EPA
Reaches Agreement with General
Electric Company and SI Group, Inc.
to Protect Drinking Water at the Dewey Loeffel Landfill Superfund Site
in Nassau, New York
Tuesday, April 10th @ 6 PM at the Castleton Public Library During the peak earning years of life we often set aside assets that
are earmarked to provide for our retirement needs.
Schodack Democrats will be
awarding two $250 scholarships to college-bound students.
Applications and a complete list of requirements are available at Guidance
Counselor’s office of each high school and at the Schodack Democrats’ website www.schodackdemocrats.com.
Deadline:
April 20, 2012 Submit
Application To:
Schodack Democratic Club Scholarship
PO Box 145
East Schodack NY 12063
"I found out what happens when you try to stand up to OFT," says former employee Leo LaMountain.
By James M. Odato Published 09:40 p.m., Saturday, April 7, 2012
ALBANY -— Leo LaMountain may not have been cut out to be a state employee. His bosses ended his three-year stint at the Office For Technology
in January when he was terminated for insubordination. So he's out
$37,800 a year, and living on weekly unemployment checks of $393, a
benefit the state appealed four times. "I found out what happens when you try to stand up to OFT," he said. His
experience in the public sector introduced him to union and government
bureaucracy, he said, and the pitfalls of speaking out about co-workers
napping and watching videos, and managers joining in. His abbreviated
state employment followed almost four decades in the private sector in
sales, home construction and printer repair jobs during which he said he
was never punished for disruptive behavior.
Fred LeBrun, CommentaryPublished 08:10 p.m., Saturday, April 7, 2012
Because most of us fervently believe a pay raise for state
legislators is utterly ludicrous and arrogant to the nth degree means we
should worry all the more. You bet they're going to try.
This remains, after all, Planet Albany, where ludicrous and arrogant are not deal killers, but merely challenges in public perception that need professional adjustment.
Granted,
more public money in the pockets of state legislators who just lately
stuck it big-time to the wages and benefits of fellow public employes
while protecting their own job security through bogus redistricting
might take more of a lift than can be done this year. But rest assured
it won't be for the lack of trying, and not just by legislators.