Elbert Johnston was initiated as an Entered Apprentice of Murray Lodge No. 380, Free and Accepted Masons on January 25, 1910, passed to the degree of Fellow Craft on February 8, 1910, and was raised to the sublime degree of Master Mason (Third Degree) on February 22, 1910.
HOLLEY – May 4, 1907: “Up early, left New York, 7:50 am train….. At Mauch Chunk (PA.), went into the dining car and had dinner, Vegetable soup, English mutton chops, potatoes with cream and ice-cream, cost $1.25 with a tip of 25c. The waiter gave me the menu as a souvenir…..Had to change trains at Rochester….Mailed card to Mother….Walked about a mile from the Lehigh Valley Station to the N.Y.C.& H.R. Railroad and waited for the 7:55 pm train. Reached Holley nearly 9 pm.”
Thus begins a charming journal, written by Elbert Johnston, then aged 19, as he started his journey to a new job and a new life in Holley, NY. The journal is short-lived, little more than a month long, but the entries are detailed and offer a unique view into daily life in a rural village at that time.
Elbert was born in New York in 1887. His mother died when he was young. His father remarried. Following his death, Elbert was raised by his stepmother, Emma Johnston. He worked at the U.H. Dudley Co. in the city.
In May of 1907, he moved to Holley to work as a bookkeeper at Hudson Canning, the family business. Elbert’s Aunt Alice was the wife of Joseph B. Hudson, originally from Mattituck, Long Island, who had built the Hudson Canning factory in Holley in 1901. (See Column V4, No.4)
When he arrived, Elbert noted that “The house is not quite finished inside, and things are all in any old place.” It seems that his aunt and uncle had just moved in. There are references throughout to workmen in the house, the new bathtub “Very good washing, only the sides are slippery,” carpet selection, planting a hedge, sowing grass seed and putting sheep-manure on it.
Having arrived on a Saturday, Elbert attended the Baptist Church next day:
“I was welcomed and stayed to communion and Sunday School. The new minister, Rev. Herrell had a cold and could not speak very well. There were 81 people present and about half of that number in church service.”
He “fell in” to work at Hudson Canning on Monday, May 6 and “began to charge from farmers seed receipts to farmers ledger. Wrote letter to Gt. A&P Tea Co….and later mailed them 200 Hudson gallon apple labels by express collect.”
He recorded details of what he worked on each day at the Canning factory office.
It seems that there was a backlog of accounting to be dealt with. Once that was in order, he spent a great deal of time cleaning the “capper,” the machine which was used to process the pea crop.
At the end of the first week, Elbert wrote:
“Well, here I have been for one entire week, and I hardly know anyone….Kind of lonely, evenings not like the city.”
The next morning, he still had a “blue streak on, but I guess I had better laugh.”
That was about to change. He became friendly with George Dibble, a young man of the same age, whose father was involved in the Orleans Canning Company. Pretty soon, the two young men were out each evening for drives, or walks around the village, or to the cemetery or The Glen, accompanied at different times by Claire, Kathryn, Cora, Sally and Jennie, Miss Copping or Isabella Newton.
For evening entertainment, they visited the young ladies’ homes to hear them play piano or gramophone records. At his aunt’s house, Elbert played Dominoes, Pit, or Flinch or sometimes read.
Elbert’s first outing with George is worth noting. George invited him to a Women’s Suffrage meeting at the Presbyterian Church. The speaker was Mrs. Shaw.
“Her talk was interesting to those who perhaps were in favor of woman suffrage, but after sitting from eight to ten on a hard straw cushion and then not having converted me, well she wasn’t very good.”
Elbert was an inveterate “numbers person.” It is entirely appropriate that he wrote this journal in a Cash Ledger as he noted all his expenses and spending.
He noted attendance at every church service he attended. He noted the number of people he passed in the town square. On the evening of May 16, having shaved and put on his high collars etc., he and his new friend, George, went for a short walk and passed twenty-five people “That is pretty good for a little place like Holley.”
Later, on May 17, he noted: “While out, not counting the Square, there were 214 people that we passed, or about one nineth of the population. At the Church, there were over a hundred people.”
He noted the time he went to bed and the time he got up each day – he retired 9 p.m. to 10 p.m., but as late as 11:15 p.m. once. He generally rose around 6 a.m., a little after 7 a.m. on Sundays. He noted the weather and temperature each day. It turned cold on the second week of May and snow fell on May 10.
He mentioned meals as “after breakfast” or “home to dinner,” but unfortunately, he did not specify what they ate. On two or three occasions, he refers to buying grapefruit when they were out, they were 5 cents each.
