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State Police Arrest Middleburgh Man Twice in 12 Hours

Written By Editor on 8/8/22 | 8/8/22

On August 7th, State Police in Cobleskill arrested James Wood, 59, of Middleburgh, NY, for Endangering the Welfare of a child, a class “A” misdemeanor, Criminal Mischief in the Fourth Degree, a class “A” misdemeanor and fail to safely secure firearms, a class “A” misdemeanor.


On August 7, 2022, at about 7:40 p.m. State Police in Cobleskill responded to a home in Middleburgh to check the welfare of four children in Woods’ care. While being interviewed, Wood acted belligerently and damaged a vehicle not belonging to him. During further investigation, Troopers located a firearm inside the home, which was not stored safely. All children present were turned over to a family member.  


Wood was transported to SP Cobleskill for processing. He was arraigned in the Cobleskill Town Court and released on his own recognizance. 


On August 8, 2022, at about 6:50 a.m.  Wood was arrested for Criminal Contempt in the First Degree, a class “E” felony. After being released on the above charges, Wood violated a stay-away order of protection issued by the court during his arraignment. The protected party was the victim of the criminal mischief.


Wood was arrested and transported to SP Cobleskill for processing. He was arraigned at the Cobleskill Town Court, and remanded to Schoharie County Correctional facility in lieu of $2,000 cash or $4000 bond.



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Fenimore Art Museum Offers Three-Day Landscape Painting Workshop for Kids Ages 8-12


 Three-Day Landscape Painting Workshop for Kids (ages 8-12)
Tuesday, August 23–Thursday, August 25, 2022
10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. each day
Fenimore Art Museum
$100 Members; $115 Non-Members. Find link to register at FenimoreArt.org.

 

Cooperstown, New York – There is still plenty to do this summer at Fenimore Art Museum. Kids ages 8-12 can learn the basics of landscape painting in a special three-day workshop which features a variety of fun art projects. Participants learn about color, perspective, horizon line, and techniques for painting sky, land, and water. The group will spend time on the expansive lawn behind the museum to paint Otsego Lake en plein air and also explore the many landscape paintings on view inside the museum. The workshop takes place Tuesday, August 23–Thursday, August 25, 2022 from 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. each day. Find a link to register at FenimoreArt.org or visit Fenimore’s page at Eventbrite.com.  $100 Members; $115 Non-Members.

 

About Fenimore Art Museum
Fenimore Art Museum, located on the shores of Otsego Lake—James Fenimore Cooper’s “Glimmerglass”—in historic Cooperstown, New York, features a wide-ranging collection of American art including folk art; important American 18th- and 19th-century landscape, genre, and portrait paintings; more than 125,000 historic photographs representing the technical developments made in photography and providing extensive visual documentation of the region’s unique history; and the renowned Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art comprised of nearly 900 art objects representative of a broad geographic range of North American Indian cultures, from the Northwest Coast, Eastern Woodlands, Plains, Southwest, Great Lakes, and Prairie regions. Visit FenimoreArt.org. 

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Free Sharon Springs Historical Society Webinar Tonight: Monticello

This is a reminder that the Sharon Historical Society's Free Webinar - "Monticello - The Home of Thomas Jefferson" is tonight at 7 PM.  This program is available both In-Person and on Zoom.  If you come in person, it is at the Sharon Free Public Library Community Room.

If you plan to attend by Zoom, the link is below.  See you there!

Topic: Monticello – The Home of Thomas Jefferson
Time: Aug 8, 2022 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89412648139?pwd=Ykp5ZmFYZmhtL2ZMODlUbWsydmFaUT09

Meeting ID: 894 1264 8139
Passcode: 757847

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A Photography Show in The Hudson Valley Examines a Different Side of Cuba, and the Utopian Hope of NFTs

Dancer Osnel Delgado photographed by Laura Diffenderfer 

SAUGERTIES, New York, August 5, 2022 – Artist Laura Diffenderfer offers an exhibition of  photographs, “It Won’t Be This Way Forever,” at Opus 40 in Saugerties, NY August 11– September 30. There will be an opening reception on Saturday, August 13 from 4pm-6pm  (RSVP here). 

