- By Dan Veaner
- News


Monaghan says that after moving 14 times in 20 years he is putting down roots in the Village, and running for Trustee is part of that effort. He says he is committed to environmental issues. The Lansing Star recently interviewed him about his candidacy at his Village of Lansing home.


I have had over 35 years of working in the creative services as an artist and as a graphic designer, as an art director and as a creative director. I consider those skills to speak to my ability to be a creative problem solver. I have had a number of positions where I worked in management in the commercial arts, working for large corporations, small community hospitals. I've done a lot of medical marketing. Communications is the name of the game. So I would bring that experience.

What would you like to make happen that the current board has not worked on?


You must be part of the Community Party.


What key challenges do you see the Village facing in the next two years?

Some of the big challenges come from unfunded mandates that are coming down from New York State. At some point I would like to see us be part of the response that's coming from municipalities all over New York State, saying we need to stop unfunded mandates. They are a threat to our fiscal soundness and our fiscal responsibility.

You're talking about things like the growing local responsibility for storm water management and those things?


The land in the northeast/Dart area that was purchased and Poison Ivy Point are almost parks. Should action be taken to make them public areas now, or is it something for the future? Why?



In the case of Poison Ivy Point there are two more steps, to get the right of way from the railroad and signage. The northeast parcel is more open space than park space right now. Should it be developed with walking paths or left as open space?


As you canvass for the election, are Village residents saying that they are happy? What are they asking for and what do you plan to serve those needs?

I don't know if there will ever be a land lease in the Village, but it's certainly an issue that I would like to see us stand with other municipalities on. If nothing else I would like to see us have a conversation which addresses the impact that this industry could have on the quality of our water and on our roads.

Do you favor an outright ban, then?


Is there room for business growth any more? How will you support it (if you do)?

Yes, more business in that district is good. Better design, better traffic patterns -- any kind of improvements to those districts that help decrease pollution and enable people to get in and do business here in the village are great.

There has been a lot of talk for years about the potential of developing Sundowns Farm and what would happen if it were developed. Hypothetically if it were to be sold for development what would you like to see there?

I read your article about whether Lansing is becoming a suburb of Ithaca. I think they are talking about building a development of over 300 units just north of Burdick Hill. I think that kind of development needs to be balanced with an inciteful vision for preserving open space.

Have you talked to the Town's Lansing Pathways Committee?

Anything we can do to foster inter-municipal cooperation is something that I think is desirable.

Roger Hopkins talks about what you just said, having pathways from the Village mall area all the way up to the Town Center.

We want the Village and the town to be walkable. We like the idea that you can walk anywhere in the Village within 20 minutes.

Lansing has been split up by the post office, the phone company and the school districts. I think all the Village residents have Ithaca ZIP codes and phone exchanges. Arguably there is no Village identity. The Mayor has said that a lot of people who live in the Village don't even know they live here -- they think they live in Ithaca.


A lot of people move to the Town because of the quality and smaller size of the schools there. For Villagers, some are in the Lansing district and some in the Ithaca district. Lansing is so split up in so many ways... should it just be one school system for the whole town including the Village?

No, no, no. I don't think you can all of a sudden tell people their kids are no longer in the school system they chose.

Theoretically their kids would be grandfathered into the Ithaca schools.

But if I want to live in live in Lansing but I want my kids to go to Ithaca schools I have the option of moving to the Village. If I want to live in Lansing and I want them to go to just as wonderful a school system, but with a smaller, different kind of feel to it, then I have that option of moving north of Burdick Hill.

Village officials say the Village will never merge with the Town and there is no cost benefit in doing so. Town officials say there is a cost benefit that would lower taxes by merging services, and that the cultures and values of the two municipalities are much closer together than they were when the Village was formed. How do you stand on merging, and why?

I think there is a reason they split up. There are values up in North Lansing that didn't allow the Village to feel our needs were being considered. That's the reason the split happened. I think it's done.
If anything there are people in the Town who would give anything to have some of the quality of what we have in the Village. We should keep it the way it is as far as I'm concerned.

Along those lines you know the Mayor has spoken up about Town taxes and has been trying to get them reduced for Villagers. Where do you stand on that issue, and what will you do to work on it?


What would you like people to know about your candidacy that we haven't already discussed?

It seems at this point that I will be running unopposed, but even so, my goal is to knock on 300 doors to introduce myself to people. I'm a newcomer. I would like people to know who I am, and what I stand for. I'm willing to work really hard. I feel it's a big opportunity for me to become a part of this Village in a new way.
The Village Elections will be held from noon to 9pm at the Village of Lansing Office, 2405 N. Triphammer Rd., Ithaca, NY.
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