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Farm Credit welcomes crop of interns, including student from Albion

Posted 2 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Courtesy of Farm Credit – Farm Credit East’s 2013 interns include front row, from left: Samantha Graf, Christian Carrion and Kaitlyn Miller of Albion. Back row: Alyssa Guilianelli, Darren Fuller, Gregory Murray, Casey Wells and Ashley Simmons.

Press release, Farm Credit East

BATAVIA – Farm Credit East continues its successful college intern program for college students in 2013 with eight interns focused on careers in agriculture.

The group includes Kaitlyn Miller of Albion, who is working out of Farm Credit’s Batavia office. She formatted all the policies and executive orders for Farm Credit’s EastNet – the organization’s Internet site. She also updated the Young, Beginner and Small Farmer Report that is submitted annually to Farm Credit Administration.

Miller will be returning to St. John Fisher this fall for her senior year. She is the daughter of Richard and Sharon Miller.

The 12-week internship opportunity is offered to college juniors each summer. Interns are placed throughout Farm Credit East branch offices. During the experience, students earn an inside look into Farm Credit East and the various careers available by shadowing employees of all different roles. Each intern also completes a major project, many of which fulfill business plan initiatives. These projects contribute valuable information to be used in reports and future planning.

“Our internship program serves as an excellent recruiting tool to maintain Farm Credit East’s commitment to the Northeast agriculture industry,” said Bill Lipinski, CEO of Farm Credit East. “Our internship advisors work hard to put together a well-rounded experience so that each intern is exposed to agriculture native to that area.”

Besides Miller, this year’s Farm Credit East team of eight interns included: Christian Carrion, Cornell University; Darren Fuller, Hamilton College; Samantha Graf, University of Connecticut; Alyssa Guilianelli, Delaware Valley College; Gregory Murray, Cornell University; Ashley Simmons, SUNY Cobleskill; and Casey Wells, Western New England University.

Farm Credit East is the largest lender to Northeast agriculture. It implements the internship program for individuals working towards degrees in agribusiness, accounting, finance or similar fields.

For more information on the Farm Credit East internship program, please contact Briana Beebe at Briana.Beebe@FarmCreditEast.com.

Meet SnapDragon and RubyFrost

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Photos courtesy of Ingrid Lamont – Cornell University and New York Apple Growers LLC today unveiled the names of two new apple varieties in Geneva at Cornell’s Agricultural Experiment Station.

GENEVA – Cornell University and New York Apple Growers LLC have unveiled the names of two new apples that the fruit industry believes will be popular with consumers and profitable for growers.

SnapDragon is a cross between Honeycrisp and NY 752. The new spicy-sweet flavored apple has Honeycrisp’s juiciness and firmness, but doesn’t have that apple’s production problems. Honeycrisp can be vulnerable to seasonal pathogens that cause defects and the apple is tricky to store over winter.

RubyFrost is a cross between Braeburn with Autumn Crisp. That new apple will be 95 percent red.

The new varieties are grown on 930 acres in apple-growing regions throughout the state. When the first mature crop hits the market in 2015 there will be about 930,000 bushels of the two varieties combined.

The trees are still young and aren’t yet producing a full crop. But there will be enough to introduce SnapDragon and RubyFrost to the public through farm markets this year.

The New York Apple Growers are working with Cornell’s apple breeding company to make the new varieties exclusive to NY growers. Cornell will receive royalties from tree and fruit sales, and those funds will support the breeding program, helping to fund a pipeline of more new varieties in the future.

Albion firefighters will receive Green Cross award

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

ALBION – Albion firefighters arrived on scene not long after 5 a.m. on June 21 to see a heavily damaged vehicle on Eagle Harbor-Waterport Road.

A driver, Jillian Troy, was badly injured and trapped inside the 1993 Suburu four-door sedan. The vehicle struck a concrete bridge structure that carries the roadway over Otter Creek.

Albion firefighters used the Hurst Jaws of Life to tear off the roof of the vehicle and free Troy, 18, of Holley. She was then taken by Mercy Flight to Strong Memorial Hospital.

This evening Albion firefighters will be awarded the “Green Cross,” an honor from the Hurst Jaws of Life company for using the equipment to save lives. Kevin Sheehan, Albion’s deputy mayor, will present the awards at 6:30 p.m. at the fire hall on North Platt Street.

The following will be recognized: Dale Banker, Albert Cheverie, Andrew Cheverie, Rob Connor, Mike Dalle, Matt Francis, Will Francis, Jeremy Graham, James Herdendorf, Charlie Monacelli, Steven Papponetti, Chuck Prentice and Rocky Sidari.

Church windows get extended life

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers

MEDINA – Lynn Condoluci, owner of a woodworking business in Barre, spent today caulking and repainting the wooden frame of a stained-glass window at the St. John’s Episcopal Church in Medina.

Condoluci said the caulk and paint should extend the life of the window frames, which he said have badly deteriorated.

He is working on eight of the church window frames. The church at East Center Street was built in 1832, making it one of the oldest in Orleans County.

Firefighters get thanks from 18-year-old girl they saved

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

13 members of AFD receive ‘Green Cross’ awards

Photos by Tom Rivers – Jillian Troy, 18, stands by the Jaws of Life and Albion firefighters Jeremy Graham and Al Cheverie, right. Chuck Prentice is in back.

Jillian Troy has made a remarkable recovery from life-threatening injuries sustained in a June 21 car crash. Her family credits the quick and effective work by firefighters for saving her life and helping to minimize the lasting impact of her injuries. She is pictured with Albion firefighters, from left: Will Francis, Matt Francis, Dale Banker, Andrew Cheverie, Mike Dalle, Jeremy Graham, Chuck Prentice, Al Cheverie and Steven Papponetti. Four other firefighters responded to the rescue call on June 21: Rob Connor, James Herdendorf, Charlie Monacelli and Rocky Sidari.

ALBION – Jillian Troy doesn’t remember the accident. She woke up five days after June 21, when she nearly died in an early morning crash on Eagle Harbor-Waterport Road.

Jillian, 18, had extensive injuries, including swelling on the brain, a lacerated liver, a collapsed and punctured lung, a broken left ankle and wrist, and several knocked out teeth. She only had a faint breath.

Her family credits a quick and perfectly executed extrication by Albion firefighters with saving her life and helping to prevent more serious lasting injuries.

“I’m very grateful to the firefighters,” Jillian said this evening. “They did a really good job.”

Jillian and her family met the Albion firefighters tonight who helped save her. Deputy Mayor Kevin Sheehan also presented 13 firefighters with “Green Cross” awards from the Hurst Jaws of Life company for using the tool in a life-saving emergency.

“I’m very grateful that I made out so well,” Jillian said this evening. “I had a lot of injuries.”

Her family was told she would be recovering in a hospital for months. She was able to leave after 18 days. Her body has bounced back remarkably, said her mother Lauren Rayner.

“She was in very bad shape,” Rayner said.

Rayner’s mother Cindy Troy handed each firefighter a flower in appreciation for their work on that early morning.

Firefighters heard their ring tones go off soon after 5 a.m. Mike Dalle thought it was his alarm clock. He reached for the snooze button, but realized it was a fire call. He lives on Route 104 and was on scene within minutes. So were several other firefighters.

They saw a heavily damaged 1993 Suburu four-door sedan on Eagle Harbor-Waterport Road. Jillian had fallen asleep and drove into a concrete bridge structure that carries the roadway over Otter Creek.

Albion firefighters Steven Papponetti, right, and Jeremy Graham show the Jaws of Life to Jillian Troy and her father Harvey outside the Albion fire hall.

Albion Deputy Mayor Kevin Sheehan, left, presents a “Green Cross” award to Jeremy Graham, assistant fire chief, for the fire department’s life-saving efforts on June 21 for Jillian Troy.

Firefighters arrived in Albion’s rescue truck with the Jaws of Life. They used the tools to carefully tear off the roof and remove posts inside the vehicle. They removed Jillian who was then transported by Mercy Flight to Strong Memorial Hospital.

Dalle said firefighters had Jillian out and on Mercy Flight within 15 minutes of the call.

“I remember walking away from that call and thinking I’m so proud of this department,” Dalle said. “Everything went picture perfect.”

Because the call came so early in the morning, before the firefighters went to work, many of them were on the scene within minutes.

The following firefighters received “Green Cross” awards: Rob Connor, James Herdendorf, Charlie Monacelli, Rocky Sidari, Will Francis, Matt Francis, Dale Banker, Andrew Cheverie, Mike Dalle, Jeremy Graham, Chuck Prentice, Al Cheverie and Steven Papponetti.

Jillian grew up in Britain in Suffolk, north of London. She moved to Albion about 18 months ago and lived with her grandparents until her mother and father joined her in Orleans County in November. Jillian worked at Claims Recovery Financial Services in Albion.

Her family is well-known in the Albion area. Her great-grandfather is Frenchy Downey, owner of Frenchy’s TV and Appliances on Ridge Road.

“She almost died,” Jillian’s mother said. “It was very traumatic. We just wanted to thank the firemen.”

See a list of grand champs from the 4-H Fair

Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Provided photo – Charley London of Albion is the grand champion of the Western Walk Trot.

Press release, Orleans County 4-H Posted

KNOWLESVILLE – About 200 4-H’ers competed in numerous events showing livestock and other animals at the annual 4-H Fair last week.

Click here to see a list of the champion results.

Churches work together to stage musical

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat debuts tonight

Photo courtesy of Bruce Landis – The cast and crew is pictured for Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, which has three shows at 7:30 p.m. today, Friday and Saturday.

MEDINA – Cast members from seven local churches are joining for a musical at the Oak Orchard Assembly of God, with 7:30 p.m. shows tonight, Friday and Saturday.

Admission to see Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is free. The church is located at 12111 Ridge Rd. The show is directed by Trisha Stacey, a Medina teacher.

While the show has been performed on Broadway and many secular stages, it is based on a Biblical story of Joseph and his “coat of many colors.” Joseph is in the Book of Genesis.

Genesee judge sentences Albion man to 22 years in prison for rape

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

BATAVIA – An Albion who pleaded guilty to having sex with a 14-year-old girl was sentenced to 22 years in state prison today by a judge in Genesee County.

Scott D. Stanley allegedly committed numerous sexual acts with the girl in both Genesee and Orleans counties.

He pleaded guilty to second-degree rape in Orleans County Court on July 22. He is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge James Punch on Oct. 28.

Today, The Daily News of Batavia reports that Genesee County Judge Robert C. Noonan sentenced Stanley to 22 years in prison. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison for attempted first-degree rape and seven years for second-degree rape. The sentences are to be served consecutively.

More on NY’s 2 new apples

Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

SnapDragon and RubyFrost make their debut

SnapDragon has a juicy crispiness.

Press release
Cornell University

GENEVA – After years of development and consumer testing as “NY1” and “NY2” Cornell University and New York Apple Growers have given the hottest new apples in the Empire State names worthy of their unique assets:

SnapDragon and RubyFrost.

The names were revealed this afternoon by Jeff Crist, vice chairman of the NYAG board of directors, at the annual Fruit Field Days at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, where Cornell breeder and Horticulture Professor Susan Brown developed the varieties.

“SnapDragon is a great name for this apple because consumers found its crispy texture and sweet flavor so appealing,” said Mark Russell, an apple grower and NYAG member.

Each new apple has its own logo.