It is interesting to note how important mail was as a means of communication prior to phones. The Hudson household had a phone, but there are references to the expense. Letters required a 2-cent stamp, postcards a 1-cent stamp. Postcards cost 5 cents.
On the journey to Holley, Elbert mailed a card to his mother from Rochester. During the month, Elbert received 26 letters and 5 postcards. These were from his mother, his friends George and Brooks, a young lady named Ethel, and former work colleagues from the Dudley Co., including the office-boy, Eugene Davis, whose card “Hope you arrived safe,” mailed in NYC on May 6, arrived in Holley on May 7. Elbert saved this correspondence, replied to each piece and made notes of his correspondence.
Elbert mentioned at the end of one day’s entry that “Uncle (Joseph Hudson) wants meaning of Deut. 14-26-28”. A few days later, Elbert mentioned that he had written to Dr. R.S. MacArthur for a “church letter,” and for an explanation of Deut.14-26. Dr. MacArthur was pastor at the Calvary Baptist Church in New York. Elbert presumably needed the “church letter” to transfer membership to the Holley church.
Elbert must have felt sufficiently at ease in Holley after the first month that he did not have to chronicle his experiences, or perhaps his blossoming social life did not allow him sufficient time to write – his gain, our loss. This diary is one of the many unique items in the Orleans County Dept. of History collection.
Good morning! Grab your favorite cup. Fill it up. And let’s start this day right… TOGETHER!!!
Let me start by saying how much I appreciated all of the shares and feedback over the past couple of weeks in regard to Risen Café’s “Pay It Forward” Program for feeding the homeless. I hope you will be just as supportive this week as I share about another fantastic ministry that feeds many here in Orleans County.
I am of course talking about the Orleans Koinonia Kitchen (OK Kitchen) which sets up every Thursday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. in the Harvest Christian Fellowship Dining Hall located at 560 East Ave. in Albion. I first met the director, Faith Smith, years ago when she ran the Community Kitchen, a soup kitchen that my church at the time participated in, and so I was excited to sit down with her and her husband Mike to hear about the fruitfulness of their latest endeavor.
First off, for those who are not familiar with the Greek word Koinonia it is a term that describes fellowship, community, and intimacy. When asked what the word Koinonia meant to her, Faith simply looked around the dining hall where people had started filling up the tables and responded “This!” and by “this” Faith explained that the vision for the OK Kitchen was not simply to be a soup kitchen to feed the poor but rather a place that anyone from any walk of life could gather with others and experience authentic community. The hope is that when people leave both their stomachs and their souls will be full.
Also, for those who cannot physically get to the OK Kitchen, they have recruited volunteers to help pick people up or to deliver meals to them where they are. These meals include take-outs, frozen dinners, and even “Homeless Care” bags which are actually backpacks filled with personal care items, food, first aid kits, blankets, water, pen & paper, etc. They have also partnered with Risen Café (469 E. State St. Albion) to allow people to pick up a bag there or to get a meal there that the OK Kitchen will pay for. The goal is to help anyone that is in need to receive 5 days of food.
With a “No Questions Asked” policy and a warm greeting for all who stop by it’s no surprise to find out that last year 24,184 meals were given away. And if that sounds like a lot, it is! Thankfully though this is not a solo effort by Faith and Mike. Several groups from churches and local organizations sign up to provide food, and servers if possible, for one or more Thursdays out of the year. Some, like the Albion and Medina Lion’s Clubs, provide food every first Thursday of the month. Also, since the food is already taken care of, those first Thursdays are ideal for any individuals who would like to sign up to serve. On the evening that I was there a group from Oak Orchard Assembly of God both provided and served the meal. The church also filled a table with clothes that anyone could take, and other groups provide similar giveaways on their days.
Both Mike & Faith’s enthusiasm for the ministry and their caring for those being served was evident, as was the camaraderie of the patrons and the joy of those volunteering. When asked what their biggest take away from 2023 was the Smiths quickly responded that they were overwhelmed by the amount of love and support that they had received not only from the local community but from all around Orleans County as well.
Lastly, I asked what the biggest needs were for 2024 and the answer was funding and transportation. Last year OK Kitchen received $37,534.90 in donations but are anticipating the need for more this coming year, especially as the cost of all the paper-ware, take-out containers, silverware, etc. continues to rise. I was reminded of the children’s story “Stone Soup” as Faith shared how if the 60-plus churches in the area committed to give only $25 a month it would make a huge impact. How much more of an impact could be made if individuals, businesses, and organizations committed similarly? There is also a great need for volunteers who can deliver meals or, preferably, pick people up and bring them to the Kitchen so that they can truly experience the sense of community that has been developed there.
