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Chamber News
Food Drive
The Pine Bush Area Chamber of Commerce is collecting for the New Prospect Food Pantry...
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Town of Crawford Sign Law
We are looking for input from the Town of Crawford Business Owners and residents.
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Shawangunk Byway
Byway group unveils tourism and preservation plans.
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Festival of Lights Business and Game Sponsors
The Pine Bush Chamber of Commerce would like your participation in this year's Festival of Lights.
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Positions available at the Boys & Girls Clubs
The Boys & Girls Clubs are now hiring for a variety of positions within the organization for the 2010 – 2011 school year. Our Clubs offer staff the opportunity to work with youth on a daily basis and help our members strive to BE GREAT!
Click for more

Around Crawford Book
Fritz Meier has been working on a book about the Town of Crawford titled "Around Crawford". It will be published by Arcadia Publishing and it will be available at the end of March. All of the proceeds from this book will go to the Pine Bush Area Library.
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Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
nilmdts
Remembrance photography to parents suffering the loss of a baby with the free gift of professional portraiture.

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10 Ways to Reduce Your Summer Utility Bills
Now that the summer heat--and summertime utility bills--are making you sweat, you might want to consider making a few changes to cut your energy consumption.
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Web Site Updates
We are looking for chamber members to submit stories, articles, photos and event information...
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Pine Bush Art Tour
A photo journal of the Pine Bush Chamber of Commerce Art Tour
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Pine Bush Area News...
Food Drive
The Pine Bush Area Chamber of Commerce is collecting non-perishables for the New Prospect Food Pantry. Please drop off your donations at: Sneakers to Boots, Hearts & Flowers, Subway, Stonehenge Farm Market, or Quimby & Smith. Please help us stock the pantry!

PLEASE PASS THIS INFORMATION ON!!


Town of Crawford Sign Law
Please review the current Town of Crawford SIGN LAW and the sign law SURVEY.

We are looking for input from the Town of Crawford Business Owners and residents. Please take the time to review the current Sign Law, and fill out the Survey. This is our town, and your input is important!!

Please e-mail your responses to Jo Ann Keegan at jktec@frontiernet.net.
Remember, TOGETHER we CAN make a difference!

Thank you all!

Ellen Quimby


Shawangunk Byway
Shawangunk Mountains Region – Plans for economic growth through tourism and preserving open space were unveiled today by the Shawangunk Mountains Regional Partnership of the 11 municipalities participating in the State-designated Shawangunk Mountains Scenic Byway.

Web site features attractions of the Shawangunk Mountains Region.

The tourism plan features a new 19-page web site, now up and running at www.mtnscenicbyway.org. The site presents photographs and descriptions of the scenic, natural, recreational and historic attractions of the Shawangunk Mountains Region.

“We’re very proud of the web site,”says Al Wegener, executive director of the partnership. “Linda Engler and her creative team at Ad Essentials in Gardiner have done a super job of presenting the beauty and activities of the Shawangunk Mountains Region.

“But it’s not just for tourists,” he adds. “People who live here should check it out. I think they’ll gain an even greater appreciation for their town, the towns around them, the towns on the ‘other side’ of the mountains, and for the entire Shawangunk Mountains Region.”

The heart of the site is a map of the region, showing the 88-mile route of the Shawangunk Mountains Scenic Byway, including a 4.8-mile section through the Gardiner hamlet  to be designated this summer.  The route encircles the northern Shawangunk Mountains and tours the Rondout and Wallkill valleys, visiting the towns of Crawford, Gardiner, Marbletown, Montgomery, New Paltz, Rochester, Rosendale, Shawangunk, Wawarsing and the villages of Ellenville and New Paltz.

Shorter trips are also described: a northern loop with Rt. 299, Rts. 44/55 over the mountain to  Rt. 209 and Lucas Tpke in the Rondout Valley, and then Rt. 213 and the Springtown Road section of Rt. 7;  a trip along  Rts. 44/55 from Rt.208 through the hamlet of Gardiner  and over the Shawangunks to Rt. 209; a southern route from Rt. 209 in Wawarsing, through Ellenville and over the mountains on Rt. 52 into Pine Bush and then south on Rt. 302 into Bullville; and a Wallkill Valley tour from Pine Bush east along Rt. 52, north on Rt. 14 in the town of Montgomery and then Rt. 9, east on Bruyn Tpke. through Wallkill and then north on Rt. 208 to New Paltz.

