Pubdate: Thu, 27 May 2004 Source: Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY) Copyright: 2004 Daily Freeman Contact: http://www.dailyfreeman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3269 Author: Jonathan Ment Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) SEN. CLINTON GIVES, RECEIVES PRAISE AT PATTERN CONFERENCE NEW PALTZ - U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton received a standing ovation as she approached the podium to make the opening remarks at Mid-Hudson Pattern for Progress' 40th anniversary conference on Wednesday. Outside, a handful of demonstrators voiced their opinions on medical marijuana and U.S. involvement in Iraq. U.S. Rep. Maurice Hinchey, who introduced the senator in the Studley Theater on the SUNY New Paltz campus, received his own accolades in the form of applause, hoots and hollers. "We ... were very excited when we learned she was considering a run for the senate," Hinchey, D-Hurley, said of Clinton. "She campaigned in places in upstate New York where they had not seen a ... senator, let alone a candidate, in decades. "It's exciting to me that, for 40 years, there's been this kind of accomplishment," Clinton, D-N.Y., said of Pattern, a public policy research and planning institute. "Perhaps the best years for Pattern lie ahead." Clinton said progress in Kingston, Poughkeepsie and other Hudson River cities has not been easy, but the results are clearly visible. PRAISING the region as "the most beautiful place in the entire country," Clinton said open space and farmland must be preserved while incentives are provided for the right kinds of business to locate here. And, she said, "it's important to harness the resources we already have, the human capital." Clinton said she remembers visiting Hudson, in Columbia County, in 1999 - when she was first lady and a Senate candidate - just as the renaissance there was starting to take hold; and Beacon, before the Dia Art Foundation's new museum, Dia:Beacon, was even a concept. Stewart International Airport didn't have low-cost carriers like the recently arrived Independence Air, and the region was just beginning to recognize the Hudson River for its historic significance and ability to attract visitors and commercial interests. Of brownfields, polluted former industrial sites that now are vacant, Clinton said they need to be turned into something positive for the future. Sprawl and traffic congestion, meanwhile, may not have been on the agenda 40 years ago, but they are today, the senator said, noting that more housing is needed so people who want to remain in this area or return after college can afford to. CLINTON said New York's agricultural traditions, such as apple growing and the wine industry, can be part of the economic future. She said there are efforts to create a farm-to-fork initiative that would encourage restaurants and other large consumers in New York City to look north for their agricultural needs, rather than to New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Describing a creative economic development effort she's worked on in the Adirondacks, Clinton said the Hudson Valley needs to take existing small business and connect them to the global marketplace. In the state's North Country, Clinton said, a cooperative was formed, and through a special initiative with online auction and merchandise sales sites, one- and two-employee companies making things like soap or fly-fishing rods have been able to sell their wares internationally. THE demonstrators outside the theater had left by the time Clinton's 20-minute address ended, but a waist-high model of a human head labeled "depleted uranium" remained seated by the entrance as the senator was driven from the rear of the building in a short motorcade of black SUVs. The Pattern conference, "Change Challenge Charter: An Agenda For Our Future," continues today at SUNY New Paltz with keynote speaker Michael Gallis, who will put the Hudson Valley in a global context leading into a discussion titles "The World in a Hudson Valley Context." Following the session, smaller group caucuses will work on issues of environment, the economy, respectful social and political culture, and a dynamic cultural society. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake