By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 4 August 2025 at 2:52 pm
File photo by Tom Rivers: Jonah Fisher, 5, of Albion high fives Sparky the Fire Dog. Jonah’s dad, Medina firefighter Adam Fisher, wore the costume of the friendly dalmatian during National Night Out in Medina on Aug. 2, 2022. The event returns on Tuesday from 5:30 to 8 p.m. outside the intermediate school.
MEDINA – An event that connects residents with first responders and community organizations returns on Tuesday.
National Night Out will be from 5:30 to 8 p.m. outside the Clifford Wise Intermediate School. The event is free with hot dogs, beverages and many activities.
National Night Out often draws about 700 people. Albion hosted NNO for five years from 2015 to 2019. It was then cancelled due to the Covid pandemic and restrictions in 2020 and 2021. Medina has hosted it annually since 2022.
“There are a lot of activities, and it will be a way for families to meet law enforcement and establish a connection and relationship,” said Diana Fulcomer, a prevention educator with UConnectCare. She is co-chair of the NNO committee with Sherri Bensley, public health educator with GO Health.
There will be a K9 demonstration at 5:45 p.m., the Battle of the Belts competition beginning at 6:30, and many community members in the dunk tank most of the event. The battle of the Belts feature four-person teams alternating as fast as they can to put on seat belts in four different seats in a car.
More than 40 community groups are expected to be at NNO. There will also be a magician, caricaturist and balloon artist.
A committee has been working on planning National Night Out since January. Fulcomer said NNO is a county-wide event. The committee is open to trying another location next year. The group partners with a law enforcement agency to host the event.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 August 2025 at 5:13 pm
MEDINA – Baxter Healthcare will be hosting a community safety day from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday in the Baxter parking lot at 711 Park Ave.
There will be free food and beverages, as well as kid-friendly activities.
The Safety Committee at Baxter is an employee-led group who is hosting the event, and this week the facility is focused on both workplace and at home safety, with it all culminating with the community safety day.
The Medina Fire Department, Orleans County Sherif’s Department, and the K9 unit will be at the event doing demonstrations and talks about safety, as well as car seat safety checks.
Someone will be doing car care demonstrations and will be available to answer general car questions. There will be cornhole and water balloons set up, as well as face painting and temporary tattoos, balloon animals, and a coloring station.
There will also be a basket raffle to benefit the fire department.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2025 at 10:05 am
Owner of property says he wants townhouses at site on West Oak Orchard Street
Photos by Tom Rivers: James Nashwenter, left, and Dan Dunn, right, share their concerns about a housing development on West Oak Orchard Street that would be close to their homes at Lakewood Village Mobile Home Park. Nashwenter said he doesn’t want to see low-income housing at West Oak Orchard.
MEDINA – The Medina Village Board has approved a zoning change for 46 acres of property at 450 West Oak Orchard St., which will allow a mix of housing types through a “planned residential community.”
Several residents spoke out about the zoning change, saying they were concerned the zoning change could usher in low-income housing that could potentially reduce the values of other nearby properties.
The speakers want to know specifically what types of housing will be on the property. Ed Michel of Sieck Wholesale owns the site. He said his plan is for townhouses.
But he has held off on incurring the expense for precise plans until the property was rezoned from light industrial, which doesn’t allow housing, to planned residential community.
Michel was advocated for R-3 zoning to allow more than single-family housing, but the Village Planning Board pushed for the “planned residential community” zoning which gives Medina more control on how the property is developed.
Local resident Scott Carlton said there has been too many unknowns with the potential development. He said the minutes from a County Planning Board meeting state the site could potentially have up to 400 units.
But Dan Gardner, the village code enforcement officer, said there haven’t been any numbers proposed for units at this time.
“We don’t know how many units of anything,” he said. “We’re not at the site plan stage.”
Jim Nashwenter, a resident of the nearby Lakewood Village Mobile Home Park, said there is too much “mystery” about what could be coming to the 46 acres. Nashwenter said the Lakewood Village community “vehemently opposes” lower-income housing. Lakewood Village ois for residents 55 and older.
