r a e Y w e N y p p a H & e f a S a e v a H s w e N e t a d s i from all of u Wests
December 31, 2017
Issue No. 53
www.westsidenewsny.com
West Edition
Distributed to Bergen, Clarendon, Holley-Murray and Brockport-Sweden
A look back at 2017 – The Year in Review January
A crowd estimated to be over 1,000 people filled Washington Square Park in Downtown Rochester on Saturday, January 21, 2017 during the Women’s Solidarity March one day after the inauguration of President Trump. Photo by Karen Fien.
Sue Savard of the Emily L. Knapp Museum in Brockport stands near the 1905 Edison phonograph restored to working condition by Tim Fabrizio. Photo by Dianne Hickerson.
•Brockport Police Chief Daniel Varrenti hosted a public forum at Oliver Middle School to discuss drug-related crime and rental property issues. •The Spencerport Area Chamber of Commerce held their annual Awards Banquet on January 27. Award recipients were Roger Ressman, M&T Bank and Erie Canal Animal Hospital’s Dr. Dean Snyder. •NYS Canal System was designated a National Historic Landmark, placing New York’s operating canals among the premier historic sites in the United States. •Arthur Gay Jr., 90, was presented with an honorary diploma from Churchville-Chili Central School on January 10. The demands of farming, serving in the Army during WWII and raising his family kept Gay from attending school beyond sixth grade. •Author Michael Keene visited Holley to discuss his book Vietnam Reflections: The Untold Story of the Holley Boys. Eight Holley area natives – all graduates of Holley High School – were killed in action in Vietnam. The loss is believed to be one of the highest casualty rates per capita during the war.
February •Sue Savard received the Monika Andrews Creative Volunteer Leadership Award from the Brockport Village Board for her leadership and hands-on work in the restoration of the Emily L. Knapp Museum. •It was a winning month for Brockport high school athletes. The wrestling team won their fourth straight Section V Class A team title. The Blue Devils defeated Webster-Thomas to win the Section V Class B Championship in ice hockey. Capping off a no loss season, the boys’ swimming team brought home the Section V Class B Championship for the first time. •Genesee Community College was in the process of choosing items for its 50th Anniversary Time Capsule to be placed in the Richard C. Call Arena on the college’s Batavia campus.
Brockport boys’ swimming team won the Section V Class B Championship. Provided photo.
•John Gabalski, an Orleans County 4-H member, traveled to New York City to shadow MSNBC/NBC News anchor Craig Melvin as part of a 4-H “Day in the Life Experience.”
March •Liberty Pumps in Bergen was name Business of the Year at the Genesee County Chamber of Commerce Annual Awards Ceremony. •The Greater Churchville-Riga Chamber of Commerce presented community awards to Kathleen Stephany, Peg Naughton, Sue Davis and Brian Wilkins and Denise Haggerty of Wilkins RV. •Hurricane force winds blew through the region on March 8 toppling trees, downing power lines, and leaving destruction in their wake. Monroe County’s 911 fielded more calls for service in a single day than since ice storm of 1991. Some areas remained without power for several days in below freezing temperatures. •Westside News explored the local impact of the opioid crisis with a five-part series of articles. •Local mayors expressed concern over a proposal in Governor Cuomo’s executive budget mandating every county in New York State to prepare a consolidation plan that could lead to the dissolution of villages in an effort to lower property taxes. •Spencerport Ranger Robotics Team 3015 won the Finger Lakes Regional FIRST Robotics Competition and qualified for the World Championship competition. Churchville-Chili’s Robotics team also qualified for the competition.
•Dr. Amy Mercovich and Dr. Pat Swapceinski were celebrating 20 years of business at their chiropractic office, Bergen Family Chiropractic. •A book launch party was held for Spencerport resident and teacher Andrea Page as 20 years of research culminated with the publication of her first history book Sioux Code Talkers of World War II. •Byron-Bergen Central Schools named Dr. Paul Brill (class of 1982) and the late Barry Miller (class of 1983) to their Alumni Hall of Fame. •Artist/teacher Sarah Hart gave a presentation on her findings after months of studying a trunk full of art by early 1900’s Brockport resident and artist Helen Hastings. Both Hart and Hastings had been trained using the unique “Sight-Size” method. •VFW Post 6105 in Hilton celebrated 50 years of serving the needs of local veterans and their families on April 30.
continued on page 8
April •Hilton High School junior and trumpeter Matthew Piato was selected to perform for an audience of thousands in the 2017 National Association for Music Education All-Eastern Honors Ensemble in Atlantic City. •Brock became the first police dog in the Brockport Police Department. Officer Josh Sime was chosen to be Brock’s handler.
This tree crashed into a home on West Avenue in Spencerport during the March 8 wind storm. Photo by K. Fien.
Basketball fans may have recognized Spencerport State Farm agent Dominic Agostini (center) appearing in commercials for the insurance company alongside Chris Paul (left) and DeAndre Jordan of the LA Clippers. Provided photo.
Many roads, including Route 259 in Parma, remained impassable for days as crews worked to repair downed lines and restore power after the wind storm. Photo by Karen Fien.
2 Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017
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to our SIGILLOWelcome CHIROPRACTIC Welcome to our
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Patricia McKenna, LMT, Massage Therapist, has moved to join the team at Sigillo Chiropractic providing MASSAGE THERAPY. Stop in to see our new office or call for your next appointment.
637-3630
A “Special Thanks” to Chris Kuhn for a great job on the renovations to our new office building! 18 Graves St., Brockport • 637-3630 • Most major insurance accepted. Visit us on the web at www.sigillochiropractic.com
I don’t notice it, but my girlfriend says my breath is so bad she wants to break up with me. What can I do? You are not alone; many people are unaware of their own bad breath. Some foods may cause temporary bad breath but a persistent problem generally has other causes. And while certain problems in your lungs, blood and GI tract can cause persistent bad breath, over 90% of problems originate in the mouth. Several factors including medications, dry mouth, dieting, snoring, age, hormonal changes, and even stress can affect the oral environment causing more bacterial growth and bad breath. Proper brushing and flossing will eliminate many odors by removing bacteria and food debris around the teeth. The roof of the mouth, cheeks and tongue should be brushed as well. A tongue scraper is even more effective for removing the bacteria from the back of the tongue where the most offensive odors are often produced. While mouth rinses can eliminate some bacteria, they generally only mask odors and are only effective for 30 to 60 minutes. Because bad breath may also be caused by gum disease and tooth decay as well other infections and diseases, it is important to seek your dentist’s advice regarding any persistent problems with mouth odors.
Steven J. thompSon, DDS 42 Public Square Holley
638-5435
www.thompsondentalcare.com
Dr. Christopher J. Sigillo, D.C.
How can I stay on track with my new year’s resolutions to be healthier in 2018? Start with small steps! Often people start the New Year with so much motivation they try to implement too many lifestyle changes at once. This often ends up in New Years Resolutions failing before you turn the page on your calendar. If you’rE starting an exercise program, set a realistic goal of how often you will exercise. Don’t over do it in January only to stop going in February. Fitness is a lifestyle made up of many good healthy decisions, not a rush to drop 10lbs by the end of the first week of January. If you alter your normal behavior radically you are more likely to derail your good intentions. If you want to lose weight, focus on your diet. Try a simple change like replacing processed foods with healthier whole foods. It may seem like a slow and simple start but in the long run small changes make it easier for you to stick to you new habits and increase the odds for longterm success. Lastly, find ways to renew your motivation. Read inspirational quotes, subscribe to a fitness magazine, enlist a small group of like-minded friends for support, or hire a personal trainer to help keep you plugging along.
On Christmas Eve Day, residents of Beikirch Care Center in Brockport received gifts from Santa Paws, also known as Jesse the Therapy Dog. Julia A. Gibbs holds her present, a white poodle which looks a little like Jesse. Jesse and his mommy, Dianne Hickerson, visit the residents of Beikirch every week. Photo by Dianne Hickerson.
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Wishes for a Happy and Healthy 2018!
Tami Mungenast Certified Personal Trainer and Certified Nutrition Coach
585-705-5926
westsidenewsny.com
Suburban News - West Edition - December 31, 2017 3
Brockport Police report From December 18 to December 24, 2017, the Brockport Police Department handled 346 calls for service, were dispatched to one annoyance call, three motor vehicle accidents, one family trouble, one assault report, conducted 158 special attentions that include, but are not limited to, house checks, business checks, bike patrol, etc., conducted 57 traffic stops. Note that the above calls do not represent all calls and that not all calls are found to be as dispatched once on scene.
Your arrest will become public knowledge. In many towns, the recent drunk driving arrests are published online or in the newspapers. Not only is this embarrassing, but it could potentially be damaging to your relationships when your friends, family, and co-workers find out about your conviction. Your drunk driving charge will go on your public record for all the world to see. Conducting a quick search online will reveal your entire criminal history, including any drunk driving arrests. Anyone will be able to access this information, including potential employers, landlords, and more. If you are searching for a job, this will come up in a background check and could prevent you from landing the job. For some landlords, they may even choose not to rent to a tenant who has had drunk driving arrests. Bottom Line, don’t drink and drive! If you have had more than “two beers” then call someone to help you out. With all the ride shares nowadays that are easy to get, please choose one. You can use the Stop DWI New York Website for help, http://www.stopdwi.org/mobileapp Above all Have a Safe and Happy New Years, may your 2018 be filled with good health and prosperity~ Brockport Police Department! As always, any requests for comment or questions regarding this release should be directed to Chief Daniel P. Varrenti at 637-1020 during regular business hours.
Pet BoaRding
You’ll love the care your dog or cat will receive.
Dog Classes
Obedience • Agility • Nose Work
• Doggie Day Care • Grooming • Riding Lessons
Ebb Tide
Correspondence or payments with payment stubs can be mailed or placed in the locked drop box at the drive entrance.
Kennels & stables
Brockport Village Hall will reopen at 127 Main Street Friday, 1/12/18.
16787 Ridge Road • Holley
638-5042
www.ebbtidekennels.com
Your News Ideas
The first floor of 49 State Street will expand to accommodate Brockport Village Court. The second and third floors of 49 State Street will remain the Emily L. Knapp Museum and Library of Local History with seasonal hours and by appointment.
You could lose your license. One of the most common consequences for a DWI conviction is a license suspension. You could lose your license anywhere from a few months to a few years. This is sure to put a strain on your life when you can no longer get yourself from place to place on a daily basis. Instead, you will have to rely on friends and family or public transporation to get you to and from work and to help you run your errands. Your car insurance provider will also be notified of your drunk driving conviction and they could decide to raise your monthly rates as a result. Insurance providers even have the right to drop your coverage due to drunk driving as well.
You face hefty penalties for the crime. If you are arrested and/or convicted of DWI, you could also be sentenced to jail time and be required to pay exorbitant fines. In some cases, those convicted of drunk driving are required to complete alcohol programs or driver retraining courses. Drunk driving can strip you of your freedom if you are sentenced to time in jail. The fines you will have to pay can be draining on you financially. Also anyone sentenced for felony or misdemeanor DWI, whether a first-time or repeat offender, will have to install an ignition interlock in any vehicle they own or operate. The interlock contains a breath-checking unit that keeps the car from starting if the offender’s blood-alcohol level registers 0.025 or higher, a little less than one-third of the legal limit. The device could cost the offender up to $125 to install, with fees ranging from $70 to $110 a month, depending on the sophistication of the unit it must stay hooked up for the duration of the offender’s conditional discharge or probation - anywhere from six months to five years, depending on the sentence. Add in service fees, insurance and other costs and the tab can run into the thousands of dollars, on top of any court fines, surcharges and lawyer’s fees. Offenders caught driving without an interlock - by driving a buddy’s car or renting a vehicle, for example, could land in jail for up to a year. Those who try to help an offender by blowing into an interlock are subject to the same penalty. Most models will be equipped with a camera. If you want to avoid those types of consequences, the only option you have is to never drink and drive.
