Croton Adopts Budget, Hears Pushback on Backyard Chicken Rules
The Board of Trustees reviewed a $7.2 million capital plan and faced pushback from a Truesdale Drive resident over a proposed zoning change that would reduce the minimum distance for chicken coops from 50 feet to just 15 feet from property lines.
The Board of Trustees opened its March 25 meeting with a public hearing on the proposed 2026-27 village budget — and not a single resident showed up to comment.
The real fireworks came during the second hearing, on Local Law No. 3, a sweeping zoning code cleanup that would, among other things, change the minimum distance for chicken coops from a previous standard that could be interpreted as 50 feet down to 15 feet from property lines, and set the number of fowl allowed at ten on properties of .3 acres.
Board Of Trustees meeting
Truesdale Drive resident Matthew Rubenstein delivered a pointed critique. He told the board that allowing ten fowl on properties of .3 acres is "way too many" and that reducing the coop setback to 15 feet is "too close," describing clouds of dust drifting from a neighbor's coop onto his property. Rubenstein also raised concerns about bird flu, arguing that having coops close to neighbors' homes poses a health risk, and called the coops "ugly, smelly and dusty," questioning why the rules were being changed so substantially. {{quote:3052}}
The board also heard from Ed Riely, who blasted the village's legislative priorities list, arguing that the infrastructure cannot support charging of zero-emission school buses, citing concerns about battery depreciation and replacement costs, and questioning the state's ability to run a health care program. {{quote:3855}}
Village Manager Bryan Healy reported that Dobbs Park renovations won't be finished by opening day. He also reported that tree removal at Quaker Bridge is complete but the project remains stalled awaiting Army Corps of Engineers approval; the rental registry page is live and notices have been sent to properties flagged as potential rentals; the Village is finalizing Hotel and Motel Occupancy tax forms; and DPW will begin site work at Gouveia Park next week.
Healy also advised that residents with village tax exemptions that aren't on the Town of Cortlandt roll need to file with the Town by May 1 to keep them.
In other business, the board approved a contract with USG Water Solutions for assessment of the Upper North Highland Water Storage Tank ($4,800), adopted the village's 2026 Legislative Program and Project Priorities, and authorized the village manager to approve three change orders totaling $111,467.20 for the Van Cortlandt Manor Entrance Project. All resolutions passed on 5-0 votes.
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Coverage of the Board Of Trustees meeting on 2026-03-25,
Village of Croton-on-Hudson, NY.
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Related Board Of Trustees Meetings
2026-03-26Infrastructure Fails and Budget Plans Collide: Croton Village Weighs Costs of Aging Water Mains and Winter Overtime
●Water Main Emergency: Village crews repaired a catastrophic failure on Olcott Avenue caused by cast iron pipes installed in 1908.
●Snow Removal Budget: The Board proposed a $68,000 increase for snow removal and overtime, citing a "winter from hell" and rising labor rates.
●Sanitation Costs: Budgeted a $12,000 increase for refuse collection due to rising Westchester County tipping fees.
●Recycling Revenue: Village officials noted that dog license revenue fully funds animal control, while recycling revenue helps offset sanitation costs.
●Building Maintenance: Decreased the public buildings maintenance budget by $7,550 to save funds for an upcoming engineering department renovation.
●DPW Air Quality: Established a five-year cycle for duct cleaning across municipal buildings, including the firehouses and DPW facility.
●Traffic Safety: Added $1,500 to the traffic control budget for rising costs of street signs and potential bike infrastructure.
●Contingency Planning: Acknowledged vulnerability to fuel price spikes in the flat fuel budget, with contingency funds as a backstop.
2026-03-18Croton prosecutor asks trustees for tools to punish unresponsive violators
●Dispensary Application Filed: A change-of-use application seeks to convert the Dairy Mart at 370 South Riverside Avenue into a cannabis dispensary, the first proposed in the village
●Daycare Proximity Concern: Happy Hearts Take Two daycare, serving infants through age 12, operates directly adjacent at 365 South Riverside Avenue
●State Distance Rules: Village Manager Bryan Healy stated New York State determined the location meets applicable distance requirements, though pending legislation (S7275) could add daycares to the 500-foot buffer
●Village Opted In by Default: In 2021, the Board voted 5-0 to opt out of on-site consumption lounges but deliberately did not opt out of retail dispensaries before the December 31 deadline
●500-Foot Buffer Enacted: In May 2022, the Board adopted Local Law 5-2022 adding a 500-foot buffer between cannabis shops in commercial zones
●Prior Proposal Failed: An earlier dispensary proposal near ShopRite (~2024) floundered due to state bureaucratic issues
●Revenue Reality Check: Peekskill projected $550,000 in cannabis tax revenue but received only $128,000; a single Croton dispensary might generate $30,000-60,000 annually
●Planning Board Review: The application was scheduled for Planning Board discussion on April 14, 2026
2026-03-11Sustainability Quilt Unveiled as Village Court Study Tabled
●Vouchers Approved: The Board approved $266,135.16 in total expenditures across the general, water, sewer, and capital funds.
●Sustainability Quilt Unveiled: A quilt created by Croton 100, documenting 30 households' climate actions and the school district's decarbonization efforts, was unveiled and will be displayed in the Municipal Building.
●Court Study Tabled: Mayor Brian Pugh announced that without a consensus among the Trustees, he would table the resolution to fund a study on consolidating the Village Court with the Town of Cortlandt. The move avoids a likely vote defeat but leaves the issue's future unclear.
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