A woman said she suffered a diabetic issue, causing her to rear end the car of a Batavia resident who had stopped for a red light on Lewiston Road at 8:03 p.m., Friday.Two
Two people suffered minor injuries in the accident and needed to be transported to UMMC for treatment, according to the Sheriff's Office report.
Cited for allegedly following too closely was Mary A. Acomb, 31, of Dewey Ave., Batavia.
Acomb's 2008 Chevy sedan struck a 2007 Toyota sedan driven by Frank J. D'Angelo, 53, of South Main Road, Batavia.
D'Angelo was stopped at the intersection of Lewiston and Park roads when his Toyota was struck. He was not injured, nor was Acomb.
Reportedly injured where Mona L. Adams, 33, and Diana L. Sheehan, 30.
The accident was investigated by Deputy Brad Mazur.
Marc Bzduch took his sons -- Dante, Devyn and Alexandre -- out for some early morning fishing at Dewitt Park. Bzduch said they arrived at the lake at 5:30 a.m., but it was raining, so they sat in his truck for about 45 minutes waiting for it to clear.
Fifteen volunteer firefighters from five companies in Genesee County are headed east this morning to assist in relief and recovery efforts in one of the hardest hit areas of the state from Hurricane Irene.
The volunteers gathered at the Emergency Servcies Training Center on State Street Road at 6:30 a.m. to be briefed on their mission by County Coordinator Tim Yaeger.
The group then headed to the Thruway to make it to Schoharie County by noon for a 72-hour deployment.
"They're in bad shape down there and now they've got more rain coming," said Yaeger, who was among the state's emergency coordinators dispatched to the region right after the storm hit.
The firefighters will be relieving other volunteers who have been working in the county since the storm hit last week.
"There's still places that are getting drops by Blackhawk helicopters of food and water because they're still isolated," Yaeger said.
Yaeger said it's amazing what these guys have signed up for with no pay. They will likely be sleeping on cots, living on pizza and pumping sewage out of basements during their 12-hour shifts.
They might also be called upon to deliver relief supplies to residents isolated by storm damage or just help with general clean up and recovery.
"And they're offended if I don't offer them a chance to go," Yaeger said. "These guys have been waiting for this for a week."
Darien Chief Dale Breitwieser couldn't make the deployment, but he was at the training center this morning to see off the three volunteers from his department. He said it's events like this where you see that volunteers are a special breed of person.
"There will be volunteers there from all over the state and they'll all pull together," Breitwieser said.
Besides Darien, participating departments are Bergen, Town of Batavia and Stafford along with staff from Emergency Services.
Yaeger is not joining this group, though he may be deployed later today to Green County where a village of 700 people in the Town of Plattsville was wiped off the map. The town supervisor lost his house and his gas station and now he's trying to help his town through the devastation, Yaeger said.
If you're an artist, even if you get your degree in graphic arts, there aren't many opportunities to do what you love.
Especially in a small town.
Mark Fanara got his degree from SUNY Brockport, just a few years after he got his first tattoo.
It didn't take him long to figure that maybe body art was a way he could avoid being a penniless artist or getting tied down by a suit and a tie.
He made a career decision -- to open his own tattoo parlor in his hometown, Batavia.
The start of the 21st Century turned out to be a good time to open up a tattoo business. People like Dennis Rodman and Brian Setzer helped make tattoos into a mainstream symbol of individuality.
"There a lot of people who have tattoos that you would never know they have them," Fanara said.
From soccer moms to police sergeants, tattoos aren't just something only drunken sailors get in San Diego or Honolulu or bikers use to advertise their outlaw aspirations. They are no longer just dancing hula girls, red hearts dedicated to mom or anchors emblazoned with "USN." A good tattoo is a complex work of art.
There are whole magazines now devoted to covering the latest trends in skin art.
And Fanara and his staff can give anybody the kind of tattoo they want -- from a simple rose on the back of a shoulder, to a complex and detailed eagle with wings spanning a chest.
High Voltage Tattoo opened Ellicott Street in 2006 and about a year ago Fanara moved his shop to 110 West Main St., Batavia, giving him a high-profile location and a completely remodeled and modern parlor.
