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Untitled (13)Reprieve For Stony Kill Stony Kill will stay open. The two state legislature ommittees responsible for eviewing New York's 1978- 9 97&9 budget last week allocated 100,000 to the Department of ,nvironmental Con- ervation to run the 700 -acre ducational center located ff Route 9D in Wappinger ,nd Fishkill. DEC officials earlier this aonth had threatened to -lose down the center if at east $50,000 was not allocated to Stony Kill by the egislature. They said that they could A operate the center at !ven a minimum level without the money. Bill Reiner, the head of the citizens foundation for Stony Kill and a leader in the fight for funds, says that the state senate's finance committee and the state assembly's ways and means committee agreed to add the ap- propriations to the budget last week. Both houses of the legislature are expected to vote on the budget later this week. Reiner says he sees no reason why the Stony Kill appropriation will be changed. "We got the money thanks to the efforts of Senator (Jay) Rolison and an old friend," Reiner commented Saturday. The `old friend" is Jim Biggan, the secretary of the senate finance com- mittee and a former head of the DEC. Biggan was DEC commissioner when the department took over Stony Kill four years ago. The money will be used to hire several teaching and farming personnel for the farm, and will allow the department to initiate new agricultural education programs there. The fight to gain funding for the center has lasted several months, and ap- peared to have been won earlier in the year when governor Hugh Carey in- dicated that he would include at least $50,000 for Stony Kill in his tentative budget. For reasons that have never been fully explained, the $50,000 was not in the budget when it was sub- mitted to the legislature earlier this month. The fight to have the money appropriated began anew, with DEC officials vowing to close the center and saying that they would consider giving up the farm if the money wasn't ap- propriated. DEC officials also leaked word that the state Division For Youth was interested in using the property as a home for juvenile delinquents. While it was true that other state agencies were looking at the property, it appears that the rumors were merely part of the campaign to get full funding for the center. -Jim DeFelice