Ask about our
Brockport Village Hall at 49 State Street will be closed for the relocation of Village offices Tuesday, 1/9/18 through Thursday, 1/11/18.
Community message: With the New Year approaching, so come the celebrations. Please don’t let a driving while intoxicated arrest be a part of your New Years plan! Here are some reasons you don’t want to drive intoxicated or “buzzed.”
You could lose your job. Did you know that some employers will fire you on the spot if they find out about your drunk driving conviction? Employers have the right to choose who works for their company and if they are not happy about your DWI charges, they might decide to part ways with you. If this happens and you start to look for work elsewhere, potential employers will see the DWI conviction on your public record and might decide not to hire you. Losing your license could even result in the loss of your job if you aren’t able to get to work regularly and on time. For those who are required to drive while on the job, the loss of your license will likely mean the loss of a job, too.
Vacation Time?
Notice Village of Brockport
Boards whose meetings are open to the public and that can hold public hearings (i.e. Village Board, Planning Board, Zoning Board of Appeals, Historic Preservation Board) will continue to be held in the conference room / court room at 49 State Street.
editor@westsidenewsny.com
Phone numbers, email mail addresses, and the Village website address will remain the same.
Community Free Library
Leslie Ann Morelli Brockport Village Clerk
86 Public Square Holley, NY 14470
585-638-6987
Need A New Tube?
January LIBrary HaPPEnInGS: ADULTS:
You can pick one up at our office, 1776 Hilton-Parma Corners Road, Route 259, just north of Route 104 (Ridge Road). Look for the log cabin. Our hours are Monday-Thursday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Suggestion: If you are in a windy area, it would help if you put a piece of duct tape on the back of the tube to prevent the paper from blowing out.
• January 3rd – 6:30pm – WACKY WEDNESDAY –BEGINNING CROCHET Come learn some basic crochet stitches with Master Crocheter, Jim Greanier! Please stop by or call 585-638-6987 to register for this free adult program. • January 8th – 7:00 PM – ADULT READERS GROUP – Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons. Come join us for an evening of fun and literature.
STORY HOURS:
Bodine
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Every Wednesday at 10:30 AM • January 3rd—the letter J • January 10th—Bear Bonanza • January 17th – Being Sick and Getting Well • January 24th – Winter Animals • January 31st—Nursery Rhymes
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Dep. 5am most dates, tix in Grandstand, upgrade options 5/26 Angels 6/16 Tampa 6/30 Red Sox 7/21 Mets 7/28 Royals 8/18 Jays 9/1 Tigers 9/19 BoSox 6/9-10 Yankees @ NY Mets 2 games - tix Grandstand, hotel, Dep. 9am Back Sunday 1am..................... $450+ 6/29-30 Boston Red Sox Rivalry Series 2 games, bfast, Dep. 5am, return Sat. 8pm..... $460+ 1 bed $550+ 2 beds TBA Yankee Oldtimers Weekend 2 games..........$440+ 7/29-30 Pocono NASCAR 400 & KC @ Yankees, Hotel, tix, tgate, Dep. Naples 4am, return 11pm ...........$480+ 8/6 NASCAR @ The Glen Front stretch w/tgate........$180+
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Departs Pittsford. Itineraries mailed 7 days prior to departure. Please read and sign company policies prior to booking.
See our ad in the Westside News Hometown Community Directory
• January 11th – 10:30-11:00 AM –Move It & Shake It Storytime: An interactive and movement-based storytime • January 13th – 10:30-11:30 AM—STEAM Saturday: educational science, technology, engineering, art, and math activities • January 16th – 4:00-4:45 PM—After School Activity: Journaling: Learn about expressing yourself through writing and drawing and take a notebook home. Registration recommended. • January 27th—10:30-11:30 AM— Puppet Making Workshop: Use a variety of materials to make your own puppets and try them out in our theater.
Inspection Appointment... IF YOUR INSPECTION STICKER IS BLUE,
we’ll get you in & out - and on your way, so call today!
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2569 Spencerport Road Spencerport, NY 14559 Phone (585) 352-3530 Fax 352-6726 HouRS: Monday - Thursday 7 am to 7 pm, Friday 7 am to 6 pm
4 Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017
Wildlife warning for Brockport residents We always, all ways give you more
www.westsidenewsny.com (585) 352-3411 • FAX (585) 352-4811 P.O. Box 106 1776 Hilton-Parma Corners Road (Route 259) Spencerport, NY 14559
Since the Canal Corporation began their Vegetation Management Plan along the banks of the canal, some neighborhoods are being frequented by one or more fox, who have been impacted by work in their habitat. Please report any problems associated with the fox to Mayor Blackman or Deputy Clerk Erica Linden at 637-5300. Residents should feed pets indoors only and supervise pets when outside. Flashing lights, outdoor radios, and
ammonia-soaked rags will act as deterrents to both fox and prey. All garbage and compost containers should be covered and secure. Be advised that feeding wildlife, such as birds and squirrels, will encourage the fox to remain in the area. The Village of Brockport will provide information and updates on their website at www.brockportny.org and their Facebook Page.
Staff and Contact Information Publisher
Keith A. Ryan ext. 125
Editor Emerita
Evelyn Dow
Office manager
Marilyn Brown ext. 120
Editorial Department email: editor@westsidenewsny.com Classified Advertising ext. 124 email: classified@westsidenewsny.com General Information “0” for the operator email: info@westsidenewsny.com Advertising Representatives and Contact Information Lori Antonelli
ext. 133 lori.antonelli@westsidenewsny.com
Rachael Blair
ext. 139 rachael.blair@westsidenewsny.com
Jen Davila
ext. 135 jen.davila@greecenewsny.com
Debbie Day
ext. 131 debbie.day@westsidenewsny.com
Tami Raco
ext. 129
tami.raco@westsidenewsny.com Mary Lou Rockow mary.lou.rockow@westsidenewsny.com Ellen Stevens ellen.stevens@westsidenewsny.com
Ad production manager
ext. 134 ext. 130
Appreciations to all supporting Brockport Rotary pie sale - Selling pies from the Special Touch Bakery of the Holy Childhood School was the idea of Doris Russo, Brockport Rotary Club secretary. She is shown in photo handing a pie to Rotarian Gene Wood. The other photo shows Annie Crane, village trustee and employee of the Lift Bridge Book Shop, receiving her pecan pie. The pies were very large with a large amount of filing. The club has yet to decide if they will continue this activity next year, but it also has the advantage of supporting the bakery which employs many special needs individuals. The profits are going to Camp Haccamo, where a number of young people with special needs from our community attend summer camp each year. Provided photos.
Karen Fien ext. 128
Asst. production manager Joanne Michielsen ext. 128 email: production@westsidenewsny.com Production Emily Antinore, Vicki Caspersson, Suzette Coleman, Linda Michielsen, Donna Stultz. Website -- Barbara Burke email: barbara.burke@westsidenewsny.com
Writers & contributors Mark Ball, John Dunn, Maggie Fitzgibbon, Kristina Gabalski, Doug Hickerson, Warren Kozireski, Rick Nicholson, Terra Osterling, Joe Reinschmidt, Leisa Strabel. Editorial Assistant -Tori Martinez
ext. 126
Circulation & distribution -Don Griffin, Noreen Newton. ext. 123 email: circulation@westsidenewsny.com Published each Sunday by Westside News Inc., Suburban News circulates by private carrier and the U.S. Postal Service to free distribution recipients and paid subscribers in Bergen, Brockport-Sweden, Chili, Churchville-Riga, Clarendon, Clarkson, Hamlin, Hilton-Parma, North Greece, and Spencerport-Ogden. Business offices are located at 1776 Hilton-Parma Corners Road (Route 259), Spencerport, NY 14559. (585) 352-3411. Entered for mailing at Spencerport, NY 14559. Subscription rates are $40 per year; $25 for six months or less. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS All advertising in this publication is subject to approval before publication. We reserve the right to edit, refuse, reject or cancel any ad at any time. We shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from the publication (whether published correctly or not) or omission of an advertisement. COLLECTION NOTICE In the event of non-payment when due, an advertiser’s account may be turned over to an attorney for collection and will be liable for all charges paid by Westside News Inc. for collection. If judgments are received against the advertiser, the name of the person and the business will appear in this publication until the judgment is satisfied. Office hours:
Mon.-Thurs. ................................................. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Friday.............................................................. 9 a.m. - noon Closed Saturday and Sunday, Memorial Day, Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day. Also, the office is closed on Fridays which precede Memorial Day, Labor Day as well as the Friday following Thanksgiving.
Government Meetings
•Brockport: Village Hall, 49 State Street, Brockport is open Monday - Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. except holidays. Website: www.brockportny.org. Phone 637-5300. Village Board meets the first and third Monday of each month at 7 p.m. Village Board work session meets the fourth Monday of the month at 7 p.m. Planning Board meets the second Monday of each month at 7 p.m. only upon application. Zoning Board of Appeals meets the first Thursday of the month at 7 p.m. only upon application. Other Boards, Committees, Task Forces have varying meeting schedules. •Clarendon: Town Board meets on the third Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall, 16385 Church Street, Clarendon. Planning Board meets every second and fourth Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall. Zoning Board of Appeals meets upon necessity, on the first Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. •Clarkson: Town Board meets each second and fourth Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Clarkson Town Hall, 3710 Lake Road, Clarkson. Planning Board meets the first and third Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. Zoning Board of Appeals meets the first and third Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. Conservation Board meets the second Wednesday of every month as needed. Architectural Review Board meets on the first Tuesday of the month as needed. All meetings are held in the Town Hall, 3710 Lake Road, Clarkson. The Library Board meets on the third Tuesday of every month at 6:30 p.m. at the Seymour Library, 161 East Avenue. Historical Society meets on the first Wednesday of the month at 7 p.m. at the Clarkson Academy, 8343 Ridge Road. The Town Clerk’s Tuesday office hours have been extended to 6 p.m. •Hamlin: Planning Board meets the first Monday of each month at 7 p.m.; Town Board meets the second Monday of each month at 7 p.m.; Conservation Board meets fourth Monday of each month at 7 p.m.; Zoning Board of Appeals meets the third Monday of each month at 7:30 p.m. All meetings held at the Hamlin Town Hall, 1658 Lake Road, Hamlin. For information, call 964-7222. •Kendall: Town Board meets on the third Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. for regular meetings. The conference sessions (workshop) meets the first Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. Meetings are held at the Kendall Town Hall, 1873 Kendall Road, Kendall. The Town Board has also scheduled additional work sessions to occur on Saturdays prior to the third Tuesday of each month from 9 to 11:30 a.m. at the Kendall Town Hall, 1873 Kendall Road, Kendall. Planning Board meets the fourth Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m., with optional work sessions held the second Tuesday at 7 p.m.; and the Zoning Board meets the second Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. at the Kendall Town Hall.
•Murray: Town Board meets the second Tuesday of each month beginning at 7 p.m. at the Murray Town Hall, 3840 Fancher Road, Holley. •Sweden: Town Board meets the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month at 7 p.m. Planning Board meets the second and fourth Monday of each month. Town of Sweden offices are open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For information, contact the Supervisor’s office at 637-7588.
Library
•Hamlin Public Library events: Mega Blok Playtime: Wednesday, January 3 from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Preschoolers will love our gigantic collection of blocks. Lego Club: Saturday, January 6 at 11 a.m. Children can play with our gigantic collection of Legos. Kid’s Craft: Saturday, January 13 at 11 a.m. for kids 5+. Register at 964-2320.Volunteen Connection: Saturday, January 20 at 11 a.m. Tweens and Teens are invited to help design and plan exciting and creative library programs. The Hamlin Public Library is located at 1680 Lake Road North. For more information or to register for programs, call 964-2320.
