Dec 19, 2017

Dues deadline just 2 weeks away

Your dues statement for 2018 was distributed by THCA Treasurer Jerry Gordon in November. Now, we're about to receive the first payments of the New Year.

The dues, at a level unchanged from 2017, are due no later than New Year's Day -- either in full or as part of a periodic payment plan. If you need to be refreshed on the options, just click here.

And don’t forget, there is a white locked mailbox just below the bulletin board in the mailbox gazebo. You can deposit your checks there without a postage stamp. You don’t even have to address the envelope; Jerry is the one who gets everything in that mailbox. As a matter of fact, you don’t even need an envelope – you can just drop the check in.

You also can use that mailbox for depositing any suggestions, comments, or questions you may have for the Board. Of course, if you’re paying from out of town, you still can use the good old U.S. Postal Service.

Grounds Committee success and successor

You may have noticed that the areas along the road entering the Terrace properties have been patched by the City of Troy. Special thanks go to Sid Legg and Ned Alaskey for making that happen.

Most recently Sid was in touch with the City administration and our local councilman, Jim Gulli, to get the work done. While this is not the only road repair we need, it was a priority improvement in both appearance and the safety for our grounds.

Also, after serving as our Grounds Committee chair for the past two years Ned is stepping down. John Paccione (#19) has agreed to assume the position of co-chair of the committee for 2018. I thank Ned very much for his hard work during the past two years and especially last winter which was a rough one. I also know that John will do a superb job. He is one of our community’s rising stars!

-- THCA President Steven Sanders

Dec 15, 2017

Happy Hanukkah


Dec 1, 2017

Your new slate of officers for 2018

From THCA President Steve Sanders:

I am delighted to report that the Board of Directors met this week for the annual organizational session and elected the following officers to serve our Association for the next 12 months:
President -- Steven Sanders
1st Vice President -- Sid Legg
2nd Vice President -- Bill Dowd
Treasurer -- Jerry Gordon
Secretary -- Ellen Gordon
I want to express my deep appreciation, and the gratitude of all the members of our Terrace Association, to the outgoing officers: Vice Presidents Joan Richardson and Ned Alaskey and Secretary Collen Walsh. Their service to our community was exemplary. On a personal note, each of them was a pleasure to work with.

Our new slate of officers is among our most impressive ever. Each one brings a wealth of experience to the job. Of course, Bill Dowd is a three-times-Past President, and Jerry Gordon is our indispensable incumbent Treasurer and a fiscal expert. Both Sid Legg and Ellen Gordon are smart, excellent and energetic. So, I am confident that our Association is in very good hands as we head into 2018.

Nov 21, 2017

Happy Thanksgiving 2017


On behalf of myself and our Board of Directors I want to wish you a joyous Thanksgiving holiday!

We know how truly fortunate we are to be living in such a unique and wonderful community. Our lives are made richer because of the good friendships and genuine caring that we find with each other. I am thankful for all of you.

I hope that your time with family and friends is special. And for those who may be travelling this week please do so safely.

Best wishes, Steven and Tammy Jo.

Nov 15, 2017

Troy's 'Complete Streets' project gets under way today

The City of Troy today began the first phase of roadway safety enhancements as part of its "Complete Streets" program, according to an announcement from City Hall. Work is beginning initially on Burdett Avenue.

"The planned improvements –- including striping of parking areas, bike lanes, left turns, and crosswalks –- seek to increase safety, health and access for all users who utilize the local transportation network," according to the announcement.

The "Complete Streets Ordinance and Policy," adopted in June 2014, was named one of the best by the National Complete Streets Coalition in 2015. It was created by the Transport Troy Complete Streets Citizen’s Working Group, which included members of Capital Roots, Transition Troy, Troy Bike Rescue, the Independent Living Center of the Hudson Valley, Troy Architectural Program, and the City of Troy, "served as the first step in developing a policy for planners and engineers to design and build streets which will provide all users of any ability, age, income and method of transport, with safe, accessible and convenient access to destinations across the Troy community."

