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Catskill’s “Little Theatre That Can” Celebrates Survival In Its 2022 Season

Written By Editor on 4/19/22 | 4/19/22


“To tell you the truth, I’m amazed we’re both still ambulatory,” groans Steven Patterson, one of the co-founders of Bridge Street Theatre.

Patterson and his partner John Sowle, who converted a once-derelict factory building in the Village of Catskill into an arts complex early in 2014 and have since transformed it into one of the most adventurous and exciting small theater companies in the Hudson Valley region, were hit hard when COVID19 shut everything down in mid-March 2020.

“We’d just held a hugely successful benefit performance featuring Edmund Bagnell in February and were all set to launch into our full season when everything came crashing down,” says Sowle, the theatre’s Artistic and Managing Director. “As a space dedicated to live performance, the fact that suddenly no one was able to gather in groups pretty much froze us in our tracks. We’d initially hoped, of course, that things would return to ‘normal’ soon and that we’d be able to salvage at least some of the work we’d planned to present. But before too long it became fairly obvious that we were going to be in this for the long haul.”

But while the pandemic definitely slowed things down, it couldn’t stop them entirely. The pair hunkered down to try and figure out what the theatre could do to move forward – and to survive!

“John and I had been creating theatre together since 1986 and had a huge backlog of archival videos of productions we’d presented,” says Patterson. “We hauled those out, John edited and enhanced them as much as he was able, and we wound up posting as many of them as we could receive permission to post – which turned out to be 25 – free of charge on Vimeo. I did a series of Bedtime Story readings for kids, which we posted for free on YouTube. About midway through the year, we brought in two of the solo shows we’d originally hoped to present, filmed them live on our stage without an audience, and posted them online as ticketed events, sharing the proceeds with the artists. We also partnered with La Mama ETC in NYC for a livestream from our stage of Concrete Temple Theatre’s “Geppetto”, and with the Orlando-based steampunk horror troupe “Phantasmagoria” for a Halloween Weekend online presentation of their show “Plague Tales”.

As 2021 came in, and the situation remained unstable, the theatre was approached by Duke Dang of the Works and Process Series at Manhattan’s Guggenheim Museum about the possibility of hosting a series of bubble dance residencies. Utilizing Bridge Street’s artist housing, the dancers were then able to isolate and use the theatre’s mainstage and technical facilities to develop new works. This program ran from January through June of 2021, hosting twelve different dance companies, and was so successful that it was re-instituted during the first few months of 2022.

As the COVID pandemic began to ease somewhat, Bridge Street was able to re-instate occasional live performance, with a limited seating capacity to allow for social distancing and proof of vaccination and masking required for entry. One of the theatre’s most successful annual events, Bridge Street Belly Dance, was made a triumphant two-performance return in June. Those performances were filmed and transformed by filmmaker JD Urban into a stunning concert documentary called “Before”, which has since screened to great acclaim at Bridge Street Theatre, Hudson Hall, and numerous film festivals. Jazz vocalist Charles Turner, composer Sean Mason, and playwright Marcus Scott brought a one-performance “tasting” of a new musical they’d been working on during a residency at Catskill’s Catwalk Institute to BST’s Mainstage in late July, and have since returned to BST for a week-long residency (and performance) in February of 2022. During the summer, the theatre instituted a Youth Musical for local students and alumni, whose own performance opportunities had also been forestalled by the pandemic. A two-weekend run of “The Addams Family Musical: Quarantine Edition” as presented August 12 – 22.

And finally, with a nod from Actors’ Equity Association, Bridge Street was able to roar back to life with three of the productions they had originally hoped to present in 2020 – Fred Barton’s musical revue “Miss Gulch Returns!” (which won “Best Solo Performance” at the 2021 Berkshire Theatre Critics “Berkie” Awards), Samuel D. Hunter’s “Lewiston”, and Eugene O’Neill’s classic tragedy “Long Day’s Journey Into Night”.