I am grateful for all of the outdoor fridges, food, pantries, and food distribution sites that we have here in our County and hope you will support any and all as you are able. If you would like to volunteer to provide and/or serve a meal, make a donation, or help with the transportation needs at Orleans Koinonia Kitchen, please contact Faith Smith at (585) 319-1578 or by e-mail at Okkitchen2022@gmail.com You won’t regret it!
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 27 January 2024 at 8:30 pm
Saul Harrison greeted by more than 1,000 people in a benefit to help him in battle with cancer
Photos by Tom Rivers
ALBION – A crowd of several hundred people are shown at Dubby’s Tailgate in a benefit for Saul Harrison this afternoon. Harrison is battling myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells. He is getting chemotherapy and has had a mass removed from his spine and a lesion from his hip.
Harrison, 50, is still remembered as a powerful football player for Albion. But the 1992 graduate these days is known for his mild manner and gentleness as a youthcare worker for the county and a deacon at the Shiloh Church.
Holli Nenni, the county’s DSS commissioner, was among many in DSS at the benefit. Harrison, a 15-year county employee, is well-liked by his peers and the residents.
Harrison, besides working with youth, also is assists elderly residents. He shows lots of patience and understanding, Nenni said.
“He is a very dedicated employee,” she said. “He is an inspiration to our youth.”
Saul Harrison greets people at a benefit for him and his family today to help with medical costs and other expenses while he fights cancer.
Harrison shook many hands and received many hugs. He said the outpouring of support is very humbling.
Some of the foster kids he’s worked with attended the benefit and hugged him, so did some of the senior citizens he’s worked with.
His wife Connie thanked the community for the “amazing” show of support.
A large bobblehead of Snoop Dogg, an actor and rapper, was among the big-ticket items at today’s benefit. There were 130 baskets, many valued at $100 to $150, plus the 10 big ticket items valued at $300 or more.
Debbie Prest, one of the organizers of the benefit, said people responded in a big way today, spending money on the tickets and putting together so many baskets.
“Everybody knows Saul,” Prest said. “From his work with the county to helping coach youth sports.”
There were 500 chicken barbecue dinners and they were a quick sell out.
Laisha Harrison, left, is Saul Harrison’s daughter. She is served by, front to back: Jami Allport, Abby Kincaid, Micky Stowell, Jamie Allport and Crystal Botello.
Many of Harrison’s friends and family sold 50/50 raffle tickets and helped put on today’s event.
Trellis Pore, pastor of the Shiloh Church, has been a long-time friend of Harrison’s. The two grew up in the church together.
Harrison has a strong faith in God and long been a leader at the Shiloh Church.
“Saul is a solid individual,” Pore said. “For this cancer battle, they couldn’t have picked a tougher individual, physically and spiritually.”
Pore said “test” is part of a Christian’s testimony. God never said the road would be easy without challenges, Pore said.
He spoke while waiting to get into Dubby’s. The line to get inside was out into the parking lot. Pore marveled at the crowd. He has seen it many times in Albion and the local small towns, a big turnout to help a family facing a crisis.
“In a small town you have a sense of community,” Pore said. “That’s the greatest thing about it. This small town steps up. I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else.”
Provided photo: Saul Harrison is joined by his children, from left in back: Jamaur, Laisha and Noah.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 27 January 2024 at 12:10 pm
LYNDONVILLE – Richard Ball, the state’s agricultural commissioner, sees brighter days ahead for the New York’s farm economy, which totals nearly $6 billion in total revenue.
In Orleans County, the total farm receipts are $155 million annually. Those figures are according to the 2017 ag census. The census is done every five years and data from 2022 will be released on Feb. 13.
Ball said Gov. Kathy Hochul sees the agricultural sector as critical to the state’s economy. Hochul kept Ball as the ag commissioner after she took over on Aug. 24, 2021 following Andrew Cuomo’s resignation.
“Whenever she calls me or whenever I see her we talk ag,” said Ball, who spoke at Friday’s Legislative Luncheon organized by the Orleans County Chamber of Commerce. “When she started, she told me she wanted me to stay and asked what do I need. We have a governor who gets agriculture.”
Ball, a farmer from Schoharie County, has been the state’s agricultural commissioner for nearly a decade.
He highlighted the governor’s executive budget, including these new investments for agriculture:
$34 million in capital grants for on-farm milk storage technologies and processing infrastructure to improve supply chain efficiency.
