Assembled automatically from the city’s public-meeting transcripts, a draft for residents, not an official record.
Launch EditionHudson, New York

Future Hudson · Hudson, New York

Weekly Digest

A Wednesday morning civic digest for residents of The Friendly City.

Hi all,

This morning's first Weekly Digest went out with mistakes.
We are very sorry.

We have identified the problem and fixed it. This is the corrected version.

Thank you to the neighbor that alerted us.
Please let us know if you notice that anything else is off.

Peter

Launch Edition · Hudson, New York

A new experiment in civic engagement.

FUTURE HUDSON is proud to announce the launch of The Weekly Digest & The Public Archive.

This is one experiment, with two parts.
The Digest & The Archive.

The Weekly Digest is a Wednesday morning email sharing what happened in public meetings last week, and what is coming in the week ahead.

The Public Archive is a growing collection of readable transcriptions of every city meeting since January 2026, at archive.futurehudson.com.

Together, they give neighbors in The Friendly City access to the workings of city government.

Last week

  1. Bliss Towers clears its environmental review
  2. Council halves the county's parking deal
  3. A lawyer is back about the dock law
  4. Treasurer reports another $160K hole in Hudson's books
  5. Sidewalk Improvement District opens for 2026 applications
1

Bliss Towers clears its environmental review

What happened.The Planning Board issued a negative declaration on the Bliss Towers redevelopment at a special meeting May 28, ending the SEQR environmental review process. The vote was unanimous and clears the way for the project to move toward site-plan approval. Engineering questions raised in the May comment letter, water and wastewater capacity, traffic, and the townhouse setback variances, still need final answers. Those come back to the Planning Board on June 9 and the Zoning Board of Appeals on June 17.

Where it’s headed.The townhouse variance hearing at the Zoning Board of Appeals on June 17, and a full public hearing on the site plan later this summer.

Planning Board · May 28Read the full meeting →
2

Council halves the county's parking deal

What happened.Hudson approved Columbia County's request to reserve 18 weekday parking spaces at the 11 Warren Street lot, but cut the term from five years to two, and required the county to pay, in writing, for moving the displaced handicap parking space to a more accessible corner across the street. Both amendments came from the floor, after residents said the original deal gave the county a long-term hold on a public lot for less than the public pays.

Where it’s headed.The amended lease returns to county legislators for sign-off. Hudson's resolution takes effect once both sides countersign.

Common Council · May 26Read the full meeting →
3

A lawyer is back about the dock law

What happened.Near the end of the May 26 Council meeting, a Whiteman Osterman and Hanna attorney representing what appears to be Colarusso and Son told the Council his client is the only Hudson business harmed by the dock-operations law (§ 325-17.1) the Council introduced at its May 18 informal. The Council president agreed the law wasn't on the meeting's agenda and committed to a proper public hearing. The attorney urged the Council to get outside counsel before acting. Watch Thursday's Legal Committee for the first signs of how that hearing gets scheduled.

Where it’s headed.A public hearing date is expected to be set at Legal Committee, Thursday June 11.

Common Council · May 26Read the full meeting →
4

Treasurer reports another $160K hole in Hudson's books

What happened.The city treasurer presented Hudson's 2025 books. The bottom line: Hudson's unassigned fund balance dropped another $160,000, far better than 2024's $1.3 million plunge, leaving about $1.39 million on hand. Government-finance guidance says the city should have closer to $2.6 million. The pattern, smaller losses but still losses, sets up a tight 2026 budget cycle and renewed conversations about which line items can absorb cuts.

Where it’s headed.Budget conversations resume through the summer, with the formal 2026 budget process beginning in early fall.

Common Council · May 26Read the full meeting →
5

Sidewalk Improvement District opens for 2026 applications

What happened.The Public Works Board opened sidewalk season with nine fresh Sidewalk Improvement District applications on top of last year's carry-overs and roughly $310,000 in the fund. Members scheduled a Thursday afternoon walk-through with the mayor to weigh priority sidewalk pieces on Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Streets, plus an attachment to municipal buildings, for a Request for Proposals that funds work this summer. Residents whose blocks are on the list can attend the walk-through to make the case for inclusion in this year's RFP.

Where it’s headed.The Request for Proposals for 2026 sidewalk work goes out after the walk-through; selected blocks see work in mid-to-late summer.

Public Works Board · May 27Read the full meeting →

Missing from the record

These meetings appear on the calendar, but have not been uploaded to YouTube.

Mon Jun 1IDA

This week’s civic calendar

Hudson, this week

Mon Jun 8, 5:30 PMCode and Infrastructure CommitteeCity Hall
Tue Jun 9, 6:00 PMPlanning BoardCity Hall
Tue Jun 9, 6:30 PMWard Five Community Town HallCentral Fire Station
Wed Jun 10, 5:30 PMWard Two Community Town HallBliss Towers Community Room
Thu Jun 11, 6:00 PMLegal Committee - HybridCity Hall
Fri Jun 12, 10:00 AMHistoric Preservation CommissionCity Hall
Sat Jun 13, all dayHudson Flag Day ParadeGreen St
For links to join city meetings
Go to City’s Official Calendar →

This is an experiment in civic engagement. It gathers Hudson's public meetings from the City and School District YouTube channels into a Weekly Digest and a Public Archive.

Meetings can change; for the most reliable information, confirm at Gossips of Rivertown. Reply with questions.

Peter

Weekly Digest

A Wednesday morning civic digest for residents of The Friendly City.

Browse The Public Archive →