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The Best Gifts from Schoharie County

What You Need to Know About Required Minimum Distributions

Written By Editor on 12/19/22 | 12/19/22

By Michael Lanuto


By the time you retire, IRAs and other retirement accounts may represent some of your largest assets. If this is the case, you’ve likely enjoyed the benefit of tax-deferred growth of earnings on those accounts for many years. But at some point, Uncle Sam will want you to start taking distributions from those assets (and pay the appropriate tax due on them). This explains the existence of Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) rules.


At a certain stage in life, the tax code requires that you begin withdrawing at least a minimum amount from your IRA on an annual basis. This is true regardless of whether you need to take money out of these accounts to meet your cash flow needs in retirement.


Here are answers to some of the most important questions you may have about RMDs and how they apply to your circumstances.


Q: At what age do RMDs first apply?

A: The year you turn 72 is considered your beginning date. You have until April 1 of the year after you reach age 72 to take your first required distribution. 


Q: After that first year, what is my deadline to take an RMD?

A: In every subsequent year, RMDs must be received by December 31. Note that if you wait to take the initial RMD until the year after the year in which you turn 72, you will have to take two distributions in the same year, exposing you to potentially greater tax liability. 


Q: What accounts are subject to RMDs?

A: Traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs. Also, RMDs apply to workplace plans such as 401(k)s, 403(b)s, 457(b)s, profit sharing plans and other defined contribution plans. RMDs can be delayed from workplace retirement plans until April 1 of the calendar year in which you retire if you remain employed with the plan sponsor past age 72. 


Q: Are Roth accounts subject to RMDs?

A: One of the great advantages of Roth IRAs is that RMDs do not apply, so your money can continue to grow on a potentially tax-free basis indefinitely. However, RMDs do apply to Roth 401(k)s.


Q: How are RMDs calculated?

A: To make the calculation, you first must know the value of the account at the end of the previous calendar year. Then, using tables provided by the IRS, the minimum distribution is calculated. For most 72-year-olds with a $200,000 balance on Dec. 31 of the previous year, that amount would be divided by 27.4 years, resulting in a required distribution of $7,299 for the first year. The distribution period declines throughout your life. In certain situations, a different IRS table is used to make the calculation.


Q: Do distributions have to come out of all affected retirement accounts?

A: Yes. Once you reach age 72, RMDs must be withdrawn from each account subject to the rule. Therefore, it may simplify the process to consolidate your retirement accounts. This includes rolling workplace retirement plans into IRAs. Talk to your financial and tax professional to discuss the pros and cons of consolidation.


Q: What is the penalty if I fail to take RMDs on a timely basis?

A: If you fail to take an RMD in a given year or withdraw an insufficient amount, a penalty equal 50% of the value of the amount you failed to withdraw as required will be applied.


Q: What if I don’t have a need for the money I’m required to withdraw?

A: One option is to utilize a Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD). This allows money to be distributed directly to a charity. Such a distribution can be applied toward your RMD in a given year. There is a $100,000.000 annual cap on the QCD.


This information is designed to help you understand some of the basic rules about RMDs. However, it’s important that you meet with your financial advisor to talk about RMDs in the context of your overall retirement income strategy, and your tax advisor to make sure you are complying with tax rules.

  

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


Investment advisory products and services are made available through Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC, a registered investment adviser.


Investment products are not insured by the FDIC, NCUA or any federal agency, are not deposits or obligations of, or guaranteed by any financial institution, and involve investment risks including possible loss of principal and fluctuation in value.


Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates do not offer tax or legal advice. Consumers should consult with their tax advisor or attorney regarding their specific situation.


Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC. Member FINRA and SIPC.


© 2022 Ameriprise Financial, Inc. All rights reserved.



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ASF’s Winter Season Set To Begin December 17

Written By Editor on 12/14/22 | 12/14/22

WINDHAM – The Adaptive Sports Foundation (ASF) is gearing up for another winter season of providing ski and snowboard lessons to children and adults with both cognitive and physical disabilities and chronic illnesses. The organization’s first lesson date will be Saturday, December 17.