SnapDragon, formerly NY1, gets its juicy crispness from its Honeycrisp parent, and it has a spicy-sweet flavor that was a big hit with taste testers. Russell anticipates it will be a popular apple for snacking, especially for children.

Brown said she recognized its promise and fast-tracked it for commercialization.

“I remember my very first bite of SnapDragon. The taste, the crispness and the juiciness impressed us,” Brown said. “Retailers will appreciate its other qualities as well, because although SnapDragon’s harvest window starts relatively early – in late September – its long storage and shelf life means retailers may be able to offer it with consistent quality for a longer time than Honeycrisp.”

RubyFrost, formerly NY2, which ripens later in the fall and stores well, will provide a boost of vitamin C well into winter. Brown expects it will be popular with fans of Empire and Granny Smith.

RubyFrost apples are juicy with a red skin.

“I think juicy and refreshing when I eat a RubyFrost,” Russell said. “It’s a fascinating apple, with a beautiful skin and a nice sugar-acid balance, but to me the crisp juiciness is rewarding every time.”

The two varieties have been a decade in the making, and how they’ve gone to market is a first for the Cornell apple-breeding program and the New York apple industry.

Historically, public universities developed new apple breeds and released them to the industry freely. But in 1980, the Bayh-Dole Act gave universities the ability to retain the intellectual property rights for their research, with limited plant-based royalties.

In May 2010, Cornell forged a partnership for a managed release with NYAG, a new industry group, to establish an exclusive licensing agreement in North America for the two apple varieties. Growers pay royalties on trees purchased, acreage planted and fruit produced, and the income is used to market the new varieties and support Cornell’s apple-breeding program.

The first trees were planted in farmers’ orchards in 2011, and now 400 acres are growing across the state. According to NYAG, the still-young trees will produce a limited crop this year, but intrepid consumers can search out SnapDragon and RubyFrost at select NYAG farm stands across the state. By 2015, the varieties will be vying for space in grocery stores among the Empires, Galas and Honeycrisps.

Greater quality, better storage, and disease and insect resistance have long been the goals of Cornell’s apple breeding program. In addition to SnapDragon and RubyFrost, Cornell has released 66 apple varieties since the late 1890s, including the popular Cortland, Macoun, Empire and Jonagold. Brown herself has brought consumers the highly popular Fortune and Autumncrisp varieties, as well as 11 cherry varieties.

Replica canal boat docks in Albion and heads west

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Floating museum will be open for tours Aug. 8 in Medina

Photos by Tom Rivers – The Lois McClure docked in Albion last night and left this morning, headed west for a public event in Lockport.

The boat will be back in Orleans County on Aug. 8.

MEDINA – A crew from Burlington, Vermont, is trying to turn back the clock by a century on the Erie Canal.

The Lois McClure, a wooden schooner built as a replica of a canal boat from the 1860s, is spending two months on the canal this summer. Last night the boat docked in Albion. This morning it headed west to Lockport, where it will be open for tours from 5 to 8 p.m. today.

The boat will be in Buffalo over the weekend for tours. It will stop in Medina on Aug. 8. The public is welcome to come aboard to see the boat from 4 to 8 p.m. The tours are free.

“We want to bring the perspective of history,” said crew leader Art Cohn, who is also executive director of the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, which owns the Lois McClure.

The schooner is a full-scale replica of an 1862-class sailing canal boat, constructed by the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum in Vermont and launched in 2004. Cohn said it is typical of a “blue-collar boat” on the canal from a century ago, used to move freight. Many families owned boats like the Lois McClure and made a living hauling goods along the historic waterway.

“It’s a unique boat today, but it was very common in the 1860s,” he said.

The boat has a traveling companion, a tugboat named the C.L. Churchhill. The tug pulls the boat at about 5 miles per hour.

The schooner is named in honor of Lois McClure, who has been a major contributor to the sailboat and other community projects in the greater Burlington, Vermont area.

