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We Have New Neighbors

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 3/28/25 | 3/28/25

By Vic DiSanto, Museum Associate, Iroquois Museum

HOWES CAVE – A new couple has moved into the area!  The Iroquois Museum is happy to announce that a pair of bald eagles have nested in the neighborhood.

We would like to extend a hearty welcome and hope that the nesting pair like their new home.  After they get settled in, visitors to the museum will be able to view their activities from a telescope that we are setting up on our grounds.  

Bald Eagles hold a lofty status in Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) lore. Led by Deganawida, the peace maker, the Iroquois symbolically buried their weapons beneath a white pine known as the Tree of Peace. Atop the tree, Deganawida placed an eagle to scream out a warning at the approach of danger.  

The eagle is also considered to be the leader of all the birds.  For this reason, Native Americans have chosen the eagle and its feathers as a symbol of what is highest, bravest, and strongest. In the Native American culture, eagle feathers are given to one another in honor, and the feathers are worn with dignity and pride. They are treated with great respect.

The Eagle and the Hermit Thrush

But even the strongest and bravest can be outwitted. According to a Haudenosaunee tale, the Good Spirit decided that the bird who could fly the highest would have the most beautiful song. The eagle was confident he would win, but a little brown thrush hid himself beneath the eagle’s feathers.  As all the birds flew upward, one by one they began to tire and drop out of the contest until only the eagle was left. The eagle flew as high as he could until he was completely exhausted. The eagle looked around and saw no other birds, so he turned around to fly back toward Earth. Just then the little brown thrush hopped off the eagle’s head and flew upward to the Land of the Holy Spirits, where he learned a beautiful song. Yet after he returned to earth, he was ashamed because he cheated, so he hid, and today this shy species of bird is known as the Hermit thrush.

Bald Eagle Restoration in New York State

The use of DDT in New York State led to the extirpation of Bald Eagles by the early 1960's. The majestic raptor had stopped producing eaglets because the eggs were collapsing during incubation due to a thinning of the shells caused by the pesticide.  

The United States and Canada banned DDT in 1972 and in 1976 the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) started transporting juvenile bald eagles from Alaska and releasing them here. Over a 13-year period, 198 nestling bald eagles were transported and released in New York. The program met with success, and by 2010 there were 173 nesting pairs of Bald Eagles who called New York home!

Eagle Watching Etiquette from DEC

  • Don't approach eagles any closer than a quarter mile

  • Avoid eagle roosting areas

  • Don't make loud noises when in the presence of an eagle

  • Keep your pets at home when you go eagle watching

  • Don't try to make the birds fly under any circumstances

Bald Eagle Facts

One of the largest birds of prey (raptors) found in North America, bald eagles stand about 30 inches high, have a wingspan of 72-84 inches, and weigh between 8 and 14 pounds.

A bald eagle nest is a large structure, usually located high in a tall, live white pine tree near water. The nest is reused and added to (decorated) each year, often becoming eight or more feet deep, six feet across, and weighing hundreds of pounds.

This majestic bird is easily identified in adult plumage by its unmistakable brown body set off by a white head and tail and bright yellow bill (male and female eagles look identical, except that the female is usually about one third larger and heavier than the male, as is typical in birds of prey). Sexual maturity and the characteristic white head and tail are achieved at five years of age. The word bald in the eagle's name comes from a word in Old English that means white headed.

Immature bald eagles lack a white head and tail. They are mostly chocolate brown with varying amounts of white over the body, tail, and underwings. Juvenile bald eagles are often mistaken for immature golden eagles, which are much rarer in New York.

The bald eagle is a long-lived bird, with a life span in the wild of more than 30 years. Bald eagles mate for life, returning to nest in the general area (within 250 miles) from which they fledged. Once a pair selects a nesting territory, they use it for the rest of their lives.

Bald eagles produce only one or two offspring per year, rarely three. In New York, the young fledge by mid to late summer at about 12 weeks of age. By 20 weeks they are largely independent.

 

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Cobleskill Drops Non-Conference Matchup to Skidmore

COBLESKILL — The SUNY Cobleskill baseball team fell to Skidmore College, 9-3, in a non-conference contest Tuesday evening at Fighting Tiger Field. The game was called after eight innings due to fading daylight.

