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The Best Gifts from Schoharie County

Man Arrested for Allegedly Driving Occupied School Bus Drunk in Schoharie

Written By Editor on 2/14/22 | 2/14/22

On February 11, 2022, State Police in Cobleskill arrested 43-year-old Harry Olivier of Troy for three counts of Driving While Intoxicated-Leandra’s Law and eleven counts of Endangering the Welfare of a Child.

 

At approximately 8:34 p.m. on Friday, State Police stopped Olivier after receiving calls that he was driving erratically as he operated a school bus on I-88 in the town of Schoharie. Olivier was administered roadside sobriety tests and taken into custody for driving under the influence. He was transported to SP Cobleskill where he provided a breath sample of .06% B.A.C., which is over the legal limit for the type of vehicle he was driving.

Olivier was transporting members of the Cohoes girls basketball team at the time he was stopped. 

Olivier was issued appearance tickets and is due in Schoharie Town Court on February 28, 2022.


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February Second Sunday Snowshoe at Landis

Written By Editor on 2/10/22 | 2/10/22

Come enjoy winter at Landis!
Sunday, February 13 (also March 13)
1:00 PM – 3:00 PM

Don’t let Old Man Winter keep you indoors! Join us for an invigorating afternoon of winter fun and learn how to “walk on snow.” We will teach you about the different types of snowshoes and all the basic skills you need to enjoy the serenity and unique beauty of winter on snowshoes. Adult and children’s snowshoes are available, so arrive early if you need them, or bring your own. Please dress appropriately for the weather and wear a sturdy pair of boots. No snow? We’ll take a hike. Click here to register in advance using PayPal or a credit card, or pay at the gate.

Location: Meet at the Farm House Welcome Center; free parking in the lot across from the entry gates
Members: $5/person, $15/family. Non-members: $10/person, $25/family.


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Bassett Healthcare Network Expands K-9 Security Program

Written By Editor on 2/9/22 | 2/9/22

Thanks to a generous gift from Jane Forbes Clark, Bassett Healthcare Network is expanding its K-9 security program. Three-year-old Ryker, a German Shepherd, and his handler, officer Jared Hubbard, joined Bassett’s security team last week and will provide services throughout the Bassett Healthcare Network.

 

Bassett, along with a growing number of hospital systems around the country, is integrating a K-9 security program as a critical part of its care team, offering comfort and safety to patients and staff across medical settings. Bassett introduced its first K-9 security team in 2019 – Hudson, a five-year-old Belgian Malinois, and the dog’s handler, officer Robert Meiser, have been an integral part of the network’s security operations, traveling throughout the health system’s eight-county region.


Harold Southworth, Bassett’s network director of Public Safety and Transportation,
 says the K-9 program has introduced diverse benefits into clinical settings. “Ryker and Hudson are both extremely intelligent and adaptable to the moment,” says Southworth, who, along with Andrew Zuk, manager of Security Operations, has led the development of the K-9 program. “Their presence can immediately bring calmness to patients, families, and staff. They are approachable, comforting distractions when called upon, especially for children in the emergency department. I can’t tell you how much relief Hudson has brought to kids – and adult patients – who are frightened and upset.” 


Officer Jared Hubbard poses with Ryker.



Hubbard trained with Ryker for several weeks before officially beginning work at Bassett Healthcare Network. “The training was rigorous and a really fantastic experience. Ryker and I have bonded deeply,” says Hubbard, who, in his role as a K-9 security officer, has taken on the responsibility of caring for his canine partner as well as the ongoing training of Ryker. Similarly, officer Meiser maintains a working and caring relationship with Hudson.

 

“The presence of a K-9 team has added an important new dimension to our security program,” says William LeCates, MD, Bassett’s northern region executive. “Over the past few years, the program has been extremely successful, offering comfort and safety to patients, their loved ones, and our caregivers. We are very proud of our K-9 program and the vital work they do every day to keep our patients, visitors, and staff safe.”

In addition to its K-9 team, 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 reassuring presence and resource for staff, patients, and visitors. They respond to emergencies and are the network’s liaison with area law enforcement.


