Medina winterguard performs in Lancaster, will host 25 groups on March 8
Posted 2 March 2025 at 9:16 pm

Information courtesy of Medina Band Boosters

The Medina Mustang JV and Varsity winterguards traveled to Lancaster on Saturday to compete for the 5th time this season.

A total of 24 guards from NY, PA and Canada came to compete. Medina’s JV guard performed in the Cadet class and came in 2nd place with a score of 57.28, bested by  Ventures Cadet with a score of 59.55.

Medina’s varsity guard competed in the A1 class and came in 4th place with a score of 60.85, with the Ventures in 1st place with a score of 68.35.

The next opportunity to see these two Medina guards perform is Saturday, March 8 in Medina at the high school. A total of 25 guards will be performing and the doors open at 3 p.m. and the show starts at 4 p.m. This is a great opportunity to see these students and adults display their talents and it will give you a greater appreciation of what winterguard involves.

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DOCCS commissioner: COs still on strike Monday will lose health insurance
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 2 March 2025 at 5:22 pm

ALBANY – Daniel Martuscello, the commissioner of Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, said today that corrections officers who remain on strike on Monday will lose their health insurance.

Their dependents on their health insurance plans also will be cut off, and they won’t be eligible for health insurance through COBRA.

“My message to you is this is the final push,” Martuscello said in a message posted on the DOCCS Facebook page.

Corrections officers have been on strike for nearly two weeks, beginning at Elmira and Collins facilities on Feb. 17. By the next day the strike had spread to the majority of the prisons, including Albion and Orleans.

“I want you to come back to work today,” Martuscello said. “If you missed your shift, you should still report, and know that we will continue to have open dialogue on making facilities safer places to work.”

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Group of ‘Rebekahs,’ shown in 1927, were part of Odd Fellows, offering hospitality
Posted 2 March 2025 at 1:17 pm

By Catherine Cooper, Orleans County Historian 

“Illuminating Orleans” – Vol. 5, No. 9

MEDINA – A friend came upon this intriguing A.J. Richards photograph of a group of ladies this week and rescued it from the ignominy of a Lockport thrift store bin. Not only is the photo in good condition but wonder of wonders – the names are clearly written on the reverse!

However, the date, nature of the group, and the occasion were lacking. Naturally the challenge was accepted!

Judging by the clothing, the period appears to be late 1920’s. The ladies are wearing decorative collar sashes, so they are obviously members of a group or club. The clue in determining the date and subject of the photograph turned out to be the words “District Deputy” which follow Bessie Gaze’s name on the reverse. A search of the New York State Historic Newspapers unearthed the following paragraph in the Medina Daily Journal of May 20, 1927:

“The Welcome Rebekah Lodge of Medina was highly honored at a New York State Rebekah assembly held at Buffalo this week by having one of its members appointed to a state office.

Mrs. Jessie Breitbeck, past District Deputy, was installed as assembly conductor.

Mrs. Bessie Gaze also received her appointment as District Deputy, President of the Orleans District.”

The Daughters of Rebekah, generally referred to as the Rebekahs, was founded in 1851 by then U.S. Vice-President, Schuyler Colfax. It is the women’s group associated with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows (I.O.O.F.). The Odd Fellows originated in England in the 1700’s as a mutual aid society to assist smaller tradesmen (“odd fellows”) and their families when in need.

The name “Rebekah” honors the biblical character who offered hospitality to a humble stranger.

The group’s stated objectives were to “aid in the establishment and maintenance of Homes for aged and indigent Odd Fellows and their wives, the care, education, and support of orphans of deceased Odd Fellows and deceased sisters of the Rebekah degree” as well as to cultivate social relations among these groups.

The Medina Welcome Rebekah Lodge, No. 146 was instituted on Feb. 6, 1895, by Charles M. Morgan, Grand Master. At that time the membership boasted 38 “brothers” and 32 “sisters”. The I.O.O.F. Lodge rooms were in the Downs & Kearney Block, 108 West Center St., Medina.