$21 million to a new Alternative Waste Management and Enhanced Precision Feed Program to further the mitigation of agricultural greenhouse gas emissions
$10 million to continue a multi-year investment in support of kitchen facilities that prepare meals for K-12 schools from New York State farm products.
$10 million to reinvigorate New York’s aquaculture industry through the Blue Food Transformation and to grow New York’s bioeconomy.
Ball said the agriculture economy also can play a role in helping the state meet its climate change and resiliency goals by sequestering carbon. The state Department of Agriculture and markets supports renewable energy projects, Ball said in response to a question at the luncheon, but those projects shouldn’t be at the expense of good farmland. The state is working on a plan to have solar projects be pushed to land that isn’t being farmed or isn’t considered good for growing crops, Ball said.
Richard Ball said agriculture remains a critical industry in the state, especially in rural communities like Orleans County.
Agriculture does face challenges, including a shortage of workers. He said Congress needs to overhaul the immigration system, which hasn’t been updated in about three decades. He isn’t optimistic Congress will pass meaningful legislation about the issue.
That leaves farmers to try to work with a federal guest-worker program that is cumbersome, costly and doesn’t fill the employment needs for farmers, Ball said told.
Ball said some farms are turning to technology and robotics to get some farm work done. The state is also stepping up workforce recruitment for local residents to learn skills and work in the ag industry, Ball said.
Assemblyman Steve Hawley, R-Batavia, said the industry is particularly challenged in New York due to high taxes, high costs for equipment and escalating expenses for workers, especially now that an overtime threshold has dropped from 60 hours a week to 56 hours, part of a phase in to get agriculture’s OT standard down to 40 hours .
Ball said the state is working to strengthen the food supply chains, including a stronger relationship between upstate farmers and the big market of New York City.
He sees an industry that will remain strong in the long-term future.
“New York has good land and access to water, the best land-grant system and some of best farmers in the world,” he said. “I like our chances.”
During his presentation, Ball also commended Amy Machamer of Holley for serving on the state’s agriculture task force. She is the owner of Hurd Orchards.
Students from Orleans County have earned academic honors by making the Dean’s List at SUNY Morrisville, Le Moyne College and Finger Lakes Community College.
• Blake Dunton of Knowlesville and Olivia Kroening of Knowlesville made the Dean’s List for the fall semester at Morrisville.
• Aubrey Schoolcraft, a freshman Accounting major from Medina, is on the Dean’s List at Le Moyne College in Syracuse.
• At Finger Lakes Community College in Canandaigua, Adriana Botello of Holley and Ella Lewis of Lyndonville made the Dean’s List as full-time students with grade point averages at 3.5 or higher.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 26 January 2024 at 10:19 pm
MURRAY – A section of Monroe-Orleans Countyline Road has been closed due to flooding. The Murray Joint Fire District announced the closure tonight. It effects the road between Gulf Road and Route 104.
The flooding conditions affected other roads in the county. Firefighters also have been busy today pumping basements, some with several feet of water.
UPDATE at 7:30 a.m. on Jan. 27: Countyline Road reopened to traffic this morning.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 26 January 2024 at 9:58 am
It doesn’t take a genius to see Medina is set up to hit a fiscal wall. The day of reckoning has arrived. The village faces a major expense for a new fire truck and an addition to the fire hall.
The village has a bustling downtown, many manufacturers and a strong sense of pride and civic involvement. It should be able to afford an upgrade to its fire hall and fire apparatus. But Medina is in Orleans County, where the village gets crumbs of the local sales tax.
The village in 2024 will get $160,160 in the county’s sales tax that will likely be close to $25 million. That is less than 1 percent of the total. The county has kept the total sales tax share to the four villages and 10 towns at the same level since 2001 – $1,366,671.
Since then the sales tax revenues have more than doubled. Wal-Mart and many chain stores came to the community, boosting the sales tax. Internet sales are taxed. Prices have gone way up, leading to a higher sales tax, but still the villages and towns haven’t got any of that increase.
The county says it has expenses and can’t afford to give up a little more of that sales tax, even if a lot of that money is generated by the work of the villages and towns. The county has acquired a former bank in Albion for the treasurer’s office for $250,000. It bought the former GCC site for probation and the district attorney’s office for $975,000, and 25.7 vacant acres near that property for $500,000. These purchases came without any public input. They weren’t talked about for years, with a clear need long established like the ladder truck and fire hall addition in Medina.
Medina is one of the county’s shining successes. It is a Hallmark movie scene with its many well-attended events, including the very popular Parade of Lights. The county loves to brag about Medina, showcasing the village in tourism brochures and with economic development outreach.
