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AllOTSEGO.com, OTSEGO COUNTY’S NEWSPAPER/ONLINE
Oneonta, N.Y., Thursday, February 8, 2024
Volume 16, No. 16
COMPLIMENTARY
Community Members Seek Financial Aid for Ghanaian CGP Student By WRILEY NELSON
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SPRINGFIELD CENTER t. Mary’s Episcopal Church of Springfield has organized a GoFundMe page to raise financial assistance for a Ghanaian student who was admitted to SUNY Oneonta’s Cooperstown Graduate Program but who lacks funding. Enoch Bright Ampong, 28, is a museum docent at Elmina Castle, the oldest European building south of the Sahara. He was born and raised in the Central Region of the small West African country, a former British colony with a population of 34 million. He graduated with honors from Takoradi Technical University with a degree in tourism management. Ampong began giving tours at Elmina during an internship semester in 2016. “I’m very proud to say that I have never gotten a bad review after my tour,” he reflected. Elmina was built as a slave trading fort by Portuguese King João II in the 1480s and stands as a horrifying reminder of the four brutal centuries of the transatlantic slave trade. It was Continued on page 11
Photo provided
Bernadette Tiapo, SUNY Oneonta chief diversity officer (far left), and Laura Arias, SUNY Oneonta associate director of the Center for Racial Justice and Inclusive Excellence (far right), congratulate Julianna Everson, Zoey Mae Elizabeth Beal, and Emma Peck on their prize-winning essays.
Essay Contest Winners Announced ONEONTA tudents from Oneonta, Worcester and Gilbertsville-Mt. Upton central schools received first-place honors recently in the SUNY Oneonta Office of Equity and Inclusion’s Martin Luther King Jr. Essay Contest. Zoey Mae Elizabeth Beal, a fifth-grader at Greater Plains Elementary, won the elementary school category. Worcester Central School eighth-grader Julianna Everson took the middle school award, and the first place high-school finisher was Emma Peck, a junior at GilbertsvilleMt. Upton Central School. In their essays, students wrote about the legacy of Dr. King and addressed the following questions: Where do you see his impact in your community? Is there someone you know who embodies the spirit of Dr. King? How can people your age participate in this legacy and make an impact inspired by his work? The three first-place finishers received a plaque and a $100.00 prize. There were recognized on Monday, January 29 at SUNY Oneonta’s MLK commemorative program, which featured a breakfast keynote and panel discussion featuring Dr. Jelani Cobb, an American writer, author, educator, and dean of the Columbia Journalism School.
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Photo provided
Enoch Bright Ampong, 28, a museum docent at Elmina Castle in Ghana, is hoping to enroll in the Cooperstown Graduate Program.
INSIDE
OLT Making Improvements at Brookwood Point
► body of missing man found, page 2
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► emily Hilbert joins iron string press, page 2 ► oneonta rotary plans event, page 3 ► NEWS BRIEFS, page 3 ► be afraid-do it anyway, page 6 ► chili bowl contest is this weekend, page 7 ► cfoc awards grant to caa program, page 7 ► O’CONNOR TALKS ABOUT WRESTLING, page 8 Follow Breaking News On
AllOTSEGO.com
Photo provided
A new hedgerow will be planted to replace the hemlocks removed from Brookwood Point this winter.
COOPERSTOWN here’s snow on the ground, but according to Otsego Land Trust officials, work is already underway to prepare the Brookwood Point Conservation Area for spring and summer use. The 22-acre property located two miles north of Cooperstown is a quiet refuge for residents and visitors, with formal gardens, walking trails, and a natural launch area for canoes and kayaks. It has been owned and managed by OLT for public use since 2011. “The first step in preparing the gardens this year was to remove the overgrown hemlocks along the east side,” said Gregory Farmer, OLT executive director. The hemlock hedge was designed in the early 20th century to be about five feet high, Farmer explained. Over the
years, the trees had grown to 30 feet and were casting deep shade on the lawn and garden beds. The tight row of 20 hemlocks also increased the risk of infestation by the hemlock woolly adelgid, an invasive insect that attacks and kills North American hemlocks. “We waited to remove the hemlocks until the ground was frozen hard and the snow was not too deep,” said Justin Williams, agricultural specialist and public lands manager at OLT. “That prevents damage to the gardens from the heavy equipment.” D. Reese Tree Service of Cherry Valley took down the trees and will return to the site to grind the stumps. The sense of enclosure on all four sides contributes to Brookwood Point’s “secret garden” feel. A new hedgerow Continued on page 11
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST PRINT CIRCULATION 2010 WINNERS OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMER EDDM PRESORT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID ONEONTA PERMIT NO. 890
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
A-2 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA
Hilbert Joins Paper Staff COOPERSTOWN ast week, Emily Hilbert, 24, of Cooperstown, joined Iron String Press in the role of spring 2024 news media intern. Hilbert moved to the area in the fall of 2022 to attend the Cooperstown Graduate Program through SUNY Oneonta and pursue her master’s degree in museum studies. She is set to graduate in May and hopes to move into an administrative or event planning role at a museum. Originally from Long Island, Hilbert spent four years in Fredericksburg, Virginia, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in historic preservation with a minor in museum studies from the University of Mary Washington, graduating in 2021. While an undergrad, she worked as a costumed interpreter at the Mary Washington House and volunteered for various events for her department. Hilbert’s first internship was at the Fredericksburg Circuit Court, where she worked in the archives. The following year, she interned at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in the exhibition department. “It was a long commute into work three times a week,” she said, “but it was a good experience to see how large museums operate.” Recently, Hilbert completed a summer internship as an interContinued on page 9
Body of Missing Man Found After Intensive Search
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Photo provided by Susan Sklenarik
Stunner of a Quilt Could Be Yours ONEONTA—An array of quilts made by members of the Susquehanna Valley Quilt Guild will be on display February 15-18 and February 22-25 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Community Arts Network of Oneonta’s Wilbur Mansion, 11 Ford Avenue. An open house for the quilt show will be held on Friday, February 16 from 4-7 p.m. Light refreshments will be served. For the last 10 years or so, SVQGfeatured quilts have adorned the walls during CANO’s popular Chili Bowl, set this year for Saturday, February 10. The drawing for the raffle quilt (pictured above), which generally brings in a couple thousand dollars, organizers said, will be on Sunday, February 25. Money raised from the raffle is used to help fund projects made during the year that are donated to local individuals and community organizations. These projects include such items as comfort, fidget, and remembrance quilts, pillowcases, placemats, and fleece buddy blankets, some of which will be on display at the quilt show along with a variety of personal quilts made by SVQG members. For more information on the SVQG, visit susqvalleyquilters.org.
Wednesday, February 14
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COOPERSTOWN he body of a missing Otego man was located following a large scale multi-agency search conducted on Friday, February 2 in and around the Village of Cooperstown. Authorities said Matthew V. Sisson had left Bassett Hospital around 7 a.m. on Friday, January 26 and had not been seen since. According to a press release issued the afternoon of February 2 by Cooperstown Police Chief Frank J. Cavalieri, Sgt. Richard Kimmerer—a member of the Otsego County Sheriff’s Office assigned to one of the search teams—located a deceased male in the Susquehanna River at approximately 11:15 that morning which was later identified as the 45-year-old Sisson. The New York State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation is currently investigating the death. A press release issued by the Cooperstown Police Department thanks the New York State Forest Rangers, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, New York State Police, Otsego County Sheriff’s Office, Otsego County District Attorney, New York State Fire, Otsego County Emergency Services, Otsego County EMS, the Cooperstown Volunteer Fire Department, Fly Creek Volunteer Fire Department, West Edmeston Fire Department and members of the public who assisted in the search efforts. “We offer our condolences to the family of Matthew V. Sisson,” the press release reads. “At this time, the family is requesting privacy so they can process this tragedy and grieve in their own way.” It has been reported that Sisson was suffering from a perforated appendix when he left the Bassett Hospital Emergency Room on January 26. Gabrielle Argo, Bassett Healthcare Network director of public relations, said in a statement on Monday, February 6, “We are deeply saddened by this tragic event and wish to express our sincere condolences to Mr. Sisson’s loved ones.” Questions regarding the investigation should be directed to the New York State Police at pio@ troopers.ny.gov.
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA A-3
NEWS BRIEFS
Immigration Law Topic of Talk COOPERSTOWN—The Race, Equity, and Justice series will continue on Sunday, February 25 at 6 p.m. with a session titled “Immigration Law 101,” led by Reina Fostyk and Tasha GottschalkFielding of Cornell Law School’s Farmworker Legal Assistance Clinic. This session, held in the ballroom at 22 Main Street in Cooperstown, will help make sense of the current legal structure and is timely as Congress, President Biden and others weigh in on potential changes. Series speakers work throughout the Mohawk Valley Region as part of a unique partnership between the Cornell clinic, the First Presbyterian Church of Cooperstown and the First Baptist Church of Cooperstown. This is a chance to hear about the immigration assistance being offered locally, especially for minors who are in the U.S. without one or both parents. The public is invited to learn how national issues play out in our local communities— this series is free and open to the public.
Vets Club To Host Fish Dinner ONEONTA—The Oneonta Vets Club will host a fried beer-battered haddock fish dinner on Friday, February 9 from 5-7 p.m. at the club, 279 Chestnut Street. The dinner, which is open to the public, includes French fries, coleslaw, dessert and beverage with dine-in meal at a cost of $14.00 per dinner. Take-out is available. Call (607) 432-0494.
HWA Meeting Set for Feb. 21 BINGHAMTON—The New York Forest Owners Association and Cornell Cooperative Extension will present a talk on the hemlock wooly adelgid, an invasive, aphid-like insect that poses a significant threat to New York’s hemlock trees. Camille Caceci from the Finger Lakes Partnership for Regional Invasive Species Management will guide volunteers through the location, identification and reporting of HWA infestation. HWA is native to Asia and can stunt or kill
North American hemlocks by drinking their sap. Hemlocks are critically important in the ecology of the northeastern U.S. Training a large number of volunteers to detect and track HWA will be a key step in protecting the native hemlock. The presentation will be held at the CCE office, 840 Front Street in Binghamton, at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, February 21. Doors will open at 6:30. For more information, visit the Finger Lakes PRISM at https://dec.ny.gov/nature/animals-fish-plants/ invasive-species/resources-regulations/prism.
Sunday Series Continues COOPERSTOWN—On Sunday, February 11, Friends of the Village Library of Cooperstown will present Dr. Howard Ashford, assistant professor of history at SUNY Oneonta, speaking on the topic “Victor, Not Victim: A Historical Reframing of African Americans and Black Power.” Dr. Ashford is the author of “Mississippi Zion: The Struggle for Liberation in Attala County, 1865-1915.” His topic flows from research for this book. Dr. Ashford will discuss how understanding African Americans requires centering them within their respective narratives. “Mississippi Zion: The Struggle for Liberation in Attala County, 1865-1915” opens a historical discussion to analyze why it is necessary to understand African American power and its role in the creation of the Jim Crow society that dominates their narrative today. This FoVL “Sunday Speaker Series” presentation, in celebration of National Library Lovers’ Month and Black History Month, will run from 3-4 p.m. in the Village Hall third-floor ballroom at 22 Main Street, Cooperstown. This event is free and open to the public.
Beginners and Novices” at the Cornell Cooperative Extension, 123 Lake Street, Cooperstown, on Saturday, March 2 from 10 a.m. to noon. Participants will learn what supplies are needed to get started and how to grow seedlings at home with less stress. Following the March 2 workshop, Master Gardeners have scheduled a series of “troubleshooting” office hours from March to May to help guide participants to success. Space is limited. Those interested should register by Wednesday, February 28 at www.cceschoharie-otsego. org or by calling (607) 547-2536, extension 235. A $5.00 donation is suggested to cover materials.