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JOIN US FOR OUR FREE WEBINAR SERIES - The sheer number of fires in the Village of Sharon Springs is disconcerting to people who have lived here for years and witnessed not only the destruction and financial losses, but the vanishing architecture as well.  Visitors come here and see the vacant lots where historic buildings once stood and question, “What happened to Sharon Springs?”  Some buildings were massive and took up an entire block.  In several cases, total blocks were lost to fire.  The vacant lots in the lower Village and the gaps in the streetscapes are grim reminders of the splendid hotels, bathhouses and boarding houses that once stood there.  

Many early fires were the result of inadequate firefighting equipment.  The fire bucket brigades of the late-1800s were overwhelmed with the size of the fires in three- and four-story structures.  The buildings were in close proximity to each other and fires affected more than one building.  Early construction was generally wooden and heated by wood or coal stoves, lighted by kerosene lamps and candles.  Countless fires had mysterious origins, such as blazes during the winter months or off-season when hotels and boarding houses were unoccupied and the electricity was shut off.

The intent of this book is to document the fires in the Village and the loss of historic buildings and unique architecture.  The loss of personal property and insurance claims can’t even begin to be computed – it is in the millions of dollars, many times over.  The book gives credit to the many volunteers of the Fire Department, Auxiliary, and Rescue Squad who have served the community and continue to serve us every day.  It’s an opportune time to credit the firemen who put their lives on the line to protect the safety of the community.  They are the “everyday” heroes we all take for granted.

Presented by Historian and author Sandra Manko. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-many-fires-of-sharon-springs-registration-265436135627?

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Audubon hosts Dr. Douglas Causey, University of Alaska at Anchorage for special program on Bering Seabirds on Feb 18 on Zoom

Written By Editor on 2/8/22 | 2/8/22

By: Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society

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

Bering Seabirds and Environmental Change from 3,000 Years Ago to the Present Day

Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society will host Dr. Douglas Causey, Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Alaska Anchorage on Friday, February 18, 2022 on Zoom at 7:30pm. This program is free and open to the public. Registration is required.

Registration link is available at https://doas.us/bering-seabirds



Photos by Dr. Douglas Causey.

We are in the midst of rapid climate change, and the Arctic and Subarctic are warming 3 – 4 times faster than the rest of the world. In order to get a better idea of how these environmental changes may affect breeding seabirds in the Bering Sea, Doug and his students have been looking closely at rapid changes in the past 15 years as a way to understand what the future may hold. But before we can understand how great or quick the effects may be, it’s important to know how seabirds reacted to past environmental events. Dr. Causey will talk about how archeology of early Aleut midden has told us about the abundance and distribution of all breeding seabirds over the past 3000 years, and tie this into research that has been undertaken up until 2019. He will present images and videos of Beringian seabirds and colonies that few ornithologists have seen, and will work to convince you that cormorants are probably the most interesting seabirds in the world.  

About the Presenter

Dr. Douglas Causey is Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Alaska Anchorage and Senior Fellow of the Arctic Initiative, Harvard Kennedy School. An ecologist and evolutionary biologist by training, he has authored over two hundred publications on topics as diverse as the biology of Arctic marine birds, high Arctic coastal ecosystems, and zoonotic diseases. He has published extensively on policy issues related to Arctic environmental security, dynamics of change in Arctic marine ecosystems, and bioterrorism and public health.

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Impact of Storm Causes Cancellation of the Ice Harvest Festival at Hanford Mills Museum

Written By Editor on 2/4/22 | 2/4/22

Hanford Mills Museum in East Meredith has had to cancel Saturday’s Ice Harvest Festival due to the winter storm. On Friday, there was standing water throughout the site, including on top of the frozen Mill Pond. “As the water freezes overnight, it will make for unsafe conditions,” explains Liz Callahan, the Museum’s executive director. “Visitor safety is the priority.”

