEA Union President, Paula Becker. Not being able to find her anywhere on the internet, and not realizing that she was a City of Beacon employee, I called her number and left a voicemail. And again the next day. The day after that, I received the following email from Chris: “I received notice from other staff that you had called regarding a personnel issue. As I mentioned previously, the City does not comment on personnel issues. I would appreciate you contacting me if you have questions in the future.”

Respecting his original request, I hadn’t contacted any staff. His response got me thinking that someone was impersonating me. I didn’t realize that Paula’s phone number extension was one digit different from Chris’, and that the CSEA Union President was a staff member of the City of Beacon. Did that yield fair representation or advocacy?

Union President As City Of Beacon Employee - Helpful or Fair?

Reuben was used to the dual role of staff and union president. He used to be the CSEA Union President as a Highway Department employee, before he was Highway Superintendent. “I was comfortable with it because I was a strong individual. Some people are not fine with it because the employer can give them certain benefits. Makes it an uncomfortable and tough situation. I was comfortable with having those battles,” Reuben reflected. '“It depends on your character and your personality. Paula, I believe, has a great heart, and wants to see the good in everybody. That's not necessarily the characteristics that sometimes you need, to be tough and fight back face-to-face.”

Verification Gained - ALBB Sees The Unpaid Leave Letter & Complaint Log

To publish this story, I felt better seeing the letter outlining the unpaid leave. I believed Reuben, but I wanted to see the letter and see how it was worded. I wanted to see the complaints behind the disciplinary action. The first response from anyone I verbally tell this story to is: “Well, what did he do? He must have deserved it.” Reuben maintained his answer: “I don’t know.”

“But did they show you a list of complaints?” I pressed.

“Yes, but they don’t say exactly what I did,” Reuben explained. “For example: I ‘drove out of City limits in a company vehicle.’ But I went to Glenham. But Glenham is outside of City limits if I have to service it. If I drive over the I-84 bridge to turn around in the Hudson View apartments to turn back to Beacon, I’m outside of City limits.”

Eventually, Reuben trusted me and showed me the letter. It said exactly what he said it said. Behind the letter was a thick stack of papers. “What are these?” I asked.

“The complaints,” he answered. He was reluctant to let me see them. We chatted some more, and I asked again if I could see them. “What could be so bad that I cannot see them? Is there something unimaginable?” I rattled off some unimaginable things. Surprised, he smiled and said “No,” and his hesitation disappeared. I turned the page to start looking through the stack of complaints. The stack of paper was thick, about half an inch.

These complaints started in the summer of 2020. They weren’t the first against Reuben in his life. He’s already been through another set in 2019, which you can read about here. The summer of 2020 was the same time that Reuben began speaking out at Black Lives Matter speaking events at Pete & Toshi Seeger Riverfront Park about his long history of working in the Highway Department, and racially charged and unfair treatment he has seen, experienced, and been told about while working there.

The complaints read as rows and rows of almost the same words on different line items of dates that said something vague like:

“On July 23*, 2020, Reuben Simmons was at the intersection of South Avenue and Main Street fixing a sign, and did not complete his work.”

“On July 23*, 2020, Reuben Simmons returned late from lunch.”

Copy/Paste those two complaints, change the dates and the intersections, and multiply by 50. Many, many rows of the same repeated. And then finally, a different complaint:

“On September 12*, 2020, Reuben Simmons…” and it was something about how he used a certain number of his Personal hours within a 4-hour period in a way that did not fit compliance.

*The number of this exact date has been estimated. I didn’t take a screenshot. But these were the months.

The worst complaint was a vehicle accident at the transfer station where he hit a civilian car with a company truck. OK. People have accidents. I’ve turned around several times in the transfer station, and it is tight. Question is: Have other employees who have also had accidents in company vehicles been disciplined with a 30-day unpaid leave? We wouldn’t know, because the City of Beacon won’t comment on personnel matters. And they may not answer all FOIL requests. None of mine, at least. And none of them, if answered, have been published since August 2020, as Mayor Kyriacou promised.

So what happened? The accident itself was reported as a complaint. Reuben was supposed to call his supervisor to report an accident, which he did. But the next complaint was that Reuben used curse words to his supervisor during that conversation.

