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Fire Crews Fight Gallupville Blaze

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 1/2/25 | 1/2/25

GALLUPVILLE - At 6:29 am on December 23, firefighters from the Gallupville Fire Department were dispatched to a working structure fire on Drebitko Road.

Members of the department along with Schoharie, Berne, Central Bridge, Middleburgh Fire, along with Scho-Wright, County EMS and the NYS Police responded. Knox FD was on standby in Gallupville station. 

Any fire is devastating for any homeowner, but when that homeowner is also a member of your FD family, it hits that much closer to home, fire officials said. This morning all of these departments came together to assist with the safe extinguishment of the fire. Battling the severe cold all agencies work tirelessly to have the best possible outcome for the situation they were presented with. 

They thanked all those involved in helping this morning. "Whether you were one of the dispatchers at the Schoharie County Sheriff’s office, who were amazing, to someone who offered us coffee or a hot meal, everyone put in 110 percent. Although the home is a complete loss, everyone of the Fire/EMS workers went home safe. Again, thank you to all agencies involved."


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Forecast Shows Decline in MCS Enrollment

By David Avitabile

MIDDLEBURGH - Middleburgh Central School enrollment, which stabilized this year after years of decline, may once again be decreasing in the next three years, according to a three-year forecast of the district.

The enrollment forecast was part of a long-range financial plan presented by MCS school business manager Robyn Bhend at the December 11 school board meeting.

Earlier this school year, officials announced that after year of After years of enrollment decreases, MCS enrollment hit a plateau, but Ms. Bhend said that student numbers could soon be on the way down again.

In November, MCS officials said that on the official enrollment day for New York State school districts was in October, MCS had an enrollment of 656 students for this school year. This was the same as for the 2023-24 school year.

Ms. Bhend said that number could decline for the next three years and reach a low of 604 for the 2027-28 school year.

After this year's 656, the projected student count for the 2025-26 school year is 618. That number could fall to 613 for the 2026-27 school year and 604 in 2027-28.

The declines are projected due to smaller than normal incoming kindergarten classes for next few years. While the incoming kindergarten class numbered 45 two years ago, this years kindergarten class numbers 32 and is expected to be 34 next year. Projections are for 35 the following two years.

Aside from this year's graduating class of 51 and the ninth grade class of 62, all under MCS classes are under 50 and not expected to increase in the next few years.

According to Ms. Bhend's projections:

* The pre-K enrollment will go from 33 tis year, 32 next year, and 35 in both 2026-27 and 2027-28.

* The kindergarten student count will go from 32 this year to 34 next year and 35 in each 2026-27 and 2027-28.

* The enrollment in grades one through 3 will go from 135 this year to 120 next year, 111 in 2026-27 and 101 in 2027-28.

* The student count in grades four through six is expected to go from 129 this year to 127 next year, 129 in 2026-27, and 135 in 2027-28.

* The enrollment in grades seven and eight is projected to increase from 85 this year to 92 next year, 90 in 2026-27, and 81 in 2027-28.

* The student count in grades nine to 11 is projected to go from 150 this year to 147 next year and the year after, and 133 in 2027-28.

* The enrollment in the 12th grade is expected to go from 51 this year to 44 next year and the year after and 62 in 2027-28 (when the current ninth grade class graduates.)

* The number of out-of-district students is projected to go from 24 this to 22 in each of the next three years.

Total enrollment totals over the last eight years are:

* This year: 656.

* 2023-24: 656.

* 2022-23: 675.

* 2021-22: 689.

* 2020-21: 671.

* 2019-20: 732.

* 2018-19: 748.

* 2017-18: 759.

The district still has not recovered from the drop after the pandemic (732 in 2019-20 to 671 in 2020-21). Since that time, more students are being home-schooled or have moved out of the district.

Officials have noted that the decrease in enrollment is not unique to Middleburgh as schools across the county and region are showing decreases in recent enrollment numbers.

