Video: Sugar and Horton at the Genesee County Animal Shelter
The Genesee County Animal Shelter has posted another video to YouTube encouraging adoption of felines at the shelter.
The Genesee County Animal Shelter has posted another video to YouTube encouraging adoption of felines at the shelter.
Just checking out YouTube for local videos this morning, and came across this:
Some people think the web makes the world bigger. I say, it makes it smaller. Some people say the web makes us neighbors with people in Kenya or the Ukraine. I say it makes us better neighbors with the family next door.
There was a time in United States history when newspapers served as a centralizing force for drawing communities together -- and then came television, and cable, and satellite -- all the forces that did nothing to humanize communication, but made mass communication more mass and less personal. (Radio is a mixed bag. For every WBTA there are 10 radio stations programmed by a computer in Texas, Nevada or Pennsylvania.)
The Internet brings back the possibility of human-sized communication.
At a time when too many glass-eyed Americans turn to network TV for their "Heroes" and get "Lost" in the idea that last night's episode of whatever flimflam Hollywood is dishing out this season is worthy of deep discussion, the Web opens up new possibilities for people, local people, people who share a common interest in a common community, to partake in conversation and pursue change with conviction.
If I might share a bit of personal biography: In 1995, I started a web site in eastern San Diego County called East County Online. At the time, I would tell any number of colleagues in the newspaper business: "Mark my words, the web is the best thing that ever happened to local news; all the fascination now is with global communication, but eventually, people will look homeward and want to use the web to build better communities."
I've never stopped believing that. I believe it to this day.
I've learned a lot about the Internet and how people use it since 1995, but the philosophy remains the same: Together, we can use digital communication to build better, stronger, more self-reliant communities.
That's what I want The Batavian to do for Genesee County. And maybe, along the way, we can convince a few people to turn off the TV once or twice a week and visit a local art gallery, spend an evening with the Batavia Players, or "root,root, root for the home team."
The Muckdogs' (43-26) 13-0 win against the Spikes (16-53) was as lopsided in the stats as in the score. State College had only three hits and five errors compared to Batavia's twelve hits and no errors, in a great game offensively and on the mound for the first place Muckdogs.
In the start, Scott Gorgen (4-2) earned himself the win in five innings with two hits, one walk and one strikeout. Miguel Tapia followed him with one hit and four strikeouts through three innings, and LaCurtis Mayes pitched the 9th with two strikeouts to close-out the shutout. The Spikes' Brian Leach (1-3) lasted three and a third innings with five hits, six runs (four earned) and three walks in the loss.
The Muckdogs wasted no time getting on-board, as they scored two in the 1st on a Colt Sedbrook single and Shane Peterson two-run homerun. The biggest inning of the night came in the 4th as they scored four runs. Bases were loaded early as Charlie Cutler walked, Xavier Scruggs doubled and Frederick Parejo also walked. Cutler came in to score when Chris Swauger hit into a force out. After Edwin Gomez walked, both Scruggs and Swauger came home on a fielding error. Gomez scored the last run of the inning as he came home when Sedbrook hit into a force out.
Batavia scored once more in the 6th on singles by Gomez and Jermaine Curtis. They scored three runs in the next inning, starting with two walks to Cutler and Scruggs. Another error enabled Cutler to move to third to be in position to come home on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Parejo. Swauger then hit one deep to right for the Muckdogs' second two-run shot of the night.
As if 10-0 wasn't enough, Batavia tacked on three more runs in the 9th. Parejo reached on an error and Gomez walked before Alex Castellanos came up with pinch-hit triple to get himself two RBI. He then came home when Curtis hit a sacrifice fly.
Curtis ended the night 2-for-4 with a double and two RBI. Sedbrook got things swinging again, going 3-for-6 with a RBI and run scored. The Spikes host the Muckdogs again tomorrow night before Batavia travels to Jamestown. I'll bring the new NYPL standings first thing to you in the morning.
