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Delaware League Standings

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 12/19/25 | 12/19/25

Delaware League Varsity Boys Basketball (12 league games)

Jefferson/Stamford                        1-0     1-2

SKCS/Andes                                  1-0     1-2

HTC                                                0-0     2-3

Windham                                        0-0     1-2

Charlotte Valley                              0-0     1-3

Margaretville                                   0-0     0-2

Gilboa Conesville/Roxbury             0-2     1-2


Delaware League Varsity Girls Basketball (8 league games)

Stamford/Jefferson                        2-0     3-1

HTC                                               1-0      3-2

Margaretville                                  0-0     1-3

SKCS/Andes                                  0-1     1-4

Gilboa Conesville/Roxbury            0-2      1-5


Delaware League JV Boys Basketball (10 league games)

Gilboa Conesville/Roxbury            2-0     3-1

Charlotte Valley                              0-0    1-1

Margaretville                                   0-0    0-2

HTC                                                0-0    0-3

Jefferson/Stamford                        0-1    0-1

SKCS/Andes                                  0-1    0-1


Delaware League JV Girls Basketball (8 league games)

Stamford/Jefferson                        2-0    4-0

Gilboa Conesville/Roxbury            1-1    4-1

Margaretville                                   0-0   0-2

HTC                                                0-1    1-2

SKCS/Andes                                  0-1    1-3


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Residents Concerned About Chicken Processing Plant in Village

By Liz Page

STAMFORD – There were 20 people present for Tuesday’s monthly meeting of the Stamford Village Board, according to Village Clerk Jamison Hanway. They were concerned about a comment made last month by Mayor Robert Schneider regarding a chicken processing plant at the former Catskill Craftsman complex on West End Ave.

Village Code Enforcement Officer Rich Irwin explained nothing is formal at this point. The only thing the village has received is an application for a zoning permit which does not list what foods would be processed.

The area is zoned commercial so it is an allowable use provided it meets the village water usage law.

Once a site plan application is submitted, it would fall under the jurisdiction of the village planning board which would then follow the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) process. That process would involve public hearings.

Those present were concerned about notifications and asked that the public be informed by the posting of meeting agendas.


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Harpersfield Has a Light Agenda

By Liz Page

HARPERSFIELD – Members of the Harpersfield Town Board held a short meeting as the fiscal year winds down.

They renewed the contract with Headwaters EMS, but will ask a representative to attend next month’s meeting to provide an update on the ambulance service the towns of Harpersfield, Stamford and Kortright provide funds to for a not-for-profit service. They would like to know how the service is doing and discuss the finances.

Board members learned that Positive Pay has been set up and changes are being made to the town’s website in accordance with recommendations. 

The town transfer station will be closed on Christmas Eve, Dec. 24 and Christmas Day, Dec.25.

Board members also approved renewal of the contract with the Delaware County Planning Department in the amount of $3,500.

The town’s Comprehensive Highway Improvement Program (DHIPS) funding has been submitted for town roadways. They have also submitted paperwork for the purchase of the truck. Those payments may be received in March or April.

Highway Superintendent Russell Hatch is looking to sell the town’s 2005 S550 and the skid steer used at the transfer station. Supervisor Driscoll said the must find a replacement for the skid steer before it can be sold.

The town is still in conversations with attorneys regarding the assessment on the Walgreen building.

The board moved into executive session to discuss litigation.


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Local Christmas Services

Mountain Beacon Parish Christmas Eve and Candlelight Services:

4p Hobart United Methodist Church

5:00p Gilboa United Methodist Church

5:30p Bloomville United Methodist Church

6p Jefferson United Methodist Church

6:30p Stamford Presbyterian/United Methodist Church

8p Harpersfield United Methodist Church

All are welcome to any of these services!


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New Trucks & Mail Issues In Kortright

By Mary A. Crisafulli

KORTRIGHT - Budgeting for highway trucks and addressing mail delivery issues were top discussions at the final 2025 Kortright Town Board meeting on Dec. 15.

Two community members asked the board for assistance with United States Postal Service (USPS) deliveries that have been delayed. They noted that some individuals might be awaiting much-needed prescription medications. After visiting the post office, the couple reported that the staff were unable to locate their packages.

Bloomville residents have mail delivery through the Delhi USPS since the Bloomville office shut down over four years ago. The mail courier with the Bloomville route has recently retired, leaving residents without consistent deliveries.

