By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 30 September 2025 at 8:30 am
Provided photos: These three were dressed up as characters at Beggar’s Nite last year in Medina. From left include Byron Hill as Colonel Sanders, Joshua Hill as Paw Patrol’s Rubble and Tucker Graton as a dinosaur.
ALBION/MEDINA – The downtowns in Albion and Medina will have hundreds of children in costumes for Beggar’s Nite.
That day is observed the Friday before Halloween. This year, Halloween is on a Friday so Beggar’s Nite will be a week ahead of Oct. 31.
Albion has Beggar’s Nite from 5 to 7 p.m. on Oct. 24, while in Medina the event runs from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
Both downtown business districts will likely see several hundred kids dressed as super heroes, goblins and other characters.
Photos courtesy of ReLeaf Medina: West Center Street in Medina is one of several tree-lined streets in the village with recently planted trees getting more mature.
MEDINA – Autumn leaves with rich hues of orange, red and yellow lighting up the landscape bring warm thoughts of hot chocolate, flannel and fall fun.
But for others who are in the business of overseeing municipal trees, thoughts turn to planning for spring planting.
The village of Medina has a Municipal Tree Board and a Forestry Coordinator (all volunteer), as well as well-trained DPW personnel, all of whom play a role in planting and maintaining the village’s “urban forest.”
But there is another vital group that works to support those efforts financially: ReLeaf Medina.
ReLeaf Medina was formed a few years back to raise money for the village to replace dying trees – something the Tree Board is not allowed to do.
According to Medina’s Forestry Coordinator, Chris Busch, the cost of plant material has risen exponentially in the past ten years, costing an average of $3,000-plus more per year.
“From the very beginning, the Mayor and Trustees have absolutely been on board and continue to be fully supportive of Medina’s planting program. We are incredibly grateful for the funds they budget annually given that municipal budgets are very, very tight.” said Busch. “In light of that, we’ve had to be creative with supplemental funding solutions. Thankfully, there are a growing number of citizens who have noticed how amazing our tree-lined streets look and have been happy to support our efforts. Their financial gifts result in a living legacy that will be enjoyed by an entire community for years to come.”
Annually, the Village removes 50-60 trees and replants about 50. Removing dying trees is an unending task and replacing them has become increasingly more costly.
“What used to buy 50 trees now buys 30 or less,” Busch said.
“We continue to plant diversely with a wide variety of trees that are proven urban environments,” said Mary Lewis, Tree Board chair. “We take great care in selecting the right tree for the conditions that exist on any given site. There’s a great deal of urban forestry science that goes into the planning and selection of trees.”
Once again, ReLeaf Medina is asking citizens to contribute to the amazing living legacy of trees by making a monetary gift.
Lewis, a Medina business owner, has also issued an invitation to local businesses to consider becoming a corporate sponsor.
This photo shows trees along Gwinn Street in Medina.
“Several letters were recently sent out to local businesses and we’re hoping they’ll see the benefit of corporate sponsorship,” she said.
ReLeaf Medina states businesses becoming a corporate sponsor not only engage with their employees and investors but also build community through the support of grassroots public environmental stewardship.
“It is a chance to make a tangible difference in a highly visible way that will stand for generations and leave a positive, beneficial living legacy for the future that will be seen every day,” Lewis said.
All gifts to ReLeaf Medina are tax-deductible and can be made in three ways.
As a General Donation, the money helps replace street trees in neighborhoods throughout the village. Suggested amounts are $25 to $199 (Good Citizen); $200 to $299 (Silver); $300 to $499 (Gold); $500 and up (Platinum).
Gifts In Memory cost $300. They will fund trees placed in one of Medina’s six parks and will be identified with a granite marker honoring a loved one or in recognition of the donor’s family or organization. Memorial trees can be located on streets without a granite marker and cost $275.
To designate a tree On Your Street, the cost is $250. If the village determines a tree or trees are needed on that street, the donor may request a specific location.
Checks for tree donations should be made payable to the Orleans Renaissance Group, Inc. – Notation: ‘ReLeaf Medina’ and mailed to PO Box 543, Medina, NY.
