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5 Financial Considerations When Moving to a New State

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



Deciding whether to move to a different state comes with many considerations. Top of mind might be factors like the weather, job market conditions, and education systems. Finances likely come into play, as well. Here are five key considerations to take into account as you evaluate your options:


#1 – Recognize cost-of-living factors

Living expenses vary from one place to the next. Moving across state lines means your housing costs are likely to change. Commuting expenses are another consideration, as well as expected monthly payments for services like utilities and internet connections. Health insurance costs may also differ depending on where you live. Make sure you are prepared for your new financial realities – whether they’ll ultimately help or hurt your bottom line.


#2 – Understand your moving expenses

If you’re moving for a new job, some employers will cover moving costs, but if that isn’t the case, it’s important to estimate what your out-of-pocket expenses will be. If you have few personal belongings, costs can be minimal. But, if you are moving a whole household, you’ll need to rent a moving van or hire a professional service. Moving costs can add up quickly, so make sure you include them as you build out your budget.


#3 – Become familiar with tax laws in your new state

State income tax rates vary dramatically across the U.S.. Some states have higher sales taxes, while others offer sales tax exemptions on items like food and clothing. This is another “living cost” consideration as you assess how your bottom line may be affected by a move out of state.


#4 – Consider the impact on your investments

Investment income such as dividends or capital gains may be taxed differently in your new home state versus the state from where you are moving from. Make sure you are aware of the potential impact and determine if it might be beneficial to make changes to your portfolio. In addition, if tax-exempt municipal bonds from your current home state are part of your portfolio, be aware that you will lose the state tax exemption benefit if you change your state of residency. 


#5 – Review your estate plan

Laws affecting estate plans vary by state. You’ll likely need to update your wills, trusts, and any other key estate-related documents such as health care and financial power-of-attorney documents. Consider your decision to move across state boundaries a perfect opportunity to conduct a thorough review of your estate plan.


Work with a professional

If you have a relationship with a financial advisor, it makes sense to discuss the financial ramifications of your move with him or her. Keep in mind that they will need to be licensed in the state where you intend to move if you plan to keep working together. If that’s not feasible, you may need to seek advice from an advisor with the right credentials to serve your needs. Start the process as soon as you can to ensure a smooth transition of your finances as you settle into your new living situation.


Michael D. Lanuto, CRPC®, AWMA® is a Financial Advisor with S.M. Miller & Associates, a private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC. in Albany, NY.  He specializes in fee-based financial planning and asset management strategies and has been in practice for 7 years. To contact him: 518-949-2039; 4 Atrium Drive, Ste 200, Albany, NY, 12205; Michael.Lanuto@ampf.com; https://www.ameripriseadvisors.com/michael.lanuto/lp/request-contact/3/.

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Music Beyond any Limitations

Written By Editor on 5/3/23 | 5/3/23


HUDSON – Gili Melamed-Lev, co-founder of Jazz and Classics for Change, chooses concert selections that bring beauty and joy to the listeners.  “For the Saturday, May 20th afternoon,” she says, “I picked Dvorak’s Piano Quintet because it’s inspiring and beautiful.  We’ll open with an Intermezzo by Kodaly to set the tone, and conclude with work composed only last year by Seth Grosshandler.  From Kodaly’s Eastern European origin to Grosshandler’s composition created during the pandemic, it’s quite cross-cultural.  And, for me, the bottom line is to always present inspiring and uplifting music with musicians of the highest caliber.”

