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Former Falls official pleads guilty to corruption

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For steering business to a favored contractor, former Niagara Falls Building Commissioner Guy A. Bax received an expense-paid fishing trip, free golf outings, home repairs that included a remodeled bathroom, and driveway plowing.

But now these improper gratuities in 2009 could cost him his freedom and a hefty fine.

Bax, 66, pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court in Buffalo to accepting a gratuity concerning a program receiving federal funds.

He faces a maximum prison sentence of 10 years and a fine of up to $250,000. But given the circumstances, including his early cooperation, the sentencing guidelines call for a prison term of eight to 14 months, a fine of $2,000 to $20,000, and a period of supervised release of one to three years.

“Obviously, it’s a serious charge,” U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara told Bax during the court proceeding.

The federal prosecutor did not specify the overall value of the gratuities in court but later said it was not high.

“It’s not a huge sum,” said First Assistant U.S. Attorney James P. Kennedy Jr. “I find it remarkable in these corruption cases the relative cheapness by which people may be purchased.”

Bax did not comment after he left the courtroom. He remains free until his sentencing on May 10.

But Bax’s lawyer said his client’s promised cooperation and acceptance of responsibility are among the facts he will use to argue against incarceration.

“His early cooperation made this the best path for him to obtain closure,” said defense lawyer Terrence M. Connors of Buffalo. “He feels terrible for his family and the city.”

While not an excuse, “the gratuities were minimal,” Connors said after the plea hearing.

Bax’s plea stems from his friendship with John J. Gross Jr., a well known Falls plumbing and heating contractor and political insider who is currently serving 33 months in federal prison because of convictions on mail fraud and tax evasion.

The FBI has investigated Bax for more than three years and, as recently as last October, interviewed city employees about his relationship with Gross.

The plea agreement details how Bax steered business to Gross and his company, David Gross Contracting, from homeowners and companies seeking permits and approvals from Bax’s city department.

“In promoting Gross and his company, Bax created a perception in those individuals and entities he encountered that it would be in their best interest to use Gross and his company and that if such individuals and entities did so, they would have an easier time obtaining the approvals they sought,” according to 19-page plea agreement.

The agreement revealed the experience of a business person who bought property in the city intending to use the parcel for a commercial enterprise.

In late 2007, the business person met with Bax, who was then the acting building commissioner, to discuss the business plan.

To finish the project, “you have to know the right people,” Bax told the business person, according to the plea agreement.

Bax suggested the business person hire Gross because Gross “knows the right people and he knows the inspectors,” according to the plea.

Bax then told the person that other business people who were trying to get into the same industry failed to develop their projects because they were not using contractors who were “the right people,” according to the agreement.

Bax provided the business person a list of contractors, but based on his comments, the business person understood that only by hiring Gross would the project would be completed, Kennedy said court.

The business person, unnamed in the plea agreement, hired Gross’s company and paid between $25,000 and $30,000 for the work needed to operate the business, Kennedy said.

In another case, this one involving a residential property owner, Bax pressured the owner to hire Gross to do work needed before the city would issue a certificate of occupancy, according to the plea agreement.

In a meeting, Bax provided the property owner with the contact information for David Gross Contracting.

The property owner felt “Bax was very clear that he should hire Gross,” Kennedy said.

Following the meeting with the property owner, as well as other meetings between Bax and other property owners, the inspections department would provide David Gross Contracting with a list of deficiencies needing to be addressed before the properties could pass inspections, according to the prosecutor.

Once the company received the department’s letter for each property, a company employee would contact the property owner and arrange to make the repairs, according to the plea agreement.

“In this manner, Bax used his position to provide a competitive advantage to DGC,” according to U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Kennedy would not say how many other property owners and businesses Bax steered to the contracting company.

“Those were representative,” Kennedy said of the two case in the plea agreement.

The agreement also calls for Bax to cooperate with the government regarding any and all other criminal activity related to fraud and public corruption, whether undertaken by him or others.

The cooperation includes submitting to interviews with government attorneys and agents as well as testifying before grand juries and at local, state and federal trials.

In exchange, Bax will not be prosecuted by federal prosecutors for any other federal criminal offenses involving fraud or public corruption, according to the plea agreement.

“As we have said in the past, this office intends to root out public corruption wherever it occurs,” U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. said in a statement. “Every person or business is entitled to a level playing field when it comes to dealings with government officials. Public employees, for their part, may not illegally or personally benefit from their position. While instances of public corruption are fortunately rare in Western New York, such will be treated firmly and decisively when they come to our attention.”



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Levesque stepping down as NU president

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LEWISTON – The Rev. Joseph L. Levesque took over as president of Niagara University in 2000 and turned the school into a 21st century campus.

New buildings, renovated facilities, updated technology.

Now, Niagara is heading into a new era, after Tuesday’s announcement that Levesque will step down as president at the end of the academic year.

It was time, he said.

“I’m going to be 75 my next birthday, and I said, ‘I think it’s time to move on,’ ” he told The Buffalo News. “I’ve accomplished the things I really wanted to accomplish.”