As of right now, Jamestown lost a 1-0 game to Williamsport and our Muckdogs are up 7-0 against the Spikes in State College...I'll have a full game re-cap later, as well as updated standings and statistics when all the NYPL games are completed!
Since this is the last week of the regular season, I'll have full game re-caps and standings/stats EVERY DAY! So, be sure to check back in and get out to Dwyer this Thursday, Friday and Saturday as we continue our quest for the NYPL title!
A visit Saturday to the LeRoy Farmer's Market yielded more than the fresh produce that I brought home. This is a community gathering that brings together neighbors and friends along with our local growers. We purchased goat milk soap from Darien, rhubarb chutney from Hill and Hollow in Pavilion (delicious, by the way), my friend Mary Margaret's yummy pumpkin bread, sweet corn from a farm a mile from my house and the sweetest cantaloupe that I have ever tasted. I also learned about heirloom tomatoes which have more nutrients than the genetically altered tomatoes that we grow today. It was fascinating to interact with the vendors and learn about the foods and homemade items that are produced in our own neighborhoods. I also ran into many friends and enjoyed the camaraderie of being part of a community.
As the movement to eat local and sustainable food grows in popularity, the more we will learn how valuable this is. The "buy local --buy fresh" movement creates a low carbon footprint that fits into a sustainable renewable lifestyle that is one of the good consequence of the end of cheap oil. It will benefit our farmers and producers. It also provides nutritional value which promotes a healthier alternative to eating processed foods or foods shipped in that may lose nutrients on route. A tomato picked in the morning and eaten the same day is far better than one that has been in cold storage for a week or more. Eating local protects us from bio-terrorism. Food with less distance to travel from farm to plate has less susceptibility to harmful contamnination. Finally, purchasing locally conserves energy on a large scale as the produce is not packed and shipped from far off places. I would much rather buy my corn from MacKenzie's or Pullyblank's -- growers that I know -- than from hundreds or perhaps thousands of miles away. A win-win for everyone.
Kudos to the LeRoy Farmers Market steering committee. The Farmer's Market operates every Saturday in the parking lot behind Pontillo's from 8:00 until noon. This is truly a community venture that the farmers and the local consumers will benefit from greatly. I also would encourage people to stop in at the permanent farm markets and stands. These established stands need our support, too, and provide the same local flavors.
Happy Labor Day, everybody. How come you're inside staring at a computer screen on a beautiful day like this?
Philip Anselmo has the day off. I hope you do, too.
There's news on the WBTA news page.
A car struck a tree off the Thruway this morning. One person is unconscious. Mercy flights dispatched. Listen to WBTA for updates.
Police dispatchers made the switch to the County's dispatch center at midnight.
And those, so far, are the biggest news items of the day.
Be safe and have fun.
The Batavia Muckdogs (42-26) enter the closing week of the season with a half game lead on the Jamestown Jammers (42-27) for the PInckney Division crown.
Winning the division could prove more significant than it seemed a week ago, when the Brooklyn Cyclones (42-28) sat three games back behind Batavia (then in second place in the division). Since then, Brooklyn has reeled off eight straight wins and now sits a mere game behind Jamestown. If Brooklyn stays hot, the Pinckney's second place team -- either Batavia or Jamestown -- may not make the playoffs.
The next two days of games, however, are decidedly in Batavia's favor as they head to State College (16-52), where the Spikes have flirted with achieving the worst record in New York-Penn League history (the 1981 Batavia team holds the record at 16-59). Meanwhile, the Jammers travel to Williamsport (35-33, but 17-19 at home).
Tonight's game is at 5 p.m., while Jamestown and Williamsport clash at 1 p.m. and Brooklyn plays Aberdeen (34-36) at 7 p.m.
The Muckdogs are in Jamestown on Wednesday and then close out the season with three games at home -- Jamestown on Thursday at 7:05 p.m., and State College on both Friday and Saturday at 7:05 p.m.
