Henry Grace and Friends features a lineup of live music for a Saturday Morning Coffeehouse Acoustic Music Series through June 21 at GO ART!, 201 E. Main St., Batavia.
First up are:
Paul Almeter and Henry Grace this Saturday
Steve Kruppner and Howard Owens are on May 10
Billy Lambert and Bart Dentino May 24
Michael Iten and Steve Kruppner June 7
Bart Dentino and Paul Almeter June 21
These morning coffeehouse sessions run from 10 a.m. to noon, and are free to the public.
Actors from Pavilion Central School's fourth and fifth grade classes rehearse Monday for this week's debut of "Moana Jr. Musical" at 2 and 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Jr./Sr. High School auditorium in Pavilion. Photo by Joanne Beck
Going for the top role in Pavilion’s fourth and fifth grade musical may have seemed daring for 10-year-old Maddie Smart, who admittedly had some apprehension to overcome.
But the soft-spoken fifth-grader decided to take the leap.
“I tried out for the role because I thought, I’ve never been the lead before, and I’ve never done a play,” she said Monday during a break from rehearsal at the high school’s auditorium. “I didn’t want to be on the couch, I wanted to be doing something. It’s very exciting; it’s not as scary anymore.”
It was almost as if Maddie, in her island-themed skirt and shell-decorated tank top, wearing a turquoise necklace and holding a small wooden paddle, had literally embodied lead Moana’s brave spirit from the show "Moana Jr. Musical."
The show goes on at 2 and 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Pavilion High School, 7014 Big Tree Road, Pavilion.
“She’s a brave person. She wants to save her island,” Maddie said of her character. “I can see myself in her. It’s not in this time; it’s a long time ago, before there were buildings. There was hay and stuff, and people had their own tribes and islands. She became a superhero by saving her tribe.”
Given the amount of time that Moana is in the show, that means learning many lines and choreography, and singing solos. There wasn’t much that felt too challenging for her, Maddie said.
“I memorized all my lines. My brain is just very smart and can memorize,” she said. “I feel good singing in front of people.”
Moana Jr. is a 60-minute adaptation of the 2016 Disney animated film, and features a “coming-of-age story that follows the strong-willed Moana as she sets sail across the Pacific to save her village and discover the truth about her heritage,” Music Theatre International states.
Sixth-grader Connor Smart, Maddie’s cousin, was already in his own school’s play earlier this year, and was asked by Musical Director and Coordinator Rebecca Marczyk if he would help out with this one as assistant director. He hasn’t minded putting in the extra time after school the past few months, he said.
“I’ve been helping getting everyone out on time, and just helping people memorize their lines, and helping with the songs and stuff,” he said, answering if he’s had to act like a boss to fellow students. “Not really. Most of the kids are very well prepared and ready to go.”
Connor has gained from the experience, such as “learning just to be patient a little bit,” he said. He also has taught from his own acting on stage: "Speak louder to all the exit signs, articulate your words," he said.
“It’s a very good show, all the kids are doing a very good job, they’re very good at singing,” the 11-year-old said. “It’s definitely very upbeat, I would say, because it’s very, there’s some parts like, very calm, and kind of sad, and then there are others parts that’s very active. And people are coming in from all sides, that’s really cool.”
Dressed from head to toe for her role in the monster ensemble — an ocean creature of flowy underwater plants — Emma Sponaugle had not one but two roles in her first play ever. A transplant from Lyndonville last November, the 11-year-old also plays an ancestor. She wanted to be part of this production for reasons other than the plot.
“Moana is my favorite movie. I like swimming, and it’s all about the ocean,” she said. “The music is fun to listen to, it’s cheery.”
She also said that some of the movements can be challenging, displayed by a stage full of actors moving about the full width at any given time with dialogue, singing, dancing, and a crescendo of blue waves from the ocean, followed by stillness.
A trio of actors made up Essie Michau’s Tamatoa, a crab obsessed with all things shiny, with Ari Sardina serving as the left claw and Tenley Harris as the right one. All girls are in the fifth grade and described their central character as being “very sassy.”
“I am very bossy and have to make it about myself, and I love myself,” 11-year-old Essie said of her role, as Tenley added that “looking sassy is hard — the sassy face.”
There were lots of roles, though, both in front of the spot light and behind it. Landon Jett was one of the four stage crew members who opted to move sets and props in place, as another critical responsibility.
“I like to sing, but I didn’t really like singing in front of big crowds. So I wanted to be in stage crew,” the fourth-grader said, admitting to a change of heart for a future play. “Maybe I’ll act next time.”
Photo by Joanne Beck
Maddie Smart, front and center, plays Moana. Photo by Joanne Beck
Xander Green, left, Landon Jett, and Jonah Bush, all in the fourth grade, are part of the stage crew for Pavilion's "Moana Jr. Musical" hitting the stage Thursday. Photo by Joanne Beck
Musical Director and Coordinator Rebecca Marczyk, center, positions student actors during rehearsal Monday at Pavilion High School's auditorium. Photo by Joanne Beck
After two years as director of Richmond Memorial Library, Beth Paine has resigned the position, Board President Leslie Moma says.
Moma issued a press release Monday announcing Paine's departure. She was hired in March 2023 to replace former director Bob Conrad.
"Beth will remain available to us as we transition to new leadership," Moma said. "Her contributions will continue to help the library serve the needs of our community. During her tenure there were numerous positive developments: modernizing library policies, increasing operational efficiencies, overseeing improvements to our building and grounds, and evaluating staff skills and talents and promoting them to positions that enabled them to utilize their diverse talents.”
After her first year as director, Paine recommended that the library, for the first time in decades, take over its own financial and purchasing duties from Batavia City School District, which provided them as in-kind services as part of its landlord-tenant relationship.
Paine's job responsibilities then included the payroll and related duties, she had said, and the library accounts payable clerk and accounts receivable clerk had taken over the bookkeeping tasks. The library also hired an outside accountant to “oversee all of these functions, and we have hired a payroll company to process our payroll,” Paine had said of the new arrangement.
Submitted Photo of local members of the GLOW Nurses Honor Guard during a ceremony.
"Upon the whitewashed walls, a woman’s shadow falls — a woman walketh o’er the darksome floors. A soft, angelic smile, lighteth her face the while, in passing through the dismal corridors."
That line from a Victorian-era poem by Emma Lazarus may not hold completely true to the bustling hospitals of today, but how many patients can probably relate to seeing that soft smile from a helpful nurse? Lazarus penned the poem about Florence Nightingale, a famous British nurse of the 1800s who offered comfort to soldiers during the Crimean War.
She also serves as inspiration for a traditional ceremony conducted by the GLOW Nurses Honor Guard, a local chapter of the New York State Nurses Association.
“It’s been an organization for a really long time; it recognizes nurses who have passed on. Our purpose is simple: to honor our fellow nurses during their funeral or celebration of life,” member Amy Bontrager said to The Batavian. “We’re trying to get more recognition for it, because of all the funerals that I’ve gone to, everyone said, every single time they’ve said, ‘I didn’t realize this was a thing, this is great that you guys do this.’”
The local chapter is planning to honor nurses during National Nurses Week with a brief ceremony at noon, May 12, in front of United Memorial Medical Center, 127 North St., Batavia. This is the first time the ceremony has been held at the hospital. It includes a reading of a Florence Nightingale poem, some audience participation, and the honor guard in traditional nurses' all-white uniforms with blue and red capes, Bontrager said.
“The purpose is to remember those nurses who have previously passed on without having had a Nurses’ Honor Guard ceremony. Anyone who has previously lost a loved one who once served as a nurse — LPN, RN, NP, or the public in general — is welcome to attend,” she said. “To me, it’s important because I have an emotional connection to being a nurse; they do a lot of things no one ever knows about — a gentle touch, a smile, giving hope, the bigger picture that you’re making a difference. It’s very emotional.”
New York State Honor Guard’s vision is to “make sure that when a New York State nurse is coming to the end of life or has passed away, that nurse is not forgotten. Volunteer nurses from all over New York are committed to remembering the careers and commitment of their colleagues,” with a mission to pay tribute to these nurses, including living tributes to those who are approaching end-of-life care.
The organization has grown from one chapter to 24 that cover 59 of the 62 counties in the state, including Genesee. Many funeral homes are aware of this service, Bontrager said, and members hope to continue spreading the word so that nursing friends and families keep it in mind when planning to honor loved ones.
“We stuff it all down, but it’s in there,” Bontrager said of colleagues’ memories, and her own nursing experiences that began in the 1990s. “It’s very moving, just offering support to fellow nurses.”
And now and then there slips
A word from out her lips,
More sweet and grateful to those listening ears
Than the most plaintive tale
Of the sad nightingale,
Whose name and tenderness this woman bears.
