May is Bicycle Safety Month; Sheriff Announces Helmet Giveaway

Madison County Sheriff’s Office

By John Ball

(Wampsville, NY – May 2012) May is National Bicycle Safety Month. Bicycle riding is a fun, healthy activity when everyone takes the time to be informed about safety. Bicycles are considered vehicles in New York state, and cyclists have the same rights and the same responsibilities to follow the rules of the road as motorists.

In support of Bicycle Safety Month, a bike helmet giveaway will take place Thursday, May 10, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at ZEMS Ice Cream, 135 James St. (corner of North Main Street) in Canastota.

Helmets are being supplied to children who need them by the Madison County Sheriff’s Office and Safe Kids Upstate NY. The event is being co-sponsored by the above and the Madison County Health Department, and is being supported by the Canastota Police Department.

Helmets will be distributed while supplies last. Please note that a parent or guardian must be present with the child.

Operation Safe Child ID cards will also be available at this event, along with a special visit by McGruff the Crime Dog.

The following safety tips are provided by Sheriff Allen Riley to help all of our citizens, particularly our children, to be safe on the roads:

Equipment/Clothing

* Wear a properly fitted bicycle helmet. Bicyclist’s 14 years old and younger are required to wear a helmet when operating a bicycle. If your travel plans include visiting the Erie or Rockland County area, those localities require everyone to wear a helmet.

* Use a bicycle that is properly equipped. New York State Law requires a warning bell or horn, coaster brake, reflective devices on front and rear wheels, sides and pedals.

* Use lights at night. New York law requires a white headlight (visible from at least 500 feet ahead) and a red rear reflector or taillight (visible up to 300 feet from behind) for riding at night.

* Keep your bike in good repair. Adjust your bike to fit you and keep it working properly. Check brakes and tires regularly. Routine maintenance is simple and you can learn to do it yourself.

* Wear bright colored clothing, preferably neon, fluorescent or other bright colors whenever riding. Also wear something that reflects light, such as reflective tape or markings.

General Safety

* Control your bicycle. Always ride with at least one hand on the handlebars. Carry books and other items in a bicycle carrier or backpack. Keep both hands ready to brake.

* Be on the lookout for hazards such as potholes, broken glass, gravel, puddles, leaves and dogs. All these hazards can cause a crash.

* Never operate a bicycle wearing headphones, talking on a cell phone or text messaging – stop your bicycle when sending or receiving a cell phone call or text message.

* Sit on the bike seat, keep feet on the pedals and never carry a passenger on a bike unless it’s a child in an approved safety seat. New York State Law requires it.

* Make eye contact with drivers. Assume that other drivers don’t see you until you are sure that they do. Eye contact is important with any driver who might pose a threat to your safety.

Rules of the Road

The safest place for bicycle riding is on the street, where you should ride in the same direction as motorists. Children less than 10 years old, however, are not mature enough to safely ride in the street. Children under 10 should generally ride on the sidewalk. For all others:

• Go with the traffic flow. New York State Law requires bicycles to ride as close to the right side of the road as you safety can, in the same direction as other vehicles.

• Obey all traffic laws. A bicycle is a vehicle, and you’re a driver. When you ride in the street, obey all traffic signs, signals and lane markings. New York State Law requires it.

• Be predictable. Ride in a straight line, not in and out of cars. Signal your moves to others.

• Watch for parked cars. Ride far enough out from the curb to avoid the unexpected from parked cars (like doors opening or cars pulling out).

• Use hand signals. New York State Law requires use of hand signals to tell motorists and pedestrians what you intend to do. Signal as a matter of law, of courtesy and of self-protection.

• Look before turning. When turning left or right, always look behind you for a break in traffic, then signal before making the turn. Watch for left or right-turning traffic.

• Choose the best way to turn left. There are two choices: (1) Like an automobile: signal to move into the left turn lane and then turn left. (2) Like a pedestrian: ride straight to the far side crosswalk. Walk your bike across.

• Don’t pass on the right. Motorists may not look for nor see a bicycle passing on the right.

Children between the ages of 10 and 14 are at the highest risk of injury on a bicycle. Review these safety guidelines with your children, and watch out for children when you are driving.

If we all take the time to review these laws and tips, we can all ride … and drive … safer this spring.

John Ball is Madison County Undersheriff.