But the county can’t budge with the sales tax.
Medina is in a tough spot. It has committed to a $1.7 million purchase for a new ladder truck. The current 28-year-old truck often is out of service due to malfunctioning parts. The village should have replaced it about a decade ago. It has asked and begged for more sales tax from the county but has been rebuffed.
Medina has no choice but to move forward on the ladder truck. It’s an important truck in responding to calls in Medina, and also on mutual aid in nearby towns. The village will be paying $159,000 annually over 20 years for the new ladder truck. (Medina also has a 32-year-old fire engine in need of replacement.)
The village also must do an addition of its fire hall to accommodate a taller ladder truck. The current size is smaller than a typical ladder truck and would need to be specially ordered at a high price tag. The fire hall addition and repairs to the current fire station from the 1930s would be about $6 million, according to projections from an engineering firm.
The village is looking to scale back the building project, and residents are speaking out about the high taxes in the village. They assume the village is spending too much – that it’s the village’s fault.
The problem is a lack of revenue to help offset the local property taxes. If Medina’s local sales tax share had been doubled, like the county’s, since 2001, that would give the village another $160,060 – enough to cover the annual debt service for the new truck without putting more on the village taxpayers.
I thought the county legislators would be alarmed last March when Medina’s villages taxes crossed the $20 per thousand threshold. Medina’s tax rate went from $18.85 to $21.15 per $1,000 of assessed property. Albion is close behind at $19.13. These tax rates are way out of line compared to villages and small cities in neighboring counties. The City of Batavia for example just released its 2024-25 budget with a $8.96 tax rate. It receives $7,783,469 of the Genesee County sales tax.
As the village tax rates continued to climb and fire trucks got older, I thought for sure the Orleans County legislators would realize their stinginess with the sales tax (when many other counties share 50 percent with towns, villages and cities). But the county remains iron-clad in opposition to freeing up any more for the villages, even when they wrestle with critical equipment purchases while the county pursues projects that don’t seem so essential.
Orleans County isn’t the only one giving the Village of Medina the shaft. The state has kept Medina’s AIM amount at $45,523 the past 15 years. The state gives $715 million annually to cities, villages and towns through Aid and Incentives to Municipalities. This is a small amount of the state sales tax share given back to municipalities to help them with their costs of delivering services. Nearly all of the $715 million goes to cities, even ones smaller than the Village of Medina get much more.
Medina, population 6,047, receives $45,523 or a per capita of $7.53. The City of Mechanicville, population 5,163 in Saratoga County, gets $1,649,701 for a per capita $319.52. The City of Salamanca in Cattaraugus County, population 5,929, gets $928,131 in AIM funding or $156.54 per capita.
What a difference it would make for the Village of Medina, which operates very much a like a city, if it was getting Salamanca money from the state. The Orleans Hub has railed about this disparity for years but our state legislators don’t have news conferences or put out press releases on this issue.
The Village of Medina’s biggest obstacles to success: Orleans County and New York State.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 26 January 2024 at 8:15 am
Group would be trained for rope rescues, grain entrapment and water rescues
File photo by Tom Rivers: Ray Keffer of the Fancher-Hulberton-Murray Fire Company is on shore while three firefighters head out into the icy water of a quarry by the Erie Canal in Murray to go after a dog on Jan. 4, 2020. Firefighters were able to safely bring the dog to the shore. They also assisted the owner of the dog in getting up the embankment. The Orleans County Emergency Management Office wants to create a technical rescue team for rope rescues, grain entrapment and water rescues.
ALBION – The Orleans County Emergency Management Office is looking to create a technical rescue team for firefighters from multiple departments to train and work together and share equipment.
The team would be trained for highly technical rescues, such as rope rescues, grain entrapment and water rescues. There will be a public hearing at 4:25 p.m. on Feb. 20 for the creation of the Technical Rescue Team. The hearing will be at the legislative chambers of the Orleans County Office Building, 14016 Route 31 in Albion.
“We will have joint training where will we all work together,” said Justin Niederhofer, the EMO director.
Carlton, Clarendon, Medina, Murray and Shelby fire departments each have equipment for technical rescues. Firefighters from those departments, as well as other departments without that equipment, will have an opportunity to be trained to be on the technical rescue team.
Not all departments with rescue equipment have the same gear. The team will train on each department’s equipment to be familiar with the ropes, harnesses and other tools. Some departments also have grain rescue equipment which includes steel plates and an augur. The team members will also have wet suits for going into the water.