A week ago, The Batavian hung out at High Voltage while 36-year-old Fanara applied an ornate zombie face to the back of an arm of one of his apprentices, 18-year-old Ashli Hill, of York.
Hill, who does body piercing for High Voltage and is learning how to tattoo, said she's always loved art and was attracted to tattoos because her dad had them.
"I just remember my dad having this crappy looking panther and I just thought it was the coolest thing," Hill said.
The zombie face was a drawing Hill found online and decided it was a theme she would like to develop in her own body art.
"I love scary movies," Hill said. "I love zombie movies. I decided that's a theme I would like to build on."
She also said she likes tattoos on her arms because, "it makes me feel like Popeye."
Fanara said he gets all kinds of people coming through his door, from the accountant looking for just a little something only his friends on weekends will see, to hardcore tattoo addicts who are looking to add a new work of art to their bodies.
"The classics never go out of style," said Fanara. "The heart with 'mom' will never go out of style."
Of course, many of his clients are repeat customers.
"It's one of those things where once you get one (tattoo), you just want more," Fanara said.
"It's really a mainstream art now," he added. "It's a way to personalize your skin and it's a way to express your personality."
Safety
While we talked, Fanara brought out a surprising issue: Genesee County is one of the few county's in the state that doesn't regulate tattoo parlors. NYS has some regulations, but in most counties, the health department conducts monthly inspections of tattoo parlors, and Fanara thinks in the interest of public safety, Genesee County should do the same.
Fanara said he follows all of the safety and cleaning recommendations common in the industry, from sterilizing his autoclave to using disposable needles, but he believes the public should be assured that all tattoos are applied with the same safety standards.
One danger he warned against is the tattoo applied by the hobbyist at the kitchen table.
"They just know nothing about safety," he said.
Licensing and inspections might help reduce the number of tattoos that aren't applied in a safe environment.
"It would be a good idea," Fanara said. "It would make it safer for everyone. I don't want to pay another fee or pay for a license, but it would just make getting a tattoo safer."
There was a time when a child who was victimized would have to go through a gauntlet of police and medical exams while a case was built against the perpetrator.
And at the end of the process, the child and his or her family was left alone to figure out how to deal with trauma and its aftermath.
Then a group of leaders in the local criminal justice system got together and created Justice for Children and the Child Advocacy Center.
Today, when a child is sexually or physically abused, the child is no longer brought to an intimidating police station for an interview, then driven up to Strong Memorial Hospital for a physical and forensic exam, and then perhaps put through interviews with another investigator or two.
Rather, at the CAC on Bank Street, the child is welcomed into a kid-friendly environment where the investigators, medical examiners and other specialists are brought in to simplify the process for the child.
The CAC also provides ongoing counciling, support and even clothing and school supplies to families that need the assistance.
"I can't imagine going back to the way that it was before," District Attorney Lawrence Friedman said. "It's just a great place."
Friedman is also president this year of the Batavia Kiwanis Club. As a national organization, Kiwanis has a mission of engaging in charitable and civic work on behalf of children. The Batavia Kiwanis adopted the CAC as its long-term project.
The first order of business is to raise $150,000 to buy a new building to house the CAC. The club's goal is to raise $100,000 itself and is asking other Kiwanis clubs to contribute a combined $50,000.
"It's hard for me to imagine a more worthwhile long-term project for our club," Friedman said.
Currently, the CAC pays $1,300 a month in rent -- down from $1,500 when the landlord provided lawn care that is now performed by volunteers -- mostly Kiwanis members.
Friedman said that $1,300 a month that could be used to benefit children directly, and it's also a big expense in an age when state and federal grants are being reduced.
According to Genesee Justice Director Tiffany Szymanek, the CAC receives money from three primary grants -- National Children's Alliance, NYS Office of Child and Family Services and NYS Office of Victims' Services.
A new formula for state grants has more funds going to CACs in larger cities and cuts to smaller cities, Szymanek said.
Cuts have forced CAC to reduce staffing from two full-time employees to one and a half, with the hours of Grace Flannery, a child advocate (pictured) having her hours cut in half.