Levesque – Niagara’s 25th president – made the announcement to students, staff and faculty Tuesday afternoon at the Castellani Art Museum on campus.

However, Levesque – whose ties to Niagara go back to 1970, when he began as a lecturer – said he will remain at the university after being given the title president emeritus by the board of trustees. He will continue to be involved specifically in the areas of fundraising and civic engagement.

“I am not retiring,” he told the crowd. “I will be leaving my position as president after 13 years, but very happily for me, I will remain at NU for a long time to come.”

Meanwhile, the university’s board wants its next leader also to be from the Vincentian community, a religious order that founded Niagara in 1856.

The board has been working closely with the Rev. Michael Carroll, provincial of the Eastern Province of the Congregation of the Mission, to identify candidates at two of the three other Vincentian schools in the United States – St. John’s and DePaul universities.

“It is the goal of the board to identify a successful candidate over the next couple of months and to name the next president as early as the middle of March,” said Jeffrey Holzschuh, chairman of Niagara’s board of trustees.

“The new president will then begin working on campus this summer.”

Holzschuh thanked Levesque for his “great service and leadership.”

After serving as provincial for nine years, Levesque in January of 2000 was appointed president of Niagara, where he started as a lecturer three decades earlier.

During Levesque’s tenure, nearly $100 million has been invested in new campus construction and renovation.

That includes new student housing, a renovated student union and revamped food service on campus.

New buildings went up for Niagara’s education and business schools, while the university updated facilities for its theater program.

In addition, Niagara recently completed an $80 million capital campaign – it’s largest fundraising initiative in history. And coming this fall, Niagara opens its new science center, the B. Thomas Golisano Center for Integrated Sciences.

But on Tuesday, Levesque didn’t want to focus on campus redevelopment. Instead, he talked about Niagara’s good reputation, its students and faculty, and the work the university is doing in the community.

“Those are the things I’m …proudest of,” Levesque said.

As for his new role, Levesque said that you’ll still find him on campus – and that his door is always open.

“I’m not the second president, I’m simply someone that’s going to remain, and with the experience I have, help out the university as much as I can,” he said.

“I know so many alums and so many donors, I would like to continue to work with them. That could be a help,” Levesque said. “The other piece is this engagement of the community.

“I love that piece.”



email: jrey@buffnews.com

Two copper thefts in Falls

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NIAGARA FALLS – Two unrelated copper thefts were reported Monday, and in one the burglar was caught in the act.

In the 500 block of 24th Street, the property owner told police he arrived at the house at 10:30 a.m. and saw a man exiting the rear of the vacant building and running west toward 23rd Street.

The victim said he gave chase, but lost him in a yard. He noted that the man was carrying a duffel bag which appeared to contain copper pipes. Inside in the apartment’s kitchen a small stack of copper pipes appeared to have been left behind by the suspect. The owner took the remaining pipes, police said. Damage was estimated at $1,000.

In an unrelated case a property owner in the 1800 block of 16th Street told police that a person broke a basement window and removed the copper plumbing line connected to the water meter. A tenant on a second floor said he noticed a man leaving the area on a bicycle, but did not call police, according to the owner. Total loss and damage was estimated at $80.

Man arraigned on armed robbery, store theft charges

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LOCKPORT – James A. Connell, 36, of Bellreng Drive in the Town of Niagara, was arraigned in Niagara County Court Tuesday on an indictment charging him with robbing a 7-Eleven store on Hyde Park Boulevard in Niagara Falls of $55 on June 30 while armed with a knife.

Assistant District Attorney Claudette S. Caldwell said Connell, who pleaded not guilty, also is charged with stealing more than $2,000 worth of electronics merchandise from the Kmart store on Military Road in the Town of Niagara on Nov. 17.

Connell, charged with first- and third-degree robbery and fourth-degree grand larceny, was jailed in lieu of $75,000 bail set by Judge Matthew J. Murphy III. A trial is tentatively scheduled for June 10.

Both crimes occurred while Connell was on a one-year conditional discharge for attempted second-degree robbery: the theft of a shotgun and a marijuana “bong” from a man on July 6, 2010, in an apartment on Packard Court in the Falls.

Sex offender jailed for failing to register

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LOCKPORT – A Level 3 sex offender was sentenced Tuesday to a year in Niagara County Jail for failing to send in his annual address verification form to Albany last year.

“I’m inclined to believe this was an intentional act,” County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas said in regard to the felony committed by Jason I. Jones, 30, whose last registered address was on Walnut Street in Lockport.

Jones, who pleaded guilty Oct. 23, went on the sex offender list in 2005 after pleading guilty to sexual misconduct for an incident with a 17-year-old girl. Farkas said Jones indicated in an interview with a probation officer that he had little interest in obeying the rules of the Sex Offender Registration Act.

Probation violator jailed in stolen car case

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LOCKPORT – A resident of the Tuscarora Indian Reservation was ordered Tuesday to serve a year in Niagara County Jail for violating the terms of his probation for knowingly buying a stolen car in March 2011.