Student Host Families Sought NEW YORK STATE—World Heritage International Student Exchange Program, a non-profit public benefit organization, seeks local families to host exchange students in the upcoming school year. Students come from a wide variety of countries, are between 15 and 18 years of age, and are enthusiastic to experience American culture, life, and school. They also share their own culture and language with their host families, providing everyone with a rich experience of intercultural exchange. Host families may be single parents, couples or individuals. Exchange students are provided with pocket money for small expenses, as well as full health, accident and liability insurance. They are carefully selected based on academic and personal criteria. World Heritage also offers qualified American students the opportunity to spend a school year, semester or summer abroad. For more information on applying as an exchange student or host family, contact Program Director Debra Garbon at 1 (800) 888-9040, www.world-heritage.org or info@world-heritage.org.
CCE Hosts Seed Starting Class Orchard Is Site of Workshop COOPERSTOWN—Readers who want to learn how to grow their plants from seed can learn from the experts as Master Gardener Volunteers Kim L’Heureux and Carol Phelps teach “Seed Starting for
MIDDLEFIELD—Cornell Cooperative Extension Schoharie and Otsego Counties will host a tree and small fruit pruning workshop at the Middlefield Continued on page 9
Rotary To Host Soirèe ONEONTA he Oneonta Rotary Club will hold a Valentine’s Day Soirèe on Wednesday, February 14 from 68 p.m. at Social Eats Café-Project 607, 546 Main Street, Oneonta. The public is invited to attend what organizers call “an enchanting evening,” featuring a five-course wine or mocktail tasting menu, amuse bouche (small plates) and dessert. “With gluten-free and vegetarian options available, the event caters to diverse palates, ensuring an unforgettable experience for all attendees,” according to a press release. The menu is comprised of roasted pear and goat cheese crostini with walnuts and honey drizzle; tomato soup shooter with grilled cheese truffle butter and honey mustard; endive and frisée with blood oranges and chicken; grilled filet mignon steak bordelaise; and strawberry mousse crunch. The wines are from countries served globally by the Rotary Club and the mocktails feature Seedlip non-alcoholic spirits from the United Kingdom, officials said. The emcee for the evening is Rotarian Al Rubin, chief executive officer and founder of A&D Transport Services. Tickets to this event are $75.00 per person. All proceeds directly support the work of the Oneonta Rotary Club in the local community and beyond. To reserve your seat, visit www.oneontarotary.org or call (607) 431-8025.
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TICKETS $20 ONLINE NOW AT FOOTHILLSPAC.ORG 24 Market St, Oneonta, NY
Meet and Greet with Mark Valley Mark Valley, the star of Garrow, will be available for a meet and greet. Valley is an American actor, best known for his role as Brad Chase on the TV drama Boston Legal. He was last seen on Fox’s now-cancelled action drama Human Target.
Meet and Greet will be between movie screenings and after Garrow.
HOMETOWN Views
A-4 HOMETOWN ONEONTA
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
The partial observer
EDITORIAL
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Flawed Energy Plan Moves Forward
Great Bowls of Fire
e have arrived. The 2023 NFL season is over but for the final touchdowns, which will come to us this Sunday when the American Football Conference champs Kansas City Chiefs meet the National Football Conference champs San Francisco 49ers in Las Vegas. This is the 58th annual Super Bowl, since 1966 the closing game of every NFL season. If all is true in Super Bowl history, this game, which is in fact no different from all those of the many preceding seasons, will rank among the most watched single sporting events in the history of television, commanding, perhaps, the largest audience among all broadcasts in America during the year. And this is a game, just one game, of football. The Chiefs were founded in Dallas, Texas by Lamar Hunt, whose family still owns the team. They moved to Kansas City in 1963 and played in the first Super Bowl, in 1966, losing to the Green Bay Packers and their beloved, remarkable coach, Vince Lombardi. Since that epic battle, Kansas City has played in four more Super Bowls, winning three, in 1970, 2020 (against the 49ers) and 2023, and losing in 2021. As the defending champions they are on tap to be formidable. The Forty-niners have been around since 1946 and they, too, still have their founding family, the Yorks, at their head. They are the sixth most valuable team in the NFL, with a worth estimated at $5.2 billion, and the twelfth most valuable team in the world. They are as well one of the most successful teams in NFL history, with five Super Bowl wins and two losses, one of which, four years ago, was to the Kansas City Chiefs. They, too, are looking impressive. The big game will be played in the 65,000-seat Allegiant Stadium, with a spot for two, under the dome but near the end zone, selling at $50.00 short of $7,000.00, not even close to the $7 million for a 30second commercial on CBS that will be seen from couches all around the world. The ticket price does not include travel, hotel, nourishment or a casino stop, but it does include the National Anthem, sung by Reba McEntire, and a half-hour halftime show performance by Usher, which promises to be somewhat riveting, right up there with Taylor Swift’s ongoing Eras Tour—151 shows across five continents, surpassing $1 billion. Both shows can lay claim to the mostwatched musical performance of the year. Superlatives all. But this is football, a graceful dance with a moving ball with a goal on a green field in front of cheering crowds, rather like the Mesoamerican ball game that was first played around 1650 BC. Thought to be ritualistic as well as recreational, later Mayan and Aztec ball games served to defuse or resolve conflicts or to settle disputes between kingdoms, often with a sacrifice in the end. Our football is a little different, although there have been many major casualties, or sacrifices—sprains, tears, breaks, concussions—and even some deaths, mostly caused by multiple head injuries. It’s not the safest sport, but still it goes on and it has retained its substantial fan base. There’s one more thing about football: It reaches across the aisle. This Sunday, late in the afternoon, is possibly the first time in many months that this entire country has been able to come together to watch. United. That’s a good feeling, if only for a few hours. Thank you, Super Bowl LVIII.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR POLICY “Hometown Oneonta” welcomes letters to the editor that reflect the writer’s thoughts on an article or other item appearing in the paper. They must include the writer’s name, address, email and telephone/ mobile number; the opinions expressed must be the writer’s own. Hostile, offensive, factually incorrect or excessively inflammatory content will not be published. The length must be no more than 250 words. The editors reserve the right to accept, reject or edit letters for clarity and space. Please send letters to: info@allotsego.com.
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MEMBER OF: National Newspaper Association, New York Press Association The Otsego County Chamber Published Thursdays by Iron String Press, Inc. 21 Railroad Ave., Cooperstown NY 13326 Telephone: 607-547-6103. Fax: 607-547-6080. Email: info@allotsego.com • www.allotsego.com Contents © Iron String Press, Inc.
DENNIS HIGGINS
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egislation proposed in Albany would create “RAPID,” a new department in the Office of Renewable Energy Siting to accelerate transmission buildout. Per megawatt-hour—amount of energy moved—those new lines will be very expensive. We must build full nameplate transmission for wind, which has a capacity factor under 25 percent. Solar has a capacity factor of under 14 percent: Although full capacity generation might occur mid-day in summer, much of the rest of the time solar yields little or no energy. Transmission for hundreds of solar and wind resources represents a lot of expensive wire to buy and install and maintain; wire which will need to be run across private land; wire that mostly will move nothing at all. With each of New York’s staggering missteps in decarbonization efforts, we reflect on the mess we’re in. ORES itself has stalled out in efforts to site intermittent resources. Solar and wind builders cancelled contracts late last year when the state would not simply award them more money. They are rebidding, and the state will make new, more expensive, awards. Upstate communities are pushing back at the state’s efforts to locate solar and wind projects where local laws say “no” to industrial development. New York gets about 20 percent of its baseload energy from hydroelectric on the St. Lawrence and Niagara rivers. Solar and wind currently account for about 7 percent of total state electricity. The fast approaching 70-by-30 goal in the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act requires that 70 percent of the state’s electricity come from renewables. In other words, 50 percent of the state’s capacity must come from solar and wind. The state must multiply all the installed solar and wind built over the last 20 or more years by seven- or eight-fold in the next six years. Hochul has no ruby slippers and no magic wand, so press releases can safely be ignored. The 70-by-30 CLCPA goal is not going to happen. Still, the state has decided lack of transmission must be the culprit. Let’s take a closer look at some of the problems with the state plan. In its 20-year “Outlook” report, the grid operator NYISO detailed transmission constraints across Long Island, the Southern Tier and Finger Lakes. These will prevent energy moving from intermittent resources to downstate through this decade, and maybe the next. Can we fix the state plan by building high-voltage lines over rural New Yorkers’ objections to support energy resources that may never exist? In its 2023 Power Trends, NYISO indicated that most—70 percent, or about 17,000 megawatts-- of the state’s fossil-fuel capacity will need to be available after 2030. NYISO has already determined that peakers, which CLCPA says must be shut down, will need to be kept online. The storage projected in state planning, a hundred times the largest lithium-ion battery on earth and costing many billions of dollars, if fully charged, would not power New York City for a day. Alberta Canada, like Texas, recently issued energy alerts to its citizens as it discovered that wind power does not work well when it is very cold. Of course, solar generates almost nothing in the winter. Assuming we could get anyone in Albany to listen, is there some sort of broader lesson in all this? California—following the same wacky blueprint New York is using—has had 20 years to build out its solar and wind assets, including transmission lines to move generated energy. California gets twice the electricity from every panel that New York could hope to get. California has deserts to site intermittent resources and transmission, while New York must sacrifice its farmland and forest. California exports solar to Nevada at a loss to avoid curtailment, yet still dumped something like three terawatt-hours of energy in 2023, enough to keep the lights on in New York City for a week. California has struggled to reduce reliance on fossil fuels: It has built new gas plants and still needs to import coal-fired electricity to ensure reliability. The 2015 Mark Jacobson publication—which was in part the model for New York’s energy plan—was soundly debunked by about two dozen climate scientists two years before the CLCPA was enacted. The Jacobson paper is nevertheless a sort of bible to the Big Greens. As noted in MIT’s technology review, that paper “contained modeling errors and implausible assumptions that could distort public policy and spending decisions.” Consequently, the CLCPA and the resulting scoping plan, following similar flawed analysis, have already led Continued on page 11
Letters to the editor … In their opinion
Tague Asked To Offer Solutions I am writing about a recent letter from Assemblyman Chris Tague, who wrote about some of the serious problems facing our state. Alas, Mr. Tague also epitomizes a lot of what’s wrong with politics today: He points his finger across the aisle and blames the other person/party for all of our problems. Now, don’t get me wrong, I am not exonerating the Democratic leadership in New York for the many boneheaded decisions they have made. However, I am tired of listening to the blame game that infects our political system. Mr. Tague, you said that Gov. Hochul offered no plans to fix our broken state. Well, where are your plans? I would invite you to submit another letter to this paper outlining how you and your party intend to fix the problems you mentioned— crime, housing, taxes, immigration, the economy (although we no longer have “record inflation”). If you want to “fight for change,” then offer us some concrete proposals that allow us to focus on how we can correct
things instead of just assigning blame. This will point us in a positive direction. It may also help you earn the votes of your constituents. I look forward to your response. Tony Kroker Fly Creek