On a chilly evening where offense was hard to come by, senior Zach Ducorsky (Oceanside, NY) paced the Fighting Tigers with a 1-for-3 performance and a run scored. Freshman Thomas Reis (Deposit, NY) provided the biggest highlight of the night, launching his first collegiate home run in the eighth inning. Logan Firment (Andes, NY/South Kortright) added a hit and a stolen base, while Troy Enamait (Vernon, CT/Rockville) scored a run and swiped a bag of his own.

On the mound, Logan Scott (Binghamton, NY) turned in a solid start, allowing just one run on four hits over four innings but was tagged with the loss. The Cobleskill bullpen saw action from Jack Laughlin (Cortlandt Manor, NY/Walker Panas), Evan Balbera (Patchogue, NY/Patchogue-Medford), and Tyler Sienko (Binghamton, NY/Windsor).

Skidmore struck first, plating a run in the opening frame on a wild pitch. The Thoroughbreds extended their lead to 3-0 in the fifth before Cobleskill clawed back in the sixth. Ducorsky came around to score on a Korin Laurilla (East Greenbush, NY/Columbia) RBI groundout, and a wild pitch brought home Enamait to cut the deficit to 3-2.

However, the game unraveled in the seventh as Skidmore capitalized on Cobleskill miscues, erupting for six runs to break the game open. Reis answered in the eighth with a towering solo shot off the scoreboard in left field, but the rally was cut short as darkness forced an early ending.

The loss drops Cobleskill to 5-8 overall, while Skidmore improves to 10-4-2 on the season.

 

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County Approves $35.87M Broadband Project Bond

By Chris English

SCHOHARIE COUNTY — A unanimous vote to move forward on a $35.87 million bond to finance a broadband project came with a healthy dose of skepticism from some Schoharie County Supervisors.

At its Friday, March 21 meeting, the county Board of Supervisors approved a resolution authorizing the "issuance of not exceeding $35,870,000 in bonds" to fund a project aimed at giving every county resident the ability to connect with the Internet.

The plan is to use proceeds from the bond to essentially front money for the project, and then pay back the borrowing from a $30 million grant the county is supposed to be getting from the state ConnectAll Program. The grant is a reimbursable one in which the county puts up money for the project and is then reimbursed from the grant at various milestones along the way.

Before the vote to approve the bond resolution, BOS Chairman Bill Federice of Conesville and Supervisor Stephen Weinhofer of Broome said they would be voting against it though they ended up casting a yes vote.

"I would vote for $30 million, and I ask that we consider circling back to that. I won't support this at that number ($35.87 million)," Federice said before the vote.

Weinhofer voiced similar concerns while Supervisor Donald Airey of Blenheim also expressed skepticism though he never said he would vote against the measure.

"I will support this but not because I love it," Airey said, adding that he didn't favor one of the alternatives, to use part of the county's substantial fund balance (surplus) as front money for the broadband project.

"I don't like the debt load, but I want to protect our general fund and reserve fund (fund balance)," said Airey.

A roll call vote on the bond resolution ended up being unanimous after county Treasurer Mary Ann Wollaber-Bryan and Andrew Watkins of Fiscal Advisors addressed the board. Those two and others will be putting together details of the bond issuance now that the resolution has been approved.

Wollaber-Bryan has described the $35.87 million figure as a safeguard reflecting the project's $33.3 million estimated cost and $1.6 million in contingencies.

"There is no intention to actually borrow the full $35 million," she said at the March 21 BOS meeting. "An initial $15 million is what we would go with. We could decide to borrow less or borrow more. We don't want to cut ourselves short so that we have invoices coming in and we have no way to pay them."

The bond resolution states the broadband project will be "initially funded with the remaining ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) funds in the amount of $204,635.14."

Also approved by the BOS at the March 21 meeting was a State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) resolution stating that the broadband project will have no significant impact on the environment.

In other actions, the board approved eight appointments to the Schoharie County Youth Board. Appointed were Janine Pustolka of Cobleskill (term expires Dec. 31, 2026); Matthew Wilms of Seward (Dec. 31, 2028); Da-Lai Wu of Schoharie (Dec. 31, 2028); Meghan Keaney of Sharon Springs (Dec. 31, 2028); Dan Cornwell of Sharon Springs (Dec. 31, 2027); Jeffrey Sperbeck of Seward (Dec. 31, 2027); Melissa Bevins of Middleburgh (Dec. 31, 2027) and Marissa Karker of Schoharie (Dec. 31, 2027).

The board also approved the appointment of Jessica Beretz to a farmer seat on the Schoharie County Agricultural and Farmland Protection Board, term to expire Oct. 1, 2027.