“We are all really excited for the start of what should be a great winter season,” Executive Director John Iannelli said. “Our team is ready and our lodge is open for our students and volunteers, something everyone missed dearly the last two winters. With cold temperatures and snow in the recent forecast, Windham should have a variety of trails for our students to enjoy.”



The season was initially supposed to begin last weekend on December 10, however due to a lack of snow, the ASF deemed that the available terrain at the time was not appropriate for the ASF students’ first time on snow this season. Now that Windham was gifted plenty of snow from Mother Nature this week, the organization looks forward to getting back to teaching adaptive ski and snowboard lessons.



From the middle of December to the middle of March, the ASF hosts adaptive ski and snowboard lessons every weekend, while weekday lessons are available beginning in the final week of December. A student can be signed up for a half-day lesson, choosing between the morning or afternoon session, or a full-day lesson. Lesson availability is based on the availability of the organization’s volunteer instructors.



As well as daily lessons, the ASF offers competition racing and recreational racing programs for those adaptive athletes who are more experienced on the slopes. The Adaptive Sports Foundation’s Competition Racing Program provides coaching, mentoring, technique development and tactics training for athletes with physical disabilities (Paralympic eligible) and intellectual disabilities (Special Olympics). Through hard work and guided coaching, the ASF Race Team athletes earn the opportunity to participate in local, regional and national competitions. The ASF also has its Recreational Race Program that promotes competition, but to a lesser extent than the Competition Racing Program.



The ASF’s Sliders program provides a season-long program for skiers and snowboarders whose aspirations are more recreational and social in nature. The Sliders learn how physical activity, good nutritional habits, and a positive outlook impacts their health through a coordinated student-first coaching philosophy shared by the instructors.



Since 1984, the ASF has been providing sports and recreation opportunities to thousands in the disabled community. The wintertime is special for the ASF, as the foundation started as an adaptive ski school nearly 40 years ago, working out of a room in Windham Mountain’s main lodge. Since then, it has grown into what it is today, an organization that provides year-round services out of its own slope-side lodge, the Gwen Allard Adaptive Sports Center. All this has been done over the years thanks to many donors and an impressive legion of volunteers, who can be seen in their iconic green jackets sliding down the snow-white slopes.



This will be the first season since early 2020 that the ASF lodge will be open for its many participants and volunteers. This includes the ASF’s lunch program, which was suspended the last two seasons and is very popular among the participants.



The Adaptive Sports Foundation is a non-profit organization that provides profound and life changing experiences for children and adults with physical disabilities, cognitive disabilities and chronic illnesses through outdoor physical activity, education, support and community. If you’d like to learn more about the ASF, or if you'd like to help support the ASF’s mission of “empowering lives through adaptive sports”, visit www.adaptivesportsfoundation.org.


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SUNY COBLESKILL WOMEN’S BASKETBALL DOWN SUNY DELHI 74-41 IN NAC OPENER



Cobleskill, N.Y.: The SUNY Cobleskill women’s basketball team opened the North Atlantic Conference (NAC) portion of their schedule on Saturday afternoon by posting an impressive 74-41 victory over the visiting Broncos of SUNY Delhi at the Iorio Gymnasium. With the win the Fighting Tigers move to 4-5 overall on the year including a 1-0 record in league play while the Broncos are now 2-5 overall including a 0-1 mark in NAC action.  

The Fighting Tigers used defensive pressure and superior depth to take a 34-15 lead into halftime and never looked back as 14 different Cobleskill players scored in the victory while holding the Broncos to only 24.6% from the field on the evening. The home team also controlled the glass throughout the day holding a 67-46 rebounding edge.  

First-year guard Talia Washington, Schenectady, N.Y., Schenectady High School, led the team in scoring with 16 points along with six assists and six rebounds while first-year center/forward Emily Satterday, Latham, N.Y., Shaker High School, came off the bench to score nine points, take down a game high 17 rebounds and pass out two assists on the afternoon.  