“We worked our asses all our life to enjoy a quiet peaceful retirement,” Nashwenter told the board at Monday evening’s meeting. “This is a non-starter. It will destroy the park.”
Ed Michel of Sieck Wholesale wants to use 46 acres for housing. He said the main goal is for townhouses on the property. Now that the property is rezoned, he will work with engineers are more precise details for the property.
J. Lincoln Swedrock, an engineer and vice president with BME Associates in Fairport, responded to concerns that the property may be contaminated. He said the DEC (Department of Environmental Conservation) shows there is no contamination on the vacant land. There was a spill from Fisher Price but a monitoring well hasn’t detected any contaminants in about 40 years, Swedrock said.
At a Village Board meeting last month, J. Lincoln Swedrock, an engineer and vice president with BME Associates in Fairport, said there needs to be a mix of housing with some townhouses to allow more units so a project would be economically feasible.
Swedrock works for Michel, the owner of the property. Michel wants a mixed-use option with single-family houses as well as multi-family town houses.
The Village Board approved the zoning change, and Mayor Marguerite Sherman said there would be public hearings in the future as plans are developed.
Village attorney Matt Brooks said the village can’t make decisions about housing and zoning based on the income, gender and ethnicity of residents.
“We can’t discriminate against this group,” said village trustee Scott Bieliski. “We can’t just shoot it down.”
The zoning change “just opens up the possibility” for the land to be developed for housing, he said.
“At the end of the day this is his property and it will give him some options,” Bieliski said.
Nashwenter asked the Village Board to keep the public apprised of any developments with the property.
“I’m not a meeting person but this thing has lit a fire under my butt,” he told the board in a packed meeting room.
Two representatives from the United Way, executive director Nyla Gaylord and board member Dean Bellack, attended last month’s board meeting and urged the board to make the zoning change. They said the area has a significant housing shortage that is a factor in the county’s decreasing population.
The housing shortage is threatening the community’s ability to grow. For businesses to come to Medina, there needs to be more housing for their workers, she said.
Orleans County overall needs more housing options from single family construction, to affordable rentals for young adults and senior citizens, Gaylord said.
“We have some scary data for our community if we don’t allow more property to be developed for housing,” she said.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 30 July 2025 at 12:46 pm
Photo by Tom Rivers – A Medina Fire Department ambulance heads out for a call on Monday evening.
MEDINA – The Medina Village Board has set a special meeting for Aug. 20 for the discussion to focus on the future of the Medina Fire Department.
Board members say they highly value the work of firefighters, but the board is concerned about the costs of running a department with 17 full-time paid staff. The board recently reduced the paid staff from 21 to 17.
Trustee Debbie Padoleski, a retired clerk/treasurer for the village, said it is imperative for Medina to get more financial help from neighboring towns for the fire department services, which includes running the primary ambulance service for western Orleans County. The fire department responds to about 2,500 calls a year and about 90 percent, more than 2,200, are EMS/ambulance calls.
The towns of Shelby, Ridgeway and Yates each contribute $35,000 a year to Medina towards the ambulance service.
“That doesn’t even begin to pay for our firemen, the ambulances, fuel, and wear and tear,” Padoleski said during Monday’s Village Board meeting.
The other seven towns in Orleans County contract with Mercy EMS for ambulance services. The amount varies and is based on call volume. Mercy will be paid $250,000 this year for staging two basic life support ambulances in central and eastern Orleans 24 hours a day, seven days a week, plus an advanced life support fly car that would be available 24-7.
The contract calls for the seven towns to pay the following in 2025: Albion, $93,000; Barre, $11,000; Carlton, $18,500; Clarendon, $28,000; Gaines, $38,500; Kendall, $12,750; and Murray, $48,250.
Medina village officials also need to decide soon about whether it will proceed with an addition to the fire hall to accommodate a new ladder truck due to arrive in December.
Medina will be paying $1.7 million for the ladder truck. A one-bay addition to the fire hall is expected to be just over $1 million. Medina is pursuing a state grant for $1 million to help pay for the addition, but Padoleski said she worries about the difference in the final cost and what a grant may cover. She said village taxpayers are already stretched to the limit.