The program calls for achieving one-, three-, and five-year objectives. If you're interested in the official document, which is Chapter 271 of the City Code, covering the entire project, you can see it online by clicking here.

Nov 14, 2017

What's going on across Oakwood Avenue?

Dig a hole, fill a hole. Rest, repeat.

You may have noticed a sign saying "Diamond Rock Plaza" that just went up at the construction site on Oakwood Avenue (Route 40) opposite the entrance to the Terrace.

What is it, you ask?

It's the latest Tom Murley project, but one that has largely lain dormant since it was approved by the Town of Brunswick more than a year ago. In the interim, a lengthy list of conditions on continuing its development has been issued by the state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC).

When I checked today with the Town of Brunswick Building Department, I was told it would not issue a building permit for construction of the four-"suite" structure until all DEC conditions have been met. The work you currently see going on is to meet some of those infrastructure requirements. It is unclear whether actual building construction will be undertaken during the winter.

While the Town does not know which tenants will do business at the location, a spokesperson  told me she believes a convenience store will be the major occupant. Initial plans mentioned having a Cumberland Farms store there, but that chain apparently no longer is involved, she said.

-- Bill Dowd

Nov 5, 2017

2018 dues schedule released

Your dues statement for 2018 is below. You’ll be glad to know that the dues are unchanged from last year.

And don’t forget, there is a white locked mailbox just below the bulletin board. You can deposit your checks there without a postage stamp. You don’t even have to address the envelope; I’m the one who gets everything in that mailbox. As a matter of fact, you don’t even need an envelope – you can just drop the check in.

You can also use this mailbox for any suggestions, comments or questions you may have for the Board. Of course, if you’re paying from out of town, you can still use the good old U.S. Postal Service.

Your faithful servant,

Jerry Gordon, Treasurer
Terrace at Highpointe Community Association


The Terrace at Highpointe Community Association, Inc. 
Dues Notice for 2018

The Maintenance Fee (“Dues”) for 2018 is $1800.00 per year ($1560 for #34). Payment options:
  • •  Annual payment of $1800 ($1560 for #34) is due on January 1, 2018.
  • Semi-annual payments of $900 ($780 for #34) are due on January 1 and July 1,
    2018.
  • Quarterly payments of $450 ($390 for #34) are due on January 1, April 1, July 1, and October 1, 2018. 

    Make checks payable to THCA. You can deposit them in the white mailbox under the bulletin board (no stamp or envelope required), or you can mail them to

    Terrace at Highpointe 
    35 Hyland Drive
    Troy, NY 12182-3403


    If your house number is not printed on your check, please write it in the memo field.
    If your bank sends payments automatically from your account, please move the due- date up one week to accommodate often slow mail delivery.
    Payment History (keep for your records):
Date paid
Check #
Amount
Payment #1 – due January 1
Payment #2 – due April1
Payment #3 – due July 1
Payment #4 – due October 1

Questions? Comments? Address them to Jerry Gordon, THCA Treasurer, 15 Hyland Circle, Troy, NY 12182 or jerrygordon@juno.com or 518-235-8232.


Nov 1, 2017

Terry Page obituary

Terry Page
• As published in the Times Union

TROY -- Theresa K. Page died October 21, 2017, at Samaritan Hospital in Troy. 

Theresa was born in Pleasantville, NY, to Richard and Mollie Barber in 1935. She completed both her undergraduate and graduate studies at SUNY Albany before launching her teaching career in Istanbul, Turkey, and in Athens, Greece. 

Theresa was always an activist, seeking to empower those without a proper voice and bring transparency, civility and beauty to the children, women and communities with which she interacted. 

Through creating and leading grassroots movements, she got the City of New York to beautify Broadway in the 1960s, and she was instrumental in bringing down one of the last two political machines in the U.S. in the 1970s. She quietly helped many battered women and families and actively campaigned for women's rights, going so far as to speak at an annual Coca-Cola Company shareholders meeting (while in her late 70's) to grill the board of directors regarding the lack of women on the board. 