The photographs, which feature Cuban dancers, ask viewers to pause in in-between moments— the ones we want to last forever, the ones we want to pass quickly, and moments of 

uncertainty and change. “Many of us feel like we are suspended in time in some kind of  transition right now given Covid-19, which has been particularly destabilizing to the dance  community, and to Cuba,” says Diffenderfer. The photographs feature dancers not on stage,  but in quiet moments of transition in the studio and in the wings of a theater.  

Maria Karla Araujo photographed by Laura Diffenderfer 

Since 2012, Diffenderfer has made more than a dozen trips to Cuba, capturing the movement  and the mood of a group of Havana’s contemporary dancers. This show includes a selection of  intimate photographs of one of Cuba’s best dance troupes — Malpaso Dance Company — taken over several years. 

The show’s title, “It Won’t Be This Way Forever,” also nods to the American understanding of  Cuba—that the island is “suspended in time” due to its 1950s cars and fading pastel building  facades. “In talking with others about Cuba, many people shared that they also hope to visit the  island before it changes. As I came to understand more about Cuba, this sentiment, while  understandable, started to make me uncomfortable. A large part of why Cuba looks so nostalgic  to us is a result of the U.S. Embargo, which prevents trade between the two nations,” says  Diffenderfer. The last time Cuba could import American cars was 1962, when the embargo—the  longest in modern U.S. history—began. 

And, you won’t see pastel colors or classic cars in this series of photographs. Diffenderfer says  she wanted to turn attention toward a resource that Cuba has in spades: extraordinarily special  dancers.  

Malpaso Dance Company photographed by Laura Diffenderfer 

The photographs will be available for purchase, with a portion of each sale benefiting Malpaso  Dance Company, which operates independently from the Cuban government. Two photographs  in the series will be sold as NFTs, as a long-term experiment.  

Further reflecting on our human desire for the everlasting, and the reality that all things are  ever-changing, one pair of photographs in the series will be sold in two different ways: the first  pair as an NFT, and the second through an agreement on paper. Both pairs will be sold with  smart contracts which stipulate how artists will benefit from the first sale, and each future sale  (Malpaso and Diffenderfer will receive percentages each time). One sale will be agreed to by  contract, while the other will be programmed into the NFT, allowing payments to be executed  automatically. This experiment aims to explore which method of exchange will be more reliable  over time. 

“Blockchain—the underlying system through which NFTs are sold—has been referred to as a  new architecture for trust, where ownership of something is not mediated through an  institution, but is logged forever in a ledger that is collectively maintained. It tries to solve the  problem of a lack of trust in institutions and governments with technology. NFTs can be  programmed in interesting ways to provide automatic payments to artists when a work is  resold, allowing them to participate in the art market in new ways. But, how exactly this will all  work in the future is unknown. Will blockchain offer us access to more community, freedom,  and trust? Can we trust computers more than humans—or at least groups more than  individuals? Will blockchain offer artists new ways of creating a sustainable life? Or, is  blockchain most useful as a metaphor for our desire for community, for trust, and for a more  equitable way of organizing resources in society,” says Diffenderfer.  

If this all sounds heady, rest assured that the photographs are poetic not pedantic.  

Caroline Crumpacker, the Executive Director of Opus 40 noted, “We are delighted to showcase  these remarkable photos by Laura Diffenderfer as we close out our 2022 gallery season. Hers is  a deeply thoughtful lens onto a fascinating dance company that we would love to welcome to  Opus 40 at some time in future, hopefully also ushering in a moment of more fluid international  artistic exchange.” 

The exhibition will run from August 11–September 30, 2022. An opening reception will be held  on Saturday, August 13 from 4pm-6pm, including an artist talk, drinks, and music. Tickets to  the reception are offered on a sliding scale. Visit www.opus40.org/events/gallery-openings/ or  email info@opus40.org for more.  



