HomeMy WebLinkAbout2015-06-18TB 6-18-15
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TOWN OF DRYDEN
TOWN BOARD MEETING
June 18, 2015
Present: Supervisor Mary Ann Sumner, Cl Gregory Sloan, Cl Joseph
Solomon, Cl Jason Leifer, Cl Linda Lavine
Elected Officials: Bambi L. Avery, Town Clerk
Other Town Staff: Ray Burger, Director of Planning
Jennifer Jones, Director of Recreation
Supv Sumner opened the meeting at 7:05 p.m., and board members and guests
participated in the pledge of allegiance.
CITIZENS PRIVILEGE
Art Berkey read the attached statement on behalf of the Varna Community
Association.
Supv Sumner said Cornell University is not involved in this project. The Town is
meeting and discussing this with the Ithaca Tompkins County Transportation Commission
State DOT. The Planning Director has a meeting with them later this month.
Joe Wilson read the attached statement regarding the proposed gas line for West
Dryden Road.
Judy Pierpont, 111 Pleasant Hollow Rd, said she found the discussion at the June 10
meeting on the pipeline extremely useful. She values the informal meeting format and better
understands the matter now. If there is a sense of the board about the town the town taking
the role of lead agency for the project, she urged them to vote yes. The Town has zoning laws
in place to require a special permit. In that process there would be SEQR review and specific
requirements can be made to better protect interests of Dryden and its citizens.
Supv Sumner thanked Cl Leifer for arranging and facilitating that meeting.
Cliff Kraft, 983 W Dryden Rd, said after the last time he was here he sent an email
because he was dismayed that the town attorney had made no comments during the meeting.
Supv Sumner said he would comment if the board asks him to. They had discussed it
extensively with him before the meeting. He understands that person has since resigned and
this opens opportunity for the town. The Town needs to be careful to get excellent legal advice
to deal with the complexity of these issues. NYSEG has the best attorneys in the world and is
counting on the town’s miscues. We have an opportunity to do much better. He said town law
should be changed so that any large industrial facility built in the town benefits the town. This
pipeline has no arguable benefit for the Town of Dryden and has many detriments. The board
needs to be very careful in dealing with those issues.
Kathy Russell is concerned with the definition of public utility delivery facilities. She’d
like to know to what extent the comprehensive plan includes a reduction in the use of fossil
fuels and a plan to include a reduction in the use of natural gas. It seems that the State of
New York, Town of Ithaca and City of Ithaca are incorporating infrastructure that is very
dependent on natural gas. She is concerned because of the carbon emissions. If the State and
the Town of Dryden are going to provide natural gas as a way to get energy in the future, she
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thinks it is morally wrong and economically unwise. Nevertheless, if that is going to happen ,
let’s not entrench that as a plan for acquiring energy. To what extent is the West Dryden
Pipeline put in the context of a comprehensive plan that actually t akes responsibility for
lowering carbon emissions.
Supv Sumner said the Comprehensive Plan is on the website. It was developed
beginning in the late 90’s and adopted in 2005. The Planning Board is now evaluating the
existing plan against sustainability principles and other things. They will be proposing areas to
be revised and make a plan for updating and revising it next year.
K Russell said in terms of the definition public utility delivery facility, it uses the notion
of “every day necessity” and she would like that ambiguous phrase brought into the 21st
century. It needs to be ecologically defined in a way that is 21st century.
Linda Parks thanked the board and Cl Leifer for the workshop last week. She asked
that the board amend the laws to clarify public at large and be very specific, replacing it with
appropriate terminology that benefits the Town of Dryden and its residents. She asked that the
permitted use list be revised to add gas distribution lines which serve the Town of Dryden and
its resident. She asked the Board to please do all it can if this project goes forward to be sure
that the Town Board is the lead agency.
David Bradley, 77 South St, said the weather will be extra tropical this year. Intense
rain storms will be more common. Weather is largely accentuated by CO2 pollution and
methane pollution largely as a result of human activities. People pay for the pollution that
comes from buying fossil fuels and burning them. Taxpayer dollars get used to do that, which
is not a very moral thing to do. He asked people when they vote with their dollars to vote to not
pollute. There are school and municipal activities where taxpayer dollars are used to purchase
pollution based electricity and polluting natural gas and diesel oil. He urged the board to
consider forming some sort of buying collaborative where those entities could purch ase non-
polluting wind-based electricity. Also consider that with methane consumption. The 21st
century solution is ground sourced heat pumps.