 

Callahan said that staff had prepared for months for the event, including clearing snow from the frozen Mill Pond to ensure a good crop of ice. “I want to thank the SUNY Delhi Hospitality Center Program, the exhibitors, and the crew of Ice Harvest volunteers who were ready to help out at the event,” said Callahan. “We really were looking forward to the event, especially since last year it was a virtual Ice Harvest due to the COVID pandemic. The Ice Harvest Festival is usually our biggest event of the year, so to miss it two years in a row is a big disappointment.”

 

Callahan said there are videos of the ice harvesting process and other information on the website, hanfordmills.org.

 

“After this setback, we will regroup and get ready for the start of a new season at Hanford Mills Museum,” she said. Tours of the historic sawmill, gristmill and woodworking shop begin May 15. “We are looking forward to demonstrating both water power and steam power again at the Mill.”

 

About Hanford Mills Museum

Hanford Mills Museum operates an authentic water- and steam-powered historic site, which includes a sawmill, gristmill, and woodworking shop. The mission of Hanford Mills Museum is to inspire audiences of all ages to explore connections among energy, technology, natural resources, and entrepreneurship in rural communities with a focus on sustainable choices. Hanford Mills, which is listed on the National and New York State Registers of Historic Places, will open for the 2022 season on May 15.

 

Hanford Mills is located at 51 County Highway 12 in East Meredith, at the intersection of Delaware County Routes 10 & 12, just 10 miles from Oneonta, and 15 miles from Delhi.  For more information, visit www.hanfordmills.org or call 607/278-5744.


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FENIMORE ART MUSEUM ANNOUNCES 2022 SCHEDULE OF EXHIBITIONS WITH A RETURN OF WYETH

Written By Editor on 2/2/22 | 2/2/22

 In 2022, Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown, New York, will present nine new exhibitions alongside its world-renowned collections of fine art, folk art, and Native American art, which includes The Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art.

 

The summer is highlighted by two major exhibitions. Drawn from Life: Three Generations of Wyeth Figure Studies (May 7 – September 5, 2022) explores three generations of the venerable Wyeth family, primarily N.C., Andrew, and Jamie. This insightful exhibition examines the process of how each individually honed their expertise of rendering the human form through rigorous academic exercises conducted both in the studio and in some cases, the morgue. The second, Unmasking Venice: American Artists in the City of Water (May 28 – September 5, 2022) explores the two Venetian worlds depicted by American artists during the late 19th to early 20th centuries and includes work by a diverse group of artists, including Jane Peterson and Henry Ossawa Tanner.

 

Fenimore Art Museum, nestled on the shore of picturesque Otsego Lake, reopens for the 2022 season on April 1 offering visitors to the village of Cooperstown an opportunity to experience a wide variety of world-class art in an idyllic, small-town setting.

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Bassett Psychologist Dr. James Anderson Introduces New Tools to the Opioid Epidemic

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), from April 2020 to April 2021, over 100,000 people died of drug overdose in the United States. This sobering statistic shatters the previous record for overdose deaths over a 12-month period. It is a reminder that the opioid epidemic is rapidly accelerating in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Thankfully, this crisis has not lost the attention of the nation’s health care professionals. Bassett Healthcare Network clinical psychologist Dr. James Anderson, along with colleagues at the Bassett Research Institute and the University of Massachusetts, recently received national recognition for a paper detailing their efforts to curtail this epidemic across Bassett’s eight-county service area.

 

A Complex Problem

In its third decade, the opioid epidemic is not the same crisis it was when it began. It started in the mid-1990s with under-the-radar addictions to prescription painkillers. When doctors tried to mitigate the trend in the 2000s by limiting prescriptions, many patients struggling with addiction sought out illicit drugs, like heroin, to continue their physiological needs to self-medicate. That growing market for illegal drugs has blossomed since to include new opioids and new mixes of drugs.

 

As if this constant evolution isn’t challenging enough, the crisis’ geography introduces additional obstacles. The epidemic rages in rural areas that lack essential resources. The drug methadone, for example, has been an essential tool for overcoming opioid use disorder for decades. But being a highly addictive opioid itself, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) keeps tight control on its use and distribution. For patients living in an area like the one Bassett serves in Central New York, methadone treatment could mean driving an hour or more each way every day for treatment.