“Curse words?” I asked? Reuben answered: “Yes. I used curse words about the situation in response to what my supervisor was saying. Not calling my supervisor any curse word directly. But speaking about the situation.”

Having a potty-mouth myself, I asked Reuben: “Does no one use curse words in the Highway Department?”

“They use them all the time. Worse. They use racial slurs,” he said matter-of-factly.

Next Step: A “Hearing.” With Witnesses Called By The City Of Beacon

After Reuben refused to resign or sign the letter saying that Beacon could fire him at any time for any reason, he had the option of having a “hearing.” At that hearing, the City of Beacon told him that they were bringing witnesses.

According to Reuben, the list of witness names were not given to his attorney, William T. Burke.

Ironically, back in the day when Reuben filed a harassment complaint about the unsanctioned petition, that the City of Beacon via City Administrator Anthony Ruggiero did not pursue because of lack of physical evidence of the paper petition, the City of Beacon did not care about witnesses. Reuben said he had 2 witnesses: the 2 Black employees who were eventually shown the unsanctioned petition. And Paula, the current union president who allegedly had the unsanctioned petition show up on her desk (perhaps how like Councilperson Jodi McCredo had a mystery letter show up on her front porch, putting her in a very awkward position), which then allegedly disappeared. None of these witnesses mattered for that hearing.

But on March 5, 2021, in a hearing to further detail complaints made against Reuben, the witnesses mattered. What’s that people say about All Lives Matter?

How Long Has Reuben Worked For The City Of Beacon?

Reuben has worked for the City of Beacon Highway Department since 2002, starting as “Summer Help.” His resume goes like this: City of Beacon Summer Help in parks, 2002-2008; Laborer, 2008-2012; Union President for City of Beacon CSEA Local 814 unit 6662, 2009-2017; Maintenance Worker, 2012-2017; Highway Superintendent, 2017-2018; Maintenance Worker, May 2018-August 2019; Working Supervisor, August 2018-March 2020; Maintenance Worker, March 2020-present.

After the summer of 2020 rush of complaints, the City presented Reuben with the opportunity to resign. When he declined, they offered him a letter that he could sign saying that they could fire him for any reason. He asked what that reason could be, and they would not specify. So it easily could have been: “Reuben was at the intersection of Liberty and East Main fixing a sign and did not complete his work.”

He declined to sign these. As he said he did years ago when the City presented him with a letter stating that there were no “racial tensions” in the Highway Department.

“Why Would This Be Happening To You?”

The obvious question is: “Why is this happening to you?” Due in part to Reuben’s role as union president for those years, he may have made people upset. Recently, however, the public has started speaking out, beginning with Stefon Seward, a founding member of Beacon4Black Lives who spoke out on a City Council call during the public comment period, resulting in this deep dive by ALBB to learn new information.

Reuben concluded: "I try to exhaust all internal avenues and best efforts to avoid the situation I am in today, and the City ignored all of that (see past article for reference). Maybe I'm the best person to be in this. I'm embarrassed to be in this. I'm ashamed of the City. In my 19-year career here. It's disturbing and disgusting. Beacon is better than this."

What is at stake if Reuben is fired or resigns? “My career will be cut short and I will lose the opportunity to receive my full retirement potential.”

How ALBB Knows Reuben

Unfortunately, in hearing stories of Black lives, or maybe any life, it comes down to who you know, and why you know it. I first got to know Reuben in 2019 when he got the idea to organize Beacon’s live music event, Rock Out 4 Mental Health, the first music event to bring mental health services throughout the Hudson Valley together in one place set to music, so that the community could easily meet them and get to know these services better. Reuben wanted to de-stigmatize mental health.

I didn’t know at the time that his good friend had died of substance abuse. I heard that friend’s story from his mother, who spoke at the event that June. In attendance at the event were Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro, who is a huge advocate for mental health, and state senator Sue Serino, whose brother died by suicide.