The Aug. 20 meeting will begin at 6 p.m. whether at the Ridgeway Town Hall or the Medina Senior Center. The location will be posted soon, Mayor Marguerite Sherman said.
The county also is doing a study for EMS/firefighting services throughout the county. Village Trustee Scott Bieliski said village officials already know Medina is a cornerstone for the service in western Orleans, and often providing mutual aid in central Orleans as well. The big issue is getting more revenue to Medina for the service that often goes outside the village boundaries, he said.
“They’re doing a study, but we know we are taking care of a lot of the county,” Bieliski said.
By Ginny Kropf, correspondent Posted 30 July 2025 at 7:37 am
File photo: Jesse Cudzillo, left, and Dean Bellack are shown in this picture taken last year at the YMCA while Cudzillo was director. He has recently stepped down to accept a position in a new online telehealth company founded by his brother.
MEDINA – Jesse Cudzillo has announced his resignation as executive director of the Orleans County YMCA.
Cudzillo is stepping down to pursue a new venture as chief executive officer of Neneu Wellness Club, a next-generation wellness company he has launched with his brother and founder, Nicholas Cudzillo.
“This is an opportunity we saw to really help people, and this seemed like the right time,” Jesse said. “I am filled with gratitude for my time at the YMCA. The mission, the people and the impact we have made together in this community will always be part of who I am. The YMCA stands for strengthening spirit, mind and body – and I have witnessed firsthand the real change it creates in people’s lives.”
Cudzillo led the Orleans County YMCA through significant programming expansion, community partnerships and youth development initiatives. He credits the organization with preparing him to take the next step in his professional journey, building upon the foundation of health, wellness and community.
“Jesse Cudzillo will be greatly missed,” said Dean Bellack, former board chair who is serving as chief volunteer officer until a decision can be made how to replace Cudzillo. “He has accomplished many new community partnerships, including the Christian Bow Hunters Archery Program, building the teen center and kitchen and bringing Kwandrans’ Tae-Kwan-Do into the Y. He established himself as a community leader and grew membership in our Orleans County branch. On behalf of the staff and board members in the GLOW YMCA, we wish him success in his new venture.”
“We have launched Reneu Wellness Club to take our mission one step further,” Cudzillo said. “Reneu is a physician-aligned telehealth and functional wellness platform focused on personalized care, advanced peptide therapies, hormone optimization and lifestyle coaching. Our mission is to deliver transformative, medically-responsible wellness to individuals across the country – starting right here in Western New York.”
Reneu Wellness Club aims to blend cutting-edge medicine with heart-centered coaching to help people feel, look and live better, Cudzillo explained. The company operates through a concierge telehealth model, offering care that is proactive, not reactive.
While stepping away from the YMCA is bittersweet, Cudzillo said, he emphasized that his admiration and support for the Y’s mission remains as strong as ever.
“The YMCA will always have my respect and appreciation,” he said. “I am proud of the work we did together, and I am excited to continue serving our community in a new way.”
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 July 2025 at 7:34 pm
MEDINA – The Medina Village Board approved an expanded school zone where the speed limit is capped at 15 miles per hour.
Police Chief Todd Draper advocated for the change with the extended boundaries near the Wise Intermediate School and Oak Orchard Primary School.
The Village Board held a public hearing on the change on Monday evening. Tim Zeiner, a local resident, supported the change and asked the village to better mark cross walks for pedestrians. He would like to see signs and paint in the road similar to what is done with the Main Street cross walks.
The school zone is designated from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. from Mondays through Fridays. The state Department of Transportation allows a school zone to extend a maximum of 1,320 feet along a highway passing a school building entrance or exit of a school abutting on the highway.
The expanded zone includes:
Gwinn Street, extending 1,320 feet north from the northern intermediate school entrance
Gwinn Street, extending 650 feet south of the southern intermediate school entrance
West Oak Orchard Street, extending 500 feet west of Oak Orchard School western loop entrance
West Oak Orchard Street, extending 1,320 feet east of Oak Orchard School eastern loop entrance
The school zone restrictions do not apply to ambulances, fire vehicles or police vehicles when on emergency trips.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 July 2025 at 6:37 pm
MFD, pared back from 21 to 17 full-time, needs to fill fire chief vacancy
Photo courtesy of Medina Fire Department: The Medina Fire Department welcomed Mackenzie Rider-Work, left, and Brian Bates as probationary firefighters. They were hired at Monday’s Village Board meeting.