 

“Practically speaking, I am greedy for my patients,” says Dr. Anderson. “Yes, I want them to not use heroin; but I want more than that for them. I want them to be able to reengage with their families, get a job and live their lives. Even if driving two hours for daily treatment is possible for you, what kind of life is that?”

 

The Makings of a Solution

In 2016, Dr. Anderson and a group of Bassett colleagues formed a workgroup to improve services for patients struggling with opioid use disorder (OUD). Their effort centered on a newer drug called buprenorphine.

 

Like methadone, buprenorphine is an opioid. Unlike methadone, it does not produce euphoric highs—at a certain point, a body levels off its processing. What’s more, it blocks the body from processing other opioids. The result is that it can fend off cravings with a much lower risk of misuse.

 

The lower risk of misuse also increases accessibility. Any primary care doctor, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant with a DEA prescribing license can become buprenorphine certified. “Bassett’s primary care system is both familiar to our OUD patients and close to where they live,” explains Dr. Anderson. “Empowering them to treat OUD with buprenorphine makes medication-based treatment accessible.”

 

Building a New System

As Bassett’s team studied the experiences of other rural health systems, they became concerned that certifying caregivers in primary care offices wouldn’t be enough. “A recent study reviewed all doctors credentialed to prescribe buprenorphine in Vermont,” says Dr. Anderson. “Half of them were treating either no patients or only one. Practitioners need to use their licenses, or they don’t do any good. We wanted a better record than that here.”

 

Dr. Anderson and his colleagues complemented their push for buprenorphine licensing with virtual learning and discussion. “These sessions include the expert advice from the folks who have been doing this for a long time as well as support from peers who are just starting,” says Dr. Anderson. “That community builds confidence and competence to bridge the gap between licensing and use.”

 

According to Dr. Anderson’s paper, that innovation has made a significant difference in the success of Bassett’s program. And so now Bassett’s model of building that supporting framework and community has become a valuable contribution to the field of treating opioid use disorders.

 

Building a New Culture

As Bassett’s third round of sessions begin, the program is going strong. But this is just part of the overarching goal. “We ultimately want to create a low-threshold for treating OUD,” says Dr. Anderson. “We want to make it easy for folks to get into treatment and hard for them to get kicked out. Buprenorphine makes treatment accessible and frees patients to have a life.

 

“The next step is changing how we think about addiction. In the past, the policy for medication-based OUD treatment was, ‘You use? You’re gone.’ But if someone slips up on their diet or exercise routine, and their weight, blood sugar or hypertension get worse, we don’t kick them out. Our hope is that this is progress towards seeing addiction as another chronic health condition.”


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Fenimore Asset Management Gifts $100,000 to Establish Scholarship Fund for Schoharie County Students


COBLESKILL, N.Y. –  Fenimore Asset Management, an investment manager with offices in Cobleskill and Albany, has presented a donation of $100,000 to the SUNY Cobleskill Foundation. The gift establishes an endowed fund to benefit students from Schoharie County who have demonstrated academic merit and face financial challenges in completing their degree.

 

Up to five scholarship recipients will be selected annually to assist recipients with educational expenses incurred in their full-time pursuit of a Bachelor’s or Associate’s degree at SUNY Cobleskill. Students at all levels of study will be considered.  

 

With strong roots in Schoharie County, Fenimore Asset Management embraces the value of financial and volunteer support for our community, with a focus on the arts, education, and human services, a corporate citizenship model that has greatly benefitted many nonprofit organizations throughout Upstate New York, and beyond.

 

“With this endowed gift, Fenimore again demonstrates its long-held commitment to a growing, thriving society and education's critical place within,” said Dr. Marion Terenzio, president of SUNY Cobleskill. “The immense gratitude we feel today will only grow and blossom in the years ahead as more of our local learners find encouragement through kindness, fulfilling their academic journey through our one hundred-year tradition of nourishing the world and finding solutions that sustain our thriving society.”