Armed with Medina directories from 1908 and 1941, and using the online Orleans genweb site, we pieced together the following information about the ladies in the photo:

  • Lina Blood was the wife of Seldon P. Blood, a feed store owner. They lived at 208 West Oak Orchard St., Medina. Lina died in 1949 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery.
  • Ida Boyce was the wife of Charles W. Boyce, a manager at the N.L.& O. Power Company. They lived at 618 West Center St., Medina. Ida died in 1989 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery,
  • Vernita Boyce was the wife of Clarence H. Boyce, an electrical contractor. They lived at 224 Highland Ave., Medina. Vernita died in 1971 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery.
  • Jessie Breitbeck was the wife of Fred C. Breitbeck, a foundry worker. They lived at 1031 Gwinn St., Medina. Jessie died in 1983 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery.
  • Alice Brown was the wife of William N. Brown, a Post Office carrier. They lived at 305 Park Ave., Medina. Alice died in 1950 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery.
  • Harriett Bulmore was the wife of Fred Bulmore who owned the Synthetic Granite Vault Co. which was located at 514 Erie St., Medina. The couple resided at 117 Frank St. Harriett died in 1953 and is buried in West Ridgeway Cemetery.
  • Ethel Croach was the wife of Arthur W. Croach, a rural delivery mail carrier. They lived at 110 Elizabeth St., Medina. Ethel is buried in West Ridgeway Cemetery.
  • Bessie Gaze was the wife of W. Henry Gaze, a foundry worker. They lived at 207 William St., Medina. Bessie died in 1937 and is buried in West Ridgeway Cemetery.
  • May E. Montgomery, a linotype operator at the Daily Journal, lived at 210 William St., Medina. She died in 1955 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery.
  • Addie Servoss was the wife of Burt L. Servoss. She died in 1938 and is buried in Boxwood Cemetery.
  • Georgianna Strouse was the widow of Harvey Strouse. She lived at 409 South Academy St., Medina. She was a seamstress at the Robert H. Newell Shirt Factory for many years, died in 1970 and is buried in Millville Cemetery.

Our thanks to Todd Belfield for rescuing this photo which provides a glimpse into the past.

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Hawley visits Susan B. Anthony House, highlights local women’s suffrage leaders
Posted 2 March 2025 at 8:46 am

Photos and press release, Assemblyman Steve Hawley’s office

Assemblyman Steve Hawley (R,C-Batavia) visited the National Susan B. Anthony Museum and House in Rochester on Thursday in commemoration of Susan B. Anthony Day earlier this month.

Western New York has a long history in the women’s suffrage movement, including one of Hawley’s relatives, Ella Hawley Crossett. Ella was an influential leader at the local level and was a long-tenured member of the executive board of the New York State Woman Suffrage Association (NYSWSA).

Hawley is proud of Western New York’s history during the suffrage movement and hopes these local heroes will serve as an inspiration for future generations.

“It was an honor to be able to visit the Susan B. Anthony House,” Hawley said. “Our region has a rich history in the fight for women’s suffrage and equal rights. I hope everyone takes time to learn more about our history and the impact figures like Susan B. Anthony and my relative, Ella Hawley Crossett, had on our nation.”

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CSEA, state reach agreement for civilian staff working conditions during prison strike
Posted 1 March 2025 at 4:51 pm

Press Release, CSEA

ALBANY – CSEA and the State of New York reached a temporary agreement due to the ongoing security staff strike at New York State prisons. This agreement aims to protect civilian staff while maintaining prison operations during the strike.

Key provisions of the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) include:

  • No security duties for civilian staff
  • Personal safety measures
  • Fair scheduling
  • Limited civilian tasks in restricted areas
  • Programming suspension
  • Expedited assignment dispute process – If an employee believes an assignment is hazardous or violates the MOA, they can dispute it. Employees will have access to a CSEA representative and can refuse hazardous work under PESH. An expedited arbitration process will resolve disputes. The arbitrator will issue immediate verbal rulings, followed by written decisions and good faith efforts will be made to resolve disputes informally before arbitration.

“We applaud Governor Hochul for taking this action that protects CSEA members who have showed up to their jobs every day during the crisis,” said CSEA President Mary E. Sullivan. “CSEA’s top priority is safety. CSEA members play a critical role in safeguarding inmates’ health and wellness, and these provisions ensure their safety while doing their jobs under these extraordinary circumstances.”

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Albion’s Sip N’ Stroll on March 15 includes 18 vendors, pedal bar
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 March 2025 at 11:57 am

ALBION – The Albion Merchants Association is looking forward to its Sip N’ Stroll tasting event on March 15, which will include some new stops and also a pedal bar.

There are 18 vendors who will be offering tastings of wines, ciders, beers, meads and other drinks. The stops include Dubby’s Tailgate, Hearth & Home Real estate, The Smoke Shop, Plaza Liquor Store, 39 Problems, Rise & Grind, Brushstrokes, Gotta Dance by Miss Amy, Arnold’s Auto Parts, Pretty Sweet Bakery, Project U, The Downtown Browsery, The Lockstone, J3 and Roots, and 101 East Bank St.

The AMA expects 300 to 400 people for the event, which is the AMA’s biggest fundraiser of the year. The proceeds go back towards other community events and projects.

Tickets for the 4 to 7 p.m. are $25 in advance and $30 at the door. (Click here for more information.)