Michael J. Kirkland, 35, of Walmore Road, originally had been placed on five years’ probation by County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas after he pleaded guilty to fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property.

Kirkland violated probation by failing a drug test, not completing his assigned 40 days in the county work program, not getting a job and not paying his court surcharges, Assistant District Attorney Theresa L. Prezioso said.

Lockport Cave plans new visitor center

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LOCKPORT – Lockport Cave, the city’s second-biggest tourist attraction, will have a new visitor center this season, co-owner Thomas Callahan said Tuesday.

The city Zoning Board of Appeals granted eight variances Tuesday to allow Callahan’s company to erect a 24-by-32-foot building on a long, narrow piece of property bordering Gooding Street.

Callahan said the one-story center will cost between $85,000 and $125,000 to build. It will include an overlook for the Erie Canal locks, a covered outdoor pavilion and a rear deck.

He said the Cave’s 2012 attendance was up, but declined to release exact figures.

“It’s time we did this and had a facility of our own and entered the mainstream of tourism,” Callahan said. “And the timing is right with the Flight of Five.”

He was referring to the original 19th century canal locks. The city plans to award a contract in June for renovation of two of the five locks to working condition.

Lockport Cave offers underground boat rides in an artificial cave originally dug in the 19th century to divert canal water to industries which are now long defunct. It has been headquartered in Old City Hall on the Pine Street Bridge for the past 12 years.

Callahan said he’s letting his lease on that building lapse. He bought the Gooding Street site – 352 feet long and 75 feet wide at its widest point – from the Dale Association last summer.

“This property has much better visibility [than Old City Hall],” Callahan said.

The company sought to buy a building on Canal Street from the city in 2011, but the deal fell through, leading Callahan to plan his own.

“It would be an awesome addition to the tourism industry down there,” said Michael Ulrich, president of Ulrich Sign Co. His planned 17-foot-high sign for the new Cave headquarters received one of the eight variances.

“People right now don’t even know where the caves are,” Zoning Board Chairman W. Kevin Foltz said.

The cave runs 40 feet beneath the site of the new visitor center, Callahan said. The thick rock on the site makes it hard for any foundation to be dug, and Callahan said he has an easement that would have prevented anyone from building there, anyway.

The boundary of the state’s canal right of way, the so-called “blue line,” runs through the Gooding Street lot, but Callahan presented a letter from the Thruway Authority approving the project.

Because of the oddly-shaped lot, the building will come within five feet of the front property line, and the deck will be within one foot of the rear boundary. The pavilion will be seven feet from the rear property and 11 feet from the front.

Callahan said he still needs site plan approvals from the city and county planning boards.

He said he will make an announcement soon about his plans for a former vehicle repair shop building, which he owns, next to his planned visitor center.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Trio caught with cocaine by Lockport police

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LOCKPORT – Three people were charged with drug possession following a routine traffic stop at 5 p.m. Monday on State Road.

Justin J. Snead, 21, of Lincoln Place, Lockport ,was charged with failure to signal a turn and he and his passengers, Mary A. and Ralph A. Golding III, both 48, of Buell Street, Akron, were charged with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.

City police said they searched the vehicle and found traces of cocaine on a digital scale. They said they also found plastic baggies commonly used to package cocaine, as well as $693 in cash.

Mary A. Golding was charged with a second count of criminal possession after police said she was in possession crack cocaine.


Local Right to Life group headed to Washington march

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The Buffalo Regional Right to Life Committee will send buses to the March for Life Friday in Washington, D.C., marking the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision, which legalized abortion in the U.S.

Committee president Stasia Zoladz Vogel will lead the delegation for the march and lobbying sessions in the House and Senate.

Buses will leave at 8 p.m. Thursday. Tickets are $95, which include breakfast Friday morning. Tickets are available by calling 852-3028.

The March for Life traditionally is held on Jan. 22, the actual date of Roe v. Wade, but was moved this year due to the inauguration.

News seeking candidates for diversity advisory board

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The Buffalo News is seeking candidates for its 2013 diversity advisory board to provide feedback on the paper’s coverage of minorities. The board will meet quarterly or more with News editors and reporters to discuss news coverage and offer ideas. Membership will be for one year.

Readers interested in serving should submit a one- to two-page letter briefly describing their background, their knowledge of the paper and how they believe they can help it improve its coverage.

Letters may be submitted in any of three ways: by mail to Rod Watson, The Buffalo News, One News Plaza, Buffalo, NY 14203; by email to rwatson@buffnews.com; or by fax at 856-5150, attn. Rod Watson.

Niagara Town Board deadlocks on additional duties for engineer

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TOWN OF NIAGARA – The Town Board was deadlocked Tuesday on a proposal to give additional duties to the town engineer.

With Supervisor Steven C. Richards absent from the meeting, the four councilmen voted along party lines on a resolution by Deputy Supervisor Danny W. Sklarski to make the engineer responsible for a number of significant items mostly related to town development.

Brought up as a late agenda item, Sklarski’s proposal would have the engineer prepare a plan of action for the Army Reserve Center on Porter Road, which is expected to be turned over to the town by the Department of Defense and the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority in the next few months.

