◆Resolutions Passed: None. No formal resolutions were introduced or voted on during this meeting.
◆Resolutions Failed: None.
◆Applications Reviewed: None. No Planning Board or ZBA applications were discussed.
◆Public Comments: None. No public comment period was held as the meeting consisted solely of an executive session.
◆Reports: None. No official reports were presented during this session.
◆Resolutions Passed (19 total, all 5-0):
◆#11-2026: Adopted Local Law No. 2 of 2026 authorizing property tax cap override if necessary (formality).
◆#12-2026: Adopted Local Law No. 3 of 2026 creating Village Auditor position; appointed Village Manager Bryan Healy (no additional compensation).
◆#14-2026: Accepted resignation of Daron Weber from ZBA; accepted Vincent Flynn's move to Active Member at Washington Engine Company; filed memos on red-light cameras and National Police Week.
◆#15-2026: Set boarder/roomer permit fee at $250 under the 2025-2026 Master Fee Schedule.
◆#16-2026: Initiated SEQRA review for Local Law Intro. No. 3 of 2026 (zoning code inconsistencies, definitions, fowl limits); referred to Planning Board and Waterfront Advisory Committee.
◆#17-2026: Scheduled public hearing for February 18, 2026 at 7:00 PM on Local Law Intro. No. 4 of 2026 to enact a 3% occupancy tax on hotel/motel rooms and short-term rentals.
◆#18-2026: Authorized tax lien sale for $131,414.25 in unpaid taxes; set sale date for March 17, 2026 at 11:00 AM at 1 Van Wyck Street. Largest delinquent parcel: Hudson Valley Hospital Center ($32,861.15).
◆#19-2026: Accepted $5,415 proposal from Quality Environmental Solutions & Technologies Inc. (Wappingers Falls) for asbestos and lead paint testing at Gouveia Park house; funded from Gouveia Park Endowment.
◆#20-2026: Accepted $23,500 not-to-exceed proposal from Imbiano-Quigley Landscape Architects (White Plains) for Gouveia Park site development plan; funded from Gouveia Park Endowment.
◆#21-2026: Amended General Fund budget by $76,583.57 for police overtime reimbursement from Historic Hudson Valley ($66,795.36) and NYS ($9,788.21).
◆#22-2026: Transferred $15,000 from Contingency to Manager-Contractual for Nelson Pope Voorhis planning consultant/grant writer services.
◆#23-2026: Transferred $15,166 from Water Contingency to Distribution–Equipment for hydrant meter, leak kit, and hydrant flow test kit.
◆#24-2026: Transferred $2,000 from Engineer–Personnel to Engineer–Contractual for Cornell Cooperative Extension tree steward certification training for two Engineering Department employees.
◆#25-2026: Accepted $10,710 proposal from Cohen Law Group (Pittsburgh, PA) for Verizon cable franchise negotiations; funded from Contingency.
◆#26-2026: Amended agreement with American Legion Fox-Eklof Post 505, transferring $500 from Contingency for Pearl Harbor Day ceremony costs exceeding the $2,500 annual cap.
◆#27-2026: Authorized 5-year lease agreement (Jan 1, 2026–Dec 31, 2031) with Croton Little League for advertisement banners at Dobbs Park field fences.
◆#28-2026: Authorized 3-year lease agreement (Jan 1, 2026–Dec 31, 2028) with Croton AYSO for advertisement banners at David J. Manes Memorial Field fences.
◆#29-2026: Awarded Bid No. 21-2025 to Rivertown Solar (Dobbs Ferry) for DPW Garage solar canopy installation at $302,940, funded by NYSERDA grants.
◆Appointments: Matthew Berger to ZBA (Dec 2028); Peter Sedlmair and Emily Boglioli to Recreation Advisory Committee (Dec 2028); Jessica Sewell to Arts & Humanities Advisory Council (Dec 2027).
◆Resolutions Failed: None.
◆Applications Reviewed: None (Planning Board/ZBA items not on this agenda).
◆Public Comments (4 speakers):
◆Ed Riely (110 Truesdale Drive): Commended EMS/FPW/DPW winter response; suggested medals over certificates for responders; expressed concerns about community-police relations; asked about boarder/roomer fee explanation; noted Croton has not overridden tax cap in years.
◆Bryan Deyo (North Riverside Avenue, President of Association of Businesses): Reported business traffic decline due to snow-blocked parking; requested free train station parking during snow events.
◆Sonia Ferrante (Riverside Avenue): Described difficulty finding parking during snowstorm; requested free train station parking and free shuttle transportation back to residences.
◆John Sasso (87 Morningside Drive, Recreation Advisory Committee): Expressed disappointment over stalled Dog Park discussion; committee supports sunrise-to-sunset hours (not 4 PM limit); urged Board to continue dialogue.
◆Reports:
◆Village Manager Healy: DPW working extended hours on snow removal and water main breaks; Duck Pond open for unsupervised skating; budget priority survey coming via email; Village offices closed Presidents Day; Van Cortlandt Manor entrance project starting; Quaker Bridge replacement awaiting Army Corps of Engineers approval; 25 South Riverside submitted temporary CO paperwork; some Bari Manor apartments failed inspection; recommended keeping current Dog Park hours; Gouveia Park Q&A meeting anticipated in March; free train station parking was offered during storm.
◆Trustee Slippen: Arts & Humanities Aaron Copland tribute Sunday at 2 PM at Library; Blood Drive February 21; Tax Grievance Day in June at Town of Cortlandt; congratulated Valedictorian Jeremy Pollak and Salutatorian Maya Sebestyen; recognized National Girls and Women in Sports Day; wants piece of Quaker Bridge preserved in Village archive; supports future work session on snow removal policy.
◆Trustee Nachtaler: Supported deeper snow removal discussion; noted all Recreation Advisory Committee recommendations approved except Dog Park; recognized Croton Senior Citizens Club (130 members); Recreation Department Korean BBQ trip to KPOT; next trip to Southern Table February 17.
◆Trustee Nicholson: Reported from Albany trip—parking, housing, affordability, insurance rates are top municipal issues; noted two-year Dog Park negotiation in 2023; flagged that 60 trees will be cut during Quakerbridge construction.
◆Trustee Simon: Open to reconvening Dog Park discussions; reported on Albany meetings regarding state transportation budget, AIM funding, and clean water infrastructure; met with Project Mover on phase II; Planning Board processed two ADUs and approved Mirage Mirror and Glass signage on January 27; promoted Eaglefest February 14.
◆Mayor Pugh: Appreciated Recreation Advisory Committee work; thanked DPW for storm response; supported reviewing snow removal policy after winter; thanked Daron Weber for ZBA service.
The Croton Board of Trustees approved a $302,940 solar canopy for the DPW garage, scheduled a February 18 public hearing on a 3% hotel and short-term rental occupancy tax, and set a March 17 tax lien sale for $131,414.25 in unpaid property taxes across 37 parcels. All 19 resolutions passed 5-0.