Her presence in the room
Of agony and gloom,
No fretful murmurs, no coarse words profane;
For while she standeth there,
All words are hushed save prayer;
She seems God's angel weeping o'er man's pain.
And some of them arise,
With eager, tearful eyes,
From off their couch to see her passing by.
Some, e'en too weak for this,
Can only stoop and kiss
Her shadow, and fall back content to die.
No monument of stone
Needs this heroic one —
Her name is graven on each noble heart;
And in all after years
Her praise will be the tears
Which at that name from quivering lids will start.
And those who live not now,
To see the sainted brow,
And the angelic smile before it flits for aye,
They in the future age
Will kiss the storied page
Whereon the shadow of her life will lie.
Florence Nightingale By Emma Lazarus
For more information about the honor guard, go HERE.
Congresswoman Claudia Tenney, third from right, smiles for a photo while in El Salvador for a tour of CECOT prison this week with fellow Republican representatives. The cutline was written in Spanish and translated is: Yesterday, #AmbassadorDuncan welcomed the delegation led by Congressman Jason Smith to El Salvador, who is visiting the country to strengthen bilateral ties and discuss initiatives that promote economic development and mutual cooperation. Photo from U.S. Embassy
While nearly 300 people — constituents of Congresswoman Claudia Tenney — attended a town hall this week that featured the New York District 24 representative's cardboard cutout, she was apparently out of the country.
Tenney took part in a Congressional delegation of Republicans to visit the CECOT prison in El Salvador, she said in an online social media post. Congressman Jason Smith led the group to the prison, known as “hell on Earth” for its brutal conditions, according to Axios.
In the article, none of those visiting representatives asked or posted about the condition of any of the men sent from the United States. They did pose for photos, including Tenney, at the prison and posted others of clusters of half-naked inmates standing stone-faced for the camera.
About one day after this group of politicians visited the prison, Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen — on a mission to check on the condition of Abrego Garcia, admittedly sent to El Salvador by White House administrative error — was denied entry.
On Thursday, Van Hollen reported that he was able to meet with Garcia. He promised a full report once he returned to the states.
The Batavian has sent Tenney questions regarding her trip, including what she accomplished by going; if she checked on the condition of Garcia and any others sent from the United States; how much the trip cost and who paid for it; if she had any message for the constituents she missed at this week’s town hall; and her response to the many negative reactions to her online post about going to El Salvador.
On her social media post she said, “I visited the CECOT prison in El Salvador, where the worst of these violent gang members are being held,” though it has been reported that some 90% (analysis by Bloomberg News, Los Angeles Times and human rights organizations) of those sent from the U.S. had no criminal records beyond minor traffic or immigration violations, including Garcia. A CBS News 60 Minutes investigation found that 75% of them had no apparent criminal record at all.
During the town hall at Arc Community Center in Batavia this Tuesday, an attendee spoke up for Garcia and received a round of applause from the audience. The Supreme Court has unanimously ordered the Trump Administration to "facilitate the return" of Garcia back to the United States after it admitted to sending him to El Salvador in error. No action has been taken to do so.
File photo Memorial Day Parade 2022 by Howard Owens
May is right around the corner, and that means organizers are preparing — and seeking participants — for the annual Memorial Day parade down Main Street, Batavia.
The city invites you and your organization to participate in the parade, set for a lineup at 8:30 a.m. on May 26 at the East Town Plaza. The event is to begin at 9:30 a.m. and end at approximately 10:30 a.m. at Alva Place downtown.
Parade Chairman Bob Bialkowski said marshals will be on site to assign participants a place in the parade.
“When turning off of Main Street onto Bank Street, all units are to be silent out of respect for a memorial service at the Veterans Monument on Bank Street,” he said. “Your support is greatly appreciated.”
Bialkowski is asking for RSVPs as soon as possible to schedule you on the parade roster. A certificate of insurance or “hold harmless” needs to be returned with the RSVP, he said.
Some reminders about parade protocol:
Throwing candy from vehicles is strictly prohibited.
There will be no political campaigning, such as “vote for” signs, out of respect for the event.
“Our veterans served our country, not political affiliations,” he said.
Send RSVP to Bob Bialkowski, 16 Union St., Batavia, NY, 14020, or email to bbwski@yahoo.com.
File Photo of Empire Hemp Co. in downtown Batavia by Howard Owens.
Empire Hemp has closed its doors at 204 E. Main St., Batavia, but not for long, the company said through an online post.
The store plans to close this Sunday, Van Dusen said Thursday morning.
After its expansion in 2019 to a larger processing facility and downtown Batavia retail store, the business secured licenses to cultivate and process THC cannabis three years later. However, under New York State’s “strict cannabis regulations, vertical integration is not allowed, meaning a single company cannot hold cultivation, processing and retail licenses,” the post stated.
“This meant our store could not be converted to a dispensary under Empire, so a major decision had to be made. Shelly (Wolanske) made the bold and inspiring choice to step away from Empire Hemp Co. and chart a new path forward, one that will stay to her values while embracing the next evolution of her journey,” it stated. “That path is now unfolding at Mrs. Green’s CANNary, located in the very same beloved space at 204 E. Main St. Proudly Genesee County’s first OCM licensed adult-use dispensary and 100 percent woman-owned, Mrs. Green’s CANNary will continue to reflect Shelly’s dedication to bringing a warm welcoming environment for all those who visit.”
To prepare for the new company, the East Main Street site has been closed since Sunday, and the owners are planning to reopen in early May, according to the post.
“The new dispensary will continue to carry Empire products, along with a diverse selection of cannabis offerings from across New York State,” it stated. “You can still shop all your favorite Empire CBD products online any time at Empire Hemp.”
Meanwhile, Chris Van Dusen continues to lead Empire Hemp Co. and has relocated operations to a new facility in Batavia, better suited to support the company’s growth and focus on cultivation and manufacturing, the post stated.
The Batavian reached out to Van Dusen and he said there would be more information forthcoming next week.
City Councilwoman Kathy Briggs presents a proclamation to Frank Riccobono for National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week. Photo by Joanne Beck
While public safety workers have rolled along doing their jobs to apprehend criminals, suppress fires and treat injured patients, city and county officials have taken pause to recognize the importance of those who serve as a bridge between the people with emergencies and the first responders during National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week.
City Councilwoman Kathy Briggs presented a proclamation to Director of Emergency Communications Frank Riccobono during this week’s City Council meeting.
Emergencies can occur at any time, and they require police, fire or emergency medical services, Briggs said, reading the proclamation, and “whereas, when an emergency occurs, the prompt response of police officers, firefighters and paramedics is critical to the protection of flight and preservation of property, and whereas, public safety telecommunicators are the first and most critical contact our citizens have with emergency services.”
Those public safety personnel are the single connection, monitoring activities by radio and providing police and other first responders with information to ensure that both responders and community members are safe, she said.
“And whereas, each emergency dispatcher has exhibited compassion, understanding, and professionalism during the performance of their job, now therefore be it resolved that the City Council of the City of Batavia recognizes the week of April 13th through the 19th, 2025, to be National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week,” Briggs said. “And sincerely thank the members of the Genesee County Emergency Dispatch Center for their diligence and professionalism to keep our city and citizens safe.”
Riccobono thanked council members on behalf of the men and women of the dispatch center.
“Dispatching is a very tough job, and often they don't receive a lot of recognition,” he said. “I lead a great team; I can't say enough about them, and they do a fabulous job.
“I was just talking to the city manager. I travel around the state, and unfortunately, the working relationship that we have here, which is excellent, is not seen everywhere around the state and country,” he said. “So on behalf of the men and women of the the dispatch center, I do want to extend my appreciation, not just to the city council, but also all the city agencies that we interact with, and it's been a pleasure. Thank you.”
Organizer Diana Kastenbaum facilitates the Concerned Citizens NY-24 Town Hall Tuesday evening at Arc Community Center in Batavia. Photo by Howard Owens
Stafford resident Beth Carr appreciated skimming the faces and hearing from fellow attendees at a town hall Tuesday evening, she said, though she wasn't so certain about organizer Diana Kastenbaum's remarks that people still have free speech.
As an example, the White House administration and President Donald Trump have restricted certain rights by not allowing the Associated Press into portions of White House press meetings and onto Air Force One, she said, and “they can only come on if they agree with him.”
“I don't know if everybody here is obsessed with the news as much as I am, but we also have lost Voice of America. I was married to a veteran; I lived overseas. I listened when I lived overseas to Voice of America. It was unbiased reporting and essential in this world, across barriers and across lines on maps so that people could listen to news that maybe did not have free speech. And so I am afraid that free speech is eroding and is a threat," Carr said during the Concerned Citizens NY-24 Town Hall. "Which leads me to Dr. Glover, because in light of this erosion of free speech, isn't that what's happening on university campuses? Students getting up and protesting are being threatened for their exercise of free speech, and I'd like you to address that and the impact of this on campuses like Columbia and Harvard."