A Regional Guest Artist section showcases artists in the region, starting with the landscape photography of the Shawangunk Mountains by award-winning professional photographer G. Steve Jordan, who has a studio at the Water Street Market in New Paltz.

Maps showing how to get to the byway, street maps of various communities, hiking and biking maps and information on public transportation are included along with  links to the towns and villages,  the tourism web sites for Ulster and Orange counties, and to other relevant sites in the region.
Information on the Shawangunk Mountains Regional Partnership is included on the web site along with the complete Byway Corridor Management Plan

The site is made possible by grants awarded to the NYS Scenic Byways Program through the Federal Highway Administration’s National Scenic Byways Program and by the NYS Department of Economic Development arranged by State Senator John J. Bonacic.

In addition to the web site, the regional tourism plan also includes a guide to the region in magazine format, which will be published in June, poster-size maps of the byway, publicity of byway activities and presentations to community and special-interest groups.

“The program expands next year to include portable kiosk visitor centers, a guide to our historic sites and antique shops, and a guide to the farms and farm markets in the region. We’ll also have signs, which are in the works with the DOT,”says Wegener

Byway partnership also issues regional open space plan.

 The executive committee of the Shawangunk Mountains Regional Partnership of the 11 municipalities participating in the scenic byway have approved by unanimous vote the final draft of the Shawangunk Mountains Regional Open Space Plan and the plan is now available for viewing and downloading from the new web site at www.mtnscenicbyway.org.

The plan is illustrated with aerial and landscape photographs of the region and includes several interpretive maps. In summary, the plan calls for the partnership to be supportive of the work of land trusts in the region; to explore the ways suggested to finance conservation of open space resources, to guide development in a manner which is resource-friendly; to advocate for changes at the State level that will facilitate the preservation of open space in the region; and to track progress by the partnership in carrying out the plan.

“The plan has taken us nearly three years to complete, and people in all of the towns and villages have participated,” explains Al Wegener, executive director of the partnership. “It was originally approved in December. But then Elliott Auerbach and Vin Martello moved to the Ulster County government. Now Ellenville Mayor Jeff Kaplan and Marbletown Supervisor Brooke Pickering-Cole are representing their municipalities on our committee and they have approved the plan. So we feel good now about issuing the plan on our new web site and moving forward with it.”  

Wegener points out that approval of the plan by the partnership’s executive committee does not constitute official approval by any of the municipalities. He says: “The plan is not intended to take the place of any town, village or county plan for preserving open space. The idea was to explore what we could do from a regional perspective, as a partnership of local towns and villages. And we found that there’s much our partnership can accomplish by working together to preserve the incredible beauty of our region. But, of course, it’s going to take people-power to do it.”

The area considered in the plan covers the region outlined by the route of the Shawangunk Mountains Scenic Byway and related areas, such as historic districts. In all, the region encompasses some 134,000 acres. Of these, 60,000 acres are in the mountains and the 320 farms in the region cover about 28,000 acres. About 33,500 acres are in a protected status, with around 89 percent of this in the mountains, leaving only 11 percent of the land in the valleys in a protected position.

The economic importance of agriculture ranks #1 in the region, and the plan points out that the contribution farms, orchards and vineyards make to tourism generates growth for many other businesses. While the mountains are the centerpiece of the region, the plan emphasizes the importance of scenic views of the mountains across farmland and open space and includes specific strategies for preserving farmland and scenic views and for maintaining healthy forests.

The important role of land trusts is recognized and the plan suggests ways the regional partnership can work cooperatively with the six land trusts in the region, particularly to help preserve land in the valleys.

Strategies for financing conservation are also discussed. Among these is the idea of gaining State permitting legislation for town residents to be able to vote on a real estate transfer fee when the market turns around. Such a fee could be used for financing open space conservation.

