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Delaware County Civil Service Exam Notice for BOCES Program Coordinator

Written By Editor on 4/10/23 | 4/10/23


DELAWARE COUNTY PERSONNEL OFFICE ANNOUNCES 

OPEN COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION FOR 

PROGRAM COORDINATOR (BOCES) 

EXAM #69366 

Date Issued Date of Examination Last Filing Date April 10, 2023 June 10, 2023 May 5, 2023 

NOTICE: ONLY APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED TO THE DELAWARE COUNTY PERSONNEL OFFICE WILL BE CONSIDERED  FOR THIS EXAMINATION. 

SOCIAL DISTANCING GUIDELINES WILL BE FOLLOWED 

EXAMINATION FEE: A fee of $15.00 is required for each separately numbered examination for which you apply. The required fee MUST  accompany your application and be in our office by 4:30pm on the last filing date or you will not be approved to take the examination. Send or  deliver your certified check or money order payable to the Delaware County Personnel Office. Write the examination number(s) on your check or  money order. ****PERSONAL CHECKS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.**** No refund of fees will be allowed whether or not you meet the  minimum qualifications. You are urged to compare your qualifications carefully with the requirements for admission and file only for those  examinations for which you are clearly qualified. 

EXAMINATION FEE WAIVER: A waiver of examination fee will be allowed if you are unemployed and primarily responsible for the support  of a household. In addition, a waiver of examination fee will be allowed if you are determined eligible for Medicaid, or receiving Supplemental  Security Income payments, or Public Assistance (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families/Family Assistance or Safety Net Assistance) or are  certified Job Training Partnership Act/Workforce Investment Act eligible through a State or local social service agency. All claims for  examination fee waiver are subject to verification. If you can verify eligibility for examination fee waiver, complete a ARequest for  Examination Fee Waiver and Certification@ form and submit it with your application by the Last Filing Date as listed on the  Examination Announcement. ARequest for Examination Fee Waiver and Certification@ forms may be obtained in the Personnel Office or  online at www.delcony.us. Click on “departments,” and then “personnel.” Waivers will not be considered if filed after the last filing date. 

LOCATION OF POSITION: DCMO BOCES, Norwich, NY 13815 

SALARY: $35.00 - $45.00/hour 

DUTIES: The work involves responsibility for planning, coordinating, and implementing specialized programs to provide services to the public  or a designated group of the public as defined by the goals and priorities of the programs. The responsibilities of the position may include, but are  not limited to, research analysis, development, coordination, and management; community relations and networking, educational promotion,  media development, program outreach, funding, budget forecasting, and planning; tracking and targeting populations, statistics, and training of  staff, etc. Independence and initiative are exercised by the employees in this class, within the guidelines of the policies and procedures established. Work is performed under general supervision. Supervision may be exercised over support staff. Does related work as required. 

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS: 

A. Graduation from a college or university with a bachelor’s degree in a business management, business administration, sports management,  communications, or education field and three years’ experience or its parttime equivalent in planning, implementing, organizing, overseeing, or  administering school- related programs. 

NOTE: Completion of a master’s degree in education, business management, business administration, sports management, public administration,  or a closely related field may be substituted for one year of work experience. 

NOTE: Your degree must have been awarded by a college or university accredited by a regional, national, or specialized agency recognized as an  accrediting agency by the U.S. Department of Education/U.S. Secretary of Education. If your degree was awarded by an educational institution  outside the United States and its territories, you must provide independent verification of equivalency. A list of acceptable companies who  provide this service can be found on the Internet at http://www.cs.ny.gov/jobseeker/degrees.cfm. You must pay the required evaluation fee. NOTE: A valid New York State driver’s license is required at time of appointment and must be maintained during employment. 

Candidates claiming college credits MUST submit a copy of their official transcript(s). 

RESUMES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR YOUR APPLICATION BUT WILL BE ACCEPTED only AS AN  ADDITION TO YOUR APPLICATION. 