Carr directed her question to Michael Glover, a retired longtime educator and administrator perhaps best known here as the district superintendent of Genesee Valley BOCES for 10 years.
"What you hit upon is that we've moved from a question of free speech to the Thought Police. So just tonight, before coming over here, I saw where the president had threatened Harvard with the removal of its nonprofit status because they did not bend the knee, at least thus far, to the demands of the administration to drop their DEI programs and to monitor student speech," Glover said. "So you know, universities have always been bastions of free speech.
"They need to remain so. But I'm even concerned about my colleagues who are superintendents of schools in your local school districts," he said. "They are being targeted in a highly politicized environment. It's a very tough time in education. But I think to your point, it's more important than ever to speak up and to not give in to this kind of authoritarian threat."
Glover was a panel member for the town hall, which drew about 280 people from various counties within the NY-24 district. Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz also attended the event and was singled out by Carr and others as the only elected official there. Congresswoman Claudia Tenney was invited but did not attend. Her cardboard cutout, used for other no-show events, was placed at the end of the panel row.
Issues ranged from cutting the federal Education Department, reducing Medicaid and Medicare, and the deportation of migrant farm workers and other immigrants to cuts in aid to food banks, healthcare, and how to best respond to and support what matters to folks.
Maria Bucci of Canandaigua County wanted to know, “What can we as citizens do to support farmers and build a strong workforce?”
Chris Noble, a seventh-generation farmer from Noblehurst Farms in Pavilion, said immigration is not a local or state issue but is in federal hands.
“The only way I think we can really impact the discussion is through our representatives, and so reaching out to representatives through email, phone calls, mass letters, whatever you can do to express your opinion on the matter is the most direct way,” Noble said. “Other than that, it's really trying to build a coalition that can help really affect the conversation. Us here in Western New York, we have a lot of diversity of farms, dairy, fruits, wine, processing vegetables. We relied upon foreign born workers for many years.”
Rev. James Renfrew of Clarendon painted the picture of local deportations happening and said, “I don’t know how agriculture will really continue in these areas.” Kastenbaum added that “we had heard that when ICE was coming in, the local sheriffs would have to comply with ICE directives. Are you concerned, if somebody came on your property, what would you do?”
Noble has not thought about such a “doomsday scenario,” he said.
“The number one thing, as the law states today, is that ICE, which is Integrations and Customs Enforcement, cannot enter private property by the warrants. So warrant means there's some activity or something that's gone on in the past or currently on your property that they are there to address, and beyond that, they cannot enter your property,” he said. “So I guess you can feel safe in the fact that there's that protection of the law that we can then rest upon, so we can affect our own property, of course, but beyond that, it depends on the federal authorities. So in terms of the impacts, it would be devastating, I would say, especially for the skilled nature of the labor. But I guess I don't know what that could look like.”
Jim Neider, a Vietnam-era veteran and 30-plus-year retired educator, said the same chainsaw that’s been used in other departments has also been let loose on Veterans Affairs, with “a little over 17% of the workforce” cut. The first cuts were to the veteran's suicide hotline, he said to a gasping audience.
“How does anybody in their right mind think that’s ok?” he said, prompting an enthusiastic round of applause.
Panel member Abe Zino said that the VA is lobbying for things to protect veterans, such as medication.
“I don't know if anybody realizes it. When you go to the VA home here in Batavia, the VA doesn't pay for your medication anymore. So now we’ve got to struggle to get the veterans the meds that they need. So we're trying to pass federal legislation to take care of those little things,” he said. “And we're also trying to help veterans who are in nursing homes that rely on Medicaid and Medicare because when you go in a nursing home, the fees could be anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000, and if you need specialized care, that's even more expensive. So just some things to think about.”
Dr. Laurel Dallmeyer, a panelist representing healthcare, didn’t mince words about how she felt about the direction of her field lately. She has seen patients stockpile meds in case of coverage reductions or bans, fear, and concerns by segments of the population and has even signed up to help out Strong’s trans care in the face of DEI targeting.
“This is one of the times when I say cruelty is the point,” she said in response to a speaker wanting to know what to do if her meds are taken away or not covered because of White House changes. “As a physician, I had to, like representative Tenney, swear an oath. And my oath was not to the Constitution, but it was to serve my patients and protect them. As many of you probably know, the Hippocratic Oath starts with first do no harm. And I would just like to point out that these cuts that are being proposed, and indeed some have been enacted into law already are going to do nothing but harm people of this district and this country, and that's why I've come out of the exam room to help fight for my patients and the people that I believe are being harmed in this district."
She later said that she "was horrified" when there wasn’t more of an outcry against Robert F. Kennedy Jr. being named as Health and Human Services secretary.
A number of people had concerns about what would happen to their local schools if and when the U.S. Education Department is eliminated. What does that actually mean? As programs are reduced at the federal or state levels, localities are left to fill those gaps, Glover said.
More than a dozen years ago he was speaking similar words, reminding the public of financial shortfalls that would affect rural — “low wealth” — districts the most. Free and reduced lunches, extracurriculars, programs for special needs students are just some of the potential items up for cuts. Revenue was not keeping up with increased costs, he said then, and is still repeating the same warning, though with perhaps more of a federal accent.
“Public schools should provide an equal opportunity for success,” he said. “The local schools will have to tighten up and do more with less. As time goes on, they will have to do less with less, and children will suffer.”
He emphasized that there’s a crisis in education because there’s not enough educators to do the jobs needed, teacher education programs are shrinking and an increasing demand is being met with a lower supply.
“And at the cabinet level, there will no longer be a voice in the cabinet,” he said.
Joy Hammond of Bergen asked about food banks and pantries and how FDA cuts will affect those programs. Poloncarz said a $3.5 million cut, effective in May, will especially impact fresh foods from farmers for Meals on Wheels programs—something that Noble himself is worried about for his grandmother.
Since food pantries don’t deal so much with these types of fresh foods, they may not be quite as affected, Poloncarz said. But if your local food bank has lost funding and these direct resources, obviously it’s going to matter.
“A decision in Washington is affecting the local community,” he said. “You don’t want anyone going to bed hungry in your community.”
"It would have been wonderful if some local officials had come," Chris Bennem said. "It was kind of stunning to me." Photo by Joanne Beck
Chris Bennem and his wife came from South Bristol to attend their second town hall, the first being in Geneva. It was worth the trip, he said.
"I thought it was really important for us to hear from, if not public officials that are elected, then public citizens who want to represent those of us who are residents of this area to talk and have an open discourse on the issues that affect all of us based on recent legislation that's been proposed and what DoGE has been doing," he said. "I did attend one in Geneva by a similar group that was wholly focused on healthcare, and that was really helpful. But I wanted to hear more. There are so many things being affected. This has been really effective and eye-opening. Certainly, the statements on education and free speech absolutely hit home for me.
"One topic that didn't come up, I thought about getting in line, but it was a little late, is the issue of book banning that's happening throughout the country, and the fact that things are being removed from federal libraries, whether they're military libraries and other libraries," he said. "So I am a big free speech person. I was in publishing for years, so this is not a good development in our country."
A cardboard cutout standing in abstentia for Rep. Claudia Tenney. Photo by Howard Owens
Photo by Howard Owens
Several speakers line up to ask questions and express concerns during the town hall Tuesday evening at Arc Community Center in Batavia. Photo by Howard Owens
Vietnam-era veteran Jim Neider. Photo by Howard Owens
Photo by Howard Owens
Dr. Laurel Dallmeyer Photo by Howard Owens
Photo by Howard Owens
Photo by Howard Owens
Chris Noble of Noblehurst Farms in Pavilion. Photo by Howard Owens
Dr. Mike Glover Photo by Howard Owens
Abe Zino Photo by Howard Owens
Erie County Executive Mark C. Poloncarz Photo by Howard Owens
As a Batavia native, David Snyder — no doubt along with many other locals — has memories of going to Sunny’s restaurant at the then-Genesee Country Mall downtown.
“I spent a lot of time there as a kid; my parents took us there,” Snyder told The Batavian Monday afternoon.
He has been spending time there once again — only this time around as a new owner of the property with plans to bring another version of Sunny’s back to the city. A longtime icon of downtown Batavia’s dining scene, the restaurant and lounge closed its doors on May 19, 2019.
“This is all pretty new; it’s only been a couple, three weeks, I think, since we’ve owned it, finally,” Snyder said, confirming that he purchased the site from former owner Pete Zeliff after a lengthy pursuit. “We’re working on the menu … we want to bring some different dishes into the community that other restaurants locally do not offer. Obviously, you're going to see some things on the menu, some Italian dishes you know, like the parms and stuff like that. Obviously, steaks. We want to push that pretty hard.”
A 2000 Batavia High School grad and busy remodeling contractor, he has been cleaning up and renovating the property, he said, while a liquor license has been submitted to the New York State Liquor Authority. City Council was notified of that during a conference meeting Monday evening, and there were no issues on the city’s side.