According to the printed schedule, Friday's game is not slated to be a fireworks night. Maybe Red Wings management will have a change of heart (hint, hint) so the team and fans can celebrate a great season -- especially if that turns out to be the night the Muckdogs clinch the division.
Here's the audio from today's 26th Congressional Debate between Alice Kryzan and Jon Powers.
I haven't had time yet to listen to it. If anybody wants to write up a report of it, that would be great.
As for Jack Davis not participating -- his reported demands that his opponents sign various pledges before he'll debate them is down right anti-democratic (and I mean that with a small "d").
If you run for office, you don't get to dictate what issues your opponent will support, what ethics (or not) they will follow, what sort of campaign they will run. To expect otherwise is just basically anti-American. Either Jack Davis wants to be a lawfully elected representative, or he wants to be a dictator. To dodge debates under the pretense of lecturing other candidates is unconscionable.
We need representatives who will speak up for what they believe without fear or favor. We need representatives who will be transparent about what they believe and why they believe it. We need representatives who will discuss with anybody -- other candidates, media or constituent -- what they believe an why. We should fear those candidates who purposely make themselves inaccessible.
Again, i'm not taking sides here. I'm just saying why Jack Davis was wrong to dodge the debate.
In the battle for first, the Muckdogs (42-26) overtook the lead as they beat rival Jamestown (42-27) by a score of 5-3. Ramon Delgado (6-1) looked sharp once again in the start, getting the win in his five innings with three hits, one run and seven strikeouts. Brad Hand (0-2) came out on the losing end for the Jammers, going four and two-thirds innings with six hits, three runs, three walks and five strikeouts.
Batavia started off the offense by scoring three runs in the 2nd inning. Shane Peterson walked, Christian Rosa singled and Frederick Parejo was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Chris Swauger then came up with a two RBI single. In the next at-bat, Edwin Gomez singled to score Parejo. The Jammers got on the board in the top of the 3rd as Brandon Turner singled and Justin Bass had a RBI triple.
The score remained 3-1 until the Muckdogs added two insurance runs in the 8th. Charlie Cutler, Parejo and Swauger started off the inning with consecutive base hits to score one. Jermaine Curtis had a sacrifice fly to score Batavia's fifth and last run of the game. Jamestown looked to make things interesting in the 9th as they scored two runs on a single and triple, but to no avail.
Curtis ended 2-for-2 with an RBI. Parejo and Swauger both went 2-for-3; Parejo had two runs scored and Swauger had three RBI. The Muckdogs now sit half a game up of the Jammers. Batavia now heads to State College for two games, before traveling to Jamestown again on Wednesday.
Going into today's game vs. Jamestown, Batavia is a 1/2 game out of first in the Pinckney Division with a record of 41-26. A win today would swap places with the Jammers again to put us back in first. Here's where some of our top players are in the league:
The story is about young people returning to Buffalo, but it probably could apply to any Western New York town, including Batavia.
The Buffalo area has lost a huge share of its younger population to other places, as U. S. Census numbers routinely show. But Burns is part of a segment of the population heading the other way, looking to return as their priorities change. Often they are people in their late 20s or early 30s who want to be near family, familiar places they grew up around, and crave a lifestyle with a pace different from larger metro areas.
...
A recent story in New York magazine is calling attention to the area’s low cost for living space and how it has helped persuade some Buffalo expatriates living in New York City to come back. As of late last week, the article was ranked the most read, commented on and e-mailed story on the magazine’s Web site.
Part of the article dealt with the price chasm between New York City and Buffalo for homes and apartments, as well as the difference in the amount of living space that comes with those costs. One couple gave up a tiny Brooklyn apartment for $1,300 a month for a spacious place in Buffalo for $795 per month.
Realtors interviewed said the region’s home prices could be a draw for young people who have tried living somewhere else but now want a place where they can afford to settle down.