Dr. Harman To Be Commended The Otsego Lake Association extends its congratulations and thanks to Dr. Willard Harman for his more than five decades of service to Otsego Lake and our community. Dr. Harman has led an effort to increase awareness of our lake’s issues and made substantive steps in research and work to improve the health of our lake. As a community, we are most fortunate to have the SUNY Oneonta Biological Field
Photo by Paul Donnelly
Station. Under Dr. Harman’s leadership, the BFS has been a constant resource—teaching, researching and working on lake science. OLA’s gratitude to Dr. Harman is best summed up by our words accompanying his 2017 Otsego Lake Association “Lake Citizen of the Year” award, thanking him…“for his 50 years of continuous research and reporting on the condition of Otsego Lake, being director of the SUNY Oneonta Biological Field Station since 1968, educating hundreds of biology students and interns in the field of limnology, working with area farmers to implement lake friendly agricultural practices, overseeing construction of the boardwalk and maintaining the Goodyear Swamp, developing the Thayer farm and boathouse for educational purposes, starting and running the master’s degree program in lake management, and, most importantly, for his genuine interest and dedication to ensure the health, wellbeing, water quality, and future of Otsego Lake—truly a local treasure we all love!” Jim Howarth Co-President Otsego Lake Association
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
HOMETOWN ONEONTA A-5 news from the noteworthy
TOBACCO fREE cOMMUNITIES
Local Govt’s Can Ban Menthol Cigarette Sales Compiled by Tom Heitz/SHARON STUART with resources courtesy of The Fenimore Art Museum Research Library
135 Years Ago
110 Years Ago
February 1889
Local News—“Pop” Snyder, the one, the only, and the original auctioneer, concluded his sale of the “once was” goods of Meyer Tanner Saturday morning. As was the case with the previous sales a large multitude were present and bids and witticisms alike filled the air in a never-ending stream till all the goods were sold. Just what certain unmarried gentlemen are going to do with certain articles of feminine apparel is a mystery for the sleuths of the city to discover if they can. February 1914
50 Years Ago
Charles W. Woolever, assistant professor of geography at SUCO will give a talk in the Faculty Lounge, Hunt College Union, on “Bangladesh Revisited.” Woolever, who was in Bangladesh from October 15 to December 10, 1973, had gone to Bangladesh in March 1972 as part of the Airlift of Understanding of the Emergency Relief Fund for Bangladesh. He is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. C.E. Woolever, who were missionaries in India for 42 years and lived in the Calcutta area until he was 19. He went back to India for a year of research in 1961-1962 and in 1964 joined the SUCO faculty. Woolever will be honored after his presentation as one of SUCO’s recipients of the State University’s Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in teaching. February 1974
30 Years Ago
Jonathan J. Layton, 20, of East Islip, a State University College at Oneonta sophomore, broke into a condemned house at 91 Maple Street, where Layton and members of the Iota Tau Kappa fraternity had once lived. He then shot himself with a boltaction hunting rifle. Layton’s act, an apparent suicide, stunned college officials as well as fraternity members who now reside at 21 Cedar Street. Police reported that a friend described Layton as being highly intoxicated. He was said to have spoken about harming himself. A SUCO official said it was the first instance of a student suicide in 18 or 20 years. February 1994
20 Years Ago
Propane gas is once again flowing through the Texas Eastern Products Pipeline Company’s pipeline. The line has been shut down following an explosion on January 25 that destroyed a house on Quaker Hill Road in Harpersfield. However, the flow of propane has been reduced by 20 percent and cannot be raised until the company receives approval from federal authorities. The recent incident was preceded by a more horrific explosion on March 13, 1990 and New York authorities are investigating. “The pipeline is 40 years old and this is the second disaster in our region in 14 years,” James Eisel, Harpersfield Supervisor said. February 2004 Solution: “‘Surprise Endings” (February 1)
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ur nation is on the precipice of banning sales of menthol-flavored cigarettes and flavored cigars—or not. After years of fits and starts, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration proposed the ban in 2022 and sent its rules to the White House Office of Management and Budget in October 2023 for final review, the last regulatory step. The OMB was expected to complete its process by early January 2024, but in early December, the White House tabled the final review until March 2024, raising fears the ban on sales of menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars could be delayed for years again. A delay in enacting the federal ban on menthol cigarette and flavored cigar sales means a delay in saving many lives. The FDA predicts the ban will prevent 300,000-650,000 smoking deaths over the next several decades, one third of which will be Black Americans. This is because about 86 percent of Black smokers use menthol cigarettes, following decades of the tobacco industry’s aggressive marketing of menthol cigarettes to Black Americans. This included connecting menthol cigarettes to Black American culture and civil rights institutions. The tobacco industry has also aggressively marketed menthol cigarettes to kids, Hispanics, women, LGBTQIA+ communities, and populations with low social economic status as well. Why has there been a decades-long push to ban the sale of menthol cigarettes? The reason is, menthol makes smoking easier to start and harder to quit. Science supports this: The U.S. Centers for Disease Control reports, “Menthol enhances the effects of nicotine on the brain and can make
tobacco products even more addictive.” The grim outcomes also demonstrate it: Black Americans smoke at lower rates than white Americans, but they die from preventable tobacco-related diseases at higher rates. They have a lower rate of quitting smoking than do whites even though they attempt to quit at a higher rate. Data shows these same disparities in New York State. The Public Health Law Center reports, “In New York State, about 30.5 percent of cigarettes consumed in New York State are menthol, and, in 2018, 86 percent of Black and 72 percent of Hispanic smokers in New York State used menthol cigarettes.” PHLC states that banning the sale of menthol cigarettes in the state alone “would result in 5.6 percent (33,284) of menthol cigarette smokers quitting, prevent 7,800 premature smoking caused deaths, and result in fewer young people starting to smoke cigarettes in the first place.” New York State would also likely see a reduction in the $9.7 billion spent annually on health costs directly caused just by smoking. The good news is that local governments do not have to wait for the FDA ban to go into effect. They have the authority to enact ordinances prohibiting the sales of menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars that will help prevent youth from ever trying them, help people quit, and prevent people from dying of tobacco-related illnesses. County or municipal laws can also build momentum toward a successful statewide policy by showing sales restrictions can be successfully implemented at the local level. In California, the state legislature passed a stateContinued on page 11
By MERL REAGLE
Totally New!… How many ways can you spell “new”?
ACROSS 1 Long-billed waders 7 Long-tailed squawker 12 Practitioners’ org. 15 Actress Joanne 18 Reo rival 19 King novel 20 Where Jackson got his “Stonewall” nickname 22 John Dunlop’s 1888 invention for bicycles 24 See 129 Across 25 Cook fast, as a steak 26 Pastor’s abbr. 27 Harrison’s nickname 29 Girl of song 33 Needle part 34 Spanish number 35 Beige, for one 39 Start of a city 41 “Tool Time” subject 44 Snow-capped peak 45 ___ glance 46 A giant among Giants 47 Outspoken sisterin-law of Vietnam’s President Diem in the 1960s 50 2000 Super Bowl player 52 ___ voce 54 Saver’s option 55 Came down with 56 Sweet, crunchy center 61 Leader of the Mel-Tones 63 A s Good As It Gets Oscarwinner 64 Barrister’s order? 65 Affront 66 Fiddler on the Roof role 67 Quayle’s home 71 Pie ___ 73 Wild plums 75 Hit on the head 77 Groan-inducing, as a pun 78 Billiard table’s rim 82 Helping hand for Morticia 83 Serengeti stampeder 87 Unconscious 88 Part of B.C.E. 90 Pointy 91 House tops 92 N.Y.C. closes it on Easter Sunday 95 Day break 96 Dinghy thingy 98 ___ reaction 99 Cousin of 911 100 Apiece 101 Group with no coverage? 104 ___ degree 106 Wind dir.
108 Space Needle city 109 Soft, white French cheese 113 Maui memento 114 Atkins diet staple 118 Goof 119 Best way to solve this puzzle 123 Prime candidate? 124 Date for Daisy Duck 125 Existing from birth 126 Norma ___ 127 Wynn et al. 128 Plumber’s tool 129 Columbus’s 1503 discovery, with 24 Across DOWN 1 They’re up to something 2 Fish or wish follower 3 Impression 4 Painter of Grand Jatte fame 5 Shade tree 6 Ogle 7 “Whatever-yourname-is” 8 Feat of Klee? 9 Lit. analysis 10 More spacious 11 Sad 12 Rose’s guy 13 Like a bodybuilder 14 Poe, partly 15 Bond classic 16 Loutish 17 Young ___ 19 Reversible car model
21 Covered with wool 80 As a joke 81 L ike The Taming of the 23 ___ story Shrew 28 Animal rights grp. 82 Office comedy, 9 ___ 30 Liquid Plumr rival 83 Decrease 31 Lethal loop 84 Slender wire nails 32 Singer John 85 Silas Marner girl 35 Slangy assent 86 M emorable Robin of 36 Yale of university fame Locksley 37 The Jungle author Sinclair 89 Prepared to travel again 38 Klemperer et al. 93 Perceptive 40 Shorten a sentence? 94 Night bear 42 Teed off 96 Furry river animal 43 Intro to “Yes, you!” 97 O f light’s ability to produce 47 Skier’s concern chemical changes, as in 48 Done in by Kasparov photography 49 Part of SUV, for short 101 Rob Roy portrayer 51 Director’s word 102 Drinking toast 53 Salad type 103 Like a certain Life Saver 57 The Beatles, e.g. 105 Old enough 58 1960s ring master 107 Ornamental nailheads 59 D o “the most important job 109 Fashion’s Ricci in the world” 110 90 degrees from norte 60 Addis ___ 111 A relative of mine? 62 Go too far with 112 Singer Horne 66 Demon barber 115 Dutch cheese 68 Israeli desert 116 Utah ski area 69 Threat to peace? 117 High-schooler 70 Lit. compilation 118 S hannon Lucid’s home for 72 Put a dent in 188 days 73 Clams (up) 120 Talk a lot 74 Currier & Ives print 121 Flamenco dancer’s shout 76 Actor Reeves 122 ___ whimsieve” 79 A s much as you like, 1960s-style
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
A-6 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA BE AFRAID-do it anyway
erna mcreynolds-morgan
Overcoming a Fear of Driving
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o you remember learning to drive? Were you excited? Dying to learn to drive? To get that independence? Freedom? Not me. I was terrified. I definitely didn’t want to go hurtling down a road in a multi thousand pound tin can at 50 or 60 or even 70 miles per hour. The « what ifs » sped through my mind faster than any race car. What if I ran over someone? Or crashed into another car? Or hit a deer? Or simply couldn’t learn to drive well enough to pass the test? Then, to make it worse, I worked in the summers when our school offered driver ed. That meant my super anxious and volatile mother would teach me. Why not my father? A calm man and an excellent driver. He had done this once before. He taught my mother to drive. And he swore he would never teach anyone to drive after he taught Mom to drive. I still don’t know how their marriage survived her learning to drive a grey 1948 standard-shift Chevrolet. Then I came of age. Absolutely terrified of driving, I clung to the steering wheel next to my whiteknuckled Mom who gasped and shrieked with every move. What lunacy was this? I had no choice. I was working my way through college. I had to get between my jobs and my classes. Was there any way to make this adventure even scarier? Yes, of course. My step was to buy a car. My parents couldn’t give me one, lend me one or lend me money to buy one. So I went to see the bank manager to borrow the money. I figured that I could pay for college, my room and make monthly car payments. But only if I had the car so I could work. And I had thought learning to drive was scary? I could hardly keep my fingers on the dial on that old rotary phone to call for an appointment to see the bank manager. I put on my Sunday go-to-meeting church clothes. Mom took me to the bank. Dripping sweat from the palms of my hands, I clutched my checkbook and savings passbook. Yes, I did have enough money to buy a car for cash but that didn’t fit my plan. Was my plan backward? Shouldn’t I get a job first? Learn to drive and then get a car? Definitely. But I figured that if I owed all of that money I would have to get my driver’s license. And I knew I would make myself pay off that loan. This meant I would not only have to work to get Dean’s List grades but I would have to earn enough at my jobs to pay off that loan and car insurance and registration. And gas and oil and insurance and car registration and licensing, plus all of those other little things that crop up. Tires, chains back then, all those endless repairs you need on a car that is several years old. Borrowing money to buy a car before I learned to drive sounds crazy to me as an adult—the sort of thing I would tell anyone “don’t doooo it.” But, I was still a teenager. With all the bravado that went with it. Once I bought my car with the bank’s money and my parents’ signatures, I took my first step to getting my license. I went to The Motor Vehicle Department, where they had prominently displayed the booklets to study to get a learner’s permit. No problem there. That test was “book learning.” I could do that. I read the book and got a perfect score. If everything about driving had worked that way I would have had no worries. But driving wasn’t that easy. I had to start the car with my foot on the brake while depressing the clutch. Then I had to shift that lever on the steering wheel at the same time I gradually released the clutch, pushed on the gas pedal and released the brake. All of this without stalling my parents’ enormous 1961 Chevrolet Impala. You might wonder what that lever on the steering wheel was. Well, those big, distinctive models of the 50s and 60s were quite different from your car today. Ours was a