Two men standing together

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John Sowle and Steven Patterson of Bridge Street Theatre

The theatre is now proceeding with caution (but unbridled enthusiasm) with plans for its first full season since 2019. “This enforced pause, if you can call it a pause, definitely confirmed a number of things for us,” says Patterson. “It’s strengthened our already firm commitment to presenting new works - works with a strong human connection and characters that audiences truly care about. Having to do more with less lately has re-affirmed our esthetic of making maximal imaginative use of our minimal means. It’s also demonstrated just how loyal our core audience in the region is and how much they want us to succeed. And we’ve also discovered reserves of strength I’m not sure we suspected we had. It’s been an exhausting, but exhilarating, couple of years.”

“We’d also be remiss if we didn’t give big thanks for the financial aid we’ve received during these tough times,” says Sowle. “Our patrons came through bigtime during our Fall Fundraising Appeal. EID loans, and grant monies from NYSCA and the Restart NY program, not to mention the grant monies we received for hosting the amazing artists’ residencies in our space, have been instrumental in helping us keep our heads above water. Sometimes literally – we actually had a couple inches of water in the theatre at one point during 2021.”

Plans are now moving ahead for the theatre’s 2022 Season, which they’re calling (appropriately enough) “Celebrate Survival”. The five-play slate they’ve scheduled includes a regional premiere (Samuel D. Hunter’s “Clarkston”, which is the companion piece to last year’s critically acclaimed production of his “Lewiston’, opening on April 28 and playing through May 8), an East Coast premiere (Eric Pfeffinger’s unexpectedly hilarious “Fourteen Funerals” June 2-12), a commissioned world premiere (Brad Fraser’s “Shelley’s Shadow” September 8-18), a U.S. premiere (Hannah Moscovitch’s “Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes”, winner of the 2021 Canadian Governor General’s Award for English Language Drama, October 13-23), and an American classic – even if it is set in England (James Goldman’s “The Lion in Winter” November 10-20). They’ve also planned an exciting slate of imported theatre, readings, music, dance, and more, as well as another Student Musical production, for the summer months.

“We often say that when folks walk through the doors of our scrappy little theatre, it’s pretty much guaranteed they’re going to see work they’re unlikely to see anyplace else in the region,” says Sowle. “Want plays that’ll make you think and feel? This is the theatre you want to come to. We’re back, we’ve survived, and we’re so relieved. Hope you’ll all come share in the celebration.”

For more information on Bridge Street Theatre, winner of Best Theater/Performance Space for four consecutive years in the annual “Best of Greene County Awards”, as well as detailed information on their 2022 performance calendar, visit their website at BridgeStreetTheatre.org.

Other links:
Archival Videos: 
https://bridgest.org/archival-videos/
Bridge Street Bedtime Stories: 
https://bridgest.org/bridge-street-bedtime-stories/
Dance Residency Videos: 
https://bridgest.org/2021-dance-residency-videos/

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ACADEMY OF FORTEPIANO PERFORMANCE INTERNATIONAL SALON 10 THE FORTEPIANO CONNECTION: FROM AMSTERDAM TO JAPAN AND BOSTON

 

Hunter, NY – April 19, 2022 – Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Academy of Fortepiano Performance presents International Fortepiano Salon 10,  The Fortepiano Connection: From Amsterdam to Japan and Boston, on April 23, 2022 at 8 PM (EDT). The virtual event will be hosted by Academy of Fortepiano Performance faculty Maria Rose and Yi-heng Yang, and livestreamed on Facebook and YouTube.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sylvia Berry, (l.) and Chie Hirai (r.)

 

 

Salon 10 features renowned fortepianists Sylvia Berry and Chie Hirai performing piano music of Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert. Berry and Chie met years ago while studying the fortepiano in Holland and are now established fortepianists with their own unique accomplishments in their respective countries, the US (Boston) and Japan. Their friendship and mutual respect will be evident as they share their latest research and projects, and their lives as fortepianists in general.

 

Salon host Yiheng Yang will also share a sneak peak of her recent recording of music by Fanny Hensel, Robert Schumann, and Franz Schubert. This album, entitled  "Free Spirits: Early Romantic Music on the Graf Piano", will be released in May on the Deux-Elles label.

