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Rho Mitchell recalled as ‘sparkplug’ for community

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 6 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Provided photos – Rho Mitchell is pictured with Lorraine Oakley and the giant Candy Canes he made from drainage pipe and red ribbons. Mitchell placed them along Route 31 as a holiday decorations.

ALBION – As kids growing up in Albion, David and Patty Mitchell remember helping their father wrap red ribbon on white drainage pipes. Rho Mitchell was making giant Candy Canes as holiday decorations along Route 31.

It was one of the many ways he tried to promote community pride. His children, including another son Michael Mitchell, all played in the Clown Band and the Bum Band. Their father was the ringleader. Patty played the clarinet, David the trombone, and Michael the trumpet.

“We just had fun and staggered around the street during parades,” David said.

Rho Mitchell, co-founder of a funeral home in Albion in 1957, died on Feb. 1 at age 86. He is being remembered as a devoted community member, involved in many causes.

Rho Mitchell, left, leads the brass percussion section of the Lions Club Clown Band in May 1982. Other members pictured include, from left: Howard Cotton, drummer; Mark Brailey, trombone; Frank Mack, saxophone; Tom Fitzak, trumpet; Mike Coville, bass; Jeff Long, trumpet; and John Long, trumpet.

“He was a real sparkplug,” said John Keding, a long-time leader in the Albion Lions Club. “He did a lot of work, there’s no question about it. He came up with a lot of ideas and he worked on it. He didn’t just leave the work to other people.”

Keding and Mitchell were longtime friends and members of the Lions Club. Keding was impressed with Mitchell’s creativity and commitment, especially the Candy Canes that lined the Route 31 corridor. Most of the community decorations were focused in the downtown. Mitchell wanted 31 to be jazzed up for the holidays.

Mitchell was a medic in the Navy during the Korean War. Afterhis military service, he was active in the American Legion, twice serving as commander.

Rho Mitchell plays Taps at a Memorial Day service on West Park Street with the VFW and American Legion.

He served as funeral director at many of the services for veterans. He brought along his trumpet and played “Taps” at numerous funerals and also on Memorial Day.

Rho loved music, his children said, and he wanted to promote it as much as possible in the community. Besides the Clown and Bum bands, he recruited members for the Legion Band. When some of the members became older senior citizens and struggled to march and play on a parade route, Mitchell secured a school bus for the band. He and others took the top off the bus so the band could be seen in parades.

“He was a real go-getter,” Keding said. “He made things go.”

Mitchell grew up in Elmira. He married his high school sweetheart, Beverly. She was a year behind him in school. They had a study hall together in high school.

“We sat across from each other and he completely ignored me,” his wife said. “I was surprised when he asked me out for Valentine’s day.”

They attended a dance together and Rho, “Buck” as his wife calls him, impressed her by dancing the Jitterbug.

“He was a good dancer,” said Mrs. Mitchell, his wife of 64 years. “I had two left feet.”

Mitchell initially eyed a career in the printing business as a linotypist. But he was allergic to the lead used in printing. He had a friend whose father was in the funeral business. He suggested Rho pursue it as a career.

After serving in the Korean War as a medic, he graduated from Simmons Institute of Funeral Service in Syracuse. He moved to Albion in 1955, and started his funeral director career at the former Leon Grinnell Funeral Home. At the time Albion had four funeral homes.

“He wanted to help people,” David said. “Being a funeral director came natural for him.”

Rho Mitchell and Ken Scharett started Scharett-Mitchell Funeral Home in Albion in 1957. Here is how the property looked in 1958. Mitchell, a skilled woodworker, made the sign.

Mitchell had hoped to buy the Grinnell business in 1957. Grinnell sold it to another funeral director that year. Mitchell enjoyed the Albion community and didn’t want to leave.

Rho and a friend, a fellow funeral director Ken Scharett, started Scharett Mitchell Funeral Home in Albion in late 1957 at the Christopher Mitchell Funeral Homes site on Route 31. The site has been expanded twice since then.

Scharett retired in 1974. Mitchell joined with Michael Christopher and the two opened a new funeral home in Holley in 1971 on Route 31. Christopher would retire from the business in 1982.

Rho’s son David joined Christopher Mitchell in 1984 and David’s son Josh became a funeral director, joining the family business in 2012.