 

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County Board Disagrees With State's Solitary Confinement Rules

By Chris English

SCHOHARIE COUNTY — New York State's Long-Term Solitary Confinement Act (HALT) is misguided and should be repealed, according to a resolution approved by the Schoharie County Board of Supervisors at its Friday, March 21 meeting.

The act was cited as one of the main reasons for the recent unauthorized strike by more than 2,000 state prison guards.

Signed into law in 2021 and effective on April 1 of 2022, the HALT Act limits segregated (disciplinary) confinement of inmates to the Special Housing Unit (SHU) or in a separate keeplock housing unit to a maximum of 15 consecutive days or 20 total days within any 60-day period, according to the Schoharie County resolution.

"These time limits may not be meaningfully extended even where an inmate has committed such serious acts as attempting to escape, physical or sexual assault on staff and other inmates, or even homicide," the document added.

It continued that since the HALT Act went into effect, the number of daily assaults in NYS correctional facilities has gone up from 6.8 to 8.1 a day, an increase of 25 percent.

"The HALT Act essentially eliminates any meaningful disciplinary sanctions for inmates who commit violent acts," the resolution stated. "Convicted murderers, career violent criminals and other dangerous inmates already serving life sentences in particular now have virtually no significant disincentive to commit violent acts while incarcerated."

It goes on to say that the HALT Act is unnecessary because even prior to the Act "confinement to the SHU did not constitute true 'solitary confinement' and could only be imposed subject to significant procedural safeguards, including notice and a hearing."

The resolution calls on the New York State Legislature and Governor Kathy Hochul to "enact immediately legislation repealing S.2836 known as the HALT Act, and restoring the prior inmate disciplinary framework."

In other actions from the March 21 meeting, the county BOS approved a resolution authorizing Chairman Bill Federice of Conesville to execute an agreement with Carver Construction, Inc. for replacement of the Ecker Hollow Road culvert in Schoharie. The total price is not to exceed $629,145.

Also approved was a resolution that schedules a public hearing for the next BOS meeting at 9 a.m. April 18 relating to the need for acquiring a fee title/easement for land that could be needed for replacing the Engleville Road Bridge over West Creek in the Town of Sharon.

The parcel in question is at 263 Engleville Road "owned now or formerly by the Estate of Ray Aker Jr." the resolution stated. It added that the "public be notified that there is no proposed alternate location for this project."

 

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County Board Hears Presentations On Grant Programs

By Chris English

SCHOHARIE COUNTY — The Schoharie County Board of Supervisors seemed agreeable to applying for one grant program and heard about the success of another at its Friday, March 21 meeting.

County Planning and Community Services Director Shane Nickle and Schoharie Economic Enterprise Corporation (SEEC) Executive Director Julie Pacatte addressed the board early in the meeting, with Pacatte's talk also featuring a visual presentation on a screen including charts and graphs.

Nickle briefed board members on the advantages of applying for County Wide Micro Enterprise grants under the federal Community Development Block Grant program while Pacatte talked about a similar grant program she said has brought a lot of success during the last four years.

Nickle said the county would be applying for a grant of $240,000 designed to help eight small businesses in the next two years. He added that he's looking to put the application in for April. Some of the qualifications would be a low to moderate income business owner with a business of five employees or less including the owner. The business could have no more than $200,000 in liquid assets.

Nickle added that grant money could only be used for machinery and similar uses and could not be used for real estate, paying off debt or construction. The owner would also have to be current on all property taxes.

Pacatte said a Digital Strategies program started in 2021 in the wake of the Coronavirus Pandemic involved cooperation between SEEC, the county and the villages of Middleburgh and Schoharie. She continued that the program has had $1.2 million to work with since 2021 and has benefitted 39 businesses and the two villages.

"Overall, it created 18 full-time equivalent jobs and 30 jobs total when you include part-time," she said. "We Wi-Fied Middleburgh and Schoharie and provided free access to the Internet for many residents. Two-thirds of the businesses benefited were women owned."

Among the positive results of the program were solar powered charging stations near benches in the two villages where residents could charge their phones or computers for free, Pacatte said.

 

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CRCS Proposes Third Budget Draft

By Joshua Walther

COBLESKILL - At the last CRCS Board of Education meeting on Monday, Superintendent Matthew Sickles presented the third version of the 2025-26 budget to be voted on in May.

Before he jumped into the numbers, Superintendent Sickles noted the severe backlash over the past two iterations from the public.