The 4PM concert will be held at Tydeman Farm, 564 County Rte. 10 in Germantown with thanks to owners Brian and Lindsay Shea.  “It’s relaxed and casual,” the pianist said. “There will be chairs set up in the barn.  And doors on all four sides will be open, so listeners are free to sit outside on the lawn if they prefer.”  The musicians, from the Orchestra of St. Luke (and friends), include Krista Bennion Feeney – violin, Anthony Bracewell – violin, David Cerutti – viola, Serafim Smigelskiy – cello, and Melamed-Lev on piano. Tickets may be obtained from https://www.jazzandclassicsforchange.org/

This is the opening concert of the 2023 season and, as with all organizations with missions to do good, funds are always needed.  In the case of Jazz and Classics for Change (JCFC), there are plenty of reasons for support.  “We want to heal through music,” co-founder Melamed-Lev says.  “We give concerts on a regular basis to seniors who are often marginalized in assisted living facilities and people with special needs.  Even during the lock down, we arranged to play live – outdoors, at many of the local residences.  And, through Promise Neighborhood, we’re presenting concerts for the children of the incarcerated.  It’s an exposure they may not get otherwise.”

And if that’s not enough to keep JCFC busy, there is also a program to provide Hudson school children with musical instruments – an expense few can afford.  “Kids Need Music”, a JCFC partnership with Craig Bender, has made a tremendous difference in the schools.  Through this program, there is a vibrant musical interest at the schools. Active involvement has increased from 10% to over 40%,” the Ghent resident explained.  “We’ve even begun working with our Vermont neighbors on a similar program for their communities.”

“Our mission,” Melamed-Lev concludes, “is to connect and heal through music in our changing world.  Each concert is a chance for us to continue our outreach.”  A fan letter from a senior said this. “After the concert, I have no photographs to show my friends, but, none-the-less, I have been on a journey of a lifetime and I know that I have changed.”

The concert is Saturday, May 20th beginning at 4PM.  It will be held at Tydeman Farm, 564 Cty. Rte. 10 in Germantown.  Reservations are recommended.  For tickets go to https://www.jazzandclassicsforchange.org/.


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Legislation Gives New York Power Authority Additional Authority to Advance Renewable Energy Generation and Decarbonization in New York State


 

 

WHITE PLAINS— The 2023-24 Enacted State Budget provides the New York Power Authority (NYPA) with new authority to develop, own, and operate renewable energy generating projects—either alone or in collaboration with other entities—to assist the state in meeting its bold clean energy targets, including producing 70% of the state’s electricity from renewable sources by 2030 and creating a zero-emission statewide electrical system by 2040. In addition, the enactment provides that NYPA will lead the state’s effort to decarbonize its electric grid by ceasing fossil fuel-based electricity production at its peaker power plants by 2030. NYPA will also develop action plans to decarbonize 15 of the highest emitting state facilities.

 

“With the support of Governor Hochul and continued collaboration with the State Legislature, the entire Power Authority team and I are inspired and ready to execute on this expanded authority to develop renewable energy projects across a large spectrum, helping the state advance its bold Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act goals, enabling public entities and NYPA’s customers to achieve their sustainability goals, and providing support to disadvantaged communities across New York,” said NYPA Acting President and CEO Justin E. Driscoll. “We are proud of our legacy of achievement and appreciate the confidence that the Governor and the Legislature have placed in NYPA at this critical time in the energy transition. The Power Authority has a proud history of leveraging our experience, and in particular the expertise of the state’s unionized workforce, to address unique and complex challenges. We are well positioned to develop new renewable energy generation resources—in collaboration with our state partners, stakeholders and the private sector—to accelerate the state’s decarbonization journey while helping to prepare New York’s workforce for the clean energy transition with good-paying jobs.”

 

The Power Authority is formalizing internal taskforces charged with advancing the key pillars of the new legislation: renewable development, a new Renewable Energy Access and Community Help (REACH) program to benefit disadvantaged communities, labor training and NYPA peaker plant retirement. One action already underway is a review of the Power Authority’s own assets for renewable development.

 

“I have directed Power Authority leadership to immediately analyze all NYPA-owned land for potential renewable development opportunities,” said Driscoll. “We will use every tool available to ensure that the Power Authority leads the effort to advance the Governor’s bold climate action priorities for the benefit of all New Yorkers.”

