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GCC to hold annual Job Fair on April 13

By Billie Owens

Genesee Community College will hold a Job Fair from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Tuesday, April 13 in the William Stuart Forum. More than 35 companies are expected to participate.

Genesee's Career and Transfer Center continues to solicit businesses from all types of industries to join the popular, three-hour event that introduces potential new employees to employers, and also provides businesses an opportunity to present their trade and services to the local community.

Any company interested in attending the Job Fair should call 345-6888 to register immediately.  The following employers are scheduled to attend:

Byrncliff Resort & Conference Center; New York State Police; Army and Army Reserve; Camp Wyomoco; Pier 45 at the Port U.S. Marine Corps; Combined Insurance; Pioneer Credit Recovery, Inc.; Navy; Darien Lake; Professional Driver Institute; WCJW; Department of Homeland Security – ICE – DRO; Rochester AmeriCorps; Western New York D.D.S.O.; ESL Federal Credit Union; Rochester City Police Department; Five Star Bank; Rochester Psychiatric Center; Genesee Area Family YMCA (Camp Hough); Rochester Riverside Convention Center; Genesee County AmeriCorps; Social Security Administration; Genesee County Career Center; Stepping Stones Learning Center;  
Genesee County Sheriff's Department; SUNY Brockport; Army ROTC, Genesee Region Independent Living Center, Inc.; TAP Personnel Heritage Centers; The Bank of Castile; Hyatt Regency Rochester; U.S. Department of Agriculture – NRCS; New York State Department of Agriculture & Markets; and the Air Force.  

"We expect the job fair this spring to be very successful," John McGowan, Career Center coordinator said. "There are a lot of students and local community members that are looking for jobs. Whether it's from layoffs or more simply, people need a change of employment, we are providing an excellent opportunity for job seekers to meet with potential employers."

The college is also hosting the annual spring 4-Year College Transfer Fair, which will allow students interested in transferring to a baccalaureate college to explore options to further their education, on 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 31 in the Forum at the Batavia Campus.

In addition to these events, Genesee Community College's Career and Transfer Center sponsors several preparatory job search workshops, such as Resume & Cover Letter Writing and Credential File & Interviewing Skills. The workshops are FREE and open to the public.

A complete list of upcoming workshop dates and times can be found at www.genesee.edu/ctc <http://at www.genesee.edu/ctc>. To attend the workshops students and community members MUST register in advance by calling the Student Activities Office at (585) 343-0055 ext. 6261.

 

All-terrain vehicle accident in Byron

By Billie Owens

Byron fire and an ambulance are headed to the scene of an accident involving an all-terrain vehicle at 6943 Warboys Road in Bryon. Minor injuries are reported.

RSVP named Richmond Library's Friend of the Year

By Billie Owens

RSVP (Volunteer Placement Program) of Genesee County has been named the 2010 Richmond Library Friend of the Year.

The program will be honored at a public reception held in the Gallery Room of the Richmond Library on Friday, April 16. The reception will begin at 3:30 p.m., with the award presentation at 4.

The annual award, which is sponsored by the Friends of the Richmond Memorial
Library, recognizes an individual or group whose interest and support of the library has been exceptional. Consideration is given to people who generously give of their time and talent to help with library-sponsored programs, or who have worked toward promoting the mission of the library within the community.

Friends' President Dianne Boeheim said:

“The Board of Directors of the Friends of the Library recognizes that the work done by volunteers is invaluable to an organization and, according to library staff, RSVP volunteers are among the best and most reliable. 

"The director of the program, Dorian Ely, has excelled at finding the right people for the
different jobs. RSVP volunteers work with the library’s Interloan Department, finding requested materials for Richmond Library patrons as well as for the NIOGA system.

"They sign in students after school, helping ensure the safety of those students; and they are working as shelvers, assisting with the return of borrowed materials to the shelves in a timely and accurate fashion.”

Friends of the Richmond Memorial Library is a non-profit organization that assists the library with programs, public relations and fund-raising through its monthly book sales and membership drive. Information about membership in the organization may be obtained by calling the library at 343-9550 or by visiting the library’s Web site,  <www.batavialibrary.org>.

