The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)
Your Opinions
Local elections must focus on local issues
Conservatives are supposed to be rational and level headed but that is not always the case. Let me tell you my story and decide for yourself.
NewYork State has changed its election law and now requires all political parties to collect nominating petitions in March. So, with this change, the local city of Utica Republican Party had to scurry to recruit candidates to run for office in the local elections. Since I ran in 2017 for city council everyone wanted me to run again. I refused. So, the city Republican Committee endorsed someone else, who I believe to be an excellent candidate.
Well, at a meeting at the Republican Chairman’s office, I was forced to witness a shouting match for over 25 minutes by a relative of one of the candidates over the issue of abortion. Can you believe this absurdity?
There is absolutely nothing a local candidate or elected city or county official can do about abortion. It is exclusively a state and federal issue. In spite of this I had to suffer through this.
Folks, please try to understand that local elections are about local issues not state nor federal issues.
We all have our particular views but let us keep things in perspective.
By Lou Poccia, Utica
Land surveyors provide vital service
Many of us make assumptions. We assume our shoe is still tied. We assume that the gas left in our car’s tank will get us home. But whether it’s tripping over your shoelace or getting stranded on the side of the road, through trial and error, we have all proba- bly learned that we might not always be right. With that in mind, why is it that we assume we know where our property line ends and our neighbors’ begins? It’s extremely difficult to tell, and yet we assume we know, and blindly follow that assumption. Sometimes to our own detriment. There is another way. For hundreds of years, land surveyors across New York have serviced this need, and many more, by providing consumers with a vital resource: a map surveying their current or future property. These maps present pertinent details to the consumer, such as where your property lines are located, the history and perceived future of the land, where on your property it is safe to build, and more.
Typically, your house and land represent one of your largest assets. Do you really want to assume you know their worth?
Our professional organization, The NewYork State Association of Professional Land Surveyors (NYSAPLS), was founded in 1963 and today is comprised of more than 1,200 licensed land surveyors across the state. Our mission is to foster the establishment and maintenance of uniform high professional standards of work and ethics in the practice of the profession of land surveying; to promote and enhance the profession through its government affairs program; to educate the public about the role and responsibilities of the professional surveyor; and to provide quality professional development opportunities to the land surveying community, ultimately ensuring the health, safety, and welfare of the public.
Ultimately, we want to ensure that the public has access to reliable, trustworthy surveyors that can be hired to assess their investments. We achieve this by providing consumers with an online listing of member licensed land surveyors, as well as informational pages on our website detailing services that may be provided by them.
It is vitally important to understand that hiring an unlicensed surveyor will be of no use to the consumer, as the maps and information gathered during that survey will not be recognized as evidence in the event of a land dispute.
On top of that, there is simply no replacement for a professional and licensed land surveyor visiting your property and assessing the land. Effectively, licensed professional land surveyors are the stewards of your property ownership in NewYork State. This is why land surveying is.one of the oldest professions in the country and several of our nation’s founders were land surveyors, too.
This week, our organization, along with hundreds of others across the country, are celebrating the impact our profession makes on the community with National Surveyors Week. By Greg de Bruin, President, NewYork State Association of Professional Land Surveyors
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