The Coolest Books are at Newburgh's Golden Hour

The Golden Hour Bookstore, 181 B’way in Newburgh, N.Y., is wonderful for many reasons, first among them being the proprietor, Angie Venezia, who has a knack for offering books for all interests and all ages in her little shop. She carries great poetry there, and I am honored to say that, if you can’t wait to buy it in person, you can order my own poetry chapbook, “Pretty Nearly All Natural,” anytime, through goldenhourbookstore.com.

Drop in and browse, or order online. Hope to see you there soon!

Golden hour bookstore, at 181 Broadway, is just what newburgh needed. support this bricks-and-mortar treasure!

Get It at the Golden Hour!

Shop Local: My first book of poetry, “Pretty Nearly All Natural,” is now available at the Golden Hour Bookstore, 181 Broadway in Newburgh, N.Y.!

If you haven’t done so already, please pre-order a copy or two (or 10, or 436 …) by clicking here: https://goldenhourbookstore.com/products/pretty-nearly-all-natural-poems-by-genie-abrams-9-27-24

Golden Hour is a great bookstore (as you’ll see, if you haven’t been there yet), and it’s more important than ever to support our local businesspeople. Hope to see you at Golden Hour Books soon!

Get ‘em while they’re hot! pre-order my first book of poetry from the one and only angie Venezia, proprietor of golden hour books on newburgh’s broadway, today!

Mid Hudson Times Wants You to Know

My first book of poetry, “Pretty Nearly All Natural,” will be published by Finishing Line Press in September! Here is the story about it that ran in Dae Vitale’s column in this week’s issue of the MHT. To summarize: It costs $15.99 if you pre-order now, but the price will go up by 2 bucks on Aug. 3. So, please, hurry over to: finishinglinepress.com, click on “Bookstore” at the top and then type Abrams in the search box. Or, simply click here: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/?s=Abrams&post_type=product

This terrific poetry publisher is also on Twitter at @FLPress.

Thanks for the nice write-up, dae! Hope everyone clicks here: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/?s=Abrams&post_type=product before August 3!

Advice to All Poets Laureate

Here’s a poem I wrote shortly after being named Poet Laureate of Newburgh, N.Y. last year.

It’s called “Tatter Us a Poem,” and it’s advice I’d give to all Poets Laureate (if anyone asked me).

 

Tatter us a poem — tack it to a wall

and never give a damn if it doesn’t rhyme at all.

Shatter us a brain; break a heart or two;

etch a verse upon the door of every bar in view.

Spatter us a feeling upon a sash or sill;

blast it bold for everyone to hear it, if we will.

Scatter us some startle — shake us to our core;

awaken us to dig connection deeper than before.

Matter not the meter; the meat of what you say

(and the solace) is the knowing you have touched us on our way.

Stay tuned for info on my forthcoming book of poetry, “Pretty Nearly all natural!”

It Feels As If They Don't Want Us to Vote

As i write this, it’s 6:30 p.m. on School Board Election Day, May 21, 2024. I got home from work at about 4:30 and immediately walked the five blocks to the place where i ALWAYS vote: South Middle School. Polling is open till 9 p.m., so i had plenty of time. It was very hot out, but i have had a tradition of walking to my polling place ever since i cast my first ballot, in 1968.

When i got to SMS, i had a sick feeling because there was no sandwich board in the parking lot saying, “VOTE HERE” or, “VOTE TODAY,” as there usually is on election day. When I went to the front door i always go in to vote, i found it was locked. I thought that perhaps the voting booths were around back, in the gym, as they have been on occasionally over the years (for reasons never explained to us voters). But i didn’t go around back, because there was a sign in black type on a yellow background, in 2 languages, with a border of blue painter’s tape, affixed to the front door, saying (SEE PHOTO): “POLLING PLACE CHANGE! CITY OF NEWBURGH DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS! YOUR POLLING PLACE HAS BEEN CHANGED: SUNY ORANGE KAPLAN HALL, 73 1ST STREET. THIS POLLING PLACE CHANGE IS PERMANENT! For more information call the Board of Elections, 845-360-6500.”

i have never failed to vote in an election in my life. To me, it’s the most important right (and privilege) of those living in a democracy. My grampa didn’t come to this country in steerage so that i could fail to vote. There was no way i was going to fail to vote. So i kept on walking. i walked from SMS, on one of the southernmost properties in Newburgh, all the way to SUNY Orange, on the north side of town. Oh, i forgot to mention: It was about 85 degrees out.