Several other residents note similar issues, commiserating and seeking collaborative solutions in the Facebook group "Bloomville, NY news and events." One individual reports not receiving mail for nearly a week, while another calls on people to email the postal service or state representatives.  

Although the board recognized the issue's significance, Supervisor George Haynes noted that it is a matter for the federal government. He did offer to author a letter to be sent to the senator and congressman.

Congressman Josh Riley offers a casework request form for issues with federal agencies. The form can be filled out by visiting riley.house.gov and clicking the "help with a federal agency" link.

In another discussion, Harry Craft, deputy highway superintendent, reported that the emergency truck is failing. He noted that the town has budgeted for a new truck to come in spring, but the crew needs to make it through winter first. Without a bay to examine, Craft said it could require a power steering pump costing more than $10,000.

While acknowledging the disappointment in spending money on a truck that will be decommissioned soon, Councilmember Michael Pietrantoni said they don’t have a choice. The truck is needed through winter, he concluded.

The board ultimately approved the truck's repair. Haynes noted that another truck will become available in fall 2026. The board could open a bond to purchase this one as well, to ensure fleet reliability, he said. The truck could then be budgeted for in 2027.

The part-time heavy equipment CDL operators' pay rate was set at $25 per hour.

Town Historian Nancy Haynes resigned from her position effective Jan. 1. The town will seek a replacement.

Pietrantoni noted an issue with a logging company operating a skidder up a town roadway and over a stream crossing. Craft will check for damage in the area.

The board entered an executive session to discuss a personnel issue.

The organizational meeting is scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 1, at 10 a.m., with the highway garage inventory to follow immediately.


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Pistol League Scores

Team and High Individual Match Scores 12/12/25  Match IX

Stamford beat Rockdale: 1099-14X to 1061-16X

High Stamford Scores were from: Gus Mueller 284-5X; Carl Tubbs 276-5X; Steve Baker 273-0X; and Jim Hitt 266-4X

Other Stamford Shooters were: David Ferris, Larry VanDeusen, and Maynard Vance

High Scores for Rockdale were: Rob Gould 273-5X; Pat Hawkins 263-7X; Jason Fleming 263-3X; and Rick Braun 262-1X

Other Rockdale Shooters were: Dave Dewey, Steve Ingalls, Tom Reese, Rick Jaycox, Cole Fleming, Jennine Noxon, Gloria Galley, David Smith, Dave VanValenburg, and Joe Ocasio 

Walton defeats Oneonta: 1094-13X to 1068-15X

Sidney defeated Delhi:  1056-16X to 960-7X


Win/Loss Record:

Walton:                                8-1

Stamford                              8-1

Oneonta:                              4-5

Sidney:                                 4-5

Rockdale:                             2-7

Delhi:                                    1-8


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DWI Arrest in Delhi

DELHI — Sheriff Craig S. DuMond announced the arrest of a Yonkers resident for driving while intoxicated.

On Sunday morning, November 23rd, Sheriff’s Deputies were on patrol in the Town of Delhi where they observed a vehicle fail to stop at a stop sign on Scotch Mountain Road. Deputies conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, identifying him as 19-year-old Jack O’Malley of Yonkers. 

Upon completion of the investigation, Sheriff’s Deputies arrested and charged O’Malley with Driving While Intoxicated, a misdemeanor of the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law. Deputies also issued traffic summonses for Operating a Motor Vehicle after Consuming Alcohol-Under 21 and Fail to Stop at Stop Sign, both violations in the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law.

Upon completion of arrest processing, O’Malley was released on appearance tickets and traffic summonses and is to appear in the Town of Delhi Court at a later date to answer the charges.


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Alleged Unlicensed Operation Arrest following 18 Suspensions

ROXBURY — Sheriff Craig S. DuMond announced the arrest of a Grand Gorge resident for aggravated unlicensed operation in the second degree.

On Thursday night, December 4th, Sheriff’s Deputies were traveling on State Highway 30, in the Town of Roxbury. Deputies observed a vehicle parked in the northbound lane of State Highway 30 with the vehicle's hazard lights activated. Deputies made contact with the driver, who was identified as 40-year-old Peter Williams of Grand Gorge. Upon further investigation, it was determined that Williams’ drivers license was suspended for failure to answer summons with a total of 18 suspensions. 

Upon completion of the investigation, Sheriff’s Deputies arrested and charged Williams with Aggravated Unlicensed Operation in the Second Degree, a misdemeanor, and Unlicensed Operator, a violation, both offenses of the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law.