“I know the mission statement sounds hypocritical, and I can do nothing to change some people’s minds,” he said. “But I have an obligation to serve the students of today and hand off the district in the future.”

He began the presentation by noting that the previous budget gap at the beginning of March was $868,034, and the district has been looking for more savings wherever they can.

The first adjustment was the walk-back on the proposed school resource officer addition, which saved approximately $90,000.

Superintendent Sickles also explained that the school psychologist addition would now be financially offset by a new behavior support and math intervention shift, but said that the registered nurse addition is non-negotiable because of state law. There would also be no change in cutting the librarian or art teacher positions from the last proposal.

With these new changes, the budget gap would be lowered to $680,334, but several other cuts to non-student-facing areas were considered, such as contractual services, materials and supplies, and a summer budget adjustment, bringing the new gap down further to $262,150.

“That’s it,” Superintendent Sickles said once the number was revealed. “There’s nothing left to cut.”

Before the final presentation on April 7th, the district hopes to receive $80,000 more in Foundation Aid, then use $182,150 to close the gap and balance the budget.

However, member Jason Gagnon suggested that the district was being too conservative with their interest number of $600,000.

“We’ve grossly underestimated parts of the budget, especially the interest,” he said. “If you raise it to $900,000, then that more than covers the gap and the two cut positions.”

However, the rest of the Board argued that while the actual interest number is higher than what they budgeted, they cannot become reliant on raising it because it may dip from year to year.

When Superintendent Sickles asked for direction for the April 7th presentation, Mr. Gagnon said that he stands in opposition to the suggestions.

“I will not support a budget without a librarian or an art teacher,” he said.

Meanwhile, President Bruce Tryon, Vice President Dominga Lent, and Steven Philbrick supported the budget’s changes.

Members Aimee Yorke and Mary Black both spoke at length about not liking the cut positions, but said that they would support it regardless.

Finally, member Susan Strasser was torn, but ultimately decided that she will only support the budget if they use their reserves to cover the cost of keeping the positions.

With a majority in favor of the budget, Superintendent Sickles will use that information to guide the final presentation before the vote.

 

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New Analysis Exposes CRCS Misstatement

By Joshua Walther

COBLESKILL - A new report from the New York State United Teachers has brought information on CRCS’s flawed budgeting process to light.

The analysis, which was released in January of this year, covers an audit of the budget versus actuals over the past three years and states that CRCS has historically overestimated their expenditures and underestimated their revenues.

“The percent difference between actual and budgeted expenditures ranged from 4.5% to 6.6% under budget over the three-year period,” the report reads. “For the three-year period, the district under-spent its budgets by a net total of $7,451,982.”

The report continues to the revenue side, saying “The percent difference between projected and actual revenues ranged from 2.7% to 3.6% over projection and averaged 3.1% over projections for the three-year period. Over the last three years, actual revenues exceeded district projections by a total of $3,916,239.”

The analysis also goes through each of the district’s restricted and unrestricted reserves and points out inaccurate numbers, such as “This district had $3.2 million in a Reserve for State and Local Retirement System Contributions which can only be used for costs associated with the State and Local Retirement System. The district has only budgeted an annual payment of $765,376 to ERS.”

However, one of the most important pieces comes from the report’s summary, which indicates that there is more money than the district seems to let on in budget workshops.

“For the three-year period covered by this analysis, the district had a net operating surplus of $11,368,221 … Of this surplus, $12,495,348 was transferred to restricted accounts. The deficit of $1,127,127 balance, together with $3,711,269 transferred from the unrestricted fund balance and $12 of accounting adjustments, were used during the three-year period to cover the cost of district operations.”

The report’s math is also backed up by Cobleskill resident Garrett Cole, the chief financial advisor for the National Alliance for Direct Support Professionals for the past three years, who similarly compared the district’s budget versus actuals over the last six years.

“The Board paints a grim picture of the district when, in reality, there’s a $3.7 million surplus on average over five of the six years that we have reports for,” Mr. Cole said.

Despite this surplus and the district’s tendency to overestimate their budget, the tax levy has only increased year by year, and this next budget plans to escalate the increase by a further 2.55%.

“Because of this misstatement between what they say and what’s happening, we’re paying more in tax dollars than we need to,” concluded Mr. Cole.

When this discrepancy was brought up at Monday’s CRCS Board of Education meeting by member Jason Gagnon, a vehement opponent of the newest budget, the Board was reluctant to change their numbers or the proposed cuts.

