Pine Plains booster is 'vital cog'

PINE PLAINS — Interim Athletic Director Mike Kohut gave a presentation on the district’s athletic department during the Dec. 3 Board of Education meeting and commended the fiscal support provided by the Bombers Booster Club.

Since the district is on a contingency budget, the booster club and other concerned citizens have provided money for all athletic teams’ non-league contests. The Board of Education is only funding the district’s basic Mid-Hudson Athlete League (MHAL) program.

So far, the booster club has raised $9,382.50 toward non-league athletic programs. Excluding the salaries of coaches, that number represents approximately 20 percent of the cost for the various Pine Plains sports programs.

“The athletic program is a vital cog in providing a well-rounded education for our students,†said district Superintendent Linda Kaumeyer.

This is not the first time local school districts have found traveling to distant away games overly costly for the district’s budget. The Webutuck Central School District has been looking into ways to avoid traveling far for their teams to compete, and Kohut spoke on Dec. 3 at the Pine Plains Board of Education meeting about the options.

“[Kohut] and other area athletic directors are exploring ways to enhance healthy competition among area schools and save travel time, fuel and other costs by restructuring the athletic conferences,†Kaumeyer reported. “Options being explored include restoring the former ‘Bi-Valley’ conference, creating a new Section XII or realigning the current MHAL/Section IX teams. No firm proposals exist at present, but discussions continue on this topic.â€

Kohut thanked parents, students and supporters for their help keeping the athletic program at its current level, and singled out Roger Lougheed from Peddlar’s Cafe and his staff for their sponsorship and support of the Carvel Golf Tournament and BBQ during last weekend’s Parade of Lights event.

With 35 teams, 47 coaches and 305 participating students (52 percent of the student body) spanning the various athletic programs Pine Plains offers, Kohut remarked that the management of the Athletic Department was similar to running a separate school. He is employed full time by the district and stressed the need for a full-time director of health, physical education and athletics.

BOCES Salt Point campus

In other Board of Education news, Kaumeyer reported on the Dutchess County BOCES’ (Board of Cooperative Educational Services) $30 million capital construction project to expand its facilities at its Salt Point Campus. The campus is currently renting its BETA building, and the cost of constructing and consolidating their operations into one location is expected to be more cost-effective in the long run.

While all Dutchess County taxpayers will share the costs of the project, it remains unclear exactly what the financial impact will be for Pine Plains town citizens. The BOCES Web site states that based on this year’s school tax information, they estimate that the difference this year would have been an average increase of about “two-hundredths of one percent†(.019) on each district’s current year tax levies. Residents will have the opportunity to vote on the financing for the project on Feb. 10 of next year, and Kaumeyer urged all residents to learn more about the project by heading to the project’s Web site, which is located at dcboces.org/onecampus.

The next Board of Education meeting will be Dec. 17 at Stissing Mountain High School at 7 p.m. in the library.

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