 

“Fenimore’s values are demonstrated through a shared future-mindedness with our community partners, serving to enrich Schoharie County and its future learners and leaders,” said Debra Pollard, president of Fenimore Asset Management. “As a partner in shared values, we are delighted to make this gift to SUNY Cobleskill and the aspirational learners of today and tomorrow.”

 

The SUNY Cobleskill Foundation helps position the College as a leader in public education by empowering students to succeed inside and outside the classroom, end ensuring faculty has the ability to maintain academic excellence in teaching.

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ONC BOCES Seeks Board Members

Written By Editor on 2/1/22 | 2/1/22

The Otsego Northern Catskills (ONC) Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES) is seeking nominees for their Board of Education. BOCES were developed by the New York State Legislature in the 1950s to provide shared services to school districts. ONC BOCES provides its nineteen (19) component school districts with a variety of quality educational and administrative services. ONC BOCES also provides the region with adult and continuing education. ONC BOCES serves Andes, Charlotte Valley, Cherry Valley-Springfield, Cooperstown, Edmeston, Gilboa-Conesville, Hunter-Tannersville, Jefferson, Laurens, Margaretville, Milford, Morris, Oneonta, Roxbury, Schenevus, South Kortright, Stamford, Windham-Ashland-Jewett and Worcester school districts.


There are three seats up for election this year. The Otsego Northern Catskills BOCES has a nine member Board of Education. ONC BOCES Board of Education terms are three (3) years. The Board meets once per month, with meeting locations alternating between the Otsego Area Occupational Center in Milford, NY, the Northern Catskills Occupational Center in Grand Gorge, NY and the ONC BOCES Instructional Support Services Center in Oneonta, NY. New terms begin on July 1, 2022. Only one candidate per district can be elected to the BOCES Board. The following districts are eligible to nominate a resident to the BOCES Board of Education: Andes, Cherry Valley-Springfield, Cooperstown, Edmeston, Gilboa-Conesville, Hunter-Tannersville, Jefferson, Milford, Morris, Schenevus, Stamford, Windham-Ashland-Jewett and Worcester. If you live in any of the aforementioned districts and are interested in serving on the BOCES Board of Education, please contact your local Superintendent’s Office as soon as possible. If you would like more information about the ONC BOCES organization, please contact the ONC BOCES District Superintendent’s Office at (607) 286-7715 ext. 2224 or aoliveri@oncboces.org. 



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Delhi Telephone Company’s 2021 Holiday Giveback Program Results in $1,350 in Donations to Local Non-Profits

Delhi Telephone Company sponsored a Holiday Giveback Program where employees could
choose to donate to local area non-profits for the 2021 holiday season. Fire departments,
animal shelters, and other charitable organizations were among those who received
donations totaling $1,350.
The Holiday Giveback Program was launched in December of 2020 when the DTC Team
recognized the impact the pandemic had on our local charities and non-profits. In an
attempt to give back to our community during a time of need, DTC employees were given
the opportunity to choose from sixteen different organizations to donate to.
Delhi Telephone Company is proud to support our local charities, non-profits, fire
departments and more, who continue to work tirelessly to provide our communities with the
services they need.
For more information about DTC’s charitable work, contact Delhi Telephone Company at
607-746-1500 or visit www.delhitel.com.

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Bev Grant and william cordova in conversation at OSMOS

We invite you to join us for a film screening and live conversation with Bev Grant and william cordova, moderated by OSMOS founder Cay Sophie Rabinowitz. Select works will be on display from the book, Bev Grant Photography 1968 - 1972 (OSMOS, 2021).

