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Photos: A look at scenes in Le Roy and Batavia today
Here are a few pictures from my travels today.
Above, taken from Black Street Road, Le Roy.
A pony on Bernd Road, Le Roy.
Route 5 coming into Batavia from the East. It was not long after sunset so there was a bit of color, but I decided I liked the mood better as a black and white.
From this afternoon on Ellicott Street.
UMMC to become integrated affiliate of Rochester General
Genesee County's only hospital will become a fully integrated affiliate of Rochester General Hospital, according to an announcement issued today.
RGH said it has reached an agreement to formalize "a comprehensive partnership."
“Even given our sound financial position today, changes in health care will continue to negatively impact independent rural health care providers,” stated Mark Schoell, CEO, United Memorial Medical Center. “The leadership of United Memorial remains committed to providing the best for our patients, and this expanded relationship will strengthen the future of health care in Genesee County.”
Here's the rest of the press release:
The hospital’s affiliation with RGHS will lead to a continued expansion of health care services in Batavia and on-site at United Memorial, and over time will result in fewer Genesee County residents needing to leave their community for vital health care. United Memorial will maintain its name and a local board, and will continue its longstanding tradition of providing a full range of medical and acute care services in Batavia after the affiliation is formalized.
The announcement today mirrors a trend among successful hospitals and health care systems nationwide. Community hospitals continue to be impacted by changes in the business of health care, and few have the size and scale necessary to support wide breadth of specialized services and technology required today. System affiliations address the economic realities that community hospitals face with health care reform, while ensuring patients have immediate and convenient access to a full range of primary and secondary services locally and a gateway to the best clinical care available when more highly specialized care and technology – like cardiac surgery, stroke services, neurosurgery, and other complex services – are required.
“Progressive and forward-thinking rural hospital management teams and boards like United Memorial’s continue to recognize the value in partnering with larger systems, to ensure their patients have access to a full range of highly specialized technology and physician expertise,” said Mark C. Clement, president and CEO of RGHS. “This partnership will enable the residents of Genesee County to continue to have access to and receive world-class care, right at home here at United Memorial.”
The two health care institutions are no strangers to each other, having collaborated in the areas of Cardiology, Pathology, Surgery, Urology and Gastroenterology since 2008, and most recently partnered to open a Cancer & Infusion Center at United Memorial. Rochester General and United Memorial have served residents in their respective communities for more than a century.
In making its decision to affiliate with RGHS, the United Memorial board cited the system’s longstanding focus on high-quality patient care and safety, its expertise in clinical integration, its comprehensive medical and surgical specialties that will enhance existing services available in the Batavia community, and its successful track record of collaboration with smaller acute care hospitals and physicians.
“We are creating a health care system that will serve as the future model that helps communities get healthy and stay healthy” Clement said. “We’re creating true alignment of processes and providing full access to life-saving services and exceptional patient care, no matter where you live or through which system-wide door you enter. We are committed to expanding services at United Memorial, which will serve as the western hub for all of Rochester General Health System’s services.”
RGHS operates the Sands-Constellation Heart Institute, recognized as the best in cardiac care in New York for four consecutive years by Delta CareChex quality rating group, and is the only area health system to be nationally rated by SDI – a premier health care analytics firm – as a TOP 100 Integrated Health Network each year since 2007. Integrated care networks are consistently recognized for delivering higher levels of quality, service, patient safety and efficiency. These are important factors, made even more so, as the government and insurers increasingly tie reimbursement to quality, safety, efficiency and the health of a defined patient population.
Leadership teams from both organizations will work closely together to create a formal affiliation and integration plan and to complete the required regulatory approval process, which is expected to take three to six months.
This affiliation with United Memorial aligns with and is complementary to RGHS’ current merger plans with Unity Health System. United Memorial would bring another high-quality, integrated hospital into the planned new system, enabling it to offer convenient access to exceptional, high-value care to more than a million patients throughout Monroe, Genesee, Ontario and Wayne counties.
Notre Dame and Bishop Kearney set to clash in Section V Class B2 finals
It's probably the outcome Section V officials predicted when they moved Notre Dame girls up three classes and Bishop Kearney up one to put both teams in Class B2.
The two private Catholic schools will face each other Saturday in the B2 Section V Championship. One team will eliminate the other and Section V officials can rest assured only one private-school squad gets to advance toward a possible State Championship.