The board has discussed creating an industrial park for “airport-related” businesses at the 22-acre site.

“I’m disappointed this did not pass,” Sklarski said after the vote. “If the keys are turned over to us in a couple of months, we need to hit the ground running.” Only fellow Republican Councilman Charles F. Teixeira voted with Sklarski.

Before the vote, Democratic Councilman Marc M. Carpenter tried to get the board to table the matter so it could be discussed at a future work session. With Councilman Robert A. Clark the only one to support the tabling effort, Carpenter’s move failed.

Carpenter made a second attempt to discuss the resolution before the item vote, but Sklarski, who was presiding over the meeting, refused. He said that he had already called for discussion but that there was no response. Carpenter explained that his sole intention was to have the matter discussed before the vote.

The other duties on the list were for the engineer to develop plans to replace the roof on the shelter at Veterans Memorial Park, construct protective dugouts at the baseball diamonds, change and update the town master plan and zoning laws, and update policies and procedures of the Building Department.

The issue was brought up last week at a work session when Clark asked why the engineer was answering questions from the public in the Town Building Inspector’s Office. One building inspector position was eliminated in 2012, and another was reduced to part-time during budget sessions.

Teixeira got the board to agree to have the inspector post his office hours on the town website so the public would know when to apply for permits.

For winemakers, time to chill out

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It didn’t get warmer than 11 degrees Tuesday in the Lake Ontario hamlet of Burt.

With the wind chill, it felt like it was minus 15 – the sort of bone-chilling, eyeball-numbing cold that sends even the hardiest of us scrambling for thermal underwear.

And it was a perfect day for picking grapes for ice wine.

The conditions were just right Tuesday morning for grape growers Ann and Martin Schulze and their closest – and toughest – relatives, friends and fans to take part in the annual winter harvest.

“I’m happy today,” Martin Schulze said.

He’d been racked with anxiety the previous night, barely able sleep as he kept checking the weather reports to make sure it would stay cold enough for picking the frozen grapes for that sweet dessert liquid known as ice wine.

The grapes are finicky to begin with, and can only be grown properly in a few places in the world, like Western New York and Germany, where ice wine was invented. It requires just the right balance of dry, hot summers and very cold winters, the Schulzes explained.

The grapes ripen over the summer but are left on the vine all fall. As they dehydrate, the sugars of the grapes concentrate. When the temperatures dive into the subfreezing zone, what little water left in the grapes freezes.

“The sugar solids have a lower freezing temperature,” Ann Schulze said.

That’s when they need to be harvested and pressed.

“Like marbles,” Martin Schulze said as he showed off a giant container of shriveled, rock-hard purple grapes.

The grapes thrived this past summer. While other produce across Western New York, from apples to corn, struggled in the dry heat, grapes, including the three varieties of ice-wine grapes the Schulzes planted, flourished.

“The grapes were just optimal,” Ann Schulze said.

Now, all they needed was very cold weather – right around 12 degrees.

The news came about a week ago that temperatures were on their way down, and the Schulzes got the word out that they needed their volunteers to come help them.

At about 7 a.m. Tuesday, as light winds blasted tiny snow flakes in the air, about a dozen of the Schulzes’ friends and supporters joined them to gather fruit from three 800-foot-long rows interspersed through the vineyards.

James Tee, one of the volunteers, said there was no denying the cold when they headed out to the vines. But as the crew got to work, hitting the vines and shaking the grapes loose into the netting around the plants, it wasn’t as noticeable.

“You get some heat built up pretty quickly,” said Tee, who works in the tasting room of another local ice-wine maker, Leonard Oakes.

Tee said it’s not uncommon for the small but growing number of wineries in Niagara County to help each other out. A member of the Oakes family is the Schulzes’ winemaker, for instance.

It was that same spirit of kinsmanship that brought Bruce Gammack and Ken Urtel out in the cold to help with the harvest.

“We all believe there’s a great future for wine culture in Western New York,” said Gammack, who is friends with the Schulzes and a fan of their wines. “If it doesn’t receive support from people like us, it’s not going to get going.”

Urtel said it’s fun, too, and no big deal to be out in the cold for a couple of hours.

The bowls of hot chili and glasses of ice wine served to the volunteers after the morning harvesting helped warm them up, too.

But that was just part one of what needed to be done Tuesday.

Martin Schulze explained that the grapes that were plucked needed to be pressed. The grapes need to stay frozen for the process – and that was not going be a problem with Tuesday’s cold weather.

Schulze operated a giant John Deere tractor, lifting a crate of the freshly picked grapes and maneuvering it over to the wine-making building. From there, he used a smaller forklift to dump the fruit into a large, cylindrical machine. Inside the machine a large air bag slowly and gently expanded, squeezing out the syrupy amber nectar from the grapes.

Schulze scooped up the juice as it rained down into a steel catch basin and poured the liquid into a long tube, lowering a device that measures the sugar content.