Reuben’s nonprofit organization, I Am Beacon, asked me to be on the planning committee for Rock Out 4 Mental Health. I don’t say yes to many things because of time, but I said yes to this immediately. Reuben ran every planning meeting that we had in my old office on Main Street every other Tuesday. I brought my toddler. Reuben ran in one morning in his bright yellow Beacon Highway Department sweatshirt, to give us notes and direction for the meeting. Reuben says he got personal time approved through Payroll, then attended the meeting. He said he saw his boss, Michael Manzi, that morning. They waved to each other, but then 2 months later Reuben was written up about the attendance of that meeting as a form of discipline, which Reuben says he later disputed.

That morning, he got written up by his supervisor, Highway Department Superintendent of Streets Michael Manzi, for being late. The complaint went into Reuben’s personnel file. If you have heard the podcast about it, you’ll know that it was during this event planning experience that I learned that Reuben was no longer the Highway Department Superintendent. You’ll remember that when I went to write the article about the event, I visited his LinkedIn to get his proper job title. LinkedIn said he was Maintenance Worker.

I asked Reuben about it, thinking nothing of the question. “Hey Reuben - what’s your job title? I see something different in LinkedIn.” He answered that he couldn’t talk to me about it. Couldn’t answer the question. Was going through some things at work legally, but maybe he could tell me later.

Later came one year later during the Black Lives Matter movement. We were going to have the Rock Out 4 Mental Health event again, and were going to ask the City, which had a new Mayor in place, if we could use Riverfront Park again. The former Mayor Randy Casale and Reuben had been close. They argued in public - both having loud voices coming from passionate places - but they were tight.

Randy Casale was part of why Reuben was promoted to Highway Superintendent. Not long after, however, Reuben’s job title of Highway Superintendent dissolved. Turned to dust. Never existed. He was demoted but there was nothing to demote him from. He just was Maintenance Worker again. Why? That doesn’t make sense, right? Right. Two words of how it happened: “Civil Service.”

The pandemic hit, and all events paused. Except Black Lives Matter marches. Or protests in the name of Black Lives Mattering more than the status quo. Whichever you want to call it. Whichever brand you feel comfortable saying, as people tried to chip away at the original meaning of BLM. Which was that Black people were dying, being fired, being ignored, and having to work extra hard to sustain success they made for themselves. Because of white people keeping them down. You. Me. All of us. Systems in general. “All lives” were keeping them down in the name of comfort. That feeling you get when you feel discomfort, so you turn your eyes away and feel comfortable again in your own little world.

Reuben attended a protest march and took to the microphone at Pete and Toshi Seeger Riverfront Park, and for the first time, in a shaky but strong voice, told his story. Even prior to his taking the microphone, there had been tensions between Reuben and the Highway Department. Complaints had already been written about him.

City Cuts Off ALBB From Responding To Questions

Since ALBB published the article, “During Hot Mess Of Water Department Hires, Beacon Passes Diversity and Inclusion Statement,” Beacon’s City Administrator Chris White has refused to answer any questions from this publication. Our door remains open. We will continue to send questions on this and other totally different matters. Even if we send them into the abyss and only hear crickets back.

City Administrator Chris White asked for a FaceTime-type call to get to know each other, since I keep emailing him questions. I email questions to lots of people. To the office of Dutchess County, or to business owners. No one else has requested a video chat to get to know each other better. I get it. I’m a people person too. I like to meet people. But in the media sense, it’s not necessary.

Chris’ final words, for now, to this publication are below. These are very similar to when Mayor Kyriacou responded to one of my questions asking him if he really said something that I had heard. Mayor’s Kyriacou’s response was to give me the definition of hearsay. Hearsay is when you don’t seek confirmation after you hear about what someone may have said. I’m not sure what it’s called when someone doesn’t answer the question but gives you a run-around, condescending, derogatory response.

For the record: Chris seems to do very great work. I am looking forward to his work in project management that he will do in the name of the natural environment. In the name of personnel matters, the experience thus far has been surprising. Perhaps that will change some day.

Until that time, while the City stonewalls any questions about treatment of employees by its employees and its employers, A Little Beacon Blog will continue to receive stories from residents of the community, and will continue to listen to them with compassion. If these stories line up with other stories, and begin matching and forming a pattern, those stories will continue to get published.

some physical proof cannot be seen in words. Slinging racial slurs will never have proof. Unless they are recorded, as with much, much worse happenings like with Rodney King or George Floyd. No one is free from racist behavior. Every day, every single one of us must keep ourselves in check. We must educate ourselves; reach out to make new friends and deeper friendships, to keep ourselves in check.