NOTE: Unless otherwise specified, all required experience must be full-time paid or its part-time paid equivalent. You are responsible for submitting an  accurate, adequate and clear description of your experience. Omissions or vagueness will NOT be interpreted in your favor. Applicants for  examination must meet all minimum qualifications on or before the examination date with no tolerances allowed. If an applicant lacks the required experience  or has not completed all required training at the time he/she submits an application, but is serving in a qualifying position or will complete all required course  work by the date of the examination, he/she may be approved conditionally to take an examination pending verification of successful completion of all  experience and training requirements. 

There are no residency requirements for this exam, however, preference in appointment may be given to legal residents of Delaware County, or the school  districts, towns, villages, special districts, or Delaware County departments where the vacancies occur. 

The New York State Department of Civil Service has not prepared a test guide for this examination. However, candidates may find information in  the publication 'General Guide to Written Tests' helpful in preparing for this test. This publication is available on line at:  https://www.cs.ny.gov/testing/testguides.cfm. Candidates who wish a copy of the Guide should call or write the Delaware County Personnel  Office, One Courthouse Square, Suite #2, Delhi, New York 13753 (607-832-5678) or access our web site at www.delcony.us. Click on  “departments,” and then “personnel.”  

Scopes / Subjects of examination: A test designed to evaluate knowledge, skills and /or abilities in the following areas. Preparing written material: These questions test for the ability to present information clearly and accurately, and to organize paragraphs  logically and comprehensibly. For some questions, you will be given information in two or three sentences followed by four restatements of the  information. You must then choose the best version. For other questions, you will be given paragraphs with their sentences out of order. You must  then choose, from four suggestions, the best order for the sentences.

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Understanding and interpreting written material: These questions test for the ability to understand and interpret written material. You will be  presented with brief reading passages and will be asked questions about the passages. You should base your answers to the questions only on  what is presented in the passages and not on what you may happen to know about the topic.  

Educating and interacting with others: These questions test for the ability to interact effectively with individuals or groups to educate or  inform them about topics of concern, to publicize or clarify agency programs or policies, to obtain information through interviews and other  methods, and to represent one's agency or program in a manner consistent with good public relations practices. Questions may also cover  interacting with others in cooperative efforts of public outreach or service.  

NOTICE TO CANDIDATES: CALCULATORS ARE ALLOWED. You are permitted to use quiet, hand-held, solar/battery powered  calculators. Calculators with typewriter keyboards, Spell Checkers, Personal Digital Assistants, Address Books, Language Translators,  Dictionaries or any similar devices are prohibited. You may not bring books or other reference materials other than what has been mentioned  above. 

This examination is announced and will be rated in accordance with Section 23-2 of the Civil Service Law. The provisions of the New York  State Civil Service Law, Rules and Regulations dealing with the rating of examinations will apply to this examination. 

Applications for examination can be obtained from the Delaware County Personnel Office, One Courthouse Square, Suite #2, Delhi, New York  13753 or online at www.delcony.us. Click on “departments,” and then “personnel.” ALL RELEVANT INFORMATION MUST BE  CONTAINED IN YOUR APPLICATION. RESUMES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR YOUR APPLICATION  BUT WILL BE ACCEPTED ONLY AS AN ADDITION TO YOUR APPLICATION. A separate application must be filed for EACH examination for which you apply. Applications must contain the correct examination title and/or number in order to be considered. The Delaware  County Personnel Office reserves the right to accept or to reject applications/fees submitted/postmarked after the last announced filing date. The  Delaware County Personnel Office is NOT responsible for lost or misdirected mail. 

CROSS-FILING: APPLYING FOR CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS IN MULTIPLE JURISDICTIONS WHEN EXAMINATIONS  ARE SCHEDULED ON SAME DATE: If you have applied for other Civil Service examinations for employment with N.Y. State or other local  governments, YOU must make arrangements to take all the examinations at one test site. If you are taking a state exam you must sit at a State  site. If you have applied for an examination, in another County, City or State, which is scheduled to be given the same date as this exam, you must  write our office and the Civil Service office in the other County/City or State and make arrangements to take both exams at either our test site or  theirs. You must make these arrangements with our office no later than the last filing date indicated on this announcement. You must  advise our office in writing, by the last filing date contained in this announcement where you intend to take this exam. Please note that  State exams cannot be given at our test site.  