He understands that, as with all applicants, it may be quite a wait to hear back from the liquor authority about his license, he said, and is “hoping” to tentatively open in July or August at Batavia City Centre. It’s to be known simply as Sunny’s (no "restaurant" or "lounge" after it), and likely with a six-day schedule, he said.
If you’re a city property owner, chances are you have already received the letter: a notification from City Assessor Rhonda Saulsbury announcing the change of assessments.
So in addition to a rocky stock market, 401Ks and grocery prices, your home value has probably risen as part of the city’s attempt to keep in flow with full market value.
Unless, of course, you’re planning to sell, and then you might be quite pleased to have a higher price tag on your commode — tucked between what the New York Post has deemed to be the hottest housing markets in the entire country, City Manager Rachael Tabelski said.
“I can't say that assessments will be raised every year at the evaluation of homes and sale prices. As I was just telling some council members, the New York Post just did an article on Saturday afternoon throughout the entire country. The hottest housing market in the entire country is Rochester, New York. Houses don't sit for more than 13 days in Rochester, New York. Number three is Buffalo, New York. So we are right inside that area,” Tabelski said during City Council’s conference session Monday evening. “We've always had homes that are affordable, that people want to live in. So as they do come into it, people come into our area and buy homes, and values do tend to go up. But we do have a press release that will be issued … just letting everyone know that we strive to maintain 100% equalization, and that's the sale price to assessment ratio. We aim to keep our assessments at 100% full market value across all property types.”
When constituents come to City Hall and ask about their assessments being upwards of $200,000, city staff asks them, “Would you sell your home at this amount, less or more?” Tabelski said.
“And they always say more. And so again, we try with our assessor's office, it’s completely independent to have fair assessment values across the entire city,” she said. “(Along with the assessment) This piece of paper has explicit instructions on how to challenge your assessment. So I encourage everyone to take advantage of coming in, getting the market data that you can look at, look at the comparables for your property and have an informal review prior to the final review with the city assessor's office and then with the final review is the formal grievance in the city clerk's office.
“You can file any time before May 29, but I do encourage everyone to attend the informal review day and to come to the assessor to get all the information they need for comparables so they can see if there's any way they can lower the assessments,” Tabelski said. “And as everyone knows, as assessments are spread out across all properties, that doesn't mean the tax rate will increase or that you will have an increase in taxes. This year, we lowered the tax rate, because everyone remembers, by 50 cents.”
She also wanted to remind citizens that the city tax is 25% of the total bill, with county being another 25% and school taxes taking up the remaining 50% of the total amount. The city tax rate is $8.46 per $1,000 of assessed value.
“And I think Council, with our budgeting process, continues to work as hard as they can to provide the services that our residents want and enjoy at the lowest cost possible,” she said.
Councilman Bob Bialkowski mentioned that a couple of his constituents called him about their raised assessments, and he noted the misconception about who controls that process.
“I’ve run into this repeatedly, where people think that council directs the assessor to go doing new assessments so we can get more money,” Bialkowski said. “A lot of the people just don't accept the fact that, the assessors told me, we have no influence. We don't tell her what to do.”
Information about property assessment, inventory data and sale information became available as of April 7 HERE.
Part of the process includes the assessor’s office running each property through an appraisal software system, comparing the building style, square footage, year built, bedrooms, baths, and lot size, against recent sales data. A field review is completed to determine the fair full market value based on this data, the assessor’s press release states.
Grievance Day is set for May 29, 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. in Council Chambers, second floor, City Hall.
Pembroke Intermediate K Kids show off their certificates and candy bars as recognition for their stellar fundraiser of selling 2,950 chocolate suckers for Crossroads House. Teacher Jessica Phelps is back row third from left, and Crossroads representative Joanne Patri is back row far right. Photo by Joanne Beck
Fayth Rose eagerly volunteered to talk about being in K Kids, an offshoot of the Kiwanis Club, during a recent get-together with Joanne Patri of Crossroads House.
Fayth is one of 26 “kids” in the junior club at Pembroke Intermediate, and they collectively raised $2,950 for Crossroads by selling 2,950 $1 chocolate Oliver’s suckers. Her first year in the club, 10-year-old Fayth joined “so I could help the community,” she said.
“I think it’s a very good thing to do,” she said, admitting to being somewhere in the middle of shy and outgoing as a salesperson. She did learn more about Crossroads House along the way, she said, a nonprofit comfort home based in Batavia for those with a terminal illness.
Her favorite project so far has been the Halloween Trunk or Treat, handing out candy to dressed up ghosts and goblins and such, and also enjoyed this recent chocolate sucker sale. Fayth has no plans to leave the club any time soon, she said.
“Because the longer I’m in the club, the longer I can help people out and just carry them on and cheer them up,” she said.
As a representative for Crossroads, Patri said the group has continued to outperform itself each year.
“They've done a fantastic job for many years. They started out with less than 600 suckers, and they're now up almost to 3,000,” she said, with an armful of recognition certificates and chocolate bars for the kids. “We greatly appreciate what they do for us. (The money will go) toward the functions of the house. It’s kids doing something positive.”
Teacher Jessica Phelps is the K Kids adviser this year, and one of her goals has been to instill a sense of ownership and confidence by having them serve in leadership roles, including president and vice president, she said, and charging them with the responsibility to get tasks done.
“So we're building on leadership, and then also Kiwanis kids is about the community, to bring everyone into the community and doing community service. So just making the kids, showing students that they are role models and leaders and being able to go out and be part of the community,” Phelps said. “We went over to Homeslice and we sold chocolate suckers over there one night when the teachers were making pizzas. So being part of the community, lifting people up and showing everyone that we bring people together, and praising them, no matter where you come from or what you do.”
The K Kids were responsible for sales involving the entire school — with flyers going home, sign-up sheets for those interested in buying and/or selling, and assignments of counting and double counting to ensure there were no miscalculations in what was going out or coming in, delivering the product, learning about the cause from their teacher and talking about how the money raised will help to support it, Phelps said.
And what did they get out of the experience?
“They get out of it pride for helping the community, they get out of it pride for themselves, taking that role in being a leader and feeling good about themselves. The success of being able to do something for the community and for Crossroads, bringing the money back and seeing how much each year it grows, and some of these kids have been in this club since they were in third grade,” she said. “Now it's only fifth and sixth grade, but these kids have been in since we changed it, because it was just easier, because there's 26 students in it now. So just being able to give back and help the less fortunate, help people out there.”
Leah DiPalma and Silas Stock were pleased with their individual results of having sold at least 500 suckers each. Leah, 12, doubled up with her mom and sold a lot at the family diner where her mom works. She thought maybe they had hit the 200 mark, and after continuing to get bags of 25 and 50 each week to sell, Leah finally added it up. “I was surprised,” she said. She’s not at all ambiguous about her club.
“I love K kids. I just feel I like helping people, and when I get that opportunity, I'm just gonna jump right on it,” she said. “I’ve been doing K kids, helping out with it since probably two years before I actually could in third or fourth grade, because I would help at the car show with the bounce house. So I've been helping for a while.”
Many of the kids have also been arriving at school at an unusual time to help prepare for the upcoming Kiwanis Easter Egg Hunt on April 19, Phelps said. It has been a sight to behold.
“The kids getting up early in the morning, coming in at 7:15 to 7:30, taking 45 minutes, stuffing the eggs, and just to see that joy on their face being able to do that. I give them directions, they organize it, they put them in bags, they're making the labels,” she said. “And just to see them start to organize and be able to do it without me — seeing them grow, growing on their own, and supporting one another. They want to be here. They want to be part of the community and help with community service around here. So it's a huge community service.”
Fayth Rose, 10, shows her certificate for participating in the Crossroads House fundraiser. Photo by Joanne Beck
Joanne Patri of Crossroads House hands out certificates and Oliver's chocolate bars to Pembroke Intermediate K Kids Club members, including Romeo Landis. Photo by Joanne Beck
US Air Force F-35A Lightning II Demo Team Photo from Wings Over Batavia website
With more than 20 performers already lined up for the return of this year’s Wings Over Batavia Air Show, organizers are continuing to add to this year’s event, dropping in a periodic featured performer every now and again before it takes to the sky Aug. 30 and 31 at Genesee County Airport.
The latest performer spotlight is on the USAF F-35A Lightning II Demo Team, a fifth-generation fighter that combines “advanced stealth with fighter speed and agility,” organizers said.
Of the distinct variants of the F-35, the F-35A is flown by the U.S. Air Force.
Organizers sprinkled some additional details into an email about the F-35A, including that:
It is the first and only stealth, supersonic, multi-role fighter jet.
The F-35 is set to replace aging fighters, including the F-16s, A-10s, F/A-18s, and AV-8B Harriers.
