Block grants beneficial

Thank goodness for block grants. Officially dubbed Community Development Block Grants (CDBG), these grants award hundreds of thousands of dollars to towns and villages throughout our region year after year, allowing projects to be undertaken to improve our living conditions in substantial ways.

For 2010, $350,000 was awarded to three Harlem Valley communities: Millerton, Dover and the town of Washington. That accounted for almost one-third of the county’s $1.1 million worth of grants awarded this year.

The money will allow Millerton to repair sidewalks along Barton, Church, Maple, Fish and South Center streets — a much needed project that will work wonders to enhance the village. There was no way the village could have afforded the $125,000 cost without the grant.

Likewise, in Dover, $125,000 will go toward repair and paving a portion of Cart Road down to Route 22 and up to Northrup Road. This is a big project, but one that will benefit the town tremendously. There will be drainage work, rock removal and actual straightening of the road. The money allotted may not be enough for the project’s completion, which is why the town will likely reapply for another block grant next year, to finish the work. But just getting started on the project is a big step in the right direction, and Dover is slowly putting its roads to right (last year a block grant funded improvements to Holsapple Road).

Last year, in the town of Washington, last year a block grant paid for the construction of a bridge from the existing playing fields to the new fields at the town park. This year, a $100,000 block grant will help pay for handicapped parking and a walking path to the new fields. What a difference that will make for town residents and visitors who want to enjoy the park.

Infrastructure improvements and handicapped accessibility projects tend to rate high on the county’s priority list for awarding block grants. Our communities are fortunate that they fell under those umbrellas. Their projects are good ones and deserving of the CDBG funds.

However, we should keep a steady eye on the county (the state and the federal government, too) and make sure the block grant program stays put. The fact is that overall funding declined more than 30 percent in 2010 from 2009, from roughly $1.6 million to nearly $1.1 million. At least the program still exists, however, and that is really important for towns and villages around the Harlem Valley. Our municipalities count on those funds to improve the quality of life for all residents through projects just like the ones described here. Let’s do our best to make sure it stays that way.

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