The plan offers ways land can be developed in a manner friendly to the resources which are important to the well-being and character of the region, such as the connections between our mountains and other natural areas.  The plan also outlines how the partnership of 11 municipalities can advocate for changes at the State level which would improve the ability of the region to conserve land and resources, such as gaining an appreciation of the value of scenic views to the tourism industry and having that reflected in the State’s Environmental Protection Fund.

Consultant for the project was Behan Planning Associates, LLC. The plan was funded through a collaboration of the NYS Department of State Qualities Community Program; the Federal Highway Administration’s National Scenic Byways Grant Program administered by the NYS Scenic Byways Program of the NYS Department of Transportation; the municipalities of the Shawangunk Mountains Regional Partnership; the Mohonk Preserve and the Shawangunk Ridge Biodiversity Partnership.

“We’re very pleased to be able to unveil our tourism and open space plans at the same time,” says Wegener. “It just came out that way. But they really do go hand-in-hand; at least, that’s the perspective our partnership has had from the very beginning.”

For more information, contact Al Wegener at 845.399.0002 or aweg@earthlink.net or
John Valk, Chair and Shawangunk Supervisor at 895-2900
Carl Chipman, Vice Chair and Rochester Supervisor at 626-3043
Toni Hokanson, Vice Chair and New Paltz Supervisor at 255-0604
Phil Jamison, Chair of Crawford Planning Board at 361-5892
Jeff Kaplan, Ellenville Mayor at 647-7080
Joe Katz, Gardiner Supervisor at 255-9675
Brooke Pickering-Cole, Marbletown Supervisor at 687-7601
Mike Hayes, Montgomery Supervisor at 457-2600
Terry Dungan, New Paltz Mayor at 255-141
Patrick McDonough, Rosendale Supervisor at 658-3159
Ed Jennings, Wawarsing Supervisor at 647-6570


Festival of Lights Business and Game Sponsors
August 1 2010
Bill & Sue Wiand
Wiand Wellness dba Lion’s Den
POBox 429
Walker Valley NY 12588-0429

Subject: Annual Festival of Lights ~ Business Sponsors / Game Tents

Your chamber of commerce works hard all year long to coordinate events that encourage participation from its members and provides a means of drawing attention and potential customers to our local businesses. One such event is the annual Festival of Lights. This year, the event will take place on Saturday December 4 from 5:30 - 7:30pm on Main St. Pine Bush.

The Board Members realize that the membership area covers a lot of miles throughout this lovely countryside. In their effort to fulfill a membership benefit “to provide business exposure through events that benefit the community”, the Game Tents Sponsorship Program is just one of many ideas that has been developed over the years.

Even though this may not be a retail event opportunity, it definitely is a promotional event opportunity for everyone. The chamber provides the tents, lights, game materials and a front row location during the festivities. Your donation of prizes for the children is appreciated. [low cost prizes can be obtained from Oriental Trading at www.orientaltrading.com]

What the chamber would like to see from you:

1] Your participation as a business sponsor - even if you are a Main St. business you will benefit by having people wandering in and out of your shop. For those who are located off the beaten path, this will give you an opportunity to let people know you exist, where you are located and what you have to offer.

2] At least one person from your business to be present and involved in the activities in your game tent. [Additional assistance will be made available to you as needed.]

3] Signage to promote your business, business cards, brochures, etc. You can also give away some sort of discount coupon to encourage people to use your services or make purchases at a later date. Display some samples of your products: a visual representation of what you have to offer.

Together we can make a difference in keeping our local dollars just that - local! Contact me and I will sign you up for one of the game tents. There are only 10 in all, so don’t hesitate or you will lose out on this promotional opportunity - and miss out on all the fun!

Respectfully,

Sue Wiand
Festival of Lights Committee ~ Game Tents Coordinator
744.3960 [7am to 7pm]
wiandwellness@mac.com
POBox 1628
Pine Bush NY 12566
845 220.8125
info@pinebushchamberofcommerce.org
www.pinebushchamberofcommerce.org


Positions available at the Boys & Girls Clubs
The Boys & Girls Clubs are now hiring for a variety of positions within the organization for the 2010 – 2011 school year.

Our Clubs offer staff the opportunity to work with youth on a daily basis and help our members strive to BE GREAT!