 

Sylvia Berry is one of North America's leading exponents of historical keyboard instruments. A Philadelphia native based in the Boston area, she has played countless types of fortepianos, harpsichords, organs, and clavichords, including many noteworthy antiques. Her recording of Haydn's "London Sonatas” on an 1806 Broadwood & Son grand (#3448, restored by Dale Munschy) drew critical acclaim; a reviewer in Early Music America proclaimed her “a complete master of rhetoric, whether in driving passagework or in cantabile adagios,” while a review in Fanfare stated, “To say that Berry plays these works with vim, vigor, verve, and vitality, is actually a bit of an understatement." Of her concertizing, Cleveland Classical enthused: “Her splendid playing took her up and down the keyboard in lightning-fast scales and passagework, and her thrilling full-voiced chords allowed the fortepiano to assert itself as a real solo instrument.” Though primarily a fortepianist, Berry’s engagement with a wide variety of keyboard instruments and repertoire has informed her musicianship and understanding of historical performance practices for 25 years.

 

Chie Hirai studied piano at the Toho Gakuen School of Music in Tokyo, graduating with a Bachelor of Music in 1997 before specializing on the fortepiano under Stanley Hoogland at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague where she received her Master’s Degree in 2002 with distinction. In 2006, the inaugural recital of Chie’s recital series, “Composers fascinated by Viennese Pianos” was welcomed enthusiastically by critics:  “The music had its own breath under her fingers, the instrument must be rather difficult to control, but she had a complete command to allow her to choose the proper sonorities with the right taste. The performance was of highest quality”. (MUSICA NOVA, Tokyo) In the ensuing years, Chie has won international acclaim through competitions and performances, having been described as “the expert of this instrument…(a) virtuoso without any trace of vanity…” (Wiener Zeitung) Chie is currently in demand as a soloist and chamber musician in various ensembles in both Europe and Japan.

 

Academy of Fortepiano Performance (AFP) will hold its annual workshop and festival June 11-19, 2022. AFP co-founders Audrey Axinn, Maria Rose and Yi-heng Yang have arranged a full schedule including masterclasses with Sylvia Berry and Pierre Goy, an improvisation workshop with John Mortensen, “Galant Continuo” with Therese de Goede, and concerts by faculty, students and Pierre Goy.

 

Watch the free virtual salon on Facebook and YouTube on April 23, 2022 at 8PM EDT. Register at catskillmtn.org or academyfortepiano.org to receive the Salon 10 links. For more information about the Academy of Fortepiano Performance International Salon 10 or the Academy of Fortepiano Performance Workshop and Festival, visit catskillmtn.org or academyfortepiano.org.

 

About the Academy of Fortepiano Performance

The Academy of Fortepiano Performance was co-founded by fortepianists Audrey Axinn, Maria Rose, and Yi-heng Yang in 2017 to provide an inspiring and practical immersion into the world of historical performance for students, professionals, amateurs, and audiences. Hosted by the Catskill Mountain Foundation Piano Performance Museum in the idyllic mountain setting of Hunter, New York,  the intimate performance hall, impressive piano museum, and comfortable student lodging are all in close proximity to each other and just 2 1/2 hours north of New York City. The Academy is open to students, professionals, and adult amateurs. Visit catskillmtn.org or academyfortepiano.org for more information.

 

About Catskill Mountain Foundation
The Catskill Mountain Foundation’s (CMF) aim is to provide educational opportunities in the arts for youth and lifelong learners, to bring the experience of the arts to the Catskill community, and to support artists and art organizations in the development of their work through residencies. Since its founding in 1998, CMF has presented hundreds of music, dance, and theater performances; screened over 1,000 films to tens of thousands of audience members; provided studio arts classes to thousands of students of all ages; and served thousands of art-loving patrons in the Catskill Mountain Foundation Gift Shop.

 

Since 1998, CMF has raised, generated, and invested close to $16 million in facility development and an excess of $42 million in programming operations, for a total investment in the Catskill community of over $58 million. CMF believes that the arts can transform the lives of those touched by it and can transform the community. Like us on Facebook, follow us on Instagram, and subscribe to our YouTube channel.


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Meat Processing Microcredentials Offered at SUNY Cobleskill This Summer


COBLESKILL, N.Y. – SUNY Cobleskill is offering two in-demand, non-credit microcredentials in Meat Processing in May and September 2022. These microcredentials are held in the College's federally inspected processing facility. Registration is now open and limited space is available. Find more information and registration here.