APPLICATION DEADLINE POLICY: All completed applications along with application fees or proofs of waiver must be submitted to the  Delaware County Personnel Department by 4:30pm on the date of last file as listed on the Examination announcement. Applications received via  U.S. Mail will be accepted only if received on or before the last file date. Applications that are received after the Application Deadline and are not  received in the Personnel Department by the last file date will not be accepted.  

REASONABLE ACCOMMODATIONS, SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS, ALTERNATE TEST DATES, MILITARY PERSONNEL: If you require reasonable accommodations as a disabled person, or special testing arrangements as one in need of religious accommodation, or are  an alternate test date candidate (in accordance with Alternate Test Date Policy), or an active member of the military away from the area on the  scheduled test date, clearly indicate this fact on the application. All such requests must be supported by appropriate documentation. If you are  unable to take this examination due to an emergency situation, and you wish an alternate test date, you MUST call the Delaware County Personnel  Office, with your request, by noon of the Monday following the test date. 

***Religious Accommodation***Most written tests are held on Saturdays. If you cannot take the test on the announced test date due to a conflict  with religious observance or practice, check the box under ASpecial Arrangements.@ We will make arrangements for you to take the test on a  different date (usually the following Monday). 

***Handicapped Persons:***If special arrangements for testing are required, please indicate this on your application. ***Active Duty Military Personnel:***Pursuant to Section 243b of the Military Law, applicants who are unable to take this exam on the regular  exam date because of active military duty may be eligible to take a special military makeup examination. If you are on active military duty and  unable to take this exam on the regularly scheduled exam date, please indicate this on your application. You will then be sent additional  information regarding a military makeup exam. 

***Veterans or Disabled Veterans:*** Who are eligible for additional credit must submit an application for veteran=s credit with their  application for examination or at any time between the dates of their application for examination and the date of the establishment of the resulting  eligible list. Applications for veteran=s credit are available from this office. Veteran=s credits can only be added to a passing score. Effective  January 1, 1998, the State Constitution was amended to permit a candidate currently in the armed forces to apply for and be conditionally  granted veteran=s credit in examinations. Any candidate who applies for such credit must provide proof of military status to receive the conditional  credit. No credit may be granted after the establishment of the list. It’s the responsibility of the candidate to provide appropriate proof, as  defined in Section 85 of the Civil Service Law, and that the candidate received an honorable discharge or was released under honorable conditions  in order to be certified at a score including veteran=s credits. 

***Children of Firefighters and Police Officers Killed in the Line of Duty***In conformance with section 85-a of the Civil Service Law,  children of firefighters and police officers killed in the line of duty shall be entitled to receive an additional ten points in a competitive examination  for original appointment in the same municipality in which his or her parent has served. If you are qualified to participate in this examination and  are a child of a firefighter or police officer killed in the line of duty in this municipality, please inform this office of this matter when you submit  your application for examination. A candidate claiming such credit has a minimum of two months from the application deadline to provide the  necessary documentation to verify additional credit eligibility. However, no credit may be added after the eligible list has been established. 

DELAWARE COUNTY IS AN EQUAL DELAWARE COUNTY PERSONNEL OFFICE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER CARRARA KNOETGEN, PERSONNEL OFFICER 

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Performances of Local Writing at Fenimore Art Museum


 

Writers and actors take the stage on Saturday, April 22

 

 

Write Out Loud 

Saturday, April 22 • 7:00 p.m.

Fenimore Art Museum Auditorium

Admission: free by donation 

 

 

Cooperstown, New York   Returning for a second year, Write Out Loud, presented by the Fenimore Art Museum's Glimmer Globe Theatre, will be presented LIVE for the first time in Fenimore Auditorium on Saturday, April 22 at 7:00 p.m. The performance will feature a variety of poetry, prose, short fiction, and more, all penned by 20 local or regional writers. While most pieces will be performed by the author, others will be interpreted by local actors. The performance will feature the work of: V.J. Bauer, Christopher Carter Sanderson, Veronica Coe, Jack Crosby, Danielle Crozier, Libby Cudmore, Shannon Dzikas, Robin Gara, Cliff Henderson, Andrew Jimenez, Bhala Jones, Lynne Kemen, Samuel Kovar, Ben Magill, Melissa Marietta, Libby Marshall, James Matson, Megeen Mulholland, and Sarahmarie White. The performance is free with suggested donation, and light concessions will be available. For more information, visit FenimoreArt.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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ASF Snowboarders Leave Their Mark at USASA National Championships

Written By Editor on 4/9/23 | 4/9/23

COPPER MOUNTAIN, Colo. – Adaptive Sports Foundation (ASF) snowboarders Zachary Elder, Charlie Kleiman and Andrew Stout each had a successful showing at the United States of America Snowboard and Freeski Association (USASA) National Championships this week, bringing home a total of ten awards while competing in the Kekoa Class.