Theresa also served as president of the trustees of the Oakwood Cemetery in Troy, where she implemented volunteer and paid cleanups that pruned back decades of decay and succeeded in getting the chapel designated a National Historic Landmark. She loved quilts and gardening, and had many friends from her time as a Master Gardener. Supporting female artists and projects for social justice were important to her, as was being informed about current events. 

Ms. Page is survived by her children, Kimon Skarlatos of New Jersey, Leonidas Skarlatos of Myanmar, and Kirsten Healey of UT; her brother, Richard Barber of Chesterfield, MO, and seven grandchildren. A memorial service will be held in the spring of 2018. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Capital Roots at 594 River St., Troy, NY 12180, a community garden organization. Please visit www.mcloughlinmason.com.

Oct 21, 2017

What's on tap for October 30 annual meeting


The Terrace at Highpointe Community Association (THCA) annual meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, October 30, at Faith Lutheran Church, 50 Leversee Road.

Our agenda will include:

  1. The election of our Board of Directors for the 2018-19 term as designated by our Nominations Committee chaired by Lorraine Bailey, (nominees listed below).
  2. A financial report by Treasurer Jerry Gordon (per the reports he forwarded to you) as we approach the start of our new 2018 Fiscal Year.
  3. A report by President Steven Sanders on Terrace matters, including new contracts with our three vendors and the impact on our Terrace budget.
  4. Committee reports as needed.
  5. Good and welfare
Bill Dowd, who chairs our Rules Committee, reports that the work on our Declaration and Bylaws amendments is ongoing, and that a number of useful suggestions have been made by various Terrace neighbors. To complete the work on those amendments and any other input, consideration by our full membership will be deferred to our Spring meeting. A new document will be distributed for your further review once the most recent changes have been incorporated.

Board of Directors nominees:
  • Bill Dowd
  • Ellen Gordon
  • Jerry Gordon
  • Sid Legg
  • Steven Sanders

Terrace, community lose Terry Page

Dear Terrace Neighbors:
I just learned that our dear friend and neighbor Terry Page passed this morning (Saturday, October 21). 

Her family was with her and she died peacefully. When I receive further information about arrangements I will let you know.

Sincerely,
Steven Sanders
EDITOR'S NOTE: Among her numerous neighborhood and community efforts over the years, Terry was instrumental in gaining National Landmark status for the historic Oakwood Cemetery. Click here for a 2011 newspaper report on that achievement.

Sep 29, 2017

Sep 14, 2017

Annual Meeting to vote on officers, rules update

From THCA President Steven Sanders:

The Terrace at Highpointe Community Association (THCA) will convene its Annual Meeting at 7 p.m. Monday, October 30, at Faith Lutheran Church, 50 Leversee Road.

Our agenda will feature two major topics. One is the election of five members to the Board of Directors. Our Nominations Committee, chaired by Lorraine Bailey has nominated the following persons for election to two-year terms that began on January 1, 2018:
• Bill Dowd
• Ellen Gordon
• Jerry Gordon
• Sid Legg
• Steven Sanders
Many thanks to our three outgoing Board members Colleen Walsh, Joan Richardson, and Ned Alaskey. Each put in much time and effort ,and their service to our community is very much appreciated.

We also will consider changes to THCA operating rules contained in the Declaration and Bylaws. By clicking here you will find the updated product of our Rules Committee's efforts, chaired by Bill Dowd. The draft is presented in a pretty easy to read format indicating where the changes appear. If between now and our meeting you wish to suggest further changes or just make comments, don’t hesitate to forward those suggestions to me, and I will see to it that our Rules Committee receives your suggestions. If you wish to copy all our Terrace neighbors certainly feel free to do that as well. During the Annual Meeting there will be yet another opportunity to make whatever changes may be deemed appropriate.



4th quarter dues deadline is October 1

A gentle reminder: Fourth-quarter 2017 dues must be paid no later than Sunday, October 1.

As always, you can save the cost of a stamp by dropping your payment in the white lock box below the mailbox gazebo bulletin boards. Checks should be made payable to THCA.