“Thirty-one” he said. Not quite high enough, he explained, but he expected higher levels as the pressing went along.

A few minutes later, he tried again. “Thirty-six,” he said.

Schulze and his wife’s sons stopped the machine and opened it up. The grapes, still frozen, had grouped together. They used oarlike sticks to push the grapes back down so they could be re-pressed.

The machine was started back up again, and more syrup began to trickle down.

Schulze gathered up more of the syrup. It looked clearer now, more golden.

“Forty-four!” he yelled smiling. “No, 43.”

But that would do just fine, just the right amount of sugar for good ice wine.

The rest of the grapes would be pressed Tuesday afternoon and then allowed to settle overnight. Then the fermenting process would begin.

Martin Schulze broke out a bottle of his winery’s sparkling white wine, poured a drop of the freshly pressed nectar into it and toasted: “To the ice-wine harvest.”



email: mbecker@buffnews.com

Something new to local Catholics: a married priest

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A husband and father of three daughters will become the area’s first married Roman Catholic priest when he is ordained Saturday in Allegany County.

Bishop Richard J. Malone of the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo will preside over the ordination of John Cornelius, a former Episcopal priest who is being allowed into the ranks of the Catholic priesthood under a 2012 papal exception to the church’s celibacy rule.

Cornelius, 64, converted to Catholicism about two years ago with his wife, Sharyl.

He spent 20 years as a priest in the Episcopal Church until retiring in 2010.

“I look forward to celebrating Mass again. It’s been two years, and I missed it greatly,” Cornelius said Tuesday. “That closeness to God is an amazing thing.”

A directive by Pope Benedict XVI aimed at welcoming disaffected Episcopalians and Anglicans into the church allows for Cornelius’ ordination.

Last year, the pope established a new “ordinariate” – an entity similar to a diocese – serving former Episcopalians and Anglicans who have converted to Catholicism.

More than 100 former Anglican priests, including Cornelius, applied to become priests for the ordinariate, and Cornelius will be among the first 30 applicants to be ordained.

His wife of 33 years and their three daughters – Virginia, Rebecca Maier and Sarah – will be on hand for the 5 p.m. ceremony in Immaculate Conception Church in Wellsville.

Afterward, Cornelius will lead a small community of former Anglicans who meet in a Catholic church in Henrietta, in the Catholic Diocese of Rochester.

The community, known as the Fellowship of Saint Alban, is considered fully Catholic but may use a traditional Anglican liturgy, including the Book of Divine Worship, which features prayers in Elizabethan-style English.

Cornelius will be a priest of the Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, which is based in Houston, and overseen by Monsignor Jeffrey N. Steenson, a former Episcopal bishop turned Catholic.

But much of Cornelius’ spiritual work will be focused in the Diocese of Buffalo – in Allegany County, where he will celebrate standard Catholic Masses and participate in other ministries at rural Catholic parishes.

His ordination doesn’t signal a relaxing of the Vatican’s celibacy policy.

“This is by exception. It’s not the norm,” said the Rev. Dennis J. Mancuso, a Catholic pastor of Allegany County who assisted Cornelius in his conversion to Catholicism. “The way they’ve done it is in accord with tradition.”

Cornelius went through a lengthy Vatican approval and formation process.

Under Benedict’s exception, former Anglican bishops, priests or deacons who are married may become priests for the ordinariate, but unmarried clergy who are ordained Catholic priests may not subsequently marry.

A 1980 provision by Pope John Paul II also allowed for some married Episcopal priests to be ordained.

Nonetheless, Cornelius’ presence at the altar will be highly unusual in the Diocese of Buffalo.

“This is something that’s totally new to people here,” he said. “Down in Texas, it wasn’t quite so much an anomaly.”

The Diocese of Buffalo has at least one other priest who was married and is a father. But the Rev. Richard J. Cilano was able to pursue ordination only after his wife died. Ukrainian Rite and Byzantine Rite Catholic priests are able to marry and have families, but it’s not common for them to celebrate Masses in Roman Catholic churches.

Cornelius said he believes that his perspective as a husband and parent could be a benefit in relating to parishioners.

“When they come to me and talk about their own families, there’s a certain amount of reciprocity of emotion that goes along with it,” he said.

Cornelius, who grew up in Bolivar, said he was laid off twice from jobs he held before entering the priesthood. He recalled the financial stresses of trying to support a family while out of work and the difficulties of raising children, including a daughter who once ran afoul of the law.

Having experienced those realities adds authenticity to his counsel for people to turn to God in times of trouble, he said.

“You can look at people and say, ‘Yeah, I know what you mean, but God will take care of you,’ ” he said.

Cornelius served as an Episcopal priest in Florida, Rhode Island, Texas and, most recently, near Albany. His disenchantment with the direction of the Episcopal Church, including its approval of a gay bishop in 2003, led him to the Catholic Church, he said. “I’m a traditionalist in a lot of ways,” he said.

Many Episcopalians took notice when the pope in 2009 made his initial overtures to disaffected members of their denomination, accusing the pontiff of attempting to poach membership.

