🏛️ Board Of Trustees
Crowd Kills $19,750 Court Study, OKs $1.8M Fire Truck
The Board unanimously rejected a $19,750 study of Village Justice Court operations after 14 residents spoke against potential court consolidation with the Town of Cortlandt, while approving a $1,789,929 purchase of a new Seagrave pumper for the Fire Department and a $48,260.35 budget amendment to cover snow removal costs from the Blizzard of 2026.
◆ Key Actions & Decisions
- **Resolutions Passed**
- **#45-2026** (5-0): Accepted a $1,074.71 donation from Capriccio Pizzeria & Restaurant for a bench at Black Rock Park; accepted a $2,289.02 donation from Holy Name of Mary Knights of Columbus Council for bleachers at Dobbs Park; approved Fire Department membership changes; filed for the record a David Allee Award letter for ZBA Chair Christine Wagner and a $4,500 JCAP grant award for court security enhancements.
- **#46-2026** (5-0): Scheduled a public hearing on the 2026-2027 Tentative Budget for March 25, 2026 at 7 p.m.
- **#47-2026** (5-0): Scheduled a public hearing on Local Law Introductory No. 3 of 2026 (zoning code inconsistencies, definition updates, fowl limits) for March 25, 2026 at 7 p.m.
- **#48-2026** (5-0): Scheduled a public hearing on Local Law Introductory No. 5 of 2026 (affordable housing occupational preferences for emergency and medical services workers) for April 8, 2026 at 7 p.m.
- **#49-2026** (5-0): Scheduled a public hearing on Local Law Introductory No. 6 of 2026 (new and updated real property tax exemptions including surviving spouses of police officers, combat zone service members, seniors, and volunteer firefighters/EMS) for May 6, 2026 at 7 p.m.
- **#50-2026** (5-0): Updated Summerfest vendor fees in the Master Fee Schedule (e.g., General Vendor Early Bird $115, Regular $140; Food/Beverage Early Bird $165, Regular $190; Food Truck Early Bird $315, Regular $365; Non-Profit Early Bird $55, Regular $65).
- **#51-2026** (5-0): Approved the 2025 Volunteer Fire Department Length of Service Award Program list and authorized 30-day posting.
- **#52-2026** (5-0): Authorized Village Manager to execute the 2026 Mount Airy/Quaker Bridge Fire Protection District agreement with the Town of Cortlandt for $273,837 ($54,767 to Fire Council, $219,070 to the Village).
- **#53-2026** (5-0): Budget amendment of $48,260.35 in the General Fund to cover snow removal overages ($10,508.50 contractual, $37,752.78 supplies), offset by increased revenues in Public Works Charges ($10,166.93), State Aid – Snow Removal ($3,568.39), and Ambulance Charges ($34,525.96).
- **#54-2026** (5-0): Declared the Half Moon Bay Bridge rehabilitation project consistent with the Village's Local Waterfront Revitalization Program (LWRP), following Waterfront Advisory Committee review.
- **#55-2026** (5-0): Authorized purchase of a Seagrave Marauder pumper from Seagrave Fire Apparatus LLC of Clintonville, Wisconsin for $1,789,929 to replace Engine 119 (2006 Seagrave). Delivery expected in approximately four years; payment due upon delivery.
- **#56-2026** (5-0): Authorized CivicPlus website platform upgrade at a one-time cost of $8,000, funded by transfer from Contingency Account A1990.4000 to Publicity – Contractual A6410.4000.
- **#58-2026** (5-0): Hired Joel R. Dichter of Dichter Law LLC as special counsel to monitor Con Edison's three-year electric and gas rate settlement before the NYS Public Service Commission, at $1,250 per year per municipality.
- **Resolutions Failed**
- **#57-2026** (0-5): Proposal to hire CGR of Rochester for a $19,750 study of Village Justice Court operations failed unanimously. All four Trustees and the Mayor voted nay.
- **Applications Reviewed**
- Half Moon Bay Bridge rehabilitation project reviewed under the LWRP; Board concurred with Waterfront Advisory Committee that the project is consistent with applicable LWRP policies.
- **Public Comments**
- 14 residents spoke on agenda items, all opposing the proposed Village Justice Court study/consolidation with the Town of Cortlandt: Ali Jaffery (72 Irving Avenue), Debbie Braddick (9 Young Avenue), Joel Gingold (55 Nordica Drive), Paul Doyle (121 Old Post Road North), Casey Raskob (Lounsbury Road, Village Prosecutor), Sam R. Watkins (Lounsbury Road, Village Justice), Gary Eisenger (210 Cleveland Drive), Jay Sherman (94 Grand Street), Lewis Montana (5 Ackerman Court), Ira Lipton (55 Old Post Road), Paul Janis (65 Truesdale Drive), Regina Montana (5 Ackerman Court), Hanna Robbins (6 Fox Road), Sherry Horowitz (119 Maple Street), Donald Blum, Shem Guibbory (45 Brook Street), and Doug Wehrle (Old Post Road South). Arguments included loss of local service, hidden costs for residents and police, court revenue loss, the court's excellent reputation, and calls for a permissive referendum. No non-agenda public comments were offered.