Meetings
•The Triangle Tract Genealogical Society meets the first Tuesday of the month from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Ogden Farmers’ Library, 269 Ogden Center Road, Spencerport. Free; all welcome. For information, call 617-4867. •The Brockport Lions Club meets the first and third Wednesday of the month at the Brockport area Vet’s Club on West Avenue at 6:30 p.m. Contact person is Barb Marshall, 255-0948 or e-mail at appleumpkin@aol.com. •The Hamlin Morton Walker Board of Fire Commissioners meets on the first Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. and the third Monday of the month at 7 p.m. for the purpose of paying bills. All meetings will be held at the Hamlin Morton Walker Fire District Building, 1521 Lake Road in Hamlin. •Brockport Writers Group meets the first Wednesday of every month from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at Lift Bridge Book Store, 45 Main Street, Brockport. •Brockport V.F.W. Post 2890 meets at 5 p.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at the Brockport Vets Club, 222 West Avenue, Brockport. For information, call 637-5012. New members welcome. •The Hamlin Democratic Committee meets the first Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Hamlin Town Hall.
Social & Professional
•The Hilton Heart and Hand Quilt Guild meets the first Thursday of each month from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the Hilton Fire Department, 120 Old Hojack Lane. (Please do not park in front of hall - park and enter by side door on left side of hall). New members and visitors welcome. For information contact, Mary Hinkley, 392-4153 or Sarah Barton, 392-5403.
Say you read it in the Calendar!
Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017 5
sports/recreation
Celebrating 15 Years in Business
Thank You
For Your Patronage & Support
Wiley’s Ark 44 State St., Holley •
Veterinary Care for Your Pets
638-7309
wileysark.com
Thank You On behalf of the Salvation Army I would like to thank all of the volunteers who rang for me at the Tops in Hamlin this Christmas Season. I would also like to thank Tops in Hamlin for letting us ring in their store again this year. Lastly, I would like to thank the community for their great support of this worthy cause. Because of everyone’s help we were able to raise more than we did last year, which a great portion will be used to help those in need in our community. Again, thanks everyone. See you next year!
Tom Ingraham
Hamlin Kettle Drive Chairman
This crew of hardcore waterfowlers braved the single digits for a great late season hunt his past Tuesday (l to r) Drew Brown, Joel Hendrick, Genny, Dylan Makovec and Mark Makovec. Provided photo.
Late season waterfowl hunting (The sequel) by T.R. Hendrick Well, judging by the tsunami of Christmas car commercials dominating television I’m sure Santa brought each of you brand-new cars this year … right. Seriously, is there anybody you know who actually gives someone a car for Christmas? You can tune in any television channel and there they are, trying to make you think that everybody gets a car for Christmas. Sorry, but I really needed to get that off my chest. When we last left our hero, he had just survived something totally moronic. He (I) had just about drowned himself and his buddy on Lake Ontario in January while trying to shoot a few diver ducks which, ironically, are terrible table fare. Many of the diver variety of ducks dive under the water for their food; their diet consists of crustaceans and tiny minnows that make their meat taste very gamey. The late season waterfowler hunters are a wild bunch. There isn’t much they won’t do to shoot a duck or a goose. You could argue that they are even crazier than ice fishermen when it comes to their willingness to brave ferocious elements and chance their safety. A perfect example was hunters that were out during this past first week of the second half of the waterfowl season … in single digit temperatures. In the brutal cold I saw hunters in boats out in the middle of the Cayuga Lake and, I’m sure, there were hunters in the other Finger Lakes boat blinds as well. We were able to hunt Cayuga Lake from shore this week with good success, but my son’s lab got so cold we had to put her in front of our portable heater for a good while to get her happy again. After opening day, which was this past Tuesday, December 26, the late season ducks get educated very quickly. Once they get shot at a few times, they become spooky and hard to decoy. It’s then a good time to make a switch to field goose hunting. The goose hunting around New York State is fantastic at this time of year. With the weather so cold, geese get concentrated in certain areas where they have access to water that isn’t frozen to roost on at night and fields where they can still get at some feed during the day. The nice thing about goose hunting in January is that you usually don’t have to be on water. All you have to do is lay in the snow for four or five hours, that’s much saner. With the weather as cold as it was last week, most of the area geese have moved to the Finger Lakes area and are feeding in the surrounding corn fields. There is a state run co-op on the east side of Cayuga Lake with roughly 30 goose fields and a couple of water blinds. The local landowners have these open for hunting with the agreement that the state oversees all the hunting (http://www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/71870.html). That area has thousands of geese using it now because on the north end of the lake is Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge. When the weather is cold enough to freeze Montezuma’s marshes, it pushes tens of thousands of ducks and geese off the refuge and south down onto Cayuga Lake where they have open water to roost on and many corn fields surrounding the Finger Lake. If you want to DYI hunt and be successful, you need to scout. It is the absolute number one key to all successful waterfowl hunts, but especially on late season geese. Luckily for me I have a son who is an expert at this. I swear that the kid can find geese in a desert. It might possibly have something to do with me throwing a live goose into his crib when he was a baby. He now chases geese with a vengeance that borders on obsession. The snag is that once you find the birds, you have to get permission to hunt that area, and figuring out who owns what is when it gets tough. There are very few large farms in this area and it seems that most fields are owned by one person and farmed by another, much larger farming operation. Small working farms are almost extinct. My son Joel puts in a ton of wheel time and with the help of the new mapping apps that show the property boundaries and landowners’ addresses, he usually finds a good honker field to hunt when we need one. The hunting apps are the greatest thing to happen to the freelance waterfowler since the lay-out blind. With app in
hand once you find the field the geese are using, the web site will not only show you the property lines but also the address of the landowner. Even a whitehead like myself can appreciate this technology. It’s then just a matter of dodging a farm dog or two and knocking on a few doors to get a yes. Now that deer season is over, it is much easier to get a yes from property owners to hunt geese. It can be feast or famine during this late season waterfowling. You will either shoot your limit or be shut out completely; but when it works it can be the best hunting of the season. Just beware during the single digit cold temperatures, especially if there is water involved. If you are new to the sport I suggest you find an experienced waterfowler and beg your way in on a hunt. Volunteer that you will carry all the decoys, boats, motors, blinds, mojo decoys, heaters, guns and shells down to the shore blind and I’d bet they let you join them. The season only remains open until January 14 so grab every piece of warm clothing you own to get out there and run with the hard core waterfowlers. But be careful, you could get hooked if you don’t freeze first! Provided information
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by Warren Kozireski Churchville-Chili rallied back from 18 points down in the first half and from 16 down in the fourth quarter, but eventually fell to NW-Prep 61-60 in boy’s basketball. The Saints managed just nine points of offense in the first quarter, but a 10-0 highlighted by a pair of free throws by Dennis Swetz, a three-pointer from Fidel Brock, a drive and free throw by Corey Powell and a runner from Griffin Stella started a rally that had them down by only six at the half. The start of the second half was the Powell show with three consecutive baskets to cut the lead to just two points before the Panthers ended the third quarter on a 21-8 run to extend their lead back to 16. The Saints pressure defense held the Panthers off the scoreboard for the final three minutes of regulation while the offense received consecutive field goals from Eric Lewis, free throws and put-back by Powell and a lay-up by Stella after a great feed from Lewis. That again cut the NW-Prep lead to 61-60 with 32 seconds remaining, but the Saints couldn’t convert of their final two possessions. Powell led the Saints with 16 points and added six rebounds. Stella and Marcellus James each added 13 points while Lewis finished with 11 points and six boards for the 2-5 Saints.
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Opinion/Comments Canal Corp’s “Vegetation Management” project should be no different on east side than in Brockport tions. Subsequently the town supervisors, along with the Brighton town supervisor, held an evening town hall meeting with the public and the press but not the Canal Corp in attendance. That second meeting is where the information reported in the news came from.
An article in the local paper on December 19 reported, “Two state agencies overseeing a $2.6 million Erie Canal project that calls for the clear-cutting of trees and brush along embankments have agreed to delay work until February in Brighton, Perinton and Pittsford and are willing to compromise on how much work is done.” Given the work that has already been done in Brockport, that article prompted a conference call with the Canal Corp on December 21. I spoke with Dave Mellen, Director of Construction Management, and Jackie Schillinger, Director of Communications, explaining that the way things appeared here, Brockport and Orleans County had taken the hit for the more prosperous east side, who were getting what everyone along the canal had wanted by forestalling the project and securing compromises. According to the Canal Corp, that is not the case. Canal Corp personnel met with the town supervisors of Pittsford and Perinton, and Senator Funke in a private meeting, explaining basically what they told Brockport residents at a November 8 meeting, and answering ques-
Here’s what the Canal Corp reiterated to me: 1. The project is on hold simply because of the weather and will resume when conditions improve. The contractor’s schedule is to have all cutting completed by March 31, and all small brush removed by June 30. 2. The only compromises will be, as they were here, small ones with individual property owners. 3. The dominant thinking across the nation is that trees don’t belong on earthen dams, which is what the canal embankments are. “We are 100 percent committed to doing what we are doing and that will be no different on the east side of Rochester.” 4. There will be two public meetings on the east side with the Canal Corp, January 17, 6 to 8 p.m. Perinton
Community Center and January 18, 6 to 8 p.m., PittsfordMendon High School Auditorium. 5. The Canal Corp will return to Brockport for a public meeting before phase 2 (stump removal - winter of 2018) occurs. 6.If residents have further questions and concerns, they should contact Dave Mellen (david.mellen@canals. ny.gov). I hope, given this latest development, that the Canal Corp is learning how to improve public relations and communication. Brockport residents, and especially property owners whose properties border the north bank of the canal, should prepare well, with questions, concerns, and any requests regarding remediation assistance in advance of the phase 2 meeting in Brockport. I am happy to be of assistance in this endeavor. Margay Blackman Mayor of Brockport
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A look back at 2017 continued from front page
May
A new mural celebrating Brockport’s history was unveiled in a ceremony on May 11 kicking of the Low Bridge High Water festival. Local artist Stacey Kirby painted the mural on the south side of the railroad bridge spanning Route 19 in the village. K. Gabalski photo.
2017 produced the highest recorded water levels on Lake Ontario since reliable records began in 1918. Flooding and land erosion caused problems for lakeshore residents through the spring and into the summer. Above, a home on Shore Acres in Hamlin was completely flooded. K. Gabalski photo.
•Electric customers began seeing new Clean Energy Standard surcharges on their monthly bills. The surcharge was state mandated in an effort to keep failing nuclear plants operations until a “green” market could be established to meet electric demand. •Robert Batt of Albion became the new executive director of Orleans County Cornell Cooperative Extension which was in the midst of a year long celebration of its centennial. •Higher than usual levels of precipitation and run-off combined with the implementation of the controversial Plan 2014 which restricted the release of water from Lake Ontario into the St. Lawrence River had residents along the Lake Ontario shoreline dealing with damaging flooding and land erosion caused by high lake levels. •Ownership of the eight empty “Diaz Homes” in Holley was turned over to the Village of Holley Development Corporation by the EPA. The homes had been cleared of all chemical contamination and the VHDC was looking to sell the homes to new owners. •Spencerport’s Hannah Lopa, who had been crowned Miss New York in January, traveled to Las Vegas to compete for Miss USA 2017. Lopa finished in the top ten. •Charlie Cowling, archivist at The College at Brockport’s Drake Memorial Library, received the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Librarianship. •Planting began at the new Community Garden in Holley. The village obtained a $15,000 grant to construct the garden where community members could rent space to grow flowers or vegetables organically. •The Spencerport Volunteer Firemen’s Association Ladies Auxuliary marked their 70th Anniversary.