This treatment of a friend is nothing I would have expected from the City of Beacon. But this story is not new. It’s just not told in a public way.

Below is the current City Administrator Chris White’s last response to me. My response to him follows. Again. I think Chris is very talented. Anthony Ruggiero is very talented too, and I’m so bummed that he resigned. As the City of Beacon has stated: “We have work to do.” Anyone, in any position they are in now, can do better, and shift moves made in their past.


 

3/4/2021
In response to an invitation to speak on Zoom to get to know each other, which I declined.

Katie,

Thank you for your response. I am unable to respond to further questions until you and I have some discussion about journalistic standards for your articles. Since I replaced Anthony, I have tried to treat you as I would a news outlet, but I’m realizing that your blog does not operate in the same manner. I have to say that I also liked your blog’s focus on small businesses in Beacon so I tried to give you the benefit of the doubt in responding to you as time allowed.

The article that you just published on City hiring, which is referred to as a “hot mess,” certainly does not meet basic journalistic standards for unbiased reporting. If you would like the City to respond to you as we do with news media, we will need to establish some comparable reporting standards. With a simple conversation, we could have cleared up some of the inaccuracies and misleading assertions in this article, which is what the local papers would have done before publishing.

If you would like to have a conversation at some point to discuss this further, please let me know, and I will try to be available to you. However, until we can establish some sort of standards, I am not able to respond to further questions.

Best regards,

Chris


3/4/2021 Response:
Hi Chris,

I understand where you are coming from.

I do not know about other news outlets having conversations with administrations about how those administrations are covered, but having that discussion is not something I would need to have in order to get accurate information for a story, or try to at least. Informing about known or unknown information is what I would do.

Oftentimes, when a positive adjective is used, people are happy. When an unflattering one is used, the word “unbiased” gets returned.

As for coverage of businesses in Beacon, thank you. However, there may be times when local government decisions are unfavorable to business, or a certain businesses, and you may then not like that coverage, or that article.

Any reporter is biased, as a human. Only so many words and topics can get covered because of time and space (paper and digital), so by the very nature of publishing, every piece of content produced is biased.

With a simple email response, you can always shed light on inaccuracies if there are items that need corrected.

As a local paper would have done before publishing, I did try to get answers from you, in order to get as much accuracy as possible. Which you would not give. And now are stating will continue to not give any unless we have a conversation.

Thank you for your consideration in time in responding prior. We are all busy.

Thank you for the rest of the work that you do. There is a lot on your plate.

Best,
Katie

###

This article is not just for Reuben. As torturous as this is to watch. This is for all of the other Black employees who have been ignored by the City of Beacon, or squashed down into dissolved positions.

The people involved in that - are probably some of the best people. Some of the best friends. Families who your family may have had play dates with. This is your check. My check. Everyone’s check. The check of all people’s lives.

Stories resulting from past articles on this are already coming from people who have been ignored on repeat. Most likely, this will extend into the Hispanic, Arab, Jamaican, Everyone community. Get comfortable with people who sound different than you. Are louder than you. Move differently than you.

Maybe you could shake it up and move differently too! Let your own passion out! Without shaming someone when they do it.

 

Beacon’s New HR Director Hears From City Employees About Discrimination, Inequality, Growing Tensions; Suggests Solutions; Begins With Highway Department

beacon-new-hr-director-hears-from-highway-department-employees-discrimination-MAIN.png

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During the December 14, 2020, City Council workshop meeting, Beacon’s new HR Director Gina Basile, who was hired in July 2020, gave a presentation about “many discussions with our employees about how they feel about working for the City.” She also met with community group Beacon4Black Lives. After holding a Meet and Greet with all department heads individually, she scheduled a Meet and Greet with the Fire Department, which needed to be rescheduled due to COVID-19-related issues. Gina held a Meet and Greet with the Highway Department, which is where she began her focus to discover overall themes employees experience when working for the City.