But Cornelius said the effort was not aimed at practicing Episcopalians, but at those people who weren’t attending church anymore.

“I don’t think it was done with malice toward anybody. I think it was done for the care of souls,” he said.

The Rev. R. William Franklin, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York, said in a statement that the change in an individual’s church affiliation would not affect the diocese’s efforts to seek “cordial relations” with other area organizations.

“We all have our own spiritual journeys,” Franklin said. “Throughout the history of the Episcopal Church, many Roman Catholic priests have become Episcopal priests and vice versa. I don’t believe God sees such things as a competition nor should we.”



email: jtokasz@buffnews.com

In Focus: Jill Jedlicka, Buffalo Niagara Riverkeeper

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Local waterways have the potential to foster what some call a “blue economy.” Some view them as our greatest regional asset.

Buffalo Niagara Riverkeeper is a not-for-profit group that works to protect water quality and promote public access. Executive Director Jill Jedlicka sat down with The News’ Brian Meyer to discuss ongoing projects and challenges as part of the weekly “In Focus” series. Watch the full six-minute interview at BuffaloNews.com/video.

Jedlicka: The water in Western New York is cleaner to this day because of the Clean Water Act ... [It] came at a time when the environmental movement started to take over, and environmental laws and regulations were put into place to help protect, restore and clean all of our water throughout our country.

Meyer: A lot of folks have seen some very visible signs of this. We saw a major dredging project along the Buffalo River.

Jedlicka: That is just one of many things that need to be done in order to protect our waterways. With the dredging project, that helps make progress towards the virtual elimination of toxics ... As recently as the 1960s and ’70s, the Buffalo River was actually declared dead by the federal government. You can see just by the vibrancy happening right now and the natural regeneration that has happened, there has been tremendous progress. But we’re kind of stuck ... with a legacy of industrial pollution that’s locked in the bottom of our rivers and streams. And that is what we’re trying to tackle right now.

Meyer: Your group is real big on promoting the blue economy. Tell us about that.

Jedlicka: The blue economy is not a new concept. It’s just basically using the waterfront as a driving force for economic revitalization, and putting the water first, so to speak. The water will define how our region revitalizes and how it redevelops. Everything from ecotourism, to recreation, to fisheries, to actual wastewater management, industrial processing.

Meyer: Let’s talk about RiverBend Commerce Park. What’s going on there?

Jedlicka: RiverBend is a fabulous project that’s actually hidden in South Buffalo. It’s a prime example of the blue economy in action. RiverBend is actually a former steel manufacturing facility. About 20 years ago, it underwent a remediation and that became a barren brownfield. We’ve got brownfields all over Western New York. What we’re trying to do in RiverBend, in partnership with the economic development agencies there, is, again, putting the water first – putting the river first ... We’re creating an opportunity for both human interaction with the waterways and also ecological restoration of the Buffalo River. Riverkeeper has been able to bring in literally millions of dollars right now to help reclaim that former brownfield. [We’re] about to restore the shoreline and also offer public access opportunities along the greenway.

Meyer: In another part of Buffalo, we have Hoyt Lake at Delaware Park. That’s a very widely used waterway, but one with some problems. And Scajaquada Creek is there as well.

Jedlicka: The Scajaquada is another poster child for everything that we’ve done wrong to our waterways. Hoyt Lake and Scajaquada run through some of the most amazing cultural gems in Western New York ... But Scajaquada has been abused and altered for a hundred years ... It has issues with contamination, it has issues with sewer overflows ... The litter is disgusting ... Riverkeeper is helping to bring together partners and resources to actually make the change and make the improvements.

Governor’s plan for pensions: fiscal relief or financial gimmick?

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The question revolving around Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s plan announced Tuesday to allow local governments and school districts to “lock in” stable pension contributions during future years was this: fiscal relief or financial gimmick?

Those struggling to cope with surging pension costs for towns and school districts eyed early details of the proposal with hope that it would help stabilize a fluctuating expense over which they have little control.

“I think it’s a creative way to help cities,” said Mayor Byron W. Brown of Buffalo, where the governor said the city could see $19 million in savings under the first year of the pension stabilization plan.

Cuomo, in his budget proposal, unveiled a plan to allow local governments and school districts to tap into savings now that they expect to see in future years as public workers are hired under a new public pension tier with less-generous pension benefits. Municipalities that choose that route, he said, would see relief now – while pension contributions have spiked – but would pay the same rates in future years when contributions are expected to go down.

The state expects pension costs to drop as a new class of workers hired under the newly created pension tier – Tier VI – come on board.

“It basically provides a financing plan to get the municipalities through this pension bubble, which is what we’re really experiencing,” Cuomo said during his budget address Tuesday.

The proposal garnered positive reaction Tuesday from groups such as Unshackle Upstate and the New York Conference of Mayors.

“Anything that would give us pension relief would be appreciated,” said Amherst Town Supervisor Barry A. Weinstein. “We really don’t want to see pension costs go up again next year. It would really be a problem.”

But E.J. McMahon, senior fellow of the conservative Empire Center for New York State Policy, questioned whether the short-term gain would be worth the long-term trade-off for municipalities.