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Caroga Arts Ensemble to Perform at Cooperstown Summer Music Festival August 16

Caroga Arts Ensemble to Perform at Cooperstown Summer Music Festival on August 16

 

The Cooperstown Summer Music Festival continues its 24th season with a performance by the Caroga Arts Ensemble on Tuesday, August 16 at 7pm at the Otesaga Resort Hotel.


The Ensemble, a collective of top performers with local ties founded and directed by cellist Kyle Price, will present an eclectic program entitled ‘Musical Kaleidoscope’, consisting of repertoire ranging from bluegrass and classical to jazz and pop.


Price describes the performance as a “musical variety show”, drawing on the diverse talents and backgrounds of the musicians involved and offering something for everyone. Yet the program is more than the sum of its parts, as combining genres in this way brings new insight to every piece being performed -- as well as new energy to those doing the performing.


“A program like this inspires the musicians to discover the pieces, our fellow performers, and the audience in a new way,” says Price. “That energy and spontaneity is something that we thrive off of as performers.”


EVENT DETAILS:


Caroga Arts Ensemble: A Musical Kaleidoscope

Tuesday, August 16, 2022, 7:00-9:00pm, Otesaga Resort Hotel

A musical variety show offering an eclectic program including bluegrass, classical, jazz, and pop selections.


TICKET INFORMATION:

Tickets for this event are by donation. Tickets for this concert must be reserved in advance either online from www.cooperstownmusicfest.org or over the phone by calling Purplepass Tickets at 800-316-8559 and selecting Option 1. Please note there is a $2 service fee per phone order.


For all events, audience members must show proof of vaccination, including a required booster shot for those who are eligible.


ABOUT THE COOPERSTOWN SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL:

Founded in 1999 by flutist Linda Chesis, the Cooperstown Summer Music Festival has been bringing world-class chamber music performances to the Cooperstown area for 24 years. The festival has featured performances by the American, Juilliard, St. Lawrence, Jupiter and Jasper String Quartets, Stefon Harris, Bill Charlap, Kurt Elling, Simone Dinnerstein, Mark O’Connor, John Pizzarelli, the Sonia Olla Flamenco Dance Company, and many more. Concerts are held in venues across Cooperstown, including the grand Otesaga Hotel, The Farmers’ Museum and Christ Church (the church of author James Fenimore Cooper).


The Cooperstown Summer Music Festival is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature.


See cooperstownmusicfest.org for details.


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Editorial: Pain, Part II

Written By Editor on 8/6/22 | 8/6/22

I wrote about Ryan and his late sister Kayla in last week's editorial. They were special people from a great family. I hope that everyone reading this goes to the celebration of life today at 5pm at the Timothy Murphy Park.
Ryan deserves the elevation, and his friends and family deserve catharsis.

Some comments were thrown about Monday's Middleburgh village board meeting opposing the donation of funds raised to the New York Wildlife Rescue Center by Mayor Bergan. Those comments were ignorant, wrong, and quite cruel under the circumstances. A few minutes of attention would have avoided the tangent.

Ryan and Kayla spent untold time at Wes Laraway's farm and rescue. Kayla was an outstanding, big-hearted person who did more through the rescue than most. Mr. Laraway has been tireless in his efforts to honor her legacy since her passing in 2016.

Mr. Laraway also has not taken a cent from his hours-- at all hours of the day and days of the week-- rescuing animals. The man's main fault is that he expends himself for the benefit of families and animals in need. Not only does he not take a salary, he donates more in a year in time, money, and sweat, than many people do in a lifetime. I can think of no better tribute to Ryan, who I knew since he was 6, than to have his family and friends present for a concert performed by his band, and the proceeds donated to the rescue. Trustee Bob Tinker and DPW head Nick Dunscombe correctly pointed this out during the meeting.