Click Here for an Employment Application

Please fill out our employment application and forward to dragni@bgcorange.org, or fax to 845-361-3222.
Questions? Please call 845-361-2222.

Available Positions

Program Leaders ($10-12/hr)
Responsibilities Include:
Over site of day-to-day operations & supervision of children. Oversee Club staff, providing an age-appropriate curriculum for youth. Manage daily schedule & staff. Work with school staff and parents. Coordinate monthly community service projects. Clearance & national criminal background check required.

Available Locations:

Before School Programs (6:15-9:00am):
Circleville Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District
Pine Bush Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District

After-School Program (2:00-6:00pm):
Circleville Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District
Circleville Middle School, Pine Bush Central School District
Monticello Middle School, Monticello Central School District
Pine Bush Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District

Program Aides ($7.25-9/hr)
Responsibilities Include:
Organize games, homework assistance and other activities for children at our after-school program, and monthly community service projects. Clearance & national criminal background check required.

Available Locations:

Before School Programs (6:15-9:00am):
Circleville Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District
Pine Bush Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District

After-School Program (2:00-6:00pm):
Benjamin Cosor Elementary School, Fallsburg Central School District
Circleville Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District
Circleville Middle School, Pine Bush Central School District
Fallsburg High School, Fallsburg Central School District
Liberty Middle School, Liberty Central School District
Monticello Middle School, Monticello Central School District
Pine Bush Elementary School, Pine Bush Central School District


Around Crawford Book
Fritz Meier has been working on a book about the Town of Crawford titled "Around Crawford". It will be published by Arcadia Publishing and it will be available at the end of March. All of the proceeds from this book will go to the Pine Bush Area Library. Those who have expressed a desire to carry the book will be contacted soon by Arcadia's sales person. Fritze will be available to do a book signing event at your business. These events do bring customers in to your business giving you an opportunity to not only sell the book, but to showcase your business. Please e-mail Fritz at fmeier@hvc.rr.com if you would like to set up a time. If you have not contacted Fritz previously about buying books for your business, please send an email.

To celebrate the release of the book, the Catholic War Veterans in Pine Bush will be hosting a book release party on April 11th, 2010 at their hall on Center Street. The event will start at 12:00 and it will go until 2:00. Since the Catholic War Verterans building is 100 years old this year, the event will start with the removal of the building's cornerstone to see if there is a time capsule. This will be followed by a power point presentation about the book, coffee and cake, and book signing/sale. Please join us and see if there is a hidden treasure in the cornerstone and to get your own copy of Around Crawford.

If you have any questions, feel free to cantact Fritz Meier.fmeier@hvc.rr.com


Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
Four years ago, one mother and one photographer connected to form a non-profit organization to place professional photographers with families in need of remembrance portraiture. Currently there are approximately 7,000 professional photographers in 25 countries who volunteer their professional photography services to the Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep Foundation. As a volunteer member of the organization, I would like to share with you how we are helping families in this community of Orange County. When nurses or social workers at Horton or Arden Hill Hospitals, sometimes Westchester call me on behalf of a family, I pack up my gear and head to the hospital. I first offer the family my condolences on their loss or impending loss, and then I get to work, knowing that the images I capture will be their only connection to that child once they have said goodbye. Some of these babies pass away at or near birth due to genetic defects, pregnancy trauma or stillbirth. In other cases, doctors have tried everything they can to help find a cure for whatever ailment the child suffers from, but the hospital calls me when the family has realized all efforts have been exhausted and they will soon be disconnecting life support. In some cases, I am able to capture the last images of this child’s time here on Earth; in other cases, the parents are more interested in seeing their child memorialized eternally at peace, meaning once the child has passed and no cords or IV’s are connected. I wanted to contact you, as a member of the local media, to see if you would be interested in profiling the volunteer work we do as an organization. I would work with you, the hospital, and a family to provide a well-rounded story on NILMDTS so that the public may learn about the good work we do to help so many families. We were profiled on the Today Show (3/5/08) and to view that segment to learn more about how you could locally do a story on how NILMDTS is active in our community, please take a moment to view the segment by going to www.nowilaymedowntosleep.org and clicking on the story which can be found at the “top” of the web site, or in the “In the News” section. I look forward to the opportunity to discuss this with you further. You can reach me at my contact numbers above, and if you are interested in reaching anyone at the organization’s headquarters, that information is at the footer of this page. Additionally, on the second page of this letter, I am including a “fact sheet” from NILMDTS headquarters with current statistics on the program.