The Fighting Irish enter the Section V Championship game with a 19-1 record after a close-call, overtime win against Bath-Haverling, 50-49. Bishop Kearney is 17-2 after having a much easier time of it against Le Roy last night, winning 75-47.
For ND last night, the Lady Rams, who entered the game with five losses, proved to be a handful.
"We knew they were a very good team," said ND Head Coach Dave Pero. "The thing we didn't know coming into the game is how quick they were. We had trouble defensively getting stops. We missed a few easy baskets underneath, but I think the thing that helped is that they (the ND girls) had the will to finish."
Bath's Mackenzie Smith proved a challenging opponent. She's tall, fast and can shoot. It was Laurie Call's job to defend her.
"Laurie had a tough time of it in her match-up with number three," Pero said. "Number three probably had six inches on Laurie and I think we finally found a girl that is almost as quick as Laurie and that's dangerous."
It turned out, the Lady Rams were a lot harder to play than they looked on film, said senior guard Mel Taylor.
"We knew three was going to be athletic, but I didn't think she was going to be jumping three foot higher than what we were playing defense on," Taylor said. "It was intimidating, it was adjusting to what we're not used to playing in regular season, but we did pretty well."
Smith scored 20 points, snagged 10 rebounds and had five assists.
Call, who typically doesn't get into foul trouble, was tagged with four.
"It was physical game," Call said. "It was really physical at both ends of the court. I caught myself reaching and so did the refs."
Taylor scored 14 points to lead the Irish. Emma Francis, nine, Rebecca Krenzer, eight, Shea Norton, seven, and Call, six.
Helping Smith out on offense for the Rams was Angelo Binkowski with 15 points, including two threes.
One of the side stories of the game was how quickly the refs, particularly one of them, were to call jump balls. A jump ball is supposed to be called when two players share possession of the ball, but often it looked like a player had possession while an opponent was merely reaching.
One such called came in the final 15 seconds of regulation when Norton grabbed an offensive rebound and Bath's Brooke Buckley was reaching in while Norton was trying to shoot. Rather than a shooting foul, it was called a jump ball.
A shooting foul there, with the scored knotted at 41, could have ended the game in regulation.
The Section V refs have reportedly been instructed to be quicker on the jump ball calls to cut down on foul calls.
Pero said them are the breaks of game.
"It did seem a little quick, but they see what they see and they're not going to change their minds," Pero said. "You've got to live with it. I learned a long time ago if you want to argue with them (the refs), you're going to lose. They've got the final say and overall the officials do a great job. They're the officials and the coaches are the coaches and we're supposed to coach and they're supposed to officiate. Sometimes you do get those calls."
In the night cap at Honeoye Falls-Lima, Bishop Kearney dominated Le Roy, but with a 10-8 record.
Kearney and Notre Dame could match up well. Both teams have five players who scored at least 100 points on the season and could match up on height.
Both teams are coming off State Championship seasons so they both have big game experience.
"All of our big games in past, all of our big elba games, this game today, it gets you ready for the big stage," Call said.
Before we knew for sure Kearney would be Saturday's opponent, Call said she was ready to face whoever came out on top of the semi-final game.
"Saturday's another basketball game," Call said. "It's senior year, so it's pretty emotional., but we're just going to play. it's a faceless opponent. Hopefully we come out with a patch."
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Photo: Snowfall in Oakfield
At about 10 a.m., the snow was coming down pretty heavy in the Village of Oakfield.
Winter weather advisory issued for snow and wind, cold and low visibility
A short, but heavy snow storm is expected this morning, with visibility reduced to a quarter mile or less.
As much as an inch to an inch-and-a-half of snow fall per hour is possible. A total of three inches of snow is possible.
Strong winds will create blowing snow, contributing to the low visibility.
Colder temperatures, in the single digits, will follow the snowstorm, and combined with winds, will create a dangerously low wind-chill factor. The temperature could be as low as 20 degrees below zero.
Today's Poll: Should extinct animals be brought back to life?
New York Times: The Mammoth Cometh
Trial date set for man accused of throwing punch Kid Rock concert
A trial date has been set for Craig Malcolm Lawson, the 34-year-old Canadian citizen accused of throwing a single punch following a Kid Rock concert at Darien Lake and seriously injuring a former WNY man.
Jury selection is set to begin at 10 a.m., June 23 for an anticipated four-day trial.
Lawson is accused of punching Jason McNeil, of Tuscaloosa, Ala. McNeil reportedly hit his head on the pavement. He was in a coma following the incident and sources say he will never fully recover.