1961 Chevrolet Impala, maroon on the bottom and white on the top. No bucket seats but instead what looked like couches in both the front and back seats. Those “couches” could seat three people and maybe a small child, too. When I slid that bench forward so I could touch the pedals with my short legs, everyone went forward with me. And most of my passengers sat with their knees tightly wedged between the dashboard and the car seat. Back to that lever on the steering wheel. That was the gear shift. That’s how cars came then. And the clutch? Ours was a standard shift, which meant using three pedals—the clutch, the brake and the gas pedal. The automatic cars cost too much for ordinary people, and especially for people like my family, who could barely afford the car we had. We lived on a farm with enough space between the house and the barn for tractors and milk and grain and other trucks to turn around. I could have learned basic driving there. But neither Mom nor Dad wanted the other to watch Mom teaching me how to drive. So Mom took me to the coal yard parking lot a few miles from our house. There I could lurch around in the car. Stall it. Sometimes jerk forward. Once in a while drive a few feet without running into a pile of coal or a tank of heating oil. How would I turn this fourwheeled ship? White knuckled with my knees banging together. And scariest of all? My Mom. Shrieking with every lurch forward. At the end of lesson one I was sobbing, screaming in fear and frustration, too. Fortunately, I had an older sister who rescued me. Betty had a bright orange VW Beetle and offered to get me through the driving test. After a few trips straight up the steep hill opposite our house, she thought I was ready to tackle the test. We made an appointment in a small nearby city. At the appointed time, on the appointed day, I pulled up into a designated parking space on one side of the square set aside for driving test candidates. The man who gave the tests was infamous in the region—both for his bad humor as well as the number of candidates he failed. When he got into the car, my knees began to bang together in earnest. On his first barked command the banging got even worse. My first couple of attempts to get my foot on the gas pedal failed. It slid off like a greased pig on a pole. Eventually I got my feet in the right positions on the right pedals—held together by my banging knee caps. I was ready for that examiner’s snapped command to move into the street. I had my turning signal prepped, my feet poised to manipulate the pedals so I could glide off with a “super smooth start”—none of that sputtering, chugging and finally stalling. A brilliant beginning? Even worse to come. Parallel parking was easy. I taught myself to do this from the pictures in the learners’ permit book. But next? Three-point turns. Turning around in the middle of the road? More illustrations! How did I blow myself up? Can you start a standard shift car on a hill? With a stranger yelling “you stupid idiot” plus a few less polite words? You know what happened. I failed. My sister screamed at me. My Mom told me I would go bankrupt. Now what? I did it. Ground my teeth together. Learned how to do “a super smooth” start. Tackled DMV. Got a tester who would pass me. Got two jobs and earned enough to pay for my blue Chevelle. But yet trial. How would I get insurance to repair my car after that deer ran straight at me! After triumphing over all of those hurdles, I still had to get two jobs and a place to live with a parking space which was near to college and both of my jobs…
Student Art Exhibit at SQSPCA Opens on Valentine’s Day COOPERSTOWN n all-animal-themed art show featuring work created by Cooperstown Elementary School students will kick off with an opening reception at the Susquehanna Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals on Valentine’s Day, Wednesday, February 14, from 4-6 p.m. The exhibit, aptly titled “Paws and Reflect,” will remain on display through February 24. “We are thrilled at this opportunity to bring art into the lives of our animals here at the shelter,” said SQSPCA Executive Director Stacie Haynes. “Socialization for shelter animals is so very important to their well-being. By bringing art to our animals in this way, with a gallery show, we are attracting students, their families, and other visitors to the shelter. In doing so, they have an opportunity to engage one-on-one with our animals. It’s a perfect match!” According to Cooperstown Elementary School art teacher Alyssa Ketcham, her students have been working for weeks on animal-related art projects in preparation for the “Paws and Reflect” exhibit. “It is so important to me to get our students involved in the community from early on, and I am so excited that I get to use art to help them do so,” Ketcham said. “The students have been working hard on their creations and have enthusiastically embraced the idea that their work can positively impact the lives of the incredibly special residents of the SQSPCA. I am thrilled to be working with such a wonderful organization.” Cooperstown Elementary School Principal Amy Malcuria can’t wait for opening night. “I am so thankful for our incredible arts department at Cooperstown Elementary and the wonderful people at the SQSPCA for enabling this exciting collaboration. The fusion of art and animals, my two passions, is a dream come true. I take immense pride in our students’ dedication and effort in crafting these beautiful pieces for display,” Malcuria said. The SQSPCA is located at 5082-5088 State Route 28, just south of the Village of Cooperstown. Student artwork will be displayed in the shelter’s Community Room and throughout the main lobby. Light refreshments will be served during the opening reception. For more information, contact (607) 547-8111.
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SUNY Oneonta February Events Celebrate Black History Month ONEONTA n honor of Black History Month, SUNY Oneonta is hosting two February events to celebrate the lives and achievements of African Americans, both of which are free and open to the public. On Thursday, February 8 at 7 p.m., Minnijean Brown-Trickey, civil rights activist and a member of the Little Rock Nine, a group of nine African American teenagers who integrated Little Rock Central High School in 1957, will speak on “The Continued Struggle for Civil Rights” at the SUNY Oneonta Alumni Field House on Ravine Parkway. Brown-Trickey’s presentation is sponsored by the SUNY Oneonta Office of Equity and Inclusion, the OIE Capek Family Fund for
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA A-7
Chili Bowl Contest Is This Saturday
County’s Leaders Look Ahead, Part 3
ONEONTA he Community Arts Network of Oneonta will hold its 19th annual Chili Bowl Cook-Off and Fundraiser on Saturday, February 10 from noon to 3 p.m. at 11 Ford Avenue. Each year, hungry community members gather to taste a variety of chili out of handcrafted bowls, peruse the Susquehanna Valley Quilters’ display in CANO’s galleries, and listen to music provided by the Mansion Jam Band. The popular chili cook-off gets a refresh this year as restaurants have been invited to compete for bragging rights at a professionals-only event. Past contenders Autumn Café and Wise Guys Sammy’s will compete this year for bragging rights against newcomers such as Crumhorn Coffee House and Azul. According to organizers, about 15 different chilis, including two vegan options, will be available. CANO members’ entrance opens at 11:30 a.m. for first pick of the unique bowls made and painted by local artists and CANO members. A limited number of tickets will be sold for this exclusively-indoor competition. Membership and tickets for the event will be available at the door. CANO is located in the Wilber Mansion at 11 Ford Avenue. More information can be found on CANO’s website www.canoneonta.org or email admin@canoneonta.org with any questions.
OTSEGO COUNTY ron String Press reached out to Otsego County’s movers and shakers to find out what they are most looking forward to accomplishing in the months ahead. The series concludes this week with updates from Glimmerglass Festival, Hartwick College and Springbrook.
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Gallery Announces Three New Exhibits ONEONTA he spring 2024 art gallery season at SUNY Oneonta is underway with three new exhibitions titled “Emotional Ties,” “Art Across Campus,” and “Cabinets, Tree Stands, and a Few Fish.” “Cabinets, Tree Stands, and a Few Fish” is an exhibition of lithographs created over close to 30 years by Otego-based artist Timothy Sheesley (SUNY Oneonta ‘78). His pieces are on display in the Martin-Mullen Gallery until March 9. “Sheesley’s work on view demonstrates his keen eye for detail and color, and each print is an intuitive meditation on personal memory, lived experience, and the things we keep,” said SUNY Oneonta Gallery Director Sarah Simpson. “The densely saturated colors encourage the viewer to look deeply, and the cloying imagery plucks at the edge of the mind, reminiscent of half noticed details and objects infused with meaning. Desiccated cats, wooden monkeys, locks, fish and more are placed above a simple but special cabinet. Each print is made in variations—the same design with different colors—as if the object or memory is being picked up, re-examined and filtered through time.” “Emotional Ties” is a solo show of new work by digital and studio art senior Christine Schmitt selected from the gallery’s Project Open Call exhibition. Her work is on display in the Project Space Gallery from through February 24. “This collaborative exhibition, which includes supporting photographic works by Molly Seidl (SUNY Oneonta ’23), features a wide range of Schmitt’s provocative crocheted art, such as her 2D abstract wall works, 3D sculptures, wearables and site-specific installations,” said Simpson. “Overall, this is an immersive experience where the viewer enters a cohesive and mostly abstract environment that asks you to consider texture, color, and shape in relation to the emotions they evoke. Schmitt offers Continued on page 8
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The Cooperstown Art Association’s “Let’s FIGURE This Out!” program supports bringing diversity—through the fine arts—to our rural community.
Drawing Program Gets Funding Boost COOPERSTOWN ooperstown Art Association offers an imaginative program, “Let’s FIGURE This Out!,” supporting the fine arts cornerstone of figure drawing through highlighting diversity and humanity. Diverse models give artists and the community opportunities to learn about people of all shapes, sizes, gender expression, skin color and other physical attributes, organizers said. CAA’s belief is that artists can better visualize and understand diversity by drawing diverse people’s bodies; including people of color, people marked by surgery, or modified by transgender procedures. The program intends to create an inner reexamination of our perception of beauty and humanity—spurring greater inclusivity as we see the “other” as us. Let’s FIGURE This Out! serves CAA patrons, tourists, people who are often underrepresented and the public. In support of this program, the Community Foundation of Otsego County announced recently that it has awarded $5,000.00 to CAA, based on CFOC’s grant focus on diversity, inclusion and welcoming programs. “We are pleased to offer this program which supports bringing diversity—through the fine arts— to our rural community. The program will work to break down stereotypes and support understanding of different cultures. CAA is happy to be recipients of a community foundation grant to facilitate our Let’s FIGURE This Out! Program for 2024,” said CAA Executive Director Janet Erway. The program is every Wednesday from 6-9 p.m. in the upstairs class space at CAA. No reservations are needed. This is a non-instructed, open-studio workshop with live nude models for sketching and watercolor. No oils and acrylics are allowed and participants are asked to bring their own drawing materials. Easels are available or artists can bring their own. A trusted CAA member is present during each session to answer questions. Cash donation per session is $18.00, or $150.00 for 10 sessions—call (607) 547-9777 for further information. An exhibition of the art at CAA is planned at a later date, along with a reception, a guest panel, and the models themselves speaking about the power of being seen and belonging through the medium of art.
