Barker/Lyndonville, R-H score soccer wins
Barker/Lyndonville shutout Newfane 3-0 and Roy-Hart edged Akron 1-0 in Niagara-Orleans League girls soccer games this morning.
The Medina at Albion game was postponed due to a referee scheduling mix up.
Alexa Robinson had 2 goals and an assist and Arnie Sturtevant a goal for Barker/Lyndonville which improves to 3-1-1.
Julia Verratti scored the goal for Roy-Hart off an assist from Kaylie Churchill. The Lady Rams are now 3-1.
N-O Golf
Barker boosted its N-O golf record to 5-4 with a 250-275 win over Newfane Friday as JJ Prynn earned medalist honors with a 43.
ESL could be operating in Medina at Generations Bank site soon after Jan. 1, 2026
MEDINA – ESL Federal Credit Union is moving closer to acquiring the assets of Generations Bank, which operates a branch in Medina.
The two organizations announced an acquisition deal in September 2024. Generations merged with the former Medina Savings & Loan in 2018. Generations is based at Seneca Falls and has nine locations including a site in Medina on Maple Ridge Road.
On Sept. 3, ESL and Generations Bank announced regulatory approvals from Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for the purchase and assumption transaction. The closing price has increased from $26.2 to $26.5 million.
The transaction is expected to close on Jan. 1, 2026. The Generations branches should see rebranding to ESL sites after Jan. 1, said Zachary Case, marketing communications specialist for Generations.
The final closing remains subject to the approval of the National Credit Union Administration and other customary closing conditions.
Generations Bancorp’s shareholders are currently estimated to receive an aggregate of between $18 and $20 in cash in exchange for each share of Generations Bancorp common stock owned.
Generations was organized in 1870. Its main office is in Seneca Falls. There are eight full-service offices and one drive-through facility located in Auburn, Farmington, Geneva, Medina, Phelps, Seneca Falls, Union Springs and Waterloo.
Upon completion of the transaction with Generations, ESL is expected to have total assets of approximately $9.6 billion and will increase its footprint to more than 30 full-service branches throughout the Greater Rochester and Finger Lakes region.
Father-daughter have worked more than 50 years at Medina Memorial
Jim Luckman is director of facilities for maintenance while Amanda Luckman serves as director of admissions
Photo by Ginny Kropf: Jim Luckman and his daughter Amanda have combined more than half a century of employment at Medina Memorial Hospital. He is director of facilities (maintenance) and she is director of admissions.
MEDINA – Carrying on the tradition of family members who have worked at Medina Memorial Hospital are Jim Luckman and his daughter Amanda.
Combined, their employment totals more than half a century.
Jim first came there in the early 1980s when he had just graduated from high school and was looking for a job.
“Housekeeping had an opening and I applied,” Jim said. “Then I transferred into maintenance as a maintenance helper, then maintenance mechanic, maintenance foreman and now I am director of facilities for maintenance.”
At the time he started, the first floor was a medical wing, he said.
Amanda’s first job there was in patient registration. She was also an aide, so she got to work with the Emergency Room secretary, she said.
Initially, Amanda said she had worked at Orchard Manor where they had rehab and she realized Medina hospital had services that needed to be marketed. She came to the hospital to work in rehab and was here five years until going to Orchard Manor for two years and finally returning to the hospital.
“Since then, we have doubled our census and are looking at even higher numbers this year,” Amanda said. “It’s great to know I got to grow up visiting the hospital with dad working here, and now I get to share the hospital I love with the community.”
Like several other relatives who have been employed there, Jim and Amanda were both born at Medina Memorial Hospital. The nursery is now Jim’s office.
“The rocking horse banners are still up in there,” he said.
“Few families in our storied history have touched more areas than the Luckmans,” said Scott Robinson, director of Marketing, Communication and Outreach. “Jim brings a deep knowledge of how each facility operates, and has evolved over time, while Amanda’s competitive spirit drives her to continually provide the best care to patients. Together, they represent the best of dedication and service at Orleans Community Health.”