He is charged with assault in the second degree.
It remains possible Lawson will accept a plea offer. He has until April 24 to decide, Judge Robert C. Noonan said.
Lawson did not appear in court today and the last time he appeared -- for an evidence hearing -- he was 45 minutes late.
Noonan asked his attorney today why Lawson had a hard time crossing the border that day and the attorney said INS agents would not initially let him cross because of the pending felony charge. The attorney said he will provide his client with a letter to present at the border before his April 24 appearance.
New emergency communication system launched today with no serious problems
It may not have gone off without a hitch -- some users had a learning curve -- but the new emergency communication system in Genesee County is fully functional.
There were rumors of technical problems with the new system, including problems with the Pavilion tower, but trusted sources along with Sheriff Gary Maha said the Harris system has performed as it should since the switch over shortly after 7 a.m.
The $10.8 million system -- paid for largely with federal grants and a local bond -- is technically identical to the communication system all police and fire units across the United States are converting to, which will help improve inter-agency communications in regional and national emergencies.
"We've been using the system all day and handled a number of calls -- accidents, shoplifters, calls for service -- and so far so good," Maha said. "It's gone as smooth as could be expected."
Owners of the new Uniden P-25-compatiable scanners locally are reporting spotty success in picking up fire and police transmission. The scanners do work, but reception is not always reliable.
Here at The Batavian, we don't have our new scanner fully programmed yet, so can't report on how it's working out for us.
The Sheriff's Office also switched to a new digital phone system. That transition didn't go as smoothly, Maha admitted, but the phones appear to be working properly now.
Hens takes leadership role among his peers, aided by 57-year county employee
County Highway Superintendent Tim Hens is about to fill a role occupied by two of his predecessors -- NYS County Highway Superintendents Association.
What's unique, perhaps, is that Laura Mullen, a principle financial clerk with the highway department since 1957, has work for both of the previous presidents from Genesee County.
That would be Joe Amedick, who served in 1987 and Bob Carrier, who served in 1959.
Now part-time, Hens finds Mullen indispensable.
"She knows where thr vendor files are from ions ago," Hens said. "She knows where bridge files are, road files are. Any bit of information I need, she knows exactly what box it is in in the storeroom."
When Hens started his job 16 years ago, there were no computers. He said he couldn't work like that, so his computer was the first in the department.
Mullen, already with more than 30 years on the job, jumped right in with automation and took classes at Genesee Community College on her own time, at her own expense, to learn Microsoft Office.
Hens said Mullen will fill in wherever she's needed.
He has his own kind of seniority going. At 16 years on the job, he's the fourth or fifth most senior county highway superintendent among the 57 counties in the state.
The association, he said, serves an important role in helping the state's highway departments and public works departments share information and best practices as well as lobbying Albany to maintain funding for roads and bridges.
If a member has a question, they jump online, ask it, and might get 30 answers.
"You learn something from other counties or something that somebody has already done and that saves you a lot of time and a lot of hassle," Hens said.
DA granted motion to drop remaining charges against convicted child molester
There will not be a second trial for convicted child molester Earl Sprague, who has already been sentenced following his first trial to 21 years in prison.
District Attorney Lawrence Friedman made a motion this morning, which was granted by County Court Judge Robert Noonan, to dismiss the remaining charges against Sprague.
The 42-year-old Sprague was facing a possible trial on eight felony counts, including two counts of burglary, 1st, sexual abuse, 1st, criminal sexual act, 1st, aggravated sexual abuse, 1st, two counts predatory sexual assault, a Class II-A felony, and one count of assault, 1st.
Friedman said he could not discuss the reason for the motion to drop the charges.
"We made a determination we couldn't really proceed with the remaining charges," Friedman said. "That's all I can really say."
The former Alabama resident was convicted by a jury on 28 counts of sexual abuse.
Defense and big game by Fagan carry Blue Devils past Newark in Section V playoff game
Memo to Brian Miller, head coach of the Geneva Panthers: If you want to beat Batavia in Sunday's Section V Class A2 Finals, you better figure out how to stop Justice Fagan and Jeff Redband.
Good luck with that.
Teams have been trying all year and stopping the Blue Devil's two standouts just gets harder and harder.
The Newark Reds tried Tuesday night at the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester and found themselves on the losing end of Fagan's biggest game of the year.