Upon completion of arrest processing, Williams was released on an appearance ticket and traffic summonses and is to appear in the Town of Roxbury Court at a later date to answer the charges. 


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Alleged E-Bike DWI

DELHI — Sheriff Craig S. DuMond announced the arrest of a Meridale resident for driving while intoxicated.

On Monday night, December 1st, Sheriff’s Deputies were patrolling on State Highway 10 in the Town of Delhi and observed an E-Bike traveling on State Highway 10 between the shoulder of the roadway and the driving lane. It was also observed by Deputies that the operator of the E-Bike was operating in a 55mph zone, which is prohibited and it was further observed that the operator was not wearing a helmet as required by law. Deputies conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, who was identified as 51-year-old Daniel White of Meridale. 

Upon completion of the investigation, Sheriff Deputies arrested and charged White with Driving While Intoxicated, a felony of the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law. White was issued additional traffic summonses for Unlawful Operation of an E-Bike on a Highway greater than 30 mph, Operating E-Bike while Impaired, and Operating a Class Three E Bicycle without a Helmet, all violations in the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law.

White was released on an appearance ticket and traffic summonses and is scheduled to appear in the Town of Delhi Court at a later date to answer the charges.


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Two Retire From Stamford Town Board

By Liz Page

HOBART – With two long-time council members retiring from the Stamford Town Board, last Wednesday’s meeting ended with a reception to honor Dan Deyseroth for his 16 years and Dave Post’s 11 to 15 years of service to the town. Post was not sure how many years, having come in on an appointment and then running for the office with a few years in between.

Stamford will open the new year with two new board members and two with one year of experience each. They will also have a new highway superintendent, who was elected.

Board members approved paying the 2025 bills as they filter in to save on budget adjustments.

Deputy Highway Superintendent Kevin Rinehart gave his report on the highway department, saying they have been working to stay ahead of the snowflakes. In between they have been working on the old Mack to have a spare truck. The issue of a salt shortage has been rectified.

Mike Cairns of LVDV was present to present a new connection to the South Kortright sewer system. It has been designed by a professional engineer at the cost of the property owner. It has also met the other criteria required by the sewer law. The application fee has been paid and the cost to hook into the sewer is $5,000, again at the expense of the property owner. The inspector has approved the connection and town board gave its approval for the connection.

Board members also approved a five-year extension to a Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILLOT) with the Western Catskills Community Revitalization Council in the apartment complex in the village of Stamford. The town’s attorney will draft an agreement which was at 3 percent. The extension will be 5 percent.

The tow dog control officer passed the inspection from the state Agriculture and Markets Department. They also expected and approved the county shelter in Delhi. There was discussion last month that the town dog control officer did not answer the phone. She is willing to give up the position and Doug McMullen said he was interested in the position and will do some research before letting Supervisor John Kosier know for certain.

A proposal to place a memorial bench for Dan Deysenroth’s grandfather, Howard Nichols was approved by the board. Nichols was a long -time town supervisor and chairman of the Delaware County Board of Supervisors.

The two outgoing council members were asked if they had any words of wisdom to offer the incoming council members. Deysenroth said never be afraid to ask questions. Chances are that if you don’t understand something, others do not either. Post said you need to be aware of your surroundings and to do what is best for the community as a whole. 




Stamford Supervisor John Kosier stands between two long time council members who are retiring, Dan Deysenroth, (left) 16 years and Dave Post (right), more than 11 years.They were honored during a reception following last Wednesday’s town board meeting.



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“Anywhere you go in the world, people are the same:” A Delaware County humanitarian in eastern Ukraine

By Rianna Pauline Starheim


This reporting was supported by the International Women’s Media Foundation’s Women on the Ground: Reporting from Ukraine’s Unseen Frontlines Initiative, in partnership with the Howard G. Buffett Foundation.

Bryan Many works on a humanitarian shelter budget on his laptop as his Ukrainian colleague, ⁠Serhii, drives the highway from Kharkiv to Dnipro in eastern Ukraine. Due to jamming to interfere with drones, the GPS shows the car near Lima, Peru.


This straight ribbon of winter highway connecting Kharkiv and Dnipro in eastern Ukraine could easily be rural America: Route 88 between Oneonta and Binghamton in upstate New York, perhaps, or Route 55 tracing the northeastward line from Bloomington to Chicago in Illinois. Wipers steadily clear the light rain that repeatedly obscures the windshield, limiting the field of view. Trees are silhouetted against a horizon that disappears into fog in all directions. It’s the perfect day from a security perspective: weather that blurs the view from the skies, and grounds Russian drones. Weather you can hide behind.