“If you’re a mayor who’s under the gun in Syracuse or Rochester or someplace and somebody is waving in front of you a savings equivalent immediately of 5 percent of your budget, that’s a pretty tempting apple,” McMahon said. “That is a very appealing short-term proposition. Now, in the long run ... to increasing degrees every year starting in 2020, you’re actually going to be spending more than you actually would be spending under the best-case scenario.”

Cuomo on Tuesday also proposed tightening language that affects how binding arbitration settlements for police and fire contracts are imposed. The governor’s proposal would create a cap for those settlements for communities “under fiscal distress.”

That proposal, combined with a continued commitment to provide relief from Medicaid expenses for counties and the pension stabilization proposal, was given cautious approval on Tuesday by groups seeking relief from state-imposed mandates on towns and school districts.

“Clearly there’s a lot more we have to do on mandates, but those three things will go a long way toward helping municipal governments and school districts stay underneath that 2 percent cap and give them some cost containment and predictability that they currently don’t have,” said Brian Sampson, executive director of Unshackle Upstate.

Stephen Acquario, executive director of the New York State Association of Counties, called the proposals “positive steps” given the perimeters under which the governor is working.

“Could the governor have done more? Absolutely,” Acquario said. “Could he have provided more state resources toward local county mandated programs? Yes.”

The governor, Acquario said, faced a number of pressures, including the impact of Superstorm Sandy, the proposed increases for school aid and the Medicaid relief already in the works.

“That pretty much tapped the available revenues that the state had,” Acquario said. “We’re trying to understand some of the proposals that he put out, but it looks like the governor acknowledges the mandated situation that the counties are sitting in and is trying to advance tools for local governments, county governments, to use to manage their finances.”

McMahon, however, said the governor sidestepped calls for further relief from state mandates.

The pension proposal, he said, “is basically something the governor has contrived as a way to get around the fact that he’s not really offering significant mandate relief,” he said.



email: djgee@buffnews.com and jterreri@buffnews.com

Falls going into reverse on parkway plan

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NIAGARA FALLS – City leaders are casting doubt on a plan to reconfigure the Robert Moses Parkway at the entrance to Niagara Falls State Park.

The plan would turn the four-lane highway’s southern section into a two-lane “riverway” to slow traffic and connect pedestrians to the water.

But the City Council wants the state to go one step further and tear out all four lanes of the Moses, forcing millions of yearly travelers into the city for parking, food and other amenities before reaching the falls.

Joining the lawmakers is Harvey Albond, who serves on the state park’s advisory board and was instrumental in getting a similar part of the Moses removed three decades ago.

“It may seem paradoxical that I would be coming here to ask you to reject a selection and program of state parks, but I do so deeply from my heart,” he told the Council Tuesday.

“I see no use for this road other than to bypass the city, and therefore I ask your support in rejecting this report and indeed having your staff join me in fighting it.”

Like many in the city, Albond blames part of downtown’s decline on the state, which uses the parkway to funnel millions of tourists to its parking lots each summer.

That parking revenue is a key component in statewide park operations and a major sticking point in the Cataract City.

Lawmakers believe businesses in the city would prosper if tourists no longer had the option of bypassing city streets and zipping into the park on the Moses expressway.

“We want everything to go through downtown Niagara Falls,” said Council Chairman Glenn A. Choolokian.

But others say the state is unlikely to give up the revenue, especially after a design process that is nearing its end after years of delays.

“The disturbing thing here is there is a process, we’ve gone through the process, now we’re at the point where we’re trying to find funding for the project,” said Mayor Paul A. Dyster. “I don’t think it helps to have the City Council now suddenly going in a different direction.”

Plans for the Moses were conceived under a joint agreement signed years ago between the city, State Parks, USA Niagara Development and the state transportation department.

Dyster said the city originally advocated for full removal of the parkway in the city, a stipulation not agreed upon by the state.

“State Parks was adamant they wanted the road to continue and their views as [project] partners had to be taken into consideration,” Dyster said.

The final result was a road where pedestrians – not vehicles – dominate the landscape, Dyster said.

“We felt that was as far as we could get with that and under the circumstances that was a lot better than what we have now,” Dyster said.

But Albond and the Council say that is not good enough.

“They can call it the Riverway but I call it the Niagara Falls bypass,” Albond said. “I find a great deal to be aghast at.”

State Parks officials declined to comment.



email: cspecht@buffnews.com

Lewiston village board weighs using town’s water system

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LEWISTON – Some water bills would be higher and some would be lower if the village’s public water system were turned over to the Town of Lewiston, members of the Village Board were told Tuesday.

Board members are in the very preliminary stages of discussing the advantages and disadvantages in consolidating the local water system with the town system.

The village is part of the town, but its water system is separate from the system that serves parts of the town that are outside the village.

Consolidation into one townwide system could result in a slight reduction in personnel in Village Hall and in its Public Works Department, but some village residents fear that it also could cause reduced maintenance and slower response time for water service complaints.