This photo submitted by Scott Robinson shows hospital staff readying for an expansion. At left are Donnie Pellegino, Mike Sergeant and current facilities manager Jim Luckman. At right are Dr. Kennth Brooks, Gene Albone and Lyman Sanford.
Jim and Amanda’s jobs interact, in that he is in charge of the van drivers who take patients to appointments outside the hospital and Amanda schedules their appointments.
“Everybody refers to him as ‘Jim-Dad,” Amanda said.
“That came about with the first e-mail I sent her, and I wasn’t sure how to address her,” Jim said. “So I put ‘Amanda-daughter.’ I still have that e-mail.”
Jim said he has had a good career at the hospital and he has no plans to retire.
“I’d like to work until I’m 75,” he said. “There have been a lot of good times and a lot of bad times.”
He shared his kids grew up attending special events at the hospital, such as the “Mash” clinics and Teddy Bear clinics.
Day-to-day, Jim and Amanda only see each other in passing, they said.
“We keep it professional,” Jim said. “I’m busy. Besides the main hospital, I take care of five other sites associated with the hospital.”
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Trump continues to sink to lowest common denominator
Editor:
On September 14, 2025 during a speech at his Bedminster, NJ golf club, Donald Trump publicly said: “smart people don’t like me.” It’s taken nearly 80 years but Donald Trump has finally said something that he and Democrats can fully agree.
Even after years of characterizing his supporters as “the very poorly educated,” this man continues to openly insult you to your faces and you still just don’t get it.
Is he right as he apparently is about everything? If it’s not the smart people who like him, then who does? At least Hillary didn’t call you stupid.
Anything and everything about Donald Trump sinks to the lowest common denominator of humanity. The only creatures in the entire biosphere beneath him are those who secretly know it’s true and in like-minded circles celebrate it.
Oh, by the way, how about those MAGA farmers down in Brookland, Arkansas last week pleading for a government bailout on TV?
It seems Trump’s tariffs have made Brazil’s soybeans and corn cheaper in China so it’s up to the American taxpayer to make up the difference. Now that’s rich … sounds a little “wokey” if you ask me.
These are the same people who cried blood about giving a hungry kid a sandwich in school but down on the farm, as they say, socialism is quite the new “Republican core value.” Remember those?
Me neither.
“As you have treated the poor, so have you treated Me.”
Tom Graham
Rochester, NY
Graham is a member of Albion High School’s Class of 1978.
Lackawanna spoils Albion’s home opener
Photos by Cheryl Wertman – Albion’s Hunter Huscher returns a kickoff during this evening’s home opener against Lackawanna. Demario McCutcheon moves in for the Steelers. All of the scoring took place in the first half as Lackawanna posted a 38-0 win.
Albion’s Jack Conn goes high to knock a pass away from Lackawanna’s Kobe Underwood.
DOT: Rehab of iconic Albion bridge builds on state investments along historic Erie Canal
Photo by Tom Rivers: The Main Street lift bridge in Albion is shown on Wednesday morning, two days before the bridge would reopen to vehicular traffic. The bridge from 1914 was initially closed in November 2022 for an extensive rehabilitation.
Press Release from NYS Department of Transportation
ALBION – New York State Department of Transportation Commissioner Marie Therese Dominguez today announced that the historic lift bridge carrying State Route 98 (North Main Street) over the Erie Canal in the Village of Albion, Orleans County, has reopened to traffic following an extensive rehabilitation that modernized the structure and extended its service life by approximately 30 years.
With a new deck, upgraded lift system and other improvements, the 111-year-old bridge will now provide enhanced safety and resiliency for an important travel link to the Village of Albion’s bustling business corridor and the vibrant tourism scene along the Erie Canal.