Yancey's Fancy earns Gold Medal in world's biggest cheese contest

By Billie Owens

Judging for the 2010 World Championship Cheese Contest ended today in Madison, Wisc., and Yancey's Fancy, Inc., located in Corfu, earned a Gold Medal and three other awards.

There were a record number of entries this year, with 2,313 cheeses and butters from 20 nations and every continent vying for awards. That makes it the biggest, and so to speak "cheesiest" contest on the planet. It is has been held in even-numbered years since 1958.

An international panel of 30 "cheese-evaluation experts" spent Tuesday, Wednesday and today selecting medalists in 80 cheese and butter classes.

The competition is a technical evaluation of entries, using an objective measure of cheese defects to select the products in each class that best exemplify perfection for a cheese variety. The highest-scoring cheeses and butters earn a Gold Medal, with Silver and Bronze medals awarded to second- and third-place finishers in each class.

“The cornerstone of this competition is a fair, objective evaluation of entries,” said Robert Aschebrock, contest chief judge, a career cheese and butter grader and inspector with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Yancey's Fancy earned the Gold -- Best of Class -- for its pasteurized process Jalapeno Peppadew Cheddar (98.8 points). It took two 4th-Place awards (each earning 97.55 points) for its pasteurized process Smoked Gouda and Bacon Cheese and its pasteurized process Roasted Garlic Cheddar Cheese. A 5th-Place award went its pasteurized process Horseradish Cheddar Cheese (97.35 points).

In this morning's Championship Round of judging, 77 Gold Medal cheeses from cow, goat and sheep milk classes were re-evaluated. The highest-scoring cheeses were named World Champion and First and Second Runners-Up.

Cheesemakers and buttermakers competed from Argentina, Australia, Austria, Canada, Cyprus, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States.

Thirty U.S. states had cheese or butter entries as well as the Canadian provinces Alberta, British Columbia, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island and Quebec. Participating U.S. states included California, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin.

Strong growth in the contest was reflected in several cheese categories. Bandaged cheddar entries nearly doubled in 2010 along with rinded Swiss styles, brie cheeses and spreadable cheeses. Significant increases are noted in classes for gorgonzola, ricotta, blue-veined cheeses, smear-ripened cheeses, flavored cheeses, reduced-fat cheeses and semi-soft goat’s milk and sheep’s milk cheeses. The new reduced-sodium cheese class debuted with a respectable 10 entries and the shredded-cheese evaluation (new in 2008) grew from 5 to 20 entries.

Winners will receive their awards during the International Cheese Technology Exposition, April 20-22 in Wisconsin.

Transformer explosion on Walnut Street

By Billie Owens

Batavia Fire Department is responding to a reported "transformer explosion" at 61 Walnut St. National Grid has been notified.

UPDATE 2:54 p.m.: The transformer is fine, says the fireman. They are leaving the scene. There are a couple of wires up high there that are dangling or loose. "Mighta been some squirrels," the fireman says, as a possible explanation.

Motor vehicle accident prompts Mercy Flight to land on Jackson Street in Batavia

By Billie Owens

A motor vehicle accident in downtown Batavia prompted the landing just minutes ago of a Mercy Flight helicopter in the parking lot of the Salvation Army Store on Jackson Street (the old Star Market).

At the accident scene nearby, a car is reported to be on its roof, which required extrication of the occupant(S). Mercy EMS met the helicopter out of Buffalo at the gate of the Salvation Army.

No further details yet.

UPDATE 7:36 p.m.: The Life Flight helicopter is airborne, bound for Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester.

 

Vendors sought for upcoming Downtown Batavia Public Market

By Billie Owens

Downtown Batavia Public Market Committee is in the process of organizing its fourth season at its Ellicott (Route 63) and Center streets location.

The market will open on Thursday, June 17 and run through October, every Thursday, with newly extended hours from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 pm. There will be a number of new growers and crafts people to add to the variety of items that shoppers need and want.

The market will be offering: baked goods, fresh corn, tomatoes, berries, peaches, cheese, honey, maple syrup, New York wines, cut flowers and handmade crafts. Shop and have lunch -- hot dogs, hamburgers and pizza will be served. There will be new activities such as nutrition programs and more.



