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Erie County joins opposition to state gun law

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ALBANY – The push-back continues.

More than two dozen county legislatures across New York, including Erie County’s, have formally condemned New York’s new gun-control law, describing it as everything from an infringement on Second Amendment rights to legislation stacked with costly state-imposed mandates to an affront to doctor-patient rights.

Opposition to the law, which pollsters say has contributed to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s recent noticeable drop in poll ratings, appears only to be intensifying the emotional debate over gun control even though five weeks have passed since the governor signed it into law.

The Erie County Legislature became the most recent body to condemn the law, when it voted 7-4 Thursday with the help of Republican, Democratic, Conservative and Independence Party lawmakers. The Legislature asked state lawmakers and Cuomo to rescind the new law.

“This issue is not going away,” said Tom King, president of the New York State Rifle and Pistol Association, which is affiliated with the National Rifle Association.

The Albany-based group is set to file a lawsuit in the next 10 days challenging the new law. The lawsuit will come about the same time as a rally next Thursday in Albany that organizers say could draw thousands.

“The counties are telling the governor that they’re very disturbed with the way this legislation was handled,” King said.

Erie County’s nonbinding resolution described some of the law’s provisions as “thoughtful,” such as banning guns on school grounds. But it also said the new law violates Second Amendment rights and contains ineffective, “knee-jerk reactions” to gun violence, such as reducing maximum ammunition magazine sizes from 10 to seven bullets.

“The constituents are saying enough is enough of the Albany politics. They’re saying let’s send a message to people that this legislation was not vetted properly … and repeal it and go back to the drawing boards,” said Erie County Legislature Minority Leader John J. Mills, an Orchard Park Republican.

The steady stream of county legislatures condemning the law has ranged from Rockland and Putnam in the New York City suburbs to counties in rural central and northern parts of the state to several counties surrounding Buffalo.

The New York State Association of Counties recently adopted its own critical resolution, aimed mostly at the unfunded mandates the bill will impose on localities to enforce the law. It says the new law will drive up the budgets of sheriff’s departments, county clerks who must register additional guns and mental health divisions that must investigate reports from health professionals about patients who might be a threat to themselves or others.

The county resolutions have no force of law to change anything that Cuomo and state lawmakers did when approving the NY SAFE Act, a measure that backers say is needed to help reduce gun violence following the Sandy Hook school shootings Dec. 14 in Connecticut.

The provisions include crackdowns on assault-style weapon purchases, new gun-registration requirements, ammunition-purchase tracking and confiscation of weapons owned by people deemed to be a possible risk to society.

The county resolutions run the gamut. Many call on state lawmakers to repeal the law, an action that has no chance of happening.

Others condemn the process by which the bill was passed. Cuomo and state lawmakers used a “message of necessity” route that kept the bill from going through the legal three-day “aging” process to give the public a chance to read its contents.

The vocal opposition drowning out supporters of the new law illustrates a reality: The matter is already state law, and backers have little to lobby for because they already got their way.

That has not stopped the opposition, which is looking at court actions, public rallies and threats of political retaliation at the ballot box next year to make its point.

In Buffalo Thursday, Cuomo was asked the same questions that have dogged him since he signed the measure into law Jan. 15, less than 24 hours after the bill was made public.

“I am a gun owner, so this is not about taking away people’s guns,” the governor said. “I believe people think this is a slippery slope once the government starts to act in terms of gun control. I am a gun owner, and we understand the Second Amendment fully.”

Cuomo said the new law is about making it harder for criminals and mentally ill individuals from obtaining assault-style and other weapons. He chalked up opposition to the law from people who have “a fear of what the law might lead to.” But he called that fear “totally unfounded.”

A survey by The Buffalo News on Thursday found 26 county legislatures or boards of supervisors – with Republican and Democratic support – in the past few weeks backing resolutions critical of the new gun law. And that does not include a growing number of towns that have been going on record opposing the law.

William Ross, chairman of the Niagara County Legislature, said the unanimous vote by his colleagues Tuesday night condemning the law produced something he hasn’t witnessed in his 20 years in office. “It was the first time we got a standing ovation in the chamber,” Ross said of the reaction by gun-control opponents who packed the room for the vote.

Other counties that have adopted resolutions critical of the new law in some fashion include Cattaraugus, Wyoming, Orleans, Ontario. Madison, Hamilton, Cayuga, Fulton, Greene, Washington, Rensselaer, Yates, Oswego, Oneida, Herkimer and Warren. In Warren County, north of Albany, the resolution expressed “dissatisfaction” with the law and urged Cuomo and state lawmakers to meet with interested parties to address problems the governor and Legislature created by the “hasty enactment” of the law.