When i got to SUNY Orange, the security guard laughingly asked, “Are you here to vote?” “Yes,” i smiled back at him. “Well,” he said, “I’m sorry to tell you this, but you are now the…” (here he looked down at a piece of paper on his desk) “… 22nd person to come here trying to vote, and there’s no voting booths here.”

Stunned, i told him about the sign at SMS. “Yeah, i heard about that, but that sign is wrong. This is not a polling location,” he said.

Here’s a funny thing that happened about four days ago: A pair of young men (one Black, one Latino) came to my yard as i was gardening and handed me a colorful card promoting four School Board candidates (three of whom are incumbents). It said, basically, “Don’t forget to vote,” but it didn’t say where. I asked them if they knew where my polling place would be. i now believe they thought they were in Ward 1, not Ward 2, because they said, “Yes, because of your location, you vote at the Heritage Center.” i was pretty sure i knew where they meant, but i don’t call it that. “You mean the Old Court House?”

“Yeah,” they replied, “across from the Library.” Well, this couldn’t be right, because my house is located, like SMS, in the southernmost end of the city, and the Heritage Center, like SUNY and the Library, is in the northern part. “Hmm…that’s funny,” i said. “Are you sure? Because that’s awfully far from here, and i always vote at South Middle School.”

“Yes! You vote at the Heritage Center,” they said.

So, back to today’s fustercluck: In desperation, i asked the security guard at SUNY if he knew where i’m supposed to vote, and he suggested, “Maybe Horizons-on-Hudson Elementary? Or, the Heritage Center? Or, the Library?” The closest to me of those three buildings — just a few blocks farther north — was the Library, so i went there. A young woman at the desk informed me that the Library was NOT a polling place. She showed me a sheet of paper in front of her that said Ward 2 voters should go to SMS. Somehow, i refrained from blowing my brains out.

God bless her, after i told her about the sign, she made several calls to both the Board of Education and the Orange County Board of Elections, but got no answer at either number (it was now long after 5 p.m). But she kept trying and finally she said that “someone” told her that there was no such sign as the one i’d described, and that i should return to the SMS “and try around back.” She said she believed me about the sign, though, and that the “someone” she’d spoken with said “someone” would be there in “about 15 minutes” to rip the sign down.

i walked as fast as i could back to SMS, hoping against hope that i would get a photo of the sign before it was removed. It took me about 25 minutes (bad knee), but when i got there, there it was! i took this rather poor photo of it (sun-glare, my own reflection showing) and, rather than just head home (a cold beer was calling me quite loudly at this point), i decided to “go around back” just for the heck of it anyway.

Guess what! After passing at least three locked doors, i came to one plain, totally unmarked door looking for all the world like the door to a janitorial closet. It was unlocked! And inside were … people! Four or five election workers were there, and when they innocently asked, “How you doing?” i gave them quite an earful. Not one of them believed me about the sign until i showed them the photo, and for some reason (probably i was having a stroke) i couldn’t make them understand what i meant by “the front door.” One nice lady walked with me around to the front door, where the sign (thank you, God) remained taped. She took it down immediately.

Still, after all that, i can’t help wondering how many more than 22 Newburgh residents were discouraged from voting today. And OK, i’ll go ahead and say it: I also can’t help wondering if “some” people actually didn’t want us to vote.

Nope! SUNY is not our polling place for today’s school board election! hope no one else was fooled, as i was.

Now We Know Where We Are!

Fast and excellent work by Newburgh’s Department of Public Works has resulted in a new, amazingly accurate street sign here. Heading north on Robinson Avenue, you can now arrive at the intersection of Robinson and South Street. Previously, you arrived at … who knows where? There was no sign at all for northbound travelers at this busy intersection, while, equally amusing: Southbound folks found that they were at the corner of South Street and South Street! (see “before” and “after” photos, and pardon my lousy photography.)

Many thanks to George Garrison and his Terrific Team for helping us all get our bearings.

“After.” THANKS, DPW!

“Before.”

Newburgh's Kai Wright, Live from the Apollo!

In case you missed it: Click here: https://www.wnyc.org/mlk2023/ to watch Newburgher Kai Wright lead a conversation last night, live from the legendary Apollo Theater, about the history of the racial justice movement in the U.S. and where we go from here. Kai interviews Imani Perry, professor of African American studies at Princeton University, and Chelsea Miller, the fearless young New York City activist who led the marches for justice in NYC after the murder of George Floyd. There are also amazing performances by a Washington, DC-area group singing “Young, Gifted and Black” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and more.

Catch Kai’s brilliant, nationally syndicated call-in show, “Notes from America,” every Sunday at 6 pm at WNYC.org, 93.9 FM or 820 AM.