 

Beef Processing for Producers: Designed for a beef producer to manage the complexity of regulations and maximize marketing yield from their animals. Participants will have a hand in fabricating finished cuts. This is a three-day course runs May 18 through 20.

 

Meat Processing and Food Safety: This intensive, basic training program provides the knowledge and skills necessary to attain employment in the meat processing industry. The program delivers specialized training in whole carcass utilization, equipment use, and sanitation within federal compliance. This is a four-week course and runs September 12 through October 7.

 

SUNY Cobleskill actively collaborates with organizations to deliver industry-demanded education to build our regional economy and match the needs of both students and industry, today and in the future. Badges and microcredentials never expire and are stackable, enabling learners to earn badges and microcredentials as needed for employment advancement and while compiling them over time to earn certificates and college degrees. 

 

 

About SUNY Cobleskill: 

With an emphasis on experiential education, The State University of New York College of Agriculture and Technology at Cobleskill prepares students for successful careers, advanced studies, and engaged citizenship. SUNY Cobleskill is an accredited, baccalaureate, residential college, with a rich academic tradition that spans 100 years. Today, we offer 52 baccalaureate and associate degree programs through our two schools – The School of Agriculture and Natural Resources and The School of Business and Liberal Arts and Sciences. Learn more at www.cobleskill.edu. 


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SUNY COBLESKILL ANNOUNCES ATHLETIC SCHEDULE CHANGES DUE TO WEATHER

The SUNY Cobleskill Athletic Department announced today that due the inclement weather that has impacted the region, the following further schedule changes have been made to the Fighting Tigers’ baseball and men’s and women’s golf team’s schedules. 

The Fighting Tiger baseball team’s away non-conference game versus the Giants of Keystone College originally scheduled for Wednesday April 20, in Factoryville, Pa. has been postponed due to weather and field conditions and will now be played on Sunday May 1 beginning at 12:00 p.m. 

The men’s and women’s golf team’s away match versus the Broncos of SUNY Delhi to be played at the Delhi Golf & Country Club in Delhi, N.Y. scheduled for Wednesday April 20 has been cancelled.    

For further information regarding Fighting Tigers athletic teams’ schedule adjustments please check the athletic program's website at http://fightingtigers.cobleskill.edu 


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Red Cross to Open Shelters to Assist Those Without Power

Red Cross volunteers and staff are responding to the needs of thousands of Southern Tier residents impacted by power outages in several counties resulting from a major spring snowstorm.  In response to requests from the Broome County Office of Emergency Management, the Red Cross is opening two shelters in the area as of 5:00 p.m. today.  Those shelters will be located at:

Trinity Memorial Episcopal Church

118 Oak Street, Binghamton NY

Deposit Fire Department

130 Second Street, Deposit NY

Staff and volunteers have been working throughout the day to plan and implement sheltering and feeding for area residents.  The response comes in the midst of National Volunteer Recognition Week and volunteers are particularly important to the Red Cross as they comprise approximately 90% of the American Red Cross of Western New York workforce.  The need for volunteers has never been greater as we experience larger and more intense disasters across the country. Please consider becoming a Red Cross volunteer to help families in need. We’ll provide all of the training you need, visit redcross.org/volunteertoday to learn more.

About the American Red Cross

The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides comfort to victims of disasters; supplies about 40% of the nation's blood; teaches skills that save lives; distributes international humanitarian aid; and supports veterans, military members and their families. The Red Cross is a not-for-profit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to deliver its mission. For more information, please visit redcross.org or cruzrojaamericana.org, or visit us on Twitter at @RedCross.   


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SUNY COBLESKILL’S WYATT PALMER NAMED NAC PITCHER OF THE WEEK

Written By Editor on 4/18/22 | 4/18/22

The North Atlantic Conference (NAC) announced today that for the third time this season that SUNY Cobleskill junior right hander Wyatt Palmer, Camden, N.Y., Camden High School/Cayuga Community College, has been named the conference’s Baseball Pitcher-of-the-Week for the week ending April 18, 2022. 

The Camden, N.Y. native hurled a nine inning complete game three-hit shutout on Monday April 11 defeating the visiting Wildcats of the SUNY Polytechnic Institute 5-0 allowing only three hits while striking out six and walking two.   