All three snowboarders are members of the ASF Race Team as well as the Catskill Mountain Series (CMS) team, which creates and maintains the avenue for Eastern Regional Athletes of all ages to have great venues to ride, achieve National points, qualify for the USASA National Championships and to receive recognition for their efforts in the sports of snowboarding and freestyle skiing.

Elder earned gold medals in all six disciplines he competed in; slalom, halfpipe, boardercross, slopestyle and giant slalom. In placing first in all six competitions, Elder earned the Overall Rider Award for the second-consecutive year, making him the first snowboarder in the Kekoa Class to do so.

The first event of the week was the slalom event, which took place on Sunday. Elder completed his first of two runs with a time of 35.45 seconds. He improved his time in his second run by nearly two full seconds, finishing that run in 33.56 seconds for a total time of 1:09.83. The next day, Elder hit the 22-foot superpipe in the USASA's halfpipe contest, where he earned the gold with an 89.00 score.

On Tuesday, Elder competed in both the slopestyle and the rail jam events. In the slopestyle competition, Elder's first run was the best, as he impressed the judges and finished with a score of 89.33. While competing in the rail jam, Elder put together a set that garnered him a score of 1,005.

Elder's fifth event came on Wednesday when he participated in the boardercross. He finished with the gold with a score of 1010. Elder's week wrapped up with an impressive showing in the giant slalom on Thursday, posting times of 47.86 and 46.15, respectively, for a total time of 1:34.01, giving him his sixth and final gold medal of the Championships.

"Winning six golds and the Overall Rider Award feels great," Elder said. "My three favorite disciplines are the freestyle disciplines; rail jam, the half pipe and slopestyle. You don't have to race against the clock, you're just doing your favorite tricks to go with it."

Stout earned two medals, one silver and one bronze in the two competitions he participated in. Stout's first run in the slalom competition on Sunday was a great way to start the week, as he crossed the finish line in 53.32 seconds. Unfortunately, he fell and slid into a gate on the second run, but Stout didn't let that deter him. He managed to right himself and make it down the mountain, finishing his second run with a time of 95.83. In total, his 2:29.15 was good enough for third place in the discipline.

Stout bounced back nicely in the giant slalom event on Thursday, as he was able to weave his way through the gates on his first run for a time of 58.52 seconds. He finished his second run in 62.89 seconds, bringing his total time to 2:01.41, putting him in second place behind Elder.

"I'm very proud of myself," Stout said of his performance. "This was my first time at Nationals and it was great, I loved being there."

Stout was invited and ready to participate in the 2020 USASA National Championships, but the COVID-19 Pandemic shut down that year's festivities. He was able to make the most out of his first trip to Colorado and is looking forward to competing in more events like this in the future.

Kleiman's first run in the slalom ended with a time of 58.49. He improved his time in his second run by over five seconds, crossing the finish line in 53.34, logging a total time of 1:51.83 and reserving his second-place spot on the podium.

This was Kleiman's seventh year competing at the USASA National Championships. "It was good to be back competing at Nationals," Kleiman said. "It was really fun and I'm pretty proud of myself."

ASF snowboarders earned six gold medals, two silver medals and a bronze medal this week, totaling nine medals. Adding in Elder's Overall Rider Award, ASF riders brought home ten awards from the Centennial State.

The Kekoa (Hawaiian for "The Brave") Class was recently created by USASA to recognize the many snowboarders with intellectual disabilities, allowing them to compete for the first time on the same day, time, and courses in all six disciplines as the rest of the snowboard community. The USASA snowboard community embraces inclusion, and it has been very welcoming and supportive of adaptive skiers and snowboarders chasing their dreams.