Best regards and thank you for your time reviewing this proposal,

Wendy Wellington
Wonder, Simplicity & Beauty In Portraits
www.wsbinportraits.com

Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep
7201 S. Broadway #150
Littleton, CO 80122
877-834-5667
www.nilmdts.org

Mission Statement

To introduce remembrance photography to parents suffering the loss of a baby with the free gift of professional portraiture. We believe these images serve as an important step in the family’s healing process by honoring their child’s legacy.

A Brief History of the Foundation

When co-founder Cheryl Haggard lost her son in February of 2005, she knew that her family’s healing was going to come by remembering details about Maddux, not by forgetting that he existed. Her husband contacted local photographer and eventual co-founder Sandy Puc’ and requested her services in helping to memorialize young Maddux. Over time, memories fade, but these cherished photographs will last for generations and help show the love that was shared between this young boy and his family, no matter how brief his stay on Earth was. From these beginnings, the Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep Foundation was born. Today, the organization encompasses approximately 7000 photographers worldwide who volunteer their services by creating sensitive images that will last a lifetime. We have also grown from an all-volunteer status to a small staff whose full responsibility it is to support the wonderful volunteers who make this mission possible. We believe the images of these precious children serve as an important step in the healing process and that this opportunity should be available to all in need regardless of socio-economic status. To this end, our entire network of professional photographers graciously donates their time and talents to this noble service. If you were to assess a dollar value to each session, including the cost of travel to and from the location, execution of the onsite photo shoot, retouching of images, a DVD with a musical slide show and a CD with high-resolution images, it would equal approximately $2,000. Our main web site, www.nowilaymedowntosleep.org has 1,800 to 2,000 unique users per day who visit an average of 16 pages per session. That equals approximately 30,000 page hits per day, or approximately 11 million hits per year.

Current Focus

Our main focus is are the photo sessions for infants from 25 weeks until after birth who have been or will be lost to critical illness or stillbirth. At the family’s request, one of our volunteer photographers comes to the healthcare facility and performs an onsite photo shoot. The photos are then professionally retouched and presented to the family in a DVD slideshow format with music as well as a CD of high resolution images. We provide this service directly to families, thus NILMDTS is not a HIPAA covered entity. While the nurses and social workers are the ones who call us 90% of the time to let us know a family is in this situation and to see if we have a volunteer available, they are simply the “go-between” to inform us there is a need, meaning we are not “vendors” of the hospital, instead we serve as guests of the patient just like Chaplains and Pastors. To offer a supportive place for parents to grieve, we administer a Family Forum on our website, www.nowisleep.com . We have received tremendous approval from parents on the forum for creating a place for families to gather and work through their grief together with others who have experienced similar situations. At this same web site we offer a second forum for photographers to counsel each other through their sessions and provide coaching to new members.


10 Ways to Reduce Your Summer Utility Bills
10 Ways to Reduce Your Summer Utility Bills

Now that the summer heat--and summertime utility bills--are making you sweat, you might want to consider making a few changes to cut your energy consumption. You can shave dollars off your monthly bills without sacrificing comfort, as long as you plan ahead and get creative. Here's US News and World Report's room-by-room guide to saving money this summer and benefiting the Earth at the same time.