Niederhofer said firefighters deploy rope rescues when people are stuck down ravines and embankments.
The formation of the team will also increase the chances for grant funding for equipment and training, Niederhofer said.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 25 January 2024 at 8:43 pm
ALBION – Saul Harrison has long been a strong and dependable presence for the Albion community, back when starred on the football field in high school and for many years as an adult, serving as a youthcare worker for the county and a leader at the Shiloh Church.
Harrison, 50, is fighting myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells. He has had a mass removed from his spine and a lesion from his hip. He is taking chemotherapy. Harrison is down 30 pounds since his first surgery on Dec. 2. His appetite is coming back, and he is thankful the pain is mostly gone in his back.
In October he started to feel intense pain in his back. Twice he went to the ER. An MRI on Nov. 30 detected the cancer.
The community will have a benefit for the Harrison family from 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday at Dubby’s Tailgate.
Saul and his Connie are thankful for the many cards and prayers, including some from strangers.
“The outpouring of support has been crazy,” Connie said today at the Harrison home on East Park Street.
Harrison has been forced to slow down from a busy pace, that included working full-time for the county and part-time on nights at Walmart while also running a barbecue business, Daisy’s Sweet Sauce, named for his mother.
“I’m keeping my faith and trusting in God,” Harrison said. “He will make me a stronger person. He puts stuff on us but not more than we can bear.”
Harrison said a long-time friend, John Butler, has been especially helpful getting him to medical appointments, cooking meals and fixing things around the house.
Butler said he is grateful to give back to someone who has done so much for others.
“I’ve known him for a long time,” Butler said today. “He has been my idol. I’ve always looked up to him. I love him to death.”
The benefit for Harrison is being planned by Geno Allport, Debbie Prest and Callie Allport. About 100 gift baskets are expected to be up for raffle, as well as a 50/50. Some of the big ticket items include an autographed football from Buffalo Bills star Dalton Kincaid, and autographed jerseys from Buffalo Bills players Terrell Bernard, Stevie Johnson and Eric Wood, and coach Sean McDermott.
There also will be a chicken barbecue with tickets at $20. The benefit will help the family with medical expenses.
Harrison said he is eager to get back to his active lifestyle, especially cheering on his son Noah at his sporting events.
“I’m looking forward to getting better and getting back out there,” he said. “I have a lot planned.”
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 25 January 2024 at 7:29 pm
Photos by Tom Rivers
ALBION – Haley Black opened Rise & Grind last month, a coffee shop in downtown Albion at the corner of East Bank and North Main.
Black, 23, already has a devoted customer base, from teen-agers to senior citizens. She opened the business after 2 ½ years at Batavia Downs, working as a server and then a supervisor at the Fortunes restaurant.
Haley Black makes a specialty coffee for a customer this afternoon at Rise & Grind.
She wanted to be in her hometown, and run a business where people could unwind and relax.
“We already have our regulars,” Black said this afternoon at Rise & Grind. “I’m people person and I’ve already made so many new friends.”
Her mother Marilyn Black has been a downtown mainstay for more than 30 years as the owner of Hair Fantasy next door. Haley’s father Corey Black did many of the renovations inside Rise & Grind, which previously was the Coffee Joint. Haley picked the colors and the look of the place are her ideas.
The result is a homey and inviting place that includes a sofa, many tables and chairs, and games and puzzles for people to enjoy.
Haley feels confident Rise & Grind has a long future at 63 North Main St. Besides coffee, tea and cold drinks, she has many sandwiches, as well as bagels, muffins and baked goods. She has partnered with other local businesses for some of the food items, but makes her own paninis, and eggbites with sausage and cheddar.
Black has impressed customers with the repertoire of drinks and a growing menu. Her father believes she will make the business a success, and give the downtown a welcoming space.
“She has the work ethic and the personality,” he said.
Haley said she has lots of other ideas for the site, including outdoor seating in the summer.
Rise & Grind is closed on Sundays. It’s open 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday, 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesday, and 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. from Wednesday through Saturday.
Haley and her father Corey Black are outside the new coffee shop in downtown Albion. Black and his wife Marilyn own the building, which also has Hair Fantasy next door. The Rise & Grind sign went up on Sunday.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 25 January 2024 at 4:02 pm
Photos by Tom Rivers
ALBION – Hannah Brundage, a Kendall High School senior, shared her winning speech from the Orleans County American Legion Oratorical Competition on Tuesday with the County Legislature.
Brundage won the county event, and also the 8th District Level. She will next compete at Mt. Morris on Feb. 2 for the zone level competition. Zackary Baron of Albion, who was second at the district level contest, also advances to the zone level competition on Feb. 2.