Rho Mitchell is pictured in 2012 with his son David and grandson Josh. All three made their careers as funeral directors. Bruce Landis took this photo that hangs inside Christopher Mitchell Funeral Homes.

David said his father welcomed input from his son and staff.

“I was very blessed with dad from a business end,” David said. “He wanted to know what ideas I had to improve the business. He wasn’t stuck in his ways.”

His father was skilled as a woodworker and made wagons, model ships, petal cars and dump trucks as toys for his grandchildren. Those toys have endured for decades and David and Josh say they will be treasured by the family for generations to come.

Rho and his wife moved to Florida for the winters in 1991. Rho was seriously injured in a car accident in 1997 in Florida. He had to relearn to walk and talk after suffering a brain inury, as well as a broken neck and other bones.

He was at The Villages of Orleans Health and Rehabilitation Center in Albion the past four years.

“They took wonderful care of him,” David said. “We can’t say enough about the staff.”
Patty, a vocational painting and wall papering instructor at the Orleans Correctional Facility, said her father left a powerful legacy in the community.

“It was all about working together and making it a better place,” she said.

Gillibrand announces push for stronger food safety regulations

Staff Reports Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, D-NY, announced a new push today to prevent foodborne illness and improve food safety standards.

The Centers for Disease Control estimates that each year approximately 1 in 6 Americans get sick, 128,000 are hospitalized and 3,000 die of foodborne diseases. Gillibrand said an estimated 3 million New Yorkers get sick from the food they eat each year

According the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates, nearly a quarter of all cut-up chicken parts are contaminated by Salmonella and another Consumer Reports study found that one third of all chicken breast with Salmonella carry a drug resistant strain of the disease.

Gillibrand is a pushing a new bill introduced last week, the Safe Food Act of 2015, which would consolidate food safety authorities into a single independent food safety agency called the Food Safety Administration.

Sen. Gillibrand

Under the current system, 15 different federal agencies oversee food safety functions including inspections, enforcement, recalls and restrictions on pathogens like Salmonella and E.coli. According to a Government Accountability Agency study, the fragmented and inefficient system is a high risk to the public’s safety.

“Too many New Yorkers are getting sick and even dying from food they trusted was safe,” Gillibrand said. “New Yorkers should be able to walk into a grocery store and be confident that the food they are putting on their family’s kitchen table and serving at our schools or in our restaurants is properly inspected and safe to eat.”

The proposed consolidated agency would help prevent foodborne illness by allowing food recalls to happen more quickly once illnesses are confirmed, improving inspections, and enhancing enforcement against unsafe food. The Food Safety Administration would also protect and improve the public’s health by focusing resources to prevent and detect foodborne illness before it spreads rather than responding after New Yorkers have already fallen ill.

“We need to detect foodborne illness and stop it before it spreads rather than scramble to respond after New Yorkers have already fallen ill,” Gillibrand said. “My plan would give New York families more peace of mind when they sit down at the kitchen table by reducing bureaucracy and consolidating the 15 federal agencies that oversee food safety under one roof.”

Gillibrand is also proposing new legislation that would require stores to improve customer notification in the event of a food recall. Stores with customer loyalty card programs could use that data to call and email consumers when food they have purchased has been recalled.

Gillibrand’s proposed legislation, the Meat and Poultry Recall Notification Act, would grant authority to the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service to require companies to recall dangerous food and notify consumers and local health officials. Gillibrand’s new legislation would also create a 1-page Recall Summary Notice that could be prominently displayed on the store shelf where the recalled food was sold or at the cash register for stores that lack customer loyalty card programs.

“We need to make sure that if dangerous food does end up at the grocery store that it gets recalled, pulled off the shelf and out of freezers faster,” Gillibrand said. “Every time you swipe a loyalty card to save a few cents, the grocery store makes a record of what food you’re bringing home. When a recall happens, stores should use that information to call and email people to tell them to not eat the food they have purchased.”

Local growers help promote new apple

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

RubyFrost gets star treatment from Wegmans, other grocers

Provided photo – Brett Kast, right, of Kast Farms in Albion is pictured with his wife Amanda on Saturday at the Wegmans in Buffalo on Sheridan Drive. Peter Weisenborn, a Kast family cousin, stopped by to sample the new RubyFrost apple.

An apple that debuted last year at farm markets is out in bigger numbers this time, and local growers are helping to promote the new variety.