The senior captain scored 28 points as the Blue Devils punched their ticket for the finals with a 45-41 win over the #2 seed.
And by all accounts, Redband had an off night, with defenders constantly in his face, but he still managed 15 points.
"That's been happening all year (tight defensive coverage)," Redband said. "I didn't do the best with it this game. We had plays to get me the ball, I just wasn't making shots. I'll make them other games. We rode Justice because he was having the greatest game of his season tonight."
Fagan just took the game over in the closing minutes and with under two minutes left, the Blue Devils grabbed the lead and the Reds' fate seemed sealed.
As important as Fagan's big game was, it was really Batavia's defense that secured the victory.
Head Coach Buddy Brasky teaches his players, hold the opponent to less than 52 points and you will always have a chance to win.
The Blue Devils opened sectional play with a 56-37 win over Honeoye Falls-Lima three days ago, and against a Reds team that has put at least 60 points on the board nine times this season, Batavia pinned Newark down at only 41, holding them to 13 in the second half.
Brasky's team switched to a 3-2 zone defense and the Reds never got a handle on how to penetrate it.
"We've hardly played a 3-2 all year," Brasky said. "They (the Blue Devils) just picked it up on the fly and executed it well."
With the Reds left with few inside scoring opportunities, it also meant there were fewer opportunities for Batavia to draw fouls.
In the closing minute and a half, Batavia was shooting bonus free throws and had only committed four second-half fouls themselves.
"We went to the zone and they didn't attacked it," Brasky said. "There was a lot of pass on the perimeter. They stopped going to the basket, so there wasn't a lot of opportunity for us to foul. They took a lot of outside shots. That's what the zone forced them to do. Justice started attacking. Jeff started attacking. We were going to the basket where they stopped going to the basket. That's the foul differential right there."
Redband went to the line twice and hit all four shots, while neither late-game foul by Batavia resulted in free throws for the Reds and Fagan made a crucial free throw to take away any hope of a three-pointer to tie the game.
"Jeff and Justice are 70-, 80-percent foul shooters," Brasky said. "They come to the school every morning before class and shoot 50 free throws. Every morning. When we've got them at the foul line at the end of games, I'm very confident."
The foul differential was a huge strategic advantage, especially when Batavia could afford another foul with 4.5 seconds left. In that situation, a quick three-pointer would have given Newark a slim hope for a steal and another score. Instead, two seconds were lost and Newark had to inbound the ball again. A desperation three missed the basket wide and short by three feet and went out of bounds with 0.8 seconds left. A simple Batavia inbound and the game was over.
Brasky said Fagan's confidence has been soaring since a big game against Lockport on Senior Night, and Tuesday night, he just took the team on his back and carried it to victory.
Fagan said that's his job.
"I'm the senior captain," Fagan said. "I didn't want this to be my last game of the year, or ever, actually. I just wanted to win this game. I kind of figured I needed to take over a little bit through the game because we were struggling a little bit offensively. Somebody's got to take over."
The only other Blue Devil to score against the Reds (who don't wear red, but maroon) was Jerret Lasket, who had two points.
A low-scoring affair is exactly the kind of game the Blue Devils like to play -- battle for 30 minutes and close it out at the end.
"In our games, we never do get down by a lot, usually, because we play good defense," Brasky said. "We've been in close games all year, so they have confidence in close games."
For Newark, Jaymee Rosser had 17 points. Tyler Collins, an outside shooting threat, tried, but was 1-6 from beyond the arc and was held to 10 points. Rosser was the top rebounder for the game with nine.
For Redband, Tuesday's visit to Blue Cross was his first since a season ago when he sent his team to the State's Final Four with a three-point buzzer beater.
The junior guard walked out to the same spot during warm ups and admitted taking a moment to reflect on the shot and later hit a practice shot from the same spot. He said he likes playing in the big gym.
"I'm comfortable playing here," Redband said. "With a lot of the new people, I just said it's a normal game. It doesn't matter that it's in this big stadium. You've just got to play basketball."
He also wasn't surprised his team is about to play for the Class A2 championship. The Blue Devils are where they're supposed to be.
"We've beat good teams all year so we knew all year we could be right here at sectionals in the finals," Redband said.
Game time Sunday at Blue Cross is 5 p.m.
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Burglary investigation leads to alleged drug stash discovery
Two Batavia residents are accused of being drug dealers after Sheriff's investigator went to their house on an unrelated matter and allegedly spotted controlled substances in plain view inside their South Main Street residence.