The helmet-mounted display system contains all the intelligence and targeting information an F-35 pilot needs to complete a mission.
With the helmet, the pilots can see what is below the floor of the jet.
Nine countries are involved in the development of the F-35: the United States, the United Kingdom, Italy, the Netherlands, Turkey, Canada, Denmark, Norway, and Australia.
The U.S. Air Force F-35 Lightning II has One Pratt & Whitney F135-PW-100 turbofan engine, with a thrust of 43,000 pounds per engine. Its wingspan is 35 feet, length is 51 feet, and height is 14 feet. Its speed is Mach 1.6+, equivalent to approximately 1,200 miles per hour.
This aircraft has an internal fuel capacity of 18,498 pounds and a unit cost of $128 million. As of Oct. 20, 2015, there was an inventory of 81 in the Air Force, including four internationally.
Other announced performers so far include NextGen Eagles, Trucker’s Air Patrol, Rob Holland, GhostWriter Air Shows, Kevin Coleman, Luke Aikins, Redline Air Shows, Good Year FG-1D Corsair, P-51 Mustang “Crazy Horse 2,” B-25 Mitchell “Panchito,” Kyle Fowler-Long EZ, Airythmia, Fireworks - On Final FX, Great Lakes Drone Company, Wall of Fire - Tora Bomb Squad, Pyromusical, Jim “Cookie” Crum - Air Boss, Ric Peterson - announcer, with more to be coming.
Speaking of Wings Over Batavia, stop by The Batavian’s booth at the Home Show from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday or 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at the McCarthy Ice Arena, 22 Evans St., Batavia, and fill out our entry form for two VIP tickets to the Air Show, courtesy of Wings Over Batavia.
Genesee County Chamber of Commerce's 10th annual Home Show kicked off Friday evening at McCarthy Ice Arena in Batavia, and continues from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. Photo by Howard Owens.
Chuck Flynn is poised and ready to ask visitors a question throughout this weekend.
What do you think your home is worth? Take a guess. What do you think?
“So when they give me their guess, let’s say they guess $220,000, and I type in their address and we get an immediate estimate for what it might be, and we find out how close they are, up or down or not. And then everybody who guesses, they get entered into a drawing for an awesome gift certificate at Max Pies Furniture in Batavia,” said Flynn, a licensed associate broker at Howard Hanna Real Estate Services.
He is representing one of 65 vendors at Genesee County Chamber of Commerce’s 10th annual Home Show. It began Friday evening and continues from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at McCarthy Ice Arena, 22 Evans St., Batavia.
Now, if you’re thinking that Flynn’s game is easy because most folks ought to know their property’s assessment, he has found that many homes are actually worth more than they think. One visitor was surprised to learn that his Southside home’s value ranged some $10,000 more than his overpriced guess.
Besides a source of entertainment, does having a booth at the home show serve a business purpose? Absolutely, Flynn said.
“I definitely have connected with new relationships and reconnected with old ones,” he said. “And we get business from it every year. It’s fantastic.”
It’s a seller's market, he said, because there are more buyers out there than there are properties, “so for every 10 buyers, there’s one seller.”
“So just by the metrics, we’re just getting more buyers. And part of that’s driven by demographics, generational, the millennials are the biggest generation, right? There’s more millennials and baby boomers, so baby boomers aren’t the biggest generation anymore,” he said. “As the newer generation is coming up, there’s just os many more buyers, and they’re entering their prime home buying years, which is a little later in life for those generations than it was for my generation or the baby boomers.”
On the opposite side of the arena was Ron Weiler, owner of Sterling Tents. He’s been part of the home show since the Jaycees operated it at Batavia Downs years ago, he said. His wife’s grandfather, Roie Sterling, founded the company in 1911 on Main Street in Batavia, and it has remained here, except for a location change to Pearl Street.
He enjoys the annual event for the exposure it brings to his company and what it can provide for people, Weiler said.
“You meet the people, bring awareness to them, so that they know that there’s options for like, they put up a beautiful deck and it's too hot, they can't use it. So then we can use covers for that. And what we are is, life's a series of events. There are the poor ones, but there are good ones, like a graduation or wedding. So with our tents and our equipment, we make it so great that when you have a bad day, you can think about the good time you had,” he said. “So we have protection, and it’s festive. You think of tents, you have festivities, and it's social interaction, and that's what we need. We need social interaction and to have fun; life should be fun.”
Are you actually conducting business when you’re here?
“We make contacts, and then you go back and forth. It's always rewarding, you know, and we've always gotten a lot of work from it,” he said. “But it’s not like next week or anything; it’s simmering, and they return. My office manager, Sandy, she’s the one that handles all of that. I’m on the jobs mostly.”
There are other vendors that participate for reasons other than to gain an immediate or impending sale, Adam Clark said, with the clever draw of his 3-year-old golden retriever Dazey nearby.
“Just being part of the community, seeing all the familiar faces, whether it’s the other vendors, your existing customers, or new customers. It’s just nice to get out and be in the public,” said Clark, co-owner of Cedar Street Sales and Rentals. “We might gain a few sales from it, but it’s more of just a PR kind of thing, getting out in the public.
Friday evenings have typically been fairly slow; however, there was a steady flow of visitors carrying the home show bag to store goodies from each vendor. There are pens, chip clips, magnets, wrapped candies, rulers, bumper stickers, keychains, radon kits, and mini fishing, golf, and pick-a-duck games for entertainment and with chances to win prizes.
Vendors cover a wide range of areas, from driveway sealing, municipal services, and plumbing to realtors, community theater, health and wellness, financial advising, local media, household and garage needs, heating and cooling, and equipment repair.
While many vendors are from Genesee County, some travel from other areas, including Neil Delves, owner of Never Wet Basement Waterproofing. This is his fourth or fifth year at this show, he said.
“It just generates new appointments for us because I'm in the basement waterproofing business, and therefore, we do not really get any repeat business. Once we fix someone's house, we don't have to go back and see them ever again. So it is a one-time fix, done right and permanently,” he said. “Always looking for new customers. So we come here every year, as I do all the other local home shows. This is one of my favorite home shows because it's not very big, but people know what they want here, and they come up to me and say, ‘Okay, I need you to come out and look at my house.’ And the leads we get are very fruitful.”
Perhaps that’s why a third of these booths are new vendors this year, which has provided a good variety, Chamber President Brian Cousins said.
“A lot of Chamber members as well, which is great for the chamber membership. It's great to support the members as a chamber organization, to highlight all the businesses that we have for our community," Cousins said. "We get a lot of people that over the course of time … they've had a lot of home projects or home things that they've needed to do and wanted to do, but either didn't have the wherewithal or thought that they were going to do it themselves, and then come now and they find a vendor to be able to really help them.
“The other thing that happens throughout these shows too is a lot of the vendors do vendor-to-vendor, business-to-business deals as well, so they can find out how to support each other," he said. "Some of them have like industries, and some of them have a little bit of a different of a context, or a complimentary business to be able to help each other grow and to work. I was just talking with a couple people on the other side over here that were doing just that, so it was kind of nice to see.”
Michael Battaglia, Chamber board member, talks with Genesee County Chamber of Commerce President Brian Cousins, right, at the 10th annual Home Show Friday evening at McCarthy Ice Arena in Batavia. This type of event is a financial lift for the county, Cousins said: "100% it helps the economy, because any time that we can support local it keeps our dollars inside of our local community, boosts up our local businesses. All these guys are our friends and our neighbors and they live in our community. And a lot of the times, they work so hard that it's kind of hard to take a deep breath and actually showcase what they have for our local residents. So it's kind of nice to see the local residents in the community come in to really support them." Photo by Howard Owens
Photo by Howard Owens.
Laiken Ricker, Grace Marzolf, and Allysa Pascoe talk wellness at the GO Health booth Friday evening. "The biggest thing we're trying to promote right now is our free radon test kits for residents of Genesee County, but we also have lots of information on our other programs and services," Marzolf said. "Another big thing is we have our Healthy Neighborhoods program, which lets us go into homes in the city or town of Batavia and just do a little bit of a safety inspection, where we look at fire and safety hazards in the home, and then we have free supplies available to people who need them." Photo by Joanne Beck
Photo by Howard Owens.
Chuck Flynn of Howard Hanna Real Estate Services talks to a visitor at the home show Friday evening. Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Adam Clark, Cedar Street Sales and Rentals, and Dazey. Photo by Howard Owens.
Corfu resident, businessman and Village Mayor Tom Sargent has added entrepreneur to his title with his and wife Jennifer Stevens' second enterprise, Thirty-Three East Market at 10 E. Main St., Corfu. Photo by Joanne Beck
Tom Sargent and his wife, Jennifer Stevens, had been humming along with Homeslice 33 Pizzeria in Corfu for about three and a half years when they kept getting more ideas for growth without the room to spare. There was, however, a vacant parcel right next door.