June
About 50 community residents in the Town of Kendall came out to the Highway Garage on May 6 to help fill and distribute sandbags to lakeshore residents and businesses. The town filled highway trucks with sand which was then released through a salt spreader at the back of the truck and into sandbags. The National Guard was also deployed to help with sandbagging efforts. K. Gabalski photo.
Stephen Cudzilo, eighth grade earth science teacher at Hilton’s Merton Williams Middle School, shared his experience at the Honeywell Educators at Space Academy in Huntsville, Alabama. The five-day program focused on space science and exploration. Provided photo.
Richard Schlesinger (right) and a crew from “CBS Sunday Morning” stopped in Spencerport to interview Dave Ruch (left), a performer and teaching artist from Buffalo, as part of a segment on the 200th anniversary of the start of construction of the Erie Canal. The segment aired in July. Photo by Karen Fien.
The community rallied to pay for repair of the tower clock on Brockport United Methodist Church. Photo by Dianne Hickerson.
•Spencerport became the first community in the Finger Lakes Region to earn the Clean Energy Community designation for its commitment to reduce energy consumption, cut costs and drive clean energy within the Spencerport community. Churchville, Bergen and Brockport achieved the designation later in the year. •Hilton-Parma-Hamlin Chamber of Commerce honored Heinrich Collision as Business of the Year and Peter Miles from Hilton Family Pharmacy as Business Person of the Year. •After a one-year break to re-organize, June Fest returned to the Village of Holley. The day-long event featured yard sales throughout the village, a 5K race, a parade and more. •A grassroots citizens group, United Shoreline, was founded in Kendall and quickly grew as residents became proactive in obtaining help and information from government officials about the flooding and damage caused by high lake levels. •Sara’s Garden & Nursery in Brockport celebrated 40 years in business. •Construction was underway on a $14 million project to upgrade the junction of Route 531 and Route 36 along with modifications to nearby Route 31 in the towns of Ogden and Sweden. The project is expected to be completed by the end of 2018, and is aimed at easing traffic flow and improving safety. •The Brockport Lions Club committed to sponsoring a community project to raise $21,500 to repair Brockport’s tower clock in the Brockport United Methodist Church which suddenly stopped working after more than a century.
The Charlie Daniels Band performed a show to a crowd of just under 3,500 at the Hilton Firemen’s Carnival on July 12. Chris Wormer (left) performs on the guitar next to Charlie Daniels. Photo by Karen Fien.
•St. John the Evangelist Church in Spencerport held a Food Truck Rodeo and community picnic on June 25 in celebration of the church’s sesquicentennial. •Two Brockport High alumni were inducted into the Section V Baseball Hall of Fame. Peter Agostinelli (class of 1987) and Richard Reynolds (class of 1950) were honored in a ceremony at Frontier Field. •A new mural, painted by Bergen resident David Burke, was dedicated at Byron-Bergen Public Library. •Spencerport School Superintendent Michael Crumb retired June 30 after 19 years with the district.
July •Derek Warren took over as principal at Hilton’s Quest Elementary School while Karl Dubash was appointed assistant principal at Brockport’s Oliver Middle School. •Construction was underway on a $22.7 million plan to renovate several of Churchville-Chili’s athletic facilities including the stadium, track and pool. •Members of the Friends of Hamlin Beach State Park, along with Park Manager Kate Gross and several park employees, installed 30 Interpretive signs along the walking tour at the former CCC/POW camp located on Moscow Road within Hamlin Beach State Park. The signs enhance the paper based walking tour with photos and maps as well as educational descriptions of the buildings for all visitors to the site to see. •The Albany Symphony played to a crowd of hundreds gathered along the canal in Brockport. The concert was part of the “Water Music New York” tour celebrating the bicentennial of the beginning of the construction of the Erie Canal. •The National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House in Rochester held a week-long VoteTilla from Seneca Falls to Rochester, docking at several towns and villages along the route to commemorate the centennial of women’s suffrage in New York State. •Byron-Bergen Junior/Senior High School sophomore Siomara Caballero won four medals in track and field at the North American Indigenous Games held in Toronto.
August •After several years at Northampton Park, the Monroe County Fair moved to the Town of Rush. •The Village of Brockport decided to hold off pursuing proposed public nuisance and party nuisance legislation because other communities had faced constitutionality issues when enacting similar laws. •The Town of Clarkson kicked off its annual “Good Neighbor Day” celebration Friday, August 25, with a Highway Department Open House to give residents a first-hand look at new offices added to the front of the highway garage adjacent to Hafner Park on Route 19. •Oak Orchard Health celebrated community health at its inaugural farm-to-table community health dinner August 26 at The College of Brockport. •Donovan Berbeneciuc of Spencerport constructed a dry-stacked stone wall on the east side of the Colby/Pulver House Museum on Colby Steet as his Eagle Scout project. The stone wall will serve as a backdrop of the daylily display garden planned by the Ogden Historical Society. •Sweden Town Board members adopted a resolution Memorializing the late Wayne “Jack” Mazzarella who died July 29 at age 89. Mazzarella served the Brockport/Sweden community in countless ways as an educator and volunteer.
The Town of Ogden sponsored a fireworks display on Saturday, July 29 as part of the ongoing Spencerport Sesquicentennial and Ogden Bicentennial celebration. The event capped off day one of Spencerport Canal Days. Photo by Joe Pompili.
Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017 9
The Year in Review September
November
•The year-long celebration of the Ogden Bicentennial and Spencerport Sesquicentennial continued on September 9 with an Ox/Pig Roast and Hoedown held at Colby Farm. Teresa Schreiber Werth debuted her children’s book Goodnight Spencerport! at the event. •Fred Holbrook celebrated his retirement from the Village of Spencerport, Town of Ogden and Monroe County with a gathering at the Spencerport Depot and Canal Museum on September 17. •Hilton Central Schools Teachers Association named Northwood Elementary School kindergarten teacher Barbara Richardson their 2017-2018 Teacher of the Year. •Duncan Family Farms, a leading organic grower in the country, expanded into New York State establishing operations in Monroe County. The company partnered with local agribusiness Newstead Ranch to support the effort in Brockport. •Christopher Albrecht, a fourth-grade teacher at Brockport’s Fred W. Hill School, was named the 2018 New York State Teacher of the Year. •The Village of Bergen successfully “upcycled” it’s former water pump/DPW building into an attractive, welcoming all-season shelter for community use. A dedication and ribbon cutting at the new Sage Pavilion was held September 28.
•Spencerport Rangers boys volleyball team won their second consecutive Class B Section V championship. •Gerald Underwood defeated long-time incumbent Paul Kimball as Clarkson Town Supervisor. Todd Baxter unseated Patrick O’Flynn for Monroe County Sheriff. •The Village of Brockport purchased the former Lifetime Assistance building at 127 Main Street for use as a new village office building to open up space at the current village hall on State Street to better accommodate the growing needs of the Village Court. •The Hilton Lioness Club held a dedication ceremony at Parma Town Park on November 12 for the park bench they furnished in memory of Becky Kelley. •The Ogden Planning Board gave site approval for a commercial solar array on Whittier Road just west of the Washington Street intersection. •BISCO donated $5,000 from its Arts Festival/Duck Derby proceeds to purchase a special swing for Corbett Park. •Hamlin Recreation Department received the Multimedia Award for its successful use of video in its digital advertising campaigns and staff member Kyle Foelsch received one of two Dr. Christine Z. Howe Memorial Scholarship awards at the 2017 Genesee Valley Recreation and Parks annual conference. •Brockport Ambulance suddenly ceased operations on November 21 after more than fifty years of service to the community. BVAC cited reduced revenue and limited number of volunteers among the many factors contributing to the shut-down. Monroe Ambulance adjusted staff and resources to compensate for the loss of Brockport Ambulance service.
October • Five new names were added to the Brockport Central School District’s Athletic Wall of Honor. The 2017 inductees were Mike Kemp, athlete and coach from the Class of 1970; Mel Lorback (posthumously), athlete and coach, Class of 1945; Ralph Matsko, athlete, Class of 1980; Andy Parrino, athlete, Class of 2004; and Arlene Suda, athlete, Class of 1988. •Brockport Village Board gave approval for a proposed memorial in remembrance of shooting victim Megan Dix to be located at the rear of the South Avenue parking lot between a wooded area and the railroad tracks. •Brockport’s 12th Annual Walk To School Day held on October 4, was a record setting event with the most students walking to school in the history of the event: 777 to be exact. •New York State’s Canal Corporation held an information meeting on its vegetation management plan to remove trees and brush along the canal embankment in Orleans and Monroe Counties through the end of the year. •Union Congregational United Church of Christ welcomed its new pastor, Rev. Shirley L. Pudney-Eilers. •The historic Medina sandstone chapel in Hillside Cemetery in Clarendon was getting a new slate roof as the first major step towards restoration and preservation of the landmark. •The Honorable Allyn S. Hammel was presented with the Honorable James E. Morris award at the Monroe County Magistrate’s Association Dinner. The association’s highest award was given to Judge Hammel in recognition of his devotion to the futherance of justice throughout his many years of service to the Town of Clarkson Justice Court. •For the 10th year, the Hilton-Parma area joined forces to participate in National Make a Difference Day. Fifteen community groups and over 250 volunteers took part in 20 projects throughout the community.
A rare example of the early work of famed Clarendon taxidermist/ artist/inventor Carl Akeley, was welcomed back to the Cobblestone Museum in Childs, Orleans County, during a special reception September 16. Part of the museum collection, a red fox mounted by Akeley in 1879 when he was 16 years old, had been restored and returned to the museum. Matthew Ballard, Orleans County Historian (left); Bill Lattin, retired Orleans County Historian and retired director of Cobblestone Museum; and Melissa Ierlan, Clarendon Town Historian with the Akeley fox. Photo by Rick Nicholson.
Spencerport Rangers girl’s varsity soccer team was ranked top in the state, finishing their regular season 15-0-1. The team went on to win their second consecutive New York State Class A crown in November. Photo by Karen Fien.
December •Churchville-Chili High School inducted the inaugural class of ten athletes to its new Athletic Hall of Fame. Honorees included Felicia Barretta, Aaron Faro, Ron Fodge, Joanna Patalano, Nikki Prad, Tim Redding, Randy Shaffer, Robert Shaffer, Lyndsay Wall and Ron Zorn. •Brockport Village Board announced the hiring of Lt. Mark T. Cuzzupoli as Brockport Police Chief to replace Chief Daniel P. Varrenti who is retiring March 31, 2018. •The Churchville-Chili Concert Choir performed an original musical composition created for the choir by composer Nathan Jones at the New York State School Music Association’s 82nd annual Winter Conference. •The Clarkson Town Board honored longtime Supervisor Paul Kimball with a resolution in honor of nearly four decades of service to the residents of the town. The Clarkson Recreation Park at 8000 Ridge Road will also be renamed “Kimball Park” in his honor. •Hilton Cadets freshman bowler Elena Carr threw an 831 series after games of 265, 300 and 266, setting a national high school record. The 300 was the first perfect game of the 14 year old’s career. •The canal was dewatered to allow for culverts in Niagara, Orleans and Monroe counties to be cleaned and inspected, then refilled to verify the integrity of the culverts after cleaning. The canal was then dewatered for the season following another inspection. •Paul and Joy Shewan were honored by the Chili Historical Preservation Board for their restored barn at 36 Attridge Road in Chili. •Christopher Martin was sworn-in as a Brockport Village Court Justice on December 17.
Compiled by Joanne Michielsen from past issues of Suburban News & Hamlin-Clarkson Herald.
Lake Champlain Maritime Museum’s (LCMM’s) replica 1862 canal schooner Lois McClure made stops in Spencerport and Brockport in August during her 2017 Legacy Tour commemorating the Erie Canal Bicentennial. Photo by Karen Fien.
