Dresden Holds the Line on Taxes

On Monday, November 8th, the Dresden town board finalized the 2011 town budget. The amount to be raised by taxes will only be $6,780 more than 2010. This translates into a 1.32% increase in taxes from 2010 to 2011. The town board should be congratulated on keeping the town budget in excellent shape during these trying fiscal times.

In another bit of good news, the total debt of Sewer District #1 is $185,775, down from $230,128 a year ago. If only our national debt was headed in the same direction.

While Whitehall discusses a 13% tax hike for next year, our local town board members have really worked hard to keep Dresden town taxes low.

You can see a summary of the 2011 town budget here.

Happy 2nd Birthday!

Today is November 9, 2010 which is exactly two years since my first post on the Huletts Current. So now the Huletts Current is officially two years old. The day I started this adventure in blogging, my wife said; “It will be difficult for you to find enough interesting tidbits during the winter when things are slow.” So while things have been slow at times, I’ve at least tried to keep things interesting the last two years.

I continue to look for a variety of information about those things that would interest you, the reader. The responses I received throughout the year have been generally positive and indicate that the Huletts Current continues to draw a significant readership. Hopefully you’ve gotten some enjoyment from the site and learned a thing or two when you’ve stopped by. I’m always looking for interesting interview candidates and if you have any info that you think other people would be interested in, I always enjoy hearing from you. Some of the best ideas have been generated by many of you, so thank you for the ideas.

To celebrate our second year, I wanted to share an email that I received which captures what I hoped to do with the Huletts Current.

Dear George:

My husband and I stayed at Huletts in 2007 and 2008. He has been ill and we have been unable to take a vacation the past two years. I just have to tell you how much I have enjoyed the web cams. I have been able to take a short “virtual vacation” when I get a spare moment. The cams have kept me close to a place I really love and enjoy. Sometimes I can almost smell the pine. Thank you and thank you to the people who have kept the links up and running.

Gail Hoppe

Well Gail, it’s been my pleasure the last two years trying to update everyone about the “goings-on” in and around Huletts. My thanks go out also to our web-cam providers who are sharing their wonderful views.

To recap the last year I thought I would link to the top 10 posts from our second year:

1. Back to the Huletts School
2. Interview with School Board Candidate, Mark DeLuca
3. Local Catholic Church Renovation Plan Presented
4. Spring Smelt Run Started
5. Cell Phone Tower Update
6. An Interview with Olympic Athlete, Erin Hamlin
7. Whitehall Says NO to Growth, Jobs & Expanded Tax Base
8. Cell Phone Tower in Firehouse’s Future?
9. Absentee Ballots Counted: Town Board Race
10. Diseased Oak Tree Taken Down

On to year three.

Policy on Obituaries

In any small community, the deaths of friends are, in many cases, common knowledge.

These are my general guidelines on publishing obituaries:

1.) If a family gives me explicit permission to publish an obituary, emails me the text or tells me I can inform people, I will do so.

2.) If a family publishes an obituary in an online source which references that person as having lived in Huletts, I will most likely publish the link if I am aware of it. Many times however, I do not know of this unless I am notified. My searches and reading sources do not include obituaries, so an obituary could be published online and I would simply not know about it.

3.) If the person occupied a public position, I generally will post that as a news worthy item.

However, if I know of a person’s passing and that person’s online obituary does not mention Huletts Landing, or if the family does not notify me directly, I will not post that information. Why would a family not want this information posted?

Well to begin, many blogs are still not accepted as real “news” sources. Secondly, because we have so many seasonal residents, some people just don’t publicize that they spend time here. Finally, there are any innumerable reasons why people choose to keep this information private.

As the readership of the Huletts Current has grown, I wanted to state this policy openly. I do not “pick and choose” whose obituary to publish. If you want an obituary to be published the best thing to do is contact me directly.

An Interview with the Assessor

Recently, I had a chance to interview Ms. June Maniacek, the Town of Dresden Assessor. Everyone is concerned about rising taxes, so while some of our conversation might seem a bit arcane, it directly relates to the property taxes we all pay. Ms. Maniacek has been the Dresden Assessor for many years and she was gracious enough to sit down with me and answer all of my questions.

To begin, you are charged by law with setting the assessment roll in the town of Dresden. Could you tell us exactly what this means and what by law you are charged with doing?

I must prepare and file an assessment roll as of July 1st of each year which is utilized by the various taxing jurisdictions to spread their tax levies in a fair and equitable manner across the assessing unit.

So you assess every parcel in the town with a value?

Yes. Then the tax rate (which is determined by the budget and total taxable assessed value in the particular jurisdiction), is then applied to each individual assessment to determine the portion that parcel will pay.

What happens when different towns are in one taxing jurisdiction, say the County?

The Equalization Rate comes in to play. The ER rate is calculated by dividing the State’s estimate of the Town’s Full Market Value into the total assessed value as determined by the assessor. Each Town’s ER will determine the Full Market Value in each Town, and then their share of the total tax levy will be apportioned based on their % of the total taxable value in the county.