 

NYPA will now begin extensive work toward the publication of its first two-year strategic plan, outlining its strategies and proposed renewable projects, after collaboration with stakeholders and a public comment process that includes public hearings. The plan will be updated at least annually after public comment.

 

In addition, the Power Authority will lead the power generation sector by developing and publishing an action plan within the next two years to deliver upon its commitment to phase-out electricity production from its fossil fuel peaker power plants. NYPA will also consider the appropriateness of using the plants and the sites for renewable generation, energy storage or electric grid support needs.

 

The law also empowers NYPA, in partnership with the Public Service Commission (PSC), to support disadvantaged communities with a new REACH program. REACH will enable low-income and moderate-income electricity consumers to receive bill credits through the production of renewable energy products developed by or for NYPA in New York, making electricity more economical for more New Yorkers while helping to decarbonize the state’s electric grid. In addition, the enactment authorizes NYPA to contribute up to $25 million annually to the Department of Labor (DOL) for workforce development in the renewable energy sector.

 

NYPA expects to be able access new and existing federal tax credits provided by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 to lower the costs of certain renewable energy projects that it would undertake under the enactment. The IRA tax credits, such as the investment tax credit and the production tax credit, are now directly payable to governmental and other non-taxable entities like NYPA.

 

NYPA also will leverage its energy service and engineering expertise to assist the 15 highest emitting state facilities by creating decarbonization action plans for the facilities. The action plans will accelerate the state’s progress toward a cleaner building sector, support the creation of high-quality jobs at future decarbonization projects—including thermal energy networks—and move the state closer to reaching its climate goals.


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New Exhibition Day to Night: Photographs by Stephen Wilkes Opens May 20 at Fenimore Art Museum


 


Mesmerizing photographs created using more than 1,500 images captured over the course of a day at some of the most recognizable locations on the globe.

 

 

Cooperstown, New York  Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown presents the awe-inspiring photography of Stephen Wilkes in his exhibition Day to Night, on view May 20 – September 10, 2023

Day to NightStephen Wilkes’ most defining project, began in 2009. He and his team traveled to some of the world’s most well-known locations, including the Grand Canyon, Paris, Venice, several celebrated spots in New York City, and many others. Working from a fixed camera angle, he captured the fleeting moments of humanity and light as time passed. After approximately thirty hours of photographing and over 1,500 images taken, he selected the best moments of the day and night. Using time as a guide, all of these moments were seamlessly blended into a single photograph in post-production, visualizing places that are part of our collective memory. In each image, the landscape is masterfully captured with vibrant color and incredible detail.  

 

“In a world where humanity has become obsessively connected to personal devices, the ability to look is becoming an endangered human experience,” Wilkes said about the project. “Photographing a single place for up to thirty-six hours becomes a meditation; it has informed me in a unique way, inspiring deep insights into the narrative story of life and the fragile interaction of humanity within our natural world.”

 

The project has been featured on CBS Sunday Morning and dozens of other prominent media outlets, and with a grant from the National Geographic Society, was extended to include America’s National Parks in celebration of their centennial anniversary and Bird Migration for the 2018 Year of the Bird. Most recently a new grant was extended by the National Geographic Society for Day to Night of Canadian Iconic Species and Habitats at Risk in collaboration with The Royal Canadian Geographic Society. Day to Night: In the Field with Stephen Wilkes, a solo exhibition at The National Geographic Museum in 2018.

 

In 2021, Wilkes, a National Geographic Explorer, was commissioned by National Geographic to create a Day to Night of the Biden Presidential Inauguration. The photograph was featured in the magazine. His newest project for National Geographic, America the Beautiful, was published in September 2022 and his photograph of Bears Ears National Monument was the cover image.

 

Fenimore Art Museum, nestled on the shore of picturesque Otsego Lake, offers visitors to the village of Cooperstown an opportunity to experience a wide variety of world-class art in an idyllic, small-town setting.