Know Your Home Remodel ROI

An often-used measure to evaluate the financial feasibility of a project is "return on investment" or ROI, a calculation of how much of the cost of the investment can be recovered. The National Association of Realtors suggests seven projects that will give you good ROI. Although the data is updated annually, these 2009 approximate figures should give you a general idea of what return you'll get on your improvements:

Improvement Job Cost Value % Recouped Kitchen Minor $17,950 $15,250 85% Windows (Wood) $11,040 $9,400 85% Bathroom $12,900 $10,970 85% Windows (Vinyl) $10,160 $8,500 84% Two-story Add $105,300 $87,650 83% Kitchen Major $54,250 $43,600 80% Attic Bedroom $44,100 $35,250 80%
Refrigerator Retirement Savings Calculator

You probably know that refrigerators are typically the most energy-hungry appliances in your home, so the more efficient your refrigerator the more money you can save. Older refrigerators are usually two to three times more costly to run than newer models. If you still have a fridge from the 1980s, replace it with an ENERGY STAR qualified model and save over $100 each year on your utility bills. Replace a fridge from the 1970s and save nearly $200 each year! If you are wondering whether replacing your refrigerator is a good decision for you, ENERGY STAR Savings has a calculator you can use to find out exactly how much money you'll save by replacing your existing refrigerator.

Truths and Myths of Dryer Fires

Consumer Reports says: "Here's a frightening claim: Fabric-softener sheets can burn out the heating unit of your clothes dryer and possibly cause a fire. That's the warning in an e-mail message sent to one of our readers, who asked us whether it's true. The short answer is no, though dryer fires are a real hazard and there are ways to protect yourself." See the complete article for a few tips to keep your clothes dryer running safely and efficiently and to let their experts set the record straight.
NEWS

Most families with young children live within a mile of a public elementary school. The most common home heating fuel in the U.S. is gas. Only a third of American homes have a working carbon monoxide detector. These are just some of the findings of a comprehensive national sample of the more than 130 million residential housing units released July 1, 2010 by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. HUD's 2009 American Housing Survey (AHS) is the most thorough look inside the homes of millions of Americans and reveals everything from the square footage of the unit to how many homes have front porches, garages or even usable fireplaces. The 2009 survey reveals that significantly more American homes are larger, are more air conditioned and have more bedrooms and bathrooms than homes from the initial 1973 survey.

Fast Facts

Months that begin on a Sunday will always have a "Friday the 13th." Next one? May 2011.

The thigh bone is largest by volume and the longest and strongest in the human body. It is stronger than concrete.

You're born with 300 bones, but by the time you become an adult they have fused to only 206.

Ants make up about one tenth the earth's total animal biomass. About the same amount as humans.

Bamboo plants can grow up to 36 inches in a day.

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Web Site Updates
To keep the Pine Bush chamber of commerce website fresh with up to date information, and to provide internet exposure for our members, we will looking for articles, stories, business information and public events written by or about our chamber members.

Chamber News
Chamber News stories are primarily informational articles put out by the chamber itself. These story headlines appear on every page of the website. Once clicked on, the full story will be displayed. If you have information that would be considered chamber news, submit it as chamber news.

Life in Pine Bush
These are human interest stories that are related to the Pine Bush area, its residents or visitors. These articles should be written like a newspaper or magazine article. The two most relevant articles will headline on the front page of the website. Once clicked on, the full story is displayed as well as a link to view all the stories. If you have a human interest story, please submit it as a Life in Pine Bush article. Please include a photograph.

Events
Public events such as concerts, fund raisers, family events, as long as they are non-profit or free community events can be placed on the events page. The closest dated events will appear on the front page of the web site while all events are listed on the events page. Each event will have an entire page dedicated to it once it is clicked from the list. Events are also posted on the calendar as a clickable link to its own page. If you can, please submit a photograph along with your event information.

Business directory
Every chamber member will have a listing in the Business Directory under a specific category. Please contact the chamber if your business is not listed properly. We will be enhancing this directory to include more information soon. We need your business name, phone number, website, location, small icon (very small photo), and description. If your business has a website, it will be listed under Local Business Links on every page of the website. New members will be listed on each page of the website for one month after joining.

Visiting Pine Bush
There has been some discussion as to how this page will evolve while remaining fair for all members. Its original intention was to create a directory for people who may want to visit Pine Bush. The page was intended to list only attractions for the area, listing near by places to visit whether they were members or not.

If you use the Pine Bush Area Chamber of Commerce website for posting your event, please place a link back to us on your website.

The Pine Bush Area Chamber of Commerce reserves the right to reject any material that it feels does not fit the function or purpose of the website.


Pine Bush Art Tour












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