- **Reports**
- **Village Manager Bryan Healy**: Dobbs Park renovation underway targeting opening day; Annual Tax Lien Sale March 17 at 11 a.m.; Verizon Franchise Agreement public hearing expected on next agenda; water bills mailing March 15; VISA and American Express now accepted for utility payments; new Resident Connect Portal coming; DPW fixing potholes (residents urged to submit requests); Con Edison gas main work on Brook Street (between Terrace and Old Post Road North) and Old Post Road North (between Van Wyck and Mount Green Road); Quaker Bridge project delayed beyond June 30 due to Army Corps of Engineers permit issues.
- **Trustee Slippen**: Applauded Croton 100 quilt; Women's History Month exhibit at Croton Free Library with Croton Council on the Arts; ABVE working with Police on Police Appreciation Week flag; thanked DPW for snow removal.
- **Trustee Nachtaler**: Thanked court consolidation speakers; acknowledged Capriccio Pizzeria bench donation and Knights of Columbus bleachers donation; noted 305 residents participated in budget survey.
- **Trustee Nicholson**: Recreation catalog available; Conservation Advisory Council repair café held February 26; Earth Day May 2; Gouveia Park information session presentation on website.
- **Trustee Simon**: Croton on 2026 Westchester County Calendar cover; HEART Committee ceremony February 20; Historic Hudson Valley renovation update February 20; Sustainability Committee solar array and food scrap program update February 22; Bicycle/Pedestrian Committee discussed Project Mover and Slow Down Croton expansion February 26; Grand ribbon cutting February 27; Rotary planning DPW recognition.
- **Mayor Pugh**: Moment of silence for Mark Goldfarb, former Water Control Commission member. Noted parking revenue remains $750,000 below 2019 levels and stated he does not foresee proposing a court study in the future.
- Voucher approval: $266,135.26 total (General Fund $216,684.13; Water Fund $10,301.07; Sewer Fund $5,437.69; Capital Fund $33,712.37), approved 5-0.
A standing-room-only crowd turned out at Village Hall Wednesday night, and the message was unmistakable: hands off the Croton Justice Court.
In a 5-0 vote, the Board of Trustees rejected Resolution #57-2026, which would have hired CGR of Rochester for a $19,750 study of the court's operations — a step many residents feared was a prelude to consolidating the court with the Town of Cortlandt. Fourteen residents spoke against the proposal, including Village Justice Sam Watkins, who has served on the bench for twenty years.
"We would lose all revenue from fines," Watkins told the Board. "I do not believe moving the Court to the Town of Cortlandt will save any money, and I do not believe that the Town of Cortlandt Justice Court will have the same compassion as our local Village Court does."
Village Prosecutor Casey Raskob noted that the court accounts for two percent or less of the Village's overall budget and actually returns money through fines. "No consultant will be able to change this fashion to get a different result," he said. "Our Village Court runs well and has an excellent reputation in the legal community."
Residents echoed those concerns, with several calling the study a "slippery slope" toward losing local services. Donald Blum questioned the $40,000-plus price tag and urged the Board to explore alternatives. Paul Doyle asked that any future proposal be subject to a permissive referendum.
Trustee Brian Simon, who introduced the failed resolution, said the Board's intent was simply periodic review, comparing it to a past study of the Engineering Department. But his colleagues joined the public in pulling back. Trustee Leni Nicholson said she remains "strongly committed to good governance" but supports not moving forward. Trustee Katharine Nachtaler said she was "never in favor of court consolidation." Mayor Pugh, who first explored consolidation during the pandemic's fiscal crunch, said flatly: "I do not foresee proposing any study in the future."
On other matters, the Board unanimously approved a $1,789,929 purchase of a Seagrave Marauder pumper to replace the 20-year-old Engine 119. Trustee Nicholson called the doubling of apparatus costs over five years "not sustainable," and residents should note the new truck won't arrive for roughly four years.
The Board also approved a $48,260.35 budget amendment to cover snow removal overruns from the Blizzard of 2026, offset by higher-than-expected revenues. The Village is working with Westchester County on a potential federal disaster declaration for reimbursement.
Residents should mark their calendars for the March 25 public hearing on the 2026-2027 tentative budget, also at 7 p.m. at Village Hall. Water bills will be mailed March 15, and the Village now accepts VISA and American Express for utility payments. The Annual Tax Lien Sale is set for March 17 at 11 a.m. Con Edison gas main work is expected on Brook Street and Old Post Road North, and the Quaker Bridge project has been delayed beyond its June 30 deadline due to Army Corps of Engineers permit issues.
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