 

 

RELATED PROGRAMMING:

Day to Night: After-Hours Exhibit Tour with Photographer Stephen Wilkes
Saturday, May 27 • 5:30 PM
Join photographer Stephen Wilkes for an exclusive in-person, after-hours tour of his exhibit, Day to Night.
Adults: $20 members; $25 non-members. Visit FenimoreArt.org.

 

"Visualizing Time:" FREE LIVE VIRTUAL LECTURE with photographer Stephen Wilkes via Zoom

Thursday, August 17 • 7:00 PM

“Visualizing Time” is a lecture that delves into the unique and captivating work of renowned photographer and artist Stephen Wilkes. Through a stunning collection of work, Wilkes will share his personal journey as a photographer and artist, the evolution of his style, techniques, and philosophy.

This virtual lecture is online only. Free with a suggested donation of $20. Visit FenimoreArt.org.

 

 

 

 

Museum Hours: 
Open April 1–December 31, 2023. Spring hours (April 1–May 26): 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday (closed Mondays). Summer hours begin May 27: open daily 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Museum admission is free for visitors 19 and under. Find more information at FenimoreArt.org.

 

 

About Stephen Wilkes

Since opening his studio in New York City in 1983, photographer Stephen Wilkes has built an unprecedented body of work and a reputation as one of America’s most iconic photographers, widely recognized for his fine art, editorial and commercial work.

 

His photographs are included in the collections of the George Eastman Museum, James A. Michener Art Museum, Houston Museum of Fine Arts, Dow Jones Collection, Carl & Marilynn Thoma Art Foundation, Jewish Museum of NY, Library of Congress, Snite Museum of Art, The Historic New Orleans Collection, Museum of the City of New York, 9/11 Memorial Museum and numerous private collections. His editorial work has appeared in, and on the covers of, leading publications such as the New York Times Magazine, Vanity FairTimeFortuneNational GeographicSports Illustrated, and many others.

 

Wilkes’ early career interpretations of Mainland China, California’s Highway One, and impressionistic “Burned Objects” set the tone for a series of career-defining projects that catapulted him to the top of the photographic landscape.

 

In 1998, a one-day assignment to the south side of Ellis Island led to a 5-year photographic study of the island’s long abandoned medical wards where immigrants were detained before they could enter America. Through his photographs and video, Wilkes helped secure $6 million toward the restoration of the south side of the island. A monograph based on the work, Ellis Island: Ghosts of Freedom, was published in 2006 and was named one of Time magazine’s 5 Best Photography Books of the Year. The work was also featured on NPR and CBS Sunday Morning.

 

In 2000, Epson America commissioned Wilkes to create a millennial portrait of the United States, “America In Detail,” a 52-day odyssey that was exhibited in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.

 

Day to Night, Wilkes’ most defining project, began in 2009. These epic cityscapes and landscapes, portrayed from a fixed camera angle for up to 30 hours capture fleeting moments of humanity as light passes in front of his lens over the course of full day. Blending these images into a single photograph takes months to complete. Day to Night has been featured on CBS Sunday Morning as well as dozens of other prominent media outlets and, with a grant from the National Geographic Society, was recently extended to include America’s National Parks in celebration of their centennial anniversary and Bird Migration for the 2018 Year of the Bird. Day to Night: In the Field with Stephen Wilkes was exhibited at The National Geographic Museum in February, 2018.

 

Day to Night was published by TASCHEN as a monograph in 2019. The book is available as an XXL Edition and an Art Edition, the latter including one of two fine art prints from the Day to Night series.

 

 

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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SUNY DELHI ANNOUNCES SUMMER SWIM PROGRAMS 2023

DELHI, NY - The SUNY Delhi summer swim program for children and adults will begin June 26, 2023 and run through August 4, 2023.  Monday through Friday. Closed on the 4th of July. 