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Subscribe to AllOtsego.com Call (607) 547-6103 for more details.
Hartwick College As the interim president of Hartwick, I am eager and enthusiastic about the numerous possibilities and opportunities that lie ahead for the college. First and foremost, I am committed to continuing the momentum at Hartwick by fostering a vibrant and inclusive academic community. We will work toward enhancing the overall student experience, ensuring that our students receive a high-quality education that prepares them for success in their personal and professional endeavors. Establishing Hartwick’s leadership among residential colleges is a key objective. We aim to create an environment where academic success, health and well-being, and personal and professional development skills become a journey of shared success. Celebrating the incredible work of our faculty and staff is another priority. Our dedicated educators play a vital role in shaping the future of our students. Recognizing and valuing their contributions is integral to maintaining a positive and collaborative campus culture. Lastly, I look forward to engaging with the Hartwick College community, including students, faculty, staff, alumni and our broader network of supporters. Open communication and collaboration will be critical as we work together to navigate the evolving landscape of higher education and ensure the continued success of Hartwick College. Interim President James H. Mullen Jr. Glimmerglass Festival The Glimmerglass Festival is in full swing preparing for our 2024 season, opening on July 22. The season, titled “Identity & Illusion,” will explore the many masks we wear and the roles we play in our daily lives, both onstage and off. I am particularly excited for this summer, as it is the first season I have planned in its entirety. “Identity & Illusion” promises a thrilling experience of myth, mystery and even a little mayhem. It will also immerse you in the productions as never before, as we unveil our new outdoor stage and artist-curated concert series, Lyrics on the Lawn. We are also well into preparations for Glimmerglass Festival’s 50th season in 2025. This once-in-a-generation anniversary will offer an opportunity for the whole community to celebrate one of its greatest cultural treasures and to explore the festival’s extraordinary journey from its first performances in the local high school to internationally acclaimed artistic powerhouse. We can’t wait to see you this summer! Artistic and General Director Rob Ainsley Springbrook Two thousand twenty-four promises to be another year full of opportunities for growth, connections with the community and collaborative partnerships for Springbrook. Today, we continue the work we started yesterday by expanding on programs and services for Springbrook’s dedicated employees and continuing support for people with developmental disabilities. In the new year, Springbrook will expand opportunities for employee growth through continuing Continued on page 8
OBITUARIES
Photo provided
MARGARET MONTARRAS
Margaret S. Montarras 1953-2024
FRANCE—Meg (Margaret) Seaver Montarras, daughter of the late Robert Badger and Mary Sheil Seaver of Cooperstown, died peacefully in France on Sunday, January 28, 2024 after spending two years keeping pancreatic cancer at bay with
her indomitable “joie de vivre.” Meg and her twin sister, Sash, were born in Philadelphia in 1953 but moved to Cooperstown with their family in 1960. Meg graduated from Cooperstown Central School in 1971. After stints at Sarah Lawrence and Mount Holyoke colleges, she moved to France and finished her degree at University of Paris VIII. She worked first as a library assistant at the American School of Paris. Then, in 1985, she earned a master’s degree in library science from U.C. Berkeley and became the head librarian of the ASP Lower School. She only recently retired, after an illustrious library career of more than 40 years. As important as her career was, Meg’s family
was ALL. In 1990, Meg and Didier Montarras, a biologist at the Pasteur Institute, were married in Sevres, France and had two sons, Paul Emmett and Alan Francois. Meg and “her boys” lived a quintessential Paris life centered on family,
friends, meals, music, and ideas (and rugby!). In France, she leaves Didier, Paul, and Alan; her niece, Carine, and nephews Hugo and Thomas; as well as extended family, friends, and colleagues. In the U.S., she leaves her four
Grandma loved her farm, her family, and playing her old guitar.
siblings, Brig (Louise Schemm), Sash (Jack Spielberg), Maud, and Din; her nieces, Lydia, Gillian, and Tilly; her nephews, Robert, John, Natty, and Samuel; her
step-mother, Veronica Gil Seaver; and many cousins, friends, and extended family—she was a force of connection to so many all around the world.
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Peaceful grounds. Home-like atmosphere. Suitable for large or small gatherings. 82 Chestnut Street, Cooperstown | 607-547-8231 www.cooperstownfuneralhome.com
A-8 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
Milford’s T.J. O’Connor Reflects on Successful Final HS Season By WRILEY NELSON MILFORD ilford Central School senior T.J. O’Connor is approaching the end of a six-year, fiveseason career on the Cooperstown/Milford varsity wrestling team in style. According to cnywrestling.com, O’Connor, 17, has a career record of 190-
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32, including 88 pins. He placed second in the 152-pound class at the Section III Class D-2 Tournament at Mount Markham on Saturday, February 3, and will compete in the Division II Championships on Saturday, February 10. O’Connor had a bye in the first round of the Class D-2 Tournament and won two matches by pinfall, beating Dolgeville’s
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Ezekiel Monk in 52 seconds and SherburneEarlville’s Justin Rose in 2:14. He lost to Tavian Camper of Copenhagen in the finals, and was one of three C/M wrestlers on the podium as the team finished 10th of 11 schools. Sophomore Max Koffer placed third in the 116-class and Carson Moore finished sixth in the 215-class. Earlier in the season, O’Connor took sixth place in the prestigious Eastern States Classic, considered one of the most difficult high school wrestling tournaments in the northeast, on Saturday, January 13. It featured a field of 32 high-caliber athletes in O’Connor’s weight class. He went 4-3 overall. “I’ve had a lot of tough
matches this year and have won a lot of tough matches,” O’Connor said. “I’ve lost some, too, but I feel really good.” He was especially excited to face Camper, to whom he lost two difficult, close matches last year, at the Class D-2 tournament. Camper, who committed to the DivisionI wrestling program at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in December, was an especially challenging opponent. “We don’t win too many dual meets as a team, but I love everyone there,” O’Connor continued. “The kids at Cooperstown are just the nicest people. We’re all friends and really support each other in the sport and in general. I’ve been on
the team for six years and there has never been any drama with this group. “I love Coach [Michael] Croft, too,” he concluded. “He really, deeply knows what he’s talking about. He’s also great at managing the personalities and the social aspects of the team.” The admiration is mutual. Croft, a 2008 Cooperstown graduate in his 10th year as coach, noted that O’Connor would have wrestled all six years for the varsity program if the COVID19 pandemic had not canceled a season. “T.J. is the longesttenured wrestler I have coached,” Croft said in an e-mail. “This year, the team had great numbers and over half the roster
was first-year varsity wrestlers. T.J. took a big interest in teaching and mentoring these athletes while focusing on his individual goals and success. Now that we are in the postseason, I am excited to see what he can achieve for himself now that it is just him left competing for the remainder of the season.” O’Connor has not yet selected a school to attend this fall, but intends to study construction management. He said wrestling at the college level is on the table, but that academics will come first. To view his season and career wrestling statistics, visit w w w. c n y w r e s t l i n g . com/iii/results/wrestler. php?id=412800.
Gallery
Dr. Maria Chaves Daza (Africana and Latinx studies), Dr. Sheena Mason (English) and Dr. Sarah Portway (fashion). “Art Across Campus” is on display in the Open Space Gallery until February 17. Admission to the galleries is free and open to the public, and visitors can receive parking passes through the University Police Department. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. For more information, contact Simpson at Sarah.Simpson@ oneonta.edu or (607) 436-2445.
mental disabilities and a Supported Employment Service Hub. This new workspace will have employment specialists on site and expand a much-needed service for people seeking employment. Employment services have successfully placed people with developmental disabilities in paid entry-level positions, meeting employers’ needs in retail, food service, custodial, and more across 150+ regional businesses. I wish all our partners and community members a successful 2024 for the best year yet! Chief Executive Officer Patricia Kennedy
paintings, sculptures and installations was created by African Americanfocused artists to share their views on voting rights. It is the result of a collaborative partnership between the SUNY Oneonta Cooperstown Graduate Program and Golden Artist Colors in New Berlin. “To commemorate and honor Black History Month, SUNY Oneonta and Hartwick College are partnering to bring these activities to our students, faculty, and staff, and engaging our broader community of neighbors in Oneonta,” said Bernadette Tiapo, vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion and chief diversity officer, SUNY Oneonta Office of Equity and Inclusion. “Our aim is to bring campus-hosted events that will continue to further both the institution’s DEI and social justice goals and deepen our understanding of our shared humanity through in-depth reflections and open discussions.”
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guides in the form of emotive models dressed in the wearables that have since been combined into large-scale installaShelter Associate: EHAP tions and in the presence and poses of her stuffed Classroom (Toddler) Teacher human-like sculptures. Enter this exhibition with Shelter Associate: VIP an open mind and engage with the emotions that tie FT Head Start Positions us all together.” with school breaks and “Art Across Campus: summers off: Spring 2024” is the third Assistant Teacher exhibition in an annual Classroom Aide series that showcases the creative final projOFO is a family-oriented organization offering ects by students across competitive wages, excellent benefits and campus from a diverse opportunities for professional growth. For details on our current openings, our benefit range of majors and package summary, and TO APPLY, focuses. This semester’s visitwww.ofoinc.org/jobs EOE exhibit features student work submitted by Dr. The leader in developing innovative solutions to Continued from page 7 Suriati Abas (elementary promote healthy lives, thriving families, and caring communities since 1966. education and reading), partnerships with SUNY Oneonta and Hartwick College. Direct support professionals will have the opportunity to gain credentials through the SUNY Microcredentials for New York State’s DSPs program. At the same time, we will expand opportunities for employees working across all professional To place effective employment ads, fields at Springbrook. We also expect to call 607-547-6103 or email Tarab@allotsego.com complete the renovations of the Ford on Main, which will provide 24 housing units for people with develop-
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Continued from page 6 Inclusive Excellence, Activities Council, Office of Student Life and Leadership, and Hartwick College. From February 8-29, SUNY Oneonta’s Center for Racial Justice and Inclusive Excellence will host “Our Votes, Our Stories,” an art exhibition that reflects on historical barriers and voter suppression. The exhibit is open to the public Monday through Friday this month, from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., at Lee Hall. The collection of
SubStituteS needed for the following School diStrictS: Charlotte Valley CSD Edmeston CSD Laurens CSD Milford CSD Oneonta City SD Schenevus Stamford Windham-Ashland-Jewett CSD Worcester CSD ONC BOCES (Grand Gorge & Milford)
SubStitute PoSitionS:
$17/hour starting wage $1500* sign-on bonus
Teachers LTAs Aides & Monitors Nurses Cleaners Bus & Van Drivers Clerical & Office Support Food Service Workers
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Please visit www.oncboces.org/subs for application and information. EOE
Auditions Set for ‘Twisted’ HERKIMER—Herkimer College will hold auditions for Starkid’s production of “Twisted: The Untold Story of a Royal Vizier” on Monday, February 19 and Tuesday, February 20 at 6:30 p.m. in the SarkusBusch Theater located in the Robert McLaughlin College Center, room 247. Faculty, staff, students and the greater community are welcome to audition. “Twisted: The Untold Story of the Royal Vizier” is described as a hilarious and unexpected journey through the classic fairy tale world, providing a unique perspective on the characters and promising laughs and surprises at every turn. The production will be held at Herkimer College from Thursday, April 11 through Sunday, April 13. For more information, and to download audition songs, visit www. herkimer.edu/twisted ADDITIONAL NEWS ITEMS CAN BE FOUND EACH WEEK ONLINE AT ALLOTSEGO.COM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
Hilbert
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA A-9
The
well as covering events in the northern part of the county. I look forward Continued from page 2 to her fresh perspective preter at Monticello, in as she dips her toe in the Charlottesville, Virginia. journalism field.” “When I was not giving tours, I was assisting with the planning and execution of Continued from page 3 the Monticello Teaching Institute,” she explained. Orchard, 2274 State “It’s a week-long, fully- Route 166, from 10 a.m. funded professional to noon on Sunday, March development opportunity 9. Laura McDermott, for teachers to research team leader and small and study at Monticello. fruit/vegetable specialist Everyone gets the chance with the CCE Eastern to collaborate, travel New York Commercial around Charlottesville, Horticulture team, will and meet with top demonstrate proper techJefferson scholars, niques for pruning, which all to build classroom is critical for healthy and resources. It was so much successful orchard trees fun getting to know the and fruiting bushes. teachers and hear about Gardeners and farmers will receive pruning their experience.” When Hilbert is not instruction, information working on assignments on climate-appropriate for class, she prefers variety selection, and staying at home to cook pointers on disease and pest control. or read. Space is limited “I like to go out with friends when I can, but and pre-registration is Registration we’re all usually busy required. with work. Plus, it’s will be accepted until always nice to have a Thursday, March 7 or quiet evening to your- until the class is fully enrolled. Visit https:// self,” she added. Hilbert is an avid cross- cceschoharie-otsego. stitcher and has been for org/events/2024/03/09/ the past 10 years. She tree-small-fruit-pruningenjoys stitching anything, workshop or call (518) extension but is currently working 234-4303, her way through a collec- 119 or (607) 547-2536, tion of miniature works extension 226. The class costs $10.00, payable by of art. “We are excited to have cash or check to “CCE Emily join our team,” S c h o h a r i e - O t s e g o , ” said Iron String Press which can be sent to or General Manager/Senior dropped at 173 South Editor Darla M. Youngs. Grand Street, Suite 1, “She will be working on Cobleskill 12043 or 123 compiling news briefs Lake Street, Cooperstown and calendar items as 13326.