Philip Skowfoe, the Democratic chairman of the Schoharie County Board of Supervisors, a rural county west of Albany, also said he hoped state legislators would rethink their votes. “I would hope they would reject this law. I would hope they would overturn it. I think it’s very wrong to do that in America,” he said.

Beyond the Second Amendment arguments, many counties have a more basic concern: money. The new gun law continues the trend of the state imposing unfunded mandates on localities, they say.

The statewide association of counties earlier this month called on state lawmakers to hold hearings to address the law’s impact on counties “and the issue of gun violence in a way that will produce meaningful results.”

The group also asked for amendments to the mental health-reporting process and to a new gun-permit recertification process that counties say will be unwieldy and costly and will add new workloads to stressed personnel .

The Erie County Legislature on Thursday unanimously adopted a second resolution using the same language as the statewide county group, complaining about costly mandates.

That counties would complain about some action in Albany is not new, nor would it be new that counties would not get their way in Albany. But gun groups say the united voice that keeps coming from county legislators across much of the state can’t be ignored so easily on such a controversial issue as gun control.

“County governments are the grass roots of state government, and this is the people speaking. It’s not politicians, it’s people,” said King of the Albany gun-rights organization.



email: tprecious@buffnews.com

107th birthday a milestone, and demographic shift

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Carmella Nardolillo will blow out her candles – 107 of them – today to the accompaniment of cheers, applause and good wishes from her large family and many friends.

For the Orchard Park woman, it will be a milestone birthday.

“I’m here for a reason,” said Nardolillo, who still lives on her own and takes no medication, a mischievous gleam in her clear brown eyes. “I’m here to straighten up my children.”

But Nardolillo’s birthday is not just a personal epoch. It also marks a demographic shift for the Buffalo Niagara region.

More than ever, people here are living into not just old age.

They’re making it to old, old age – as in, their late 80s and 90s – and even 100 and more.

“Oh, absolutely,” said Randy Hoak, Erie County’s interim commissioner for senior services, on whether people in Erie County are living to very old age more frequently these days.

“We have a client who … just recently turned 106, and we have provided a number of services to her in the past to keep her in her home,” Hoak said of that Depew senior. “I previously worked at the Erie County Home out in Alden and ... they had 5 centenarians living there. And our oldest [Home] resident, who recently passed away, was 107.”

It’s clear that a demographic change is under way, according to data drawn from the census and provided by Erie County’s Senior Services Department

The numbers show that people older than 85 have grown significantly since 1970 as a proportion of the total county population.

In that year, people in the 85-and-up demographic accounted for less than 1 percent of the county’s total. In 2010, those 85 and up – nearly 24,000 people – represented 2.6 percent of the county population.

And, the change is reflected in slightly younger age brackets, as well.

Men and women age 75 and older made up less than 4 percent of the population of the county in 1970, the data shows. But, by 2010, those 75 and older represented 8.1 percent of the population in the county.

That’s a trend that geriatric specialists see reflected in their own practices.

“There’s no question about it,” said Dr. Danielle Kwakye-Berko, a geriatric specialist physician at the Geriatric Center of Western New York in DeGraff Memorial Hospital, which treats at least 3,000 older residents of the region. “It has a lot to do with medications and with patients’ awareness of their physical health and what is required to live long.”

Not only are these people living longer, many are also leading more active lives, said Hoak, the interim county commissioner.

“We have a woman ... who participates in our fitness programs, and we have video of her jumping rope,” Hoak said of the woman who will turn 91 in April. “These folks have a lot to offer our communities. We have folks who are well into their 80s who are involved in volunteer opportunities.”

For Nardolillo, born Carmella Mary Dettelis in New Jersey in 1906 – five years after Buffalo’s Pan-Am Expo and during the presidency of Teddy Roosevelt – life has not been easy, but it has been full.She came to Buffalo with her Italian-American family at age 6 and settled in Sloan. She managed to stay in school until the third grade. Then there were some of her 11 siblings to care for – all of them now gone – so she was needed at home.

“I had to stay home and help my mother,” Nardolillo recalled this week, during a conversation in the kitchen of her younger daughter, Rosanne Lucci, who is 84.

Nardolillo met her husband, Michael Nardolillo, a longtime employee of the DL&W Railroad, when she was a young woman of 14. They married in 1924 in St. Francis of Assisi Church.

The couple at first worried that they wouldn’t be able to have children, so they adopted a daughter, Marie, from Father Nelson H. Baker’s orphanage and infant home in Lackawanna in 1926.

After that, Nardolillo gave birth to three more children, Rosanne, Frank and Carl.

All of Nardolillo’s four children – now in their 70s and 80s – are alive and living in Western New York. Her husband of 55 years died in 1979.