“The Erie Canal helped transform New York State into an economic powerhouse and it’s imperative that we do everything possible to honor that rich history and preserve the infrastructure, especially the historic bridges, that are part of it,” Commissioner Dominguez said. “The rehabilitation of the State Route 98 bridge not only ensures that a vital transportation link continues to serve the Albion community for decades to come but also protects one of the region’s greatest treasures for the benefit of future generations.”
Originally built in 1914, the State Route 98 steel truss lift bridge is an important part of the Erie Canal system, which is a registered National Historic Landmark. As such, it benefits from protections that ensure it continues to look as it did early in the 20th century, with its trusses and lift towers preserved.
As part of the rehabilitation project, the bridge’s deck and portions of the truss system were replaced with high-strength galvanized steel. To complete work on the trusses, the bridge was dismantled and the trusses moved to a lot adjacent to the Canal, where more than 80% of the steel was replaced.
Updates were also made to the mechanical and electrical components within the bridge’s vertical lifting system, which raises and lowers the bridge to accommodate marine traffic.
Additional improvements included the rehabilitation of the bridge towers, installation of new bridge rails and repainting in the bridge’s existing shade of green. Sidewalks leading to the bridge were also replaced to meet current Americans with Disabilities Act standards.
Additionally, NYSDOT donated original elements of the historic structure to the Village of Albion, which commissioned local artists to create a solar-powered lamppost and bench from the donated materials. They were installed alongside a time capsule and interpretive panel in the newly dedicated Erie Canal Park adjacent to the bridge.
The Village of Albion is the Orleans County Seat with the county’s 1858 Greek Revival-style domed courthouse and 65 structures listed in the New York State and National Registers of Historic Places. State Route 98 is a vital route to its business corridor and essential for the transport of the region’s many agricultural products.
While the lift bridge has reopened to traffic, construction activities will continue adjacent to the structure and the traveling public should be advised of occasional short-term delays.
Rehabilitation of the bridge is part of a $29.1 million project to modernize and preserve New York State’s Canal structures. The project also includes the State Route 19 lift bridge over the Erie Canal in the nearby Village of Brockport. The project builds on the Department’s prior successes in rehabilitating similar lift bridges in the Villages of Fairport and Spencerport, a $16.9 million project.
New York State Canal Corporation Director Brian U. Stratton said, “The Albion Lift Bridge is a vital lifeline for the community and for the Erie Canal, allowing vehicular and pedestrian traffic to cross and vessels to navigate underneath the bridge safely. As we commemorate the Bicentennial of the Erie Canal and contemplate its next century of use, we’re working to ensure the canal’s vital supporting infrastructure is in safe working order. I thank and congratulate our partners at the Department of Transportation for completing this very important project.”
Kendall scores boys and girls soccer wins
Improving to 7-0, Kendall downed CG Finney 3-0 in a non league boys soccer game this afternoon.
Pablo Rosario-Reyes scored a goal in each half for Kendall as Jonathan Esposito also had a goal in the second half.
Eagles goalie Jonny Conte made several big saves in the second half to preserve the shutout.
Girls Soccer
Kendall 4, Alexander 0
Kendall blanked Alexander 4-0 in a Genesee Region League girls soccer game.
Jersie Drake scored two goals and Hailey Ball and Addison Kludt both netted one as Kendall improves to 5-0 in the league and 7-1 overall. Drake, Stella Kwiatek and Ryleigh Denning each had an assist.
Barker nips Medina in N-O field hockey
Photos by Cheryl Wertman – Barker’s Madelina Pavlock, who scored the game’s only goal sends the ball toward the goal as Tatianna Maxon defends for Medina. The action took place during Barker’s 1-0 win at Vets Park this afternoon.
A fourth period goal proved to be just enough to earn Barker a narrow 1-0 win over Medina in a Niagara-Orleans League field hockey game this afternoon.
Madelina Pavlock scored the game winner for Barker with 12 minutes to go in the final quarter.
Barker is now 3-1 and Medina 2-3.
Akron 4, Newfane 0
Defending champion Akron improved to 5-0 with a 4-1 win over Newfane as Morgan Tomporowski scored two goals and Madigan Regan and Mackenzie Tomporowski each had one.