Total enrollment numbers were about 1,000 in the late 1980s and early 1990s and has been dropping ever since. The peak class enrollment was the senior class of 1964 which totaled about 110.


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Gilboa-Conesville Voters Approve $7.9M Improvement Project

By Chris English

GILBOA-CONESVILLE — Students, parents, and staff in the Gilboa-Conesville School District are gearing up for an estimated $7.9 million improvement project after district voters approved the work, 62-21, at a Dec. 17 referendum.

“Thanks to the community,” said District Superintendent Bonnie Johnson at the Dec. 18 school board meeting. “We look forward to the kickoff meeting with Hunt Architects.”

According to presentations made by Hunt during the last few weeks, the project will not necessitate a property tax increase. The funding proposal for the work is to use $3.7 million from a capital reserve fund and $4.2 million in serial bonds. No tax increase can be accomplished by “leveraging New York State building aid and managing debt service payments,” according to the Hunt presentation.

“The presentation was totally transparent, which always helps,” School Board President Michael Fleischman said at the Dec 18 meeting “I want to thank our community, which always supports the school.”

Proposed improvements include painting and acoustic upgrades to the  gymatorium, locker replacement, an Americans with Disabilities Act connection between the two main buildings, septic system and retaining wall replacements, renovation of the parking lot and office and conference room ventilation work at the bus garage and other upgrades.

Included in the estimated $7.9 million pricetag are gymatorium cooling, roof overlays for all buildings, and replacement/relocation of playground equipment. However, those three items will be bid as alternates so they can be eliminated from the project if necessary.

A projected timeline has a preconstruction and design phase from December through July of 2025, awarding of bids in March of 2026, and construction from May 2026 to September 2027.

In other actions from the Dec. 18 meeting, Candice Gockel gave a presentation on the Gilboa-Conesville technology plan. She said the district has been striving to modernize technology within the classroom, including equipping classrooms with updated security and introducing  STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math) courses in grades pre-kindergarten through 4. Gockel added the district needs to upgrade the infrastructure that supports its technology.


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M'burgh Loses Elementary Teacher, Adds Music Teacher

By David Avitabile

MIDDLEBURGH - Middleburgh Central School lost an elementary teacher in December but will be adding a teacher next week.

At their December 11 meeting, school board members accepted the resignation  for Kelli Lombardi as an elementary teacher effective December 11. They also approved a three-year probationary appointment for Nicholas Follett as a music teacher starting January 13.

In other personnel moves, board members:

* Added the following support staff substitutes: Kritina Traver, Bernard Yuhas, Kaitlyn Nelson, Nicole Smith, Ciara Armlin, and Morgan Schafroth, all at the current sub rate.

* Accepted the resignation of teaching assistant Kristina Traver, effective December 11.

*   *   *

In other action, board members:

* Accepted the donation of a $500 gift card from the Broadview Credit union for classroom supplies and TI Inspire calculators.

* Declared the following buses as obsolete/surplus: #167, #166, and #165.

* Declared the following textbooks as obsolete/surplus: social studies: The United States, 41 units, and The World, 47 units.


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MCS Looks to the Future in Three-Year Plan

By David Avitabile

MIDDLEBURGH - Costs and taxes for Middleburgh Central School should be steady for the next three years - as long as the State of New York cooperates.

School Business Manager Robyn Bhend gave school  board members a projection of costs, expenditures, revenues and taxes at their December board meeting for each year through the 2027-28 school year.

Costs such as health insurance and salaries would increase but the tax levy would continue to rise by 1.5 percent per year through the 2027-28 school year, as long as the state maintains foundation aid (the bulk of the state aid package) at current levels. MCS, not unlike other school districts in the Capital Region, has seen decreases in its enrollment and trends forecast a continued drop in the next few years, which would mean less foundation aid for the district, which could mean a loss of more than $1.9 million for each of the upcoming two years. 