Canastota Announces Prom Court

court ladies

Prom Court Ladies front row from left are, Brionna Coleman, Kaiya Stoddard, Samantha Streator and Justice Clark. Back row from left are, Chelsea Dolloff, Melissa Krak, Shea Foster, Moriah Saunders and Alicia Mayville.

Prom Court Guys front row from left are Andrew Frost, Randy Bovee, Wyatt Albanese and Xavier Johnson. Back row from left are, Joel Campanie, Garrett Lesher, Jordan Becker, Jon Halsey and Ryan Wisinski.

(Canastota, NY – May 12, 2012)  The Canastota Junior Prom will be held on Saturday, May 12 from 8 p.m. to midnight at the Greystone Castle. Public admission for crowning begins at 11:30 p.m. for a cost of $1.

 

Madison County Literacy Coalition Competes for All-America City Awards

(Madison County, NY) The Fourth Annual Madison County Literacy Summit was held on Wednesday, May 2 at the New Beginning Church on Genesee Street in Wampsville.

This was a celebration of successes and a time to be re-invigorated for charge into the many projects underway to help every inch of the county achieve maximum literacy at all stages of life.

In 2010 and 2011 more than 50 Madison County Literacy Coalition Task Force members helped create a coalition of literacy providers, a formal non-profit structure with Managing Partners and a full time Executive Director. The MCLC hired the experts at Literacy PowerLine to do a detailed Literacy Needs and detailed Literacy Services Assessment. The managing Partners then developed a detailed Five-Year Strategic Plan. The coalition has very clear set of goals. Much has been done.

The Fourth Annual Summit presented what has been accomplished, what the group is engaged in and where they go next.

For more information, please contact Coalition Executive Director Jay Dunn at 796-1543 or mrjayadunn4@gmail.com.

Spurred by a reading crisis for American students, more than 120 cities, counties and towns have submitted ambitious and sustainable plans to get students on track for grade-level reading by the end of third grade. The third grade milestone marks the point when children shift from learning to read and begin reading to learn. Students who haven’t mastered reading by that time are more likely to get stuck in a cycle of academic failure, drop out of school, and struggle throughout their lives

In September, the Madison County Literacy Coalition’s Managing Partners submitted a Letter of Intent to the Campaign for Grade Level Reading. Hard work by many county literacy providers and the new Executive Director, Jay Dunn, produced a Community Solutions Action Plan submitted in March for national adjudication.

The MCLC is now part of the Campaign for Grade-Level Reading Network (www.gradelevelreading.net.), which will provide access to experts, policymakers, and over 80 foundations and philanthropic donors, who fund early childhood and early learning and literacy projects.

The plan also serves as application for the All-America City awards, which will be announced by the National Civic League in July.

The communities—ranging from big cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and Baltimore to smaller places like El Dorado, Kansas and the Madison County, New York—are  in what is clearly a national crisis: a full two-thirds of U.S. students, and fourth-fifths of low-income children, fail to become proficient readers in the early grades.

The Community Solution Action Plans they have developed focus on developing strategies to tackle three underlying issues that have consistently kept children from learning to read well:

school readiness — too many children are entering kindergarten already behind

school attendance — too many young children are missing too many days of school

summer learning — too many children are losing ground academically over the summer

Madison County’s Literacy Coalition members are enthusiastically moving ahead with their plan.

For more about the MCLC see their web page at madisoncountyliteracycoaliton.org.

Excerpts borrowed from http://www.gradelevelreading.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/CSAP-Release-2.html.

 

Oneida Healthcare Announces New CFO

Rowlands, Dewey

(Oneida, NY) The Board of Trustees of Oneida Health Systems, Inc., has announced the appointment of Dewey Rowlands to the position of vice president of finance. Rowlands had been serving as controller of the organization since coming to Oneida Healthcare in 1988. Prior to that, he worked at Excellus Blue Cross/Blue Shield and at the former Faxton Children’s Hospital in Utica.

The Utica native is a graduate of Utica Notre Dame High School, Mohawk Valley Community College and Utica College of Syracuse University. He serves on the Board of Directors of GPO Federal Credit Union and is member of the Healthcare Financial Management Association, having previously served on the Board of Directors for the Central New York chapter.

Rowlands resides in Whitesboro with his wife Pamela. They have two daughters, Nicole and Karli, currently attending New York Law and SUNY Oswego, respectively.

Nursing Student Represents Head Start at National Event

(Madison County, NY) Autumn [Crofut] Ogunbamise, a Madison County Cooperative Extension Head Start alumna, was selected to represent Head Start for the National Day of Opportunity on April 19. Since 1965, more than 27 million children have participated in Head Start and Early Head Start programs. Autumn was one of 27 Head Start alumni chosen nationally to represent her fellow Head Start graduates.