Roy-Hart 6, Sacred Heart 0
Roy-Hart blanked Sacred Heart 6-0 in a non league game as Adella Dukes had 3 goals and 2 assists, Bella Rhinehart 2 goals and an assist and Savannah Newton a goal.
Medina’s Isabelle Perez sends the ball up field as Naomi Bish defends for Barker.
N-O Golf
Wilson downed Medina 238-246 in a Niagara-Orleans League golf match this afternoon as Ben Meyers earned medalist honors with a 36.
Cam Fike shot 41 and Tyler Draper 43 to lead Medina.
Roy-Hart defeated Akron 232-269 to improve to 9-0 as Blake Stahl led the way with a 44.
Closed no more: Albion bridge reopens after nearly 3 years of work
Photo from Albion Police Department
ALBION – Workers on the Albion Main Street lift bridge pose with an Albion police car this afternoon when the bridge opened back up for traffic just after 3 p.m.
The bridge was closed on Nov. 14, 2022 for what was expected to be about 18 months for a major rehabilitation. That project stretched to more than two years when the bridge was reopened just after Christmas on Dec. 27, 2024. But it was closed again for more work on April 21.
Today, the state Department of Transportation gave it the final OK for the bridge to reopen. The bridge from 1914 was nearly totally rebuilt with about 80 percent of the steel replaced.
Even par start for Green at Arkansas Tourney
Medina’s Melanie Green got off to an even par start today at the Epson Tour’s Murphy USA El Dorado Shootout Tournament being played at El Dorado, Arkansas.
Green, who won the Epson Tour’s Guardian Championship Tournament in Alabama last weekend, had birdies on 7 and 15 to offset bogeys on 3 and 5 to finish with an even par round of 72.
Rainy wather caused play to be suspended later in the day. The tourney is scheduled to continue on Saturday and conclude on Sunday.
Oak Orchard Bowl celebrates 65th anniversary, including 20 years with Hanks family
Photos by Tom Rivers
ALBION – Randy Hanks and his son Robbie are shown are Oak Orchard Bowl last Thursday when the center had a full house for its men’s league.
The Hanks family is celebrating 20 years of owning the bowling alley, which is also marking its 65th anniversary this year. The 18-lane bowling center is on Route 98 at 3291 Oak Orchard Rd.
The Hanks family has tackled numerous improvements to the bowling center during their two decades at the helm, including a new oil machine, synthetic lanes, flooring, carpeting and remodeled bath rooms.
Hanks was named “Proprietor of the Year” in New York state in 2014 by the United States Bowling Congress. The family has improved the facility, promoted youth bowling and backed several fundraisers in the community, especially for the PAWS Animal Shelter and a memorial for Scott Whittier. The bowling tournaments for PAWS have raised about $40,000.
Randy Hanks is shown at the check-in counter. He has owned Oak Orchard Bowl for 20 years. The first 13 years he juggled a full-time job with FedEx while managing the bowling center full-time.
“Its been a lot of blood, sweat and tears,” he said.
Hanks said his family – wife Renee, daughter Regina, and sons Robbie and Ryan – have been a big part of Oak Orchard’s success.
Many of the long-time bowlers praise Hanks for the steady improvements at the bowling center. Joe Morlino is part of the Thursday Men’s League.
“Every year he does something to make it better,” Morlino said. “He’s a great guy who is very fair. He puts money back into the place.”
Since the old wooden lanes were replaced with synthetic lanes, Morlino said there have been many more 300 games and 800 series.
“The most important thing is there are no breakdowns,” Morlino said.
Hanks praised his head mechanic, Marty Clemino, for keeping the pin-setter machines in good working order.
Randy Hanks calls out the winning 50/50 number. That fundraiser supported the Thursday Men’s League which runs from September through April.
Oak Orchard also has a kitchen with a fryer and grill serving pizza, wings, salads, pretzels, nachos and cheese, and other food.