*Masks required


American photographer Bev Grant’s work, created between the late 1960s and early 1970s reflects her time participating in and covering left wing and radical protests along the East Coast. Shot on a Pentax 35mm camera, Grant’s captivating black and white imagery, unseen until 2017, paints a storied first-person picture of resistance and uprising, highlighting groups such as New York Radical Women, Black Panther Party, and the Young Lords. Grant’s work catalogues numerous demonstrations and political protests, including the Miss America Pageant Protest and the Free Ericka Huggins and Bobby Seale Demonstration among others, giving us an intimate view into the passion and purpose of these past events that feel just as relevant today as they did fifty years ago -- the resemblance between the radicalized movements of the late 1960s and those of today hold space for this kind of historical photography, rooted in social and political activism, giving it a feeling that is both fresh and familiar. 

william cordova is an interdisciplinary cultural practitioner born in Lima, Peru. Cordova's work addresses the metaphysics of space and time and how objects change and perception changes when we move around in space.


Bev Grant’s book can be purchased via www.osmos.online while supplies last.

For more information contact:
Cay Sophie Rabinowitz
osmos.address@gmail.com
+1 917 362 5415


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Virtual Beginning and Ongoing Farm Series

Join CCE Schoharie and Otsego Counties for a virtual farm series from February 23rd through March 16th, 2022.

  • Starting a Farm Business, February 23, 6:30pm
    • Steve Hadcock, Beginning Farmer and Market Development Educator with the CCE Capital Area Agricultural and Horticultural Program, will be answering your questions about starting a farm business. What are the risks of starting a farm business? Can I make enough income to sustain the business? What does it take financially to start a farm business?
  • Marketing Ag Products, March 2, 6:30pm
    • Sophie Ano, SUNY Cobleskill professor, Ph.D., Department Chair for Business, Food, Service and Agriculture, will be discussing the basics of marketing your farm or food business using social media and other outlets.
  • Conservation Easements for Agriculture, March 9, 6:30pm
    • May Leinhart, Otsego Land Trust Stewardship Associate, Master’s degree in Geography, will talk about private conservation easements, state and local tax credits, and options farmers and landowners have in conserving their property.
  • Farmland Succession Planning, March 16 - 6:30pm
    • Farm Net Farm Business Management Specialist Gabriel Gurley will discuss the fundamentals of farm succession and how to develop a succession plan.
  • What’s New at NYSAMP? March 16 - 7:30pm
    • The New York State Agricultural Mediation Program (NYSAMP) is “More than Mediation”. Welcome to an overview of NYSAMP and the ways it can serve farmers, their families and their businesses, presented by Christine Tauzel. We look forward to seeing you!

Fee: $10 per class, $25 for all

https://pub.cce.cornell.edu/event_registration/main/events_landing.cfm?event=Farmseries_243

If you have questions, email Jessica Holmes at jmh452@cornell.edu or call 518-234-4303 ext. 119.


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SUNY Delhi Announces Advanced Certificate Programs in Nursing Administration and Nursing Education

The 12-credit certificates can be earned in two semesters in a convenient part-time, online format.

DELHI, NY (01/27/2022) SUNY Delhi is addressing the national demand for qualified staff in nursing administration and education by launching two advanced post-graduate certificate programs. Designed for nursing professionals with an existing master's or doctorate degree who want to gain competency in a new area of healthcare, the 12-credit certificates in Nursing Administration and Nursing Education can be earned in two semesters in a convenient part-time, online format. Applications for Fall 2022 are open now.

The Nursing Administration certificate prepares students for employment as nurse managers or executives with the skills to improve business processes and manage people effectively in contemporary healthcare settings. The Nursing Education certificate covers topics in teaching, curriculum development, and evaluation, allowing graduates to fulfill roles as nursing educators and faculty.

"These unique certificate programs are ideal for working nurses looking to expand their knowledge and redirect their careers towards the administrative or educational aspects of healthcare," says Dr. Susan Deane, dean of the School of Nursing at SUNY Delhi. "The online, part-time format with 7-week terms allows our students the flexibility to advance their education while juggling work, family, and other commitments."

To be eligible for the advanced post-graduate certificate programs, applicants must have an existing master's or doctorate degree and be licensed as a registered nurse.

For more information on admissions requirements or to apply, please visit www.delhi.edu/nursing or contact 607-746-4492.