If you are making financial plans for 2018, please remember Treasurer Jerry Gordon will accept dues payments on various schedules -- quarterly, semiannually, annually.  If you have any questions about that schedule, please contact Jerry directly.

Thank you.

Sep 4, 2017

'Soft wash' roof service signup deadline is Tuesday


If you have an unsightly roof and want to improve its appearance -- as well as lengthen its lifespan by mitigating damage to shingles from black algae and green lichen growths -- you may want to check the signup sheet on the the Terrace mailbox gazebo bulletin board.

Ellie DeBonis has posted the sheet for those of us who would like to have the service. Usually, when we contract for services, the more of us who sign up, the better a price can be negotiated. The deadline for signup is this Tuesday, the day after Labor Day.

We're told that "soft washing," as it is called, works well without damage to the roof and is guaranteed for three years.

Sep 1, 2017

The origins of Labor Day

From the U.S. Department of Labor:
"Through the years the nation gave increasing emphasis to Labor Day. The first governmental recognition came through municipal ordinances passed during 1885 and 1886. From these, a movement developed to secure state legislation.

"The first state bill was introduced into the New York State Legislature, but the first to become law was passed by Oregon on February 21, 1887. During the year four more states -- New York, Colorado, Massachusetts, and New Jersey — created the Labor Day holiday by legislative enactment.

"By the end of the decade, Connecticut, Nebraska, and Pennsylvania had followed suit. By 1894, 23 other states had adopted the holiday in honor of workers, and on June 28 of that year, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and the territories."
For a more complete look at the history of Labor Day, as well as links to related stories and information, just click here

A note from our president

Dear Terrace Neighbors:

It’s hard to believe the Labor Day weekend is upon us and summer is coming to a close. But, autumn in Upstate New York is spectacular, so let’s look forward to that!

And, with the onset of Fall comes our Terrace Annual Meeting. We will be gathering on Monday, October 30, at 7 p.m. in the Faith Lutheran Church located at 50 Leversee Road, so please hold that date.

Our agenda will be a busy one for that evening. We must elect our Board of Directors for the 2018-19 term. In addition, I expect we will be considering amendments to our Bylaws and Declaration. Those documents, with the full agenda, will be distributed to you in advance of our meeting in about two weeks. Of course, comments or suggested changes are always welcome.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy this holiday weekend. If you are traveling, be safe!

Steven Sanders
THCA President

Aug 30, 2017

Why you're living on legendary land

An undated Times Union article tells the tale of Diamond Rock.
Did you know you live near a very historic piece of land, filled with legends arising from the time before Europeans arrived on the scene?

Thanks to Janice Dessingue who shared a yellowed newspaper clipping with The Terrace Times, here's an opportunity to revisit a story published in the Times Union about the tales of Diamond Rock, the granite outcropping overlooking the Mohawk Valley and, in the distance, the Helderbergs. The clipping, while not dated, probably was published just before construction began on the Terrace in 1995. It refers to the Highponte development's opening in 1990. It also provides a clue to the namesake of the Moneta Overlook group of homes abutting the Terrace and built well after the Terrace community was created.

Here is the full text of the story.

By TIM O'BRIEN
Staff writer

TROY -- High on a hill above Lansingburgh, hidden away behind the Highpointe housng development, is a large rock where a Mohawk legend says an Indian chief's wife once mourned and waited for her sons. And if you take a good look at its face, they say it's easy to trace the tracks of her tears.

Diamond Rock is the name of this natural feature, once a popular romantic spot for couples to park and now part of the walking path behind the Highpointe town houses.

The legend is recounted in the book "Body, Boots & Britches," by Harold W. Thompson, published in 1940, and in the 1971 history of Lansingburgh, according to information provided by the Rensselaer County Historical Society.

Moneta was the most beautiful woman in tribe and the wife of the old sachem Hohadora, the legend says. Her son Onasqua was captured by a band of Adirondack warriors and taken to the north as a prisoner.

Brokenhearted, Hohadora died and was buried by the riverside overlooking the Hudson River in Lansingburgh. According to custom, Moneta then lit a fire over his grave for four days to guide his spirit home.