When Autumn began her education at the New York Head Start program, her mother became a teacher’s aid, transitioned into different roles and eventually became the director of that same Head Start program. Autumn moved through her elementary, middle, high school, and college years, eventually deciding to pursue a nursing degree.

As part of her nursing studies, Autumn came full circle in 2011 when she returned to the Madison County Head Start program to conduct health literacy workshops with parents.

Today, Autumn is in the final semester of her baccalaureate nursing program and works as a staff nurse at Washington Hospital Center in Washington, DC.

John Becker to speak at Sullivan Chamber Spring Dinner

(Bridgeport, NY – May 2012) Fisher Bay Restaurant on the water in Bridgeport will host the Sullivan Chamber of Commerce’s May 10t meeting with a 5:30 p.m. networking hour (cash bar) and 6:30 p.m. buffet dinner.

Town of Sullivan supervisor John Becker will update the attendees on local projects affecting our commerce and development. Becker will also discuss the status of the pending Bridgeport sewer project.

Chamber President Bill Baldwin said the Chamber selected the evening timeframe for this gathering to give the public and business owners the opportunity to attend this informational meeting. The intent of these Chamber meetings is to allow the community and businesses alike to network and stay abreast of community initiatives and events.

The Chamber Spring Dinner is open to the public; the buffet dinner is $12.50 for Chamber members and $15.00 for non-members. To make a reservation contact Joan Tedford by phone (315) 263-5311 or by e-mail jotedford@yahoo.com.

Madison County to Celebrate Civil War Sesquicentennial

(Earlville, Morrisville, Peterboro, NY) Two major Madison County arts and historical organizations are collaborating on a series of events to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War.  The Earlville Opera House Multi-Arts Center and the Annual Peterboro Civil War Weekend have developed two historical and musical programs to provide education and entertainment about the War Between the States.

In conjunction with the 2012 NYS Heritage Weekend, to be celebrated at sites around the State on Saturday and Sunday, May 19 and 20, the first collaborative event will take place on Saturday, May 19, at 7:30 pm, at the historic Madison Hall in Morrisville.  The event, John Brown’s Ghost:  From Madison County to Harpers Ferry, will be hosted by local author and playwright Hugh C. Humphreys who will highlight Madison County’s profound role in igniting the war, including abolition activities and its support of John Brown.  Matthew Urtz, Madison County Historian, will present the faces of Madison County participants in the war, as well as a selection of letters to and from Civil War soldiers.

Greg Artzner and Terri Leonino, who comprise the musical duo Magpie, will perform selections of Civil War music.  Artzner and Leonino have spent decades studying John and Mary Brown, and they perform regularly at the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park and at John Brown Lives! functions in Lake Placid.

On Friday, June 8, at 7:30 pm, the Earlville Opera House presents Four Seasons, Four Years – The Civil War, A Musical Journey.  Magpie returns with nine other upstate New York musicians in a new theater/folk music ensemble performing popular songs of the era (1820-1865) as well as songs composed in response to the war and the events leading up to it.  The music will be interspersed with historical narratives specific to New York State and the New York Volunteer Regiments.

The Earlville Opera House Multi-Arts Center leads the collaboration as Madison County’s premier performing arts venue.  Founded in 1970 as a nonprofit, volunteer-based, community service organization to promote the arts in rural Central New York, EOH offers programs of cultural, educational and historical significance to audiences from all over the northeast in a beautifully restored theater originally constructed in 1892.

Tickets to the May 19 and June 9 events are available online at www.earlvilleoperahouse.com or by calling 315-691-3551, and at the door of Madison Hall on May 19.  Madison Hall is located at 100 East Main Street / Route 20, Morrisville.

These two events are a prelude to the 20th Annual Peterboro Civil War Weekend to be held on Saturday and Sunday, June 9 and 10, in the Hamlet of Peterboro and sponsored by the Smithfield Community Association.  The 12th U.S. Infantry (Reenacting) hosts the military and domestic encampments. Peterboro sites are on the Heritage NY Underground Railroad Trail and on the National Park Service Network to Freedom Underground Railroad Trail.  Hours are 10 am to 5 pm on Saturday, June 9, and 10 am to 4 pm on Sunday, June 10.  Admission is $8 for adults, $3 for children 6-12, and free for children under 6.  Parking is free.  For more information call 315-684-3262 or visit www.civilwarweekend.sca-peterboro.org.