MEDINA – The Medina Fire Department has two new full-time members after they were hired at Monday’s Village Board meeting.
Brian Bates and Mackenzie Rider-Work both are joining the department, while it loses Andrew Steel, a full-time firefighter the past three years whose resignation effective July 31 was accepted by the board on Monday.
Steel’s departure follows the resignations last month of fire chief Matt Jackson and firefighters Tiffany Petry and Dylan Schreader. Captain Jonathan Higgins also retired.
The department was at 20 full-time members and a fire chief, but was pared down to 16 firefighters and a chief.
Once the fire chief position is filled, the Medina FD would need to fill one more position if the fire chief is promoted from within the department.
Bates joins Medina, coming from the Hilton Fire Department and Monroe Ambulance. He has completed the fire academy and is waiting to take the paramedic test.
Rider-Work comes from the Clarence Fire Department. He is an EMT-B and a state fire instructor assigned to Erie County.
“Brian will be assigned to the 4th Platoon and Mackenzie will join the 2nd Platoon once they complete the onboarding process,” stated the Medina professional Firefighters IAFF Local 2161. “They are both a welcome addition to the team but we still face a long road to return to being considered fully staffed. We are still awaiting the promotion of a new fire chief to lead our department.”
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 July 2025 at 9:21 am
Photo by Tom Rivers: The Medina Village Board approved a lease agreement with Erie Floatel, LLC to have a house boat at one of the floating docks in the Canal Basin until Oct. 31.
MEDINA – The Medina Village Board has approved a lease for a house boat to be at the Canal Basin, a boat that will be available for short-term rentals and overnight stays.
The boat will remain at the dock and won’t be operated in the canal. The board approved the lease with Erie Floatel, LLC of Medina for use of the floating dock on south end of the canal for $220, plus another $100 for electric and water consumption for the season.
Erie Floatel will be operated by Andrew Meier and Svein Lilleby. The lease runs from Memorial Day to Oct. 31, 2025.
The lease agreement has been discussed at length in recent board meetings. Medina officials said the project is unusual along the canal and adds another feature for visitors to the community. Erie Floatel will be available to rent through Airbnb as a short-term rental.
The Village Board and Erie Floatel reached an agreement for the business to have $2 million in insurance coverage with the Village of Medina named as “additional insured” in Erie Floatel’s umbrella coverage of $2 million.
Brian Hellner, operator of North Star Cruises, said the village reached a more favorable tenant agreement with Erie Floatel than with Hellner’s boat ride business which started in 2023. Hellner said the village made him have $2 million in general liability coverage, not umbrella coverage and also didn’t make utilities available for his boat.
Mayor Marguerite Sherman and the board members said Hellner could have access to water and electricity at the same $100 rate.
Village attorney Matthew Brooks said the village has insisted on the $2 million of minimum insurance coverage, and Erie Floatel met that requirement.
Hellner said the village should insist the house boat is inspected and safe for the public. Brooks said a marine inspection is not within the purvey of the village.
Heather Farnsworth Hungerford, co-owner of the Bent’s Opera House, cautioned the Village Board from leasing too many of the docks spaces to businesses, limiting the public use of the properties. She said the house boat business for overnight stays could also discourage investment in the historic downtown for lodging.
Sherman said the leases in the Canal Basin are short-term for less than a year so the village can re-evaluate them. Right now, only two of the spaces are being leased. Sherman and the board members said there is still an abundance of dock spaces for the public.
“These are short-term leases so we have an opportunity to correct them if something goes wrong,” said Brooks, the village attorney.
Sherman said the board appreciates North Star Cruises and Erie Floatel for the services they are offering in the community.
“We are being fair,” she said. “We’re trying to work with our businesses as best as possible.”