“Support the downtown that supports your community." Sponsored by: Batavia Business Improvement District Public Market Committee. Interested vendors may contact the B.I.D. office at 585-344-0900 or visit our website at  HYPERLINK <http://www.downtownbataviany.com" www.downtownbataviany.com>

College tech prep students wage annual war at GCC

By Billie Owens

Middle and high school students will have a chance to take what they learn in the technology classroom and compete in the third annual Tech Wars competition Thursday at Genesee Community College.

Registration for the College Tech Prep event begins at 9 a.m. and the competition starts at 9:30 a.m. From catapults to robots, manual drafting to Web page design, the imagination and creativity of some of the brightest students in the GLOW (Genesee, Livingston, Orleans and Wyoming Counties) region will be showcased during this day-long event.

There will be multiple project-based events of skill, chance and ability. Students will compete in bridge building, drafting, sumo robots, T-shirt design, carbon dioxide dragster racing, among other events. The highlight of this year's event will once again be the Robotic Tractor Pull. Two new events are Sculpture and Rube Goldberg Machines.

"Interest in this competition continues to grow each year," said Debbie Dunlevy, the college's Tech Prep Program director and coordinator co-chair of the Tech Wars competition. "It's not only a lot of fun, but it gets young people exploring the wide array of careers in technology.

"Sometimes what they learn and share on the floor of GCC is transferred to a conversation at home, and that can translate into thinking about careers, education and employment down the road."

The Tech Wars competition was inspired from a similar competition currently held through Niagara County Community College. That event is now in its 13th year and attracts as many as 600 students from Western New York to compete.

"The ultimate goal of the Tech Wars is to encourage these kids to think beyond the classroom, engage their creativity, strengthen their team-building and problem-solving skills and embrace technology as a fun and rewarding way to make a living," Dunlevy said. "It may seem like a tall order, but it happens each year at the Tech Wars. We love hosting this fun yet educational event."

College Tech Prep helps students explore various career options and make a smooth transition from high school to college and ultimately to professional careers. The Tech Wars is among several dynamic programs giving students the opportunity to work in hands-on learning encounters, often within business settings and with various professionals.

College Tech Prep offers several distinctive career academies to high school students including: Heath, Legal, Information Technology, and the new Theatre Arts Academy offered in tandem by Genesee Community College theater classes and instructors Maryanne Arena and Ed Hallborg. In addition, there is also a Virtual Enterprise Business program available to high school students.

For more information, please contact Dunlevy, College Tech Prep Program director at Genesee Community College, at 585-343-0055 x6316 or dkdunlevy@genesee.edu <http://dkdunlevy@genesee.edu.>. More information can also be found at the Tech Wars website, http://www.techwars.org. <http://www.techwars.org>

Longtime Stafford historian to be honored March 25

By Billie Owens

Grace Woodworth, who served as Town Historian of Stafford for 17 years, will be honored by the Stafford Historical Society at its monthly membership meeting on Thursday, March 25.

It begins at 7 p.m. in the Town Hall on Rte. 237 in Stafford.

A DVD will be shown of an interview with her in which she recalls memories of growing up on a farm in Morganville. The public in invited to attend.

For questions, contact Phyllis Darling at 343-1928 or e-mail to: <electra@2ki.net>.

Event Date and Time
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Longtime Stafford historian to be honored March 25

By Billie Owens

Grace Woodworth, who served as Town Historian of Stafford for 17 years, will be honored by the Stafford Historical Society at its monthly membership meeting on Thursday, March 25.

It begins at 7 p.m. in the Town Hall on Rte. 237 in Stafford.

A DVD will be shown of an interview with her in which she recalls memories of growing up on a farm in Morganville. The public in invited to attend.

For questions, contact Phyllis Darling at 343-1928 or e-mail to: <electra@2ki.net>.

Traveling to Canada? Get your passport ready - fees may increase

By Billie Owens

The Genesee County Clerk’s office will hold our “National Passport Day” from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, March 26 at 15 Main Street, County Building #1.

As with “National Passport Day in the USA 2010” on March 27, it's a reminder to residents that traveling to Canada now requires either a passport card, passport book or enhanced license if the traveler is over 19 years old.

Event Date and Time
-

Traveling to Canada? Get your passport ready - fees may increase

By Billie Owens

The Genesee County Clerk’s office will hold our “National Passport Day” from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, March 26 at 15 Main Street, County Building #1.