Ogden resident Bill Stultz travelled to Spring City, Tennessee to experience two minutes and 39 seconds of totality during the solar eclipse on August 21. Provided photo.
A Little Free Library constructed by Gordy Fox (right) as a scale model of the Normal School in Brockport was dedicated at the Alumni House on October 6. Fox also built a Little Free Library replica of the Morgan-Manning House’s Carriage House. Photos by Dianne Hickerson.
A Senior Open House was held at the Sweden/Clarkson Community Center in November to encourage seniors to take a look at the entire recreation facility and learn more about the services and activities available at the new location. Programming for the senior community moved to the community center from the Lodge on the Canal in October. Photo by Dianne Hickerson.
The historic Medina sandstone chapel in Hillside Cemetery in Clarendon was getting a new slate roof in October as the first major step towards restoration and preservation of the landmark. Photo provided by Erin Anheier.
Halle Lowry of Greece used bottle caps as pie plates to bake 100 miniature apple pies for an October event commemorating Hilton Apple Fest. Provided photo.
10 Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017
death notices Dealerships would like to welcome
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ANNOUNCING THE 3RD ANNUAL
TRIBUTE TO
FIRST RESPONDERS
BERGEN
KENDALL
BROCKPORT
•DeWaele, Clarence L. “Dutch” “Cap” died December 19, 2017, at age 93. Predeased by his wife Lois; son James ; sister, Mary (Palmer) Gaetano; son, Douglas Miller Jr. He is survived by his loving wife Janet; daughters, Paulette (Carey) Lape, JoAnn (Mark) Whipple, Janet (Van) Huston; Rev. Karen (Garry McCaffery) Smith; Virginia Parker, Dale (Tim) Schmitt, Elizabeth (Daniel) Berry; son, Michael Miller; 20 grandchildren; 18 great grandchildren; sisters; Beatrice (John) VanOrman; Shirley N. (Frank ) Semmelmayer; very close friend Bob Slocum; many nieces and nephews. Dutch served in the 8th Air Force as a flight mechanic with 35 missions over Germany durning WWII. A Memorial Service was held December 27 at the United Methodist Church, Brockport. Contributions can be made to Kendall United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 464, Kendall, NY 14476 or Brockport United Methodist Church, PO Box 247, Brockport, New York 14420 in his memory.
•Goosley, Alice F., died December 21, 2017, age 87. Predeceased by her husband John Goosley Jr., brothers Ed (Pat) and Joe Jeziorowski, sister Theresa (Ed) Mohney and daughter-in-law Peggy Goosley. She is survived by her children; John Goosley, Mary Ann Goosley, Chris Goosley, and Sue (Paul) Henshaw; grandchildren, Sean (Ola) Goosley, Brandon, Mitchell, and Tyler Henshaw; sister-in-law Estelle Jeziorowski; beloved nieces, nephews and friends. Alice was a devoted member of Nativity BVM Church and Catholic Daughters of the Americas. She graduated from St. Ann’s Business School in Buffalo. She worked at the Liberty Bank in Buffalo in Bonds and Securities. Alice retired from SUNY Brockport after many years as Head Administrative Assistant of the FSA. A Mass of Christian Burial was held December 28 in Nativity of the BVM Church, Brockport. Contributions can be made to Nativity BVM Church Building Fund or to the Catholic Daughters of the Americas (check written to “CDA Court Nativity of Our Lady #931”) care of Nativity Church in her memory.
SPENCERPORT
•Maher, James W., age 93, died December 23, 2017. Son of the late Clarence and Eileen (Lawler) Maher.He was a 93 year member of St. Brigid Church in Bergen. He was a lifelong farmer and avid hunter in Riga. Beloved husband of Ann (Fodge) Maher; loving father of Regina “Gina” (Ron) Smith, Terry (Sue) Maher, Mike (Torrey) Maher, Dennis and Dan Maher; devoted grandfather to nine grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren; dear brother to Mary O’Rourke. Predeceased by son, Tim Maher; and siblings, Theresa Keenan and Richard Maher. His Funeral Mass was said December 30 at St. Brigid Church, Bergen. Interment, St. Brigid’s Cemetery, Bergen. Contributions can be made to the church in his memory.
•Parlato, Fortunato “Fred,” died December 13, 2017. He is survived by his loving and devoted wife of 43 years, Vicki; his sons, Fred Jr. and Kenneth; daughter, Jackie (John) Carey; and granddaughters, Ashley and Lynsey; siblings, Philip (Jackie) and Virgil (Ilene) Scardino; mother-in-law, Arlene Kepler; brothers-in-law, Lance (Melanie) and Kevin (Barbara) Kepler; nieces, nephews, cousins and a loving circle of friends; best friend, John Nania; beloved companion “Buddie.” Predeceased by parents, Antoinette (Virgil) Scardino Sr. and Frank (Jennie) Parlato, father-in-law, Harold Kepler; brother-in-law Daniel Kepler. At Fred’s request no services will be planned. Contributions can be made to: Lollypop Farm, 99 Victor Road, Fairport, NY 14450; St. Jude’s Research Hospital, PO Box 50, Memphis,TN 38105 in his memory.
•Kepler, Victor E., died December 15, 2017 at age 90. Predeceased by his son Michael Kepler, four brothers and one sister. He is survived by his loving wife of 67 years, Elaine; children Frank (Donna), Steven (Kathy) and Cindy (Randy) Dumas; daughter-in-law Marianne Kepler; 13 grandchildren and 18 great grandchildren; many nieces and nephews. He was a U.S. Army Veteran. Family will receive friends on Saturday, December 30 from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Fowler Funeral Home Inc., 340 West Avenue, Brockport. A Celebration of Life will be held following calling hours at 5 p.m. Those wishing can contribute to Sandy Creek Seventh Day Adventist Church in his memory.
HILTON
Coming in the February 25th Edition
of Suburban News and Hamlin-Clarkson Herald Every fire department, ambulance corps and police department in our coverage area will be featured including: 1) Color photo of membership and staff 2) List of members and staff 3) Calendar of activities for all first responder organizations 4) Member of the Year for 2017 for all organizations who choose to select one. Deadline for all material Wednesday, February 1st
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•Matla, Donna, died December 20, 2017 at age 78. Survived by her daughter, Lori Matla and incredibly loving friends, nieces, and nephews. Donna was a small business owner for over forty years and a member of the Hilton/ Parma Chamber of Commerce. Visitation to be held on January 4, 2018, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Thomas E. Burger Funeral Home, Inc., 735 East Avenue, Hilton, followed by her Memorial Service at 7 p.m. Contributions can be made to the Open Door Mission or Mt. Carmel House in her memory. •Shemski, Gertrude M., died December 23, 2017, age 82. Predeceased by the father of their children, George A. Shemski Sr.; daughter, Cynthia Heywood; son Theodore Shemski; and sister Dolores Marlatt. Survived by children, Susan (Brian) Ordway, George Jr. (Debbie), Casey, Joseph Shemski; two grandsons, Robert Sciolino Jr. and Daniel (Kerry) Sciolino; a niece, two nephews, many cousins and friends. Her Memorial Mass was held December 28 at St. Leo Church, Hilton. Interment, Parma Union Cemetery.
Holley
•Schaap, Sharon D. (Dutton), age 68, died December 3, 2017 at Albany Memorial Hospital surrounded by family after a brief illness. Born in Rochester, she was the daughter of the late Lenzie “Bud” Dutton and Phyllis Dutton. Beloved wife of the late Terry L. Schaap, she is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Tersha (Jonathan) Choy of Watervliet; sister Linda (Jeff) Guy of Rochester; several nieces, nephews, and cousins. Services will be held at the convenience of the family. Contributions can be made to the Department of Theatre and Music Studies at The College at Brockport. Make checks payable to the “Brockport Foundation,” 350 New Campus Drive, Brockport, NY 14420 in her memory.
•Byers, Fred M. “Crow,” died December 23, 2017, age 81. Predeceased by his loving wife of 50 years, Freida; two brothers and one sister. He is survived by his children: Dale (Angela), Paul (Eileen) and Lori Cole (Dan Pries); grandchildren: Bobby, Jessica (Mike), and Paige; great grandchildren: Max, Walter, Kiernan and Bentley; many sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law, nieces and nephews. Fred served his country in the U.S. Navy. A Mass of Christian Burial was held December 29 in St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church, Holley. Interment will be held in Holy Cross Cemetery in the Spring. Contributions can be made to St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church, Holley, NY in his memory.
•Mariano, Robert A. (Bob), a banker, community leader and philanthropist, died December 22, 2017 following a prolonged battle with cancer. He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Barbara; daughter, Michele (Brian Sr.) Labigan; son, Mark Sr. (Jayne); grandsons, Mark Mariano Jr., Brian Jr.(Brittany) Labigan; granddaughter, Brittany Labigan; brother, James Mariano; sister, Debi (David) Dineen and numerous cousins, nephews, nieces, dear friends and business associates. He had a 35-year career with the local Lincoln Rochester Trust Co., later acquired by Chase Bank. Bob was always active with Barbara in whichever community he worked, and they lived in. In Rochester, Bob was chairman of the Blue Shield Board, Treasurer of St. Mary’s Hospital Board, and Chair of the town of Perinton Republican Committee. There will be no calling hours or services, per Bob’s request. A Celebration of Bob’s Life took place at Brook Lea Country Club, Rochester on December 27. To share a memory of Bob or send a condolence to the family visit www. walkerbrotherfh.com. Contributions can be made to Lifetime Care, 3111 Winton Road South, Rochester, NY 14623, Wilmot Cancer Center, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642 or any charity of one’s choice in his memory.
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Steven C. Larson 6/14/1962-12/23/2017 Steven Christopher Larson, 55, of Brockport, NY, passed away unexpectedly on December 23rd surrounded by family at the University of Minnesota Hospital. His Mass of Christian Burial will be 11:00 am, Saturday, December 30th at Church of St. Mary in Willmar with visitation one hour prior to the mass at the church. Burial will be held at a later date. Gifts in memory of Steve will be used for the benefit of his sons education. Arrangements by Harvey Anderson Funeral Home, Willmar, MN. www.hafh.org Steve was born on June 14, 1962 in St. Paul, MN, the son of Wayne and Sharon (Martinettow) Larson. He graduated from Willmar High School in 1980. He continued his education at St. John’s University, Collegeville, MN, where he graduated in 1984. Steve later earned a Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Boston University. In 1997 he was united in marriage to Angela Phelps in Watertown, NY. This union was blessed with two sons, Thomas and Gerard. In 2004, Steve retired from the US Army as a Lieutenant Colonel after 20 years of service. He enjoyed golfing, fishing, sports, and spending time with his family and friends. Steve is survived by his sons, Thomas and Gerard Larson of Spokane, WA; parents, Wayne and Sharon Larson of Willmar; sister, Julie Larson of Eden Prairie, and brother, David (Wendy) Larson, and niece, Anna, of Springfield, VA.
Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017 11
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ELECTRICIANS Electrical Work - all phases. In business for 30 years. Master’s license, insured. Quality job at reasonable prices! 585-6378321.[12-31] _________________ Electrician for all your needs. In business for over 20 years, am licensed and insured. Up to date with all new code changes. No job too big or too small, please call for a quote! Vince 585-3700861.[1-21-18]
GUTTERS Call Joe for seamless gutters, aluminum trim, carpentry work. Complete jobs or repairs. Fully insured. 585-3923248.[11-11-18]
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PAINTING & PAPERING JIM CERVINI Painting and Paperhanging, remodeling, drywall hanging, textured ceilings, gutter cleaning and replacement, and power washing. 585270-9539.[TFN] PAINTING: Interior/Exterior, Powerwashing, Deck Restore, neat, dependable and highly skilled. Reasonable rates, 30 yrs. Experience. Call Phil 585659-8366.[TFN]
This is Suburban News & The Herald. Thank you for reading!