job scene job scene Briefs To place effective employment ads, call 607-547-6103
PRODUCT DESIGNER Sportsfield Specialties, Inc. is seeking a Product Designer for its Delhi, NY location who can facilitate the design, development, construction and modification of steel, aluminum, and concrete structures for sports construction projects. Responsibilities/Duties incluDe but not limiteD to: • Participate in the launch of new projects by determining materials, methods, processes, schedules, and procedures. • Coordinate with Structural/Civil Engineers on design and construction activities. • Identify opportunities and/or implement changes to improve products and reduce costs. • Work closely with other departments and customers to coordinate design engineering activities. • Create engineering drawings, layouts, and specifications particularly for steel, aluminum, and concrete structures. • Perform cost estimation and project take-offs. • Create manufacturing drawings for production release. • Create, edit and update BOM and Production Orders within an ERP environment (Epicor).
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k®, N.A., Member FDIC, pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. No cash access or recurring payments. Can be used everywhere Visa debit cards are accepted. Card valid for up to 6 months; unused funds will forfeit Credit Card offer. who are individual consumers with mailing addresses in the U.S. and U.S. territories. Commercial fleets are not eligible for these rebates. Not valid on previous purchases. Cannot be combined with other Goodyear oodyear, and bonus portion of rebate offered by Citibank, N.A. Goodyear is not affiliated with Mastercard. Additional terms, conditions, and fees apply. See participating retailer for complete details and rebate forms.
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Sportsfield Specialties, Inc. is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer. Authorization to work in the U.S. is a precondition of employment. We do not sponsor employment visas.
any form of payment method; plus get an added rebate of up to $75 more when the purchase is made on the Goodyear Credit Card. Subject to credit approval. Get a $75 Prepaid Card with purchase or $150 Prepaid ® Assurance MaxLife®, Wrangler® All-Terrain Adventure with,G9< Kevlar®, Wrangler DuraTrac®, Wrangler Fortitude HT® (excludingcC-Type), Wrangler *A;CMH TrailRunner AT 9HK , Eagle Exhilarate®, WinterCommand®, WinterCommand® c )>> .@= 9;C@G= =FLMJQ he Goodyear Credit Card of: Assurance® All-Season, Eagle® Sport All-Season Family (including ROF & SCT), Winter Maxx® 2 and Winter Maxx® SJ8. Get a $25 Prepaid Card with purchase or $50 Prepaid Card with ® .AJ=K c #FL=JKL9L= 9LL=JA=K y Edge HP®, Kelly Edge All-Season®, Kelly&G9<=J Edge All-Season Performance and Kelly Winter Access™.
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ON THE 4(%4)2%3(/0 "): Financing FARM TIRE OPEN MON. SAT. 8-6 Available der license by The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company and affiliates. SERVICES com/en-US/tire-warranty/30-day-pledge. 155 Erie Blvd., Canajoharie, NY
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE SUPERVISOR
Sportsfield Specialties is seeking an Accounts Receivable Supervisor for its Delhi, NY location, to oversee/supervise the day-to-day operations and activities of all accounts receivable’s business procedures, functions, and collection processes to ensure compliance with internal accounting policies and controls. Responsibilities/Duties incluDe but not limiteD to: • Monitor all open customer receivable balances to access risk of uncollectible accounts and report high-risk accounts to Assistant Controller. • Track and report weekly receivables with Credit and Collection Specialist. • Review credit applications, sales contracts, sub-contractor agreements, pre-qualifications. • Analyze legal obligation clauses that bind the company to perform as indicated. • Resolve customer credit and billing issues. •Produce customs paperwork when required for international shipments. • Assist Sales to establish credit for new customers. • Complete monthly project billings, AIA forms are usually required. • Process credit memos for returned customer shipments. • Manage company project related licenses and registration requirements (Contractor’s Licenses, Business Licenses and State Registrations). • Monitor State Compliance and submit required reporting. • Perform analysis as needed. • Perform other duties as assigned. RequiReD qualifications: skills: • Excellent verbal, written, interpersonal and negotiation skills. • Proven ability to create and maintain positive internal and external working relationships through frequent, efficient, and impactful communication. • Working knowledge of Microsoft Office Suite products and ERP systems (SAP, NetSuite, Epicor, etc.). • Strong supervisory and leadership skills. • Ability to function well in a fast-paced and at times demanding environment. • Outstanding communication, organizational, attention-to-detail and problem-solving skills. EXPERIENCE/EDUCATION: • Bachelor’s degree in accounting or similar field and minimum of 4 years’ experience. • 2 years’ experience in a supervisory/ management role. Salary Range $60k -65k per year DOE, great benefit package includes but not limited to: health, dental, vision, 401(k) with company match, life insurance, flexible spending and paid time off. To apply, submit application online, apply in person at 41155 State Highway 10, fax resume to (607) 746-3107 or send resume to: Human Resources, P.O. Box 231, Delhi, NY 13753. Sportsfield Specialties, Inc. is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer. Authorization to work in the U.S. is a precondition of employment. We do not sponsor employment visas. an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
A-10 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA
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Legal nOtice Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the LOT OWNERS of the Hartwick Seminary Cemetery Association will be held at the Hartwick Seminary Fire House, Dept. 2, in Hartwick Seminary, NY. This meeting will be held on Sunday, February 25, 2024, at 1 PM to transact a business meeting, which includes the election of Trustees. COVID restrictions, such as a mask, will be up to each individual. Bottled water and wrapped snacks will be available. 3LegalFeb.22 Legal nOtice SUMMONS Supreme Court of New York, Otsego County. U.S. BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS LEGAL TITLE TRUSTEE FOR TRUMAN 2016 SC6 TITLE TRUST, Plaintiff, -againstLAURIE HEXT AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF MARILYN L. HEXT; ASHLEY MATTESON AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF MARILYN L. HEXT; HELENE EJDESTAM AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF MARILYN L. HEXT; UNKNOWN HEIRS OF THE ESTATE OF MARILYN L. HEXT; LSF9 MASTER PARTICIPATION TRUST; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (NORTHERN DISTRICT) O/B/O INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE; “JOHN DOE” AND “JANE DOE” said names being fictitious, it being the intention of Plaintiff to designate any and all occupants of premises being foreclosed herein, Index No. EF2023-772. Mortgaged Premises: 16 Canterbury Circle Washingtonville, NY 10992 Section: 103 Block: 4 Lot: 18 TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE
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HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above captioned action and to serve a copy of your Answer on the Plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days after the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal delivery within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a Defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service hereof. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint.
stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT.
NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECTIVE of the above captioned action is to foreclose on a Mortgage to secure $107,167.62 and interest, recorded in the Otsego County Clerk’s Office on April 17, 2008 in Book 1550, Page 350, Document Number 2008-00062996, covering the premises known as 325 Butternut Road, Richfield Springs, NY 13439. The relief sought herein is a final judgment directing sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the mortgage described above. Plaintiff designates Otsego County as the place of trial. Venue is based upon the County in which the mortgaged premises is located. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not
FRIEDMAN VARTOLO, LLP 1325 Franklin Avenue, Suite 160 Garden City, NY 11530, Attorneys for Plaintiff. 4LegalFeb.29 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF HEARING TO HEAR COMPLAINTS IN RELATION TO ASSESSMENT ROLL Notice is hereby given that the Village of Cooperstown, County of Otsego has completed the tentative assessment roll for the current year. Effective the date of this notice through February 20, 2024 the assessment roll may be seen at the Village Clerk’s Office during regular business hours, Monday through Friday, between the hours of 8:00 am and 4:00 pm. The Board of Assessment Review will meet on Tuesday, February 20, 2024 at the Village Office Building, 22 Main Street, Cooperstown, New York between the hours of 4:00 pm and 8:00 pm, for the purpose of hearing and determining complaints in relation to assessments on the application of any person believing himself to be aggrieved. Complaints with respect to assessments must be filed with the Village Clerk on or before the day of the hearing on a form prescribed by the State. These forms are available at the Village Office. The Assessor will be available through February 20, 2024, Monday through Friday, from 8am – 2 pm, Thursday, February 8, 2024 from 6 pm – 8 pm, Saturday, February 10, 2024 from 9 am to 1 pm, or at a mutually convenient time by appointment, (607) 547-6057. Dated this 1st day of February, 2024 Albert Keck Assessor Village of Cooperstown 22 Main Street Cooperstown, NY 13326
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Dublin Consulting NY LLC
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
filed w/ SSNY 1/31/24. Off. in Otsego Co. SSNY desig. as agt. of LLC whom process may be served & shall mail process to c/o James C. Raneri, 644 Keys Rd, Cooperstown, NY 13326. Any lawful purpose. 6LegalMar.14
also the principal business location. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 6LegalMar.14
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Trustees of the Village of Cooperstown will hold the following public hearings in the Village Office Building, 22 Main Street, Cooperstown, New York on Monday, February 26, 2024 at 7:00 p.m. or as soon thereafter as can be heard, to discuss the following: Proposed Local Law No. 1 of 2024 - Amend Chapter 270-6Vehicle and Traffic regulations – by eliminating the stop sign on the southeast corner of Main Street at Averill Road and replace with a yield sign. Proposed Local Law No. 2 of 2024 - Amend the Zoning Law 300-31(c) Supplemental Environmental Regulations- eliminate the provision that allows for the removal of 30% of trees on a property within ten years and replace with a requirement for replacement when a mature, healthy, noninvasive tree is removed. Any resident of the Village of Cooperstown is entitled to be heard upon said local laws at such public hearing. Disabled citizens, who require assistance in attending said public hearing, or in furnishing comments or suggestions, should contact the Village Clerk to request assistance. Copies of the proposed laws are available for inspection at the Village Clerk’s office, 22 Main Street, Cooperstown, New York during normal business hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Dated: February 6, 2024 By order of the Village Board Village of Cooperstown Jenna L. Utter, RMC Village Clerk Village of Cooperstown 22 Main Street Cooperstown, NY 13326 (607) 547-2411 (phone) jutter@cooperstownny.org Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF
Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Craft Woodworking LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on December 21, 2023 . Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY Designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to PO Box 1431 Richfield Springs, NY 13439. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 6LegalMar.14 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF SG JUNIOR, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the NY Secretary of State on 01/26/24. The office of the LLC is to be located in Otsego County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him to: The LLC, PO Box 1373, Oneonta, NY 13820. The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity. 6LegalMar.14 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LOTUS GLASS STUDIO, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 2/2/24. Office in Otsego Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 1091 County Hwy 46, Oneonta, NY 13820, which is
Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Doubleday Court LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 2/1/2024. Cty: Otsego. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to Molly Hernandez, 17 Walnut Street, Cooperstown, NY 13326. General Purpose 6LegalMar.14 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Butternut Valley Ventures LLC filed 1/18/24 Office: Otsego Co. SSNY designated as agent for process & shall mail to: 4021 State Highway 51, Garrattsville, NY 13342 Purpose: all lawful 6LegalMar.14 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF GLIMMERGLASS MEDICAL & WELLNESS LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 1/19/24, Otsego Co. SSNY design agent for process & shall mail to Zenbusiness Inc. 41 State St #112 Albany, NY 12207 General Purpose 6LegalMar.14 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF The Cleaning Club, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the NY Secretary of State on 01/23/2024. The office of the LLC is to be located in Otsego County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon it to The LLC, 93 Chestnut Street, Oneonta, NY 13820. The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any lawful act. 6LegalMar.7
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13807. Purpose: General. 6LegalMar.7
TIN BIN ALLEY LLC.