Delaware County native Bryan Many, 37, sits shotgun in the mud-streaked SUV, writing a multimillion-dollar humanitarian aid budget on a computer open on his lap. His Ukrainian colleague, ⁠Serhii, drives and the two make easy conversation in English about the impact electric vehicles will have on America’s massive network of gas stations, plans for Christmas, and Serhii’s 11-year-old cat and two-year-old dog, who get along well. ⁠Serhii asks whether the United States will withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO); he’s been reading about that in the news. Bryan says he doesn’t know. You never know. It might.


Headlights of oncoming traffic emerge like eyes from the fog: a civilian cement truck, 10-wheeler tractor trailers, coach buses, many muddy and weathered passenger cars. Occasionally, a military vehicle passes, camouflage netting blowing wildly in the wind and with a cage around its forehead to protect from drones (the drone explodes on impact with the cage, rather than directly on the vehicle skin, reducing damage). The car passes a civilian café with plywood over the windows, operational again after a Russian drone attack in late October. 


Every 50 miles or so, the car slows and then stops at a checkpoint, where Ukrainian soldiers check ⁠Serhii’s identification on his phone. Most Ukrainians carry their national identity documents electronically through a government app called Diia. Ukrainian males over the age of 25 are eligible for a national draft that has conscripted more than a million men since the beginning of martial law in February 2022. As the war nears its fourth year and casualties mount, desertion has increased. The military uses drones to find men trying to leave the country illegally and in cities, conscription officers patrol the metro and other public places, checking documents. For 25 to 60-year-old Ukrainian men, this type of encounter could be life changing.


The Diia app, which Ukrainians use to store their national identification cards. In the section of the app that’s shown, users can view military job vacancies and apply to join the military. Some of the jobs shown on this screen include Master Explosive Technician for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), Aircraft Maintenance Technician, Warehouse Clerk, and the highly coveted position of UAV Pilot.


The road from Kharkiv to Dnipro is quiet now, but in February and March of 2022, Ukrainian tanks rolled over this pavement and warplanes flew overhead as Russia carried out a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, occupying twenty percent of the country and dramatically escalating conflict that had been simmering since 2014, when Russia annexed the 10,000-square-mile Crimean Peninsula, still claimed by Ukraine. In 2025, this road is no longer a front line—that’s dozens of miles away—but still, forest green armored vehicles and small military encampments surrounded by sandbags are visible through the mist and the trees.


Bryan has been based in eastern Ukraine for more than a year working with an international humanitarian organization that has offices in central Kharkiv split across three spaces within a one-block radius, all in basements so staff can stay as safe as possible in the event of an attack and carry on with their work during air alarms. The fluorescent-lit rooms are filled with the basic physical tools from which humanitarian work is coordinated: simple desks, printers, shelves, pens and highlighters, an almost-empty container of animal crackers, detailed maps on the walls, a water kettle, microwave, and espresso machine. Muted laughter, clicking keyboards and conversations in Ukrainian and English set a quiet soundtrack. A colleague begins a video call with a wry, “We hope the electricity will allow us to have this conversation.” There is evidence of the previous lives of these spaces: an empty barista counter from when one of the offices was a coffee shop; gilded burgundy sofas and brightly painted brick walls in the office that used to be a bar. On a whiteboard in the fluorescent-lit basement where Bryan works—a former electronics repair store—someone has written in careful marker in English: May your homes be filled with love and laughter—and electricity, water, and heat. Then in Ukrainian: Stay strong, Ukraine.

Bryan in a central Kharkiv metro stop. Metro stations in Kharkiv and Kyiv were built deep into the ground during the Cold War to double as shelters in case of American nuclear attack or other bombing. Six metro stations currently also serve as schools for Kharkiv's children. Most Ukrainian schools moved online in 2020 for the COVID-19 pandemic, then children continued to study from home due to the war.


As project manager, Bryan manages a portfolio of more than $5 million for emergency and recovery shelter programs across three teams of more than a dozen people, based in the eastern Ukrainian cities of Kharkiv, Dnipro, and Sumy. A typical day might include discussions with the team to stay current on evolving needs and resource allocation, United Nations-coordinated cluster meetings with other organizations to align work, hours of writing budgets, video calls with colleagues in other cities, tracking progress to make sure project timelines are met, and site visits to buildings where projects have replaced windows damaged by explosions or given funds to help displaced Ukrainians cover security deposits and rent. The humanitarian response strives to aid civilians most impacted by the conflict, with the shelter program helping repair war-related damages and winterize buildings, often near current front lines and in territory previously occupied by Russia. “It’s strange, because obviously you don’t want to encourage people to stay in a dangerous place,” Bryan says. “But at the same time, if people are going to stay regardless, then it’s important that they are warm.” 