As with “National Passport Day in the USA 2010” on March 27, it's a reminder to residents that traveling to Canada now requires either a passport card, passport book or enhanced license if the traveler is over 19 years old.

The day allows us to extend an invitation to residents to come in and apply for your passport at the clerk's office before the proposed increase in fees takes affect.

You will need to bring your certified birth certificate or other citizenship documentation and your driver's license or other acceptable form of identity. Passport photographs are available in the local office. If you are applying for anyone under the age of 16, both parents and the child need to be present.

If you have any questions, please call the clerk's office for clarification at 585-344-2550, ext. 2316. The friendly staff is there to assist in the process, and cookies and punch will be available for your enjoyment on that day. So if you are thinking about getting your passport, this would be an excellent time before the proposed fee increase takes effect!

City's new Mental Health Treatment Court aims to reduce crime and recidivism

By Billie Owens

All too often a person with a mental illness cycles in and out of the criminal justice system, never really getting the kind of assistance he or she needs to break the pattern.

They may stop taking their meds, get high on drugs or alcohol, and wind up committing a crime. They are no less culpable for their actions, but they can make better choices, move forward and be less likely to get into trouble, if they plug into the many resources available to them in Genesee County.

So say the proponents of the Mental Health Treatment Court, which is a new division of Batavia City Court. It accepted its first case last June, before being officially designated as a mental health court in November.

On March 23, an opening ceremony will take place at the courthouse with many of the stakeholders present, including the Hon. Robert J. Balbick, who also presides over city and drug treatment courts and the "veterans' track" cases.

He has spent 20 years on the bench and during that time has seen the growth and advancement of treatment courts.

"People who have mental-health issues, traditionally, haven't been dealt with effectively by the criminal-justice system," Balbick said. "People with a mental illness will not respond in the same way to ideas, programs, etc., as a person without a mental illness.

"We run our court differently. We're trying to encourage, to put people in a place where they can take control of their lives. We are not as coercive. ... Mental health is different than other treatment courts and the (public) response to it is different than others."

Chief Court Clerk Linda Giambrone said the plans for the opening are definately unlike any other held at the courthouse to date. A flautist will play softly before and after the ceremony, a classical guitarist is being sought to perform and art works produced by the mentally ill will be showcased. There's a brunch reception afterward.

"Sometimes the treatment courts are seen as 'soft justice,'" Balbick said. "But they're not. We make that person accountable -- maybe financially, certainly to the community. Hopefully, the person doesn't recycle back into the system. I'd rather see them go through the treatment process."

That process typically begins with recommendations from law enforcement, the public defender's office, doctors and other professionals. Resource Coordinator Nicole Desmond, who has a strong background in the mental-health field, reviews these and is part of a team which evaluates whether a defendant is a good match.

The team includes representatives from Genesee County Mental Health, Mental Health Association in Genesee County, ACE Employment, Horizon Village Recovery Center, GCASA, Atwater House, Genesee Justice, the D.A.'s office, public defenders' office and assigned counsel.

Desmond's job at the courthouse is to bring together a variety of providers and services to address these unique and often complicated cases.

"With the decentralization of psychiatric hospitals, people have fallen through the cracks," Desmond said. "I think this is a positive way to get people to take better care of themselves."

Of course, the major of people living with mental illness never see the inside of a courtroom because they've never broken the law. They are productive citizens who hold jobs, go to school, raise families, etc., despite their diagnoses.

The prime candidate for mental health court has committed a crime but is not a threat to others. It has been determined he or she has mental health issues that are biological in nature, apart from any other issues, like behavioral problems and substance abuse, which often compounds the complexities of these cases.

Currently, 11 people are participating in the mental health treatment court, which is held from 3 to 3:30 p.m. on Thursday in the Batavia City Court. Their diagnoses include: traumatic brain injury, mental retardation, developmental delays, post-traumatic stress disorder and serious mental illness. Eight of the cases also have an alcohol and/or substance abuse diagnosis and are active in outpatient treatment.

For now, only people eligible to have their cases heard in Batavia City Court can participate. But if someone say, from Pavilion, also had a diagnosed substance abuse problem, a recommendation for mental health court could be considered.

"We give people opportunities to link to treatment to help themselves," Desmond said. "We focus on treatment, we monitor them and help them stay connected rather than just getting into trouble and going to jail. Somebody can live with mental illness but they function better if they are plugged in."