Supv Sumner announced that Family Fun on the Farm Day will be held August 1 at
the Carey Farm in Groton from 11 am to 4 pm.
Music concert series schedules were distributed.
A Local Law listing (all laws adopted by the Town Board since 1976) was distributed.
Kathy Gehring, Vice-Chair of the Recreation and Youth Commission, presented the
Commission’s 2014 Annual Report and the Youth Needs Assessment that was conducted in
2014 – PowerPoint attached.
There was an inquiry about the possibility of bringing Family & Children
Services/Mental Health Services to Dryden. Supv Sumner and Jennifer Jones will discuss
reaching out to them. Only Dryden school district residents were surveyed. Martha Robertson
pointed out they left out a third or a quarter of the population by not contacting Ithaca school
attendees. K Gehring said it would be difficult to do that but they will discuss it for next time.
A needs assessment is conducted every three to six years. Cl Sloan said recreation trails
provide opportunities to draw in people and perhaps increase sales tax. Tasteful business
districts can help with that. A recreation center and trails will compete for funding from the
same sources. Cl Sloan would like to know more about what the community thinks going
forward.
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Special Use Permit – Ithaca Tactical Laser Tag
Miles Merwin has submitted a special use permit application to have a laser tag facility
at 1975 Dryden Road, behind Ringwood Raceway. This will be outside, with six 12’ by 12’
temporary structures. They don’t expect it will be louder than go-karts. Operating hours will
be the same as the raceway and there will be no additional lighting. The board scheduled a
public hearing for July 16, 2015 at 7:05 p.m.
Bolton Point Labor Contract
Judy Drake, who provides human resources services for the Town of Ithaca and Bolton
Point, said this is the result of nine months of negotiation. It was interesting in that nine
employees under the operating engineers decertified and wanted to join the UAW group. A
great deal of time was spent trying to bring two different con tracts together. Benefits were
already established except wages and health insurance in the contract. The allowance for
uniforms went up $50 per year. Wages go into effect July 1 instead of being retroactive to
January. The biggest change was contributions to health insurance. They were at 2% of
premiums per month and will go to 6%, 9% to 12% over 3 years. Wages go up 2%, but
distribution and production employees received an equalization increase. They did a lot of
work on this and made sure no one went home with fewer dollars. Employees also can now
choose a less expensive health insurance plan for which there is also a lower percentage of
contribution premiums. Being part of the health insurance consortium has helped them with
expenses.
RESOLUTION #95 (2015) - Approval of Union Contract with the United Auto Workers for
Southern Cayuga Lake Intermunicipal Water Commission’s Employees
Supv Sumner offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
WHEREAS, the Southern Cayuga Lake Intermunicipal Water Commission, in good faith,
entered into contract negotiations with the United Auto Workers union for a renewed contract
for the contract that expired on December 31, 2014; and
WHEREAS, on June 2, 2015, the Commission’s negotiating team reached tentative
agreement on a contract with the union’s negotiating team; and
WHEREAS, on June 10, 2015, the employees in the union bargaining unit ratified the
tentative contract; and
WHEREAS, the Commission reviewed and approved the tentative contract at the June
12, 2015 meeting of the Commission; and
WHEREAS, the Town of Dryden has reviewed the tentative contract and determined it to
be acceptable as required by the contract and the Public Employees Relation Board; now,
therefore, be it
RESOLVED, the Town Board of the Town of Dryden does hereby approve the tentative
contract between the Commission and UAW unit; and, be it further
RESOLVED, the Town Board authorizes the Commission’s negotiating team to sign said
contract as presented.
2nd Cl Leifer
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
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Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
COUNTY BRIEFING
Martha Robertson - The public hearing on the TC3 budget is set for July 7 at 5:30 p.m.