She has 17 grandchildren, 32 great-grandchildren (with two more on the way) and seven great-great-grandchildren.Nardolillo, who drove her own car until age 93 and had her hip replaced at 91, attributes her physical stamina and strength to a lifetime of hard work. At various times, she worked at Sattler’s on Broadway, as a boss on a produce farm in North Collins, and for Curtiss-Wright, in order to supplement her husband’s salary.

“He was making 23 dollars every two weeks,” Nardolillo recalled of her husband. “I had to raise four children on that salary. I was saving pennies. Pennies.”

Of her years on Lovejoy’s Goethe Street, raising her family, Nardolillo said: “I don’t think there is a woman in East Buffalo that worked as hard as I did.”

For her birthday celebration today, Nardolillo and her family were planning the usual: breakfast at the pancake house, then a trip to the casinos, then a stop at a bingo hall in Fort Erie where she likes to try her luck. A family party will also take place at night, Nardolillo’s family members said.

Nardolillo’s support system is extensive and strong; several family members check in on her every day. Nardolillo herself said she is firm in her wish to remain living in her own Orchard Park home.

“I like to be alone,” she said.

She enjoys watching TV programs, sitting in a favorite chair, feeding the wildlife in her backyard and eating Chinese food.

Her children said that Nardolillo, who said she takes no medication other than an occasional Aleve, seems more than capable of managing in her own space. She has lived in Orchard Park for 46 years.

“She still makes her own chicken soup and stock,” said Rosanne Lucci, laughing.

Support systems for those in the upper ranges of senior living are key, according to Hoak. The support allows people who wish to remain independent to do so, he said.

Even so, these situations can be tricky, he said.

“What I find interesting is that, a lot of these folks, at 106, 107 – their children are not likely to be alive,” Hoak said. “What I find with these folks is, their support systems are not there. Or they have an overburdened support system. The grandchildren could be in their 50s and 60s but may be caring for their own parents.”

“You’ve heard about the sandwich generation – this is a sandwich with multiple layers.”

Hoak said many families that successfully take care of the very elderly are doing a great job.

“It’s certainly a testament to their dedication, because it’s not easy,” he said.Nardolillo, a Catholic since birth, said that her faith and her prayers keep her going.

“Jesus is my company,” she said. “When I get up, Jesus is with me. I tell my kids, ‘Always remember, without Jesus, you wouldn’t be here. Jesus gets you where you want to go.’ ”

Looking at her gift of years – challenged by hard work, but blessed with family and friends – Nardolillo said this: “I’ve had a good life. A tough life. But a good life.”

As for her beauty regimen, Nardolillo chalks up her glowing skin to her healthy diet – heavy on homemade pastas and beans and greens, as well as red wine and Tequila Rose in modest quantities – and to a simple regimen she has followed since she was a girl.

“You know what I do?” she said. “I wash my face with hot water. Then I put ice cubes on my face. Then, I put lemons on my face – fresh lemons. Twice a week.”

Nardolillo, clad in a teal-blue sweater with sequins and a sparkly bracelet, silver drop earrings framing her face, said it’s important to take such steps – no matter what your stage in life.

“Oh, I take care of myself,” she said, smiling. “Even in my old age.”

email: cvogel@buffnews.com

Stadium backers promote Buffalo waterfront proposal at forum

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“If you build it, they will stay.”

So prophesied Erie County Legislature Chairwoman Betty Jean Grant, D-Buffalo, Thursday evening of the Buffalo Bills’ long-term future in the Queen City during a community forum at Erie Community College’s downtown campus designed to spark enthusiasm for a proposed massive waterfront project that would include a 72,000-seat domed stadium.

Grant, along with Legislator Timothy R. Hogues, D-Buffalo, representatives from the Strong Museum of Play in Rochester and principal partners from the Greater Buffalo Sports and Entertainment Complex, issued a public “call to action” to gather momentum for the $1.4 billion project aimed at attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors to the outer harbor.

“It brings downtown and the central business district down to the waterfront,” said George F. Hasiotis, a principal in the proposed project with Nicholas J. Stracick.

The group is looking to nail down an option on the outer harbor land to get the wheels in motion for not only the year-round stadium but other projects there, such as a collateral North American Museum of Sports run by the Strong museum.

With the land option, the group would be able to approach the National Football League with the proposal and then have a set amount of time to work “with a vengeance to build this project within the next five to seven years,” Hasiotis said.

“We’re making progress with elected officials in Western New York,” he added. “The governor has to realize this is the project he’s been talking about. There’s nothing on his list of potential projects that compares to something like this.”

The smattering of a couple of dozen area residents – ranging from casually dressed urban dwellers to businessmen in suits – who found their way to the forum liked what they saw of the ideas and enthusiasm.