For the season the transfer from Cayuga Community College is 4-1 overall in five starts with a 2.45 ERA in 29.1 innings of work striking out 17 on the season.  

The Fighting Tigers are currently 16-11 overall while leading the NAC Western Division with a 7-0 record on the season. Cobleskill is next scheduled, weather permitting, to be in action on Wednesday April 20 when they travel to Factoryville, Pa. to meet the host Giants of Keystone for a non-league solo contest beginning at 3:30 p.m. 


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SUNY COBLESKILL’S LOGAN HUTTER NAMED NAC BASEBALL ROOKIE OF THE WEEK

The North Atlantic Conference (NAC) announced today that for the third consecutive week SUNY Cobleskill first year catcher/designated hitter Logan Hutter, Smithtown, N.Y., Smithtown West High School, has been named the conference’s Baseball Rookie-of-the-Week for the week ending April 17, 2022. 

The Smithtown, N.Y. native went 7-for-17 for a .412 batting average at the plate including three home runs, two double, nine runs scored, nine RBI a stolen stolen bases along with a .500 on-base percentage during the week.  

On the season Hutter is batting .377 with an on-base percentage of .456 including six doubles, six stolen bases, three home runs, 17 runs scored and 17 RBI.   

The Fighting Tigers are currently 16-11 overall while leading the NAC Western Division with a 7-0 record on the season. Cobleskill is next scheduled, weather permitting, to be in action on Wednesday April 20 when they travel to Factoryville, Pa. to meet the host Giants of Keystone for a non-league solo contest beginning at 3:30 p.m. 

 


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New Exhibition at The Farmers’ Museum Celebrates the Role of Children on Family Farms Past and Present

New exhibition opening April 23

Growing Tomorrow’s Farmers

April 23–October 30, 2022
The Farmers’ Museum, Cooperstown, NY / Main Barn Exhibition Space

FarmersMuseum.org

 

Cooperstown, New York — The Farmers’ Museum in Cooperstown opens a new exhibition celebrating the role children played on family farms from the 19th century to the present. Growing Tomorrow’s Farmers, on view from April 23–October 30, 2022 and again in 2023, demonstrates that youth and family farms continue to remain at the heart of farming's future. Through the exhibition, guest curated by Caroline Welsh, visitors are introduced to new and legacy farmers that are changing the agricultural scene while growing local economies, culture, and tourism. It also examines the role of farmers of color in New York State—the barriers they faced historically and are still facing today, and the resurgence they are currently leading. 

Growing Tomorrow’s Farmers showcases area farmers through captivating imagery produced by an array of contemporary photographers including Richard Walker, Wesley Bernard, Dana Matthews, and others. Visitors will also find historical photographs from Plowline, The Farmers’ Museum’s collection of original photography that documents changes in agricultural practice, rural life and farming families in New York State dating back to the 1800s. The exhibit includes objects from the Museum’s extensive collections as well as related artwork from Fenimore Art Museum. 

 

Growing Tomorrow’s Farmers is sponsored in part by Nellie and Robert Gipson, and NYCM Insurance.

 

 

While visiting the Museum, enjoy a ride on the Empire State Carousel, explore the 19th-century country village and farmstead, check out Todd’s General Store, and visit the famous Cardiff Giant. Kids can learn about life on the farm and delight in the baby animals at the Children’s Barnyard.

 

The museum is currently open Tuesday–Sunday, 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. (closed Mondays). Starting May 7, the Museum is open daily from 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.  Admission: Adults and juniors (ages 13-64): $15.00; seniors (65+): $12.50; youth (7-12): $6.00; children (6 and under): free. Museum members are always admitted free, as are active-duty and retired career military. From Memorial Day to Labor Day, active-duty military and up to five family members are admitted free through the Blue Star Museum program. 

 

The Farmers’ Museum is located at 5775 Route 80 in Cooperstown. Visit FarmersMuseum.org for more information.