Community Swimming Lessons will be offered between 9:00 a.m. and 12 p.m. in the Kunsela Hall pool. Classes include American Red Cross Levels I-VI, infant/toddler/preschoolers’ program and a Level VI diving class.  Classes will be 30 minutes long.  Adult classes are available. Session 1 will be from June 26 to July 14.  Session 2 will run from July 17 to August 4. 

Town residents of Hamden should contact the Hamden Town Clerk to register for free enrollment but must pay a $15 deposit to hold each participant spot at the Town Clerk, the town will pay the rest. Proof of residency will be required. All other people that are not residents of Hamden may participate at a cost of $60 per person, each session.  

Swim Team practice is also available as part of swimming lessons from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. during the lap swim. 


Please let me know if you have any questions,


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SUNY COBLESKILL FIGHTING TIGER WEEKLY RECAP 4/30/23


The SUNY Cobleskill baseball team won three-of-four home contests during the week defeating Utica College on Tuesday 7-6 and SUNY Oneonta 17-15 in non-league action then splitting a pair of North Atlantic Conference (NAC) games on Saturday versus SUNY Canton taking the first game 2-1 in extra innings before losing the second game by a 6-4 margin to move to 20-13 overall including a 13-2 record in NAC play to claim their third consecutive NAC Western Division Championship. Fighting Tiger sophomore outfielder Zach Ducorsky, Oceanside, N.Y., Oceanside High School, went 8-for-10 on the week for a .800 batting average with eight stolen bases, five runs scored and an RBI. 

Junior distance runner Nick Logan, Queensbury, N.Y., Queensbury High School, was the Fighting Tiger men’s track & field team’s top finisher at the 2023 North Atlantic Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships hosted by the league at Colby College in Waterville, Maine over the Weekend winning the 1500-Meter Run in a conference record time of 4:02.90 while placing third overall in the 800-Meter Run with a time of 1:59.60. Led by Logan Cobleskill posted a team total of 59 points to finish in fifth place overall in the eight-team field. 

The Fighting Tiger women’s track & field team posted a team total score of 58 points to place fifth overall in an eight-team field at the 2023 North Atlantic Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships hosted by the league at Colby College in Waterville, Maine over the weekend. Sophomore jumper Lilah Ward, Arlington, Vt., Arlington High School, won the High Jump at the event clearing a height of 4’11 ¾” at the meet.  

The men’s lacrosse team closed the season with a pair of NAC road losses during the week losing to SUNY Canton in Canton, N.Y. on Wednesday by a 15-5 margin then losing on Saturday at the SUNY Polytechnic Institute on Saturday 10-8 to close the season with an 8-5 overall record including a 3-5 record in NAC action. The Fighting Tigers were led by junior midfielder Sean D’Amaro, Northport, N.Y., Northport High School, who scored four goals, passed out two assists and picked up seven ground balls on the week.  

The Fighting Tiger women’s softball team lost four-of-five games to NAC opponents during the week splitting at home with SUNY Delhi on Tuesday taking the opener 7-3 then losing the nightcap by a 5-1 score. Cobleskill then lost three games over the weekend at Cazenovia College in Cazenovia, N.Y. losing twice on Friday by scores of 7-1 and 12-4 then dropping a 12-6 decision on Saturday to move to 11-23 overall on the year including a 6-6 record in conference play. Sophomore designated player Olivia DeMott, Sidney, N.Y., Sidney High School, went 10-for-15 during the week for a .625 batting average with a double, two home runs, five runs scored and three RBI. 


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Help Wanted - Halcott



The Town of Halcott seeks a full-time Truck/Heavy Equipment Operator with Mechanical Skills preferably with computer skills as well. Salary to be determined based on experience. 



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Sophie Strand in Andes

Please join us in welcoming Sophie Strand, writer, thinker, inter-weaver and force of nature for an evening of reading and discussion based on her truly groundbreaking book of essays The Flowering Wand: Rewilding the Sacred Masculine (Inner Traditions, 2022). If we're lucky, Ms. Strand will also provide a preview from her forthcoming The Madonna Secretan eco-feminist historical fiction reimagining of the Gospels.