Flannery's job is to help guide a child and family through the process, from the day the child first walks into the toy filled waiting room through the criminal investigation, the court proceedings and any counseling.
The waiting room, Flannery said, "at least makes them feel a little more comfortable."
It's a symbol of what the CAC tries to accomplish -- avoid victimizing children again by putting through the trauma of reliving their experiences in sterile, adult environments.
"If they are escorted from service to service, they are just re-victimized and re-victimized," Szymanek said.
In a tour, Flannery showed off the CAC's child-friendly exam rooms, the clothes closet, the school supplies stacked in the employee break room and a boardroom filling up quickly with donations for an upcoming fundraiser. She said many times she thinks the community needs to know about the work the CAC does to help victimized children.
"The CAC is a marvelous resource that the community should know about," Flannery said. "Anything you can do to help get the word out, we really appreciate."
The Kiwanis Club is sponsoring a "Bidding on a Brighter Future" Gala and Auction at 6 p.m., Sept. 17 at Batavia Downs. Donations of items for the auction are still being accepted. Tickets for the gala are $40 per person or $75 per couple. Checks can be mailed to: Justice for Children GLOW Foundation, Inc., 108 Bank St., Batavia, NY 14020.
Disclosure: As of Thursday, Howard Owens is a member of the Batavia Kiwanis Club.
The Blue Devils erased a 14-0 fourth-quarter deficit only to see a shot at victory slip past them. With less than 30 second to go in the game, Bath's Matt Nevius connected with Dan Leonard on a 47-yard TD pass.
In the season opener, Batavia's John DiFante connected with Brett Scheurline on a 65-yard pass to put the Blue Devils on the board.
In their next offensive series, the Blue Devils converted on fourth down to keep the drive alive and then scored on another fourth-down play, a three-yard run by Alex Ianita. Batavia's conversion attempt was a run by Codee Gangarossa, who managed to just get the ball across the goal line to tie up the game.
On Bath's next drive, the Blue Devil's defense looked like it might have a chance to stop Bath, but Leonard managed to sneak past a defender. Once he secured the pass from Nevius, there was nothing between him and the goal line.
The Blue Devils are at home again, 7:30 p.m., Friday, against Bishop Timon-St. Jude HS.
In other Genesee County football action on Friday: Way-Co beat Le Roy 28-8; Notre Dame beat Attica 27-7; Pembroke beat Alexander 21-14.
NOTE: About the video -- I shot the first half with the same video camera I've used each of the past two seasons, but it wouldn't stay in focus for some reason. At the half, I decided to switch to my DSLR and use its video function. I decided not to even bother processing the first-half video, so the video above is only from half-time on.Ironically, during one of the key plays of the game, the tripod slipped, causing the camera to lose focus, but I included it in the video anyway.
Notre Dame scored 20 first-quarter points in route to a 27-14 victory over Attica in the opening week of high school football.
Quarterback Tim McCully tossed two TD passes to his brother Doane. Doane had four catches on the night for 90 yards. Doane also had a kick return for a touchdown.
Nick Conklin scored on a 10-yard run for the Fighting Irish in the first quarter and in the fourth quarter, Tim MCully connected with Nick Taylor on a 24-yard TD pass.
Photos submitted by Bare Antolos. His web site is bareantolos.com
The family of 86-year-old Thomas L. Dufford is concerned about his whereabouts.
Dufford was last seen leaving the residence of one of his daughters on Pratt Road at noon, Friday.
He has not been heard from since, according to another daughter, Bonnie Dufford.
Dufford drives a white Lincoln Continental
"We are worried," Bonnie said. "This is not like him and he needs his heart medication."
She's hoping a reader may have some information to share.
According to Sgt. Greg Walker, law enforcement agencies throughout the state have been notified to be on the look out for Dufford's car, a white Lincoln Continental, model year 1996, with New York registration EDW 3680.
Dufford resides in the northeast part of Town of Alexander.
Walker said the Sheriff's Office has no specific leads on where to look for him since nobody knows where he might have decided to go after leaving Pratt Road.