Village attorney Matthew Brooks said the board is approving short-term leases that allow for re-evaluating after each season. In back are village trustees Mark Prawel and Scott Bieliski.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 28 July 2025 at 10:49 pm
Draper to end 21-year career with Medina PD on Aug. 30
Photos by Tom Rivers: Todd Draper receives the police chief’s pin from his father Don Draper, a retired Medina police chief, during a swearing in ceremony on June 12, 2023. Todd Draper announced he will be retiring Aug. 30, ending a 21 year career with the Medina PD, including about two years as the police chief.
MEDINA – Todd Draper, the Medina police chief, will be retiring from the role on Aug. 30. Draper has been the chief since June 12, 2023.
He has worked for Medina for 21 years, including 8 ½ years as a K9 handler until Kye, a Belgian Malinois, retired in November 2020.
Draper was praised for being a hard-working police chief with a strong commitment to his hometown.
“Todd will be missed tremendously by this village,” said Jess Marciano, a village trustee.
She has served on the National Night Out planning committee with Draper in recent years. The event next week on Sug. 5 will be in Medina and Draper will again be in the dunk tank. National Night Out is a drug-free event intended to connect residents with first responders and community organizations.
Marciano also was on a Police Advisry Committee with Draper for several years.
“Todd has been a very receptive police chief,” Marciano said during this evening’s board meeting. “I’m really sad to see him leave.”
Draper was congratulated by board members for his impending retirement. He leaves the village with another department head vacancy to fill following the resignation of Matt Jackson as fire chief on July 12. Jackson cited a “constant battle” with some board members for his resignation.
The police department has been understaffed with some officers leaving for other departments where the pay is much higher. The board during its budget process in April also announced it was ending the K9 program and no longer would be providing two school resource officers at Medina school district. The district reimbursed Medina for nearly all of the expense, but board members said it didn’t fully cover the cost and the two SROs were needed to help cover shifts in the department.
Mayor Marguerite Sherman said the police chief’s test won’t be offered until the spring 2026. Medina may have to do a conditional appointment to fill the position until a new chief can take and pass the exam.
Draper during his career completed a 10-week management/leadership program from the FBI’s National Academy in 2022. He completed six classes at the National Academy: Critical Incident Management, Essentials of Leadership, Physical Training/Wellness Breaking Barriers and Building Communities, and An Overview of Forensic Science for Law Enforcement Managers.
He welcomed the chance to work with community members. He will be at the National Night Out for what Marciano said will be an “extended” time in the dunk tank.
Todd Draper is shown on Oct. 28, 2020 when he stopped by the Oak Orchard Lementary School with Kye, the Medina PD’s retiring K9. Draper served as the dog’s handler for 8 ½ years. This photo was during the Covid pandemic when people were required to wear masks.
By Ginny Kropf, correspondent Posted 28 July 2025 at 1:24 pm
Provided photo: Flotsam River Circus is shown here in a performance in Oakland, Calif. They will arrive in Medina for a show in the Canal Basin at 7 p.m. on Aug. 6.
MEDINA – Celebration of the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal is continuing with the visit of a floating circus in Medina’s Canal Basin.
On Aug. 6 Flotsam River Circus will put on a performance at 7 p.m., according to Jim Hancock, chairman of Medina’s Tourism Committee.
“This is unique and a fun event for children and adults,” Hancock said. “I hope many people will bring their lawn chairs and come out to see them.”
Flotsam River Circus is the brain child of Jason Webley of Seattle, formerly a traveling musician, who formed the floating circus with friends in 2019.
“When I heard about this being the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal, I reached out to the Canal Corporation and they were interested in having us perform,” Webley said in a recent phone call from his home.
The concept was inspired by the American showboat tradition and modern floating art projects, according to information from Webley, an accordion troubadour who captains the floating raft. The show includes musicians, puppeteers and circus artists on a ramshackle raft.
Flotsam is a troupe of musicians, circus performers and puppeteers who travel on a ramshackle raft, giving free performances in waterfront towns. Once their boat is together, they keep it in the water for the duration of the tour. They travel with a crew of nine and a converted school bus as their land vehicle, Webley said.