Luckily for school districts, for the last several years, the state has protected districts from sudden decreases in state aid with a "save harmless" clause.

MCS Superintendent Mark Place explained the clause.

"'Save harmless' in New York State education funding means that a school district is guaranteed to receive at least the same amount of funding it received in a previous year, even if the formula used to calculate aid suggests the district should get less. It's a way to protect districts from sudden drops in funding, ensuring stability for planning and operations." he explained.

"Middleburgh CSD has been on 'Save Harmless' for many years. We either only get the minimum Foundation Aid increase approved by the legislature. The last two years, we have received zero percent increases. If the formula was allowed to run without 'Save Harmless' being in place, MCS would receive about $1.9 million less in Foundation Aid."

Ms. Bhend said a three-year projection is important for school officials and the district.

The projection allow "decision makers to set long-term priorities and work towards goals, rather than making choices based only on the needs and politics of the moment. If there is a need for change, a plan can help identify and manage potential fiscal difficulties before crises emerge. "Fiscal stability and responsibility are critical aspects to ensure the success of a school district," she told board members.  

All items in this forecast are meant to highlight future budget scenarios based on the current financial information that will impact district budgets. "The budget increases are realistic as are the changes in revenue," she noted. The forecast reflects, past, present and estimates future budget performance. This report’s purpose is to be a reference tool for the development of the 2025-2026 school year. The purpose of this report is to become aware of how current budget decisions impact future budgets. This year’s long-range plan addresses and includes information on projected increases as well as the impact of inflation on major budget categories. "It is important to state that this annual three-year financial plan is meant to remind us that we must always plan for the future."

Highlights in the three-year projection are:

* All union contracts are settled through June 2026. The teachers' contract is through June 2028 and the non-teachers' one is through June 2027.

* There are 153 employees in the district, including 80 teachers and 64 non-teachers.

* Current grants run through 2028.

* The district has a fund balance of more than $9.4 million with $2 million in unassigned accounts and $6.36 million in assigned reserves.

* Foundation aid remains at $8.5 million through 2027-28 if the state continues "save harmless."

* If there is no "save harmless," there would be a gap of $1.57 million in 2025-26, $2.28 million in 2026-27, and $3 million in 2027-28.

* Salaries would increase from $9.2 million to $9.9 million in 2027-28.

* Total expenditures will go from $23.4 million to $25.79 million in 2027-28.


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Pistol League Scores

Team and High Individual Match Scores 12/20/2024  Match X:

Oneonta defeats Delhi:  1075-15X to 1014-13X

Sidney vs. Stamford- Weather Postponed

Walton defeated Rockdale:  1096-23X to 1044-11X


Win/Loss Record:

Stamford                             8-0

Walton:                                 7-2

Oneonta:                               6-3

Rockdale:                              3-7

Sidney:                                  2-7

Delhi:                                     1-8    


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Schoharie to Go with ParentSquare to Better Communicate with Parents

By David Avitabile

SCHOHARIE - Schoharie school officials are switching to ParentSquare to improve communications with parents.

SCS Superintendent David Blanchard announced the change at the December 19 school  board meeting. The district currently uses School Messenger.

Parent Square is a communication tool that the district will use to connect families to classroom teachers and events, Mr. Blanchard explained. "It can be used for mass notifications, classroom communications and interpretation services. This also enables better communication on the district website and a platform to distribute forms."

The district has signed a contract with ParentSquare and in the next few weeks, a system will be created for teachers and parents to communicate, Mr. Blanchard told school board members. The system will be introduced at the January faculty meeting. More information will be given to board members at their next meeting, along with strategies on how to use the new system.

ParentSquare, Mr. Blanchard added, allows teachers to get more information out of the classroom to parents and gives more ways for parents and teachers to communicate.

ParentSquare is a digital communications platform that is designed for education institutions and parents or guardians. The idea is to keep family contact clear and simple with direct lines of open dialogue.