The Adaptive Sports Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization located in Windham, N.Y. that provides profound and life-changing experiences for children and adults with physical disabilities, cognitive disabilities and chronic illnesses through outdoor physical activity, education, support and community. For more information about the ASF, including how to get involved or how to donate, visit www.adaptivesportsfoundation.org.


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Bushel opens new exhibition “Inside Voice” by Saira McLaren and Nancy Diamond, April 8

Written By Editor on 4/5/23 | 4/5/23



DELHI, NY— Bushel is pleased to present Inside Voice, a two-person exhibition of paintings, drawings, and collage by Saira McLaren and Nancy Diamond. This show brings together two artists whose work is deeply informed by their shared environment, particularly the mountains that in our Catskills region are both around us and beneath us; as we view them, we are in and among them too. The exhibition runs April 8–30, 2023, with an opening reception on Saturday, April 8, 3–5 pm. In conjunction with the show, on Friday, April 21, 7 pm, Bushel will screen the film noir Night of the Hunter (1955, directed by Charles Laughton), selected by McLaren and Diamond for Bushel’s monthly Community Film Pick. The exhibition, opening reception, and film screening are all free and open to the public. Bushel is located at 106 Main Street, ground floor, in Delhi, NY. 

Diamond and McLaren each possess a highly developed language of vision that reveals itself as equally as a language of emotion and experience. Nancy Diamond’s “exploratory” paintings are grounded in observation—the cataloging and collecting of visual information—but the resulting imagery bears an indeterminate, hallucinatory quality that seems to bend the rules of macro- versus micro-vision, inviting an inward-turning reception of what the artist terms a “distinctly sensitized” terrain. Saira McLaren’s vivid canvases—each one a view painted through a window, from indoors—are not so much abstracted landscapes as accurate pictures of an instance of apprehension, of an associative and affective meaning that resists resolution, providing, in the artist’s words, “a response to the culture of immediacy and the fragmentation of time.” Together, the paintings in Inside Voice invite a renewed curiosity toward our environment and toward our ways of seeing and interpreting it, aptly falling during the time of year in which the outside begins to call.

Inside Voice is part of Bushel’s ongoing series of Alumni shows—exhibitions and happenings proposed by artists who have exhibited at Bushel in the past, and who agree to invite or engage at least one other artist or maker who has not yet been exhibited at Bushel. Inside Voice’s curating artist is Saira McLaren, whose two-person show with Colie Collen, “Deep Library,” took place in 2018 at Bushel’s former location.

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Hartwick College’s Spring Visiting Writers Series Spotlights Fiction, Poetry

Two acclaimed authors will visit Hartwick this spring as part of the College’s 2022-23 Visiting Writers Series. The authors, which include a poet and a fiction writer, are “talented and represent diverse backgrounds and genres,” according to Bradley J. Fest, associate professor of literature, media and writing, and co-director of the Visiting Writers Series.

 

The visiting writers include:

-        7 p.m. Wednesday, April 12

o   Julian K. Jarboe is the author of the Lambda Award-winning collection, Everyone on the Moon Is Essential Personnel. Their fiction and poetry has appeared in Hypocrite Reader, Maudlin House, Nat. Brut, Uncanny Magazine and the SmokeLong Quarterly. Jarboe is also the author of the games Marshmallow Test, Inscrutable Cities, and Over Easy: A Diner Heist. They are currently working on a novel. 

 

-        7 p.m. Friday, April 28

o   Sten Carlson is the author of the chapbook, Lives of the Czars, written collaboratively with Robin Clarke. He is also the author of several chapbooks, including Fur & After, Fifteen False Propositions against Crowds, Climate Chorale, and several other “little” books. His poems and criticism have appeared in The Columbia Review, Whiskey and Fox, The Volta, Shampoo, and the Denver Quarterly. Carlson teaches poetry and creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh and is working on a nonfiction book, The New School Garden: Teaching Resilience and Regeneration in an Age of Climate Crisis.

 

Both readings will take place in Eaton Lounge, Bresee Hall, on the Hartwick College campus. The Visiting Writers Series, co-directed by Tessa Yang, assistant professor of literature, media, and writing, is hosted by the Hartwick College Department of Literature, Media and Writing.