“This is an amazing, bold vision that I haven’t seen in 44 years in Buffalo,” said one resident, who suggested the group consider proceeding in phases to make the massive pie-in-the-sky dream come true one piece at a time.

Added another, who said he left Buffalo in 1984 and spent his last 28 years in New York City: “When I left, Buffalo was a city that was flat on its back. When I came back last year, I saw a city that was up on one knee, trying to get up.”

It’s a project that already has the interest of G. Rollie Adams, the Strong museum’s chief executive officer, and Scott G. Eberle, a Buffalo resident who is vice president of the museum.

“We will work just as hard to anchor this site,” said Eberle of the proposed Strong sports museum, which Strong officials believe will attract 600,000 or more visitors annually, more than the Bills and 26 other NFL teams.

Adams said the planned sports museum will celebrate not just big-time athletes but also “all of us.” Adams envisions the museum having what he called a collaborative working relationship with the baseball, football and basketball halls of fame to bring in sports-themed exhibits and artifacts.

Other dignitaries at Thursday’s forum included Bernard Tolbert, senior vice president for security for the National Basketball Association and former special-agent-in-charge of the Buffalo office of the FBI, and Assemblyman David DiPietro, R-East Aurora, who endorsed the proposal.

“To be blunt, I think this is a great project. The first thing I told Nick [Stracick} to do is to keep the politicians out of it,” said DiPietro. “If we want to keep the Buffalo Bills here, we have to get everybody on board and move forward.”



email: tpignataro@buffnews.com

State agency approves plan for stadium work, lease

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A $130 million project to upgrade Ralph Wilson Stadium gained a necessary state approval Thursday.

The Empire State Development board of directors approved a general project plan for the stadium renovation and extension of the Buffalo Bills’ lease. The approval is one of several steps Erie County and state officials must take to formalize a memorandum of understanding with the team on a 10-year lease agreement.

The cost of the renovations will be split among Erie County, New York State and the Bills.

In addition, the state and the county have agreed to share stadium operating costs, game day expenses and team subsidies during the agreement.

Officials expect to finalize the deal in late March. Once all of the approvals are in place, including from the National Football League owners, construction is slated to begin later this year. The major portion of the stadium upgrades are expected to be finished in 2014.

State to make good on Salamanca’s lost casino revenue

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SALAMANCA – Help is on the way from Albany for the financially strapped city government, thanks to a 30-day amendment to the executive budget announced Thursday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.

Under the amendment, the state will make up for the $2.5 million that the Seneca Nation of Indians should be paying Salamanca this year from slot machine receipts at the Seneca Allegany Casino. The money, which covers nearly 40 percent of the city budget, will be transferred from the state’s general fund to the Tribal State Compact account.

The Senecas have withheld payments to Salamanca, Niagara Falls and Buffalo since 2010 in a dispute with the state over the installation of video gambling machines at racetracks.

Memorial Medical Center holds contract talks with workers

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NIAGARA FALLS – A contract bargaining session was held Thursday between Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center and the union representing 650 of its employees.

The existing contract, which was to have expired Dec. 8, has been extended several times, with the latest extension lasting until March 31, said Bruce Popper of Local 1199, Service Employees International Union, United Healthcare Workers East. Hospital spokesman Patrick J. Bradley confirmed that a bargaining session was held and no agreement was completed.

The workers covered by the contract include registered and licensed practical nurses, technicians, therapists, social workers, and dietary, housekeeping and maintenance employees.

Niagara Chamber will oppose school budgets that exceed cap

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WHEATFIELD – The Niagara USA Chamber has declared that it will “publicly and actively” oppose any proposed school budget this spring in Niagara County that exceeds the state property tax cap.

“The integrity of the property tax cap must be maintained,” said Kory Schuler, the Chamber’s director of government affairs. The cap is 2 percent plus exceptions set in state law, and thus differs from district to district.

“We understand that districts are challenged, and we support their efforts to get relief from costly state mandates, which is highly important. But asking overburdened taxpayers to cough up more beyond the tax cap is not the right answer,” Schuler said Wednesday. “If we have to urge people to vote against a school budget, we are prepared to do that.”

Falls shooter, later wounded by gunfire, pleads guilty

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LOCKPORT – Billy L. Benton Jr., who shot a Niagara Falls man only to be shot himself three days later, pleaded guilty Friday in Niagara County Court.

Benton, 25, of Niagara Avenue in the Falls, admitted to second-degree assault and was promised a sentence of no more than five years in prison by County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas, who scheduled sentencing for April 26.

Benton shot Curtis Cheley, 52, in the right wrist and right leg Nov. 23 on Ninth Street.

On Nov. 26, Benton himself was shot in the leg. There have been no arrests in that case, mainly because Benton won’t tell police who shot him.