“As you walk or drive around our village this fall and you like what you see and how the beautiful canopy makes you feel, please help us continue planting to make Medina an attractive place to live, work and grow,” Lewis said.
By Mike Wertman, Sports Writer Posted 29 September 2025 at 8:52 pm
Photo by Cheryl Wertman – Albion’s Garret Jones works the ball up field against Akron defender Joseph Higgins during the host Purple Eagles loss to the Tigers this evening.
Completing a home and home season series sweep in a span of only three days, Akron downed host Albion 2-0 in a Niagara-Orleans League boys soccer game this evening.
Akron, which also posted a 4-0 home field win over Albion on Saturday, improves to 3-3 while the Purple Eagles slips to 1-4-1.
Evan Kabingera scored both Akron goals in the first five minutes.
Photo courtesy of UConnectCare: John Bennett, former executive director of UConnectCare, and Kathy Hodgins, the current executive director, display the gifts they received in appreciation of their leadership of UConnectCare at the agency’s 50th Anniversary Gala & Silent Auction on Sept. 25 at Terry Hills Restaurant.
BATAVIA – In celebrating 50 years of service to the community, UConnectCare Chief Executive Officer Kathy Hodgins credited past and present employees for striving to “treat people with kindness and dignity.”
The nonprofit substance use treatment, prevention, residential, detox and recovery services agency marked its half-century of operation on Thursday night with a 50th Anniversary Gala & Silent Auction at Terry Hills Restaurant in Batavia.
Until 2023, it was known as Genesee/Orleans Council on Alcoholism and Substance Abuse.
Hodgins, who began her career at UConnectCare in 2002 as an intern, said many of those who choose this field of work have been affected by drug and/or alcohol use in their families.
“Some are in recovery themselves,” she said to the 90 people at the dinner. “All of us come to work to walk alongside people struggling with substance use disorder. We serve some of the most vulnerable people in our community and we serve them with compassion, respect and dignity.”
Hodgins acknowledged the agency’s leaders who came before her, starting with Robert Hoover in 1975 and continuing with Faith (Cole) Peterson from 1985-88, Sharon McWethy from 1988-2000, David Markham from 2000-2011 and John Bennett from 2011-2025.
UConnectCare was recognized through the presentation of proclamations from Sen. George Borrello, Chad Zambito (representing Assemblyman Steve Hawley) and Gregg Torrey, Genesee County legislator.
“We all know there’s a problem (with addiction), it’s a growing problem. But you lift people up, one at a time, and you help their lives. And that’s a beautiful thing,” Borrello said.
The UConnectCare board of directors presented gifts to Hodgins and Bennett in recognition of their leadership, with Board President Tim Batzel praising Hodgins for building upon the foundation of those before her.
“Kathy brings a deep well of knowledge, experience and unwavering commitment to our mission,” Batzel said. “Her leadership is already shaping the future of UConnectCare in meaningful ways and I’m proud to celebrate this milestone with her at the helm.”
Orleans County Legislature commends UConnectCare for services in community
Photo by Tom Rivers: Kathy Hodgins, executive director of UConnectCare, accepts a proclamation from the Orleans County Legislature last week, celebrating the agency’s 50th anniversary. Barb Koert, outpatient treatment director, is at left. County Legislator Ed Morgan is shown in back.
UConnectCare, formerly the Genesee-Orleans Council on Alcoholism and Substance, started in Batavia in 1975. GCASA opened a site in Albion in 1999, offering prevention and treatment services.
“Your ability to progress with the needs of our community members needing assistance in Orleans County will forever be widespread, long-lasting and extremely appreciated,” legislators stated in the proclamation. “The Orleans County Legislature does hereby also commend you for your dedication to the Orleans County residents.”
Provided photo: Sean Gaskell will perform with the West African Kora on Oct. 9 at Lee-Whedon Memorial Library in Medina.
Press Release, Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
MEDINA – West Coast musician, Sean Gaskell, will be performing at the Lee-Whedon Memorial Library October 9th at 7 p.m.
The concert will feature songs played on the kora—a 21-stringed West African harp. Alongside Gaskell’s musical performance, audience members will learn about the history of the kora, how it is built, who typically plays it, and the types of events it is often utilized at.
In addition, Sean will also share some of his own personal experiences while studying in West Africa and being hosted by the family of his teachers.