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
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Articles of Organization of Schweitzer CS LLC (the “LLC”) were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on January 5, 2024, effective upon the date of filing. Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 21 Frederick Avenue, Babylon, New York 11702. Purpose: General. 6LegalMar.7 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Articles of Organization of Schweitzer GC LLC (the “LLC”) were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on May 15, 2023, effective upon the date of filing. Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 21 Frederick Avenue, Babylon, New York 11702. Purpose: General. 6LegalMar.7 Legal nOtice
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Gun Club Rd LLC. Filed with SSNY on 1/22/2024. Office: Otsego County. SSNY designated as agent for process & shall mail to: 4305 61st St Apt C2 Woodside NY 11377. Purpose: any lawful 6LegalMar.7 Legal nOtice NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Roaming Roots Farm LLC,
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NOTICE OF FORMATION OF
NOTICE OF FILING: APPLICATION FOR AUTHORITY (FOREIGN LLC).
Quicksilverkeys LLC filed w/ SSNY 1/18/24. Off. in Otsego Co. Process served to SSNY - desig. as agt. of LLC & mailed to the LLC, PO Box 386, Oneonta, NY 13820. Any lawful purpose. 6LegalFeb.29
Randylayne And Sons Consulting LLC.
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF
Filed 1/7/24. Office: Otsego Co. SSNY desig. as agent for process & shall mail to: 23 Watson St., Unadilla, NY 13849. Registered Agent: United States Corporation Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Ave , Ste 202, Bklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: General. 6LegalMar.7
Terraforge Motorsports LLC
Serowski LLC. Filed 11/08/23. Office: Otsego Co. SSNY desig. as agent for process&shall mail to: 131 Clintonville rd Milford NY
Notice of Formation of
Arts of Org. filed SSNY 11/27/23, Otsego Co. SSNY design agent for process & shall mail to Aidan Sawyer 211 County Rd 52 Cooperstown, NY 13326 General Purpose 6LegalFeb.22
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NOTICE OF FORMATION OF
Legal nOtice
Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 1/14/2024. Cty: Otsego. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to 174 Main St Otego, NY 13825. General Purpose 6LegalFeb.29
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF
Legal nOtice
Articles of Organization filing date with Secretary of State (SSNY) was 11 January 2024. Office location: Otsego County. SSNY has been designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and SSNY shall mail copy of process to 114 Main St, Cooperstown, New York 13326. Purpose is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under NYS laws. 6LegalFeb.22
Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State Of New York (SSNY) on 01/14/2023. Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against may be served. SSNY should mail process to Alfred W. Quick: 7553 NY-80 Richfield Springs, NY 13439. Purpose: any lawful purpose. 6LegalFeb.29 Legal nOtice Notice of Formation of a NY Limited Liability Company. Name:
BARREL SEE LLC
ADESACOLE LLC Application for authority filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 11/29/23. Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY Designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to DOYINSOLA HALIMAT OGBEIFUN : 14 Tilton Ave., Oneonta, NY 13820. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 6LegalFeb.22 Legal nOtice Notice of Formation of Friends of the Feral TNR – Otsego LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 11/27/2023. Cty: Otsego. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served and shall mail process to Gina M. Colone: 17 River Street, Oneonta, NY 13820. General Purpose 6LegalFeb.15
►Need to publish a Notice of Formation, Public Notice, Supplemental Summons, or Notice to Bidders? Contact Larissa at 607-547-6103 or ads@allotsego.com and she can get you started.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
Observer
powered by hydro and nuclear. But don’t tell Albany: Continued from page 4 New York is intent on to “wildly unrealistic pursuing an expensive expectations” and land-hungry plan which “massive misallocation we already know will of resources.” As MIT fail. Press noted, Dennis Higgins is a Jacobson and his retired math/computer coauthors dramatiscience professor. He cally miscalculated the and wife Katie run a amount of hydroelectric farm in Otego and, as a power available and family, they are committed seriously underestimated to addressing climate the cost of installing and change any way they can, integrating large-scale including 20KW of solar underground thermal panels, geothermal heat, energy storage systems… all electric appliances, They treat U.S. hydroand driving an EV. Dennis power as an entirely has been engaged in fungible resource. regional energy issues for Like the amount [of approximately 15 years. power] coming from a river in Washington state is available in Georgia, instantaContinued from page 1 neously… https://www. technologyreview. one of the primary depots com/2017/06/19/151141/ where West and Central in-sharp-rebuttal-scien- African captives were tists-squash-hopes-forimprisoned and tortured 100-percent-renewables/) before transshipment to Following this flawed the New World. Today, plan, it always looks like the castle is preserved there is a transmission as a Ghanaian national problem, since the grid is museum and United not one big copper plate. Nations Educational, In fact, no new energy Scientific and Cultural solution or gigantic Organization World storage mechanism Heritage Monument. is needed at all. New Despite Ghana’s status York only needs to look as one of the strongest around the world at those economies and states in places that have success- West Africa, it can be very fully decarbonized their difficult for young people grids. New York only to find jobs. Ampong said needs to look in the that he usually makes mirror: the downstate about US$30.00 a month grid is over 90 percent in a semi-official capacity “dirty,” powered by gas as a tour guide during the and oil. Upstate is over season and otherwise relies 90 percent emission on $3.00 per day doing free, and like those large hard labor at construction economies that have sites. From a young age, cut fossil-fuel use, it is he has dreamed of finding
Enoch
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA A-11 a new life in the U.S. and of returning home to enrich Ghana. “I had an African American English teacher in high school,” he recalled, “and her stories about America inspired me.” “I realized that my life can only be better if I follow my heart,” he said, referring both to his passion for informative museums and his desire for a U.S. education. He dedicated himself to providing the best possible experience for museum visitors and has spent much of his free time for the past several years studying the history of the transatlantic slave trade. Professor Peter Rutkoff, a CGP adjunct professor and summer Cooperstown resident, met Ampong on a tour at Elmina in August 2022 during one of his many research trips to Ghana. “Elmina is a horrible place; even more horrible because the surroundings are so beautiful,” Rutkoff recalled. “The docent I met there, however, was wonderful and knowledgeable.” Ampong said that he gave the tour group a 20minute introduction and that Rutkoff praised him as “the best guide he’d come across in Ghana… he said my commentary bred unity without bias.” Rutkoff gave Ampong his e-mail address and encouraged him to continue his museum education in Cooperstown. They have worked closely with
CGP Director Professor Gretchen Sorin. SUNY Oneonta accepted Ampong into the twoyear graduate program, but he is unable to pay tuition at the current level of financial aid. He plans to defer his acceptance and begin the program this year, hoping to find funding in the meantime. CPG is one of the oldest museum studies graduate programs in the country. It was founded in 1964 by New York State Historical Association Director Louis C. Jones to provide intensive realworld training to future museum professionals. Located at SUNY Oneonta’s Cooperstown campus, in one of just a handful of buildings in the world specifically designed for museum studies, it offers programs specializing in science or history museums. Throughout his communication with Iron String Press, Ampong was humble and repeatedly expressed his gratitude to CGP and to anyone able to help him. “It is my aim to help establish one of the best museums in Ghana,” Ampong concluded, “to generate revenue for my country and to preach the gospel of unity amongst humanity so we never again perpetrate such injustice… I plead to anyone who reads my story to help me achieve my dream, and I know the Lord will surely reward their generations to come.” Parishioners at St. Mary’s Episcopal in
Springfield and at Cooperstown Baptist Church have already pledged funds to support Ampong’s CGP education, but further financial resources are still needed, as the goal is $56,000.00. Those wishing to make a tax-deductible donation can do so at https:// www.gofundme.com/f/ enoch-ampong-study-incooperstown.
Menthol
Continued from page 5 wide ban on the sale of all flavored tobacco products in 2020 after numerous California cities passed laws to ban them in the 2010s. In 2023, Governor Hochul proposed to end the sale of flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes in New York State. While her proposal failed to gain the support of a majority of New York State legislators, local governments throughout the state continue to consider laws banning the sales of all flavored tobacco products or
restricting where tobacco products can be sold. For more information on the impact of flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, visit our website at www. GoTobaccoFreeDOS. org. Jennifer Hill is the community engagement coordinator for Tobacco Free Communities: Delaware, Otsego and Schoharie.
OLT
Continued from page 1 will be planted in the spring to replace the hemlock hedge and maintain the beauty of the formal gardens, officials said. OLT will host a volunteer garden cleanup day in May and a garden planting day in June. Otsego Land Trust is a community-based nonprofit protecting local fields, forests, and waterways in perpetuity since 1987. To learn more about volunteer opportunities at Brookwood Point, check otsegolandtrust.org/events.