A search warrant was secured and investigators claim they seized crack cocaine, heroin, marijuana, hydrocodone pills, clonazapam pills, detroamphetamine pills and a hydromorphone pill.
Arrested were Kevin J. O'Connell Jr., 33, and Samantha L. Hicks, 26.
The investigator went to their South Main Street residence to speak with a person who reported a burglary.
After spotting what he believed to be narcotics, the location was secured and the Local Drug Enforcement Task Force was called in along with uniformed deputies and K-9 Destro.
O'Connell and Hicks are both charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance, 3rd, a Class B felony that indicates investigators believe they had enough narcotics that they were selling the drugs.
O'Connell is also charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance, 4th, criminal possession of marijuana, 4th, and criminal possession of a controlled substance, 7th.
Besides the three counts of criminal possession, 3rd, Hicks is charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance, 5th, and three counts of criminal possession of a controlled substance, 7th. She is also charged with criminal possession of marijuana, 4th.
O'Connell was jailed without bail and bail was set at $10,000 for Hicks.
Law and Order: Woman accused of welfare fraud
Michelle D. Kantz, 43, of Edwards Street, Batavia, is charged with third-degree welfare fraud. Kantz was arrested following an investigation by Batavia PD. No further details released.
Zachary W. Burke, 21, of Alexander, is charged with leaving the scene of a property damage accident and unreasonable speed. Burke was arrested by State Police following an investigation ito an accident at the intersection of Maxon Road and Route 354, Bennington.
David V. Tubbe, 50, of Darien, is charged with DWI and driving with a BAC of .08 or greater. Tubbe was stopped by State Police on Saturday on Route 20 in Darien. Tubbe allegedly had a BAC of .10.
Terry J. Toote, 36, of Lewis Place, Batavia, is charged with harassment, 2nd. Toote allegedly threatened physical harm to another person while in the presence of a police officer.
Joey Robert Tatro, 19, of Main Street, Attica, is charged with criminal mischief and harassment, 2nd. Tatro is accused of striking another person and damaging a vehicle during an incident reported at 5 a.m. Sunday on Clinton Street, Batavia.
Firefighter named City of Batavia's employee of the year
Via WBTA:
City of Batavia Firefighter Charles Hammon was named the 2013-2014 City of Batavia Employee of the year.
Hammon was honored by the city council for his management of the child safety seat program conducted by members of the fire department at various times throughout the year.
Hammon received the proclamation from Ward 5 Councilwoman Kathleen Briggs.
Only one voice of opposition to proposed city budget; council will vote March 10
Story via WBTA:
Only one person spoke in opposition Monday night to the proposed 2014-2015 City of Batavia budget. The $24 million financial plan is scheduled for a vote on March 10.
John Roach of Batavia questioned the need for an assistant city manager, a position eliminated several years ago by City Manager Jason Molino in a budget-cutting move. Molino now wants the post filled at an annual salary of between $64,000 and $78,000 plus benefits.
Ward Six Councilwoman Rosemary Christian asked if there would be “another opportunity” to discuss the budget prior to a vote. She was told by Molino that comments could be made prior to the vote on March 10.
Christian said she had “a very important matter” to discuss concerning the budget but she declined to elaborate.
No one spoke during a second public hearing Monday night on a proposed increase in water rates. The proposed rate per 1,000 gallons of water will go up by 9 cents to $4.62. Molino estimated the water increase would cost the average homeowner another $10 per year.
While the budget is scheduled to be voted upon at the next council business meeting on March 10 there would still be an opportunity to vote on the budget during the March 24 meeting. The budget must, by law, be adopted by March 31.
Woman with bright pink butterfly tattoo suspected of robbing Five Star Bank branch in Batavia
The person in the surveillance photos to the right is wanted for questioning in connection with a robbery of a bank in Batavia today.
Batavia PD believes the woman is the suspect who robbed the Five Star branch at 567 E. Main St. at 2:11 p.m.
The perpetrator presented a note that claimed she had a gun and demanded money and left on foot with an undetermined amount of cash. She did not display a gun.
She is described as a female, mid-20s, 5'7" to 5'8" and slim build.
Tellers said the woman had a large, bright pink butterfly tattoo on the left side of her neck.
Tips and information can be provided to Batavia PD at (585) 345-6350 or the confidential tip line at (585) 345-6370.
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