The Orange & Black also received contributions from first-year guard/forward Kayleigh Bryant, Schenevus, N.Y., Schenevus High School, with seven points and four rebounds in a reserve role and from sophomore guard Eva Norris, Wolcott, N.Y., North Rose-Wolcott High School, with eight points in her first start of the season.   

Cobleskill will return to action on Tuesday December 6 when they host the Lyons of Mount Holyoke College for a non-conference meeting beginning at 5:00 p.m.  

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SUNY COBLESKILL MEN’S TRACK & FIELD OPENS SEASON AT 2022 HOUGHTON DECEMBER CLASSIC

Cobleskill, N.Y.: The SUNY Cobleskill men’s indoor track & field team opened the 2022-23 season in impressive fashion at the Houghton December Classic hosted by Houghton University in Houghton, N.Y. over the weekend. 

Fighting Tiger junior distance runner Nick Logan, Queensbury, N.Y., Queensbury High School, was the team’s top performer at the event posting wins in the Mile Run in a time of 4:22.58 and the 3000-Meter Run with a time of 8:56.89.  

Cobleskill also received strong outings from sophomore jumper Gonyzer Foster, Bayshore, N.Y., Bayshore High School, who placed second overall in the Triple Jump with a mark of 41’3 ¼ and from first-year sprinter Charlie Foote, Cobleskill, N.Y., Cobleskill-Richmondville High School, who placed third in the 400-Meter Dash in 51.58 seconds and ninth in the 300-Meter Dash in 37.69 seconds. 

Other individual efforts of note saw first-year distance runner Will Seamans, Fayetteville, N.Y., Fayetteville-Manlius High School, bring home ninth place finishes in the Mile Run in 4:45.92 and the 3000-Meter Run in at 10:06.44 and from fellow first-year Jacob Rhinesmith, Sommerset, N.J., Nation Ford High School (S.C.), finishing 10th overall in the 5000-Meter Run in 17:25.62. First-year hurdler Kameron Cusmano, Oakfield, N.Y., Oakfield-Alabama High School, started his college career off strong placing 10th overall in the 60-Meter Hurdles in 9.07 seconds.  

In the relays the Fighting Tigers’ 4 X 200-Meter Relay of Gonyzer Foster, Charlie Foote, first-year Jeffery Alvarado, Amsterdam, N.Y., Amsterdam High School, and sophomore Michael Masocco, Eden, N.Y., Eden High School, brought home an eighth place finish with a time of 1:39.39. 

Cobleskill will next be in action on Saturday December 10 when they travel to Utica, N.Y. for the 2022 Utica Holiday Classic to be hosted by the Pioneers of Utica University at the Todd and Jen Hutton Sports & Recreation Center beginning at 10:00 a.m.  

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SUNY COBLESKILL INDOOR TRACK & FIELD RESULTS 2022 HOUGHTON DECEMBER CLASSIC



HOSTED BY HOUGHTON UNIVERSITY 

HOUGHTON, N.Y. 

DECEMBER 3, 2022 

 

 

WOMEN’S TEAM RESULTS:  

NON-SCORING 

 

SUNY COBLESKILL WOMEN’S INDIVIDUAL RESULTS 
 


WOMEN’S 800 METERS: Katherine Ledermann, 12th, 2:52.11 

WOMEN’S MILE RUN: Katherine Ledermann, 13th, 6:08.62 

WOMEN’S 4 X 200 RELAY: 6th, 2:03.70, Hayleigh Girard, Dory Gooselin, Shealinn Stevens, Jessica Carney 



MEN’S TEAM RESULTS:   