One of New York State's premier nursing programs, SUNY Delhi is recognized as a leader in nursing education and is a designated Center of Excellence in Nursing Education by the National League for Nursing.

View Online: http://delhi.meritpages.com/news/SUNY-Delhi-Announces-Advanced-Certificate-Programs-in-Nursing-Administration-and-Nursing-Education/24463


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Bassett Healthcare Network to Advance Support of Parents and Children with New Grant from the Mother Cabrini Health Foundation

Written By Editor on 1/27/22 | 1/27/22

The Mother Cabrini Health Foundation has publically announced Bassett Healthcare Network as the recipient of a $125,000 grant for 2022. The funds will help further establish Bassett’s Parental Support Program that combines family mental and emotional health with traditional pediatric care in an effort to more comprehensively meet family needs.

 

“In 2017, we started the Healthy Steps Program in our Cooperstown Pediatric Clinic,” explains Susan Weil, behavioral health consultant and parent support specialist at Bassett Healthcare Network. “It offered parents with very young children an array of services, including well-child appointments. Those expanded the standard physical check-ups to include screenings, information about child growth and development, and check-ins with a counselor. Last year we took those most successful parts of Healthy Steps and what we learned about community needs and replaced it with Parental Support.” The support from Mother Cabrini will help continue to establish the new program.

 

Parental Support restructures Healthy Steps to make it more sustainable while also expanding it in two ways. First, it will now be available in both Cooperstown and Oneonta. Secondly, it offers help to the families of all pediatric patients, not just infants and toddlers.

 

“Healthy Steps helped us come alongside new moms dealing with postpartum anxiety and depression,” says Weil. “It’s such a common struggle. But when it comes to other parenting challenges, most of us go into parenthood thinking we’ll just do our best to be really great parents and not make any mistakes. It takes time for parents to see where they might benefit from a counselor. We don’t want a program where families age out just as they feel that need.”

 

In addition to well-child appointments, the program will offer parenting groups using the widely-respected Circle of Security curriculum. The groups should help parents understand their children’s needs and recognize their own strengths as well as weaknesses. Weil hopes to start the first of these groups on a virtual platform by the spring.

 

“As our Surgeon General formally acknowledged in December, there is a youth mental health crisis in this country,” says Weil. “The best way to meet these challenges is to address them early in kids’ lives. We believe that empowering parents with these sorts of resources will make a real difference in the long run.”

 

To learn more about the Parent Support Program and the virtual parent groups starting this year, please contact Susan Weil at 607-547-3870.

 

The Mother Cabrini Health Foundation is a private, nonprofit organization with the mission to improve the health and well-being of vulnerable New Yorkers, bolster the health outcomes of targeted communities, eliminate barriers to care, and bridge gaps in health services. Named in memory of a tireless advocate for immigrants, children, and the poor, the Mother Cabrini Health Foundation provides flexible support for new and innovative approaches that enhance health and wellness across New York State. For more information, visit https://www.cabrinihealth.org/ 


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OTEGO WRITER DENNIS FOWLER CREATES THE GREATER OTEGO LIBRARY AND EDUCATION FUND WITH DONATION TO THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF OTSEGO COUNTY

Written By Editor on 1/26/22 | 1/26/22

The Community Foundation of Otsego County has welcomed over 300 donors since its inception in 2019. Otego writer Dennis Fowler is the latest, with a generous donation creating The Greater Otego Library and Education Fund. 


Mr. Fowler, a 50-year resident of rural Otego, is a successful writer with nearly 60 books published, including a recent science fiction novel, “Earth’s Song.” A Princeton graduate in economics, Dennis worked in New York City with his wife Peggy before embarking on his life-long writing career. They moved to Otego in the 1970’s where they became deeply involved in the community - she in Orpheus Theatre and Habitat for Humanity, he in the Otego Harris Memorial Library, where he became board president and directed an expansion of the building.