I've written about Wes many times in my editorials. The man is not perfect in politics. He is close to it in education. In animal rescue, he is first class. If it has scales, feathers, or fur (or even porcupine quills) and it lives in New York State, chances are that Wes Laraway has been out on a 2am call taking care of the animal.

Was there miscommunication from organizer Mike Bernard, who I've also known for a long time? Not any that I see. He's done something very kind for Ryan and his family. Any from Supervisor Laraway? Not unless I'm missing something.  We’re also doing our best to help, offering complimentary space in our paper. 

No one is profiting, except Ryan’s legacy.

The current park use rules were set up during my tenure as Middleburgh's Mayor. They still work well. The rules aren't the problem, nor the organization of an event for a person many people in the community loved.
I hope that all of our readers will support the event and the rescue at PO Box 410, Middleburgh, NY 12122 or https://nywildliferescue.org/support-us/. Tell them the Mountain Eagle sent you.

Ryan and Kayla Urrey's lives mattered very much to me. I hope that their memory will be the same blessing that they were both in life.

-- Matthew Avitabile, Publisher


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Sharon Historical Society's Next Free Webinar - "Monticello - An in-depth look at Thomas Jefferson’s beautiful home and plantation"

Written By Editor on 8/5/22 | 8/5/22

Join us on August 8th at 7 PM for our next Free Webinar, "Monticello - An in-depth look at Thomas Jefferson’s beautiful home and plantation"

To register for this event, please click on the link below:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/396559168147

About this event

The five-thousand-acre plantation, Monticello, was designed by Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States and the only president trained as an architect. Jefferson began designing Monticello after inheriting land from his father at age 26. Jefferson's home was built to serve as a plantation house, which ultimately took on the architectural form of a villa. It has many architectural antecedents, but Jefferson went beyond them to create something very much his own. He consciously sought to create a new architecture for a “new nation”.

Work began on what historians would subsequently refer to as "the first Monticello"; in 1768, on a plantation of 5,000 acres. Jefferson moved into the South Pavilion (an outbuilding) in 1770, where his new wife Martha Wayles Skelton joined him in 1772. Jefferson continued work on his original design, but how much was completed is of some dispute. In constructing and later reconstructing his home, Jefferson used a combination of free workers, indentured servants, and enslaved laborers. Jefferson began rebuilding his house based on the ideas he had acquired in Europe. The remodeling continued throughout most of his presidency (1801–1809). Although generally completed by 1809, Jefferson continued work on the present structure until his death in 1826.

In this program presented by Ron Ketelsen, president of the Sharon Historical Society, you will learn all about Monticello, from the time of conception, the design and building, the decorations and furnishings, the outbuildings, and plantation, and the preservation of this treasured historic landmark. Ron will also take you on a virtual tour of Monticello.

This presentation will be both an “in person” presentation at the Sharon Free Public Library Community Room at 7 PM as well as available on Zoom.

A question-and-answer session will follow with Ron Ketelsen.

Sharon Historical Society
PO Box 363
Sharon Springs, NY  13459
(518) 860-5513

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Bassett’s School-Based Health Program Receives Excellus BCBS Grant to Fund Telehealth Expansion

Written By Editor on 8/3/22 | 8/3/22


Cooperstown, N.Y. – Excellus BlueCross BlueShield has named Bassett’s School-Based Health Center (SBHC) program as a 2022 recipient of their Community Health Awards. Jane Hamilton, RN, practice manager and Courtney Graham, FNP, accepted the funding on behalf of SBHC during a visit from Excellus BCBS regional president Eve Van de Wal to the Cooperstown SBHC in June.

 

Through a competitive application process, Excellus BlueCross BlueShield’s Community Health Awards provide funding to launch, expand, and sustain programs and services that promote health. These investments advance health equity by extending the reach of preventive health services or health-promoting programs to vulnerable populations. The health plan’s corporate giving follows all applicable laws and regulations and does not support funding organizations that conflict with its corporate mission, goals, policies, or products.