Brundage entitled her speech, “Understanding the Government.” She began by asking how many in the audience ever leave home, wondering if they will ever see their loved ones again, not knowing if they would make it back alive?
Her father, Daniel Brundage, experienced that as an Army veteran with the 10th Mountain Division. He served a tour in Afghanistan and two tours in Iraq. As a firefinder radar technician, his job was to locate incoming artillery and their trajectories and determine the enemy’s position.
“Putting his life on the line, he was able to save countless other soldiers from a gruesome death,” Hannah Brundage said. “Just like him, thousands of men and women in the military are willing to sacrifice their lives to protect us. Many do not return.”
In her speech she talks about the power of Congress to declare war, and how the president sometimes oversteps the executive role and commits the country to conflicts and warfare, without Congress’s support.
She also highlights other powers of Congress that affect Americans, from the economy to civil rights. Congress also plays a big role in judging whether the president should be impeached for “high crimes and misdemeanors.”
Brundage urges citizens to educate themselves on the Constitution and the role of government.
“As James Madison said, ‘Knowledge will forever govern ignorance, and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives,’” she said.
Press Release, U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross, Western District of New York
ROCHESTER – U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross announced today that Stephen Nicot, 61, of Rochester, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Frank P. Geraci, Jr. to receipt of child pornography, which carries a mandatory minimum penalty of five years in prison, a maximum of 20 years, and a $250,000 fine.
Stephen Nicot
Assistant U.S. Attorney Meghan K. McGuire, who is handling the case, stated that between 2012 and 2014, Nicot hid a camera in the bathroom of a church located in the Western District of New York. (Editor’s Note: Previous news reports and a press release from the U.S. Attorney stated the church was in Orleans County.)
Nicot positioned the camera so that it would capture video and images of naked individuals using the shower in the church bathroom. He did this knowing some of the individuals would be under the age of 18 and he planned to display the video of the minors.
On July 21, 2022, law enforcement executed a warrant at the Nicot’s residence and recovered a memory card and USB drive, which contained videos and images of at least five minor victims using the church bathroom and shower. Two cell phones were also seized, which contained naked images of a minor victim that were recorded by a camera hidden in a bathroom of Nicot’s residence.
The plea is the result of an investigation by the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office, under the direction of Sheriff Todd Baxter and the Federal Bureau of Investigation Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force, under the direction Special Agent-in-Charge Matthew Miraglia.
Sentencing is scheduled for May 6 before Judge Geraci.
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 25 January 2024 at 1:10 pm
Photos by Tom Rivers
ALBION – Albion village trustee Tim McMurray and Jami Allport, executive director of the Genesee-Orleans Ministry of Concern, walk along the railroad tracks in Albion between Main Street and West Academy Street. They are among several agency and government leaders out today trying the measure the homeless population in the community.
Allport also is offering gift cards to Tops, as well as snacks, blankets and gloves.
McMurray said most people drive by people who are homeless or see them in stores or the public library and don’t pay them much notice. He recently saw a homeless man at the Walmart in Albion washing his clothes in the bathroom sink.
Allport said there is more public awareness of a growing homeless crisis in the county, especially since an overnight warming center open last month at Christ Church, the Episcopal congregation on Main Street in Albion. Hoag Library is a warming center earlier in the day.
A “code blue” is declared when the temperature hits 32 degrees or colder and the warming center opens as an option for people who are homeless.
The Genesee-Orleans Ministry of Concern, Community Action of Genesee & Orleans, Hands 4 Hope ministry, and Independent Living Center all have people out today trying to measure the homeless population.
The data will be sent to the Homeless Alliance of Western New York. Allport said she is hopeful the Homeless Alliance will put more resources into Orleans County, including opening a shelter to help the local homeless people.
The Orleans County Department of Social Services reported the homeless population soared in 2023. The placements were at 90 in November, with DSS staff trying to find motel rooms or other temporary housing for homeless.
Jami Allport stands outside Hoag Library today. The library serves as a warming center when it is open.
Allport said there are many misconceptions about people who are homeless. Some of them have jobs but don’t make enough for a down payment and to cover rent and other expenses.
People will sleep outside often are in makeshift tents made out of tarps, carrying a change of clothes and their possessions in bags or a backpack.
Allport admires the ingenuity of people who are homeless, who are constantly pushing to survive.
“They are working 24-7, figuring out where they will sleep and eat,” she said. “They are far from lazy.”