This year TC3 asked for a 4% increase. The amount of state funding per student has been cut
back. Cortland County has been reluctant to support the budget as requested. There seems to
be agreement that perhaps half the increase could come from the counties and the other half
would come from reserves. The counties have to agree on the method of funding.
There was a 6 – 6 tie on the disposition of the old library property. At the July 7
meeting members who were absent from the previous meeting can move to reconsider the
matter. For her the issue is the tremendous shortage of housing in Ithaca. 15,000 people
commute into Tompkins County to work from outside the county. The Travis Hyde project
was her choice because it provided 60 middle market apartments. The other project would
involve less deconstruction and would reuse the foundation and steel structure, but would
offer only 22 very expensive condos. The presentations are online.
The Regional Economic Development Council is accepting consolidated funding
applications. She thought the Varna community, with Varna Plan in place, might be able to
get some money under the rubric of community revitalization. Jim Skaley and Ray Burger will
work on an application.
Mike Lane is the Tompkins County Legislature’s liaison to the TC3 board. Tompkins
County pays about two-thirds of the sponsor share of the college’s budget and Cortland pays
about one-third. That is based on the number of full time equivalent students from each
county. Other counties pay per student through charge-back revenues. The Global
Connections program brings in students from other counties for joint degrees and that brings
in revenue that offsets the costs to run the college. There is a co-curricular program with
various high schools where teachers teach to the TC3 syllabus and TC3 waives tuition so
student earns college credit while in high school. TC3 gets state aid because those students
are counted for them. Twenty students graduated from TC3 this year before graduating from
high school. Cortland County has financial issues and was reluctant to raise their sponsorship
amount this year. The compromise is that the sponsor share will increase by 2% and the
counties will authorize the equivalent of 2% from its fund balance.
The problem is that the State has reduced its spending since 2008. The idea behind
community colleges is that students pay a third of the cost, the county pays a third, and the
state pays a third. Students currently pay a larger share and the counties and state are lower.
The counties are now trying to catch up to that third again.
The County Administrator had a letter in The Ithaca Journal that mentioned a study
done that shows that New York State is the state that uses the most real property taxes for
state spending. The state doesn’t actually levy a property tax, but the 15% comes from property
tax via unfunded mandates to the counties, school districts and other municipalities.
There was recently a press conference for TCCOG. M Lane was joined by JR Clairborne
from the City of Ithaca, Don Barber, Caroline Town Supervisor, and Kate Supron, Mayor of the
Village of Cayuga Heights. They talked about the joint study done over last six months. There
were graduate students working with Deputy County Administrator Paula Younger, who looked
at just eight shared services out the 60 or 70 that have been identified. The State is pushing to
consolidate services and municipalities. The point in the study is that we have already done
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this consolidation and are a leader in municipalities. They calculated the savings to taxpayers
is about 3.8 million a year in this county. We have found ways to save by working together.
You can’t go back further than 2012 for the governor’s program, so the health insurance
consortium doesn’t count for Tompkins County, but Cortland and Homer can count it because
they joined after 2012.
TOWN CLERK
RESOLUTION #96 (2015) – APPROVE MINUTES
Supv Sumner offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby approves the meeting minutes of May 14 and
May 21, 2015.
2nd Cl Leifer
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
NEW BUSINESS
Increase membership of Ag Advisory Committee
The board has previously discussed this and Supv Sumner introduced the following
resolution. She thanked the Ag Committee for first identifying Ag issues that were important
for them to convey to the Town Board and now for their work on the Ag protection plan. She
anticipates that plan will be very helpful.
RESOLUTION #97 (2015) – AMEND COMMITTEE STRUCTURE FOR
AG ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Supv Sumner offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
WHEREAS, the Ag Advisory Committee was formed in February of 2013, and
WHEREAS, the committee is composed of five voting members appointed by the Town
Board, and
WHEREAS, this committee has served well as the “vehicle for communication between
the agricultural community and the Board”, and
WHEREAS, the Board would like to offer the Committee additional support, therefore be
it
RESOLVED, that the Town Board hereby amends the Agriculture Advisory Committee
structure to a membership of six (6) voting members effective June 18, 2015, and nominates
Steve Foote to fill the new position to a term ending December 31, 2016.