Newburgh’s own Kai Wright. His nationally-syndicated radio show “notes from america” sometimes broadcasts from his own house here in the heights, in which case: be sure to listen for his neighbor’s dogs barking and the trains going by! Catch him sundays at 6 pm on wnyc.

Get Your ITINs here!

If you live in the City of Newburgh and don’t know Julia Elizabeth Colangelo … well, you should meet her. She’s a certified tax preparer who is ready, willing and able to get undocumented folks an ITIN.

What’s that, you ask? An Individual Tax Identification Number (ITIN) substitutes for a Social Security Number on job applications and is also good enough to get you a checking and savings account at a credit union or bank. You can use it to apply for a driver’s license, as well. In other words, for people working for “cash under the table” like so many Latinos in Newburgh, it’s a ticket to a better life.

I went to Ms. Colangelo’s office with a friend last week and found her to be friendly, bilingual and super-competent. Give her a jingle and see for yourself … and then pass this info on to everyone you meet who may be undocumented.

Contact Ms. colangelo for effective, friendly service at a great rate, and to quickly obtain your Individual Taxpayer Identification Number!

With a Flier Like This, How Many People Do They Expect to Vote?

Good old Newburgh Democratic Committee (I’m guessing they’re responsible for this) strikes again: Today was the last day to vote in the primary for our new Congressional District, NY-18. At my usual polling place, South Middle School, I went around back. It was there, during the Early COVID Period, that we started having to enter through the gymnasium doors to vote, instead of the doors we had always previously used — the front doors, facing Monument Street.

Doors locked! No one home! i peered; i knocked. Silence and darkness inside! No sign at all was on the gym doors. Did i have the wrong day? No; impossible. A former City Council member, i don’t know much, but i know how, where and when to vote. Or at least, i thought i did.

Annoyed, i went around to the front of the school, thinking that voting was now back in its “regular” place — the hallway just off the school’s Monument Street parking lot. But again, i found the building dark and all the doors locked. NOW, WHAT THE … ???

Then i noticed a single, yellow sheet of paper, taped to a window pane. I attach a photo of it here, as i find it to be a classic of its kind (that kind being, “Screwed-Up Newburgh Communications.”) A few questions about this flier:

  1. Could they make the “headline” any smaller? “POLLING PLACE CHANGE” should fill the entire sheet, left to right, no? i ask you.

  2. What are the words, “CITY OF NEWBURGH” doing there? The City of Newburgh has nothing to do with this … or if it does, it’s for some “Inside-Baseball” reason that no one cares about. And look: They used a new typeface, too! Someone must have been having some fun with this.

  3. In the fourth and fifth lines, we finally get to a sentence* that seems as if it’s going to be important: “Your polling place has been changed for only the … “ and then, right there in the middle of the sentene, they switch to Spanish.

  4. OK, so, “only the” WHAT? Only the “second time in history,” maybe? In tiny type, the next line reveals the finale of this cliff-hanger: “August 23, 2022, Primary Elections.” Except there’s no period at the end, so it’s not really a “sentence” (see #3 above). Does no one around here know an English teacher, or a good 6th-grader, who could proofread this stuff?

  5. Yay! Now we know that our polling place has been changed. But we had kind of figured that out when we found all the doors locked. The question remains: WHERE DO WE GO TO VOTE? Over the next three lines, they give an address. It would have been nice to precede that address with a few words to the effect: “TO VOTE TODAY, GO TO…” Instead, they just left that address hanging out there, in the middle of the page. (Nice big type, though!) WHY, OH WHY, couldn’t they just print a flier with these words in huge type:

    TO VOTE TODAY, GO TO 401 WASHINGTON STREET.”

  6. They then took three more lines to tell us that we won’t have to go to 401 Washington Street to vote anymore, after today. Again, there’s no period after that three-line “sentence.” (The Spanish version beneath it has one, though!) Anyway, to all those who took a cab to South Middle School to vote today: i pray you didn’t dismiss the driver before you read the sign on the door.

    PS: Are you wondering why the voting location was changed? Me too.

Here’s the one and only sign at South Middle School tellng us where to vote today. Note the glare, which added to the fun!

Meeting With Our Next Lieutenant Governor

Ana Maria Archila visited Newburgh recently at the invitation of County Legislator Kevindaryan Lujan. Ana Maria, a thoughtful and progressive Democrat, will make a great second-in-command to her running mate, Jumaane Williams.

Orange County Legislator Kevindaryan Lujan and future New York State Lieutenant Governor Ana Maria Archila dined and discussed strategies with other local civic leaders recently at Newburgh’s fabulous Machu Picchu Restaurant.