Benton has made all his court appearances with a walker. He told Farkas he suffered a fractured femur and foot when he was shot.

Deputy District Attorney Doreen M. Hoffmann said Benton offered to reveal the name of the person who shot him in exchange for a lenient plea deal for himself in the Cheley shooting. Hoffmann declined that offer.

Benton was allowed to plead guilty before being indicted, and the five-year sentencing cap is two years below the maximum for second-degree assault.

State prison time is mandatory because Benton is a repeat felon. He pleaded guilty to fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance in 2010.

In another case before Farkas Friday, a man who was accused of trying to rape a 60-year-old Niagara Falls woman was sentenced to four years in prison and seven years of post-release supervision.

Jeffrey Brantley, 47, of Walnut Avenue, had pleaded guilty to first-degree sexual abuse.

Assistant District Attorney Robert A. Zucco said the Jan. 21, 2012, incident had a “devastating impact” on the victim, who approved the plea deal because the idea of testifying was “terrifying to her.”

Defense attorney Dominic Saraceno said, “Had [Brantley] known of her mental health limitations, he would have been less aggressive that night … He completely misread the signs he saw.”

Also Friday, Farkas canceled the work plans of repeat drunken driver Michael G. Barber, who was supposed to start a $20-an-hour job at the Norampac paper mill in Niagara Falls Monday.

Instead, Barber started a one-year County Jail term Friday for felony driving while intoxicated.

Barber, who violated probation on a previous felony DWI plea and served a year in jail, begged for probation so he could work at Norampac. “I’ll never get another chance like this,” he sobbed.

Barber, 31, of Hennepin Avenue in the Falls, was arrested May 13 after he left home in a car to get away from attacks by his abusive girlfriend. “He didn’t get far before he was pulled over,” defense attorney James J. Faso Jr. said.

“I’m taking into consideration the facts of this case, because [otherwise] this is a state prison case,” Farkas said. Faso did succeed in talking Farkas into six months of interim probation for Ronald A. Bugyi Jr., who had pleaded guilty to felony DWI.

Bugyi, 39, of New Road, Ransomville, had been arrested May 11 in Wilson.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Brothers indicted in thefts from vacant Falls house

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LOCKPORT – A Niagara Falls man was arraigned in Niagara County Court Friday on charges of burglarizing a vacant house in that city Nov. 28.

Malique L. Rogers, 37, of Cudaback Avenue, pleaded not guilty to third-degree burglary, third-degree criminal mischief, attempted petit larceny and possession of burglary tools. His brother, Emanuel L. Rogers, 31, of Maple Street, Buffalo, pleaded not guilty to the same charges Wednesday.

Assistant District Attorney Joseph A. Scalzo said a nearby resident called police after seeing two men stacking pipes, a sink, a car jack and other metal objects in the alley behind a Fourth Street house, owned by the city because of a tax foreclosure. Scalzo said Emanuel Rogers was inside when police arrived, and tried to jump out an upstairs window, but was pulled back in by an officer.

Man decides not to risk judicial diversion program

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LOCKPORT – A Niagara Falls man pleaded guilty Friday to selling cocaine, but took his lawyer’s advice not to request admission to the judicial diversion program of court-supervised drug treatment.

Attorney James J. Faso Jr. said he didn’t think James Puckett, 50, of Welch Avenue, could make it through the program, with the possible penalty of nine years in prison if he stumbled.

Puckett therefore accepted a prosecution offer to plead guilty to a lesser charge, fifth-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance, with a maximum 2½-year sentence. Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas will make the call May 3.

Puckett sold cocaine March 6 in the Falls.

Falls man pleads guilty to having cocaine at home

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LOCKPORT – Eddie L. Smith Jr., who had 1.17 grams of cocaine with him when police raided his home May 17, pleaded guilty to a felony Friday in Niagara County Court.

County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas scheduled sentencing May 3 for Smith, 29, now of Greenview Terrace, Wheatfield, who pleaded guilty to fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Smith was living on 18th Street in the Falls when he was arrested. He agreed to forfeit $233 in cash he had on him at the time.

Another man picked up in the raid, Eric A. Nelson, 24, of Woodlawn Avenue, pleaded guilty Feb. 13 to the same charge as Smith and is to be sentenced May 1.

Lockport man arraigned on drug-dealing indictment

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LOCKPORT – Devon C. Klein, 22, of East Avenue, Lockport, pleaded not guilty Friday in Niagara County Court to a four-count indictment accusing him of selling cocaine April 4 and hydrocodone May 8.

Klein is charged with third-, fourth- and fifth-degree sale and third-degree possession of a controlled substance. County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III released him on his own recognizance to await further court action.