The $5,000 funding will contribute to the ongoing development of telehealth within the SBHC system. Like many uses of remote meeting technology, telehealth received special attention during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the technology is an essential complement to in-person local providers well beyond its pandemic applications—especially within a SBHC setting.

“Students utilize video visits to access a variety of pediatric specialties,” explains Hamilton. “This includes tele-psychiatry visits with a psychiatrist; medication follow-ups for ADHD or depression; concussion clearance by a pediatrician; and ongoing management of chronic illnesses, such as asthma and psychotherapy with school-based health mental health clinicians Without the need for these specialists to travel to schools throughout the region—or for students to travel to bigger medical centers—practitioners are able to see more patients and students are able to get appointments sooner.”

Telehealth becomes even more important to those students with unusual or difficult-to-diagnose conditions. In 2021, Bassett’s SBHC started a telepulmonology program that connects students with rarer asthma and similar pulmonary conditions with sub-specialists in Rochester. The Excellus BCBS Community Health Award will help SBHC expand telehealth to other pediatric sub-specialties.

“Providing access to high-quality health care is core to our mission as a nonprofit health plan,” states Eve Van de Wal, Excellus BlueCross BlueShield Utica regional president. “We are proud to support the work of Bassett Medical Center’s School-Based Health Centers with essential community health funding to remove barriers to care and improve community health.”


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FENIMORE ART MUSEUM RECEIVES TECHNOLOGY AND DIGITIZATION GRANT


    

Cooperstown, New York – South Central Regional Library Council (SCRLC) has awarded a $5,557.50 Technology and Digitization Grant to Fenimore Art Museum to digitize a collection of microfilmed newspapers from Chenango County and Delaware County. The project was directed by Megan Culbert.

 

The newspaper titles include the New Berlin Gazette and the Delhi Delaware Express.  The newly digitized newspapers will be added to NYS Historic Newspapers, nyshistoricnewspapers.org, where Fenimore Art Museum has uploaded scores of other regional newspaper titles.

 

Newspapers serve as an incredibly important and sometimes rare resource for 20th-century social history. As a result, genealogists, local historians, and students studying the early culture and contemporary history of towns within Delaware and Chenango County will greatly benefit from free, publicly available online access to these resources.

 

Microfilm is a format of film, usually stored on a reel, that contains microphotographs.  Microfilm was a popular way of reformatting and storing newspapers because it is a stable format, slow to deteriorate, and requires significantly less storage space.  The reels are easier to digitize than physical newspapers, especially for old newspapers that are fragile and difficult to handle.


About The South Central Regional Library Council
The South Central Regional Library Council is one of nine Library Councils comprising the Empire State Library Network (ESLN). As a multi-type library consortium, SCRLC serves 69 members across 10,000 square miles in the counties of Allegany, Broome, Cayuga, Chemung, Chenango, Cortland, Delaware, Otsego, Schuyler, Seneca, Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins, and Yates. SCRLC provides services to 18 academic libraries, 13 hospitals, 12 public libraries, library systems and their members, 6 school library systems and their members, 6 special libraries and 14 affiliate members. SCRLC reaches over 500 libraries in its service area. For more information about SCRLC, visit www.scrlc.org.

 

About Fenimore Art Museum

Fenimore Art Museum, located on the shores of Otsego Lake—James Fenimore Cooper’s “Glimmerglass”—in historic Cooperstown, New York, features a wide-ranging collection of American art including folk art; important American 18th- and 19th-century landscape, genre, and portrait paintings; more than 125,000 historic photographs representing the technical developments made in photography and providing extensive visual documentation of the region’s unique history; and the renowned Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art comprised of nearly 900 art objects representative of a broad geographic range of North American Indian cultures, from the Northwest Coast, Eastern Woodlands, Plains, Southwest, Great Lakes, and Prairie regions. Visit FenimoreArt.org. 


