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Assemblyman Steve Hawley

Military veteran receives parade, recognition, cake for 100th birthday

By Joanne Beck
Steve Vernaccini
Steve Vernaccini, a U.S. Army veteran and long-awaited Le Roy High School grad, celebrates his 100th birthday Sunday.
Submitted Photo

A group of family and friends helped to make Steve Vernaccini’s birthday — a century in the making — even more special Sunday with a flag-touting parade of about 10 vehicles down Main Street, Batavia, a certificate of recognition from Assemblyman Steve Hawley, representation from the Veteran Road Patrol, and a U.S. flag-themed birthday cake.

The guest of honor was also treated to a party after the parade and received a military challenge coin. 

If Vernaccini’s name sounds familiar, he was recently bestowed his long-awaited high school diploma by the Le Roy Central School’s Board of Education. The Le Roy resident had missed his graduation after serving in the Army from December 1942 to December 1945.

A native of Rock Glen, Vernaccini moved to Le Roy in 1925 and got married in June 1946. In between, he played baritone horn in a high school band, was on the track team, and played basketball. 

He completed his sophomore year in 1940 and was just rolling for two weeks into his junior year when he had to quit and go to work to support his family. What happened next took away his opportunity to return to school at that time to get that coveted diploma. 

He was drafted into the Army as a private, stationed at Fort Eustis, Va., where he completed boot camp in three months. He was put on a train to California and then boarded a ship, the U.S.S. Laura-lane, to Hawaii. He was stationed at Scofield Barracks, Oahu for just three days before he was assigned to an anti-aircraft unit. His job was to track aircraft until he was assigned to the radar unit. 

He left Hawaii in December 1944 and went to Iwo Jima in April 1945 until Oct. 3, 1945. He was discharged from the military on Dec. 12, 1945, as a sergeant. 

Earlier this month, Vernaccini was presented with that long-awaited diploma, about a week before he was to turn 100. 

“I can’t explain to you how gratifying this is to receive this,” he had said. “I’d like to have had this a long time ago, but Uncle Sam wanted me, so I did what he wanted.”

Now, he has the diploma, and recognition and thanks from the community for his service to the country. And perhaps, he even enjoyed a little cake.

Submitted Photos

Steve Vernaccini with cake
Cars with flags for Steve Vernaccini
Steve Vernaccini's cake

Hawley chides majority for blocking voters from weighing in on two-state referendum

By Press Release

Press Release:

Steve Hawley

Assemblyman Steve Hawley (R, C - Batavia) is disappointed that the Assembly Majority Conference blocked a referendum of his this week in the Local Government Committee without any debate or discussion. Numbered A.1978, the referendum would have simply put a question to voters on the next statewide election ballot: “Do you support the division of New York into two separate states?” The measure was shot down, and Hawley knows exactly why. 

“Our job as legislators should be to, first and foremost, ask our constituents questions about what they want to see us do. That is all this referendum would have done,” Hawley said. “I speculate the Majority prevented us from asking this question of all New Yorkers because they already know the answer: yes. The majority of New Yorkers are tired of the way things are, and any change, no matter how big, would be preferable to how things are right now.”

“Immigration crises, favoritism to downstate constituencies, the continued erosion of our farmlands and small businesses: these are the problems we face; infringements on 2nd Amendment rights, rampant pro-criminal policies and skyrocketing taxes and inflation. And these problems are consistently tied to the actions of a Majority spearheaded by a downstate coalition that has little regard for the rest of us. If they’re afraid of being told their actions are having a negative impact on some New Yorkers, they need a serious reality check,” Hawley concluded.

File photo by Howard Owens

Hawley urges governor to reconsider gas stove ban

By Press Release

Press Release:

Assemblyman Steve Hawley (R,C-Batavia) is joining many New Yorkers calling on the governor to reconsider her position on banning gas stoves from future new housing and construction developments in New York. What has been touted as a means to combat climate change and entice people to come to the state is now being seen as a measure to control businesses on a more granular level in New York, and Hawley doesn’t like the concept. 

“Albany progressives claim the measure is a simple implementation of new policy, but I don’t see it that way,” Hawley said. “For one, the measure neglects the fact that people upstate rely on natural gas to a greater degree than downstate homeowners, who may, in fact, benefit more from electric devices. But of course, when implementing statewide policy, we’re used to the fact that downstate progressives in charge of our government favor the one-size-fits-all approach.”

“But more than that, it’s another example of Albany focusing on an issue that seems like a big deal but will do very little in the long run. The average person cutting out natural gas in their daily life will not change the climate dramatically, so why punish the average person or business with more restrictions on how they can live their lives or operate? Why not focus the unilateral power the Assembly majority holds on bigger issues like inflation? They shouldn’t be allowed to pat themselves on the back, because they are once again infringing on the choices of New Yorkers,” Hawley concluded.

 

Hawley 'deeply disappointed' with decision to move forward with reduced farmer worker OT

By Press Release

hawlet.jpeg

Press Release:

Assemblyman Steve Hawley (R,C-Batavia) is deeply disappointed by Department of Labor (DOL) Commissioner Roberta Reardon’s decision to move forward with the previously-proposed reduction in the farm worker overtime threshold. The measure, which has been hotly debated for a number of years, was finally approved by the DOL this Wednesday. Hawley is concerned about what this will mean for the future of New York farmers.

“For the past three years, my colleagues and I have advocated for the family farmers of New York who have told us time and again that any changes to the overtime threshold would severely impact their economic security. I’m deeply disappointed that the DOL and Commissioner Reardon have ignored those pleas,” Hawley said.

“Agriculture is the largest industry in New York, and its workers are the best in the nation. But for these smaller farms trying to get by, the costs just skyrocketed, and the burden of this mandate will unfortunately cause many farmers to fall by the wayside. With this reality in mind, I can’t help but wonder who the DOL thinks it is helping,” Hawley concluded.

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