With the exception of hiring Desmond, there have been little or no public expenditures to create and run the mental health court, according to the judge. He admits it means more work for the public defenders' office, because the cases are often more complicated and therefore more time consuming.

But the other key entities are already in place and operating. It's just a matter of pulling the resources together, like working a puzzle, to get the best outcome, the judge said.

People who receive or qualify for SSI, Medicare and Medicaid don't have to worry about paying for treatment, thanks to taxpayers, who also foot the bill for the costs of incarceration.

But the working poor, those with only catastrophic health-care coverage and those who can't afford to pay high co-payments struggle the most in trying to fund their mental health treatments. A "sliding scale" based on the ability to pay helps.

One of the biggest problems the Mental Health Treament Court faces is the lack of bed space for treatment and the availability of housing.

"It's a systematic problem," Balbick said. "One thing that's not available here is a crisis center. In an emergency situation, our options are limited to incarceration or a civil commitment to a hospital. That's one of our challenges."

Batavia Downs part of new agreement to boost revenue

By Billie Owens

A new days dawns as three off-track-betting regions today unveiled a Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) designed to reinvigorate the New York’s struggling racing industry.

As part of the JVA, the presidents of Capital OTB, Suffolk OTB and Western OTB said that they will engage in cooperative ventures that increase efficiencies, boosting the revenue that the participating OTBs send to their sponsoring counties.

College gets big grant to make it more energy efficient

By Billie Owens

Here's news from Genesee Community College about its board of trustees meeting earlier this week.

Genesee Community College has been awarded a $457,661 grant from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) for replacement of campus lighting with new energy-efficient devices.

Through the grant, the college will replace incandescent and fluorescent lighting fixtures and ballasts with more efficient fluorescent lighting and light-emitting diode (LED) bulbs over the next year. LED bulbs are highly energy-efficient and last longer than traditional bulbs, according to Kevin P. Hamilton, vice president for finance and operations.

"These changes create greater light output per unit of electrical power used," Hamilton said. "And will result in savings of at least $48,000 annually at Genesee.

NYSERDA is a state agency created to fund research and infrastructure initiatives that result in greater efficiency throughout the state, and ultimately a reduction in reliance on fossil fuels. NYSERDA grants are highly competitive. The grant proposal was coordinated by longtime Buildings and Grounds Director Timothy M. Landers.

"This is a grant we have never had before," President Stuart Steiner told trustees. "It is very significant."

Hamilton told trustees that the college will continue to seek "green" grants.

"Our hope is that we will receive additional funds to be able to complete other projects such as boiler replacements, upgrades to the energy management system and motor replacements," Hamilton said. "We continue to study the feasibility of solar and wind power."

In other business, the board of trustees:

  • Approved a $16,863 athletic facilities upgrade change order for the purchase and installation of new lockers in the men's locker room.
  • Heard Board Chair Laurie J. Miller appoint a three-member board subcommittee to review proposed fees for the college's Batavia Campus athletic fields. Named to the ad-hoc committee were Maureen T. Marshall, Chair; Kenneth A. Dodd, and Laura J. Bohm.
  • Heard Vice President for Finance and Operations Kevin P. Hamilton report that drywall is being installed in the portion of the new Genesee County Economic Development Center's Med Tech Park designated for the College's nursing program. Staff should be able to move in by July 1. Hamilton also said that only "punch list" items need to be completed on the turf field project. These include landscaping and bleacher work. He also shared preliminary architectural sketches of the planned Art Gallery. Architects recommend a limestone exterior, to match the nearby Batavia Campus entranceways.
  • Heard Vice President for Student and Enrollment Services Virginia M. Taylor report that 1,308 individuals applied for admission as full-time students for the Spring 2010 semester, up 32% from the 990 individuals who had applied a year earlier.
  • Heard Taylor report that the college is receiving applications from area high school students for Summer 2010 Genesee Promise Plus scholarships. Under this program, seniors enrolled in area high schools receive a scholarship for one or two summer courses at Genesee. Last year, the Promise Plus program had 351 registrations, up 14% from the 217 registrations received in summer 2008, the program's first year.
  • Heard Genesee student Lori Mould describe "Bridge Winter Camp," an event that brought 200 SUNY faculty, staff and students to The People's Republic of China over the winter break. The Chinese government invited SUNY to send a delegation as a follow-up to SUNY's gesture a year earlier to bring 150 Chinese students from earthquake-ravaged Sichuan Province. Eight Chinese students completed a year of study at Genesee during the 2008-2009 academic year. Mould shared photographs of Beijing, Olympic Village, Chinese art and architecture, the Panda Research Center, and the Great Wall of China. She was able to meet one of the former Genesee students during the trip. Mould called the visit to China a "life-changing experience." Mould also serves as Genesee Community College student trustee.
  • Heard Genesee student Colleen McKay describe her business experience in her native Canada, and how she came to select Genesee as her college choice. McKay, whose family lives in Woodstock, Ontario, started a farm market business with her brothers and sisters as a youngster. The business operates about six months a year, selling produce and baked goods. Called – "Your Farm Market" – it has grown over the years and now earns more than $400,000 annually in gross revenue. McKay, 20, and a longtime softball pitcher, met Genesee Assistant Softball Coach Pat Clark, who was visiting Woodstock and talking to prospective students. "I spent about five minutes with him, and he taught me six new pitches in that short period of time. I was so amazed by him, and after he left, I looked up Genesee Community College on the web. I knew I wanted to come here and play softball." McKay is pursuing a degree in Entrepreneurship and holds a 4.0, or straight A, average. She calls Genesee an "amazingly friendly place.