In another case before Murphy Friday, Amy L. Shank, 37, of Payne Avenue, North Tonawanda, was placed on five years’ probation and ordered to serve three weekends in the county work program for attempted fifth-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance.

Shank sold a man two Suboxone pills at her apartment June 4.

Man arraigned in attempted murder of Lockport girl, 7

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LOCKPORT – A Lockport man who allegedly tried to kill his girlfriend’s seven-year-old daughter on New Year’s Eve was arraigned on a seven-count indictment Friday in Niagara County Court.

David L. Alfonso, 28, pleaded not guilty to attempted second-degree murder, first- and second-degree assault, first- and second-degree strangulation, second-degree obstructing governmental administration and resisting arrest.

County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas refused any bail for Alfonso, who had been held in lieu of $1 million bail set in Lockport City Court after his Dec. 31 arrest.

“We believe this individual is a danger to the community,” Deputy District Attorney Holly E. Sloma said.

Assistant Public Defender Michael E. Benedict asked for $100,000 bail, which he said Alfonso likely could make, but Farkas said no.

If convicted as charged, Alfonso faces a maximum of 25 years in prison.

Sloma said Alfonso “attacked a 7-year-old girl, choking her into unconsciousness, only stopping when he was attacked by the girl’s mother with a knife.”

The 27-year-old mother, whom police found armed with a butcher knife, was not charged.

Police found the blood-covered Alfonso at the corner of Lock and Monroe streets shortly after 2 p.m.

Sloma said Alfonso had to be subdued with a Taser electronic stun gun. She said Alfonso told police, “I’ll kill all the world … Just give me my AK-47.”

The girl came to and ran out of the Monroe Street house, first trying to get neighbors to open their doors before running to her grandmother’s house on Church Street.

The girl spent two days in Women & Children’s Hospital.

Police said Alfonso tried to tear off the girl’s jaw, teeth and tongue.

The girl’s grandmother claimed in the wake of the attack that Alfonso was a regular drug user who was allegedly high on bath salts at the time. However, Sloma and Benedict both said there was no evidence Alfonso was on drugs at the time of the attack.

Sloma told Farkas that Alfonso has another pending case in Lockport City Court, an attempted second-degree assault charge for allegedly threatening to stab an adult complainant.

City Court officials said that allegedly occurred on Oct. 4. Alfonso is due for a nonjury trial in that case on March 6.

Farkas scheduled a pretrial conference May 22 and a tentative trial date of July 29.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Catholic Health hospitals honored for specialty care

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BlueCross BlueShield of Western New York announced that all Buffalo-area Catholic Health hospitals have been named Blue Distinction Centers Plus.

Mercy Hospital, Kenmore Mercy Hospital and Sisters Hospital, Main Street Campus, were recognized for excellence in spine surgery and knee and hip replacement. Sisters Hospital, St. Joseph Campus, was recognized for quality in knee and hip replacement.

These hospitals are the only local facilities to receive designations for these services from the insurer.

The Blue Distinction Centers for Specialty Care program recognizes hospitals nationally with a track record for delivering better results, including fewer complications and readmissions. Blue Distinction Centers Plus meet the same quality criteria as Blue Distinction Centers but also deliver care that is more affordable.

The Blue Distinction Center program evaluates hospitals on their ability to deliver high-quality and safe specialty care based on such criteria as surgical team expertise and historical patient outcomes.

18-hour dance marathon to benefit Alzheimer’s group

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An 18-hour dance marathon to raise awareness about Alzheimer’s disease and funds for the local chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association will take place in early March.

The “Step Up and Dance For Alzheimer’s” event will begin at 6 p.m. Friday and run until noon the next day in Sinful Nightclub, 334 Delaware Ave. It is the first-ever dance-themed event to raise money for the local organization, planners with the Western New York chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association said.

A $20 fee covers registration for the event, which is alcohol-free for all participants. Music, food and beverages will be available, as will games and prizes, organizers said.

To register, see the dance event website at [URL]www.stepupforalz.com;http://www.stepupforalz.com/[URL]. Information is also available on the association’s website, [URL]www.alz.org/wny;http://www.alz.org/wny.

/[URL]Registrations must be made in advance by Wednesday.

The phone number for the Western New York chapter of the association is (800) 272-3900.

3 new members named to city Planning Board

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LOCKPORT – Mayor Michael W. Tucker named three new members to the seven-member Lockport Planning Board this week.

Tucker, filling vacancies caused by resignations, appointed Jeff Tracy of Cherry Street, Terry K. Harmon of Regent Street and Linda S. Roth of Locust Street to serve terms that run through Oct. 14, 2015.