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what’s haPPENIN’ in OtsegO COunty _________ Send calendar items to info@allotsego.com
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024
A-12 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA
►Fri., Feb. 9 QUILT SHOW— 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. “Fenimore Quilt Club Show.” Warm, artistic and antique quilts on display from local quilters. On view through 2/18, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday viewing is 1-4 p.m. Cooperstown Art Association, 22 Main Street, Cooperstown. Visit https://www.cooperstownart.com/ OUTDOORS—1 p.m. “Homeschool Nature Day.” Fight cabin fever with a winter walk outside. Presented by the Otsego County Conservation Association. Meet at Mohican Farm, 7207 State Highway 80, Cooperstown. (607) 547-4488 or visit https:// www.occainfo.org/calendar/homeschool-natureday-mohican-farm POTTERY— 1:30-4:30 p.m. Open Studio. Experienced potters are invited to work on personal projects. No instruction provided. $30/session. Held Monday, Wednesday, Friday. And Thursday 6-9 p.m. The Smithy Clay Studio, 1 Otsego Court, Cooperstown. Gallery@ SmithyArts.org or visit https://www.smithyarts. org/ CONCERT—7 p.m. “Dingonek Street Band.” Brass fusion quintet. Admission, $20/adult. Presented by the Cooperstown Concert Series at The Otesaga Resort Hotel, 60 Lake Street, Cooperstown. Visit https://cooperstownconcertseries.org OUTDOORS— 7-8:30 p.m. “Naked Eye Astronomy.” Explore the night sky. Bring a comfortable chair and dress for the weather. Followed by hot chocolate. Free. Registration required. Presented by Otsego County Conservation Association. Visit https://www.oc-
cainfo.org/calendar/naked-eye-astronomy-1 FINALE—7-8:45 p.m. Doors open at 6:30. “Cabin Fever Film Series: Marcel the Shell with Shoes On.” Free with suggested donation. Light concessions available. Fenimore Art Museum, 5798 State Highway 80, Cooperstown. (607) 5471400 or visit https://fenimoreartmuseum.org/ THEATER—8 p.m. “Moon Over Buffalo.” A farce about two comedians’ last chance at stardom. General admission, $20. Presented by Bigger Dreams Productions. Continues 2/10 at 8 p.m. then 2/11 at 2 p.m. Production Center, Foothills Performing Arts and Civic Center, 24 Market Street, Oneonta. Visit https:// www.biggerdreamsproductions.org/
►Sat., Feb. 10 MAKERS MARKET— 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. “Sweet Hearts Craft and Vendor Show.” Southside Mall, 5006 State Highway 23, Oneonta. (607) 432-4401 or visit https://www.facebook.com/southsidemall/ TAX PREP—10 a.m. to 3 p.m. “Free Tax Preparation.” Get help with taxes from IRS-certified volunteers. Held Saturdays through 4/15. Huntington Memorial Library, 62 Chestnut Street, Oneonta. (607) 432-1980 or visit https://www.hartwick. edu/academics/academic-departments/ business-administrationand-accounting-department/vita/ WRITERS GROUP— 1:30-3:30 p.m. Supportive group to practice writing exercises and get feedback. Huntington Memorial Library, 62 Chestnut Street Oneonta. (607) 432-1980 or visit https://hmloneonta.org/ adult-programs/ DRUMMING CIRCLE— 2 p.m. “Lunar New Year
what’s haPPENIN’ in OtsegO COunty _________
Drumming.” Green Earth, plus 50/50 raffle. $10 4 Market Street, Oneonta. minimum drink/food what’s haPPENIN’ Visit the Oneonta Drum purchase to play. Roots in OtsegO COunty Circle Facebook page. Public Social Club, 175 PANCAKE SUPPER— Main Street, Oneonta. 3-7 p.m. “Worcester Fire (607) 349-3842 or visit Department Annual Panhttps://www.facebook. cake Supper.” Pancakes, com/RootsPubSocialClub local maple syrup, farm SUPERBOWL LVIII— fresh eggs, more. Raffle 6:30 p.m. Watch live on drawing to be held at 7. preferred platform. Worcester Hose Company, 36 Church Street, Worces- ►Mon., Feb.12 ter. (607) 397-8032. EXERCISE CLASS— 9-10 a.m. Each Mon►Sun., Feb. 11 day and Thursday with PANCAKE BREAKinstructor Carol ThompFAST—8 a.m. “Cabin Feson. Worcester-Schenver Breakfast.” Eggs, sau- evus Library, 170 Main sage, bacon, pancakes, Street, Worcester. (607) more. Suggested dona397-7309 or visit https:// tion, $6/person. Enter to www.facebook.com/ win raffle baskets, more. WorcesterSchenevus Laurens Fire Department, PLAY & LEARN— 34 Main Street, Laurens. 10 a.m. Guided sen(607) 433-2906. sory learning for chilBENEFIT—9:30-10:45 dren aged 5 and under. a.m. “Super Bowl Sunday Cooperstown Village Benefit Ride.” 75-minute Library, 22 Main Street, cycling ride to benefit Cooperstown. (607) the Cooperstown Angel 547-8344 or visit https:// Network. Registration www.facebook.com/Vilrequired. $20 minimum lageLibraryOfCooperdonation. Clark Sports stown/ Center, 124 County Route CONNECTIONS— 52, Cooperstown. (607) 12:30 p.m. Bluegrass 547-2800 or visit https:// Circle Jam Session. Conwww.facebook.com/clark- nections at Clark Sports sportscenter Center, 124 County HighFIRST AID—10 a.m. way 52, Cooperstown. “CPR Certification connectionsatcsc@gmail. Course.” Morris Fire com. Department, 117 East WEBINAR—1 p.m. Main Street, Morris. (607) “Market Evaluation.” 547-4328 or visit https:// Presented by the 2024 www.facebook.com/Otse- Agricultural Marketing goCountyEmergencySerWebinar Series. Held onvices line by CCE Harvest New WINTER MARKET— York. (518) 569-3073 or 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. “Winter visit https://cceschohaCraft & Vendor Market.” rie-otsego.org/events/ Richfield Springs Central TAX PREP—6-8 p.m. School, 93 West Main “Free Tax Preparation.” Street, Richfield Springs. Get help with taxes (315) 858-0610 or visit from IRS-certified volhttps://www.facebook. unteers. Held Mondays com/RichfieldCSD/ and Tuesdays through BINGO—6 p.m. “Spay/ 4/15. 2nd floor, Golisano Neuter Awareness Month Hall, Hartwick College, 1 Bingo.” 8 rounds of Bingo Hartwick Drive, Oneonta.
_______
AllOTSEGO.
(607) 431-4338. BENEFIT—6:30 p.m. “Candlelight Yoga Benefit Class.” Vinyasa yoga with sound bath to benefit the Violence Intervention Program of Opportunities for Otsego. Registration required. $20 minimum donation. Clark Sports Center, 124 County Route 52, Cooperstown. (607) 547-2800 ext. 129 or visit https://www.facebook. com/clarksportscenter
►Tues., Feb. 13 YOUTH—9:30 a.m. “Baby and Toddler Story Time.” Huntington Memorial Library, 62 Chestnut Street, Oneonta. (607) 432-1980 or visit https:// hmloneonta.org/youthprograms/ COMMUNITY HIKE— 9:45 a.m. Hike with the Adirondack Mountain Club. Bring appropriate equipment and water, and be aware of your level of fitness. This week’s hike will be on the New Island trail. Contact hike leader Jim Austin, (607) 4375734, or visit https:// susqadk.org/ QUILTERS—10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fly Creek Area Quilters meet to cut, sew, tie, bind and have a good time working on quilts. Held each Tuesday. Fly Creek Methodist Church, County Route 26, Fly Creek. SENIOR MEALS— 11:30 a.m. Seniors are invited to enjoy a delicious meal each Tuesday and Thursday. Suggested donation is $3.50 for seniors, $10 for guests accompanying a senior. Today, enjoy a lunch of hamburger, cabbage casserole, green beans, warm applesauce and chocolate pudding. Richfield Springs Community Center, 6 Ann Street, Richfield Springs. (607) 547-6454 or visit https:// www.facebook.com/otsegocountyOFA/
homes BUY • SELL • RENT Also specializing in Property Management
Rob Lee
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
607-434-5177 roblee1943@gmail.com
One-of-a-kind location! Former automotive sales/service building of 20,000 sq. ft., PLUS 3-bay car wash! Instant cash flow! Third building provides 2,600 sq. ft.-garage/ warehouse space and 2,500 sq. ft. sandblast area. Includes 80+ acres zoned for residential, agricultural and other uses with Special Use Permit. Classy interior features classA lobby/office/showroom of 9,100 sq. ft. Includes offices, conference room, showroom, break room with kitchen/ baths/shower and a parts/storeroom. The third wing is a 7,000 sq. ft. clean room/paint booth/mechanic’s shop. $2,499,000. MLS#151861
Matt Schuermann
Registered Mortgage Broker NYS Banking Dept.
20 Chestnut Street • Suite 1 • Cooperstown 607-547-5007 www.leatherstockingmortgage.com
• New Purchases and Refinances • Debt Consolidation • Free Pre-Qualification • Fast Approvals • Low Rates
LIBRARY—Noon. “Hoopla 101.” Learn to use Hoopla to check out e-books, audiobooks, TV shows and movies with no wait times. Registration required. Huntington Memorial Library, 62 Chestnut Street Oneonta. (607) 432-1980 or visit https://hmloneonta.org/ adult-programs/ VIRTUAL TOUR— 2 p.m. “Thaw Collection of American Indian Art.” Associate Curator Julia Madore presents collection showcasing Native American artistry and craftsmanship. Followed by Q&A session. Free, $10 suggested donation. Registration required. Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown. (607) 5471400 or visit https://fenimoreartmuseum.org/ SOUP’S ON—4-5 p.m. “Homemade Soup To Go.” Free, all welcome. No age, socio-economic or church membership requirement. Continues Tuesdays through 3/19. Elm Park United Methodist Church, 401 Chestnut Street, Oneonta. (607) 432-6552. FIRST AID—6 p.m. “CPR Certification Course.” Edmeston Fire Department, 27 East Street, Edmeston. (607) 547-4328.
►Wed., Feb. 14 VALENTINE’S DAY GARDEN—Last day to register for “Gardening as You Age Discussion.” Tips and tricks for working smarter, not harder, to preserve longevity in the garden. Held 2/17 at 1 p.m. in person at CCE Schoharie Extension Center, 173 South Grand Street, Suite 1, Cobleskill. (518) 234-4303 ext. 124 or visit https://cceschoharie-otsego.org/events STORYTIME—10 a.m. Bring the children down each Wednesday for an entertaining story read aloud by library staff. Cooperstown Village Library, 22 Main Street, Cooperstown. (607) 547-8344 or visit https:// www.facebook.com/VillageLibraryOfCooperstown AGING PRESENTATION—1-2:30 p.m. “Caregiver Support.” Presented by Jessica Weeden, director of Family Support Services. Helios Care presentations held on second Wednesday of each month. The Oneonta Gathering Place, 5506 State Highway 7, Oneonta. (607) 432-5525 or visit https://www.helioscare.org/events/ CROCHET CIRCLE—3 p.m. Bring a crochet project and work with friends, learn to crochet, more. Supplies available. Held each Wednesday. Worcester-Schenevus Library, 170 Main Street, Worcester. (607) 397-7309 or visit https://www. facebook.com/WorcesterSchenevus
►Visit allotsego.com/ otsego-county-events-calendar/ for the full calendar.
Rental, Starter or Downsize IMPROVEMENTS THROUGHOUT. This 3-BR home is currently used as a rental, but would make great starter home. Side deck and front porch add to functional footprint. Newer appliances, hot water heater and electrical panel. MLS # 1471144 $129,000
Locally owned and operated Single and multi-family homes Commercial property and land
99 Main Street, Oneonta office 607.441.7312 fax 607.432.7580 166 Main Street, Suite 1 Oneonta | 607.433.2873 oneontarealty.com
GREAT OPPORTUNITY! You can own 2 investment properties w/great rental history. Main house has 2 apartments, (3 BR and 2BR). Both have hardwood floors, updated kitchens and baths, laundry. Bonus cottage has 2 BRs, updated kitchen and bath, laundry. MLS # 1518078 $225,000
www.oneontarealty.com
Lizabeth Rose, Broker/Owner Cricket Keto, Licensed Assoc. Broker Peter D. Clark, Consultant