If you have information to share, call the Emergency Dispatch Center at (585) 343-5000.
UPDATE 1:01 a.m.: Thomas Dufford was been located. He is safe. Dufford was stopped by a Sheriff's unit in Ontario County. His family is in route to Ontario County now to pick up him. He had apparently become disoriented and lost, according to Walker.
This is the Remembering 9/11 display set up at City Centre by the NYS Museum, one of several 9/11 artifact displays set up in various municipalities throughout New York. The car is an unmarked NYC Port Authority sedan that was found under the rubble of the Twin Towers. The display is outside the mall-side entrance to Batavia City Hall.
Scaffolding was erected this week around the tower of the St. Jame's Episcopal Church on East Main Street, Batavia. St. Jame's is undergoing renovation and restoration work to help preserve the church.
Sorry for the lack of posts today -- it's been such a busy week I haven't had time to do the things that, you know, actually get money into our bank account.
At one point, I did pop down Evans Street and saw city firefighters spraying a little water on the ice arena parking lot.
Batavia High School JV cheerleaders are washing cars today to raise money for new warm-up uniforms. They've set up their hoses and buckets on West Main Street, Batavia, in between Beverly's Flowers & Gifts and IR Systems/DirecTV.
A city Department of Public Works employee operating a street sweeper thinks he may have hit a car at Ellicott and Liberty streets. But he's not sure.
The worker told a police officer over the radio that "I was swinging out and he made a turn right in front of me. I think I hit him, but I'm not sure. He drove off."
A city police officer is responding to investigate.
The Barker Brothers, jailed in June on drug charges, are accused of using their time behind bars to plot murder.
The brothers, Derick, at left, and Justin, allegedly arranged for a friend from Georgia to travel to New York and snuff out an unidentified target. But when the would-be killer couldn't make the trip, the brothers allegedly asked another person to do the deed.
According to the Genesee County Sheriff's Office, money changed hands and an agreement was reached.
The potential target, who was notified by law enforcement about the plot, was never in danger of harm, according to the Sheriff's Office.
Derick W. Barker, 26, of Tera Boulevard, Jonesboro, Ga., and Justin Z. Barker, 22, of North Lyon Street, Batavia, where both charged with one count of conspiracy in the second degree.
The investigation into the alleged conspiracy began two months ago, according to the news release.
Separate from the conspiracy investigation, Justin Barker is also charged with 303 counts of aggravated harassment, 2nd, and one count of criminal contempt, 1st.
Justin is accused of contacting a person protected by court order 303 times by telephone and U.S. Mail between June 1 and Aug. 31.
The order of protection was issued by Justice Thomas Graham in Oakfield Town Court.
Justin is also charged with three counts of forgery and three counts of offering a false instrument for filing, 1st.
Justin and Derick were arraigned in Batavia City Court and jailed without bail.
The Barker Brothers made news in June when police were called to a local hotel where a trio of young men were accused of not paying their bill and refusing to leave a hotel room.
Derick reportedly fled the hotel and was eventually flushed out of a farm field on the opposite side of the Thruway.
The drug charges that put them in the Genesee County Jail in the first place, along with other charges, stemmed from the June 1 incident.
A pair of paving contractors from New Hampshire were jailed yesterday after being accused of soliciting without a permit.
Taken into custody where Stephen C. Batchelder, 31, of Mammoth Road, Hooksett, N.H., and Robert J. Batchelder, 33, of Thorpe Street, Manchester.
The duo was allegedly observed on North Lyons Street in the city soliciting driveway paving jobs. A short time later, Stephen and Robert reportedly arrived at an address on North Lyons to pave the driveway of a resident.
Sgt. Thomas Sanfratello interviewed the subjects and learned they worked for Affordable Asphalt but allegedly did not have a permit to solicit in the City of Batavia. Sanfratello reports that he learned the duo had been ordered out of service by the federal government.
A State Police inspector was called to the scene. He inspected the vehicle and trailer being used by Stephen and Robert. As a result, Stephen was issued 15 additional license, registration and equipment violations.
Stephen was jailed on $2,500 bail and Robert was jailed on $750 bail.