The Right Blend... GENERAL REMODELING Complete Home Improvement including interior and exterior work. 35 years experience. Free estimates. Locally owned and operated by S&G Remodeling. Call Cory, 585-352-0747. [TFN]
News Consumer Information Community Events Coverage
Suburban News and The Herald
PLUMBING/SEPTIC Reynolds Plumbing - Kitchen & Bath Remodeling, new homes, sewer & drain cleaning, gas lines, water heaters. Plumbing Repair Service. Call Joe 585-6376879, cell 7376016. [TFN]
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2004 Honda Civic EX, 4 door, auto., power steering, power windows, power locks, tilt, cruise, 90,000 miles. $4,000. 585415-5141.[12-31] _________________ 2 0 1 1 Ta u r u s S E , auto., 4 door, loaded, 67,000 miles, extra clean. $9,500. 585415-5141.[12-31]
gENERal sERVIcE APPLIANCE REPAIR PEST ELIMINATION Appliance Repair: Call Lou Borrelli. Wa s h e r s , d r y e r s , refrigerators, rangesovens, microwaves. 585-352-3440. [TFN] _________________ Top Notch Appliance Service - “A notch above the rest!” Insured. Reasonable rates. Professional Service. 585820-9964, www.topnotchappliance repair. net[TFN]
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WEDDINGS/ SPECIAL OCCASIONS
AUTOMOTIVE
AUTOS WANTED
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Cash 4 Cars - For your cars, vans & trucks. Up to $500 & free towing. cash4carsrochester. com. 585-482-2140.[1231]
Have a Safe & Happy New Year! ART WORK Original acrylic paintings ... seasonal, landscapes, portraits, modern folk images, various sizes. Affordable & very interesting. For more information contact Nils R. Caspersson, 585-924-7868.[TFN]
FIREWOOD/FUEL
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While Supplies Last • Additonal Fees for Out-of-Town Delivery
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CLASSIFIEDS
NOTICE
BOATS & ACCESSORIES 2011 Larson LX710, 135 hp. custom covers, trailer. Used 5 times, less than 15 hrs. on motor. $15,000 585-355-5873.[TFN]
FIREWOOD/FUEL
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Alternatives Fuels Dry Creek Premium Wood Pellet Fuel. Blaschak Bagged Coal. Envi Block-pressed wood fuel (small & large). Call Hendel Farms Feed & Grain Store, 3451 North Main St., Holley. 585638-6042.[1-28-18]
FIREWOOD/FUEL
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Junk Cars, Trucks & Vans Wanted. Higher cash paid for most models. Always free pick up! 585-3055865.[TFN]
ITEMs FOR salE/FOR RENT
Professionally trained soloist, available to add a touch of elegance to your wedding, meeting or social event. Call 585-352-8730.[TFN]
Each week, 52 weeks a year, the area’s “Best Read” local newspaper, Suburban News or The Herald, is brought to you free
AUTOS WANTED
The carriers for this newspaper have contracted to delivery you do not been receive your copy your paper no later than Sunday. If you do not please callyour our copy receive by that time please call our office at 097
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12 Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017
ITEMS FOR SALE/FOR RENT LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT
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PETS & ANIMALS
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★★★★★★ The deadline for next week’s edition is Thursday at 4 p.m.!
YOU ARE READING A
REAL ESTATE APARTMENTS/ UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS/ UNFURNISHED
Spencerport - Beautiful two bedroom townhouse in Union Hill. Freshly painted, new hardwoods & carpeting, village electric. Lawn, snow & refuse service included. $1,280. Available January 1. By appointment, 585-8205142.[1-7] _________________
Hilton: Cedar Hill Townhouses - The Space your family needs to grow ... away from the crowded city. Affordable two and three bedroom townhouses with 1.5 baths, finished basement family rooms, storage/ laundry rooms with w/d hookups, central air, 24-hour emergency service, and playground for the kids. Cats are welco me. Rates from $825-$875 + security. Call for details 585-3926015. Professionally managed by Landsman. Hours: MondayFriday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. equal Housing Opportunity. We do not participate in Section 8 or DSS programs. __________________
One bedroom apartment in Hilton; large kitchen, new bath, offstreet parking, $700/ month + utilities, no pets, no smoking. 585392-5869.[1-7-18] _________________ 1670 Mt. Hope Avenue, Rochester (minutes from College Town). One bedroom, $825 per month - utilities included, security deposit required, one year lease, full basement for storage, off street parking, laundromat across street (Mt. Hope Plaza), immediate availability, pictures available upon request, will consider pets. Contact Thomas Nanni, 585694-4212.[TFN] _________________
Spencerport/Greece. Studio/1 BR apartments, 2 BR House and Mobile homes. Great location on W. Ridge near Manitou. Commercial Building 2,000 sq. ft. Subdividable. 585-3813672.[TFN]
WESTSIDE NEWS PUBLICATION
Brockpor t-Willowbrooke Manor. Spacious two bedroom apts. Appliances, carpeting, 24 hr. emergency service, free cable TV, recreation and laundry facilities. 585-637-3400.[TFN] __________________ Persons placing ads that discriminate contrary to Federal Law can be liable for fines of $10,000 and more per offense. DON’T DISCRIMINATe. If you feel that you have been discriminated against please call the Fair Housing enforcement Project at 585-3252500.[TFN]
Reach almost 5,500,000 homes in the New York state classified Network available through this newspaper. Only $490 for 15 words. $15 each additional word. Call 585-352-3411 and place your ad today![TFN]
CONDOS/ TOWNHOUSES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
OPENING A NEW bUSINESS?
Adver tise in the Westside’s only publications with saturation coverage... AND a professional editorial staff. That spells readership and response. To advertise in Suburban News and The Hamlin-Clarkson Herald call 585-352-3411 for details.[TFN]
One of the most important aspects in opening a new business is the promotional work that must be done. The professionals at Westside News all have many years experience in helping local businesses - just like yours - to achieve their goals. Plus ... if you are a new business ... we’ve got the break you deserve! Ask about the Westside News New Business Special.
New business Special
[12-3] MISCELLANEOUS
you Can Bank on tHe Classifieds
NOTICE
With every signed 5-week contract for at least an eighth page Westside News will double your ad size at no additional cost. The business must agree to run 5 consecutive weeks of advertising within the first 3 months of opening for business.
call The Westside News Team Today at
352-3411
Harper Park Hamlin: New and pre-owned manufactured homes for sale in lovely community. Yard with 2 car asphalt driveway. Short drive to Hamlin Beach State Park. Moderately priced, single floor living. Take a tour today. 4000 Brick Schoolhouse Rd., Hamlin, NY. Call 585964-2434 or visit us at www.harperhomes. net. [TFN]
RESORT PROPERTIES FOR RENT Three bedroom, 2 bath home in North Cape May, N.J. (10 minutes to the ocean, beaches). Call Keith at 585-352-8730. [TFN]
★★ ★
AMERIcAN jObS!
★★ ★
PRODUcE LOcAL... SHOP LOcAL... HIRE LOcAL...
contact Tami for help with your employment needs • 352-3411 ext. 129 • or Tami.raco@westsidenewsny.com
EvERy EMPLOyMENT AD RUNS ONLINE FOR
free!
JOBS/FULL TIME
JOBS/FULL TIME
JOBS/FULL TIME
MANUFACTURING
rocHEstEr BasEd construction company is
Gates Albert, Inc.
• Production Trainees • Davenport Operators • Setup/Troubleshoot • Tool Makers • Inspectors • Machine Repair/Rebuild • General Labor
Must be trainable and willing to learn multiple tasks within the organization.
Gates Albert offers work stable environment, excellent benefits, 401K match and career growth. EOE
Gates Albert, Inc. 3434 Union Street North Chili, NY 14514 Fax: 585-594-4305
hr@gatesalbert.com
JOBS/FULL TIME
looking for an
ExpEriEncEd HEavy EquipmEnt mEcHanic Ideal applicants must possess the following: • Experience with: • Various types of heavy equipment • Class 3- 8 trucks and trailers • Electrical & Hydraulic systems • Ability to work extended hours if necessary • CDL A license a plus, but not necessary This is a full time permanent position offering Competitive Wages, Medical, Dental, Vision, Life Insurance, 401k with company match, paid vacation and holidays. To apply: please forward your resume to linda@ramarsteel.com or fax it to (585) 263-2734
Sales representatives - FT/PT. Start the new year with a business of your own. Training available. Must be self-motivated. Send resume to: applications@earlysunriserealty.org.[1-14] __________________ House Cleaner - Days, M-F. Can earn over $500/wk. with performance & attendance rewards. Must be at least 21 years old & have own car. 585-2474650.[TFN]
Persons placing ads that discriminate The deadline contrary to Federal Law can be liable for fines of $10,000 and more per offense. for next week’s DON’T DISCRIMINATE. edition is Thursday at 4 p.m.
westside News is looking for
walkiNg Carriers
The following inserts should be found inside your edition of the Suburban News or Hamlin Clarkson Herald this week.
for spencerport
To be eligible for the walking routes, you must be at least 11 years old. If you are still in school, you must provide working papers.
• gATES bIg m Inside all papers in Ogden and Spencerport. • TOPS Inside all papers in Bergen, Holley, Kendall, Clarendon and Murray. IF YOU FAIL TO RECEIVE A COPY OF THESE FLYERS AS YOU SHOULD, PLEASE CALL OUR OFFICE AT 352-3411.
Be sure to ask your realtor to advertise your home in The HamlinClarkson Herald and Suburban News. The only two publications on the west side with saturation coverage ... and a professional editorial staff. That spells readership ... and that spells results. Have them call us at 585-3523411 for all the details. [TFN]
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
Happy new year from westside news
ImmedIate openIngs Include:
Help a Veteran in need! Donate your gently used furniture and household items. Call 585-866-1747 or visit our website pgrny. org.[TFN] _________________
HOMES FOR SALE
Condo for Sale by owner. Park Place at Hilton Condominium - 30-C Salmon Rd. Great buy at $90,000. Call Cory 585-352-0747.[12-31]
Seeking innovative, talented people to advance our leadership position in precision Davenport machining. We are looking for motivated people to join our team in support of over 100 production machines.
NOTIcES
FREE NOTARY SERVICE - Michelle Johnson, Hamlin, NY. If you need something notarized you can contact me at notarymj18@aol.com to arrange. [TFN]
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Suburban News & The Herald 1776 Hilton-Parma Corners Rd. Spencerport, NY 14559
352-3411
email: production@westsidenewsny.com
Please call
352-3411 x 123
for further information.
Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017 13
★★ ★
aMEricaN jObs!
★★ ★
PrODUcE LOcaL... shOP LOcaL... hirE LOcaL...
contact Tami for help with your employment needs • 352-3411 ext. 129 • or Tami.raco@westsidenewsny.com
EMPLOYMENT JOBS/PART TIME
JOBS/PART TIME
JOBS/PART TIME
EvErY EMPLOYMENT aD rUNs ONLiNE fOr
frEE
NATIONwIde AdverTIsers JOBS/PART TIME
School Bus Drivers Wanted
BROCKPORT CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT Starting Pay: $13.50/hour
• Must have HS Diploma or equivalency • Clean driving record • Be able to pass required physical exam • All training provided • Call: Transportation Dept. at 585-637-1807
Reader Advisory: The National Trade Association we belong to has purchased the above classifieds. Determining the value of their service or product is advised by this publication. In order to avoid misunderstandings, some advertisers do not offer employment but rather supply the readers with manuals, directories and other materials designed to help their clients establish mail order selling and other businesses at home. Under NO circumstance should you send any money in advance or give the client your checking, license ID, or credit card numbers. Also beware of ads that claim to guarantee loans regardless of credit and note that if a credit repair company does business only over the phone it is illegal to request any money before delivering its service. All funds are based in US dollars. Toll free numbers may or may not reach Canada. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Makes/ Models 2000-2016! Any Condition. Running or Not. Top $$$ Paid! Free Towing! We’re Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-9851806. Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 866-428-1639 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket. Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-888-909-9905 18+.
Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201. AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING - Get FAA Technician certification. Approved for military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-453-6204
ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information.
Have a Safe & Happy New y ear from all of us at
weStSide NewS
sTATewIde AdverTIsers Brungard Income Tax is hiring for a part-time experienced tax preparer for this upcoming tax season. Must be registered with IRS & NYS. Please email resumes to: info@ brungardtax.com[128-18] _________________ Salmon Creek Country Club has an opening for a wedding coordinator. Please apply in person at 355 Washington Street, Spencerport.[TFN]
Persons placing ads that discriminate contrary to Federal Law can be liable for fines of $10,000 and more per offense.
DON’T DISCRIMINATE
PART-TIME
HELP WANTED
SALES DEPARTMENT of Westside News • 15-20 hours per week • Salary plus commission • Eventual full-time possible • Unlimited income potential Apply with resume at
Apply@westsidenewsny.com
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! We buy 2000-2015 Cars/Trucks, Running or Not! Nationwide Free Pickup! Call 1888-416-2208. AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue, Boeing, Delta and others- start here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1866-296-7094. MANY RN POSITIONS available in your vicinity. Hospitals, correctional facilities, and home health assessments. Great Pay & Benefits. White Glove Placement 1-866-387-8100 #202 recruit@whiteglovecare.net 1068435DCA. Over $10K in debt? Be debt free in 24-48 months. Pay a fraction of what you owe. A+ BBB rated. Call National Debt Relief 1-855-403-3654.
A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/ no obligation. CALL 1-800-553-4101. VACATION HOME, CAMP OR LAND FOR SALE OR RENT? Advertise with us! We connect you with nearly 3-million consumers (plus more online!) with a statewide classified ad. Advertise your property for just $489 for a 25-word ad, zoned ads start at $229. Visit AdNetworkNY.com or call 1-877-275-2726. Recently Diagnosed with LUNG CANCER and 60+ years old? Call now! You and your family may be entitled to a SIGNIFICANT CASH AWARD. Call 1-877-689-5293 today. Free Consultation. No Risk.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace at little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1855-439-2862.
Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy, compare prices and get $25.00 OFF your first prescription! CALL 1-844-520-6712 Promo Code CDC201725
DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 855-434-9221 or http://www.dental50plus.com/44.
NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help you self-publish your own book. FREE author submission kit! Limited offer! Why wait? Call now: 1-877-635-3893.
OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-855-839-1738.
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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-800-9198208. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar..
IF ADVERTISING IN ONE FREE PAPER IS SMART, then advertising in hundreds of them is pure genius! Do it with just one phone call! Reach nearly 3 million consumers statewide in print -- plus more online -- quickly and inexpensively! Zoned ads start at $229 for a 25-word ad. Visit us at AdNetworkNY. com or call 1-877-275-2726. DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes.Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 1-855-587-1166. DISH Network. 190+ Channels. FREE Install. FREE Hopper HD-DVR. $49.99/ month (24 mos) Add High Speed Internet - $14.95 (where avail.) CALL Today & SAVE 25%! 1-855-891-5734. VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! Call now Save 1800-870-8711. YOU or a loved one have an addiction? Very private and Confidential Inpatient care. Call NOW for immediate help! 1-877-212-1490. MOBILEHELP, America’s Premier Mobile Medical Alert System. Whether You’re Home or Away. For Safety and Peace of Mind. No Long Term Contracts! Free Brochure! Call Today! 1800-960-8653. HERO MILES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org
Spencerport Chamber Awards Banquet January 26 The Spencerport Area Chamber of Commerce will recognize 2017 Awards Winners at its Annual Banquet Friday, January 26, 2018 at Whittier Road Party House, 88 Whittier Road, Rochester. Cocktails/music/networking at 6 p.m. Dinner, awards and speaker follow at 7 p.m. Silent Auction benefits – Homesteads for Hope & Monroe 2–Orleans BOCES. Chamber Officers /Board of Directors invite the community to enjoy the Annual Banquet evening. Keynote Speaker will be Monroe County Sheriff Todd Baxter. Jenny Rae Brongo is recipient of the 2017 Clyde W. Carter Citizen of the Year Award. Jenny Rae Brongo and her mother, Luann, founded Homesteads for Hope, a Community Farm along the Erie Canal in Ogden. Based on family experiences raising Chuckie, their autistic brother and son, they saw the need for “a place to belong” that would include young adults of all abilities. Determined, Jenny Rae championed opportunities, gaining recognition and support. In 2014 funding came via charitable donations, local and national. In 2016 it was possible to purchase a 55-acre property that today represents Phase I, the Forever Homestead, followed by Phase II, Farm Expansion, and Phase III, Homesteads Village. The Brongo story - with Chuckie as Founding Farmer, is a story of his sister Jenny Rae’s love - within a caring community.
State Farm Insurance, 409 South Union Street, Spencerport, will receive the 2017 Joyce A. Lobene Business Person/s of the Year Award. Dominic Agostini, and the State Farm Team, help customers/neighbors with an array of insurance needs: from auto, home and life to commercial and financial/banking. After graduation from Niagara University, Dominic Agostini anchored his State Farm location here, eventually purchasing the building. Later Kiwanis Club President, Dominic supports the Easter Egg Hunt, Canal Days, Ogden Parks & Recreation annual Pineway Ponds 5K Race/Walk, and serves on the Town of Ogden Conservation Board. The Dominic & Amy Agostini family resides nearby with their three children who attend Spencerport schools. Brindle Haus Brewing, owners John and Kristine Boothe and Tom and Sarah DiPietro, will receive the 2017 Civic Beautification Award. The creatively renovated building is at 377 South Union Street, Spencerport. Investing blood, sweat and tears, the friends transformed a vacant doctor’s office into a casual, fun, relaxed tasting room with big-screen TV (of course) – and viewable brewery. These young parents even thought of a children’s area. The name reflects Pit Bull rescue, so a dog or two might stop by for a drink (of water). Over many months, following code guidelines and inspection regulations, barn brewing moved from passionate hobby to winning business. “Are
you thirsty, Friends?” Lots of parking shared with Bob’s Pool & Garden & Fowler’s Liquor Store. New Award in 2017! Member of the Year, Glynne Schultz, Spencerport Professional Building. Glynne Schultz shares innovative ideas for the future, plans “behind the scenes” and is a Volunteer at Community Events. Find Glynne in creepy costume at the October Ghost Walk. Anniversaries from the December 20 Holiday Chamber Luncheon at Braemar Country Club: Adams Basin Inn - 45 years; Colby Homestead Farms - 215 years; Expressions of Dance by Lisa - 25 years; Lamont Awards & Apparel - 45 years; Lori Ritzel/Mary Kay Cosmetics - 25 years; David Moore - 40 years; Plantation Party House - 50 years; Schultz Associates - 35 years; Spencerport Federal Credit Union - 55 years; Stonewall Construction - 20 years; Suburban Disposal - 55 years; Superior Technology - 20 years; The Unique Shop - 35 years; Town of Ogden - 200 years and Village of Spencerport - 150 years. Support your neighbors! 2017 Chamber Officers include: President Jill Cordts, Vice President David Moore, Secretary Joann Carr, and Treasurer Nancy Bodhorn. Easy to Register by credit card at www.SpencerportChamber.org. $35 members; $45 non-members. Sponsorship Levels available: Jake Conkling 352-5756. Chamber Office, 129 South Union Street, Spencerport: 617-0200.
14 Suburban News - West Edition - December 31, 2017
Legal Notice
Service Clubs ring for Salvation Army - Rotary (as did each of the Brockport Service Clubs) rang for the Salvation Army in December for eighteen 2 hour shifts each. Each club took a Saturday before Christmas at Brockport Walmart and Mahans Liquor shop. Lions decided to do additional bell ringing at Mahan’s on the week before Christmas. The results of the annual competition won’t be known until January. Special appreciation goes to those Rotary friends who rang and the two Brockport businesses who support bell ringing and the service clubs.
Legal Notice Village of Brockport Please take notice that the Historic Preservation Board of the Village of Brockport will hold a Public Hearing beginning at 6:30pm on Thursday, January 18, 2018, in the Conference Room of the Village Court building, 49 State Street, Brockport, New York 14420 to consider historic landmark designation for: •205 Park Avenue All interested parties will be given the opportunity to be heard. Leslie Ann Morelli Brockport Village Clerk
Keep up with projects in your neighborhood. Read SN Legal Notices.
Salmon Creek Country Club
Above, Kathy and Paul Beaumont show lots of Christmas Cheer. At left, Chris Mazzarella continues the job that she used to share with husband Jack. The club appreciates her interest (and fortitude). Provided photos.
Let Us Cater YoUr
PartY
about business
Catering Menu
a special feature of Westside News Inc. offered exclusively to advertisers.
*Buffet includes plates, napkins, silverware and serving spoons.
(20 person minimum)
The Farmer’s Table in Hamlin now offering pies from “Special Touch Bakery”
Regular Buffet - $9.50 per person (Includes 2 meats and 3 sides) Deluxe Buffet - $11.00 per person (Includes 3 meats and 4 sides) ChoiCe of MeatS: Roast Beef in Au Jus Chicken Pieces Chicken Parmesan Marinated Chicken Breast Pulled Pork
Barbeque Beef Barbeque Chicken Breast Chicken French Virginia Baked Ham Italian Sausage
ChoiCe of SideS: Macaroni Salad tossed Salad Caesar Salad Cole Slaw Salt Potatoes oven Roasted Potatoes Corn
Rice Pilaf French Style green Beans Baked Beans tuna Macaroni Salad Potato Salad Pasta Salad Macaroni & Cheese
garlic Mashed Potatoes Mashed Potatoes Cajun Corn wild Rice Mixed Vegetables Scalloped Potatoes Ziti
RollS wItH ButteR And MARgARIne InCluded
355 Washington St., Spencerport, NY 14559
585-352-3664
Plus tax, and $35 delivery within 15 miles is available
The Board of Trustees is pleased to welcome Christine Gates as the new Director of the Hamlin Public Library. Christine brings a wealth of experience working with youth, technology and the public. In addition, her pleasant persona, enthusiasm and creative ideas make Christine a great fit. Hamlin residents are encouraged to stop in to the library on Saturday, January 13 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for a “Meet the New Library Director” day. Provided photo.
The Farmer’s Table, Hamlin, is proud to announce that they are now carrying local handcrafted pies from the Special Touch Bakery at the restaurant. For decades, students and workers at Holy Childhood’s School program have been baking incredible pies for the Greater Rochester Community. Currently employing 20 people, with and without disabilities, bakers are working side by side producing these famous pies customers have come to know and love, with plans to hire as many as 40 employees. Special Touch Bakery recently expanded into their brand new, state-of-the-art 20,000 foot facility. Their bakers have a passion for making every pie just right. They have an enormous sense of pride, accomplishment and independence that helps them in all aspects of their lives. For more information about this organization, visit http://specialtouchbakery.org.
AREA WORSHIP SERVICES BROCKPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Serve. Pray. Worship. A Welcoming and Affirming American Baptist Congregation. 124 Main Street, (585) 637-9770. Sunday: 9:45am - Praise Music; 10:00am - Worship; 10:30am - Children’s Study; 11:15am - Adult Study. Free Community Meal 3rd Sunday.