 

 

Crafters and Vendors Sought for ArcStock

(Wampsville, NY) Madison Cortland ARC will be hosting ArcStock an outdoor music festival Aug. 11. Crafters and vendors are encouraged to sign up to showcase their skill and handicrafts. The event is held from noon to 5 p.m., at the Wampsville Firemen’s Field allowing vendors space sizes from 10 feet by 10 feet up to 10 by 30 feet for cars or other equipment displays. Spaces are available starting at $25.

All proceeds from ArcStock will benefit the Building Futures Foundation for Madison Cortland ARC. For more information, call Janice Buneo at (315) 363-3389 ext. 1600.

City Issues Annual Water Quality Report

(Oneida, NY) The city of Oneida Water Department began mailing its 2012 Annual Water Quality Report April 23. This document, required by the state Department of Health and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, contains valuable information about the city’s water supply.

The report provides information on the source of the city’s drinking water, treatment provided and water quality test results.

Residents not having received a copy may pick one up at Oneida City Hall, Wampsville Village Hall, the Oneida Public Library and the Madison County Office Building in Wampsville.

It also is available by visiting oneidacity.com.

Cazenovia Village Announces May Meeting Schedule

May 7, 2012

7 p.m.: Village board meeting to include Gregg Development’s petition for zoning change for property on Nine Road to South Village, Oscar Soto regarding a proposed Community Recreation Facility, Carpenter’s Barn update, request from the Cazenovia High School Athletic Department to use Lakeland Park May 25 through 31 for its annual canoeing-“Lake Days” unit of instruction and requests for signs to be posted on the Lakeland fence.

May 10

7 p.m.: Cazenovia Lake Watershed Council meeting at the Municipal Building at 90 Albany St.

May 14

7:30 p.m.: Planning Board Meeting to include a request from Gary Wilbur – 7 Sims Lane to add a roof dormer, Rich Huftalen, 19 Hurd St. for an addition, Tops of Town & Country Plaza – Site Plan review, Nice N Easy – Route 20 East – Site Plan Review, Russ Brownback – 9 Albany – resurfacing driveway, wish list – 53 Albany St. – new sign and Sears – Town & Country Plaza – new sign.

May 29

7 p.m.: Historic Preservation/Architectural Advisory Review Committee meeting.

ProAct Prescription Discount Card Saves Residents More Than $1.5 Million

(Wampsville, NY) In slightly more than four years, Madison County residents have saved more than $1.5 million while using the ProAct Prescription Discount Card Program endorsed by the Madison County Board of Supervisors in November 2007.

Since the program was implemented, residents have filled more than 63,000 prescriptions, saving an average of 48 percent – or $23.88 – on each prescription filled.

When residents utilize the discount card, they can expect to see savings ranging from 10 to 20 percent on brand-name prescriptions and 20 to 70 percent on generic prescriptions.

The discount card program also offers residents of Madison County the opportunity to save on vision, hearing and LASIK services, as well as access to a low-cost dental coverage plan.

The discount card program is currently saving residents an average of 52 percent, or just more than $30.

For residents who lack full prescription coverage or for those who have no coverage at all, a trip to the pharmacy can be very costly. There are no eligibility requirements; anyone in the county is eligible to use the program and receive savings. Simply present the discount card at your local pharmacy.

Local pharmacies and various locations at the County Complex in Wampsville have been supplied with an inventory of discount cards. The cards may also be obtained at the Health Department, Department of Social Services and in the lobby of the County Office Building.

These cards can be provided to residents who do not currently have a discount card of their own. Residents may visit NYRxDiscountCard.com to print a discount card.

ProAct, Inc., is a Pharmacy Benefit Management Company based in Central New York and a division of Kinney Drugs.

Meet Sen. David J. Valesky

(Town of Lenox, NY – May 2012) The Madison County Office for the Aging will host an open house May 10 from 1 to 2 p.m. at their offices at 138 Dominic Bruno Blvd. off of Route 5 in Lenox.

Sen. David J. Valesky (D – Oneida), Madison County’s representative in New York’s 49th Senate District and Chair of the Senate Standing Committee on Aging, will share information for senior citizens in New York state. A ribbon­-cutting will follow the event at 2:30 p.m. for the AgeNet Program.

This event is free and open to the public; refreshments will be provided.

For more information, call (315) 697-5700.