Ukraine is Bryan’s first war, but by the time he arrived in Kharkiv in November of last year, he had extensive experience with travel and work in high-risk areas. As an accident-prone, dirt bike-loving boy growing up on a veal farm in Township, Bryan’s childhood was a sequence of low and medium-grade emergency medical responses, to the resigned chagrin of his former-nurse mom. Watching the destruction of the 2010 Haiti earthquake unfold on a television, Bryan saw a commercial asking viewers to text a number to donate. “It struck me how convenient it was that you could help from your couch,” he says. “I found it both brilliant and depressing.” Instead, he was motivated to leave the United States for the first time, joining the international humanitarian response at 21 years old to help disassemble damaged and unsafe buildings left behind from the earthquake. 


Since then, his work and travels have taken him across roughly three years each of humanitarian response in Guatemala, Colombia, and the Bahamas, with shorter stints interspersed elsewhere: distributing non-food items in a refugee camp in Greece, building an award-winning pavilion out of more than 7,000 used car tires in China, navigating flood response on a shoestring budget in Honduras, a wilderness Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) course, travels in Nicaragua, years understanding and learning to manage long-term effects of Lyme Disease, a wildlife firefighting stint one summer—the list goes on. In each place, he says, it’s “waking up every morning and then trying to figure out how to maximize the day. You try to learn as much as you can about so many different topics. The reason you’re there is to assess what has happened and to do something about it.” The experiences, he says, have “opened my eyes to so many things that all help shape my perspective. I find myself in places that are full of interesting stories.”




Bryan points to Sumy, a city where he manages a shelter team in eastern Ukraine.





“People ask me all the time, what do you notice about Ukraine?” Bryan says. “It’s always the insignificant things. When I arrived in Kharkiv and saw that people were still putting their trash out for somebody to come around and pick it up, I thought, Wow, I don’t have a good understanding of what war looks like.” Ukrainian gardens are impressively bountiful in the summer—“I think that’s still from the Soviet era, where food production was something to consider,” he says. When it snows in Kharkiv, an elaborate system of machinery takes to the streets, heavily staffed by a corps of workers shoveling snow onto machines resembling hay elevators, which lift the snow into dump trucks. Before arriving in Ukraine, “I figured all resources would have to go to the war. That was the first really strange thing, realizing that life on the surface is normal in many ways. There’s better garbage service than they have in Stamford.”



Day and nighttime views of a city government building on Freedom Square in central Kharkiv. The Ukrainian flag symbolizes a field of sunflowers under a bright blue sky. Ukraine is the second-largest producer of sunflower oil and seeds in the world, after Russia. On a clear day in the summer, sunflower fields in rural areas of eastern Ukraine stretch as far as the eye can see and beyond.



The conflict in Ukraine combines conventional weapons of war—rockets, artillery, tanks, machine guns, mines—with a wide array of dangerous new drone technology and advanced (and expensive) missiles. Hundreds of shahed-type suicide drones swarm the skies over Ukraine every night, and surveillance and first-person view (FPV) drones are used as infantry on the front lines. Russian munitions have led to a complicated air defense. The war has become a financial calculation, with both sides weighing whether it costs more to make a weapon or shoot it down. Several Ukrainian cities are guarded by Patriot air defense systems, but interceptor missiles cost millions of dollars each, making them an unviable defense against cheaply-made Russian drones. As a result, air defense sometimes takes the low-tech form of soldiers in pickup trucks driving around and shooting down drones. 


With drones flying on both sides of trenches, the war in Ukraine does not so much have a front line as a large expanse of front region, more than 12 miles of “grey zone” that can easily be reached with FPV drones from either side. Humanitarian organizations don’t participate or take sides in any war—but they do need to understand the contexts they work within to be able to safely navigate their work. Bryan’s team carefully monitors the evolving conflict, working closely with starostas—the rough equivalent of a local mayor—who often join them on field visits. It’s helpful to have this local guide in rural farming communities where—as in Delaware County—strong relationships hold a lot of weight.