According to the Nashua Telegraph, Robert and Stephen are tied to the Stanley Paving Company. As The Batavian reported in 2010, some local residents felt they might have been scammed by Stanley Paving.
As we reported in April, Stanley Paving was again reportedly working in Genesee County this summer.
Photos: Stephen Batchelder, top; Robert Batchelder, bottom.
Raymond S. Woeller, 51, of 66 Lake St., Apt. 2, Le Roy, is charged with possession of a forged instrument, 2nd, and grand larceny, 4th. Woeller is accused of forging a friend's signature and withdrawing money from that person's bank account. Woeller was picked up at 11:26 p.m., Wednesday, on a warrant out of Batavia City Court. He was jailed without bail.
A 16-year-old of Mechanic Street, Byron, is charged with endangering the welfare of a child. The youth allegedly ran away from a foster home with two juvenile females. The youth was jailed on $250 bail.
A 16-year-old of Spencer Court, Batavia, is charged with petit larceny. The youth is accused of stealing $52.58 worth of merchandise from Kmart.
Russell Ray Miles, 43, of East Main Street, Le Roy, is charged with harassment, 2nd. Miles is accused of pushing another person during an argument in the parking lot of the Le Roy Country Club. The incident was reported at 8:11 p.m., Wednesday.
Kayla L. Rapone, 20, of 24 Holland Ave., Batavia, is charged with person under 21 purchasing alcohol. Rapone is accused of using a fake ID to purchase beer at a local store.
Kurt H. Hawkins, 18, of 3 Tracy Ave., Batavia, is charged with harassment, 2nd. Hawkins is accused of punching another person in the face.
It's a place teeming with wildlife, a bit of a birder's paradise. It's 400 acres of accessible open space where local residents can walk their dogs, go for a jog or just enjoy a stroll along well-maintained paths.
Some might call it a park.
We call it the Batavia Wastewater Treatment Plant.
A lot of area residents, even if they know of the plant, may not know it's open to the public, or appreciate its natural aesthetics.
"It's great that the city is able to provide access to this great resource," said Tom O'Donnell, president of the Buffalo Ornithological Society. "It's a unique place to view waterfowl and shore birds."
Some 180 different species of birds have been spotted on the property during its 21-year history, including herons, loons, egrets, hawks, terns, swans and, of course, a variety of ducks and geese.
Birders from throughout the region know of the facility and have even traveled from as far away as Finland specifically to go birding in Batavia.
What makes the plant unique is the lack of reeds and trees between the birder and the birds, said O'Donnell. The vantage point, with the raised berms around the lagoons, give birders an exceptional angle to view waterfowl and shore birds.
It's tempting to call the fenced-in treatment plant a bird sanctuary, but it's prime function is to treat the city's effluent and turn it into something environmentally safe to pump back into the Tonawanda Creek.
The process is all natural -- no chemicals -- and it takes six to nine months for a molecule of water to pass from the facility's mechanical screen to the gravity outflow pipe near the pedestrian bridge at Walnut Street on the Tonawanda.
According to City Manager Jason Molino, the treatment plant is the largest lagoon system east of the Mississippi.
"That plant is a resource that I don’t think people understand," Molino said following a city council meeting last week. "It’s a special plant. It’s 400 acres. It doesn’t use chemical treatment. It’s natural treatment, so there’s no chemical cost. Only four people run it, seven days a week. You find me a sewer plant that has low labor costs like that, low treatment costs -- that's why our sewer rates are some of the lowest in Western New York."
And the plant is paid for. A combination of federal grants and municipal bonds helped get the plant constructed and the bonds are all paid off.
It even generates a little revenue (besides sewer-rate fees). A contractor pays up to $6,000 a year to harvest fat head minnows from some of the ponds. The minnows were brought in to help balance the treatment of the water, and while birds feast on the little fish, they breed faster than even the hungriest herons can consume them.
The plant's natural treatment process is not without precedent, according to Rick Volk, chief operator of the wastewater plant.
"The idea of lagoon treatment is as old as Egypt," Volk said. "What we did in Batavia is take a system that is as old as Egypt and apply new technology."