Gaskell studied under the extensive instruction of Moriba Kuyateh and the late Malamini Jobarteh in Gambia, and both Youssoupha Cissokho and Mamadou Cissokho in Senegal.
The kora is traditionally played by oral historians known as Griots. Many songs featured on the kora preserve an 800 year history dating back to the founding of the Mande empire. Gaskell has presented adult, youth, and family programs at over 400 libraries and a multitude of k-12 schools, colleges, universities and assisted living facilities throughout the United States and Canada. This visit from Gaskell is a rare opportunity to listen to a unique and truly beautiful instrument.
Further information on the artist can be found at his website: www.seangaskell.com.
To register for this free event, call 585-798-3430 or visit the library front desk. All ages are welcome.
File photo by Tom Rivers: “Swoop” gets the ball spinning for a young fan when the Harlem Wizards visited Albion in October 2019. Swoop joined the Wizards in 2007. Prior to that, he was a showman with the Harlem Globetrotters.
Press Release, Albion Central School
ALBION – The Harlem Wizards are coming to Albion’s Charles D’Amico High School gymnasium on Monday, Oct. 27, at 7 p.m.
The Albion Basketball Boosters invites the community out for a fun-filled, interactive evening of tricks, hoops and alley-oops. The Wizards were in Albion most recently in October 2019.
Albion teachers will face off on the court against the world-famous Wizards where there will be plenty of laughs, music, dancing and dunks. Partial proceeds will benefit the Albion Basketball Booster Club which supports the Albion basketball teams.
“We are so thrilled to bring this event back to our community,” said Jeff Radder, Albion boys JV basketball coach and Basketball Boosters member. “We hope our community will consider bringing their friends and families out to experience the incredible show the Wizards put on. It is always a night to remember and our basketball teams truly appreciate the support.”
Tickets can be purchased on the Albion website. More information about the Harlem Wizards can be found on their website.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 September 2025 at 12:01 pm
OOL Museum this weekend welcomed family of Emelee Arbuckle
Photos by Tom Rivers: The Oak Orchard Lighthouse Museum presented a light show on Saturday that honored Emelee Arbuckle, who was 23 when she died in a motorcycle accident in Florida in 2013. Her family has left bricks with her name engraved at about 300 lighthouses around the country. The bricks are typically buried or left in the water close by the lighthouse. Oak Orchard is the fifth lighthouse to find the brick and contact Emelee’s parents.
Ken and Karen Arbuckle of Melbourne Beach, Fla. visited the Oak Orchard Lighthouse on Saturday evening for a special light show as a tribute for their daughter, Emelee. The show was in addition to the nightly 30-minute light show that starts a half hour at sunset. That light show mimics the Northern Lights.
POINT BREEZE – The Oak Orchard Lighthouse Museum presented a special light show on Saturday in honor of a Florida woman was passed away at age 23 on Dec. 29, 2013 from complications following a motorcycle accident.
Emelee Arbuckle was connected to the water. She was the top coxswain on her high school rowing team. She was also an artist who wanted to teach art to disabled children.
Her parents, Ken and Karen Arbuckle, visited Point Breeze over the weekend. The Arbuckles have left about 300 engraved bricks at lighthouses around the country. They were at the Oak Orchard Lighthouse on Aug. 4, 2024 and buried a brick engraved with their daughter’s name and nickname: Emelee “Bean” Arbuckle.
The Arbuckles typically will bury a brick at the southeast corner of a lighthouse or leave in close to shore in the water.
At the Oak Orchard Lighthouse, a new lighting system was being installed in August to display a light show that would mimic the Aurora Borealis. Lighthouse volunteers worked with A.J. Hetzke of IlluminFx Lighting Systems to install the system which debuted on Aug. 14.
Cheryl Giacherio was digging at the southwest corner on Aug. 7, creating a hole for one of four corner canisters for the lights. The top of the lighthouse has 192 lights for the show.
When Giacherio dug down in the dirt, she found a brick in honor of Emelee “Bean” Arbuckle. An internet search showed the story of Emelee, and helped connect the lighthouse museum to her family.
It was the fifth brick that has been found with Emelee’s name.