2nd Cl Leifer
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
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Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
DRYC member appointment
The Dryden Recreation and Youth Commission has an applicant to fill a vacancy and
Supv Sumner recommended her appointment. Jennifer Jones commented that the applicants
schooling and experience is in recreation. She is also involved in the Dryden Lake Festival
planning.
RESOLUTION #98 (2015) – APPOINT DRYC MEMBER – SINICROPI
Supv Sumner offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby appoints Judy Sinicropi to the Dryden
Recreation and Youth Commission to fill a vacancy for a term expiring December 31, 2015.
2nd Cl Solomon
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
Dryden Lake Festival will be held July 25, 2015.
ITCTC appointment
Supv Sumner said that previous planning directors have served on the Ithaca Tompkins
County Transportation Council and she would now to like to appoint Ray Burger to the ITCTC
planning committee. This is the metropolitan planning organization through which federal
funds come to the county. John Keifer of the Planning Board has been serving in the absence
of a Director of Planning and has agreed to continue as alternate.
RESOLUTION #99 (2015) – ITCTC APPOINTMENT – BURGER
Supv Sumner offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby appoints Ray Burger as the town’s primary
delegate to the Ithaca Tompkins County Transportation Council Planning Committee and John
Keifer as the alternate to the Planning Committee.
2nd Cl Sloan
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
Supv Sumner said she has served on the ITCTC policy committee for eight years.
Waiver of water/sewer late fees
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This was discussed at the agenda meeting. The request was denied. Supv Sumner will
send the resident a letter.
Weaver Wind Presentation
Weaver wind would like to schedule an educational presentation for the public about
small scale wind energy. The board discussed the possibilities.
RESOLUTION #100 (2015) – SCHEDULE WEAVER WIND PRESENTATION
Cl Sloan offered the following resolution and aske d for its adoption:
RESOLVED, that this Town Board agrees to hold presentation by Weaver Wind on small
scale wind energy on July 9, 2015, at 6:30 p.m.
2nd Cl Leifer
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
Cl Lavine will contact Weaver Wind to set this up.
Medicare supplement insurance plan for retirees
Supv Sumner explained that the health insurance consortium recently approved a
Medicare supplement plan for retirees. Until this was in place, retirees would have to pay full
price for a policy and it was not cost effective because of the duplication of coverages. This
option makes health insurance coverage more affordable for retirees.
RESOLUTION #101 (2015) – Approve Medicare Supplement Policy to be offered to
Town of Dryden Retirees
Supv Sumner offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
WHEREAS, the Greater Tompkins County Municipal Health Insurance Consortium
(GTCMHIC) has added a Medicare S upplement policy to the list of policies available to
participating municipalities, and
WHEREAS, the Town of Dryden retirees who have Medicare could benefit from the lower
cost of the Medicare Supplement premium, and
WHEREAS, some current employees have expressed an interest in the Medicare
Supplement policy being an option for them to enroll in, either during employment or during
retirement, and
WHEREAS, the GTCMHIC needs Town Board approval in order to allow Town of Dryden
retirees to enroll in the Medicare Supplement policy, be it
RESOLVED, that the Town of Dryden requests that the GTCMHIC add the Medicare
Supplement policy to the list of policies offered to the Town of Dryden retirees.
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2nd Cl Solomon
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
Solar Tompkins funding request
Solar Tompkins is seeking funding assistance for their HeatSmart Program. Supv
Sumner noted the town doesn’t have a budget for this. The board will look over the
information discuss it at the agenda meeting on July 9. The board needs to know the
anticipated cost to the town. Cl Leifer or Cl Lavine will find out what that cost is.
Freese Road Bridge
RESOLUTION #102 (2015) – FREESE ROAD BRIDGE
Cl Sloan offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
Whereas, the Freese Road bridge over Fall Creek in Varna is and always has been a
single-lane bridge,
Whereas, this single-lane bridge has proven adequate for the current traffic flow in
Varna,
Whereas, this single-lane bridge functions as a traffic-calming device and is thus fully
consistent with the Varna Hamlet Plan to be implemented along Route 366 in Varna in the next
few years,
Whereas, the New York State Historic Preservation Office has informed Historic Ithaca,
Inc. (on 21 August, 2013) that the bridge should be considered for historical designation,
Whereas, widening the bridge to two lanes would tax the budget of both Tompkins
County and the Town of Dryden,
Whereas, The Varna Community Association Board has weighed the above arguments,
speaks for the local community, and has resolved to support the maintenance of the Freese
Road Bridge as a single-lane bridge,
Be it resolved by the Board of the Town of Dryden that the Tompkins Count y Highway
Department should continue to maintain the Freese Road Bridge over Fall Creek in Varna as a
single-lane structure.
