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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. Special to WPCNR from County Roving Correspondent Nancy King. November 28, 2011:
Approximately 700 people attended the Westchester County Board of Legislators informational meeting last Tuesday to hear how the proposed cuts included in County Executive Rob Astorino’s 2012 might affect them.
The 2012, 1.69 billion dollar budget will eliminate 367 jobs with 210 through layoffs and the rest through attrition. In addition, there are proposed deep cuts for non-profits, cultural arts, child care subsidies, and community health centers. Astorino also proposes closing down six nature centers and eliminating the curators of those centers .
In the matter of those nature centers however and their one and a half curator, the CE’s office failed to tell the public is that some of those nature preserves not only provide trails but are a part of our already vulnerable reservoir system. These nature centers typically employ one full-time employee and one parttime employee who in addition to their curator duties, act as liasons for the state Department of Environmental Protection. They are the eyes and ears of watershed safety. The CE’s office also failed to inform residents that those very nature trails receive matching state monies and in shutting them down will result in the loss of those funds.
Representatives from three community health centers also spoke out against the loss of their grants. In an already blighted economy, these health centers are seeing more and more people who once they had lost their jobs and with it their health benefits, are turning to community health centers for their medical needs.
Also cut from the budget were a wide variety of cultural events ranging from the Sunday Heritage Days at the Kensico Dam to the annual Fourth of July Fireworks. Cornell Cooperative Extensions and ArtsWestchester will also sustain deep cuts to their funding.
The Astorino administration’s plan is not to raise taxes but at this point it does seem as if programs and services are going to suffer greatly.
What was evident last Tuesday night was that public interest in this budget has certainly grown in light of this already fragile economy. And in an auditorium of 700 people, not one person there was in favor of this budget. Two more public forums are scheduled for the month of December. The Westchester County Board of Legislators has until December 27th to adopt this budget.