RubyFrost is one of two new varieties developed exclusively for New York apple growers. The apple is a late season variety. After spending some time in storage, New York apple growers and several big grocery chains are pushing the apple right now throughout the state and the Northeast.

Many of the apple farmers are taking turns in stores, answering consumers’ questions about the RubyFrost variety. Brett Kast, a partner and orchard manager at Kast Farms, was at a Wegmans in Buffalo last Saturday with his wife Amanda.
Customers sampled the apple, and Kast said people were overwhelmingly positive.

“It was a great experience to see the hard work you put into it and then see the consumers’ reaction,” Kast said. “Everybody who tried it absolutely loved it.”

RubyFrost is a cross between Braeburn with Autumn Crisp. The new apple is 95 percent red. It is firm with a sweet taste. Kast said the flavor matures while the apple is in storage.

New York apple growers also partnered with Cornell to grow and market SnapDragon. That apple is a cross between Honeycrisp and NY 752. The apple is ready earlier in the season.

The apple growers formed a new cooperative, New York Apple Growers LLC, to manage where the apples would be grown. The new varieties have been planted on 930 acres in apple-growing regions throughout the state. Roger Lamont of Albion is chairman of the cooperative.

The new apples won’t be grown in other states. Michigan and Washington, which are big apple producers, won’t have access to SnapDragon and RubyFrost. The exclusivity will be a benefit to New York growers.

But they need to make consumers of aware of the new varieties. That’s why Kast and other growers are appearing in stores to introduce consumers to SnapDragon and RubyFrost, and to let the public know the apples are excusively grown in New York. For consumers in the Buffalo and Rochester markets, the apples may have been grown only a short distance away, perhaps at orchards in Orleans or Wayne counties.

Kast said most of the consumers who tried the apple decided to buy a bag of the RubyFrost.

“I didn’t have to push too hard to sell the apple,” he said.

For more information on RubyFrost and where it is available, click here.

Correctional Facility donates to Community Action

Contributed Story Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photo by Tom Rivers

ALBION – Employees at the Orleans Correctional Facility delivered food to Community Action on East State Street on Wednesday.

The following are pictured: Dan Passarell (kneeling), a teacher at the men’s prison. Back row, from left: Richard Lugo, corrections officer; Willie Thompson, corrections officer; Carol Cornacchilo, offender rehabilitation counselor; and Kelly Montes, offender rehabilitation counselor.

Employees held a competition at the facility among four unions in December and January to see which union could give the most. The management confidential union or administration led the way, with other donations from teachers, corrections officers, counselors and CSEA workers. Altogether there were 188 pounds donated.

The donations come a good time for Community Action, which sees giving drop off after the holidays, said Anni Skowneski, case manager for Community Action. She said the food would be given out at Community Action sites in Albion and Holley.

Arc puts on first chicken and biscuit dinner

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers

ALBION – Theresa Schmackpfeffer and her great-granddaughter Kelli Dingle, 7, arrange pies and other desserts at a fund-raising dinner for The Arc of Orleans County today.

The Arc is serving up chicken and biscuits at the Nutri-Fair site at 16 East Academy St. This is the first time the Arc is having a chicken and biscuit dinner as a fund-raiser. Meals will be served until 7 p.m.

Greg Canham emerges from the kitchen with four take-out dinners ready.

GCASA Foundation approves mini grants

Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Press Release, GCASA

The Genesee/Orleans Council on Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Foundation has approved three mini grants to local organizations.

The GCASA Foundation was established in 1992 to support the work of GCASA, a substance abuse treatment, prevention and residential services provider in Genesee and Orleans counties.

“GCASA Foundation is committed to supporting the work of GCASA and other grass roots organizations in our community,” said Foundation Board President Kathleen Maerten. “Annually, GCASA Foundation sets aside money to provide agencies with needed funding to further their efforts in making our community a safer, healthier place to live and work.”

This year’s three recipients provide crucial services to individuals and families in the two-county area. The Mental Health Association in Genesee County, Crossroads House in Batavia and Christ Church Community Kitchen in Albion each received $200 mini-grants.

“We receive many requests for funding and find it challenging to limit our mini-grant program,” said John Bennett, GCASA executive director. “The work done by this year’s grantees impacts many of the people we serve at GCASA.”