From 2.5 to 3.5 million gallons of raw sewage arrives at the plant daily (capacity is 5 million gallons per day). It is pumped into a screening process that removes everything larger than a cigarette butt, then goes through an aerated grit chamber to remove sand and dirt (this is the one part of the plant that produces any real stench).
After screening, the effluent is pumped into aerated ponds. The ponds provide oxygen treatment that consumes matter in the wastewater. Air is pumped into the water by 200 horsepower compressors. This process takes about a month.
The aerated ponds are popular with ducks who can be found by the dozens either in the water or resting on the long, black aeration pipes that float on the surface of the water.
The wastewater is then fed alum to assist in phosphorus removal as it flows into two secondary ponds. The 45-acre ponds are up to 8-feet deep where biological activity and settling removes more waste. The process takes up to 42 days.
Next, a lift station hoists the water up above the four tertiary ponds, which are from 25 to 35 acres each and have an adjustable depth of 3 to 12 feet. At this point, most of the suspended solids are removed.
This is where you'll find minnows and the waterfowl who feed on them, as well as a variety of other birds flitting through the air, from northern flickers to least flycatchers.
The final step on a molecule of water's journey is to pass through one of three wetlands -- ponds with reeds and other aquatic plants that help "put the final polish," as Volk said, on the wastewater.
The largest of the ponds is popular with ducks, geese, herons and snowy egrets.
The whole process is designed to ensure that only water that is safe for people, crops, fowl and fish is piped back into the Tonawanda.
Plant staff conduct frequent tests -- regulated by the state -- in a lab at the facility to ensure each step of the process is cleaning the waste as it should and that the final product shipped out to the Tonawanda is up to environmental standards.
Staff is on duty from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., which is the only time the ponds are accessible to the public.
The current four staff members are about half of what the city needed to run its pre-1990s wastewater plant, according to Volk.
While not officially a park, as long as the plant is open, area residents are welcome to visit anytime during plant hours, Volk said.
Guests are asked to sign a registry in the main building, but are then free to wander the property. With permission, guests can drive their cars -- it can be a long, long walk to the tertiary ponds -- on the well-maintained gravel roads that surround the ponds.
Volk said there are times when work being performed by staff will prevent guests from driving on the roads, which is why it is necessary to ask first.
And if you go, you really want to get back to either the tertiary ponds or the larger of the three wetlands. This is where you will see the greatest variety of birds.
There's also a park of sorts on the west end of the facility, along Donahue Road. There's a small parking lot and footpaths that allow, at points, for visitors to view the tertiary ponds as well as a reconstructed wetland -- abatement for a wetland destroyed when the plant was built. The area is open to the public at all times, but no hunting or trapping is allowed.
Batavia Downs announced today that Joseph Teresi Jr., one of Genesee County's most tireless volunteers, will receive the 2011 Italian-American of the Year award.
In the past he's also been named YMCA Volunteer of the Year as well as a two-time Lions Distinguished Service Award winner and a recipient of "Lion of the Year."
"I'm totally surprised," Teresi said. "With the number of people around here who are worthy of these awards, to be recognized twice in one year is very surprising."
Teresi is being recognized for all of his volunteer efforts, but most notably his effort to start the YMCA's Challenger Sports program and his work with the T.F. Brown's/Lion's Club annual Christmas dinner. He's also a member of the Notre Dame High School Education Foundation and past president of the Genesee YMCA and the Batavia Lion's Club.
"It's always nice to be recognized for your efforts," Teresi said. “I am proud to be an Italian-American and to enjoy the traditions of my heritage, so this award carries a special meaning.”
Teresi was nominated for the award by Joe Gerace, who won the first Italian-American award from Batavia Downs.
"it's nice to be nominated by the first-award winner," Teresi said. "For him to recognize my efforts, some of the contributions I've tried to make to the community, it's nice, and I'm proud to follow people like Chuck Zambito last year and Ray Cianfrini the second year."
The award will be presented to Teresi on Sept. 9 at Batavia Downs. To make reservations to attend the event, call Sara Tenney at (585) 343-3750, ext. 309.