Monday, January 30, 2012

Fishkill Business makes equipment that saves soldiers lives

Written by Craig Wolf Poughkeepsie Journal

For more, go to the papers website or subscribe to it as I do.

FISHKILL — In Afghanistan, American soldiers face a high risk of being blown to bits. A company here is doing something about it.

Advanced Reconnaissance Corp. has gone through a surge of job creation under a government contract to make devices that can detect disturbed earth that may signal the presence of a buried “improvised explosive device” that can blast passing military vehicles and maim or kill the people inside.

ARC, as the company usually refers to itself, was just a handful of people keeping an idea and a technology alive until the doctor came. That was the federal government, with a $10 million contract award in May that let it put the idea into practice.

It’s now close to deploying the systems for use in airplanes. “Disturbed earth is what we’re looking for,” explained Joe Jamin, vice president. “It’s remote sensing. You fly over the road and analyze the reflected light from the road.”

A later phase is intended to add vehicular and handheld systems.

The work was funded under the Department of Defense’s Department’s Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization, or JIEDDO. The military has been seeking ways to cut down deaths and serious injuries caused by the improvised bombs that enemies place along roads and detonate when an American or allied vehicle comes along.

Tougher vehicles, mine-clearing machines and sniffer dogs are some of the approaches. Reconnaissance systems like ARC’s are another.

Jamin said ARC expects to have 27 people on board by the end of the month, some of them in an office in Maryland but most of them here.

Mark Westfield, the CEO and chairman of ARC, said it has been a long path to this point, starting with the early development of the sensing technology going back many years and continuing with a pitch to the military to develop it into actual systems.

“The funding dried up and it was very hard on us,” Westfield said. “It didn’t dry up because of the technology. It dried up because of the shenanigans that went on with Congress and the budget.”

http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2012301290058

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Reorganization Meeting 1/4/2012 Town of Fishkill

http://www.fishkill-ny.gov/pdfs/TownBoardAgendas/2012%20Agendas/01-04-2012%20TB%20Reorganization%20Meeting.pdf

Meetings are now on cable and will be archived on the towns website.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Fishkill Developer owes 400K in property taxes

Developer Steve Aaron “owes more than $400,000 in property taxes on affordable-housing projects and has been accused by contractors of failing to pay his bills,” according to an investigation by the Times Herald-Record.

Kingston-based Birchez Associates and its president, Steven Aaron, owe taxes on three of four Ulster County senior and work force housing developments. Aaron is in court with three municipalities over unpaid taxes, and recently the Ulster County Industrial Development Agency voted to strip his tax break in four months unless he pays Kingston some $330,000.

Over the last five years, Aaron or his companies have been named in dozens of lawsuits, judgments or liens after contractors said they weren't paid, according to Ulster County court records. Yet last month, he won a state economic development grant for a new project in Fishkill.

“Aaron disputed claims against him point by point in an interview,” according to the report.

Aaron recently alleged racial bias and anti-Semitism was behind the demand of the Ulster County Industrial Development Agency that he pay $330,000 in taxes he owes to the city of Kingston or lose tax benefit he received for the Birchwood Village housing complex. He subsequently apologized for the allegation, saying he didn’t mean to be taken literally.

Aaron is working in Fishkill: The Birches at Fishkill, which was awarded a $1.8 million grant last month from the state Region Economic Development awards process.

For more details check out papers website.

http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120103/NEWS/201030327/-1/NEWSLETTER100