Hanks has rolled some 300 games himself. He said he wanted to be a pro bowler but had to abandon that dream because of bad knees.
He also dreamed of running a bowling center. The Spencerport resident has been able to pursue that passion in Albion for the past two decades.
Oak Orchard Bowl has hosted hundreds of birthday parties, corporate parties, church groups, Albion High School sports teams, band, chorus and other functions during the 20 years of ownership, Hanks said.
To celebrate the Oak Orchard Bowl anniversary, Hanks said the center will be giving away a few 65-inch TVs in a contest that deals with a game/series ending in 65 or 20. There will be drawings for open bowlers, too.
Randy Hanks is shown by a wall leading into the men’s bathroom. He used old wooden lanes to redo the bathrooms about two years. It’s the improvement project that gets the most compliments from the public, he said.
This year’s improvement project was replacing all the pins.
Mike Pettinella, one of the long-time bowlers and retired associate manager of the Genesee Region for the USBC, said Hanks has created a very welcoming environment for bowlers of all skill levels in Albion.
“He is very customer-oriented,” said Pettinella of Batavia. “He will go above and beyond to make people feel comfortable. He’s well respected and people enjoy coming here to bowl.”
Albion lift bridge expected to reopen this afternoon
Photo by Tom Rivers: The Albion lift bridge is shown last week on Sept. 11. It is expected to reopen this afternoon around 3 p.m. after initially being shut down in November 2022.
ALBION – Nearly three years from when the Albion Main Street lift bridge was closed for a major rehabilitation, the bridge is expected to reopen this afternoon.
The state Department of Transportation said it is eyeing 3 p.m. for the bridge to reopen to traffic.
The bridge was initially closed on Nov. 14, 2022 for what was expected to be about 18 months for a major rehabilitation. That project stretched to more than two years when the bridge was reopened just after Christmas on Dec. 27, 2024.
The bridge was closed again to traffic on April 21 to finish up the extensive rehabilitation of a bridge that was originally installed in 1914.
But a “catastrophic event” occurred on May 7 during start-up testing of the control system to operate the lift bridge.
“When the system was energized, one of the electric drive controllers arced, producing a fire in the drive cabinet,” Paul Attoma, engineer-in-charge for Region 4 Construction, wrote in a letter to village officials.
The fire damaged the system beyond repair, delaying the reopening by about four more months.
Chamber announces award winners with Velocitii named ‘Business of the Year’
Velocitii photo: Heather Smith, the CEO a partner at Velocitii, recently was recognized as a finalist for the 2025 Greater Rochester Chamber Inclusive Leadership Award.
The Orleans County Chamber of Commerce has announced its annual award winners, with Velocitii in Medina named Business of the Year.
Velocitii opened 11 years ago. It operates out of the Olde Pickle Factory on Park Avenue in Medina.
Velocitii is a business process outsourcing company. It provides support for other businesses, handling calls for customers about plans, billing and troubleshooting. Velocitii works with companies in healthcare, waste management, hospitality, e-commerce, auto insurance and technology.
Velocitii was founded by Roger Hungerford in the Olde Pickle Factory, initially with six employees. Velocitii each of the past three years has been named a top workplace in the Rochester region, placing in the mid-size company category (125 to 300 employees).
The Chamber awards celebration will be Oct. 23 at the White Birch Golf Course in Lyndonville.
The award winners include:
- Business of the Year: Velocitii
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Rita Zambito
- New Business of the Year: Homestead Pest Control
- Small Business of the Year: Bentley Brothers
- Phoenix Award: Newell Lounge/Shirt Factory
- Agricultural Business of the Year: RLW Cattle
- Hidden Gem: Hurd Orchards
- Business Person of the Year: Dan DeCarlo
- Community Service Award: Genesee-Orleans Ministry of Concern
RSVPs are due by October. 18. For information about tickets, contact Director Darlene Hartway at director@orleanschamber.com or (585) 590-6430. Tickets also are available online through EventBrite.