Albany County

Albany County (/ΛˆΙ”ΛlbΙ™niː/ awl-bΙ™-nee) is a county located in the U.S. state of New York, and is part of the Albany-Schenectady-Troy Metropolitan Statistical Area. The name is from the title of the Duke of York and Albany, who became James II of England (James VII of Scotland). As of the 2010 census, the population was 304,204.[1] As originally established, Albany County had an indefinite amount of land, but has only 530 square miles (1,400 km2) as of March 3, 1888. The county seat is Albany, the state capital.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albany_County,_New_York

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Picking Up

As I headed out to Voorheesville, the snow really started picking up, as I walked under the old highway bridge over the railroad tracks.

Sunday December 1, 2019 — Albany County Rail Trail

502, 504, 506 Rapp Road

The city used eminent Domain to condemn the lands at 502, 504, 506 Rapp Road on December 15th.

Most likely the city was told by DEC they have to buy land in the Pine Bush by December 31st for a transfer station or their landfill permit is going to be revoked. The thing is the city doesn't have to develop in Pine Bush, they could site their transfer station somewhere outside of Pine Bush (which they never seriously considered), or built it on the footprint of the existing transfer station at landfill but that would require them to downscale their operations by 40%, to roughly 300 tons a day from 500 tons a day their accepting at landfill, 80% of which is commercial haulers and other municipalities. The city says it's not economically viable to build a 300 ton a day transfer station, as without the additional tipping fees, they can't operate the facility at a profit.

After the hearing, at end of meeting they condemned those parcels late at night. However, the city still has to get a transfer station permit, which is certainly not guaranteed. The residents who live on those now condemned parcels have until September 2026 to move out, maybe the best hope is we can stop the larger transfer station and have the condemned properties added to the preserve. Green areas are current State-owned Constitutionally Protected Nature and Historic Preserve, including that small green isolated parcel which would require two successive legislatures to alienate but the city isn't planning on touching.

502, 504, 506 Rapp Road [Expires September 1 2026]