An informal poll among about 20 village residents at Tuesday’s meeting suggested that some are willing to pay slightly more to retain local control of their infrastructure, while others see advantages to consolidation.

“This is just the first step here,” said Deputy Mayor Bruce Sutherland. “We would have a public hearing before proceeding with any discussion of a transfer. We have a joint meeting with the Town Board at 6 p.m. next Monday in Town Hall, and we probably will talk about it then.”

Trustee Victor Eydt said town officials had suggested taking over the village system, and “that would require a public referendum.”

Richard San Giacomo, an environmental consulting engineer for the village, reviewed the complicated pricing structure under which consolidation would save money for some village water users but cost more for others. The pricing is based on water usage and on assessed property value.

San Giacomo said the average village user would save about $14.15 a year under consolidation, and the average commercial or restaurant user would save considerably more. But those are just averages. Most users would pay more, he said, and a relative few would pay less.

The Niagara County Water District supplies the water for the village and town systems. It would continue to do so regardless of whether there is a consolidation.



email: rbaldwin@buffnews.com

Thomas P. Denn, banker and investment adviser

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June 27, 1933 – Jan. 21, 2013

LEWISTON – Thomas P. Denn, a banker and investment adviser who was active in many community organizations, died Monday at his home in Lewiston. He was 79.

A native of Syracuse, Mr. Denn was a 1955 cum laude graduate of Niagara University, where he was president of the student government and a member of Sigma Alpha Sigma honor society.

Shortly after his graduation, Mr. Denn joined Marine Midland Bank as a management trainee, ascending to the role of Niagara District vice president from 1973 to 1976.

He joined Lytle Associates in 1976 as vice president of annuity operations.

He formed Thomas P. Denn Investments, doing business as Denn Financial Services, in 1987 and worked as a consultant for his son, Steven, since 1996.

He was a longtime member of Niagara Falls Country Club and served as a member of the board of governors for 12 years and president in 1977.

He was an active volunteer in the Porter Cup Tournament for more than 40 years, heading the event in 1982.

Mr. Denn was an active member and lector at St. Peter Catholic Church.

For more than 20 years, he was chairman of the local Catholic Charities campaign, soliciting large gifts, and he led St. Peter’s $1.3 million capital fund drive in 2000.

He was awarded the St. Joseph the Worker Award by then-Bishop Henry Mansell in 1999.Mr. Denn was a member of the Niagara University board of advisers and was a season-ticket holder of Niagara University basketball. Shortly after organizing the “Great Class of ’55 Challenge,” which produced the highest class percentage of givers in history, he was recognized by the university as Alumnus of the Year at the 50th reunion of his graduating class.

He was a member and chairman of the board of directors of the state Higher Education Services Corp. from 1957 until 1975.

He was a member, president and chairman of the University Club of Niagara Falls, during which time he negotiated the purchase of the former Carborundum guest house for the club residence.

He also was a former member and president of the Lewiston-Porter School Board, Mount St. Mary’s Hospital Board of Associates and former chairman of the United Way Campaign.

Survivors include his wife of 46 years, the former Nan Urtel; a son, Steven; a daughter, Sharon Larkins; two brothers, Edward and the Rev. James; and three sisters, Sister Maureen Denn, Sheila Beaton and Mary.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at noon Saturday in St. Peter Catholic Church, 620 Center St.

Bus loses control on slippery roads in Lockport

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Roads were slick this morning in Niagara County, where heavy snow hit overnight and this morning, delaying schools an hour in Newfane and Barker.

In one case, a Ridge Road school bus driver heading north on Sunset Drive lost control of his bus and slid into a ditch between Leete and Stone roads in the Town of Lockport at about 6:30 a.m. today. No children were aboard.

Niagara County Sheriff Sgt. James Hildreth said the driver who was beginning his route was uninjured.

“Conditions were slick. He lost control a little bit and just slid off the road,” Hildreth said.

He said otherwise calls for help were normal for this type of weather.

“In the morning it was a little slick, but the plows have come through and salted most of the roads and the conditions are better,” Hildreth said at 8:30 a.m.

Falls man seriously wounded as he opens door

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Police in Niagara Falls are looking for a single gunman who shot

A man was shot in the chest as he opened the door at 607 Elmwood Ave. in Niagara Falls just before 2:30 a.m. this morning, police reported.

“[The victim] answered the door and whoever was at the door shot him. There were other people in the house, but the shooter didn’t come in the house,” said Capt. William M. Thomson, chief of detectives. “He just shot him and left.”

Police who arrived at the scene found the victim with a small entry hole wound to the left ribs/chest area, Thomson said.

“It didn’t appear to be bleeding much, at least on the outside,” Thomson said.

He said the wounded man was in surgery this morning and has not yet been questioned by police.

The unidentified 28-year-old man was taken to Erie County Medical Center with a serious wound.

Investigators believe the shooting was drug-related, Thomson said.

Thomson said the details are still sketchy, but at this point they are looking for one shooter.

Anyone with information can call the Niagara Falls Police detective bureau at 286-4553.

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