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Friday Headlines: Dutch Discourse Edition

Fjord trail gets pushback. And more news.
Friday Headlines: Dutch Discourse Edition
Let them build (a trail). Pierce Johnston

Ah, so that’s what she was talking about.

The Village of Cold Spring’s board voted to stop the Hudson Highlands Fjord Trail over a faulty environmental review, just as Gov. Hochul pushes a state budget proposal that would streamline the State Environmental Quality Review Act process to prevent such project delays and lawsuits.

Village board members approved a legal suit on Wednesday on the grounds that trail developers and the state didn’t properly consider the area’s environment, with hopes that neighboring Phillipstown could join the suit. (The Highlands Current covered it.)

The Hudson Highland Fjord Trail is a proposed 7.5-mile pedestrian and bike path between Beacon and Cold Spring. Hochul’s plan to reform the state’s environmental review process has largely been construed through a housing lens, but she made a point of including bike and pedestrian paths within her proposal.

The state environmental review process being is usually used to tie up mixed-use residential buildings. Now safe places to travel along the Hudson River are getting the same treatment.

More news:

  • Nassau County Republicans will need to find a new pick to challenge Rep. Laura Gillen (D-Nassau County) for her seat in Congress. (Newsday)
  • Babylon is stepping up enforcement of e-bike rules on its parks and beaches. (Newsday)
  • Sometimes you just have to beat the shit out of your political opponents. (News12 Long Island)
  • Riders are worried about service disruptions at Penn Station during the World Cup. (New York Times)
  • New York Working Families Party Chair Jasmine Gripper says Hochul is up to her old budget tricks. (City & State)
  • A federal review of the funding to improve Rhinceliff’s Amtrak station could stall any progress on the project. (The Red Hook Daily Catch)
  • State election officials launched nearly 300 lawsuits against dodgy campaigns. (The Times Union)
  • Putnam County is looking for a grant to maintain and extend sidewalks in advance of a new trail. (Mid Hudson News)
  • Some worry that outgoing Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes’s replacement was chosen in spite of democracy. (BTPM)
  • The ranks of New York City green taxis have withered since Uber and Lyft came to town. (The City)
  • Transportation advocates want more, but New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is a breath of fresh air. (amNY)
  • Jefferson Avenue in Buffalo is finally getting funding for a streetscape redesign. (The Buffalo News)
Photo of Austin C. Jefferson
Before becoming Albany Bureau Chief in late 2025, Austin C. Jefferson was a state politics reporter for City & State NY, covering state government, elections and major legislative debates. His reporting has also appeared in the Daily Freeman, Chronogram Magazine and The Legislative Gazette. Having grown up in the Hudson Valley, he's always happy to argue about where Upstate New York truly begins.

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