“Our goal is to bring some magic and whimsy to the world, while helping communities engage with their waterways,” Webley said.
MEDINA – The Medina Central School District, due to requests from families and the ongoing construction improvements across the district, has moved the Welcome Back Picnic for grades UPK-Grade 6.
The open house, which was originally scheduled for Aug. 20, will now be held on Wednesday, Sept. 3.
The event allows students and families to come into the buildings and meet their teachers. Clifford Wise Intermediate Principal Jennifer Stearns and Oak Orchard Primary Principal Julie Schiavone say the Open House Night will be a fun-filled evening where students and families can get a head start on the school year.
“Students will have the opportunity to see their classrooms, meet their teachers, and reconnect with friends and familiar faces before the first day of school,” Stearns said.
Oak Orchard Primary School (UPK–Grade 2) will host their Open House from 4:30 to 6 p.m. on Sept. 3 and Clifford Wise Intermediate School (Grades 3–6) will hold their Open House from 5 to 6:30 p.m. on that same day. To make the evening even more enjoyable, free hot dogs and water will be available to all who attend, so come hungry and ready to celebrate!
Families will receive information in August with their child’s teacher(s) and back-to-school paperwork, so parents/guardians should be on the lookout through ParentSquare and their mail. The schools say that they look forward to welcoming their students and families back for a fantastic school year.
If there are any questions, please reach out to your child’s school between 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday.
By Ginny Kropf, correspondent Posted 22 July 2025 at 12:07 pm
Melissa O’Connor, left, has written a novel, The One and Only Vivian Stone.
MEDINA – Melissa O’Connor of Buffalo has chosen Author’s Note in Medina for the initial book signing to launch her debut novel, The One and Only Vivian Stone, published by Simon and Schuster.
O’Connor heard about Author’s Note at 519 Main St. from her husband’s parents, who live near Oakfield. She will discuss and sign copies of her novel at 7 p.m. July 28.
O’Conner has a literary background, having been editor of a higher education publishing firm until deciding to stay home with her children, now ages 10 and 13.
“I have wanted to write since I was 9 years old, and wrote a short story at Thanksgiving from the viewpoint of a turkey,” O’Connor said. “When I graduated from college, I tried to write several times, but it was bad and I was turned down. I kept trying and stopping. I don’t know what clicked in my early 30s, but one time my husband was on an overnight trip for work and I pulled out my computer, and the words just kept flowing.”
Although The One and Only Vivian Stone is her first published novel, she has written four overall.
This book was inspired by “I Love Lucy,” O’Connor said. “I was obsessed with her show. I had gone to the Lucy and Desi Museum when I found out they had gotten a divorce. I had loved how they were a couple on and off the screen and didn’t understand how this couple who appeared to have it all, didn’t. They had this successful show, and I thought, ‘What do you do when your co-star is your estranged husband.’ Do you stay with the show and make America happy, or do you make yourself happy.”
O’Connor said it took her six weeks to write the book and four months to edit it. She got an agent’s offer, unbelievably, within a week.
“It was a case of having the right story at the right time going across the right desk,” she said.
In her book, O’Conner weaves a dual narrative from the novel The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo and the television show “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” in which estranged lovers reconnect over mysterious tapes found in an attic and the old Hollywood secret hidden within them.
New York Times bestselling author Abby Jimenez calls the book “intriguing, sparkling with wit and suspenseful in all the right places,” and Booklist called it “a captivating blend of romance and mystery that will keep readers eagerly turning pages.”
O’Connor became obsessed with stories involving family secrets, betrayal and forbidden love after being given a box of used V.C. Andrews books at the age of 10.
When not writing now, O’Connor can usually be found cheering on her kids’ hockey teams and sneaking words on the page between games.
O’Connor shared she is working on a new novel about the music industry, inspired by Carly Simon’s You’re so Vain.
During her visit to Author’s Note on July 28, she will not only sign copies and read from her book, but will answer questions from the audience.
Her book signing will immediately follow Author’s Note Fiction Book Club, which will take place at 6 p.m. instead of its usual start time of 6:30. The One and Only Vivian Stone will be the book club’s August selection for discussion at the bookstore on Aug. 25 at the regular time of 6:30 p.m.