According to its website, ParentSquare aims to create a home-school system to enhance the connection between schools, students, and parents. Parents can use ParentSquare to view various notifications from the school at any time, including but not limited to dates of school and class events, students' attendance status, etc. It is important to note that we expect parents to add a note and necessary explanation on ParentSquare about the reason why their child is absent.

In order to provide a better communication system for schools, ParentSquare has two-way group messaging and private conversation features. Allowing parents to be the first to contact the school when they need to, rather than relying on e-mails with poor immediacy, missed phone calls, and website updates that they never read. This means parents can send private messages to school staff (or other ParentSquare users) on ParentSquare at any time, even adding pictures or attachments.


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SCS Boys Nip Canjo to Win Tourney

SCHOHARIE - Schoharie beat Canajoharie last night in the championship game of the Andy Palmer Christmas Tournament on Saturday, December 21.

Luke Stevens scored 14 points to lead Schoharie including nine in a big second quarter to lead SCS to a 42-38 victory.

SCS led 9-8 after the first eight minutes and the Storm went on a 15-11 run in the second quarter to lead 24-19 at the half.

Emmett Gagnon added 11 points for the Storm. He hit one three-pointer.

Tony Fourley scored 17 points and hit three threes to lead the Cougars.

In the opener on December 20, the Storm rallied in the fourth quarter to beat Dolgeville 38-35.

Dolgeville opened up a 15-7 lead after the first quarter and led 17-14 at the half despite scoring only two points in the second quarter. Dolgeville increased its lead to 29-23 entering the final period.

Schoharie outscored Dolgeville 15-6 in the final eight minutes to take the opener.

Emmett Gagnon led SCS with 14 points while Luke Stevens added 13 points, and Brandon Toro scored seven points. Stevens and Toro each hit one three-pointer. Toro scored all his seven points in the fourth quarter.

Andrew Martyrhuk scored 14 to lead Dolgeville and Theo Williams added 13 points.


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SCS Revises Role for Administrators

By David Avitabile

SCHOHARIE - The roles of two Schoharie school administrators were revised by the district at the school board meeting last month.

At the school board's December 19 meeting, board members updated and revised the titles and roles for school business administrator David Baroody and Matt Wright, the director of curriculum and pupil personnel services.

Mr. Baroody's title is now assistant superintendent of business operations while Mr. Wright's title is now director of curriculum, instruction, and pupil personnel services.

SCS Superintendent David Blanchard explained the rationale behind the changes.

Bob Bonaker, Mr. Baroody's predecessor, was the Assistant Superintendent for Business and "we wanted Mr. Baroody's title to match what we had previous to me starting," Mr. Blanchard said, "This change will create a clear delineation of duties between my office and the business office on the operational side of our district."

As for Mr. Wright, Mr. Blanchard said, "Mr. Wright has always had responsibilities for oversight of curriculum but was in a lateral position to the principals. Having him oversee curriculum and instruction puts him in a role where he has authority over the principals and teachers.

Mr. Blanchard noted that Mr. Wright will be helping out with the curriculum changes in the elementary school and also said the district makes changes after being designated as a district in need of improvement by the state.

The changes, the superintendent added, gives more oversight for both administrators.

The changes became effective on December 20.


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SCS Still Searching for Interim Principal

By David Avitabile

SCHOHARIE -  As the calendar changes to 2025 and students return to school after the Christmas break Schoharie school continues to seek an interim elementary school principal.

At their November meeting, school board members accepted the resignation of long-time elementary school Principal Andrea Polikoski.

After 10 years as principal at SCS, Ms. Polikoski accepted the position as the principal of Glen-Worden Elementary School in the Scotia-Glenville Central School District and left Schoharie on January 2.

After the board's December 19 meeting, Superintendent David Blanchard said the district has not yet hired an interim principal.

*   *   *

In other personnel moves, School board members at their December meeting:

* Accepted the resignation of Nida Ehring as part-time food service helper, effective December 14, in order to accept a position as a substitute.