 

 

About The Farmers’ Museum

As one of the oldest rural life museums in the country, The Farmers’ Museum in Cooperstown, New York, provides visitors with a unique opportunity to experience 19th-century rural and village life first-hand through authentic demonstrations and interpretative exhibits. The museum, founded in 1943, comprises a Colonial Revival stone barn listed on the National Register for Historic Places, a recreated historic village circa 1845, the Empire State Carousel, and a working farmstead. Through its 19th-century village and farm, the museum preserves important examples of upstate New York architecture, early agricultural tools and equipment, and heritage livestock. The Farmers’ Museum’s outstanding collection of more than 23,000 items encompasses significant historic objects ranging from butter molds to carriages, and hand planes to plows. The museum also presents a broad range of interactive educational programs for school groups, families, and adults that explore and preserve the rich agricultural history of the region.

FarmersMuseum.org

 


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Cobleskill Library News - Weekly Update

Adulting 101 Tuesdays at 5 during April. Geared for teens and young adults, Adulting 101 is your go-to program to learn the basics of becoming a responsible adult. April 26 the last program Cooking for one or two with CCE. These classes are absolutely free. Seats are limited though, so call The Community Library at (518) 234-7897 or sign up at bit.ly/CommunityLibraryEvents to reserve your seat now! 

 

Thursday, April 21 at 6pm The second session with award-winning poet and SUNY Cobleskill professor Matthew Burns will present this two-part poetry workshop sponsored by The Community Library, Poets & Writers Inc, and the New York State Council on the Arts. During this session Matthew will provide feedback on students' works-in-progress and discuss the process of revising, polishing, and submitting poems for publication. 

 

Tuesday, April 26 at 6:00 pm The Short Fiction Workshop: This writing group for teens and adults will proceed as a workshop featuring writing exercises, idea prompts, and supportive, constructive feedback. Our focus will be short (and very short) stories and over time we’ll try to discover and shape initial inspirations into polished, publishable stories. Writers with all levels of experience are welcome. 

 

Thursday, April 28 Crafts Around the World at 4pm. Each month features a different art of craft from a different corner of the globe. In April we explore the art of Molas. Register here https://bit.ly/CraftsAroundWorldMolas4-28. You can view this program from home or there will be a viewing party at The Community Library. 

 

Thursday, April 28 at 6:30 Trivia Night@ the Library! Gather your smartest, most fun friends and form a team for Trivia Night at The Community Library. Quizmaster Don LaPlant will be serving up trivia in a range of categories including books, movies, music, history, science, geography, and pretty much anything else you can learn about in the library. Bragging rights (and modest prizes) are at stake. Sign up online or call to reserve your table. 

 

Tuesdays join your neighbors and make new friends during the Tuesday Knitters group! You can find them downstairs in the Program Room at 1pm until 3pm. Bring your own supplies and learn something new while you chat, listen or just get in your zone. 

 

It is allergy season and some symptoms mimic those of a COVID-19 infection. Pick up a free COVID-19 at home test kit at the Library while supplies last. 

 

Starting May 3 The Friends of the Library will be selling raffle tickets for three Bluebird houses that have been painted by local artists. The drawing will be held in the Library on May 7th at noon. A perfect gift for Mother’s Day. 

 

The Library hours are Tuesday 10-8pm, Wednesday 10-5pm, Thursday 10-8pm, Friday 10-5pm and Saturday 10-1pm. 

 

Follow us on social media for library news, event information, volunteer opportunities, new book announcements and more! Facebook: @TheCommunityLibraryCobleskill  Instagram: commlibcobleskill   Twitter: @CommLibCOB 


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Bassett Medical Center Prime Care Holding COVID-19 Booster Clinics April 20 and April 27

Bassett Medical Center Prime Care (The Clinic Building at 1 Atwell Road in Cooperstown) will be holding COVID-19 vaccine clinics, including 2nd Boosters for those 18 years and older who qualify, Wednesday April 20 and Wednesday April 27 from 8:30 AM to 11AM.
 
Clinic details:
  • For both April 20 and April 27 Clinics:
    • 8:30 AM – 11 AM
    • Vaccinations offered: All three manufacturers available—J&J, Moderna and Pfizer.
    • Doses offered: First, second, third, and booster shots are available (for adults only – age 18 and older). This includes 2nd boosters for those 50 years old and older, plus those 18 years or older with certain medical conditions who qualify.
    • Open to all established Bassett patients age 18 and up.
    • Appointments are required – Call (607) 547-4625. 
Visit www.bassett.org/covid-19 for more detailed current booster eligibility criteria. COVID-19 vaccinations are provided at no cost.
 