By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 25 January 2024 at 9:47 am
MEDINA – Village officials are wrestling with sticker shock for the cost of a new addition to the fire hall and upgrades to the existing fire station.
The Village Board was expecting the project to be around $4.5 million. That was the estimate about a year ago from Barton & Loguidice, an engineering firm. The company’s latest projections put the tally at just over $6.1 million.
“We’re very concerned about the price tag for this building,” Mayor Mike Sidari told Tim Bivens, vice president with Barton & Loguidice during a board meeting on Wednesday. Village officials met with Bivens in a phone conference.
Bivens said the project could be scaled back, perhaps by eliminating $1.1 million in work on the existing fire hall, and reducing the scope of the project on the new addition. Contingencies also represent about 30 percent of the cost.
Village Trustee Marguerite Sherman said the project needs to be downsized due to the expense.
“Our village can’t afford what is being presented here,” she said.
The addition is needed as the village prepares for a new ladder truck that is too big for the current fire hall. The new truck is expected to be delivered in about two years.
The board on June 26 accepted the bid for $1,698,995 from Pierce Manufacturing in Appleton, Wisc. to build the new fire truck with a 100-foot-long ladder. The truck will replace a 28-year-old ladder truck with a 75-foot ladder.
The truck is taller than the current one and won’t fit in the bay at the fire station. The current ladder truck has a clearance of 10 feet, 4 inches but the space in the garage is 10 feet, 6 inches.
The new ladder trucks will have a clearance of 13 feet. The design for the new hall addition would have two bays that allow up to 14 feet. The taller truck is the typical size for a ladder truck. Doing a smaller size is a special order, said Fire Chief Matt Jackson.
The fire chief said he supports trying to scale back the building project.
“I’m a taxpayer as well,” he said. “I understand it. Whatever we can do to get the cost down.”
Chief Matt Jackson during a March open house showed how the current concrete floors in the 1930s fire hall are uneven and sinking. The new fire hall addition and repair project calls for taking out the old concrete floors and putting down new concrete.
The village has sought grants and state and federal assistance for the project but so far has no outside funding to help offset the costs on village taxpayers. Bivens said there is federal money for infrastructure projects with roads and bridges, and water and sewer projects, but nothing to help with fire and police station upgrades.
He suggested the Village Board determine what it can spend on the project, and Barton & Loguidice can make a design that fits the budget.
The board wants a little more time to consider how to proceed. Medina has started the process to take out a bond for up to $5.6 million to pay for the project, but Mayor Sidari and the trustees said they don’t want to incur that much debt for the project. The board will ask its bond counsel to present the annual debt payments for a project at $3 million, $3.5 million and $4 million.
The board was told by the bond counsel that the annual payments for the $1.7 million bond for the ladder truck would be $159,000 over 20 years putting that expense at close to $3.2 million with a 6.5 percent annual financing cost.
The addition to the fire hall that would be approximately 62 feet, 8 inches by 88 feet, 8 inches. The plan is to move the ladder truck and an engine to the addition, and then allow four ambulances to go in the current fire hall. The spots used by the ambulances could be made available to the police department for patrol cars or it could become a meeting space.
The total scope of the project includes:
A new public entry, radio room/office, laundry room, EMS room, restrooms, Decon room, gear room, mechanical room, tool room, and apparatus bay with the existing apparatus bay being repurposed to house the village ambulances.
A mezzanine space to be located along the perimeter of the new apparatus bay with file storage and office space accessed from the existing building second floor hallway.
A new air and vapor barrier membrane and new exterior cladding system to be installed over the existing concrete masonry unit wall construction of the existing fire station, and the existing overhead sectional doors to be relocated and replaced allowing for adequate clearances around the ambulance apparatus bay.
The renewal of the building’s existing façade will result in creating a weather tight envelope while simultaneously allowing the cladding system of the addition to carry over creating a cohesive look to the updated facility.
The existing concrete slab in the existing ambulance apparatus bay to be replaced, including the installation of new trench drainage and epoxy floor finish.
The outdated emergency generator located south of the alley to be replaced and upgraded to accommodate the fire station and addition.
Sherman said the village needs to determine “needs versus wants” with the project. Bivens said the village could bid out the project with some alternates, and could pick some of those depending on the bids submitted by contractors.
John Parada was among several local residents who urged the board at the meeting to try to bring the cost down significantly with the project.
“Our taxes are so high,” he said. “We’ll be stuck paying the bill.”
The current village budget for 2023-24 raised the village taxes by 14.9 percent with the tax rate going from $18.85 to $21.15 per $1,000 of assessed property.