2nd Cl Supv Sumner
Roll Call Vote Cl Sloan Yes
Cl Solomon Yes
Supv Sumner Yes
Cl Leifer Yes
Cl Lavine Yes
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Town Clerk will send a copy of this resolution to County Highway Jeff Smith, and the
County Infrastructure Committee chair.
West Dryden Road pipeline
Cl Leifer said it had been mentioned there may be a meeting of possible lead agency
choices in this matter. He would like to be clear that it is the sense of the board that Dryden
should be lead agency should an application for a special use permit be received.
Supv Sumner explained that lead agency is a term used in the State Environmental
Quality Review Act. Whenever a permitting agency is processing an application for a permit,
that agency must determine whether or not it is subject to environmental quality review, and
whether it is a type 1 or type 2 or unclassified action. Then the municipality or agency notifies
all other concerned agencies that they intend to be lead agency on this permit application.
The following points/remarks were made:
o Dryden would like to be lead agency.
o It is possible to have co-lead agencies.
o It is in Dryden’s interest to assert its authority here.
o There may be three separate parts/projects – Dryden, Lansing and Ithaca.
o Non-lead agencies cannot challenge the determinations of lead agency.
o Be careful about ignoring neighbors.
o If there were co-lead agencies there could be different conclusions and then DEC
would make a decision.
o Is it possible to segment the project?
o Dryden has the most mileage on the line and has been more involved than the
County or Lansing.
o Dryden may have more residents with a stake in it.
o Dryden could be lead agency for the entire project.
o Dryden would probably work extensively with County Planning.
o There should be a resolution directing the Zoning Officer to notify NYSEG that a
special use permit will be required.
The Supervisor and each board member stated that the Town will require a special use
permit for this project and that the Town should declare itself lead agency.
Cl Leifer has forwarded an email from Chris Denton and asked the board to read it and
call him if they have any questions.
Cl Leifer said there was a meeting yesterday about the Village water wells and he will
forward an email regarding that as well as an email from Steve Winkley of th e NYS Rural Water
Association so the board is up to date on those projects.
Supv Sumner wants to be sure that some point we make an official request for a special
use permit application from NYSEG and need we need to be aware of the timing because there
is a time limitation between the time the application is deemed complete by the Planning
Department and the time the public hearing is scheduled (62 days).
Cl Leifer said Chris Denton’s position is that it is not allowed under our current law.
His advice is to use this as an opportunity to renegotiate the franchise agreement. Cl Leifer is
concerned that we may be subject to suit because a need has been identified in another
community. He will check case law. We may be able to negotiate a contract around this
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particular project. He isn’t sure we need to jump to the conclusion that NYSEG will
automatically get the permit.
Supv Sumner noted that the franchise fees received from Time Warner were
significantly lower than budgeted.
There being no further business, on motion made, seconded and unanimously car ried,
the meeting was adjourned at 9:40 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Bambi L. Avery
Town Clerk
Dryden Recreation &
Youth Commission
2014 Annual Report
•Recreation Activities
•Youth Development Programs
•Community Grants
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
•Process
•Highlights
•Themes & Recommendations
DRYC Goal & Membership
Goal:
To provide a high quality of life for all
town residents by assisting in
facilitating opportunities to
participate in healthy and satisfying
recreation and leisure activities, and
supporting and increasing access of
town youth to programs that build
skills, confidence, leadership, and
supportive relationships with peers
and adults.