“The crucial thing is the lifestyle,” said Phil Aquila, general manager of M. J. Peterson Co. “You can have a lifestyle here because you can afford to live here.”
Are there prodigal sons and daughters returning to Genesee County?
While jobs are not in abundance, there are jobs here, and it's never been easier to work from home or start you're own business. When compared to most major metro areas, you can't beat housing prices and it's a heck of a lot less crowded, smoggy and crime-ridden.
Joyce Miles of the Lockport Union-Sun & Journal offers a profile of sorts of Alice Kryzan, Democratic candidate for the 26th Congressional District, and suggest that Kryzan has deeper roots in her party than either of her opponents.
In person, Kryzan’s manner is soft-spoken and elegant, yet down-to-earth and steeped with a sense of mission. She’s proud of her Democratic roots — her dad was a mayor of their hometown, Youngstown, Ohio, and was among the first Ohio Democrats to throw in with John F. Kennedy for President in 1960 — and she doesn’t hesitate to point out that her competitors are both former Republicans.
Is being more Democrat-than-thou a virtue in a Republican-leaning district?
As for coverage of her policy statements, it's all about the environment.
She wrote a fairly extensive policy statement linking environmental protection, U.S. energy independence and western New York economic growth opportunities. Among other things, the statement calls for a federal goal of 20 percent renewable-source power generation by 2020; a moratorium on construction of coal-fired power plants; enhanced federal tax credits for renewable energy producers and no new drilling for oil; ramped-up fuel economy standards for vehicles and expanded public transportation; sprawl control and encouragement of “walkable” communities. For western New York, she picks ecotourism and development of “green” industries like biofuels as growth engines.
Kryzan acknowledges the plan is ambitious but she’d argue it’s no more so than President Kennedy’s call to send men to the moon. She figures that got done and so can this.
“All we have to say is say, ‘we’re going to be energy independent in 10 years. We’re going to marshal all of our resources to do it,’” she said. “All we need are leaders who have the courage to do it and people to follow them.”
UPDATE: In other campaign news, the Buffalo News carries an article about Powers neglecting to mention War Kids Relief in his latest campaign literature.
In the campaign’s early days, his charity was mentioned often. But Democratic challengers Jack Davis and Alice Kryzan may have found the Achilles heel.
They’re kicking it at will, and probably will continue to do so until the three-way party primary vote on Sept. 9.
“It was the prominent aspect of his biography when he first started running for Congress,” said Kryzan campaign manager Anne Wadsorth. “And now that some questions have been raised concerning the charity and Jon Powers’ role in it, he has eliminated any reference to it as he talks about his experience.”
Any mention of War Kids Relief on the Jon Powers web site is also hard to find. At least, I couldn't find it without using Google to do a site search. Ooops, I'm blind. There's a button on the upper right of the home page.
On their 5 game road trip, the Muckdogs won two, lost two and were rained out once as they continue the fight for first place in the Pinckney Division with Jamestown, with whom they dropped a game to tonight. Here's a quick look at these past 4 games:
The Muckdogs had a 1/2 game lead going into Jamestown, but now swapped places with the Jammers after the loss. The official standings and stats have not been posted yet, but I will bring them to you in the morning (or shall I say later this morning since it's already 1:00)...
The series continues Sunday at Dwyer at 1:05.
Jamestown got to Muckdogs ace Arquimedes Nieto (6-1) for six runs (four earned) in the fist four innings tonight and never looked back, beating Batavia 10-2 to regain a half game lead in the Pinckney Division.
Jose Garcia and Charles Cutler each collected two hits. Garcia also had two stolen bases.
Jamestown and Batavia clash again Sunday at 1:05 p.m. at Dwyer Stadium.
What is Habitat for Humanity of Genesee County NY?
We are a not-for-profit ecumenical Christian housing ministry that partners with people in the Genesee County area to build simple, decent and affordable houses. Habitat exists to eliminate provety housing and make decent shelter a matter of conscience and action.