Gina started by presenting her first 4 months as HR Director (hired in July, presented findings in December), according to Gina’s presentation, which she delivered in-person during the City Council Meeting held over video conference, several themes emerged, including:

  • “Concerns surrounding diversity and equality.”

  • “Concerns regarding our Hiring Practices.”

  • “Growing Tensions in the Workplace.”

  • “Lack of clarity in intra-departmental policies and inconsistency.”

“I have heard employee concerns about discrimination, inequality, and growing tensions,” Gina stated in her printed presentation. “We need to address these issues head-on, and policies and procedures are only the beginning. We need a long-term plan on how to address these issues.”

ALBB has reported on some of these issues here.

She recruited the assistance of the Employee Assistance Program (EAP) provider The Work Place, a work-based intervention program designed to identify and assist employees in resolving personal problems. She called for “a third, neutral party to help us develop a plan on how we move forward.” They assigned 4 of the EAP counselors to assist the City of Beacon, and stated that “based on need, we began with the Highway Department.”

“Needs Assessment Counselors met virtually with all Highway Department employees one-on-one to ask questions about working for the City of Beacon, their Work Environment, and to hear any concerns they want to bring forward. The virtual meetings were held in the conference room in the Highway Department, and I was present in the building so employees knew their confidentiality is maintained,” Gina said.

After the meeting, “the Counselors presented us with Overall Themes that they heard from our employees. They did not tell us what a specific employee said.” From there, a plan has been developed, which includes recommended group and individual training, as well as suggestions on how to improve the City of Beacon’s work environment. EAP recommended and will provide individual counseling, as well as recommended development of policies and procedures. EAP “provided us tools on how to handle issues as they arise,” Gina continued in her presentation.

In conclusion, Gina said that EAP “will guide future group and individual conversations that may be difficult, and uncomfortable at times, but are necessary. We acknowledge that this will take time, and this is something that is going to take commitment and a lot of work.”

Steps To Address The Concerns

Gina presented a plan for how to address the concerns, which include:

  • “Diversity and Inclusion Statement” (this was completed soon after, on October 5, 2020, during a night that included confusion about new hires in the Water Department, and reported on here by ALBB)

  • “New Hiring Procedures”

  • “Standardizing the Promotion Process”

  • “Diversity and Inclusion Certification Program”

  • “Diversity and Inclusion Training for ALL Employees”

  • “Multi-Year Plan”

  • “Open-Door Policy/Investigate All Concerns”

  • “Streamlining Policies and Procedures throughout the City”

  • “Third-Party Involvement”

  • “Open, Community-Based Chief of Police Search Committee”

In terms of next steps, Gina outlined that they “would review the findings of the needs assessment … and discuss the kind of improvements we will be making.” She indicated that she wanted “everyone to be a part of the process and part of the solution.” She then thanked the Highway employees "for taking part in this process, and helping us identify issues, and develop a plan to move forward.”

A Step Signed Off On By City Administrator

One of the next action steps, signed by City Administrator Chris White, soon after his own first day on the job, was to place a longtime Highway Department employee, Reuben Simmons, who is mixed race and identifies as Black, on unpaid leave beginning in January 2021 for 30 days. January is also overtime season for the Highway Department, where they are out plowing and salting city streets during winter storms.

Reuben has been outspoken in complaints about behavior in the Highway Department (listen to his podcast with ALBB here from the summer of 2020), both as an employee and during his time as a Union President advocating for fellow employees during contract negotiations. Reuben told ALBB that he declined an opportunity to resign, or to sign a document that he would agree to be fired for any reason, without that reason being stated or indicated in advance, he told ALBB.

He opted instead for a hearing, during which the City of Beacon will reportedly present witnesses, to further clarify details of a stack of complaints that include dates and general areas of topics but no specific details that ALBB has seen.

The hearing for Reuben’s employment is today, Friday, March 5, 2021 at 10am. The hearing was scheduled to be in City Hall in an office in the basement, but has been moved to be on Zoom. The hearing is not open to the public. Reuben was told that the city will be presenting witnesses, but did not provide a list of those witnesses, or what details they would be expanding upon.