NON-SCORING 

SUNY COBLESKILL MEN’S RESULTS 


MEN’S 60 METER HURDLES: Kameron Cusmano, 10th, 9:07 

MEN’S 300 METERS:  Charlie Foote, 9th, 37.69 

MEN’S 400 METERS: Charlie Foote, 3rd, 51.58 

MEN’S MILE: Nick Logan, 1st, 4:22.58 Will Seamans, 9th, 4:45.92 

MEN’S 3000 METERS: Nick Logan, 1st, 8:56.89, Will Seamans 9th, 10:06.44  

MEN’S 5000 METERS: Jacob Rhinesmith, 10th, 17:25.62  

MEN’S TRIPLE JUMP: Gonyzer Foster, 2nd, 41-3 ¼  

4 X 200 RELAY: 8th, 1:39.39, Gonyzer Foster, Jeffery Alvarado, Michael Masocco, Charlie Foote 

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TALIA WASHINGTON NAMED SUNY COBLESKILL FIGHTING TIGER ATHLETE-OF-THE-WEEK



Cobleskill, N.Y.: The SUNY Cobleskill Athletic Department announced today that first-year Talia Washington, Schenectady, N.Y., Schenectady High School, a member of the women’s basketball team has been named the athletic program’s Fighting Tiger Athlete-of-the-Week for the week ending on December 11, 2022. 




The Fighting Tiger guard led the team led Cobleskill to three victories during the week as the team defeated Mount Holyoke College at home on Tuesday 84-56 then took to the road over the weekend for a pair of NAC contests defeating SUNY Canton on Saturday 85-81 then beating Norther Vermont University-Johnson 72-68 to improve to 7-5 overall on the season including a 3-0 record in NAC action to move into first place in the NAC Western Division. 

The Schenectady High School alumnus averaged 12.7 points, 3.3 assists, 2.3 rebounds and 2.0 steals per game while shooting 46.9% from the field including 40.0% from three-point range.  

For the season in 12 games including nine starts, she has averaged 11.7 points, 3.3 assists, 2.6 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game shooting 43.6% from the field including 38.6% from three-point range and 71.1% from the free throw line.  

Cobleskill will next be in action on Wednesday December 14 when they travel to Westfield, Mass. for a non-league meeting with the Owls of Westfield State University beginning at 7:00 p.m.  

 

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Organizational Meeting Notice - Roxbury FD

Written By Editor on 12/12/22 | 12/12/22



Please take notice that the organizational meeting for the Roxbury Fire District of the Town of Roxbury, County of Delaware, NY, will be held on the 12th day of January 2023 at 7:00pm at the Roxbury Fire House, located at 53613 State Highway 30, Roxbury, NY 12474. 


This notification is being given to the news media pursuant to the provisions of Section 94 of the Public Officers Law of the State of NY by order of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Roxbury Fire Department.



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Bassett Healthcare Network Begins Offering Lutathera—the First in a New Family of Cancer Treatments

Cooperstown, NY – The Bassett Cancer Institute in Cooperstown, NY has announced that it is now offering Lutathera as a treatment for neuroendocrine cancer, also known as carcinoid tumor. Lutathera is a breakthrough pharmaceutical radiation therapy that can dramatically improve outcomes for patients with this rare cancer type.

“First and foremost, this is great news for patients with this cancer,” says Dr. Timothy Korytko, Bassett Medical Center’s chief of radiation oncology. “Until now, there’s only been one basic treatment for low-grade neuroendocrine cancer. If a patient’s case was unresponsive or had already spread, there was little to do. Lutathera is a powerful, effective new option.”

Bassett is offering this potentially life-saving treatment to patients throughout the region. Previously, patients seeking the Lutathera treatment were required to travel to Albany, Rochester, Buffalo, or New York City.

“Lutathera marks the start of a new paradigm in treatment,” says Dr. Korytko. Radiopharmaceutical treatments are prescription medications developed from radioactive materials. For decades this was limited to treating thyroid cancer. Lutathera is part of a growing family of drugs designed to operate on the same principle. 

“Science has advanced so that we can now attach molecules to each other,” explains Dr. Korytko. “We can now create radioactive materials that target specific kinds of cells. Lutathera is the first, but there have been positive clinical trials for prostate cancer and there will be more new drugs for other cancers in the future.”