So instead of trying to cram more food items into the busy pizza shop on Main Street, they bought the adjacent 10 E. Main St. and, in just 10 weeks time, renovated the 800 square feet into a charming general store with a bit of a market, a candy store, bakery, assorted coffees and teas, homemade macaroni salads, a book nook, gift and novelty items and seating for at least 10.
Sargent credits his wife for coming up with a more succinct tagline.
“It’s all that and a cup of coffee,” he said at the site that opened in the last week. “As mayor, I hear we need to have a grocery store. We were gonna add some deli meats and salads over at the pizzeria, and then we were just kind of, slip in other things that we could possibly do to increase sales at the pizzeria, and we ran out of space with everything that we were coming up with, and wanting to be able to do — give fresh products to the locals, produce, bakery items, try to bring Yancey Fancy cheeses back, which we were able to do. So this property just happened to be available, so next door just made sense."
There’s method to the madness, so to speak, in that the fresh produce can serve twofold: either for customer needs or for products at the pizzeria, say, green peppers for pizzas, salads and subs, he said, and the Market is a conduit for several local vendors — 16 at this time and possibly more — to sell their goods.
Those goods include Yancey’s Fancy cheeses, Shelby M. Turner’s Ready Or Not sourdough-based baked goods, Oliver’s Candies, Upstate Milk products, a few maple syrup and honey companies, including Merle, Great Lakes coffees, Mac salad from Homeslice 33 Pizzeria, and other locally made baked goods, such as the purple-decorated lavender iced cookies, lemon blueberry mini muffins, and a line of gluten-free items.
Since opening on April 2, all vendor goods have been selling, he said. The hours are assertive: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.
“We have coffee, so we want to get people in the mornings with coffee. And we're here because we do brew coffee, and we do grind fresh coffee for people,” Sargent said. “And then we want to get the people who come home a little later in the evening, and they need an onion for dinner or whatever it is, they need lunch meat for the next day. So, yeah, we're pretty steady right through till seven o'clock.”
Jordan Stevens has joined her parents to help out at the Market, and they have hired another employee as they gauge the beginning of business. Towards the back is a deli counter with Boarshead meats, hummus and cheeses, and freshly brewed coffee and tea that can be enjoyed at the cozy seating up front in a sunny window.
Salad, sandwiches and breakfast sandwiches, are on the horizon for a hopeful May debut, and Sargent is also hoping to get more locally sourced produce once warmer weather arrives. He’s also thinking ahead to those apple orchards in fall for some cider and apples, and other fresh treats when they become available.
“The alternative is to drive 15 minutes to Batavia or Alden to get that fresh produce or those deli meats, so now they can come here to the village and it’s more of a convenience for them,” he said.
Other items include freeze-dried candies, beeswax and soy-based candles, tea towels, chocolate-covered pretzels, Kindle bookmarks, olive wood cutting boards, bottle stoppers, mugs, dairy and non-dairy goods and cold drinks. One might say it's all that and a cup of freshly brewed coffee.
The late Robert Alan "Bob" Olmstead's collection of moths, insects and butterflies has been put into a display at Colgate University, set for a public unveiling on May 2. Submitted Photo
An adult Cecropia moth’s sole function is to mate and lay eggs before dying in a very brief two-week lifespan, as the baby caterpillar is born and feeds on leaves before creating a silken cocoon for the metamorphosis stage of evolving into an intricately designed moth. And the process repeats again and again.
It was that process in Mother Nature, and watching the development of those art-laden wings that captured Robert Alan “Bob” Olmstead’s attention and heart for years until he died at 69 in January 2022. Now, his collection will be able to capture some well-deserved recognition in return.
“He lived in Jamestown an went to 4-H and someone started him with a collection, and he won a ribbon at the Chautauqua Fair in Dunkirk … so he just took off from since he was 5 years old, collecting specimens, trading, purchasing them, he even sold cocoons to people who needed them for their schools. He really enjoyed doing that,” his wife Arlene Olmstead said. “And he didn’t think he was a professional, but he was a perfectionist. They said that he did an excellent job at Colgate with his collection. He’s taught many people how to do the specimens.”
Olmstead amassed a vast specimen collection of more than 75 boxes, most of which were donated to Colgate University’s Biology and Environmental Studies Department. Student James Millmore, Class of 2027, worked on the collection and plans to speak about “the inspiration and creation” of the display at 3:30 p.m. May 2 in the atrium of Olin Hall at Colgate University, 13 Oak Drive, Hamilton. The event is open to the public.
Millmore’s studies include exploring the role of collectors such as Olmstead in the scientific world.
“Especially how he helped to connect his community to the natural world and the value of contributions like his collection to modern science,” Millmore said in an email. “In recent years, the development of nature identification apps has opened up the practice of amateur collecting and observation of the natural world to a much wider audience.
“The practice is being called citizen science, as the data generated contributes directly to research,” he said. “The exhibit would trace the evolution from early naturalists and collectors into the modern day, with an emphasis placed on encouraging viewers take up the practice and interact with their local environments.”
Arlene and some of her family, which includes three sons and two stepsons, plan on attending the college event. After all, these collections have been part of their lives as well. Bob raised two types of moths every year (the Luna and Cecropia moths). He raised the cocoons and refrigerated them in one special section.
“Everybody knew they couldn’t touch them,” Arlene said. “Then in the spring he would put them in boxes to hatch.”
They adjusted to moth cocoons in the fridge and an ongoing ritual of watching Dad, often with Mom’s help, meticulously clean and change the leaves every day for the caterpillars to feed on. His passion drew her in as a fellow entomologist.
“We shook the leaves and the trees to get all the junk off of the leaves, and we’d inspect the leaves to see if they were any good because sometimes the leaves have something on there that could kill the caterpillars. And so he would just put the sleeves over it and tie it up, and we made a lot of caterpillars, a lot of moths that were able to be in the process for those two weeks to stay alive for weeks without somebody killing it. You know, the cars kill them, the trucks, the squirrels, some mice, and any little insect could kill them, and the birds,” she said. “So they have a short life, you know. And so Bob really preserved them to get as many caterpillar moths mating so we can let them live for two full weeks. And he enjoyed working with those two moths, and they were easy to do, but it was a lot of work because the caterpillars was growing so fast and big that they needed more leaves, you had to get more leaves all the time.”
A member of Boy Scout Troop #6031 in Bergen, Bob taught many children in both the Boy and Girl Scouts, as well as in schools and churches, Arlene said. He became more widely known for his love of moths, butterflies, and other types of bugs, coupled with a desire to teach what he knew, such as the cycle of life, how and what they ate, and how to catch them safely. Perhaps no surprise, he also taught groups about trees.
Given these creatures are caterpillars and moths that live extremely short lives, why did he enjoy this so much? “Well, he enjoyed the whole process of all the insects, the moths, and the butterflies, and the beauty of them. Some of these caterpillars and moths have two different colors and designs on each side; they’re gorgeous, they’re really gorgeous,” Arlene said. “He really enjoyed once the caterpillars reached maturity, they spun into large brown cocoons. And he enjoyed that process, the two weeks that the moths live. After they mate, they die. And then there’s the little eggs, and then they hatch into little tiny caterpillars. And then we put them in little jars, and when they start eating more and more, we have to get bigger jars and make sure that they are clean inside and make sure they go through the process without dying.
“My husband loved the outdoors. He knew every tree, every plant, and every bird. He knew nature inside and out. And he could name off anything he could see, anything really, find things that he could see. He started that since he was 5 years old, and he just would walk the fields every time we'd drive down the road. It took us two or three times longer to get there because he could see something along the side of the road and take it off,” she said. “A lot of people don't see a lot of things on, even on the bushes … he just would pick up things and take care of them, let them live longer in life, in nature. And that's a great thing. I really appreciate my husband doing that.”
Photos submitted by Arlene Olmstead
“To teach about nature, teach about the different colors of how God has put these specimens on this earth, and the different colors and shapes and how beautiful they are,” Arlene Olmstead of why her husband Bob enjoyed his hobby so much. “And we don't realize, you and I, we don't realize unless somebody has a collection of this, of what it really looks like, of what specimens are out there, and this is only a little bit of a collection that he has. There is so much out there that people don't realize that there is so much out in the world that people don't realize that we have these wonderful things that the Lord has put on this earth, and we are truly blessed. But we don't take the time to see the beauty." Submitted Photo
File Photo of Bill Brach delivering the second appeal for the Buffalo Diocese from Ascension Parish to the post office in December. The Parish received word that the appeal has been accepted for review. Submitted Photo
Friends of Ascension are celebrating a win, albeit it’s uncertain for how long, with the Dicastry's decision to accept a second appeal from Ascension Parish to halt its closure in Batavia.