In the school tax bill that property owners recently received, there was a significant increase in Dresden taxpayers share due to a change in the equalization rate set by the state even though there was no increase in the school budget. Could you explain what the equalization rate is in simple easy to understand language?

The State determined that the overall value of property in Dresden was a larger portion of the overall value of the district. (This could result from a decline in market value in the Town of Whitehall, without any change in Full Market Value occuring in the Town of Dresden.)

This seems a bit strange that the equalization rate would be dropping and that the state of NY would be basically saying that property in Dresden is worth more. Everyone knows that property isn’t selling and that there is a glut of homes on the market in Dresden. Shouldn’t the equalization rate go up during bad economic times? Do you see this happening soon?

The most recent ER was based on market conditions from July 1, 2008 to June 30, 2009. More recent market trends through July 1, 2010 will not be reflected until the ER rate for 2011.

Over the last 10 years, Washington County’s budget and the Whitehall School district’s budget have really grown. People shouldn’t be mad at you because you don’t have anything to do with setting budgets, right?

That is correct. My job is to fairly distribute the tax burden. In addition I also administer exemptions which can impact tax rates. There are a number of low income property owners that pay little or no school taxes. In these cases their tax burden is not forgiven but shifted on to the remaining taxpayers.

So you’re saying you have nothing to do with budgets and spending. You just set the apportionment on how those budgets will be divided by the property owners in Dresden?

My impact is nominal. My salary and incidental expenses are part of the Town’s budget. For every tax dollar paid:

.12 goes to support the Town of Dresden and the Fire Company.
.30 of every tax dollar goes to support the County, and
.58 of every tax dollar paid goes to the school district.

If a non-profit group, like an environmental conservancy organization, purchased a significant amount of acreage from a private landowner would that acreage then be eligible to come off the tax rolls?

It may. The courts have been very lienient as to what constitutes a non-profit, or exempt purpose. Until the State Legislature makes a definitive determination, this probably will continue.

Have you seen towns where environmental organizations buy large tracks of land and this causes taxes on private property to rise?

Yes. It has happened in the Town of Putnam. If the State, in turn, purchases the holdings, it returns to the tax rolls. However, none of this land will ever be developed.

I know you make every effort to set the yearly assessment roll fairly. However, sometimes people might see your assessment as wrong. Can you explain the process of correcting an error or appealing your assessment?

Anyone that has a question should first contact me. If they are not satisfied with my response, they may file a formal complaint with Dresden Board of Assessment Review. If they are still not satisfied with their formal complaint, they may file a Small Claims Proceeding (for residential properties) or appeal to the courts (commercial, vacant, etc.)

Dresden has a significant percentage of state owned land in its boundary. Do you also assess property in the town owned by NY State?

I valued the State Owned Land in our last reassessment using the same criteria as for valuing privately owned forest land. The State later provided me with their appraisals, which were higher than mine. I accepted those appraisals, and added them to the Assessment Roll. As a result, there was a shift away from the privately owned properties to the State.

Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions for the readers of the Huletts Current.

For those that would benefit from a more structured, detailed explanation, please follow this link.

http://www.orps.state.ny.us/video/index.cfm

Postmaster’s Newsletter

Pam Stragnell recently mailed out her newsletter with order forms to purchase stamps by mail. Please remember to support the Huletts Post Office even if you are not in Huletts. Ordering stamps by mail through Pam is a great way to support the Huletts Post Office. In many ways the local Post Office is the center of life in a small community like Huletts Landing. Lets make sure it’s here for many more years to come.

View Pam’s newsletter here.

Now for Some History: circa 1920-1930

Once we were returning from Whitehall after picking up a friend who had arrived on the “Laurentian.” My daughter, who was driving, made a sudden stop. Crossing the road in front of us was a curious looking animal which upon closer inspection proved to be a skunk, its head completely covered by a tin can. The poor creature crossed and recrossed the road. When it hit the weeds by the road-side it always turned and came back. This continued as three helpless women stood and wondered what to do. A young man came along in a car and sensing that something was wrong, stopped. I said to him, “It’s a skunk! But I have read that if you pick a skunk up by its tail it will not be offensive.” The brave man did so. Mr. Skunk seemed to know that someone was trying to help him and assisted by pushing the can with his paws, twisting and turning the can until it finally came off, leaving a bloody little neck. The skunk stood there on the bank, looking bewildered, but he was odorless. He seemed to be trying to say “Thank you.” I said to the young man, “That was one of the nicest things I have ever seen done and I think you deserve a Carnegie medal.”

by
Elizabeth H. W. Danforth
circa 1920-1930

Published in Hamlet Summers: 1950

The Danforths came to Huletts Landing in 1909 when “Forest Lodge” became their summer home.

Bits of Everything

NY Times Interview with Cuomo

The NY Times recently conducted an interview with Andrew Cuomo.

Trash Plant Contract to end Soon

The Post Star did a fairly in-depth piece documenting Washington County’s trash plant woes. The trash plant has cost taxpayers of Washington County a lot of money during its history.