2014 Membership:
Stephanie Mulinos – Chair
Steve Meyer – Vice-Chair
Tracy Kurtz
Vicki Wilkins
Tom Fuchs
David Bravo-Cullen
Rick Ryan
Non-voting Liaisons:
Joe Solomon, Town Board
Jennifer Jones, Rec. Director
Kris Bennett, TCYS
Recreation vs. Youth Development
Recreation is…
Noun;
1.refreshment by means of some
pastime, agreeable exercise, or the
like.
2.a pastime, diversion, exercise, or
other resource affording relaxation
and enjoyment.
~Webster’s Dictionary
Youth Development is…
Noun;
A process which prepares youth people
to meet the challenges of adolescence
and adulthood through a coordinated,
progressive series of activities and
experiences which help them to become
socially, morally, emotionally, physically,
and cognitively competent.
~www.youth.gov
2014 DRYC ANNUAL REPORT
Recreation Activities Offered in 2014:
Youth:
•Sertoma Soccer (new in 2014!)
•Indoor Movie Night at DES
•Karate
•Baseball
•Football
•Track & Field
•Lacrosse
•Cheerleading
•Basketball
•Wrestling
•Summer Camps
•Spring Egg Hunts
Adult/Family:
•Pickleball
•Co-ed Softball
•Co-ed Kickball
•Father/Daughter Dance
•Music in the Hollow
•Dryden Music Series
•CPR Training
•Dryden Youth Program
39 Programs
170 Participants
Youth Development Programming:
2014 DRYC Annual Report
Programs included:
Primitive Pursuits
Iron Chef/Outdoor Cooking
Lunch Bunch
Community Helpers
Health & Wellness Day
Monday Makers
Hiking Trips
Overnight Camping Trips
Animal/Environmental Explorers
Canoe Trips
Nature Arts
Fun with Frisbees
•O.U.R.S.
Served 26 families located
in 3 mobile home parks
within the Town of Dryden
65 Participants
60+ Cornell Student
Mentors
Youth Development Programming:
Programs included:
Autumn Adventures
Leadership Council
Cooking Matters
Mentors in Training
Nitty Gritty Thursdays
Crafting in the Park
Word Buffs
Lego Robots
Summer Afoot
Plant Medicine
4-H Fair & KICKS
Music Wizards
Animal Tracking
Just for Teens
Stay Fit
2014 DRYC Annual Report
•Youth Employment
17 Youth Participants
9 Work Sites
•Clark’s Shurfine Foods
•Primitive Pursuits
•Dryden Community Center Café
•Dryden Summer Camp
•Freeville Summer Camp
•Southworth Library
•Camp Earth Connection
•Back to Basics Bulk Food Store
Youth Development Programming:
Program included:
Interview Skills Training
Learning the value of money
Learning patience
Learning assertiveness skills
Learning Public Health Standards
Evaluation of Program by
Participants
2014 DRYC Annual Report
Youth Development Programming – 2004 vs 2014:
2004 Programs 2014 Programs
Rural Youth Services Rural Youth Services
Freeville Youth Jobs OURS
V. Dryden Youth Jobs Dryden Youth Employment Program
Brooktondale Camp
Village of Dryden Police & Community
Youth Conservation Corps
Finding Our Strength/Finding Our
Voices
Coddington Community Center
Landscape Training for Youth
2014 DRYC Annual Report
Youth Development Program Funding – 2004 vs. 2014:
Year County Funding State Funding Town Funding Total Funding
2004 $35,235 $4,188 $39,423 $78,846
2006 38,205 3,927 39,882 82,014
2008 39,513 4,128 43,641 87,282
2010 33,264 2,887 44,252 80,403
2012 16,222 1,718 42,039 59,979
2014 18,693 3,207 64,946 86,846
Notes:
2011 – MYSS was cut by 50%
2014 – OURS was extended to 4 days/week and Youth
Employment Program was expanded.