Longest-serving legislator will retire

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2013 at 12:00 am

Bower of Holley is the current vice chairman

HOLLEY – Twice a week George Bower babysits his only great-grandchild.

“I absolutely love it,” Bower said. “It keeps me young.”

Bower, 76, relishes time with his family. He has been a steady presence at Holley school events for years, cheering on his grandchildren who play soccer, basketball and other sports.

He has tried to balance his family life with a career at Kodak and public service. He was a Murray town justice for 21 years before he was elected to the Orleans County Legislature in 1989. At nearly 24 years on the Legislature, he is the longest-serving member of the group, with Chairman David Callard two years behind.

But Bower, the Legislature’s current vice chairman, last week notified his colleagues and Republican Party leaders he won’t run again this election.

“It was really hard for me to get out,” Bower said on Wednesday. “But there comes a time. I’m fortunate I have really good health and I want to spend more time with my family.”

He plans to take more short trips with his wife Sandy, the county’s retired personnel director. Bower also wants to tend to a vegetable and flower garden.

He will continue to be a regular at Sam’s Diner in Holley, where he meets friends for breakfast almost every day.

He said he is proud of improvements to county facilities during his time on the Legislature. He noted the transformation of a former furniture store on Route 31 into the public safety building. The county has also upgraded its animal shelter, put on an addition and renovated the historic courthouse, and made a $10 million renovation and addition to the nursing home.

Bower last month was the lone legislator to oppose forming a local development corporation to be tasked with selling the 120-bed nursing home.

“Selling the nursing home that really bothers me,” he said. “That’s not the direction I think we should go.”

Bower was praised by Ed Morgan, the county GOP chairman, for his independence on the seven-member Legislature.

“Nobody agrees all the time,” Morgan said. “George would certainly speak when he has a concern on an issue.”

The GOP will endorse a candidate for the county-wide legislator position next month. The candidate has to live on the east side of the county in either Clarendon, Murray or Kendall. Morgan said John DeFilipps, a Clarendon town councilman the past decade, is interested in the part-time position.

Medina’s dissolution committee meets for first time Thursday

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2013 at 12:00 am

MEDINA A committee that has been tasked to develop a plan for the village’s dissolution will meet for the first time at 1 p.m. Thursday. The session will be in the main meeting room at City Hall, 600 Main St.

Mayor Andrew Meier is a member of the committee. He is hopeful a plan can be developed and presented to the public by next spring. A dissolution of the village would need approval by village residents.

Medina received a $50,000 state grant to prepare the plan. The village on July 8 voted to hire a consultant and formed a committee to develop a plan for the orderly dissolution of the village. Don Colquhoun, former executive director of the Arc of Orleans, is leading the committee.

Other committee members include Cindy Robinson, a Main Street business owner and president of the Medina Business Association and the Orleans County Chamber of Commerce; Charlie Slack of Slack Insurance; Thurston Dale, a retired veterinarian; Meier; and Village Trustee Mark Irwin.

The group will work with the Center for Governmental Research to develop a plan to dissolve the village and fold those government services and assets into the towns of Shelby and Ridgeway.

CGR will be paid $55,555 for its work. The organization assisted Medina and towns of Ridgeway and Shelby with a consolidation study about two years ago. That project showed the costs of providing services could be reduced by $200,000 to $400,000 with consolidation of services, plus the state would likely give the communities $600,000 annually as incentive aid for reducing layers of government.

Meier would like to have a plan developed in the next six to nine months.  The Village Board could then accept the plan and schedule a referendum for village residents. Town residents outside the village don’t have a say at the polls on the village’s fate.

Meier believes dissolving the village and its layer of government will significantly reduce Median’s tax rate, making the community more desirable for residents and businesses. Medina has the highest combined tax rate – village, town, school and county – in the Finger Lakes region. That rate is about $54 per $1,000 of assessed property, with the village accounting for about $16 of that tax rate.