We are an affiliate of Habitat for Humanity International. Habitat has built more than 200,000 houses around the world in over 92 countries, including all 50 states of the U.S.
Genesee County Habitat has just started their 7th house at 6 Columbia Ave., Batavia. The family has been selected and renovations have begun. Volunteers work on Wednesdays and Saturdays between the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. No experience needed, must be at least 16 yrs. old to help.
For more information, please contact the office at (585) 345-1656 or visit our websites at info@geneseehabitat.com or www.genseehabitat.com.
A mere half game will separate Pinckney Division leaders Batavia and Jamestown as the Muckdogs enter into a two-game series with their Western New York rivals.
The Muckdogs will be on top after a 4-2 defeat of Williamsport Friday night behind the pitching of Hector Cardenas (5-0) and Adam Reifer, who notched his 21st save.
Jamestown, meanwhile, lost to Auburn 5-4.
Saturday's game will be in Jamestown and begins at 7:05 p.m. On Sunday, the teams return to Batavia for a 1:05 p.m. game.
On September 3, artists Becky LeFevre and Karen Reisdorf will debut their exhibit, A Soldier's Anthology: Family Images from WWII and Vietnam, at GO ART! on Main Street in Batavia. In anticipation of the exhibit, I spent an afternoon with Karen and Becky in their studio on Bank Street as they put the finishing touches on their works.
We will be talking more with the artists next week, so check back for more.
One of the best things to keep in mind when writing a newspaper column—or if you're getting started on a serial blog here on The Batavian, wink wink—is that you will write better the better you know your subject.
On that note, Daily News reporter Matt Surtel proves me right and then some in his column on today's op-ed page. His style is fun and quirky, true to its theme, but above all else, it's informed and well-written, and that's what makes it so enjoyable.
Surtel writes about his longtime obsession with the comic strip For Better or For Worse, introducing me to the devoted and surprisingly zealous fan base of the strip that will end its original run Sunday and start over from scratch. Start over from scratch? Well, you see, this comic strip followed a family in real-time for 30 years, and now it will start over, reducing the kids to toddlers and going at it all over again.
Surtel does not shy from passing judgement on some of the strip's characters, calling out one of them as a "gigantic, stupid dweeb," or lamenting the "stupid mustache" of another whom he describes as a "boring milquetoast loser."
Ha!
All in all, this is a great column from a reporter I wouldn't mind hearing more from aside from the usual beat reporting. I've never read For Better or For Worse, but by the end of the column, I shared Surtel's disdain for that "milquetoast loser" who finagled an otherwise ambitious and interesting gal into a mediocre suburban pantomime of life, love and marriage. Damn that Anthony!
Whether the news is good, sad or bad, today's Daily News is mostly about people.
First, there's Annie Jones, a longtime nurse at United Memorial Medical Center who retired recently after 42 years at the hospital. Jones told the reporter that "even though I'm getting tired, I really love what I do."
Also in the news is Amy Johnson, who "has been named director of advancement at Notre Dame High School." Johnson formerly worked at Canisius College as the director of the annual fund and as director of marketing for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
Paul Cregg, co-owner of the Center Street Smokehouse, was in the news again today. County Judge Robert C. Noonan will rule on whether Cregg is guilty of three felony charges by September 8 in a non-jury trial decision. Cregg is charged with failure to file corporate tax returns, offering a false instrument for filing and filing false returns on corporate taxes.
I hope that the Daily News considers itself fortunate to have Virginia Kropf on its staff. Every time she has a story in the paper, it's interesting. She may not be a great stylist. She may not turn the swankiest phrase. But Virginia Kropf has an eye and an ear for what makes small towns tick, and she brings to life with a cool-handed delivery the idiosyncracies that you can find around every corner.
Today, Kropf visits Eugene Beach of Oakfield who barters flowers for fruit. The story is a fun one and worth checking out.
So get out and pick up a copy of the Daily News. Or, subscribe at BataviaNews.com.
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