Vice President Dominga Lent spoke to a $2 million number that is used to balance the budget for gaps like these, but did not address the larger $3.7 million that was brought up by a member of the public.

Mr. Gagnon disagreed with the Board’s position, saying “We’re spending two million dollars, and we say it’s not sustainable, but we’re almost making double that back.”

He also alluded to the fact that he is the only Board member with children still in the district. “The mission statement is being disregarded,” he said. “I’m worried that these cuts are going to create an environment where it’s harder to recruit teachers while under-serving our children we have.”

The rest of the Board thanked Mr. Gagnon for stating his opinion, then moved on to discuss other matters, declining to speak further on the discrepancy.

 

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Budget Crunch Forces Layoffs In Sharon Springs CSD

By Chris English

SHARON SPRINGS — Sharon Springs School Board members had the very unpleasant task of approving the layoffs of three teachers and one psychologist at their Monday, March 24 meeting.

The board voted unanimously at the end of the meeting to approve the agenda item marked "resolution to abolish 2025-2026 positions." The positions were two full-time equivalent elementary education tenure positions, one 0.5 FTE K-12 art tenure position and one 0.5 FTE school psychologist tenure position.

The action was done without comment during the meeting, but after the meeting Superintendent Thomas Yorke explained that the layoffs were necessary to help close a 2025-26 budget deficit that had stood at $500,000. The layoffs and other cost-saving measures will bring that deficit down to around $25,000 to $50,000, he added.

The necessity of the layoffs sure didn't make them any easier, Yorke emphasized in a conversation with this newspaper after the meeting.

"Extremely hard on a number of levels," he said. "These are peoples' lives and livelihoods and passions. These are people that I care about.

"I remember my grandfather talking about living through the Great Depression and my father talking about how hard it was being laid off at General Electric in 1987. There are Great Depressions and periods of Depression, but I think every time someone loses a job, it's a depression."

Yorke said these are the first layoffs in his three years as superintendent but the district has experienced them in the past, including some "deep ones" in 2008 when he was an English teacher at the school. One of the big reasons for the tight budget and need for layoffs is stagnant foundational state aid, he added.

In other personnel moves, the board approved tenure for Elementary Education teacher Rebecca Sniffin and Secondary Social Studies teacher Dennis Strk.

After some remarks by Senior Class President Isabella Perrotti and Class Advisor Chris Smith, the board granted their requests for the Senior Class trip later this year. It will actually be two trips on two straight days without any overnight stays this year.

The class will travel to Springfield, Massachusetts on June 17 to visit the Basketball Hall of Fame and then stay in the general area to take in Six Flags New England. Dinner at Crossgates Mall is on the itinerary later that day. The next day, the 10-member Class of 2025 will travel to Syracuse to visit the Spirit Mall and then enjoy other activities that day as well.

Yorke said this is the smallest senior class he can remember at Sharon Springs CSD and that it has had its share of fundraising and other challenges because of starting their high school years in the wake of the Coronavirus Pandemic and other factors.

The board also approved the school calendar, board meetings calendar and all the other various calendars for 2025-26. The first day of classes for students is Sept. 4 after two days of staff development Sept. 2-3.

 

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Public Outrage Over CRCS Cuts

By Joshua Walther

COBLESKILL — On Monday evening, the public surged into the CRCS Board of Education meeting to speak out against the proposed budget cuts of an elementary librarian position.

The cut suggests that the full-time position will be eliminated, and librarians from other buildings will cover that shift to keep the Radez library open on certain days.

Upon opening the public comment period, President Bruce Tryon asked that comments be kept to two minutes, and noted that the Board will not respond to such comments.

In total, there were seven speakers that advocated for the district keeping the position, and they ranged from parents to faculty to even a student.

The first was from a parent of four children that would be impacted, and found it strange that instructional staff is being considered for a cut when they make up less than half of the district’s total staff.

“It’s really hard to believe that there are no cuts to be made elsewhere,” the parent said.

Another speaker, a graduate from CRCS, gave her own testimonial on how much the middle school library meant to her.

“The librarian on staff then helped me survive middle school. That’s what you would be taking away. We should try to avoid student-facing cuts.”

A CRCS librarian was also given the chance to speak, saying that Radez students have read a total of 60,000 minutes in just the month of March alone.

“Reading is so important to these students. They need the library.”

Each participant continued to back the sentiments of those who came before, but it was a currently enrolled high school student that may have gotten the largest applause of the night.