Cuomo budget leaves school officials guessing

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Governor didn’t include aid runs for each school district

Photos by Tom Rivers – The front entrance to the Ronald L. Sodoma Elementary School in Albion includes giant crayons with guiding principles such as a “Loyalty.”

School leaders across the state in January usually are given some sense of what their state aid will be for the following school year.

The governor presents a budget in January and that document includes “runs” for each school district, the projected state aid for the following year. Usually during budget negotiations the State Legislature will push for an education funding increase over the governor’s numbers.

So the governor’s proposal typically is a worst-case scenario.

This time there are no numbers from the governor for the 2015-16 school year, which local school officials say makes preparing their budgets a greater challenge.

“Withholding of state aid figures is truly unprecedented and very disappointing as it places school districts in a very tough spot as we continue to be held to all of the deadlines established by the state with respect to local budgets but we are also unaware of our state revenue projections,” said Robert D’Angelo, superintendent at Holley Central School.

D’Angelo and the Board of Education will work on a 2015-16 budget, assuming the district’s state aid will be unchanged. If there is an increase for Holley through the state budget process, D’Angelo said district leaders will discuss how to apply an increase in state aid, if there is one. Holley also will reach out to local state legislators for their help in getting solid data from the state.

The governor and State Legislature have passed four straight on-time budgets after a generation of late budgets, some not getting approved into the summer, long after the April 1 state budget deadline.

Michael Bonnewell, Albion’s school superintendent, remembers when districts had to prepare budgets based on “guesstimates” from the state.

“It’s like the old days,” Bonnewell said.

Cuomo is pushing for changes in teacher evaluations, and he is using the state budget to pressure the Legislature to go along with his proposal.

Cuomo wants state assessments to count 50 percent towards a teacher’s evaluation. Currently, those tests account for 20 percent of the teacher’s score.

He has proposed a 1.7 percent education funding increase if the Legislature does not approve the teacher evaluation changes, and a 4.8 percent increase if the changes are adopted. He hasn’t released data for individual districts, as was done in the past.

Bonnewell said districts can’t assume a 1.7 percent increase as a worst-case scenario because Cuomo ties some of that increase to grants, which are not given uniformly to all districts. Bonnewell said there may be a chance some districts will see an overall aid drop.

Holley Central School recently completed renovations at the junior-senior high school.

The 2014-15 state budget gave the five school districts in Orleans County – Albion, Holley, Kendall, Lyndonville and Medina – a 5.1 percent increase, from $65.98 million to $69.33 million.

Jeff Evoy, Medina Central School superintendent, sent a letter to the governor last week, saying the district has been put in an “impossible” position as it tries to craft a responsible and effective budget.

Evoy said the governor’s aid numbers are a critical piece of the budget process. The district’s audit and finance committee uses that data to develop the budget with input from school stakeholders.

“This vital process cannot proceed, however, without an expected state aid distribution baseline, as we are left without enough information to predict revenue for the upcoming year,” Evoy said.

Lyndonville will work on a school budget, knowing the district may not get a state aid increase. Jason Smith, the district superintendent, said Lyndonville could use some reserves and fund balance to make up for static state aid. The district will work towards a budget with “minimal increases” to the local taxpayers, Smith said.

Smith has some doubts about the governor’s push to have assessments count 50 percent of a teacher’s evaluation, mainly because not every teacher has students who are tested that way.

Right now, the standardized tests from grades 3 through 8 Math and ELA count towards teacher evaluations.

“How is he going to account for every other teacher in districts that do not teach 3-8 Math or ELA?” Smith asked. “Furthermore, the 3-8 tests in math and ELA were never designed to be viewed as pass/fail type tests, but rather, a tool that districts can use to gauge student progress toward meeting the Common Core standards.”

Smith said he doesn’t favor the governor’s push to make the tests count so heavily on a teacher’s evaluation.

“I do not support it because of the sheer fact that is not comprehensive and lacks details, and really, the research is very unclear as to how much weight should be attributed to student scores in overall teacher evaluations,” Smith said.

State aid accounts for 60 percent of the Kendall Central School budget. The district wants to go to work on the 2015-16 school budget but “we can’t responsibly develop a budget or involve our communities in a process which could be based on faulty assumptions,” said Julie Christensen, the Kendall school superintendent.