Car fire on Seven Springs Road

By Billie Owens

A car fire is reported at 8534 Seven Springs Road in the Town of Batavia. It is near the railroad tracks. Batavia Fire is responding.

Hawley says Lt. Gov's fiscal reform plan is 'a start but needs work'

By Billie Owens

This is a statement by Assemblyman Steve Hawley concerning a proposed fiscal reform plan by New York's Lt. Governor:

“Last night, Lt. Governor Ravitch clarified his five-year fiscal reform plan to my colleagues and I in the Assembly Minority Conference. While I agreed with him on the need to cut out social ‘yum yums’, or giveaways in the state budget, I am specifically concerned with his proposal to increase state borrowing by $2 billion a year for the next three years.

"We are not going to solve the state’s fiscal crisis by increasing our borrowing and coming up with budgetary gimmicks. In order to truly close out the budget deficit and steer New York out of this fiscal crisis, we need to make real spending cuts. I look forward to working with the Lt. Governor and my legislative colleagues in the coming weeks as the budget deadline approaches."

NY Sheriffs' Association Institute to begin annual membership drive, key beneficiary is kids' summer camp fund

By Billie Owens

The New York State Sheriffs’ Association Institute will begin its annual Honorary Membership drive in Genesee County within the next 10 days, according to Sheriff Gary T. Maha.

The institute was established in 1979 and is a not-for-profit, tax-exempt organization, and contributions to it are tax deductible.

While the Sheriff’s Office is a unit of county government, many of the concerns of Sheriffs' and other law enforcement agencies are best addressed on a statewide level. The Sheriffs’ Institute provides centralized training programs and services for all Sheriffs’ Offices, where those programs and services would be unavailable or impractical on a single county basis.

The flagship program of the Sheriffs’ Institute is the Sheriffs’ Summer Camp for "economically challenged" children. The Sheriffs’ camp, in its 34th year of operation, is located on Keuka Lake and approximately 800 children statewide attend, including about 20-25 disadvantaged children from Genesee County.

The Sheriffs’ Institute pays the entire cost of the camp stay and transportation. Most children attending wouldn’t otherwise have an opportunity for vacation travel or a summer camp experience.

The Sheriffs’ Summer Camp program combines summer recreation with activities designed to teach an understanding of, and respect for, our laws and the men and women who enforce them. The strong camper-to-counselor ratio allows for individual attention with an emphasis on the development of self-esteem.

“In these difficult economic times, we can not forget our youth who will not have the opportunity for a summer camp experience or a summer vacation,” Maha said. “By becoming an honorary member you are supporting the Sheriffs’ Summer Camp for economically disadvantaged children.”

In addition, the Sheriffs’ Institute operates a scholarship program that provides one scholarship to each of New York State’s Community College’s Criminal Justice Programs. This program is designed to help attract the best and the brightest to the criminal justice vocation.

