Andy Stewart

Andy Stewart Andy Stewart is Orangetown's Town Supervisor. He was elected in 2011, and re-elected in 2013 and 201

02/16/2018

The former Orangetown town supervisor will focus on research and analysis for the regional policy nonprofit.

Dear Friends, lots of folks have asked me where I am working since completing my final term as Town Supervisor at the en...
02/02/2018

Dear Friends, lots of folks have asked me where I am working since completing my final term as Town Supervisor at the end of December, so I wanted to share the news that I have joined the staff of Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress as a Senior Vice President for Research and Analytics. Pattern is a regional policy and planning nonprofit with offices in Newburgh, NY.

Among its better known projects are the Urban Action Agenda (UAA), a major, multi-year initiative to promote the growth and revitalization of 25 communities throughout the Hudson Valley, including three in Rockland (the villages of Haverstraw, Nyack, and West Haverstraw), and the popular Fellows program that has trained over 220 leaders in regional approaches in the last 10 years.

Pattern has been active in Rockland County in recent years. In 2016, Pattern completed a report commissioned by the Rockland Business Association examining the reasons for the county's sky-high property tax bills and recommending ideas for controlling taxes, and every year Pattern joins the RBA for discussions with RBA members on current regional issues. The Town of Clarkstown hired Pattern in 2016 to evaluate the efficiency of three town departments. And in 2017, Rockland County hired Pattern to serve as consultants for the state-mandated Shared Services Initiative that requires each county to produce a Shared Services Property Tax Savings Plan. Every year, Pattern hosts an event featuring the County Executives of Rockland, Westchester, and Putnam Counties discussing the issues and challenges facing the southern Hudson Valley.

Pattern’s offices are located in Newburgh, NY, and program information is available at www.pattern-for-progress.org. I encourage you to take a look at the website and consider coming to an upcoming Pattern event. They are always well-attended, really interesting, and a great way to bring a bigger, regional, perspective to our local work.

12/31/2017

My thoughts on the last six years.

Today is my last day in office as Orangetown Supervisor. For the past six years it has been my privilege to serve you. It has been an honor and an adventure. This is not a “goodbye,” since I’ve lived here for 27 years and have no plans to move from our wonderful town. And since I made the deci...

LED streetlights -- Another win for Orangetown residents, the town budget and the global environment! Special thanks to ...
12/09/2017

LED streetlights -- Another win for Orangetown residents, the town budget and the global environment! Special thanks to my assistant Vicki C, Finance Director Jeff B, the New York Power Authority, and Allbright Electric, who is doing the installation work. Thanks also to the NYS PSC for changing its rules to empower municipalities to buy their streetlights from O&R,

The town believes the $2.3 million project will pay itself back within a few years.

11/07/2017

Tomorrow is a critical election day in Orangetown, and voters have a choice to make. Will we take the chance to build on the good work of the last six years by electing Thom Kleiner, Allan Ryff, and Heather Hurley? Will we elect candidates with clear and specific policies to address the issues we face, or candidates who think angry bluster is a substitute for public policy?

I know which way I’m going.

Please join me in supporting Thom Kleiner to replace me as Orangetown supervisor. Thom knows Orangetown and has an outstanding record of leadership in Orangetown, including 14 successful years as town supervisor and then eight years working for the NYS on issues of economic development in our region...

10/25/2017

This just came out this morning, a great endorsement for a great guy!

Our Town Newspaper Endorses Thom Kleiner for Supervisor, October 25, 2017

Kleiner seeks to return to Orangetown Town Hall bringing with him 14 years of experience as an elected Supervisor and six years of state government experience and as the Labor Department regional representative for economic development in the Hudson Valley. He also worked in consumer protection in New York City.

While serving as Supervisor, he and the Town Board bought the Rockland Psychiatric Center property as state surplus, fended off a proposal for a 5,000 unit condo complex, and negotiated a deal with the Hovnanian organization for a mixed-use development with much lower density.

In his 14 years he has worked equally well with a Democratic council majority and as a minority Supervisor with a Republican majority board, the latter achieved through consensus and diplomacy. Worth noting: All decisions made by the Town Board during Kleiner’s administration were made by a majority town board vote.

It was Kleiner’s idea to designate the Town Board as the lead industrial development agency in all land development decisions affecting the surplus property to prevent over-development and runaway density. That careful preparation is now bearing fruit. Kleiner is seasoned and has demonstrated his competence.

Chris Day, his opponent, is a Clarkstown native who just recently settled in Orangetown. He has unsuccessfully sought elected office before running for Supervisor.

A former military officer, he has announced his plan to introduce military discipline to town government.

While the top-down command chain works well for those giving direct orders, it does not work in elected office, where cooperation and consensus are required, as well as responsiveness to a flow of open communication from the citizenry and town employees upward.

Day has also raised the spectre of “high density housing” with vivid shock photos of Ramapo overdevelopment in campaign literature, clearly designed to incite fear and divisiveness. Fearmongering with false or misleading accusations is despicable.

For the record, and any despite any last-minute anonymous robo calls that may go out, there is no public or high-density housing planned for or coming to Orangetown.

The last “public housing” that was built was the Homes for Heroes development on surplus military property in Tappan, with apartments specifically designed for disabled combat veterans. We’ve heard no complaints about that, only warm welcome from the community.

Prior to that, the Republican administration of Joe Colello in conjunction with the Carpenters and Joiners Union, built Cortwood Village, a senior citizen complex managed by the Orangetown Housing Authority. No complaints there either.