Bassett made accommodations in their facilities to receive approval to administer Lutathera in New York State, putting it on firm footing for future treatment developments. “As other treatments in this class become available, we’ve already developed a process and a space to administer them,” says Dr. Korytko. “This could be the beginning of a bright future.”


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Gardening for Nature’s Intricate Web Webinar hosted by Mountain Top Arboretum

Cost of Admission: Free WEBINAR.  

Pre-registration is required and opens mid-December. 

Author, photographer, and landscape designer Carolyn Summers will present an informative  review of current research that reveals the many ways in which native plants form the basis of  the food web that supports a healthy, pollinator-rich landscape. Her lecture covers ways to  minimize harm from exotic plants, including the use of native substitutes for a wide variety of  traditional styles. Examples of striking, unusual native plants used in formal settings will be  provided along with naturalistic styles to explore the full design potential of northeastern native  flora.  

Carolyn Summers is the author of Designing Gardens with Flora of the American East. Most recently,  her photographs grace the pages of a new book, The Pollinator Victory Garden, by friend and  colleague Kim Eierman. After completing her BSLA (Landscape Architecture) degree at CCNY, she  began an atypical career with the Trust for Public Land, producing an open space report for the  Harbor Herons Project that has guided preservation efforts to create an urban wildlife refuge on  Staten Island. Ms. Summers continued environmental work with New York City’s Department of  Environmental Protection as the agency’s first Director of Natural Resources, including  implementation of a new native plants policy for all agency construction/restoration projects.  Following her work with New York City, she came to the Natural Resources Defense Council,  initiating a regional project to preserve and restore wildlife habitat and public access in the New  York-New Jersey Bight. Ms Summers is currently an adjunct professor for Go Native U, a joint  project of Westchester Community College’s Continuing Ed Program and The Native Plant Center  (based at Westchester Community College). She and her husband have recently opened their  country home, Flying Trillium Gardens and Preserve (www.flyingtrillium.com), for public tours so  that designers, gardeners and homeowners will be inspired by the beauty of native plants in both  garden and natural settings to create more of the same. 

WOULD YOU LIKE TO VOLUNTEER? 

We would love your help with greeting visitors or gardening. Find more information  on our website https://www.mtarboretum.org/volunteer

LOCATION: Webinar hosted by Mountain Top Arboretum

DATE: Saturday, January 14, 2023 TIME: 10:00 to 11:15am 

EMAIL: info@mtarboretum.org PHONE: 518-589-3903 

WEB SITE: www.mtarboretum.org



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CCE Announces New Executive Director

The Cornell Cooperative Extension of Delaware County Board of Directors is proud to welcome Dr. Mandeep Virk-Baker as the association’s new Executive Director.

Dr. Mandeep Virk-Baker brings with her extensive public health research and administration experience and has served high-level state and academic leadership positions. With more than two decades leading work in chronic disease prevention, community nutrition, health promotion, and as a public health scientist trained at the Johns Hopkins University, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH)/ the National Cancer Institute (NCI), she is deeply passionate about improving public health and nutrition and making the world a better place.  

 

Dr. Virk-Baker has an extensive background in health policy and public health research, has published in several high-impact peer-reviewed journals, and has received numerous awards for her research work. Previously, Dr. Virk-Baker served as the Area Extension Director for Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford Counties at University of Maryland Extension.

Dr. Virk-Baker is thrilled to join the CCE Delaware County team, and is looking forward to working with CCE colleagues, county, state, and federal level stakeholders, and Delaware County residents to continue to improve the lives of our local rural communities. Dr. Virk-Baker lives on a 24-acre family farm in West Oneonta. In her spare time, she likes to explore the beautiful local area, hiking trails, and lakes with her family. She is an excellent “Baker” and enjoys creating new recipes.

Cornell Cooperative Extension Association of Delaware County’s mission is to educate youth, families, farmers, and communities using research-based knowledge for practical application and lifelong learning.