* Appointed Darlene Schultz to a probationary position as a part-time teacher aide at $19.55 per hour, according to the SCEA contract, for three hours per day, retroactive to November 7.

* Approved a probationary part-time appointment for Claudia Rickard as a food service helper for $16.40 per hour, per the SCEA contract, for 4.5 hours per day, retroactive to December 9.

* Named Katie Reynolds as assistant musical director for the 2024-25 school year, at a stipend of $2,330.

* Approved Debbie Becker as an elementary volunteer for the 2024-25 school year.

* Approved a memorandum of agreement with Matt Wright on a stipend for grant writing.

* Added the following people to the SCS substitute list: Ms. Ehring, non-certified without degree, and Bernard Yuhas, certified without degree.

* Added six people to the Capital Region BOCES substitute calling service list.


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Crews Battle Christmas Eve Blaze



RENSELAERVILLE - Crews from numerous fire departments battled a fire at a small house in Rensselaerville on Christmas Eve.

At 4:26pm, Tri-Village along with Medusa and Rensselaerville and ACSO were dispatched to a working structure Fire in the 700 Block of Fox Creek Rd. Engine 33-21 arrived and made the attack followed by the crew of 18-20. Engine 27-11 took the roof to get it opened up. Although the fire was quickly brought under control, crews worked for almost three hours to open up this stubborn post and beam style building to extinguish the fire completely. 

Additional units and manpower from Livingstonville, Oak-Hill Durham and East Durham also assisted at the scene. The house was a small guest house, there were no injuries and no one was left homeless. 

Thank you to all the responders that selflessly gave up their Christmas Eve plans and celebration to respond to someone else’s emergency. It’s just what we do. 18 Tri-Village Firefighters responded.


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SCS Vocalists Perform in Rochester



SCHOHARIE - Three Schoharie high school vocal students recently performed in the Mixed Chorus at the NYSSMA All-State Festival in Rochester. Seniors Ryan Snyder, Sophia Watson, and Ivy Wray were selected to participate based on their outstanding scores and adjudications of their vocal solos at this spring's NYSSMA festival.

Thousands of students perform at NYSSMA festivals across New York State and only around 200 are chosen to sing in the Mixed Chorus. This year's director was the renowned composer and conductor, Andrea Ramsey. Ryan was selected to sing as a Bass 1, Sophia was selected to sing as an Alto 1 and Ivy was selected to sing as an Alto 2.


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Santa Comes to Middleburgh



Thanks to the members of the Middleburgh Fire Department, Santa was able to tour Middleburgh the Saturday night before Christmas. Photo by Tim Knight.


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M'burgh Rod and Gun Club Hosts Christmas Party





MIDDLEBURGH - Middleburgh Rod and Gun club  members hosted a Youth Christmas party on December 21. There was a visit from Santa Claus for all the good boys and girls. 


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Long-Distance Friend for MCS



MIDDLEBURGH - What a fun way to bring social studies to life and reconnect with a former student last month at Middleburgh elementary school. First graders video-chatted with Daniel Stenson to learn about Swedish traditions as part of their lessons on worldwide holiday celebrations. Daniel was an exchange student at MCS from 2014-15 and fielded questions from our curious students about Swedish phrases and Saint Lucia Day.


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Santa Comes to Gallupville




Trent, Evan, Jace, and Kecia of Gallupville all join Mr. Claus


By Bradley Towle

GALLUPVILLE — The Gallupville Fire Department (GFD) held its annual Breakfast With Santa on Saturday, December 21, 2024. The frigid temperatures and snowy conditions could not keep families and community members away. The GFD volunteers hastened to greet, seat, cook for, and serve the packed house. The excitement ramped up with the arrival of Santa and Mrs. Claus, who met with local children and sent them home little gifts in addition to their full bellies. This was the final community breakfast provided by the GFD of 2024. 


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