Book clubs and Author’s Note events are open to the public, according to owner and New York Times’ best-selling author Julie Berry.
Copies of the One and Only Vivian Stone are available at Author’s Note or online at www.authorsnote/com/events. Those unable to attend may order signed copies of the book to be picked up at the store or shipped free by logging on to the above website or calling (585) 798-3642.
MEDINA – The Medina school district announced it will continue providing free breakfasts and lunches to all students this school year.
Medina has been offering free breakfast and lunch to all students the past seven years through the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) of the National School Breakfast/Lunch Program.
The CEP program provides the opportunity for schools in high poverty areas to provide two nutritious meals every school day, while eliminating the stigma for those students previously identified as “low income.”
The CEP began in 2011 with three states piloting the program and then became a nationwide program in 2014. To be eligible for CEP at least 40 percent of students must be identified as “directly certified” for free meals without a meal application through programs such as SNAP, TANF and Medicaid. Medina school district has met this eligibility guideline.
For additional information about the program, contact the following:
Medina Jr/Sr High School – Michael Cavanagh, Principal at 585-798-2700 ext. 1
Clifford Wise Intermediate School – Jennifer Stearns, Principal at 585-798-2700 ext. 2
Oak Orchard Primary School – Julie Schiavone, Principal at 585-798-2700 ext. 3
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 20 July 2025 at 8:53 am
Photo courtesy of Chris Busch: These two yellow squash are ready to race in Saturday’s Zucchini 500 at the Canal Village Farmers’ Market. There were 18 competitors in the zucchini races on Saturday. The races continue July 26 and Aug. 2 and begin at 10 a.m. and last until 1:20 p.m.
MEDINA – Zucchini and yellow squash can be more than nutritious foods. They also can be turned into sleek racing machines.
The Canal Village Farmers’ Market on Saturday hosted the first of three Zucchini 500s. There were 18 racers they put wheels on zucchinis or yellow squash. They also decorated the produce for the trip down a wooden track built by Dave Miller. His wife Gail is the farmers’ market manager.
Dave Miller sends a yellow squash racing down the track on Saturday. This car was made by Roux Gilman of Medina. It covered the distance in a speedy 1.782 seconds.
The races started at 10 a.m. and continued through 1:20 p.m. They will be back on July 26 and Aug. 2.
The racing classes include:
Sprout – under 8
Tenderfoot – 8 to 16
Young-at-Heart – 16-plus
Outlaw Class – Open to all ages and any vegetable. Entrants can use their imagination to create a racing vegetable, keeping to the vehicle specs in the rules.
The farmers’ market provides the produce (donated by Human Farms) and the participants have access to stickers, flags and other decorations for their racing vehicles.
Roux Gilman, 4, holds his yellow squash that was turned into a speed machine for Saturday’s Zucchini 500.
Dave Miller served as starter for the races. He built the track which is equipped with al electronic timer to the nearest thousandth of a second.
All of the participants get a certificate for competing in the Zucchini 500.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 18 July 2025 at 11:41 am
MEDINA – The Medina Village Board is seeking to expand the boundaries of the school zone where the speed limit is capped at 15 miles per hour.
The board will have a public hearing at 6:05 p.m. on July 28 about the expanded zone. Medina Police Chief Todd Draper suggested the change, and Medina school officials also support it, said Medina Mayor Marguerite Sherman.
The school zone is designated from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. from Mondays through Fridays. The state Department of Transportation allows a school zone to extend a maximum of 1,320 feet along a highway passing a school building entrance or exit of a school abutting on the highway.
The proposed expanded zone includes:
Gwinn Street, extending 1,320 feet north from the northern intermediate school entrance
Gwinn Street, extending 650 feet south of the southern intermediate school entrance
West Oak Orchard Street, extending 500 feet west of Oak Orchard School western loop entrance
West Oak Orchard Street, extending 1,320 feet east of Oak Orchard School eastern loop entrance
The school zone restrictions do not apply to ambulances, fire vehicles or police vehicles when on emergency trips.