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Fatal Accident Claims Life of Catskill Man

The Greene County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a motor vehicle accident that occurred at
Essendant Distribution Center located on SR 9W in Coxsackie around 12AM on 12/12/22. A truck
plowing the parking lot collided with a stationary box trailer and subsequently caught on fire. The
operator of the vehicle, Lamont B. Jackson, 50 years old, of Catskill, was deceased at the scene. The
investigation is ongoing.

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Announcing the 2023 Sunday Salon Speakers and Winter Sunday Tours


This Year Marks the 20th Year of the Signature Speaker Series hosted by the Thomas Cole National Historic Site 2004-2023 

 

Catskill, NY – December 12, 2022 – The Thomas Cole National Historic Site announced today the 2023 Sunday Salon speakers on new ideas in American art and the accompanying Sunday Tours. This year marks the 20th year of the signature series. The 2023 season features leading voices across the field of American art, including curators, historians, and the next generation of innovators. The Salons present engaging speakers once a month from January through April on Sundays at 2 pm in the New Studio building at the historic site in Catskill, New York. Sunday Tours are offered before and after each Salon at 1 pm and 3:30 pm for visitors to experience the historic home and studio of the American artist and environmentalist, Thomas Cole (1801-1848). In March, in honor of Women’s History Month, a special 12 pm Tour will also be offered, featuring the women that lived, labored, and made art here on the historic property. The tours include digital storytelling installations throughout the historic home, including wrap-around visual projections, immersive audio spots, and private letters that appear on desktops. 

 

Sunday Salon tickets are $10 for members and $15 general admission and available at thomascole.org/events. Sunday Tours are $18 and available at thomascole.org/tickets. Memberships are available at thomascole.org/memberships. Advance registration is encouraged for the Sunday Salons and advance registration is required for the Sunday Tours.   

 

Sunday, January 29 at 2 pm

Toward Radical Care and Rigorous Joy:  

The Future of American Art at the Brooklyn Museum   

Stephanie Sparling Williams 

Andrew W. Mellon Curator of American Art, Brooklyn Museum 

 

Building on the Brooklyn Museum’s mid-19th century founding ethos of “art for social improvement,” Dr. Stephanie Sparling Williams charts a new vision for American art and its display at the institution. Expanding the conversations about diverse representation and desires for collections to “tell more stories,” Sparling Williams discusses the power and potential in the organization and experience of the art itself. 

 

Sunday, February 12 at 2 pm

It is Wild and Untamed – Descriptions of the Land and the Original Stewards 

Heather Breugl 

Public Historian, Activist, and Decolonial Education Consultant 

 

Words that have been used to describe the land—wild, untamed, savage—have also been used to describe the land's original inhabitants. Hear the perspective of this accomplished decolonial scholar about the use of these stereotypes of Indigenous peoples. 


Sunday, March 26 at 2 pm

Exhibiting American Women Artists at The Baltimore Museum of Art  

Virginia Anderson 

Curator of American Art and Department Head of American Painting & Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Baltimore Museum of Art 

 

Dr. Virginia Anderson will share recent and upcoming collection installations at The Baltimore Museum of Art that feature women artists, whose work ranges from the Hudson River School era to the mid-twentieth century. The presentation will highlight well-known collection favorites, works by understudied artists, and new acquisitions. 

 

Sunday, April 16 at 2 pm

Class of 2023 Cole Fellows’ Research Presentations 

Vicente Cayuela, Sofia Thieu D’Amico, Kristen Marchetti & Beth Wynne 

 

As the culmination of their year-long Cole Fellowship, Vicente Cayuela, Sofia Thieu D’Amico, Kristen Marchetti, and Beth Wynne will present their new research findings. Their research explores Indigenous land use and 19th-century industry in the Hudson Valley, previously unacknowledged labor on the historic property, post emancipation histories, the artistic achievements of Sarah Cole, the life and work of Maria Bartow Cole, and the systems of labor, commerce, trade, and agriculture that supported the development of the 1815 Main House.  