Tracy, who headed the committee that helped create the city’s new garbage and recycling program, replaces Brian Bower, who handed in his resignation Nov. 1 but agreed to serve until a replacement was found. Tracy’s mother, Sheila, is a member of the Zoning Board of Appeals.

Harmon replaces veteran member Howard Luff, who stepped down Feb. 8, and Roth takes the seat formerly held by Michael Worthington, who resigned last year.

Ruff expresses his gratitude to fans, players, owners

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Lindy Ruff has been driving from coffee shop to coffee shop the past few days, collecting his thoughts and empty cups. He knew folks wanted to say goodbye, but he wasn’t sure he was ready.

He was certain he wanted to say thanks, however, so the Buffalo Sabres’ former coach returned to First Niagara Center on Friday for a farewell appearance. It was filled with emotions and laughs, two of the trademarks Ruff established during his 26-year ride as a coach and player in Buffalo.

“Thanks to all the fans over all these years,” Ruff said. “I owe you. You made this a special place to coach.

“I know there’s a thank you outside on the fence,” he said, referring to handmade letters taped near the doors of the arena that spelled out, “Thank U Lindy.” “I’d like to put my thank you right next to it because it’s a special group. It’s a place that I call home, I always will call home.”

Ruff’s love affair with Western New York and its hockey team began in 1979 when the Sabres drafted him in the second round.

“I still have the invitation to training camp in a book,” he said.

The coupling continued for a decade on the ice and restarted in 1997 when he took over as coach. He spent 16 years behind the bench until getting fired Wednesday with the Sabres near the bottom of the NHL.

“I don’t feel like I have anything to be ashamed of or any regrets,” Ruff said. “I’ve gone over every game. I’ve cleaned out my office. I’ve grabbed all my notes. I’ve grabbed game notes. I’ve looked at all the games. I’ve looked at chances. I’ve looked at how we lost.

“It’s like I’m driving myself crazy, but when I was done I said, ‘You know, we gave three games away. We could have been at 9-7 and in a pretty good place, and instead we’re at 6-10.’ That falls with me.”

It was clear listening to him talk that the memories and friendships he built will hold more significance than this season’s disappointment.

He thanked team founders Seymour and Northrup Knox for bringing him to town as a player and coach. He thanked the Sabres’ other owners – John Rigas, Tom Golisano, Larry Quinn, Dan DiPofi and Terry Pegula – for keeping him around. In true Ruff style, he wittily said he’d skip the era when the NHL owned the bankrupt team.

He thanked the players who performed for him, the ones in the early years who went to four straight post seasons and the skaters now who are in position for a second straight playoff-free campaign.

“The reason a coach has success is he has players who play for him,” Ruff said. “It’s hard right now, but I think better days are right around the corner.”

Ruff also praised Darcy Regier, who hired Ruff just a month after becoming general manager. Regier delivered the dismissal at Ruff’s home in Clarence.

“I saw him, and I said, ‘I know,’ ” said Ruff, who was emotionally devastated following a lackluster 2-1 loss to Winnipeg on Tuesday. “To take that step back against Winnipeg, it was like a kick in the gut for me. You guys saw it. I saw it. I felt it.”

Aside from the fans, Ruff gave his most gracious gratitude to longtime equipment manager Rip Simonick. The South Buffalo native provided Ruff with the best equipment as a rookie and was a friend during the long plane rides as coach.

“He’s no longer coaching the team, but he’ll root for the team,” Simonick said following the Sabres’ practice in Northtown Center at Amherst. “He’s a Buffalonian.

“He came as a kid from Alberta with a chip on his shoulder. ... Everybody knew what they were going to get. When Lindy coached against you, he coached to win. He didn’t care if you took a punch to the nose or a stick from behind. Whatever you had to do to win the game, that was the bottom line.”

Ruff will take time to clear his head, but he has no doubts he’ll return to coaching.

“God, I miss it already,” he said.

He watched hockey on television the day he was fired, and he tried watching the Sabres play Thursday. He lasted one period.

“I found it incredibly strange, and I had to turn it off,” he said.

He refuses to turn off his admiration for the area and the organization, specifically Pegula and his wife, Kim.

“My biggest disappointment is not getting it done for them,” Ruff said. “We’ll get it right here. You’ve got to trust them because he’s a competitor. He’s a fabulous guy to be around, and it will get done right. I know it’s painful right now, but it will get it done.”



email: jvogl@buffnews.com

Panel revived to oversee spending of bed tax funds

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LOCKPORT – The long-dormant committee that decides how to spend the City of Lockport’s revenue from the 4 percent “bed tax” on hotel and motel bills was appointed this week by Mayor Michael W. Tucker.

Alderman Patrick W. Schrader, County Legislator W. Keith McNall, and city Planning and Development Director R. Charles Bell were named to join Tucker and City Treasurer Michael E. White on the panel.