Longtime parish member Bill Brach dropped that second appeal to the Buffalo Diocese in the mail in mid-December. That action was another step in a relentless process of collecting petitions, sending out updates, encouraging participation, and ongoing financial support as a display that the Sacred Heart Church community wasn’t going away without a fight.
Member Nancy Brach had said at the time that it was one thing for a parish to lose its home based on legitimate underutilization, poor physical condition, and lack of financial viability; however, none of that was the case for Ascension.
“But to close healthy churches that are needed, cared for, and loved in their communities is another story,” she said in December. “It is clear that individual parishes are being closed due to the transgressions of the Diocese.”
Those transgressions were from sex abuse lawsuits filed against the Diocese and costly settlements resulting in church closures and merging assets to pay off the plaintiffs instead of the defendants paying directly, according to prior news articles.
Attorney Ilan Schard said, “If the diocese is going to survive as an entity, other parishes, even those without claims directly against them, can contribute to help fund a settlement. It’s been done in every other settlement across the country,” according to the Buffalo News.
Brach disagreed.
“While this may be legally correct, it is ethically wrong to punish people for the sins of others,” she said.
The parish was one of more than 10 “from all corners of our diocese” that received letters from the Nuncio in Washington notifying them that their appeals had been acknowledged and accepted for further review, the nonprofit group Save Our Buffalo Churches said.
“In addition, the letters mentioned that the decrees issued were suspended pending the review in Rome. Of note, the letters all mentioned that the Dicastry would be corresponding with Bishop Fisher on the matter,” the nonprofit said in an email to The Batavian. “Cardinal Lazarus You Heung-sik is the prefect. Most of the letters were written on 3/25, the feast of the Annunciation, when we celebrate the incarnation of our Lord Jesus in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary, nine months before Christmas.
Also, our faith community is eager to learn about the status of the bankruptcy as well as the class action lawsuit. Since no settlement nor closure for either has been formally announced, we do not understand why the diocese is informing various parish and church offices to expect ‘bills’ for their share of the settlement,” it stated. “In the 2020 document issued by Bishop Scharfenberger entitled ReOrganizing for the Future Together, page 9 states: ‘The Diocese cannot use parish assets or property to settle claims.’ The document is linked from our webpage.”
Nonprofit members continue “to pray for abuse victims,” it states, as each parish community in the diocese continues to operate “as is,” celebrating Easter and other holy traditions and services, it stated.
“We continue to pray for the bishop, priests of our diocese as well as the faithful Catholics in our diocese as we complete the holy season of Lent,” it stated. “God bless you all.”
Trisha Reynolds of Justice for Children Advocacy Center, left, facilitates a panel of Genesee County agency representatives as they talk about what services they can provide for victims of crime during a Criminal Justice Day program Monday at Grace Baptist Church in Batavia. Photo by Howard Owens
Although there are multiple agencies ready to help victims of crime in Genesee County, sometimes all it takes is that one person with a particular forte, Jess Marciano says.
“Having a Swiss Army knife is not always the most effective tool,” Marciano said during a Criminal Justice Day panel Monday at Grace Baptist Church in Batavia. “It might be better having somebody who is specialized … to have diversified experts. Knowing who to tap, that’s what makes this so incredibly helpful.”
Marciano represented GLOW OUT!, and was with five others — Batavia Police Youth Detective Eric Hill, Grace Baptist Church Associate Pastor Zack Dawson, Restore Sexual Assault Services Training Coordinator Bobbie Steinhauer, and Jacquelyn Wheeler and Samantha Rychlicki of YWCA, all who spoke about their local resources within the county that offered those specialized services to victims.
They were given a scenario of a mother and father that didn’t get along, and had a transgender child who was struggling with the turmoil and dad’s addiction and abusive behavior toward the mom.
How would each agency respond?
The police department would refer the family, dad in particular, to the Police Assisted Addiction and Recovery Initiative (PAARI), Hill said, plus the fire department and Genesee County Sheriff’s Office.
“You can come to us with those drug addiction problems, and we won’t arrest you,” he said. “That would be a case where we would not arrest you, but we would actually get you in touch with ConnectCare services and counseling services without any questions asked. So if we were called to the scene, or if this family came to our police department with these issues, that would be a potential avenue for them to go down.”
There’s a countywide Single Point of Access group (SPOA) for pulling multiple agencies together to discuss issues and needs; the Mental Health Department for counseling; YWCA’s domestic violence services and a safe house for mom and the child if needed; Family Court and orders of protection; Grace Baptist certified counselors; and the police department’s jurisdiction of making an arrest and getting an arraignment for the husband’s abusive actions to prevent further harm while the case goes to court.
Restore would probably focus first on mom and make sure that she had supports for the sexual assault history, and is connected with a counselor, Steinhauer said.
“Because, again, her services are all free, trying to get whatever support she needs. And because we've got counselors that serve Batavia, that would be one piece of the puzzle, and then to try to figure out what else is needed,” she said. “We have some resources for the queer community, for the parents and for the kids that just say, here's some books, here's some resources, so that you know that you're welcome here and might be supportive to what means this family have. And then always, always the hotline. Any time, any reason you wake up at 3 a.m. and because, for reasons that trauma likes to hit at 3 a.m. we have a full volunteer (schedule). These people learn to be volunteers. They work hard, and they show up at 3 a.m. for those calls, and that's why they're there.”
As for Dawson, he’d want people to show up at the church.
“I’d want them to find that church community, and life is better connected. We’re not meant to live life in isolation, and it sounds like that family is isolated,” he said. “They need relationship and they need to find safe people. One of the things that I'd encourage you to do is I know that there's safe people in the school, and teachers love the students that they have, and the way that I've tried to work is just to be a person that is known as a safe person.”
He likened a person to a four-legged chair, with each leg an extension of that being: the spiritual aspect, social aspect, emotional aspect and the physical. So if someone has suffered physical and/or sexual abuse, there’s damage that “as a church we would want to get that person out of that situation,” he said.
“We would work with dad’s addiction … it’s not just the flip of a switch. We need to walk alongside that man and help him navigate, what are the triggers for that? How can we walk alongside with you and have accountability to where we can help you be successful to conquer that?” he said. “And for the child, man, they’ve faced a lot of stuff. Some of it has been … because the parents are trying to figure out how to handle that. And so that child needs to know that they’re loved, that they’re cared for, and that blame that they might feel, that shame that they might feel, we need to help them navigate that. I want to help them see their identity isn’t just in sexuality or a gender, their identity is beyond that.”
“You’ve gotta walk with people, life is hard,” he said. “And so, you want to keep going with them for the long haul … as well as walking through what the Bible says.”
YW staff would consider it a domestic violence situation, Rychlicki said, and ask the mother to fill out an intake form, meet with a case manager and staff could serve as advocates during her time in court, offer food from the nonprofit’s pantry and help manage a safety plan.
“We’re going to meet them where they are,” Wheeler said, explaining that they wouldn’t dispense advice such as get a divorce. “We are there as a support. We’re not necessarily dictating or putting conditions on how they have to act in order to receive our services or engage with us.”
While it’s true that each agency has its own level of expertise, they do often collaborate on a case, which Hill often initiates as part of his job as coordinator, he said. A case may go before SPOA, and then to GLOW OUT! For one portion and to Restore for another need. He gave an example of when there’s an attempted suicide.
“There’s agencies that are automatically activated when certain things happen,” he said.
Trisha Reynolds, program coordinator of Justice for Children Advocacy Center, facilitated the panel and said it was a big help for all the key players to get to know one another to “make sure we’re coordinating services.” After all, the theme of the day for the more than 100 people in attendance was about healing the community through awareness.
“So that people in the community know what's out there for them. Everybody knows that there's mental health. Everybody knows about substance abuse treatment, UConnect. But then there's some other resources that we felt like maybe people wouldn't be so aware of … especially like youth detective. I mean, people hear police, they think they're just out to arrest, but they can offer so many other services and support groups and all kinds of things,” Reynolds said. “So I think we just wanted people in the community to be aware that if you find yourself as victim of a crime, there are a multitude of community agencies out there to help you.”
Joseph Robinson of the District Attorney’s Office had the job of summarizing all of the day’s presenters. Now in his sixth year with the office, he has handled domestic violence cases — “cases with people who are in the most vulnerable position in their life” — he said.
He wasn’t going to do that alone, and relied “heavily” on county agencies like those that were just up on stage, he said.
“Back then, I didn’t even know about all the other agencies involved with this, and they really helped me be able to connect with the victims, make sure the victims were heard, and that what the victims were looking for was something we took into consideration during these cases,” Robinson said. “Like the sheriff said earlier, a lot of the criminal justice system is focused on holding the offender accountable. But that’s not the only thing we do. We listen to the victims, and we make sure they’re heard in the courtroom, whether it be in the plea we offer or giving them the chance to speak at sentencing, so that they know their voice is heard, not just to us but to the courts.