Meet Newburgh's Environmental Justice Fellows!

Meet the Newburgh Environmental Justice Fellows

 

Four skilled and smart young women of color have been selected as the inaugural class of Environmental Justice Fellows in Newburgh, a program funded by the Arbor Day Foundation and TD Bank. 

A partnership among the city’s Conservation Advisory Council (CAC) and two nonprofits — the Greater Newburgh Parks Conservancy (GNPC) and Outdoor Promise — won the $19,000 grant that created the program. Rooted in community engagement and outreach through a range of traditional and social media platforms, the program will culminate in the October planting of 16 trees throughout the city, a celebratory event, a program report with data and recommendations, and an online street-tree course available to the greater Newburgh area. 

The four Fellows will be walking through the city, listening to residents’ concerns about trees and educating folks about the benefits of restoring Newburgh’s tree canopy. 

The four Fellows chosen to serve in the 28-week Environmental Justice Fellowship program are:

  • Heidy Bonilla. Originally from Honduras, Bonilla is a highly motivated student and fluent Spanish-speaker who looks forward to working with residents who want to improve their environment but don’t yet have the communication skills to do so.

  • Ameesah Cotten. Born and raised in Newburgh, Cotten is a two-sport college athlete who thoroughly understands the connection between environmental justice and her chosen academic major, public health.

  • Kathryn McKenzie. McKenzie grew up in Newburgh and is a professional dancer and avid student of herbology. She brings boundless energy to the complex intellectual, social and physical tasks involved in the Fellowship.

  • Marichen Montiel. Montiel graduated from the Nora Cronin Presentation Academy and NFA and is now a student at Mount Saint Mary College, where she founded Sustain MSMC, a conservation group on campus, and also serves on the Environmental Stewardship Council there. She, too, is a fluent speaker of Spanish. 

The Fellowship is designed to train and support these talented and service-minded young women in tree-based environmental justice work at the community level. They will use their new street tree skills to engage their families, friends, neighbors and local businesses in thinking about how best to dramatically increase the number of trees in Newburgh. The four Fellows will be walking through the City listening to residents’ concerns about trees, educating folks about the benefits of restoring Newburgh’s tree canopy and motivating Newburghers to take action. 

“These dynamic women will be coming to your neighborhood soon. Be sure to give them your honest opinion about what you see as the pros and cons of having a tree in front of your building,” said Genie Abrams, a volunteer with the CAC. 

Kathy Lawrence, board chair of the GNPC, added, “Each of our Environmental Justice Fellows brings unique strengths to this program. We are excited to have these committed, enthusiastic young women serving as teachers, role models and stewards of our environment.” 

Ronald Zorrilla, executive director of Outdoor Promise, said, “Trees clean the air, soil and water, regulate the temperature outdoors, reduce flooding and noise, are associated with reduced incidence of asthma and other lung diseases, and provide shade and beauty for everyone. The planting of more trees will benefit the health of our residents and help redress the longstanding disparity between the health of our black and brown residents and the general population in Newburgh.”

 The Arbor Day Foundation is the largest nonprofit membership organization dedicated to planting trees. Their vision is to help others understand and use trees as a solution to many global issues, including air and water quality, climate change, poverty and hunger. 

TD Bank has a long-standing commitment to enriching the lives of its customers, colleagues and communities. Through its corporate citizenship platform, TD aspires to link its business, philanthropy and human capital to help people feel more confident about their finances and their ability to achieve their personal goals.

Kat McKenzie

Kat McKenzie

Heidy Bonilla

Heidy Bonilla

Ameesah Cotten

Ameesah Cotten

Marichen Montiel

Marichen Montiel

Become an Environmental Justice Fellow!

Calling all Black and Latinx residents of Newburgh between the ages of 19 and 24! Apply now for an Environmental Justice Fellowship (stipend: $1,400 for the 28-week program). Your training will be paid! To read all about it and apply, click here: https://bit.ly/3dpMMti

 

If you don’t answer, you don’t count.

Please, Newburghers, if you haven't done so yet, go to http://2020CENSUS.GOV NOW and spend the 3 minutes it takes to answer the 10 questions! If you prefer, you can also answer the Census questions by phone, at 844-330-2020. You can even get the questions, and respond, in Spanish or other languages, if you prefer!

The feds give cities money for education, daycare, housing, healthcare, transportation and more based on POPULATION, so they have to know how many people live here! It doesn’t matter if you’re not a US citizen yet. They don’t care. They just need to know how many eople plive here, so we can compete with all the other cities asking for money. If you don’t answer, you don’t count. Only one person per household has to do it. PLEASE show up for Newburgh!