Visit the Visiting Writers Series website for more information.

Questions? Contact Bradley J. Fest at festb@hartwick.edu or 607-431-4921.

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Spring Garden Day at Earth Fest

 

The Otsego Master Gardener Volunteers will host Spring Garden Day at the 2023 Earth Fest, Saturday, April 15, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the Milford Central School. Earth Fest is produced by the Otsego County Conservation Association and in part by the Cornell Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Program. Returning from a two-year hiatus, Earth Fest - Spring Garden Day is an exciting event for the whole family with activities, vendors, and food trucks throughout the day.

 

The Master Gardener Volunteers will have gardening activities for children, as well as information and best practices on gardening and the environment to support their theme of Gardening for the Greater Good. In addition, there will be a series of workshops that are free and open to the public. Registration for the workshops is appreciated by visiting http://occainfo.org/earth-festival/.  Workshop descriptions may be found at https://cceschoharie-otsego.org/events.

 

11:00 a.m. - Vegetable Gardening Basics: It’s time to get ready for your 2023 garden. Master Gardeners, Darleen Fournier, Carol Phelps, and Kim L’Heureux will discuss how to handle the many decisions that confront gardeners. If you have never planted a garden and want to start one, this workshop will help you begin. In this session, you will learn: how to plan your garden; planting seeds or seedlings; how to test for seed germination; when to plant; and more!

 

1:00 p.m. - Building Better Butterfly Gardens for Monarchs and Other Pollinators: Dr. Dan Potter, of the University of Kentucky, shares in this video presentation the fascinating natural history of monarch butterflies and what we can do to attract and sustain them in our gardens through the careful selection of plants, the importance of garden design, and plant placement.

 

1:00 p.m. - Managing Deer Damage in Home Landscapes: Dr. Paul Curtis of the Cornell Integrated Deer Research and Management Program, Devin Merkley of the Clark Foundation’s Mohican Farm, and David Cox of Cornell Cooperative Extension, team up to discuss the effects deer pressure can have on gardens and forested areas; the methods available to mitigate them; and the varieties of plants that are deer resistant.

 

2:00 p.m. - Growing with the Oneonta Community Garden: The Oneonta City Community Garden (OCCG) has grown over time, a place where a diverse and informal network of gardeners grow food, beauty, and community for themselves and others – a garden for all.  OCCG coordinator, Celia Reed, and Chris Burrington, OCCG Board member and Otsego Master Gardener Volunteer will discuss how and why the garden has grown, illuminating ideas that may benefit others involved in community gardens.

 

Cornell Cooperative Extension is an employer and educator recognized for valuing AA/EEO, Protected Veterans, and Individuals with Disabilities and provides equal program and employment opportunities. 

 


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Audubon to Host Dr. Casey Coomes - Live Program on How High Temperatures are Affecting Birds and their Songs on Friday, April 21.

Written By Editor on 4/4/23 | 4/4/23

By: Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society

For more information contact: Susan O'Handley, Publicity Chairperson, Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society, Oneonta, NY; (607) 643-5680; info@doas.us

 

[Oneonta, NY- REGIONAL] Join Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society IN PERSON on Friday, April 21, 2023 at 7:30 p.m. at the Elm Park United Methodist Church, 401 Chestnut Street, Oneonta for a spring program with Special Guest, Casey Coomes. Casey will present a slideshow about how rising temperatures are affecting birds all over the world. Climate change poses a huge threat to the persistence of songbirds in North America—in fact, we have already lost almost 30% of our birds in the last 50 years. During her presentation, Casey will discuss how heat can influence bird survival, reproduction, and even the songs they sing!

This is a free program; Refreshments will be available before the presentation.

Winners of the DOAS Optics Raffle will be announced at the conclusion of the program.

ABOUT THE PRESENTER

Casey’s work with birds began when she attended college at Transylvania University, where she received her bachelor’s degree in Biology. She then went on to receive a PhD from the University of Tennessee Knoxville, where she focused her research on the effects of high temperatures on communication in zebra finches. She is currently a Visiting Instructor and PRODiG Fellow at SUNY Oneonta, where she teaches Avian Physiology and Behavior.

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