Julie Christensen

Kendall has seen a $5.5 million reduction in state aid through a Gap Elimination Adjustment since 2008. The district, and others in the state, have pushed the governor and State Legislature to restore that funding. Many districts were forced to tap reserves, lay off staff and cut programs due to the funding cuts.

“It is time for the governor and our legislators to address this inequity and fully fund our schools,” Christensen said. “It’s their constitutional obligation.”

The governor and Legislature also passed a tax cap in 2011. School districts use the governor’s aid projections to formulate our tax cap calculation and the proposed tax levy is due to the state by March 1, Christensen said.

“It is impossible to establish a proposed tax levy without having a clear sense of our projected state aid,” she said.

Christensen sounded some of the same concerns raised by Smith of Lyndonville, in regards to the teacher evaluation proposal from the governor. Christensen said 70 percent of Kendall teachers do not receive a state growth score.

The remaining 70 percent of staff, according to the governor’s proposals, would receive a score that measures one year of academic growth, Christensen said. “How do you measure one year of growth in physical education, art, music?” she said.

Most districts in the state already had “rigorous, thoughtful, productive teacher evaluation systems” in place, Christensen said, long before Race to The Top and the mandated Annual Professional Performance Review process. New York City did not have those standards in place, she said.

“To hold all school districts hostage to disingenuous evaluation standards that does not support staff, students and administrators is incredulous!” she said by email. “Teachers are not numbers!! They are dedicated, committed, hardworking professionals and should be treated as such by our Governor, the State Education Department and others in political positions.”

She called Cuomo’s Opportunity Agenda “a travesty to the education profession on many levels.”

Wear red to promote heart health

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 5 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photo by Tom Rivers

ALBION – The Albion Rotary Club wore red today for their regular weekly meeting at The Village Inn. The club wore red to promote heart health.

Tomorrow is National Wear Red Day and people are encouraged to wear red to draw attention to women’s heart health. This day also officially kicks off American Heart Month.

Rotary Club members pictured, include, front row, from left: Fred Nesbitt, Don Bishop, Bruce Landis, Marlee Diehl and Mary Anne Braunbach.

Back row: Richard Remley, Bonnie Malakie, Marsha Rivers, Tammy Yaskulski, President Bill Diehl, Ron LaGamba, Brad Shelp and Maynard Lowry from Lockport Rotary Club.

Snow Moon is out in February

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 4 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photos by Pamela Moore
Pamela Moore of Barre took these photos of the “Snow Moon” last night. She is taking a series of photos of the full moons throughout the year.

According to the Old Farmers’ Almanac, the full moon in February is known as the Snow Moon because the heaviest snow usually falls during this month. Native tribes of the north and east most often called February’s full moon the Full Snow Moon, according to the Almanac.

Because harsh weather conditions made hunting difficult, some tribes also called the full moon in February the “Full Hunger Moon,” according to the Almanac.

County sells former Apollo Restaurant in Albion

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 4 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers – The Apollo Family Restaurant, located at 13939 State Route 31 West and 13927 State Route 31 West, has a new owner.

ALBION – The former Apollo Restaurant was purchased today from Orleans County, which became owner of the site after several years of unpaid taxes.

The property is on Route 31, just west of the village. Rick and Dawn Stacey offered $125,000 for the property and the County Legislature unanimously approved the bid this afternoon.

Stacey, owner of RS Automation, said the site “is a great location.” He is considering options for the property.

He said the site will be improved. He also owns other properties on Route 98, including the building for Weedman and the former Starkweather Freight Lines. Stacey said he upgraded those buildings and has worked with the tenants to grow their businesses.

“Everything I’ve done I’ve put a lot of effort in,” Stacey said. “I’m optimistic about it. It’s a nice piece of property.”

Ted Scharping, a long-time local real estate investor, bid $151,500 for the property, but the Legislature selected Stacey’s bid. Scharping didn’t submit a bid in writing until today, said Chuck Nesbitt, the county chief administrative officer.

The property had been on the market for many months, and was listed by Peter Snell Realtors in Albion for $164,900.

Scharping said the former diner is a desirable piece of property. He said a father and son wanted to reopen the place as a restaurant.

Famed newspaper editor owned cobblestone house in Gaines

By Matthew Ballard, Orleans County Historian Posted 4 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Happy 204th Birthday to Horace Greeley!