And yes, Day should look at the subsidized housing provided for volunteer first-responders along Chief Billy Harris Way.

Besides campaigning on deliberate half-truths, Day also fails to understand the need to work with, and not against the villages in Orangetown. In proposing a ferry service between Piermont and Westchester, Day chose not to consult or even inform Chris Sanders, the mayor of Piermont about the plan. For what reason? Sanders is a Democrat, therefore eligible to be ignored. Day’s world is black and white, either with him or against him; the real world is made up of shadings of opinion which must be recognized and understood for successful leadership.

There's a great opportunity to tour SUEZ Water New York's water treatment facilities and the Lake DeForest dam tomorrow ...
10/13/2017

There's a great opportunity to tour SUEZ Water New York's water treatment facilities and the Lake DeForest dam tomorrow morning. Check it out.

Tour our water treatment facilities on Saturday, October 14, between 10 am and 2 pm. This event is free and reservations are not required. Tour runs less than an hour. Appropriate footwear required for walking outdoors (no open-toed shoes, flip-flops, sandals or heels). Enter from Strawtown Road in West Nyack. Check out our online mini-tour. http://tinyurl.com/SUEZLakeDeforest

It gives me great pleasure to support Thom Kleiner, for Town Supervisor, and Heather Hurley and Allan Ryff for Town Coun...
10/11/2017

It gives me great pleasure to support Thom Kleiner, for Town Supervisor, and Heather Hurley and Allan Ryff for Town Council in this time when we need great budget management to keep Orangetown on course as a lean local government that focuses on taking care of residents and promoting appropriate development. Thank you Thom for your past service to the town, and all out for the election on Nov. 7!

One of the top issues in every race I've run in Orangetown has been taxes and spending. I was elected for the first time in large part because of our Town's desire to clean up the fiscal mess a previous Republican administration had left us. That's exactly what I did. During my time in office, Orangetown ran the tightest ship in Rockland County by far, as the chart in this post shows. We did that while investing in the things that mattered, like buying and preserving RPC, upgrading our sewer plant to dramatically reduce sewage overflow into the Hudson River, and improving quality of life in every corner of town. All this despite having to pay out $8 million in the Magee judgment resulting from town mismanagement in the '80s.

Link: http://thomkleiner2017.com/taxes-spending/

09/07/2017

Please join me, our Town Council, members of our emergency services, the clergy, families, and the community as we gather to remember the 16th Anniversary of Sept. 11th at 6:00 PM on Monday, September 11, 2017. The Town of Orangetown will hold its annual memorial ceremony in front of the 9/11 Memorial on the grounds of Town Hall to commemorate the more than 70 men and women from Rockland County who lost their lives as a result of these brutal attacks.

As we mark the 16th anniversary of the attacks, we must continue to take the time to remember those we lost and to remember the spirit of unity that all of us felt in the days and months after 9/11. This service provides a time and a place for the community to come together and honor the memories of those who are no longer with us.

In the years since that horrific day, men and women who worked what became known as “the pile,” have fought the added war against those ailments. This year, sadly, the names of five more County residents who succumbed to 9/11-related illnesses will be added to the memorial: Brian Buck; Robert Leaver; Joseph O’Toole; Christopher Pupo; and Zacarias Toro.

Please join us for Monday’s service, which includes readings of the names of all Rockland residents who lost their lives by local religious leaders and representatives from fire, emergency, and veterans groups and features music and poetry. Refreshments will be provided after the service, courtesy of the Orangetown PBA. In case of rain, the service will be held in the Court Room inside Town Hall, 26 W. Orangeburg Road in Orangeburg.

09/05/2017

Town seeks volunteers to help count bike riders, cars, pedestrians in September.

There's a great write-up in today's Journal News about the Town's Bike Study. We're looking for volunteers to help manua...
09/05/2017

There's a great write-up in today's Journal News about the Town's Bike Study. We're looking for volunteers to help manually count bike riders at various locations in Town over the week of Sept. 10th through 17th. Our stakeholder/public kickoff meeting is THIS THURSDAY, 9/7, at 7 PM in Town Hall. Please come if you are interested in volunteering, advising on issues of bike and traffic safety, or just building your understanding of the opportunities planning for biking offers with regard to quality of life, economic development, etc. Email [email protected] or call 359-5100 for more info. Please share this FB post with any interested parties. Thanks!

Town seeks volunteers to help count bike riders, cars, pedestrians in September.

RIP Eliot Tozer, writer, veteran, Orangetown Deputy Supervisor during Thom Kleiner's tenure, lover of plants, of intenti...
07/27/2017

RIP Eliot Tozer, writer, veteran, Orangetown Deputy Supervisor during Thom Kleiner's tenure, lover of plants, of intentional community (such as Hickory Hill Coop and Camp Shanks Village), supporter of the PTA, the Historical Society, the Tappan Library, wonderful singer, father, parent, grandparent, friend. You will be missed. I am so glad to have known and worked with you, and campaigned together in 2011 for good government in Rockland County. See this beautiful obituary for more info on Eliot. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/lohud/obituary.aspx?n=eliot-f-tozer&pid=186201641&fhid=14974 There is a wake at Moritz Funeral home in Tappan tomorrow, Friday, 4-9 PM, and funeral Saturday in Tappan Reformed Church in the morning.

Read the Obituary and view the Guest Book, leave condolences or send flowers. | Tozer Jr., Eliot F. March 28, 1922 - July 25, 2017 His life was beautifully written. His life-long study and deep love of the English language expressed itself in many ways. He studied English in

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Nyack, NY

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