G.O. CHRISTIAN CHURCH
22 South Main Street, Churchville (across from the Johnson House Restaurant), 585-454-9152, www.gochristianchurch.org, Pastor Dominic Renaldo. SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE at 10:30 am, BIBLE STUDIES WEDNESDAYS at 7 pm. Our FOOD PANTRY is open Wednesdays from 6:30 to 7 pm, free and open to the community. We are a church committed to Jesus Christ, His Word, and sharing His love with people walking through real life. Handicap accessible.
HILTON BAPTIST CHURCH
“A Congregation of the American Baptist Churches.” We are a community of God’s people who seek to enable others to form a spiritual connection with God and share the Good News of Jesus Christ. 50 Lake Ave., Hilton, NY 14468, (585) 392-7990. Pastor Dan Brown. Website: www.hiltonbaptist.org. E-mail: hbchurch@frontiernet.net. Facebook: Hilton Baptist Church, Worship Service: 10:00AM followed by a time of fellowship. Children’s Sunday School: 11:00 AM – 12:00 Noon. Child Care available during the Worship Service. Handicap Accessible. Hearing Assistance available during the service.
HILTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Making disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world by Following Christ; Connecting Generations; Transforming Communities. 21 West Avenue, Hilton, NY 14468, (585) 392-8761. Rev. Jennifer Green, pastor. Website: www.humcny.org, E-mail: humc98@rochester.rr.com. Service: 10am. Fellowship: 11am. Sunday School: 11:30am. Child care available 9:30am to 12:30pm. Adult Bible Study: Monday 7pm & Thursday 1pm. Handicap Accessible.
MORTON BAPTIST CHURCH
1152 County Line Road, Hamlin, NY 14464, 585-659-8459, mortonbaptistchurch@yahoo.com, Pastor James Richardson (cell 880-6433). For The Glory Of God And The Advancement Of His Kingdom. Service with choir at 10:30am, Children’s Sunday School - during church service, Adult Bible Study Wednesday at noon, Choir practice Wednesday at 6:30pm, Communion the first Sunday of each month. Handicap accessible.
OGDEN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
“To equip ourselves and others to be disciples of Christ as we seek God’s will for our church and beyond.” Sunday worship with choir at 10:00 a.m. with Sunday School for children. Fellowship hour after worship with lots of good food. Men’s and Women’s Bible studies. Youth group. Many Service and Fellowship opportunities. Handicapped accessible. 2400 South Union Street, Spencerport 14559, 585-352-6802. www.ogdenpresbyterian.org. Pastor Tedd Pullano.
PARMA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH
39 Hovey Street, Hilton, (585) 615-6383, www.PCFMinistries.com, Facebook: Parma Christian Fellowship Church. Rev. Dr. Myke Merrill. Worship Services: Saturday 5:00PM, Sunday 10AM. Family Midweek: Wednesday 6:30PM - Kids Club, TurningPoint Teens, Adult Bible Discussion Group. Nursery School: Parma Kids Preschool and Child Care Center, 39 Hovey Street, Hilton. School Phone: (585) 392-5792.
ST. GEORGE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
635 Old Wilder Road, Hilton, NY 14468 (across from Kelly’s Apple Farm), 585-392-4099, www.stgeorgehilton.org. Please join us for Worship and Sunday School at 10am.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
1107 Lake Road West Fork, Hamlin, NY 14464, (585) 964-2550. Pastor Christian Bode. Sunday Worship 8:30 & 11AM. Sunday School & Bible Class 9:45AM. NYS Licensed Child Care - Mon.-Fri., 6AM-6PM, 964-5859, UPK & Preschool.
ST. LEO’S CATHOLIC CHURCH
167 Lake Avenue, Hilton, (585) 392-2710, www.stleochurch.org. Father Joseph Catanise. Worship: Saturday 4pm for the winter; Sunday 9:30am (includes Children’s Liturgy); Sunday 6pm LifeTeen Mass. Adult Bible Study on Sundays at 10:30am. Solemnity of Mary: Monday, January 1 Mass 9:30am. Handicap accessible. All are welcome.
ST. MARY’S CHURCH
ST. MARK’S CHURCH
13 South Main Street, Holley 16789 Kenmore Road, Kendall Parish Center - Holley 638-6718, www.stmarystmark.org. Father Mark Noonan. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday - 8:00AM St. Mary’s; Thursday - 5:30PM St. Mary’s; Friday - 8:00AM St. Mark’s; Saturday Vigil - 5:00PM St. Mary’s; Sunday - 8:30AM St. Mark’s, 10:30AM St. Mary’s.
To Have Your Services Listed Please Call 352-3411
Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017 15
Since 1935
Wednesday Night Auction Starting at 3:30 p.m.
A new collection of consignments every week, ranging from antiques to tools, artwork to furniture, sporting goods to kitchenware. Today’s trends and nostalgia from every decade – all the raw materials needed to re-purpose, reuse and upcycle. Preview at www.bontragerauction.com RefReshments available
Bontrager’s Auction Center 8975 Wortendyke Road, Batavia 585-343-4529
!
NEW
NOW YOU CAN ENTER ONLINE!
To make entering our Directory Contest easier we now have the questions on our website
WESTSIDENEWSNY.com
Click on “Features” and select the Directory Contest from the choices. That week’s questions will be on that web page. All answers can only be found in the current edition of the
Santa visits with children during the annual “Umpteenth” holiday party in Clarkson. Supervisor Paul Kimball looks on.
Hometown Community Directory simply email your answers to the four questions to directoryfunpackage@westsidenewsny.com
Holiday tradition draws families in Clarkson
AGAIN THIS YEAR... WIN $600 FUN PACKAGE!
by Kristina Gabalski
Possible Tour Prizes, We Will Give You A Choice Of 2 Or More.
Families filled the Clarkson Courthouse building Friday, December 22, for the annual “Umpteenth” holiday party. Supervisor Paul Kimball acted as master of ceremonies - as he has done for 34 years - and read “The Night Before Christmas” for children and their families in attendance. The story was followed by a visit from Old St. Nick himself and all children in attendance had the opportunity to visit with Santa and receive a gift. Santa also offered any adults in attendance the opportunity to express their Christmas wishes before he headed out to prepare for his annual Christmas Eve trek. He reminded the children about the real meaning of Christmas and the significance of gifts which are shared at holiday time. “Gifts symbolize our love for each other,” Santa said. Kimball said the “Umpteenth” Christmas party originated decades ago following WWII and was hosted by the Clarkson Republican Women for many years until the town took over organizing the celebration in 1984. The event also included a pinata and refreshments.
• Syracuse Football/Basketball • Buffalo Pro Football • Buffalo Sabres • Yankees • Red Sox • Blue Jays • NY Mets @ Citi Field • Finger Lakes Wine Festival • US Open Tennis • Nascar & Indy Racing • School Trips • White Water Rafting • Ski Tours to Gore Mountain & Austria • NYC Shopping/Exploring/Rockettes Make your selection and $600 will be applied against the total. **Certain exclusions apply, based on availability.
Package courtesy of
BODINE UNLIMITED TOURS, INC www.bodineunlimitedtours.com
Also we’ll draw 3 winners for additional prizes each month.
OTHER WAYS TO ENTER
1. Watch your Suburban News or Hamlin Clarkson Herald each week for your entry blank Simply answer the questions & send it in. 2. PLUS make a copy of every receipt over $25 for purchases made at any of the listed advertisers from the Hometown Community Directory and you’ll receive credit for one entry for each receipt submitted. 3. PLUS make a copy of every estimate for services made by any listed advertiser from the Hometown Community Directory and you’ll receive credit for one entry for each estimate submitted.
RULES
1. Limit one entry per week per household for answers to questions printed below. No limit on entries submitted with a receipt for purchase or estimate for services as described above. 2. All entries must be submitted in individual envelopes. All envelopes must have a return address on the front of the envelope including name of entrant. Entries submitted with a receipt must say “RECEIPT” on the envelope. Entries submitted with an estimate for service must say “ESTIMATE” on envelope. Numerous entries submitted in one envelope will count as only one entry.
Clarkson Supervisor Paul Kimball reads “The Night Before Christmas” during the annual “Umpteenth” holiday party in Clarkson, Friday, December 22. Families are invited to take part in the longrunning event which includes Christmas stories, games, refreshments and a visit from Santa. K. Gabalski photos.
AGAIN FOR THIS EDITION
Your choice of businesses to select from will be limited. Commencing with the May 2005 contest winners, we are limiting the certificate total for the next year from any particular business to the total spent on advertising by that business in the Hometown Community Directory for that year.
Find The Answers To The Questions Below Inside Your Hometown Community Directory
Girl Scouts of WNY hosting free ‘90s Hula Hoop Party The Girl Scouts of Western New York is hosting a free ‘90s Hula Hoop Party for girls in kindergarten through 12th grade who are interested in Girl Scouts. Girls must attend with an adult. Adults will also have the opportunity to register as volunteers if they would like. The event will take place on Saturday, January 20 from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Al Sigl Center, 1000 Elmwood Avenue, Door 1, Rochester, NY 14620. The event will feature music, hula hoops, dancing, infor-
367-2904
WINNER TO BE ANNOUNCED IN APRIL 2018
Copies of the Hometown Community Directory may be picked up at our office at 1776 Hilton-Parma Corners Road, Spencerport. THIS WEEK’S QUESTIONS - Questions also listed on our website.
mation about Girl Scouts, and giveaways to the first 30 girls and first 10 adults to register as new members. Attendees are encouraged to wear their favorite ‘90s outfit and accessories while having fun doing a healthy activity. RSVP is required for this free event. To register or for questions, visit gswny.org or call 1-888-837-6410. To learn more about Girl Scouts of Western New York, visit gswny.org. Provided information
1. What business has an ad on the page with the map of the Village of Brockport? _________________________________________found on page___________. 2. What chamber of commerce does Dunn’s Furniture belong to? _________________________________________found on page___________. 3. What is the phone number for Western Monroe Historical Society? _________________________________________found on page___________. 4. What pregnancy support agency offers “a safe haven for any woman who is, or thinks she may be pregnant”?
_________________________________________found on page___________
Name______________________________________ Phone__________________ Address______________________________________ Zip__________________ Mail this ad with your answers to
DIRECTORY ESCAPE c/o WESTSIDE NEWS INC. P.O. Box 106, Spencerport, New York 14559 Questions and entry form also available on our website.
New Year...New Home?
If you’re thinking of Buying or Selling in 2018...work with one of these Brockport agents to get the best tools and resources needed to make your experience a memorable one. Call a Brockport agent to get started today!
Michael Noce**
Manager
585-233-8135
Brad LaMere* 585-217-3519
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Brittany Andrews* 585-455-8061
Joanne Bocach** 585-415-6107
Timothy Clark* 585-506-8417
Nancy Dill* 585-202-6985
Craig Lape** 585-507-1109
Bert R. Maggio** 585-261-0743
John McNall* 585-259-6485
Paul R. Nicosia** 585-721-0872
9 Main Street, Brockport
Kimberlie Donley* 585-329-7848
Jamey Hinman* 585-474-5714
Stephen Popowych* Patricia Sikula-Thayer* 585-313-1787 585-727-8954
Brockport office
Pamela Ketchum* 585-305-4656
Olga Lippa* 585-278-7653
Alicia LaMere* 585-978-2810
Brenda G. Swanger* 585-315-2734
Mark Swanson** 585-750-2906
Vickie Sweet** 585-739-6976
637-2810
*Licensed real estate Salesperson ** Licensed Associate real estate Broker
16 Hamlin-Clarkson Herald and Suburban News West Edition - December 31, 2017
Get one
Gift one Gifts that shine all season long
BOOM2
New Store
Chili Ave & Howard Rd
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