Marlene Seielstad, the event chairwoman, said the Sip N’ Stroll is a fun outing for many people and its brings them into the doors of many local businesses.

“It makes people aware of all the businesses we have in downtown Albion,” Seielstad said.

Provided photo: The Batavia Pedal Party will have a 10-person bike for the Sip N’ Stroll. The bike also is battery powered and equipped with turn signals, brake lights, backrests, seat belts and a platform area.

The route is stretched out from Dubby’s Tailgate near Route 31 and Platt Street, to the downtown and across the canal at the Lockstone. There will be a bus to give people rides or they could try the Batavia Pedal Party, which has room for 10 people to power a pedal bar.

Karen Conn is on the committee working on the Sip N’ Stroll. She also owns the Hearth and Home Real Estate Professionals on East Avenue. She hosted one of the wine-tastings and will be doing it again on March 15.

“It was so fun,” she said about having so many people in the business to sip wine.

There will also be baked goods to sample and there will be live entertainment with Gary Simboli, Steve Novak and the Zackstreet Boys during the 4 to 7 p.m. event.

The committee includes Seielstad and Conn of Hearth and Home, Debbie Prest of Red Check, Rebecca Alexander of Dubby’s, Anita Finley of Oak Orchard Canoe and Kayak Experts, Faith Smith of Touch of Faith Cleaning, and Natasha Wasuck of The Lockstone.

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Highway chiefs, Hawley urge state to increase CHIPS funding for roads, bridges
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 1 March 2025 at 8:48 am

Equipment and materials have risen dramatically, while state aid proposed to stay flat

Photos by Tom Rivers: Tracy Chalker, Clarendon highway superintendent and president of the Orleans County Highway Superintendents’ Association, speaks during a news conference on Friday afternoon at the Orleans County DPW garage.

ALBION – Local highway department leaders say a boost in CHIPS funding from the state would help the municipalities keep up with road and bridge maintenance.

A pothole has emerged on Butts Road in Albion near the railroad overpass. The highway departments in the county will be out when it warms up to fill some of the potholes. The harsh winter takes a toll on the local roads.

The costs for materials and equipment are up dramatically in the past three to four years. Gov. Kathy Hochul’s budget proposes keeping CHIPS at $598 million for the municipalities. Assemblyman Steve Hawley said the governor put an $800 million increase in the budget for the state Department of Transportation for its projects, citing the rising costs as the need for mor state funding.

Hawley said the vast majority of roads and bridges in the state are owned by towns, villages, cities and counties. They should see an increase in the state funding, too, Hawley said during a news conference in Albion at the Orleans County DPW garage. He would like to see a $250 million increase in CHIPS – Consolidated Local Street and Highway Improvement Program.

“Flat funding is a decrease,” Hawley said, noting the rising inflation.

Tracy Chalker, the Clarendon highway superintendent and president of the Orleans County Highway Superintendents Association, said an increase in CHIPS is needed to help the towns, villages and county keep the roads in safe condition for the traveling public.

“We cannot afford to stay flat or see a decrease in these programs,” Chalker said during the news conference.

Chalker said Orleans County municipalities are short-changed in part of the CHIPS formula that includes tourism. The county should be getting more state road funding for tourism because of the lakefront, canal towns, farm markets and other attractions, Chalker said.

About 25 highway leaders from Hawley’s district in Genesee, Orleans and western Monroe attended the conference.

Assemblyman Steve Hawley wants a $250 million increase from the state for CHIPS funding, from $598 million to $848 million. Hawley said the increase will help the municipalities keep up with rising costs for equipment and materials.

Chalker and many of the local superintendents will be in Albany next Wednesday for lobby day to press for more state aid. About 600 highway leaders are expected in the State Capitol.

“Do what is right for our infrastructure and keep it safe,” Chalker said.

Craig Lane, the Orleans County DPW commissioner, said the county paved 14 miles of roads last year. But with the rising costs for materials, “this year we’ll be lucky if we can do 10,” he said.

County Legislator Ed Morgan said the county budget is constrained by several state mandates that hinder the ability to spend on other local needs.

“So much of our county taxes go to the state mandates,” Morgan said.

Ed Morgan, a county legislator and retired Murray highway superintendent, said the state needs to “up and the ante” with road and bridge funding.

Well-maintained roads are critical for “trucks and tractors that are the lifeblood of our community,” said Morgan, who is retired from working 30 years as the Murray town highway superintendent.

“It’s imperative the state up and the ante and keep us competitive in Western New York,” Morgan said.

Local roads account for 87 percent of all roads in the state and carry 48 percent of all the vehicle miles traveled. However, they receive less than 12 percent of taxes and fees paid to the state for maintaining local roads, Hawley said.

