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Monday, January 1, 2024

Satmar's "girlfriend" Hochul Stabs them in the back, though they endorsed her and Kicked Lee Zeldin to the curb





DIN:
I'm personally for continued development because the Jewish community is growing B"H and needs housing. Having said that, this news item would be too funny for words if it wasn't so tragic.  They endorsed the shiksa because she promised them $$$$$ and permits for development, and threw Lee Zeldin "the Jew" under the bus.  Satmar has a habit of always reminding the Zionists that "we are still in galut" but they refuse to apply this rule to themselves. I am confident that they haven't learned anything from this episode and will continue to endorse candidates that stand against Torah Values as long as those candidates promise them "Benjamins, " and as we all witnessed, they don't even have to deliver!  

A pair of laws signed into effect by Governor Kathy Hochul last week will tighten up the process by which villages can be created, with the proposed Sullivan County village of Ateres the only exemption to the new legislation.


The new laws will raise the 500 person population requirement to 1,500, will require multiple studies to be done to measure potential impact on the area and will create a state commission to decide if a referendum is allowed to proceed. Proponents of the laws had said the existing laws were archaic and needed to be updated.

According to The Journal News (bit.ly/3S31BpS), multiple efforts had been made previously in Albany to raise the population threshold over the years. While the bills that Hochul signed call for a population of at least 2,000 to create a new village, she stipulated that the bills will be amended during the upcoming legislative session to a 1500 person minimum.

The new laws will not apply to any petitions that had been already scheduled for a referendum on December 22nd, an exemption that will allow a referendum on Ateres’ petition to proceed as scheduled on January 18th. A Ateres encompasses an area that is approximately one and a half square miles, whose mostly Viznitzer residents are looking for a government that will be more responsive to their unique needs.

The legislation is anything but good news for the proposed Village of Seven Springs, located in the Orange County town of Monroe. The Journal News (https://bit.ly/3tDB9tM) reported that the Seven Springs proposal was rejected in September by local officials on technical details, with attorneys for the proposed village saying that they intended to appeal that decision in state Supreme Court.

Senator James Skoufis, sponsor of one of the two laws signed into effect by Hochul, said that it would put the brakes on “reckless development.” He noted that new villages require sanitation, highway maintenance and public safety services, a reality that requires a much larger population base than 500 people that could translate to as few as 60 to 70 homes.

“The Seven Springs fiasco, which would have proven an impossible lift for local taxpayers, all so a couple of wealthy developers could make a buck, has come to an end,” said Skoufis.

Seven Springs had only 597 inhabitants when its petition was filed, while Ateres had 834. The only other village in the formation process is Edgemont, located in Westchester, but its population meets the new state-mandated minimums.

In a nod to those who had categorized the 500 person population requirement as archaic, Hochul agreed that the time had come to modernize the state’s village incorporation procedures.

“We want our villages and surrounding towns to thrive,” said the governor.


 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Actually, she killed for now, the Seven Springs project but Satmar was against that. So she threw Satmar another bone. Satmar is against Seven Springs because it’s an attempted project by a renegade faction which will then compete against the main Satmar group for government giveaways

Anonymous said...

Oy vavoy! 馃樀‍馃挮yidden- enough with the factionalism!!! Ad kan