The Arbuckles made the trip up from Melbourne Beach, Florida on Friday, and presented a collage with a poem by their daughter that will be on display in the lighthouse.
The lighthouse museum had a special tribute for the family on Saturday night. Hetzke of IlluminFx created a new light show for Emelee.
“Thank you so much for honoring our girl,” Mrs. Arbuckle told a group at the lighthouse on Saturday night. “No one has ever done anything like this for us.”
Emelee Arbuckle is shown at left. Here is the brick that was found last month with her name at the Oak Orchard Lighthouse.
Emelee’s mother feels like it was a God-ordained miracle that the brick was discovered at Oak Orchard. Her husband usually buries the bricks in the southeast corner. This time, he put it at the southwest corner, right where a hole would be dug a year later for the light show.
“This was God,” Mrs. Arbuckle said. “He was coordinating this to all come together. You need to recognize these miracles when they happen.”
She thanked Hetzke for the light show, which was set to music.
“With the music, you can feel it in your heart,” Mrs. Arbuckle said.
She and her husband have been to at least 400 lighthouses in the past 12 years, trying to leave a memorial brick or a “handheart” of her and her husband’s hands creating a heart shape. The Arbuckles take a picture of that heart shape with the lighthouse in the background if they can’t get up close in person. Some of the lighthouses are off limits to the public. (They stopped by the Braddock Point Lighthouse in Hilton on Saturday but couldn’t get close enough to leave a brick because it’s on private property.)
The Arbuckles are happy when people find a brick with their daughter’s name, and reach out to her parents.
“It’s about saying Emelee’s name so it isn’t forgotten,” Mr. Arbuckle said.
Here are other photos from the light show on Saturday night.
Photo by Tom Rivers: This group passes under the lift bridge in Eagle Harbor on Friday. They are aboard a replica of the Seneca Chief. This boat is 73 feet long and is making a commemorative journey along the canal in hoor the canal’s 200th anniversary. The boat was built as a replica of the original Seneca Chief that carried Gov. DeWitt Clinton on the maiden voyage on the completed canal in 1825.
By Catherine Cooper, Orleans County Historian
“Illuminating Orleans” – Volume 5, No. 34
“View on the Erie Canal” – The New York Public Library Digital Collections from 1832.
The commemorative journey of the Seneca Chief along the Erie Canal has attracted a great deal of attention. The boat left Buffalo on Wednesday and is on a 33-day tour that ends Oct. 26 in New York City.
On the original trip, the boat was hauled by “four fully caparisoned grey horses.” That would have been quite a sight! For this voyage, the horses have been replaced by a 33-foot-long tugboat, the C.L. Churchill.
We have mentioned the novel Rome Haul by Walter D. Edmonds in a previous column. It portrays a realistic view of life in the early years of the canal. The sight of the Seneca Chief brought this passage to mind. Here Dan Harrow remembers the opening of the canal and that first voyage:
“We’d talked about the canal. It didn’t seem it would ever get to us. They’d surveyed in ’19 (1819) and the route would come close to my place….Then, first thing we knowed, in ’23, men commenced working on the route between Black Rock and Lockport…..
“I remember, two springs after that, how me and Ellen sat on the big stoop in June. A warm afternoon. The word come the water would come in from Erie. And after a while we seen it come. Brown and muddy, very slow, so’s not to rip the banks. It went by us in a little creek. We watched it rise all day. At night it was still getting up. Brown and muddy. We didn’t have no supper. We didn’t want it. We’d listen to the water eddy down below all night. In the morning it had come off blue in the sun — pretty near that color.”
“Tolls was taken on the first of October. It had been a fine farming summer. I’d had more money in than I’d expected for a single year. Then on the twenty-sixth the opening come.”
“It was a masterful event. The leaves had turned late that year, and there was still color to the woods. “They had put cannon — you know how —all along the canal and down the Hudson. There was an old ten-pounder mounted on my rise of ground, its snout pointing west, and there was one of McDonough’s sailors there to touch it off.
“The neighbors came next morning early. Ellen and the women had gotten up a big feast. The men sat on the porch, looking down the canal to the lake. I had some Jamaica and Golden Medford for them — it was a brisk morning. Cool from frost at night, but no wind at all. The smoke from our pipes hung under the roof. The children played round — noisy. The cook smells came out to us.