A 2023 study of local highway and bridge needs commissioned by the New York State Association of Town Superintendents of Highways found that municipalities would need $32 billion over 15 years to restore locally owned roads through repaving and improvements or $2.1 billion annually. That study was updated this year and the amount is up about 25 percent – $2.69 billion a year or $40.35 billion over 15 years because of the spike in construction materials costs.

Craig Lane, Orleans County’s DPW commissioner, said costs are way up for projects and equipment. The county opened bids for two bridge projects and the low bids were about $250,000 more than engineers estimated when the projects were in the design phase about three to four years ago. The county also received a new 10-wheel dump truck on Thursday which cost $257,000, up from $168,000 in 2022.

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Tenney wants DOGE to seek out fraud at state level
Posted 28 February 2025 at 3:19 pm

Press Release, Congresswoman Claudia Tenney

WASHINGTON, DC – Congresswoman Claudia Tenney (NY-24) today introduced the State-Level Departments of Government Efficiency Establishment Act or the State-Level DOGE Establishment Act to crack down on waste, fraud, and abuse in state governments.

Specifically, this legislation conditions the disbursement of federal financial assistance, except for security-related funding, on states establishing an independent DOGE commission.

“DOGE is working diligently at the federal level to eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse. It’s time for state governments to follow suit,” Tenney said. “States like New York receive billions in federal aid annually, yet waste it on DEI initiatives and woke programs that are out of touch with the vast majority of Americans.

“It is imperative that these tax dollars are used properly and efficiently. The State-Level DOGE Establishment Act ensures that states create a DOGE commission to oversee the use of taxpayer funding and cut back on wasteful programs. If they refuse, they should not receive a dime of taxpayer money from the federal government.”

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COs expect strike to continue, calling offer from state ‘BS’
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 28 February 2025 at 9:48 am

ALBION – Some of the corrections officers on strike say the announced agreement to get COs back to work is “total bull s—.”

The COs say the agreement doesn’t change much in the working conditions that led to the strike at prisons in the state.

Officers are still subjected to about 800 hours of mandatory overtime a year, and the HALT Act, although temporarily suspended, hasn’t been rescinded. Corrections officers said the HALT Act and the mandatory overtime were the primary reasons for the strike, and those issues aren’t satisfactorily addressed in the agreement announced Thursday night by the governor and a mediator.

Corrections officers have this sign up along Gaines Basin Road, across from the Orleans Correctional Facility. About 75 corrections officers on strike were gathered at the location this morning.

“It seems pretty angry out here,” one striking CO said this more at an encampment across from the Orleans Correctional Facility.

The state wants the COs back on the job Saturday. If they show up for their shifts, they won’t face discipline.

But many of the workers at the site across from Orleans Correctional expect few will return to work on Saturday.

The officers also said too many drugs are making their way into the prison, putting staff at risk of exposure to dangerous drugs and substances.

There won’t be a vote among the union membership, which totals about 16,000 corrections officers and sergeants. They will show their support for the agreement by either going to work or remaining on strike.

One CO with 13 years of experience said he wants to get back to work, but the HALT Act needs to be revised to allow more punishment for inmates who break rules, cause fights, have shanks and other weapons, and have drugs or “hooch” that they make in the prison.

“We need to have some sanctions and disciplinary actions,” another CO said. “We have to allow some repercussions for bad behavior.”

The officers said the agreement calls for “temporary” suspension of portions of the HALT Act, and allows for an increase in the overtime rate from 1.5 times to 2.5 times the hourly pay. That extra rate is for about a month.

The COs said the strike isn’t about pay. It’s about the unsafe conditions inside the prison caused by the HALT Act, drugs and contraband that infiltrate the prison walls often through the mail, and mandatory overtime.

“Everybody wants to get back in there,” one CO said. “But the agreement they announced literally does nothing for us.”

Orleans Correctional Facility is being staffed by the same corrections officers from when the strike started 10 days ago. A group of about 67 officers haven’t left the facility since Feb. 18. National Guard members are helping at the site.

James Miller, spokesman for New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, issued this statement this morning:

“After three days of mediation, NYSCOPBA and the State reached an agreement and Consent Award, which contents were presented to the members who were continuing to refuse to work.

“The decisions to return to work is not a collective vote by members of NYSCOPBA. It will be up to each individual who currently is refusing to work to decide whether to return to work or risk termination, potential fines and possible arrest for violating the court order.

 “NYSCOPBA has encouraged each member to return to work based on what was achieved in the Consent Award.

 “The deadline to return to work without any departmental discipline is tomorrow for the individual officer’s scheduled shift.”

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