Village decides on block grant application

MILLERTON — The Village Board came to a unanimous decision about its Community Development Block Grant application at its monthly meeting on Monday, Sept. 20 — to pursue funding for sidewalk replacement.

Block grants are awarded by the county, thanks to funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and can amount to as much as $150,000 per municipality. They are awarded on an annual basis according to a priority list; infrastructure improvements, such as sidewalk repairs, are high on that priority list.

“I think they are number two or three,� Millerton Mayor John Scutieri said, adding that’s where sidewalks fell last year as well. Millerton was awarded a block grant to repair sidewalks on Dutchess Avenue in 2010. Number one on the county’s list of top projects is affordable housing, and it has been for years.

“They always target that, because some of the funding comes from HUD,� Scutieri said. “I’ve learned over my 12 years working with community development that almost every other year you get something, but the county executive has to look at the projects very closely and see which ones meet the priorities, too.�

The project the Village Board is gunning for is to replace the sidewalk in front of the businesses on the south side of Main Street, extending from Coyote Point down to South Center Street. It’s roughly 400 feet of sidewalk, according to the mayor, who acknowledged the sidewalk is in dire need of attention.

“It’s in terrible condition and is basically a safety issue,� Scutieri said. “We know that sidewalk is due for replacement. We’ve been band-aiding it, but it’s all pitted and has multiple cracks and it’s time we replace it.

“It’s a fantastic project and the village of Millerton brings a lot to the county of Dutchess and this is about safety, and I will stress that a lot in the application,� he added.

The mayor said the job will likely cost roughly $150,000, the maximum amount awarded by the grant. There could be hidden costs, though, as the project will be complicated, with the sidewalk abutting commercial buildings, upsetting Main Street, creating a “huge mess� in the business district and then there’s always the chance of something unexpected happening, too.

“It’s the 600-pound elephant in the room,� Scutieri said. “You know it needs to be done, and it’s a major project, so you do hope it gets done. But it [won’t be easy].�

The village sidewalks need the attention now more than ever, according to the mayor, as this past winter there were more extreme frosts, leaving bigger, and more, heaves and cracks in the sidewalks.

“And when concrete cracks, it stays cracked,� he said.

If awarded, the block grant will nicely complement another grant the village is vying for, through the Consolidated Highway Improvement Program (CHIPs). If that funding is awarded it will afford the village the opportunity to install new street lights along Main Street, identical to the new street lights that were recently installed along Dutchess Avenue.

The only other suggestion presented to the Village Board at last week’s public hearing on the block grant application came from Donald Najdek of the Recreation Commission. He requested the village consider building a new basketball court. The board said it’s in favor of the idea, but then said it didn’t think pursuing a block grant would be the best way to secure funding for such a project. Scutieri said the village will instead work with the Recreation Commission in pursuing grants through the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation this spring.

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