“The sailor, Benjy Wright, sat on the cannon’s butt… About nine o’clock Benjy cut him a hard plug with his sailor knife. He lighted his match and we stood waiting. Then a cannon sounded down by Buffalo. And Benjy touched the match to the fuse and in a minute the old gun bucked and roared, and a glass broke in the window of the parlor….Then we sat down and watched Benjy load up the cannon. And an hour and forty minutes later there was a cannon faint to eastward of us. And our gun bucked and shot again and we heard a gun boom in Buffalo. But with that sound from the eastward of us we knowed that New York knowed. The sound of it told us that.
“All to once we knowed there was other people back east who knowed about us. We were in a country as big as half the world, but with that shot it all come closer together. We weren’t alone.
“For a while there was silence.
“Clinton’s boat come along a while later when we were eating dinner. The food got burnt somehow. But we cheered him by and his four grey matched horses, and he waved to us. And we cheered the other boats.
“But nights now me and my wife hear the boats once in a while —a horn, maybe — or, when it’s still, the clink of a trace chain. Or we see the night lanterns. The railroads come in time. But here it didn’t make so much difference.”
Rome Haul by Walter D. Edmonds in 1929 is available through your local library.
By Ginny Kropf, correspondent Posted 28 September 2025 at 9:56 pm
Photos by Ginny Kropf: Members of Medina Area Partnership who volunteered at Medina Senior Center to check in participants of Ale in Autumn, posed for a picture after the crowds had thinned out. There were 565 people who purchased tickets for Ale in Autumn.
MEDINA – Those who bought tickets for the annual Ale in Autumn, sponsored by Medina Area Partnership, enjoyed a beautiful day Saturday walking through the streets of town, and enjoying a different ale at nearly two dozen participating businesses.
Taylor Sugar and Erin Taylor of Albion check in with Ann Fisher-Bale, head organizer of Ale in Autumn. Sugar has attended the event before and had a lot of fun, she said. But his was Taylor’s first time.
Deana Dena Anderson pours beer at The Walsh for Matt Corser of Middleport during Ale in Autumn on Saturday. This was Corser’s first time at the event, and he attended with friends from Canada.
Sarah Fisher said one lady came dressed as a cow.
A different feature this year for participants was getting their picture taken at Alexandra Peracciny Photography. They could choose from themed props and got to take their picture home in a card-like frame.
Dawn Borchet, director of Orleans County Tourism, provided juice and water bottles for the goodie bags each ticket holder received. The bags also contain their glass, pretzels, a pen, Koozie and a program.
Participants checked in at the Medina Senior Center, where Patrick Weissend checked their ID. The head of Tompkins/Bank of Castile in Medina, Weissend has had the same duties for at least 10 years, he said.
At The Walsh, Deana Dena Andersen poured ale from a small kiosk outside. The area is roped off for entertainment with chairs and a big screen TV. At the end, the band Darrel Brown and the Chill Factor provided music.
Fisher-Bale said this event brings in people from all over the area, including Canada.
Funds from this event and other fundraisers has allowed MAP to purchase the sound system downtown.
“The money we make goes toward improvements and promoting our member businesses,” Fisher-Bale said.
Ann Fisher-Bale, right, checks in Taylor Sugar and Erin Taylor at Medina Senior Center. Participants of Ale in Autumn checked in there, where they were ID’d and received a goodie bag.
Photos by Tom Rivers: Angela Rogers of Batavia and Karl Dionne of Toronto try a beer poured by Randy Huslor, co-owner of The Print Shop, which was one of the stops for Ale in Autumn.
At Modern Mercantile, beer tastings from Talking Cursive in Syracuse were served by Holly Lederhouse, left, and Bekah Osher.
A commemorative glass has a light beer, Oktoberfest, from Meier’s Creek Brewing Company in Cazenovia. This photo is inside the Medina Triennial Hub in the former NAPA building on Main Street.
Matt Hollenback pours a tasting of beer for Victoria Schicker of Medina at the Medina Triennial site.
The Medina Hemp House put out a sign celebrating a festive day in Medina.