When the Ukrainian government tracks the launch of Russian drones, incoming missiles, or the takeoff of aircraft that can launch missiles or drop bombs, air alarms sound across the city and a national Air Alert phone app advises individuals to shelter. In mid-December, this happened multiple times a day in Kharkiv, at least once a day in Dnipro, and several times a week in Kyiv. Walking the streets, there’s little response among Ukrainians: mothers continue to push baby carriages down the sidewalk, children laugh on playgrounds in parks, families continue visiting the lion, giraffe, leopard, and many meerkats of the Kharkiv Zoo. “It's terrible that bombs being dropped can be normalized,” Bryan says. “Everyone is carrying multiple traumas that go unnoticed because it is so commonplace.”


Immediately after an air alert, local channels on the Telegram messaging app fill with messages about drone movements and particularly high-risk neighborhoods—as well as hedgehog emojis and memes of hedgehogs running to and from cover. Jamming systems cause some drones navigating by GPS to lose orientation and air defenses shoot down many of the threats, although falling debris from the interception can also be a danger. As the trajectory of each attack unfolds, the Telegram channels track movements with impressive detail. “The whole thing is online,” Bryan says. “If you want to watch this war unfold in real time, you can.”


The war impacts life, but Ukrainians find ways to carry on, life persisting with a kind of meticulous pride. “I admire how there is every reason not to do something, but people decide to find a way to do it anyway,” Bryan says. The Kharkiv ballet, which Bryan and colleagues sometimes attend on weekends, holds performances on a makeshift stage in the basement of the Kharkiv Opera building, a looming Soviet postmodernist concrete structure nicknamed “The Aircraft Carrier” and completed in 1991, the same year Ukraine declared its independence from the Soviet Union. In Kharkiv’s Freedom Square, Ukrainians have fashioned a Game of Thrones-style “Iron Throne” where passersby can sit and take pictures, made of real rockets and mortars that were fired from Russia into Ukraine. Russian attacks on energy and other critical infrastructure have left most of Ukraine with frequent power cuts that in some cities last 16 hours a day. Still, generators hum on the sidewalks and Christmas carols play in English across restaurants and coffee shops, where there is inevitably a place to neatly hang winter coats.



Some of the generators that Ukrainians use to keep the lights on. Power generation facilities have been one of the primary targets of Russian attacks during the war, stressing the electrical infrastructure of the country. Blackouts are common, sometimes lasting up to 16 hours a day.



More than a year into life in Ukraine—and 15 years into his humanitarian career—Bryan has become accustomed to adjusting as he travels between places that can feel like different worlds. “Sometimes it goes better than others,” he says, “I can find it hard to relate to people at home.” When he visits, “I’ve been working abroad” leads to inevitable follow-up questions. “When you tell people that you’re in Ukraine, they have an image of what that means to them,” Bryan says. “Mostly people don’t know what to ask, which is fair enough. There aren’t too many opportunities to say what Ukraine is actually like.”


In Ukraine and everywhere he’s traveled, “It always goes back to the people I work with,” Bryan says. “Anywhere you go in the world, people are the same.” Humanitarian offices in Ukraine are swarming with stories—a multilingual weightlifter on the logistics team who is working toward his PhD; father of a young dancer who performs internationally; pediatrician who teaches at a local medical university on the side; colleague who makes and sells jewelry on Etsy and sat at home with a beer one night early in the war, watching orange rockets streak the sky. Some of Bryan’s colleagues were displaced from Crimea or the Donbas region, now occupied by Russia, with lives that have been many times interrupted by war. Although parts of life in a war zone have become normalized—frequent air alert sirens and power cuts, communal living and sleeping in a basement alongside other international colleagues, sipping ginger tea at a nice restaurant as drones fly over other districts of the city—Bryan continues to be amazed by the commitment of his Ukrainian colleagues to their work and their ability to carry on. “People will have spent the night in the basement or just in the bathroom because there’s been explosions all night and they are apologetic if they show up to work ten minutes late,” he says. “And you’re like, wait a second. It’s ok.”


The evening of December 12, with two minutes to spare before departure, Bryan catches a westbound sleeper train in Dnipro. He’s leaving on a trip out of the country, which non-Ukrainian staff are mandated to take every two months to prevent burnout. The airspace over Ukraine has been closed for civilian use since 2022, so Bryan will take a 19-hour train journey across the border, another hour and a half train to an airport in Poland, then fly to Egypt via a 12-hour layover in Istanbul. The sun will lap him several times before he reaches the Sinai Peninsula in northeastern Egypt, where he will complete a scuba diving course and take in some sun before returning to winter weather in Ukraine, just in time for Christmas.









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