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Bassett Healthcare Network Invests Nearly $50 Million in Compensation Increases for Its Workforce

                                                                                             

Cooperstown, N.Y. – Bassett Healthcare Network in Central New York has undertaken a full compensation analysis for its caregivers and practitioners across eight counties, investing nearly $50 million into pay increases for its workforce. The analysis, accomplished in partnership with outside firms called Gallagher and Sullivan Cotter, has resulted in wage adjustments across the organization that are competitive across New York State. The project represents Bassett leadership’s intensified dedication to its caregivers and practitioners, recruitment and retention, and the health system’s surrounding communities.

“Bassett Healthcare Network is incredibly pleased to complete this important compensation analysis, a massive collaborative effort in support of our thousands of employees across the region,” says Dr. Tommy Ibrahim, President and CEO. “I can never say it enough – our caregivers and practitioners are the heartbeat of our organization and our most vital asset. Investing in our people is an investment in our patients and communities. I, along with our network board of directors, am 100 percent committed to making Bassett a best place to work nationally because our employees deserve nothing less.”

Bassett partnered with Gallagher to engage in comprehensive position reviews for every caregiver across the organization, examining job descriptions, years of service, education, experience, and market data among other details to put in place a new pay grade structure and harmonize job titles. More than 1,200 caregiver positions have been analyzed individually as part of the analysis. Meanwhile, a parallel assessment conducted by Sullivan Cotter will boost pay structures for Bassett’s practitioner population with a focus on improving incentivized compensation and rewarding quality.

 

“Our overall goal has been to make sure Bassett’s wages are in line with comparable job positions in our industry and region,” explains Christine Pirri, senior vice president and chief people and diversity officer at Bassett Healthcare Network. “Our Human Resources professionals have been diligently evaluating thousands of positions over many months to make sure we are rewarding all employees based on the market and their unique experiences and talents. We’re also paying everyone retroactively to when the analysis project began in January 2022.”

 

The full sweep compensation evaluation and adjustment comes on the heels of Bassett recently increasing its minimum wage to $16 an hour. One year ago, in July 2021, the network increased its minimum wage to $15. Other initiatives are being prioritized by the organization’s leadership to boost retention and recruitment. Bassett, which is celebrating its 100-year anniversary this year, recently launched a new series of ads that underscore the institution’s legacy and more than century-long commitment to building healthy rural communities.

“When Dr. Mary Imogene Bassett – one of the first female medical directors in the history of the United States – founded our hospital in Cooperstown, she had a vision to pioneer advanced health care to our rural communities,” says Dr. Ibrahim. “I know she would be proud to see how we’ve carried out this tremendous legacy and continue to build upon it every day. What was originally a state-of-the-art research hospital nestled in Cooperstown is now a large health care system that spans eight counties and 5,600 square miles throughout Central New York – roughly the size of the state of Connecticut.”

Bassett Healthcare Network includes five hospitals (three of which are designated critical access hospitals), over two dozen community-based health centers, more than 20 school-based health centers, two skilled nursing facilities, a durable medical equipment company, a home health agency, and other partners in related fields. The institution is affiliated with Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and has established innovative relationships with companies like Optum.

 

“Opportunities are vast at Bassett for people seeking careers in many disciplines, both clinical and non-clinical,” says Pirri. “Join our team and make a difference in the lives of our communities every day. Join Bassett’s amazing legacy.”

Bassett Healthcare Network is hiring in all locations. Visit 
www.bassett.org/careers to explore opportunities across the region and apply today. 

 


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Town of Halcott Legal Notice: Public Hearing

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

 

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that a public hearing shall be held by the Town Board of the Town of Halcott at the Halcott Grange Hall, 264 Route 3, Halcott Center, NY 12430, on August 15, 2022 at 6:00 p.m. to present Local Law 1-2022, The Solar Energy System Pilot Law of the Town of Halcott. Regular board meeting to follow. 

 

 

By Order of the Halcott Town Board

 

Patricia Warfield

Town Clerk

Dated: July 18, 2022



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