Remembering Huletts

The Adirondack Almanack recounts some old memories of Huletts.

Think Big: Some Spectacular Shots of the Solar System

Boston.com has some stunning shots of our universe.

Sometimes a Teasing Self Promotion is in Order

Since the publication of Huletts Landing on Lake George, I sometimes get asked if I’m working on a second book. To date, I’ve always answered that I’ve been too busy and that quite frankly, every truly bit of interesting information that I had regarding Huletts was published in Huletts Landing on Lake George.

Additionally, I’ve always felt that any good history book must have an interesting story attached to it. After writing Huletts Landing on Lake George, I couldn’t see unearthing anything else which could add to the story presented in Huletts Landing on Lake George.

That is until recently when an historical artifact was given to me which was so intriguing, the story just presented itself.

Now you’re probably thinking, “oh what a tease, tell us what you’re working on”. Well if I told you now, it wouldn’t be worth the wait and secondly I have no idea when I’ll finish it because the Huletts Current while quiet now, does take a good bit of my spare time.

I will say this:

a.) it is an ongoing project with no clear finish date.
b.) there are pictures that have never been seen publically before.
c.) the story has even led me (figuratively) to Springfield, Illinois which is better known for it’s significance in the life of our 16th President.

If you see me, don’t ask. You’ll have to stay tuned here to learn more.

Voting Absentee

Please know that the General Election is fast approaching. Here is how to obtain an absentee ballot if you are registered to vote in NY state.

Qualifications to Vote by Absentee Ballot:

Absent from your county or, if a resident of the city of New York absent from said city, on Election Day;
unable to appear at the polls due to illness or disability;

A patient in a Veterans’ Administration Hospital;

Detained in jail awaiting Grand Jury action or confined in prison after conviction for an offense other than a felony;

How to Vote by Absentee Ballot

Applications for Absentee Ballots are available at your county board of elections.

You may also download a PDF version of the New York State Absentee Ballot Application Form. ( 261KB)

Upon completion, applications must be mailed to your county board no later than the seventh day before the election or delivered in person no later than the day before the election.

You may also request an Absentee Ballot by sending a letter to your county board of elections. The letter must be received by your county board no earlier than 30 days and no later than seven days before the election. The letter must contain the following information:

the address where you are registered
an address where the ballot is to be sent
the reason for the request, and
the signature of the voter

An application form will be mailed with your ballot. The application form must be completed and returned with your ballot.

Washington County Board of Elections
383 Broadway
Fort Edward, NY 12828

Phone: 518-746-2180
Fax: 518-746-2179

The Halloween Parade

The Halloween parade will take place this Saturday, October 9th at noon. It will start in front of the Post Office and finish in front of the soda fountain.

While the little ones are enjoying some ice-cream, congratulate the Mackell sisters on 20 years of their family successfully running the soda fountain!!

Back to the Huletts School


The former Huletts school house as it looks today.

This past summer I had a chance to sit down with Francis Borden and talk in-depth about what it was like for him to attend the Huletts school house when he was a young boy. Below is my interview with him.

Attending a one room school house was made popular in the television series, Little House on the Prairie, but that was the way students in Dresden were educated for a long time.

“Yes, there were a number of schools in Dresden. Clemons had a school. Dresden had a school near where the old town dump once was and the Huletts school was actually District # 5. The boundary line for attending the Huletts school was on top of the mountain. But in those days everyone walked to school and you had to be close enough to walk.”

Could you give the readers of the Huletts Current an idea of what a school day was like for you?

“Well to begin, I had to make three trips up the mountain every day. I walked up the mountain in the morning. We got sent home for lunch, so I had to walk up the mountain again at one in the afternoon, and finally I had a job cleaning the school house so I would walk up again after school to sweep and clean the building. So if nothing else, I got my exercise.”

So there were children of numerous ages learning different things simultaneously?

“Yes, for instance, the Gregories from the top of the mountain were there, Ken Robbins’ son Ben Robbins was there and and Beulah Cooper was actually the last teacher I remember. Different things were being taught to different students but it was a very good education. The fundamentals of reading, writing and arithmetic were drilled into everyone.”

Are there any pictures that remain from those days?

“Ben Robbins sent me one a few years ago and I’ll be happy to look for it for you.”

The Huletts school house only went up to the 8th grade, correct?

“Yes, when we graduated were were taken by station wagon to Whitehall for high school.”

Station Wagon?

“Yes in those days, no buses came to Huletts and there were only about 4 or 5 of us from Huletts. So we were driven in a station wagon to Whitehall. I actually graduated early because I skipped 2 grades. So when I went to high school, I was only 12.”

So the Huletts school turned out some well educated students!

“I would say so. I did the 1st and 2nd grade in one year and then 5th and 6th grade in one year. It was a good education and we were made to work.”

It certainly was a time that was much different than today. Thank you for sharing your recollections with us.

“I’m happy to. The one thing I wish is that I had more pictures. It was a way of life that really can’t be described. But that’s the way it was. I’ll certainly never forget walking up the mountain three times a day. Every day.” (Big Smile)