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June 10, 2026

It is Wednesday, June 10, 2026 in the Friendly City

FUTURE HUDSON Weekly Digest, The week of June 10

The week of June 10: Planning Board requests workshop on waterfront zoning amendment
Assembled automatically from the city’s public-meeting transcripts, a draft for residents, not an official record.
The week of June 10 Hudson, New York
FUTURE HUDSON Weekly Digest
A Wednesday morning civic digest for residents of The Friendly City.
THE WEEK AHEAD OF US
On Hudson's civic calendar this week.
Hudson, this week
Wed Jun 10, 5:30 PMWard Two Community Town HallBliss Towers Community Room
Thu Jun 11, 6:00 PMLegal CommitteeCity Hall
Fri Jun 12, 10:00 AMHistoric Preservation CommissionCity Hall
Sat Jun 13, all dayHudson Flag Day ParadeGreen St
Mon Jun 15, 6:00 PMInformal MeetingCity Hall

Events are pulled automatically from the City of Hudson's calendar (hudsonny.gov/calendar.php). Meetings can change. For the most reliable information confirm at Gossips of Rivertown.

Remote join links
On the city’s calendar →
hudsonny.gov/calendar.php
THE WEEK BEHIND US
In this issue
1
Planning Board requests workshop on waterfront zoning amendment
2
Hudson Housing Authority redevelopment advances to public hearing
3
Fire department to start cardiac arrest first response
4
Climate Smart Communities application submitted, results in July
5
Parking enforcement generated nearly $50,000 in May
6
CSO separation project headed for state review
7
Summer camp at capacity with 145 registrations
↓
1

Planning Board requests workshop on waterfront zoning amendment

The Planning Board decided it needs more time to understand a proposed zoning change before making a recommendation to the Common Council. The amendment would add hard limits to conditional dock operations in the waterfront district: 10,000 truck round trips and 275,000 tons of material. It would also codify the 10 conditions of approval the board previously imposed on the Caruso project.

Multiple board members struggled to understand what the amendment would actually change compared to the previous approval. The board agreed to schedule a special workshop meeting between now and July 14 to have city representatives explain the proposal in detail. The Planning Board has 30 days from June 9 to render its recommendation, which is purely advisory.

Where it’s headedSpecial workshop meeting between now and July 14 to discuss the amendment with city representatives
Planning Board · Jun 9  Read the full meeting →
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2

Hudson Housing Authority redevelopment advances to public hearing

The Planning Board issued a SEQR negative declaration for the Bliss Towers replacement project and scheduled a public hearing for July 21. The plan replaces today's 135-unit Bliss Towers and Columbia Apartments with 166 units across two four-story apartment buildings and six townhouses. Phase 1 builds first so existing tenants can move in before phase 2 takes the tower down.

Architect Alexander Gorlin framed the project explicitly as a correction of urban-renewal-era choices that severed the site from the city grid. The design proposes reopening North First Street between Columbia and State, which was closed during urban renewal, though board members noted they cannot bind future boards to actually carry out the reopening. A traffic analysis showed minimal impact, with all intersections operating at level-of-service B or better.

BLISS TOWERS UNITS
Today
135 
Phase 1
166 
Full build
276 
Hudson Housing Authority redevelopment plan
Where it’s headedPublic hearing Tuesday, July 21, 6 p.m. at the fire station, with written comments accepted for 10 days afterward
Planning Board · May 28  Read the full meeting →
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3

Fire department to start cardiac arrest first response

Chief Hoffman announced the fire department will begin responding to cardiac arrest calls within the next month or two as first responders, alongside rescue squads. The move is part of a countywide initiative to support ambulance services. Hudson averages 15 cardiac arrests per year over the last five years.

The department will train with Greenport Rescue next week and redo CPR certifications. Response will be via van or Tahoe equipped with AED and first-in bag, not fire trucks. Multiple EMTs and paramedics among volunteer firefighters will be a major asset. Hudson could be the first county in New York State with 100 percent fire department participation if all departments sign on.

Where it’s headedTraining with Greenport Rescue next week, service to begin within one to two months
Safety Committee · Jun 1  Read the full meeting →
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4

Climate Smart Communities application submitted, results in July

The Conservation Advisory Council celebrated completing their Climate Smart Communities application in May. The council needed 120 points for bronze certification and submitted over that amount, potentially approaching 200 points. Results are expected in July, with a possible silver certification submission in January 2027 if the council continues follow-up work.