Financial support for many of the Sheriffs’ Institute programs comes from Honorary Membership dues. Invitations for Honorary Membership are extended on a non-partisan basis, and the invitees are selected at random. Any persons interested in supporting the efforts of the New York State Sheriffs’ Association Institute by becoming an Honorary Member should contact the Sheriff, if they do not receive an invitation in the mail, or visit our web site at: HYPERLINK "http://www.sheriffsinstitute.org"www.sheriffsinstitute.org to download an application.

All donations made to the New York State Sheriffs’ Association Institute are tax deductible. In addition, Sheriffs’ Institute is registered with the New York State Attorney General’s Charities Bureau.

Car wreck at Liberty and Ellicott streets

By Billie Owens

A car accident is reported in the City of Batavia at Liberty and Ellicott streets. Law enforcement is told to approach from East Main Street because of fuel spillage.

Here's a reminder about open burning regulations

By Billie Owens

Here's a reminder about open burning regulations from Tim Yaeger, coordinator of Genesee County Emergency Services.

Last year, on Oct. 14, new rules took effect in New York regarding open burning. All open burning is prohibited with several exceptions including the following:

  • Campfires less than 3 feet in height and 4 feet in length, width or diameter are allowed.
  • Small cooking fires are allowed.
  • Fires cannot be left unattended and must be fully extinguished.
  • Only charcoal or clean, dry, untreated or unpainted wood can be burned.
  • Ceremonial or celebratory bonfires are allowed.
  • In towns with a total population less than 20,000, you may burn tree limbs with attached leaves. The limbs must be less than 6 inches in diameter and 8 feet in length (also referred to as brush). However, this is not allowed from March 16 through May 14 due to the increased risk of wildfires.
  • Open burning of residential wastes in any city or village, or in any town with a population of 20,000 or more has been prohibited since 1972.

Burning trash <http://www.dec.ny.gov/chemical/32065.html> is now prohibited statewide in all cases. Our existing incinerator rule already prohibits burning household trash in wood stoves, fireplaces, and outdoor wood boilers. DEC recommends that you recycle <http://www.dec.ny.gov/public/43706.html> all appropriate materials (such as newspaper, paper, glass and plastic) and compost <http://www.dec.ny.gov/chemical/8799.html> your organic kitchen and garden waste.

http://www.dec.ny.gov/regs/4261.html

Below are some commmonly asked questions and their answers.

Can prescribed burns be performed?

Yes. Prescribed burns, the burning of forest land to achieve a vegetative or wildlife management goal, can be performed but only in accordance with DEC regulations. Check with your regional DEC office.  (For Genesee County:  Contact Region 8 DEC - 585-226-2466).Yes, with some restrictions on the use of acquired structures and in accordance with guidance from NYS Dept. of State's Office of Fire Prevention and Control. The Fire Services Bureau may be reached at 518-474-6746.

Are individual open fires to control plant and animal disease outbreaks allowed?

Yes, as approved case-by-case by DEC, upon the request by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets.

Can I dispose of a flag or religious item in an open fire?

Yes, in a small-sized fire if it is not otherwise prohibited by law or regulation.

Can a town prohibit open burning that the state allows?

Yes, towns, villages, cities and counties can pass ordinances that are stricter than, and not inconsistent with, the open fires regulations. You should check with local authorities to find out if local law requires a permit or prohibits open fires.

Can explosives, or other dangerous contraband, be burned?

Yes, on an emergency basis by police or other public safety organizations only.

Can brush piles be burned at transfer sites?

No, the practice of burning large piles of brush collected from local residents at town or county transfer sites is prohibited. The individual landowners in small towns may burn their brush on site as stated above. Downed limbs and branches generated at a transfer site are also allowed to be burned on site with the same restrictions.

Where should I call to report an illegal open fire?

To report environmental law violations call 1-800-TIPP DEC (1-800-847-7332).

The department has received many questions regarding DEC's implementation of  HYPERLINK "http://www.dec.ny.gov/regs/2492.html" Part 215, regarding open fires. This document is intended to inform the general public about open fire regulation in New York and assist the regulated community in understanding the requirements of  HYPERLINK "http://www.dec.ny.gov/regs/2492.html" Part 215.

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