Looking back on his life in Otego, Dennis was searching for a way to give back to the place he loves. When he heard about the work the Community Foundation of Otsego County was doing and hoped to do, he saw a perfect partner. He opened a Field of Interest Fund housed at CFOC – The Greater Otego Library and Education Fund – which is focused on maintaining the Harris Memorial Library building, supporting library programs and operations, and encouraging activities to educate and enhance the lives of all the people of his beloved Otego. 


“Dennis’ love for Otego and his piece of it is obvious in every sentence he speaks,” observes Jeff Katz, the new executive director of the Community Foundation of Otsego County. While he watches the world outside his window, Fowler expresses great hopes for his hometown and village: “Otego is such a wonderful place. I just want to see it succeed.” For Dennis Fowler that isn’t simply talk. By establishing The Greater Otego Library and Education Fund within the Community Foundation of Otsego County, Dennis is helping make his and others’ dreams a reality. 


Harris Librarian Sarah Livingston says: "The Board of Trustees of the Harris Memorial Library is proud to work with the Community Foundation of Otsego County towards the goal of making the Harris Library a welcoming place for the Otego community, now and for years to come. We thank the donor who has made these goals possible and has so generously helped secure the future of an Otego institution."


"It was a pleasure to work with Dennis to create a fund which will enhance life in Otego for many, many years to come," said Harry Levine, board president of the Community Foundation of Otsego County. "A key goal of the Community Foundation is to channel people's generosity in the most effective way possible. There couldn't be a better way to start a new year than to announce the new Greater Otego Library and Education Fund at the Community Foundation of Otsego County." Levine encourages anyone with questions about creating a fund at the Community Foundation to email contact@cfotsego.org.


The Community Foundation offers a range of services and plans to assist donors in meeting their charitable goals. The CFOC also continues to invite nonprofits working in Otsego County to apply for new awards going into 2022; there are no application deadlines. For more information please visit the Community Foundation of Otsego County website, cfotsego.org, or email contact@cfotsego.org.



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Ice Harvest set for February 5 at Hanford Mills

Written By Editor on 1/25/22 | 1/25/22

Save the Date: Ice Harvest on Saturday, February 5Ice Harvest at Hanford Mills logo
The region’s “coolest” tradition returns! 

Plans are well underway for a streamlined Ice Harvest on Saturday, February 5, 10 am to 3 pm. Visitors can take part in a traditional ice harvest, using tools and techniques from the early 20th century. Before mechanical refrigeration, ice was a valued winter crop for farmers. 

At the event, if the ice is thick enough, visitors can borrow ice cleats from the Museum and walk on the frozen Mill Pond and use an ice saw to cut ice. The ice blocks, which typically weigh 50 pounds, are then transferred to the ice house by bobsled. The ice is stacked in the ice house, insulated with sawdust from the Mill. The ice will be used to make ice cream in the summer and stay frozen until the fall. 

Ice Carving, Blacksmithing, Vendors and Exhibitors

The SUNY Delhi Hospitality Center Ice Carving Team will create sculptures out of ice. There will also be blacksmithing demonstrations and local vendors and exhibitors including Catharina's Hats and Mittens, the Cooperstown Distillery, the Catskill Forest Association, the Watershed Agricultural Council, and Intelligent Green Solutions. 

No Soup Buffet
There will not be a Hot Soup Buffet or any food concessions at this year’s Ice Harvest Festival. With continuing COVID concerns, there is not enough space for large groups of people to gather indoors at the Museum. There will be complimentary hot chocolate, coffee, and tea.

Check in for latest conditions
With Ice Harvest, there are always contingency plans depending on the depth and strength of the ice. For the February 5 event, Hanford Mills will also follow CDC and public health guidelines and adapt the event accordingly. As of January 21, the ice on the Mill Pond was ten inches thick. Check the website for the latest updates and important information on making your Ice Harvest experience an especially good one. We'll also post updates on our Facebook page.

No photography allowed on the ice
For safety reasons, visitors may not take photos, with a camera or cellphone, while standing on the ice. 

Ice Harvest Videos
Learn about the ice harvesting process by watching the Ice Harvesting videos on the Museum's YouTube Channel. 


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