Meanwhile, the council reported excellent survival rates from spring plantings: 202 seedlings at the dog park and 46 at Oakdale Lake, with only about 10 of 202 plants not yet sprouted. Members are working with DPW on mowing and watering equipment, and planning mulch installation to protect the young trees.

DOG PARK SEEDLING SURVIVAL
Planted
202 
Surviving
192 
Conservation Advisory Council report
Where it’s headedClimate Smart results expected in July, next meeting with mayor to discuss rain gardens
Conservation Advisory · Jun 4  Read the full meeting →
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5

Parking enforcement generated nearly $50,000 in May

Police reported parking enforcement generated $49,652 in revenue in May, with 3,335 tickets issued and 2,378 tickets paid. Revenue was down about $13,000 from April, possibly due to elimination of weekend alternate-side parking enforcement. Ten new parking kiosks will be installed in early June at locations along Warren and Columbia Streets.

The Safety Committee also requested several signage improvements at one-way intersections and a no-right-turn-on-red sign at North Sixth and Columbia, especially with the Galvan hotel opening soon. Council President Hadad cited litigation potential if accidents occur at poorly marked intersections.

MAY PARKING ENFORCEMENT
Tickets issued
3,335 
Tickets paid
2,378 
Revenue
$49,652 
Hudson Police Department monthly report
Where it’s headedTen parking kiosks to be installed first or second week of June along Warren and Columbia Streets
Safety Committee · Jun 1  Read the full meeting →
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6

CSO separation project headed for state review

The major combined sewer overflow separation project on Columbia Street is about 95 percent designed and will be submitted to DEC and EFC for review. The review process will take a couple of months, during which DPW will address local issues like traffic management, winter shutdown options, and utility conflicts. Some city water mains are in conflict with the new sewer and will be moved as part of the project at no additional cost.

DPW Superintendent Rob Perry explained that traffic management will involve closing blocks of Columbia Street during construction, with stakeholder meetings planned to arrange detours and access for property owners. Some days, Columbia Street will have massive holes that get filled at the end of the day, making the street temporarily impassable.

Where it’s headedDesign plans to be reviewed by DEC and EFC over next few months, then returned to city to finalize local details
Code & Infrastructure · Jun 8  Read the full meeting →
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7

Summer camp at capacity with 145 registrations

As of June 3, summer camp has 145 registrations, 10 more than this time last year. Anyone applying now goes on a wait list, which is managed during the first week or two of camp by calling families of no-shows. The Youth Department hired 15 staff plus 8 summer positions from over 50 applicants, and referred applicants who were not hired to the workforce development program at the college.

The fishing derby returns to Oakdale Park on Saturday, June 27, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., for ages 5 to 14. The free event is sponsored by the Warthower Memorial Fund, with prizes including bikes, tablets, gift cards, t-shirts, food, and drinks. Trout will be stocked in the lake close to the event date to prevent early fishing.

Where it’s headedFishing derby Saturday, June 27, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Oakdale Park
Services Committee · Jun 4  Read the full meeting →
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Flagging
On Hudson’s civic calendar in the next few weeks.
Thu, Jun 12, 7-8 a.m.Community walk and bike bus event organized by Hudson City School District with free bike rentals from Berkshire Bike and Board
Wed, Jun 17 (tentative)Zoning Board of Appeals hearing on about seven area variances needed for six townhouses in Bliss Towers redevelopment
Thu, Jun 20, 2-6 p.m.Summer Solstice Carnival at Spiral House Park
Sat, Jun 27, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.Fishing derby at Oakdale Park for ages 5-14, sponsored by Warthower Memorial Fund
Between now and Jul 14Planning Board special workshop meeting to discuss proposed waterfront zoning amendments with city representatives
Mon, Jul 14, 6 p.m.Planning Board public hearing for 360 State Street application in council chambers
Wed, Jul 16, 1-4 p.m.Services Committee plans to attend tenant-landlord event at Bliss Towers to conduct community survey
Tue, Jul 21, 6 p.m.Planning Board public hearing on Hudson Housing Authority Bliss Towers redevelopment at fire station, with written comments accepted for 10 days afterward
About this digest. FUTURE HUDSON Weekly Digest is assembled automatically from the transcripts of the city’s public meetings, then written into plain language. It is a draft aid for residents, not an official record. The City of Hudson’s official minutes are authoritative.

We only see what is posted to the city’s YouTube channel. Common Council, Planning Board, and HCDPA are posted reliably; other bodies depend on members uploading. If you notice a meeting is missing, send us a note or ask the committee chair to post it.
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FUTURE HUDSON Weekly Digest
A Wednesday morning civic digest for residents of The Friendly City, Hudson, New York.
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