Taendra, Moneta's other son, swore vengeance and set out to recover his brother.

At the end of the four days, Moneta moved from the spot where she had buried her husband, traveling through a swamp and up a hill to a large rock that overlooked the whole valley. As her second child left, Moneta kindled a fire on this rock and vowed to keep the fire burning as long as her son was away to guide him back to the camp.

She kept the vigil throughout her life, at the end being helped each day to the spot by younger Mohawks. One night, when she was very old, Taendra reappeared at last, carrying the remains of his brother as he had vowed. As mother and son tearfully greeted each other, their god Manitou sent a bolt of lightning to strike the rock. At dawn, the Mohawks followed the trail to the rock and found only the bones of Onasqua. Mother and son had had their spirits carried away in the lightning and the rock remained, glistening like a diamond.

"Look," cried one woman. "See Moneta's tears!"

Today, Moneta's tears are more difficult to see. They are located on private property, inside the Highpointe development, where one of the streets is named Diamond Rock Circle.

The way to the rock is just off the development's walking path, where a small dirt trail leads to the rocky surface. It looks more like granite than diamond, although a few chipped spots still shine in the afternoon sun. Where once Moneta cried, graffiti that announce "Bill + Caryl 5/23/89 4 Ever in Love" now dots the rocks.

Joseph Manupella, Lansingburgh native and a longtime public official, said the spot was once next to the Dawes Mansion, where gangster Legs Diamond allegedly once stayed.

"We'd go up there when we were kids," Manupella said. "You'd look over the city. Kids would go up in high school, to smoke a cigarette or have a Coke. Diamond Rock was kind of sparkly, nothing that would make you go up there with a pick and shovel."

When building the housing development in 1990, site coordinator Steve Coccetti said, the Michaels Group deliberately made certain that the rock was not only untouched, but that the path to it was reachable. "We brought the path around it," he said.

When the first homes opened in 1990, he said, Troy residents regularly stopped by to share their memories of Diamond Rock.

"I think a ton of them used to come up here and park," he said. "Most people don't even know there is a story behind why it's called that."

Though graffiti-spattered, Diamond Rock still boasts a magnificent, 180-degree view of the Mohaw Valley.

"You can see all the way to the Helderbergs and the Adirondacks," Coccetti said. "It is amazing how beautiful it is up here."

Aug 18, 2017

Spruce-up and fix-up efforts around the Terrace

A  note from Lorraine Bailey:
I saw two elves working very hard to spruce up the "Terrace at Highpointe" sign today. It's great to see residents working around the Terrace to help keep our association dues down.
I'm sure everyone appreciates all the hard work keeping the Terrace looking as beautiful as it is.

P.S. Thanks Bob Malphrus and Paula Fox-Murphy for all your hard work.
A note from Bill Dowd:
Thanks to Ned Alaskey for his tireless work operating our Grounds Committee. His latest efforts include getting National Grid to paint the worn electrical box at theTerrace entrance and shepherding workers around to repair driveway damage incurred by winter snow plowing.

Aug 11, 2017

Effective Aug. 19, you'll have to make your local phone calls differently

area-codesEffective Saturday, August 19, if you try calling a phone number in the 518 area code the way you always have, it won't work.

That is the start date for full implementation of the new "Area Code Overlay" for the 518 area code. That means in addition to our current 518, the same geographic area will include a new code -- 838. That is because they have virtually run out of new phone numbers for the 518 area.

You do not have to change your 518 area code. But, any new numbers issued on or after September 19 may be assigned an 838. However, to call anyone else with that code or with the new 838 code, you will have to use a 10-digit calling sequence just as you do now for long distance calls. For example, if you normally call your cousin Mary locally at 555-5555 you will have to dial 518-555-5555. And, for local calls to people or businesses that have been assigned a new 838 code number, you also will have to dial a 10-digit code such as 838-555-5555.