 

Saturday, June 10, doors at 5 pm, reading begins 5:30.

 

Wine, water & hors d'oeuvres. 

 

RESERVATIONS strongly advised by responding to this email with a YES & your name & number of seats required.

 

Admission is Free but there's a $10 - $20 suggested donation to help keep the shop open when we pass the proverbial hat.

 

More of Sophie's ever-growing body of work can be found at:

Sophiestrand.substack.com   which contains other writings

& links to other writings & talks both published and unpublished, including poems, essays, podcasts and interviews. Also on Instagram: @cosmogyny & on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sophie.strand1 . We strongly encourage some familiarity with her work before coming to hear her speak. 

 

For further info about this event, please contact Miles Bellamy at biz@diamondhollowbooks.com


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Enrollment Open for Hartwick’s Online Summer Sessions

Hartwick students, students from other colleges and universities, and adult learners are invited to enroll now in Hartwick’s Summer Session.

 

Offered entirely online, courses will be held in three sessions between May 29 and August 18. This year’s offerings include courses in art, anthropology, biology, business, environmental studies, global studies, philosophy, physics and sociology, among others. 

 

For more information on the courses available, fees and registration, visit the Hartwick College Summer Online website at hartwick.edu/summeronline


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Cudmore Joins Cave House Museum Board of Trustees


 

HOWES CAVE, NY—Retired communications professional Dana Cudmore of Cobleskill has joined the board of trustees of the Cave House Museum of Mining and Geology, announced the board’s director, Paul Griggs.

 

Cudmore will provide public relations and fundraising expertise to guide the Cave House Museum’s eleven-member board in developing its educational mission.

 

Cudmore has worked as a newspaper and magazine writer, editor, and a public relations professional for the SUNY system. After running his own agency, Media Services, he worked as an external affairs officer for a federal disaster response and recovery agency before retiring.

 

A long-time Schoharie County resident, Cudmore has written extensively on Howe Caverns, the historic cement and stone quarrying industry of the Howes Cave area, and upstate New York’s “cave country.” In his teens, he worked summers at the famous cave as a tour guide from 1971 through 1976, developing a lifelong interest in the cave’s mysteries and remarkable history, as well as interest in the other caves in upstate New York and beyond. With friends, he explored the other local caves, as well as caves in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, the Virginias, Tennessee, and Missouri.

 

Cudmore’s most recent book, “Underground Empires: Two Centuries of Discovery, Exploration and Adventure in NY’s Cave Country,” was published by Black Dome Press of Catskill in August 2021. The book is available at the Cave House Museum Shop, local bookstores, Barnes & Noble and online.

 

As a nonprofit, NYS-chartered educational institution, the Cave House Museum of Mining and Geology promotes an understanding of the importance local and regional geology and mining plays in our lives. 


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Cooperstown Summer Music Festival opens 25th anniversary season with Ying Quartet on May 7


 

The Cooperstown Summer Music Festival will open its 25th anniversary season this weekend with a performance by the highly acclaimed Ying Quartet on Sunday, May 7 at 4pm at Christ Episcopal Church.


The quartet will present a program entitled ‘American Made’, opening with Barber’s Quartet in B minor -- from which his famously moving Adagio movement is drawn -- and continuing with works by Jennifer Higdon and Billy Childs that draw on American roots and bebop music traditions. The program concludes with Quartet No. 13 in G major by Dvorak, a European composer who helped define the American musical voice.


A concert designed to showcase the richness and variety of the American string quartet tradition is appropriate for the Yings, who, in addition to being the quartet-in-residence at the Eastman School of Music, have long been enthusiastic champions of American music.