Also appointed were Scott Cain, an accountant, and Heather Peck, program manager for Lockport Main Street Inc. Both are members of the Greater Lockport Development Corp. board.

The city sends 75 percent of its bed tax receipts to the Niagara Tourism and Convention Corp., but the rest remains in Lockport. The committee, which hasn’t met in years, is going to be asked to approve the Common Council’s Feb. 6 decision to grant a backlog of $50,000 in bed tax money to the new Flight of Five Winery, scheduled to open in May in old City Hall, 2 Pine St.

Events for people with disabilities

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“Dare to Dream,” a free interactive workshop for individuals with a disability and their families, co-hosted by the Early Childhood Direction Center of Women & Children’s Hospital of Buffalo, Parent Network of Western New York, and the Learning Disabilities Association of Western New York, will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Millennium Hotel, 2040 Walden Ave., Cheektowaga. Learn about various transitions of life and tools needed to plan for your child’s future. Experts will be available to answer questions. To register, call 332-4170 or visit: www.parentnetworkwny.org.

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Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America will host “Bowling for Bowles” at 2 p.m. next Sunday at Transit Lanes, 7850 Transit Road, Amherst. The event will help raise funds and awareness for Crohn’s disease and colitis, and contribute to the local “Take Steps Walks” fundraiser scheduled for May 18. For sponsorship details and/or cost for bowling, contact Keri Sikora at 839-2796 or email: ksikora@ccfa.org.

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Parent Network of Western New York offers a free workshop, “Guardians, Wills and Trusts,” from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at Opportunities Unlimited, 1555 Fashion Outlet Blvd., Town of Niagara. Participants will learn about trusts for a child with special needs and the various processes. Discussed will be an overview of who needs a guardian and the different types, as well as how to protect your child’s future services. To register, call 332-4170 or visit: www.parentnetworkwny.org.

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Heritage Education Program provides services to children from birth to 21 with specific or global development disabilities, including children on the autism spectrum and those with medical frailties. The program, located at One Delaware Road, Kenmore, features supports for children who are severely resistive eaters. Specialized educational and therapeutic supports are individualized for each learner. For more information, contact 876-3901.

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Parent Network of Western New York offers a free workshop, “Skills for Effective Parent Advocacy,” from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday at North Tonawanda Learning Center, 1350 Ruie Road. Parents and caregivers will learn how to effectively advocate for their child’s needs. To register, call 332-4170 or visit: www.parentnetworkwny.org.

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NFTA Advisory Committee on the Disabled will meet at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Heritage Center, 101 Oak St. It is open to those interested in learning about the NFTA’s accessible services and programs for people with disabilities. For information, call 855-7286.

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Parent Network of Western New York offers a free workshop, “IEP and Transition,” from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Orleans Niagara BOCES, 4124 Saunders Settlement Road, Sanborn. The workshop will focus on your child’s plans after high school (transition). To register, call 332-4170 or visit: www.parentnetworkwny.org.

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The Western New York Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association offers a social group respite program for those with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia in South Buffalo from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Monday. Trained volunteers and staff members run the respite in a group setting in a safe location. Fee is $5 per program session. All participants must be assessed by an Alzheimer’s Association staff member before attending a group respite session. Location of the respite program will be disclosed upon acceptance. For more information, call (800) 272-3900.



Items of timely events may be submitted by fax, 856-5150 or by mail to City Desk, Events for People with Disabilities, The Buffalo News, P.O. Box 100, Buffalo, NY 14240.

Coming UP

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MALL WALKS: The Wellness Institute and its community partners are offering Winter 2013 Be Active Erie County walks for older adults at area malls. Registration for the first walk begins at 8:30 a.m. Friday in the food court of the Boulevard Mall, Maple Road and Niagara Falls Boulevard, Amherst. The walk begins at 9:15 a.m. Participants have a choice of guided walks – long or short. Also offered are health education materials, health/fitness screenings, presentations, healthy refreshments and an opportunity to meet new people and socialize with old friends.

DANCE MARATHON: The Western New York chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association will host is first 18-hour Dance Marathon, from 6 p.m. Friday, through noon Saturday in Sinful Nightclub, 334 Delaware Ave. Dancers age 17 and older must register by Wednesday at www.stepupforalz.com. The registration fee of $20 includes free swag bags. Doors open at 5 p.m.

WORKSHOP: Cornell University Cooperative Extension will hold its annual Rural Landowner Workshop from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday in Pioneer Central School, County Line Road, Yorkshire. The workshop involves several agencies that provide educational information and outreach to landowners. For more information or required preregistration, call 585-268-7644, Ext. 10.
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