Editor of the New York Tribune and one-time presidential candidate, Greeley was once owner of the Ward House here at The Cobblestone Museum. Co-signing the mortgage for the small cobblestone home was the only way his impecunious aunt and uncle could afford to purchase the home.

When Greeley’s Uncle Benjamin Dwinnell became ill and could no longer make payments on the mortgage, Horace took control of the property. We believe he made a brief visit to Gaines in the mid-1860s to sell the house at auction.

Editor’s note: Greeley’s birthday was on Tuesday. He lived to be 61, served as a congressman and also ran for U.S. president against Ulysses Grant in 1872.

Photo by Matt Ballard

Get ready for more snow

Staff Reports Posted 4 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photo by Tom Rivers – The First Presbyterian Church in Albion was battered with snow on Monday. More snow, possibly up to 10 inches, is coming on Thursday.

The National Weather Service has issued a Lake Effect Snow Advisory from 4 a.m. Thursday until 1 a.m. on Friday.

Orleans County could get 2 to 4 inches of snow tonight, 1 to 4 inches on Thursday and another 1 to 2 inches on Thursday night.

Orleans Hub honors volunteer firefighters, outstanding citizens

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 4 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers  – Orleans Hub held a reception at Hoag Library this evening to recognize the Hub’s Outstanding Citizens for 2014 and the “Person of the Year.”

We announced these award winners in late December and wanted to have a reception to recognize them. About 60 people braved the bad weather for the reception.

Orleans Hub picked volunteer firefighters as the “Person of the Year” for their endless commitment to the community, helping in times of need.

The following are pictured, front row, from left: Peter Hendrickson, fire chief for Holley Fire Department; Jim Tabor, president of Carlton Volunteer Fire Company; Valerie Childs, a director with the Ridgeway Volunteer Fire Company; and Adam Ehrenreich, captain with the Lyndonville Fire Department.

Back row: Clarendon Fire Chief Jon DeYoung; Howard Watts, assistant fire chief with Shelby Volunteer Fire Company; Devin Taylor, captain with East Shelby Volunteer Fire Company; Gary Sicurella, president of Fancher-Hulberton-Murray Fire Company; Mike Schultz, Kendall fire chief; Jeremy Graham, assistant chief for Albion Fire Department; and Jonathan Higgins, captain with the Medina Fire Department. Jerry Bentley, fire chief for Barre, planned on attending but needed to work plowing roads.

For more on the 2014 Person of the Year, click here.

The Hub also presented certificates to the Outstanding Citizens of 2014. The group includes, front row, from left: Melissa Ierlan of Clarendon, president of the Clarendon Historical Society; State Assemblyman Steve Hawley; Jim Hancock, Parade of Lights organizer in Medina.

Back row: Erik and Marlene Seielstad, leaders of the 4-H robotics and Legos program; Kim Corcoran, leader of the Kendall Lawn Chair Ladies; Al Capurso, pioneer enthusiast; and Bilal Huzair, leader of a food dispersal program in Medina.

For more on the Outstanding Citizens and why they were selected, click here.

Hawley says new speaker should first tackle ethics reform

Posted 4 February 2015 at 12:00 am

Provided photo – State Assemblyman Steve Hawley, R-Batavia, is pictured greeting Carl Heastie of the Bronx, the new speaker of the State Assembly.

Press Release, State Assemblyman Steve Hawley

State Assemblyman Steve Hawley released this statement following Carl Heastie’s election as speaker of the State Assembly.

“Now that we have elected new leadership, the first order of business should be enacting much-needed ethics reforms. If the events of the past few weeks prove anything, it is that we have a unique opportunity to start fresh and for Speaker Heastie to prove that he is tough on ethics reform.

“For years, the Assembly Minority Conference and I have been calling for passage of measures such as the Public Officers Accountability Act and forfeiture of pension and retirement benefits for those convicted of certain felonies while serving as public officers. Today is the dawn of a new day in New York State government, and I hope Speaker Heastie takes the initiative to put us back on the right track.”

Accident closes section of 31A in Medina

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 3 February 2015 at 9:30 am

Provided photo

SHELBY – A section of Route 31A in Medina was closed this morning after an accident on the road near BMP America and Takeform Architectural Graphics. There were no injuries in the accident, but the road needed to be closed so tow trucks could be brought in, an Orleans County dispatcher said.

Shelby firefighters are providing traffic control.