The quartet aims to transmit some of their enthusiasm to their Cooperstown audience. “The tradition of American string quartet writing is full of magnificent music,” says cellist David Ying. “We have all of these wonderful composers to thank for contributing to the vibrant American music scene that we enjoy today.”


EVENT DETAILS:

 

Ying Quartet: American Made

Sunday, May 7, 4:00-5:30pm, Christ Episcopal Church

The ‘fearlessly imaginative’ Ying quartet performs a program showcasing the richness of American music, including works by Barber, Higdon, Childs, and Dvorak.


TICKET INFORMATION:

Tickets are $30 for adults and $15 for students and children. Tickets for all events must be purchased 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.

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 25 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.


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Attempted Scam in Conesville

Conesville residents are advised to be aware of a scam attempt on a local resident today in Conesville.  Two trucks occupied by six men pulled up to an elderly resident’s home stating they just finished a local job, and they had a remaining truckload of gravel and no place to put it.  An offer was made to leave the so-called surplus gravel on the homeowner’s driveway for free. The offer was accepted.   After the gravel was offloaded onto the driveway, the men demanded $2400 in payment from the homeowner. 




Thanks to the vigilance of the homeowner’s son and daughter-in-law who live next door, the demand for payment was challenged. An ensuing argument resulted in the sheriff being called and the six men in their two trucks beating a hasty departure.  But not before a photo of one of the trucks was taken with New York State license plate number 74152-MN on a white Chevrolet Silverado.   

If you know of any attempted scams that prey on senior citizens or see the truck in question, please contact the Schoharie County Sheriff’s dispatch at 518-295-8114.     


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Meet Remi, Bassett's Latest Addition to its Expanding K-9 Security Force

Bassett Word rule line.jpg

Cooperstown, New York – Bassett Healthcare Network announced today the latest expansion of its K-9 security team. Remi, a 15-month-old Rottweiler and his handler, Officer Lynda May, have joined Hudson and handler, Officer Robert Meiser, and Coal and handler, Officer Ryan Salisbury in the organization’s growing K-9 force.




 

Bassett’s K-9 security team rotates across the network’s hospitals and clinic campuses to help meet the increased security needs that healthcare workers face today. Bassett Healthcare Network, like hundreds of other health systems and hospitals across the country, has seen a significant uptick in instances of physical and verbal assault towards healthcare workers in recent years. K-9 units are often able to quickly defuse tense situations before they escalate.

 

Bassett’s growing K-9 Security team is made possible by the generous support of Jane Forbes Clark of Cooperstown. “We are deeply appreciative of Ms. Clark’s commitment to the safety and security of our patients, visitors, and staff,” said Dr. Tommy Ibrahim, President & CEO of Bassett Healthcare Network. “All of us at Bassett extend a warm welcome to Remi and Officer May as they join our K-9 team, an essential facet of our security force.”

 

Officer May trained extensively with Hudson, Coal, and their handlers before Remi came to Bassett. Since his arrival, Remi and Officer May have honed their skills with the other K-9 units. Remi is extremely excited to meet everyone across Bassett’s network. He lives with Officer May and her family, which includes four other dogs and a cat, who has become Remi’s best friend. In his spare time, Remi loves his squeaky ball above all other toys.

 

Like Hudson and Coal, Remi will have his own baseball-style trading card available for young patients and visitors who wish to collect them.

 

We are excited to have Remi and Officer May join our K-9 team,” says Harold Southworth, director of Public Safety and Transportation at Bassett, who has led the development of the organization’s K-9 program. “Our highly trained K-9s and handlers can turn escalating situations around. They add a new level of expertise to our Security team.”

 

In addition to its K-9 units, Bassett’s Security Department consists of more than 60 security officers who staff five hospitals and over two dozen regional health centers, acting as a safety resource for staff, patients, and visitors. They respond to emergencies and are the organization’s liaison with area law enforcement.

 

Photo caption: Officer Lynda May and Remi have joined Bassett Healthcare Network's K-9 Security Force


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