 If you want to get in the habit of the new requirement since it will become part of your way of life and there's nothing you can do about it, you can begin practicing by using a 10-digit sequence right now. If you forget and just use the usual seven-digit local numbers your calls will be put through until August, but not after that. This change may require a variety of changes for some people. For example, all numbers you have stored for automatic dialing on your cellphones or landlines, for answering machine messages, call forwarding, fax machines, speed dialers, internet dial-up numbers, safety alarm security systems and other such equipment will have to be reprogrammed with a 10-digit sequence. Likewise for any printed material -- checks, office stationery, websites, Facebook pages, pet ID tags, etc. Whatever you do not change will not work after August 19. Additional information is available online by clicking here.

One small step for Terrace-kind ...

The former rust-pitted National Grid power box.
Hello Neighbors:

If there is one task  I'm proud of having accomplished, it is that the National Grid service box at the Terrace entrance way which was extremely unsightly with rust has been restored to its original condition with a fresh coat of paint.

I know our neighbor Terry Page would be very pleased, as are Susan and I.

-- Ned Alaskey, Grounds Chair

Aug 9, 2017

New Terrace Board nominees announced for 2018-19

I am delighted to announce that our Nominating Committee, chaired by Lorraine Bailey, has selected three-term president Bill Dowd, Ellen Gordon and Sid Legg to serve on the Board of Directors for two-year terms beginning on January 1, 2018.

These nominations are, of course, first subject to approval from our Terrace at Highpointe Homeowners Association members who will vote on them at our annual meeting scheduled for October 30.

-- Steven Sanders, Association President

May 27, 2017

On this Memorial Day ...

Screen Shot 2017-05-27 at 3.52.29 PM 

Beyond the cookouts, the holiday sales, the family trips, the picnics and parades there is a deep and profound reason for Memorial Day. 

Although we honor all military personnel, Memorial Day is specifically designated as honoring the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. military. Originally known as Decoration Day, it originated in the years following the Civil War but did not become an official federal holiday until 1971. 

The Civil War, which ended in the spring of 1865, obviously claimed more lives than any conflict in U.S. history because all combatants were Americans, and it required the establishment of the country’s first national cemeteries. By the late 1860s, Americans in various communities had begun holding springtime tributes to these countless fallen soldiers, reciting prayers and decorating their graves with flowers -- thus the original name of Decoration Day. 

Each year on Memorial Day a national moment of remembrance takes place at 3 p.m. local time. It is unclear exactly where this tradition originated. Numerous communities may have independently initiated the memorial gatherings. Nevertheless, in 1966 the federal government declared Waterloo, New York, the "Official Birthplace of Memorial Day." 

Waterloo, which first celebrated the day on May 5, 1866, was chosen because it hosted an annual community-wide event during which businesses closed and residents decorated the graves of soldiers with flowers and flags. On May 5, 1868, General John A. Logan, leader of an organization for Northern Civil War veterans, called for a nationwide day of remembrance later that month. “The 30th of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers, or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet churchyard in the land,” he proclaimed. 

The date of Decoration Day, as he called it, was chosen because it was not the anniversary of any particular battle. On the first Decoration Day, General James Garfield made a speech at Arlington National Cemetery, and 5,000 participants decorated the graves of the 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers buried there. 

Many Northern states held similar commemorative events and reprised the tradition in subsequent years; by 1890 each one had made Decoration Day an official state holiday. Southern states, on the other hand, continued to honor their dead on separate days until after World War I. 

Although Memorial Day originally honored only those lost in the Civil War, American involvement in The Great War, later called World War I, made it evolve to commemorate American military personnel who died in all wars. For decades, Memorial Day continued to be observed on May 30, the date Logan had selected for the first Decoration Day. But, in 1968 Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act, a controversial decision that moved several major holidays from their traditional or historic dates to Mondays that gave federal -- and later on state and local -- employees three-day paid weekends. The law went into effect in 1971.


REQUIEM
by Robert Louis Stevenson

Under the wide and starry sky 
Dig the grave and let me lie: 
Glad did I live and gladly die, 
And I laid me down with a will.

This be the verse you 'grave for me: 
Here he lies where he long'd to be; 
Home is the sailor, home from the sea, 
And the hunter home from the hill.