Lamonts rescued a cast-iron hitching post

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2013 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers – The Albion and Gaines area in particular has many historic sandstone hitching posts. The Lamonts on Densmore Road have a cast-iron one by their driveway on Densmore Road in Gaines.

Roger and Ingrid Lamont pose for a photo with two of their grandsons, Alex, left, and Aaron.

ALBION – Roger Lamont saw it in a barn, part of a collection of old relics that had been abandoned.

He knew it should be displayed, returned to the landscape.

A decade ago he put a cast-iron hitching post by his driveway at his old farmhouse on Densmore Road.

“I keep everything that is old,” he said.

I’ve developed a hitching post and carriage step obsession. I was at Lamont’s house last evening for a story about two new apple varieties. I noticed the hitching post. It’s unusual around here. Most of them are made of sandstone.

The cast-iron one dates back more than a century. Lamont said it was owned by a farmer down the road. The old hitching post was left with a farm acquired by the Lamont family.

When Roger and his wife Ingrid moved in his parents’ home in 2002, Roger decided the hitching post would be a nice touch by the house.

For several years the couple operated a bed and breakfast at the site. Ingrid hung a welcome flag from the hitching post. She planted flowers around it.

The house is 100 years old this year. It includes a sandstone foundation and sandstone base for the pillars on the porch.

If you have a hitching post or carriage step story to share, send me an email at tom@orleanshub.com.

Golf tourney raises $36K for hospital

Posted 31 July 2013 at 12:00 am

Provided photos – The mixed winning team includes Matt Bush, Dave Cook, Cindy Perry and Pete Jones.

Press release, Orleans Community Health Foundation

HOLLEY – A hundred golfers played 18 rounds on a hot July 19 and raised $36,000 for the Orleans Community Health Foundation’s 27th annual golf tournament.

The tournament was postponed from its original date of June 14, due  to extreme rain and flooding.

The $36,000 will go towards finishing up Phase 2 of the renovations in the Residential Long Term Care Facility, known as the “North Wing” at Medina Memorial Hospital. This is a 30-bed nursing care facility in the hospital located on the first floor.

The renovations to date have remodeled each of the 30 resident rooms from top to bottom. Residents are enjoying new cabinetry, windows, ceilings and flooring.

The hospital is working to finish a solarium and sun porch for the residents to use, along with new furniture in the dining area and a nurses’ station.

The winning men’s team includes Wayne Barry, Paul Burgess, Gary Hill and Dan Krisher.

Fruit crop rebounds after 2012 freeze

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2013 at 12:00 am

Photo by Tom Rivers – Roger Lamont is pleased with the progress of these Honeycrisp apples and others at his fruit farm on Densmore Road in Albion. Lamont and many other growers had a small crop to pick last year.

Last year Orleans County’s leading crop was decimated by a series of spring freezes that killed blossoms on fruit trees.

There were far fewer apples in the fall. Statewide the apple crop totaled 720 million pounds last year compared to 1.22 billion in 2011. The diminished number meant fewer jobs picking fruit, sorting and packing apples in packing houses, and transporting them on delivery trucks.

This year should be a different story. Farmers say they have been blessed with ample rain and lots of sunshine. They should see a full crop that is high in flavor, said Debbie Breth, a fruit specialist with the Cornell Cooperative Extension. She is based out of the CCE’s office in Knowlesville.

“The quality will definitely be good,” Breth said today. “We’ve had plentiful moisture and the sunshine makes sugar.”

Last year the apple crop was down 41 percent in a $300 million annual industry in New York.

This year’s prolonged cool spring actually has been good for the apple crop, allowing for an extended pollination.

Breth said farmers have had to contend with more pests this year because many farms cut back on the use of sprays last year when they lost their crop. Some of the pests and insects wintered in the orchards and have required more effort to combat this year, she said.

But she is pleased overall with how the trees have rebounded after last year. The crop also is benefitting from a bigger output from many recently planted high-density orchards, she said.