People in the following groups are at highest risk for COVID-19:
  • People with serious long-term health problems (lung disease, heart disease, diabetes, asthma, kidney disease and blood disorders)
  • People with immune system weakness (cancer treatment, long-term steroid therapy, HIV/AIDS and other immune diseases) 
  • People 50 years of age and older
Please check the CDC or NYS Department of Health websites for other COVID-19 information. You can help fight COVID-19, and other sickness by washing your hands frequently, covering your mouth and nose when you cough, and staying home from work or school if you have symptoms.

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Capital Region BOCES programs recognized as NYSBBA Champions of Change

Written By Editor on 4/15/22 | 4/15/22

Two Capital Region BOCES programs were recognized recently for innovation in the advancement of educational skills for high school and adult students.

The New York State School Boards Association (NYSSBA) presented two Champions of Change awards to BOCES leaders and educators during the BOCES annual meeting on April 13.

The first Champions of Change Award was presented to the Career and Technical School Automotive Trades program for its work on development of an electric vehicle maintenance and repair curriculum.

The second Champions of Change Award was presented to the Adult Education Program, which has partnered with the Albany County Department of Probation to launch a High School Equivalency (HSE) Program for county residents currently on probation.

“We are always striving to look forward and  plan for the future needs of our students, our partners and our community. It is an honor to be recognized for this work,” said Capital Region BOCES Senior Executive Officer Joseph P. Dragone, Ph.D.

The electric vehicle repair curriculum is being written by teachers Scott Tessier and Brian LaCroix in conjunction with their counterparts in Orleans-Niagara BOCES and St. Lawrence-Lewis BOCES.

Funded through a New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) grant in partnership with the New York Power Authority (NYPA), the curriculum will prepare students for legislation signed into law by Gov. Kathy Hochul last September. The legislation effectively bans the sale of new internal combustion engine cars, off-road vehicles, light-duty trucks and equipment by 2035 and makes electric and “green” vehicles an essential mandate.  

“Electric vehicles are the future and we are working to ensure our students are prepared to maintain and repair them,” said Tessier.

Accepting the award along with Tessier and LaCroix, were Career and Technical School Principals Shelette Pleat and Matt Ward and Automotive Youth Educational System (AYES) students Alex Ramsaroop of Schenectady and Matt DeCelle of Cohoes.

The Adult Education HSE program collaboration with Albany County Probation supports individuals on probation as they earn their High School Equivalency Diplomas. The program is voluntary and students enrolled are eager to learn during the evening classes and are dedicated to completing their goal, said Maria Huntington, supervisor of Adult Education and Programming at Capital Region BOCES.

Accepting the award with Huntington was Kristin McCabe, probation supervisor at the Albany County Probation Department.


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Rep. Delgado Announces Military Service Academy Application Period and Information Night

Written By Editor on 4/13/22 | 4/13/22

U.S. Representative Antonio Delgado (NY-19) announced that the applications for the 2022 service academy nomination season are now posted. Members of Congress may nominate candidates for appointment to the U.S. Military Academy (USMA), the U.S. Naval Academy (USNA), the U.S. Air Force Academy (USAFA), and the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy (USMMA). The fifth service academy, the U.S. Coast Guard Academy (USCGA), New London, CT, does not require a congressional nomination for appointment. Members of Congress may nominate applicants who meet the eligibility requirements as established by law. Completed application packets are due by October 28, 2022.

 

Congressman Delgado also announced an information session about the application process which will take place on April 28th. During this event, people will have the opportunity to hear from a panel of representatives from the United States Military Academies and ROTC programs to learn more about their admissions and nominations process. The event will be held on Thursday, April 28th from 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm via Zoom. 

 

For more information on Military Service Academy nominations and the application process, visit Rep. Delgado’s website.  

 

Please do not hesitate to call Delgado’s Kingston district office at 845-443-2930 or email ny19.serviceacademies@mail.house.gov with any questions about this process. 


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