 

The 2023 Sunday Salons are made possible by The Estate of James T Lewis IV 

 

Additional support provided by Empire State Development’s I LOVE NEW YORK program under the Market NY initiative, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature and the Kindred Spirits Society of the Thomas Cole National Historic Site 

 

Thomas Cole National Historic Site  

The Thomas Cole National Historic Site is an international destination presenting the 

original home and studios of the artist and early environmentalist Thomas Cole (1801- 

1848). Cole founded the early major art movement of the United States, now known as the Hudson River School of landscape painting. Located on 6 acres in the Hudson Valley, the site includes the 1815 Main House; Cole’s 1839 Old Studio; the reconstructed 1846 New Studio building; and panoramic views of the Catskill Mountains. It is a National Historic Landmark and an affiliated area of the National Park System. The Thomas Cole Site’s activities include guided and self-guided tours, special exhibitions of both 19th-century and contemporary art, print publications, lectures, extensive online programs, school programs, the Cole Fellowship, free community events, and innovative public programs such as the Hudson River School Art Trail—a map and website that enable people to visit the places in nature that Cole painted—and the Hudson River Skywalk, a new scenic walkway connecting the Thomas Cole Site with Frederic Church’s Olana over the Hudson River. The goal of all programs at the Thomas Cole Site is to enable visitors to find meaning and inspiration in the full historic context of Thomas Cole’s art and ideas. The themes that Cole explored in his art and writings—such as landscape preservation—are both historic and timely, providing the opportunity to connect to audiences with insights that are highly relevant to their own lives. 


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How to Get Savvy About Investing

Written By Editor on 12/11/22 | 12/11/22

How to Get Savvy About Investing 

By Michael D. Lanuto

As a financial advisor, I spend my days helping my clients make smart money decisions that will set them up to achieve their goals for the future. While a lot of what I do involves sophisticated strategies designed for more established investors, I also care deeply about helping the next generation take control of their finances early in life so they, too, can live out their dreams. While investing can be an intimidating topic for those just getting started, it doesn’t need to be. If you’re new to investing, know that it all starts with financial literacy – understanding the basics.


Here’s a primer:


Study common investment terminology. The stock market is rife with complex concepts, so start by getting a grasp of the frequently used terms and concepts. It helps to understand the language of investing, from asset allocation to ETF and beyond. To break it all down, use an online investment dictionary that provides plain-English definitions of common investment terms, or ask your financial advisor to explain them to you. 


Enroll in a class. Take advantage of free webinars, seminars or workshops on investing fundamentals. If you prefer learning in a classroom setting, look for basic courses on investing, how the stock market works or personal finance at a local college or university.


Follow the news. Start following the business and financial sections of your favorite media outlet to get a healthy dose of investment know-how. You’ll begin to understand the types of business activities that influence the marketplace—for example, oil prices or new housing starts—and gain an appreciation for what’s considered newsworthy. As you become more attuned to global markets, you’ll start to see the ripple effect of mergers and acquisitions, product innovations and even front-page news stories—from natural disasters to general elections and terrorist events—on Wall Street confidence.


Watch investment programs. Public radio and television stations often feature investment programs aimed at new and seasoned investors.  Even your local news channels may include a market segment. Be wary of infomercials disguised as informational investment programs, though.


Check out stock market apps. There are hundreds of apps available today focused on helping consumers understand investing. Before downloading an app, check the reviews and opt for those that have been vetted by trusted sources. 


Track your favorite companies. To better understand the movement of individual stocks, pick several of your favorite publicly traded companies to follow. Then, check their stock price, company newsroom and social media accounts each day. Tracking the stocks over time will help you understand how company announcements and actions, such as a product launch or comment by an executive, may affect the stock price.


Work with a financial professional. A professional can help you understand your investment options, and help you make financial decisions that are best for your individual needs. Work with someone who is willing to explain investment concepts and provide educational materials. Tell your professional about your desire to learn more about the market. He or she will likely be willing to send you news articles, add you to a newsletter or give you a call to discuss market news that may interest you.


###


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








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