“And when it comes to holding that person accountable. My job, without having the victim feel safe, feel like they can talk to us, we have no case,” he said. “These victims aren’t on their own. They don’t need to handle this on their own, there are numerous agencies out here to help them, the community is here to help them, and it really does take a village for these people to get thought he situation, to feel safe again.”
Photos by Howard Owens
Samantha Rychlicki of YWCA, right, answers a question during the panel Monday Photo by Howard Owens
Trisha Reynolds of Justice for Children Advocacy Center Photo by Howard Owens
Zack Dawson of Grace Baptist Church.
Bobbie Steinhauer of Restore Sexual Assault Services.
Batavia Police Youth Detective Eric Hill.
Jacquelyn Wheeler and Samantha Rychlicki of YWCA.
Joseph Robinson of the county District Attorney's Office gives closing remarks for Criminal Justice Day on Monday.
Marian Velma Dworzack toasts to her century of life with family, including daughter Sheila Craver, left, and son Steve Dworzack, second to her right, Saturday at Miss Batavia Diner. Her younger siblings are seated to her left, brother Richard Cramer and Shirley Kriger. Photo by Joanne Beck
Marian Dworzack -- who credits her longevity to always carrying a song in her heart -- celebrated her 100th birthday on Saturday during a party hosted by her children, Sheila Craver and Steven Dworzack, at Miss Batavia Diner.
The family enjoyed a toast with champagne, birthday cupcakes, and plenty of smiles.
Marian was born in 1925 on her grandfather’s farm in Basom, the eldest daughter of Chauncey and Eleanor Cramer. She attended Oakfield School and graduated from Corfu High School in 1943, where she was a ping-pong champion and star of the school musical.
She worked at the Brown Knitting Company in Warsaw until she married Chester Dworzack in 1946. They operated a small dairy farm in Varysburg until 1962. Avid ballroom and square dancers, they belonged to the Batavia Twirlers and WyCo Promenaders. Marian also sang with the Sweet Adelines. She was an active member of St. Vincent Church in Attica, where she belonged to the Catholic Daughters and the Altar & Rosary Society. After Chet’s retirement in 1980, they moved to the city of Batavia, where she now resides.
Marian is a 45-year breast cancer survivor. In addition to her two children, she has seven grandchildren, six great-grandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren.
Spanning the generations are daughter Sheila Craver, left, 100-year-old mom Marian Velma Dworzack, and great-granddaughter Kayla Stone. Photo by Joanne Beck
Downtown Batavia didn't lack enthusiasm from at least 300 people carrying signs and chanting during a national Hands Off! protest Saturday. The event was one of hundreds across the country to oppose the actions of Donald Trump and Elon Trump. Photo by Howard Owens
Although there were signs admonishing Donald Trump and Elon Musk, Corfu resident Matt Steinberg didn't see it as being political and instead focused on what he believed was the bigger picture in downtown Batavia this weekend.
Steinberg chose to speak up for libraries, which he displayed on his sign while standing along Main Street.
“Well, because there's no reason to cut these. I mean, education is how we sort of advance as a country. People need to have an education and know what has happened in history, good and bad. And you learn that partially at libraries. And fascists, that's how they start. They try to have an uneducated citizenry, and that's got to be the reason that libraries are a target,” he said, as one of at least 300 people in the Hands Off! protest Saturday outside of City Hall. “I do feel that our local libraries will be affected. The small libraries depend more heavily on government support, even the big ones, like in Buffalo, Erie County, that also depends heavily on government support, because it essentially is a free function. And there are certain things in the world that should exist that don't need to generate a profit, and libraries are one of them.”
He said it was well worth his time to attend the event and protest for two hours alongside hundreds of others with various other causes. For the most part, the event was a peaceful demonstration of free speech in action, including a few motorists who apparently opposed the action by displaying Trump flags and expelling diesel exhaust close to protesters.
“It’s easier to give a finger or accelerate your truck than to engage. We’re trying to reverse what’s happening,” Steinberg said. “I’m here because I don't like the direction that the current administration is piloting the country, and I don't feel like I don't want to just take it lying down. ”
Individuals, couples, friends, and whole families came out to participate. Jen Reardon of Batavia gathered with seven relatives — including some first-time protesters that drove from Hamburg and Alden, and their grandmother — all wearing neon-colored matching “Resist” T-shirts.
This event wasn’t about getting together for a one-time cause but about concerns and conversations they’ve been having daily, Reardon said.
“We’re worried about our country absolutely crumbling and falling apart. And anything that we can do -- we need to resist and fight it,” she said. “And try to keep things funded that are important to people, and social security, Medicaid, Medicare. How are people going to live without that and all of the other things they talk about, SNAP benefits being cut, museums and libraries being cut? Head Start being cut. They’re programs that help a lot o families all over the country, and with the money gone, what is going to happen to people?”
There seems to be a fair amount of people online saying that this isn’t necessary and asking why people are protesting. How do you respond to that? “I’d say stop watching Fox News and start to watch almost any other place you an get news from; not Newsmax and not Fox News, and learn the real story of what is happening, because those media outlets are are friendly to Trump are not telling the Americans the truth of what’s happening,” she said.
Are you doing any other events like this? “Well, we found out that there’s something going on on April 15 at the town hall (at Arc Community Center), so we plan to attend that as well. And then as things come up, this was kind of our first jump into it,” she said. “But we’re really to do what we need to do to keep the lifestyle that we love here, and the freedoms that we have here that other people across the world do not have.”
The family members each carried a sign with a different cause — the forests, LGTBQ rights, recovery funds, social security, the library and art.
Taylor Peck of Batavia works in the substance addiction field and is concerned about funding for rehab and recovery and issues more personal to her. Participating in this protest “definitely” accomplished something, Peck said.
“So we're getting our voices heard, our message across. It's a scary time to be a gay woman in America. And I mean, I just want to take a stand. I work for UConnectCare here in Batavia, and I care a lot about the clients that I work with who are in recovery. So that's why my sign says recovery funds.”
Admitting that her group was “fired up,” Reardon jumped back in to add that she's concerned about cuts to education, libraries, and museums. It is “trying to make us dumb,” she said.
“Things where you can go and learn about history, and women’s rights and gay rights and the veterans,” she said. “It’s a whole lot of things that mean a lot to all kinds of people.”
Both sides of Main Street were lined with people and chants of “hey, hey, ho, ho, Donald Trump has got to go,” as motorists drove by honking their horns. There was a bright green umbrella with the word Truth written across the top and messages for “Congress, get DOGE” and “Congress, put your hands back on the wheel.”
A protester wearing the classic “Hand Maid’s Tale” garb of a floor-length ruby red dress and symbolic oppressive white head piece, known as wings, walked up and down the sidewalk with a megaphone, leading a chant of “this is what democracy looks like.”
Holding a sign with democracy written on it, Amy Fagan is “displeased with the Trump administration,” she said, and appreciated the fact that “a red county” would have people stand up against him in protest.
“Because there’s so many things that I think are being attacked that I figured democracy covers a lot of it, and then the social security in particular, people like me have paid into it our entire lives. And what’s going to happen if it goes away?” the Batavia resident said. “It’s not fair, it’s not right. It’s dangerous for the older people to not have that income coming in, because we’re not millionaires and billionaires.”
And what do you say to those people who think this is premature and this is worry for nothing? “If you wait for too long, then it’s going to be too late, and if it’s too late, there’s nothing that you’re going to be able to do about it,” she said. “People need to see that there are those of us who disagree and that maybe they don’t want to come out because they’re afraid of what their family might think. Or, just know that there’s a group of us out here that support you.”
Organizer Sarah Wolcott was happy with the turnout and that the protest had minimal negative occurrences.
“I am overwhelmed, but in the best possible way. I always prepared for some pushback. There has been very, very minimal, at best, if even any. There has been some. I'm not gonna say there hasn't been, but mostly it's all been positive and supportive and peaceful, which was the ultimate goal of today,” Wolcott said. “The whole point of choosing Hands Off, specifically, was that it's not just one cause, it's not just one thing being affected, it’s so many things. And I just gave people a place to come together, is really all I did. The rest kind of happened on its own. I think there will definitely be more.”
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
Photo by Howard Owens.
"I feel like if I don't come to protests, if I don't make my voice heard, then I am complicit in the destruction of democracy," said Matt Steinberg of Corfu. Photo by Joanne Beck
"If we just sit back and do nothing, we're gonna just see this country crumble right before our eyes," said Patricia Harrington of Batavia, fourth from left and one of the eight family members to attend Saturday's Hands Off! protest in Batavia. "It's time to get out there and take action, and even if it's just a peaceful protest, that's still doing something more than sitting there and doing nothing." Photo by Joanne Beck
“Because there’s so many things that I think are being attacked that I figured democracy covers a lot of it," Amy Fagan of Batavia said Saturday. Photo by Joanne Beck