“I’ve never seen students get as invested in a budget as they are in this one,” she said, commenting on the overwhelming support for the cut positions. “What I’m hearing is that they want their librarian, and they want their art teacher. If you get rid of these teachers, you are ruining their programs.”

Member Jason Gagnon made his own position known, siding with the outraged audience. “You don’t fall in love with reading by reading excerpts in a classroom. You fall in love by reading books.”

He went further with statistical information about the affected students, saying “32% of students are grade-proficient. That means two thirds of the student body aren’t being supported.”

All members of the Board lamented the loss of the librarian, but Vice President Dominga Lent offered her thoughts, believing that the other librarians filling in will still foster an area for reading.

“I completely disagree,” said Mr. Gagnon. “We’re destroying the library. We’d create a generation who wouldn’t read.”

The Board took both the public comments and the remarks from Mr. Gagnon in stride and thanked everyone for advocating, but ultimately refused to change the cuts.

 

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Family Farm Day 2025 Registration is now OPEN!

COBLESKILL — Cornell Cooperative Extension of Schoharie and Otsego Counties (CCESO) is delighted to announce that the 13th Annual Family Farm Day (FFD) will be held on Saturday, August 23, and Sunday, August 24, 2025. CCESO welcomes and encourages farms and agricultural businesses in Schoharie, Otsego, and Delaware Counties to register and participate in Family Farm Day, regardless of previous participation.

Registration is now open and FFD registrations will be accepted through Wednesday, April 30, 2025. Information regarding farm eligibility, registration, contacts, and agritourism resources can be found online at www.familyfarmday.org. Farms that have participated in previous years may register directly online. Farms that have not participated in FFD in the past should contact their county coordinator to confirm their farm’s eligibility. Farms in Schoharie and Otsego Counties can contact Kelley Doolin at 518.234.4303 (x119), or kmd322@cornell.edu. Farms in Delaware County can contact Desiree Keever at 607.865.6531, or dnk2@cornell.edu. 

CCESO is immensely grateful for the contribution that every participating farm makes to Family Farm Day (FFD), a highly anticipated signature agritourism event in our region. Each farm operation is unique. As an education-based organization, CCE Schoharie-Otsego & CCE Delaware strongly encourage farmers to use FFD as an opportunity to educate visitors about your farm, animals, and products. FFD is a special day and an opportunity to connect the public with agriculture. FFD also provides local farms and related businesses with the opportunity to introduce current and new customers to diverse, high-quality products, generate and boost farm sales, build long-term customer bases, and share the ever-evolving farm stories that keep the importance of agriculture in the public dialogue. “Our signature agritourism event continues to thrive,” said Liz Callahan, Executive Director for CCE Schoharie and Otsego Counties. “The feedback from participating farms and visitors has been overwhelmingly positive over the years.”

 

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Upcoming Honor Flight For Veterans

By Alexis Pencar

SHARON SPRINGS — There is an upcoming Honor Flight to Washington D.C. for Veterans this coming April 23rd, 2025 with available space for Veterans and Guardians. This is a wonderful and honorable experience for the whole group and is something Veterans should do at least once!

This Honor Flight is put on by Patriot Flight Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated to honoring America's veterans for their sacrifices. This group is a member of the National Honor Flight Network serving 7 counties in NY including Albany, Rensselaer, Schenectady, Saratoga, Greene, Washington, and Columbia Counties as well as parts of Vermont and Massachusetts 

An Honor Flight is an organized day trip from Albany to Washington, D.C., allowing Veterans to visit and reflect at their memorials. Priority is given to Senior Veterans, such as WWII survivors, and those with terminal illnesses, followed by Korean and Vietnam War Veterans. These trips are an experience of a life-time and are provided at no cost to the Veterans. 

During the November 8th, 2024, Sharon Silver & Gold Senior Club’s Luncheon meeting at the Sharon Springs Firehouse, Greg Furlong President of Leatherstocking Honor Flight, spoke about the good work they get to do by taking Veterans to Washington DC to see the memorials themselves. He said the goal is that “Veterans are appreciated” and “feel like rockstars they really are”. They visit the different war memorials with a large group of people and according to Furlong, “It is a very powerful day and we are proud to do what we do, humbled by it too”

If you are interested and available, the next flight is scheduled for April 23, 2025, and there are openings for veterans and guardians. Applications can be submitted via email to PatriotFlight.Applications@gmail.com or please visit https://patriotflight.org/ for more information.

 

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