2014 DRYC Annual Report
2014 Community Grants:
$15,000 was available for Community Grants in 2014. The list of recipients were:
Applicant Purpose Award Amount
Dryden Community Center Café Music Events $1,481
Dryden Farmer’s Market Advertising $500
Dryden United Methodist Church Community Dinners $500
Dryden Veteran’s Memorial Home New Roof $4,500
Ellis Hollow Community Center Poolside Lighting $814
Friends of Dryden Wrestling Singlets $700
Neptune Fire Company Jr. Fire Academy 1 $1,615
Neptune Fire Company Jr. Fire Academy 2 $1,319
Southworth Library Teen Programing $1,300
Dryden Historical Society Annual Festival $1,500
Varna Community Center Programming, Music Event $700
2014 DRYC Annual Report
Year Town Funding Number of Programs
2009
2010
2011
2012 30,000 9
2013 32,000 18
2014 15,000 11
2015 6,000 8
2014 Community Grants:
2014 DRYC Annual Report
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
Purpose:
To gather information from
youth in the community that
will assist DRYC in developing
and refining youth programs in
the town. Needs assessments
are completed every 3-6 years.
Process:
Input was obtained by DRYC
from:
•Community Stakeholders
Forum
•Student Surveys
•Parent Surveys
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
Dryden’s Challenges:
•Town location & size of community
•Youth are more sophisticated &
enthusiastic
•School system invokes community
pride
•More electronics, more global
awareness
•Youth are more honest & realistic
Dryden’s Strengths:
•Transient families
•Youth are over-programmed
•Adult mental illnesses not treated
•Low parental interest in activities
•Youth have a sense of entitlement
•Low funding availability
•Transportation
Community Stakeholders’ Forum
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
Results:
•23% state the people and community
are the best things about Dryden
•62% state drug/alcohol use is
medium-big problem
•16% of youth reported using alcohol,
3rd highest rate in Tompkins County
•74% state bullying is a significant issue
•Cost, transportation and having to
watch younger siblings restrict youth
from participating in programs
•74% state there is good availability of
after-school activities
•50%+ state there are good opportunities
for youth to become involved in the
community
•95% enjoy hanging out with friends
•51% would like more to do outside of
school, better parks and a recreation
center in town.
•88% think there’s a good variety of places
to eat in Dryden
Student Surveys 111 students completed the survey; 97% were
10th graders (15-16 years old)
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
•80% believe activities are sponsored by the school
•60% believe community programs are very important for youth
development
•40% state youth programs do not align with interests
•62% state program costs are too high or they have to travel too far
•12% of parents state their children are frequently bullied
•Parents would like to see more outdoor activities, sports,
environmental/natural activities, educational opportunities, arts
programs, and activities suitable for girls be offered
Parents’ Perspectives
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
Common Themes:
•Move forward with a community
center and recreational facilities
•Communication/coordination with
public/private transportation
options, including community
organizations and carpooling
•Additional programs to address
bullying, ethics, leadership and
responsibility
•Offer online youth programs for
those youth that cannot attend in
person
Recommendations:
•Parents want a community center
and safe recreational facilities
•Transportation is an issue, whether
public or private
•Communication about available
activities should include e-mail and
flyers sent home
•More programs that teach social
skills are welcome
•There is a strong sense of
community in Dryden
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
Community Stakeholder Forum Participants:
•Patty Ard, Dryden Youth Opportunity Fund
•Paul Streeter, Dryden Youth Opportunity Fund
•Shelley Lester, Cornell Cooperative Extension Rural Youth
Services Supervisor
•Dave Hall, Cornell Cooperative Extension Rural Youth Services
Program Manager
•Lt. Mike Watkins, Village of Dryden Police
•Don Scutt, Dryden Kiwanis
•Louis Gatto, SUNY Cortland Professor
•Sandy Sherwood, Dryden Central Schools Superintendent
•Mary Ann Sumner, Dryden Town Supervisor
•Kris Bennett, Tompkins County Youth Services Department
Acknowledgements:
2014 Youth Needs Assessment
•Dr. Sharon Todd, Professor & Chair of Recreation, Parks &
Leisure Studies Department, SUNY Cortland
•SUNY Cortland Graduate Students enrolled in Recreation
Research & Evaluation I & II
•Dryden Middle and High School Students
•Parents of Dryden Youth
Acknowledgements:
Dryden Recreation &
Youth Commission
2015-16 Goals
DRYC Annual Report
Youth Needs Assessment
•Trail Development
•Adult & Youth Programming
•DRYC Marketing Plan
•DRYC Membership
•Centralized Location for Community Information
•Update Recreation Master Plan
Questions?