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Judge to decide whether to return animals in cruelty case

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LOCKPORT – Barbara Hale Gonzalez of Hartland had her dogs and a horse taken from her when she was charged with animal cruelty in 2009.

The criminal case against her ended without a conviction, and she now wants the animals back. But the people who have been caring for them refuse, which is why Gonzalez is asking a judge to step in on her behalf.

Gonzalez’s attorney, George V.C. Muscato, says the SPCA of Niagara acted illegally in taking the animals in the first place. The original complaint was filed with state police by Gonzalez’s longtime veterinarian, who took one of the dogs home herself.

Muscato says that whether the animals are returned to Gonzalez, she will pursue a lawsuit for damages against the veterinarian, Jeanne Best of Royalton Equine Veterinary Services.

But Paul Hammond, Best’s attorney, said that according to state law, “Animals that are improperly cared for are deemed abandoned.”

The animals were taken by means of a search warrant issued by Newfane Town Justice Bruce M. Barnes on June 9, 2009, after Best contacted state police about conditions she had seen while treating Spike the horse at Gonzalez’s Ellicott Road farm.

Best and her employee, Stacey A. Bailey, provided affidavits that enabled Trooper John M. Spero to seize Spike, a gelded Morgan horse, along with two German shepherds, Bronko and Max, and a Border collie, Baylee. Spero executed the warrant the same day it was signed.

“This horse was standing in two feet of manure, in a stall as big as your desk,” attorney Morgan L. Jones Jr., representing the Akron therapeutic riding organization that ended up with Spike, told Lockport City Judge William J. Watson.

Jones said Best and some volunteers cleaned out the horse’s stall once, but when the improvements they made at Gonzalez’s farm didn’t stick, they called the police.

“The animals were appropriately seized,” said Jennifer Castaldo, attorney for Robert Winslow, a friend of Best who helped with the animals’ removal and ended up with Baylee, a Border collie.

Bronko, one of the German shepherds, has since died of cancer in Best’s care, Hammond said. Max, the other German shepherd, is in Bailey’s possession.

Muscato said he is not challenging the legality of the search warrant, but of the adoptions.

Best tried to get Gonzalez to surrender the animals several times, according to the lawsuit, filed in July 2010. It cites a document Best drew up for Gonzalez’s signature, surrendering Spike and a quarter horse named Dealer. Both horses were to be fostered by new owners who would take possession after six months.

Gonzalez didn’t sign the document, but Best did, on the day of the state police raid.

In November 2010, State Supreme Court Justice Ralph A. Boniello III turned the lawsuit over to Watson, who heard arguments Feb. 7. Watson said he will make a decision March 13 on whether Gonzalez gets her animals back.

The seizure of the animals occurred the same month that Gonzalez was dismissed from her job as a Niagara County corrections officer, a post she had held for 15 years. Human Resources Director Peter P. Lopes said Gonzalez’s dismissal was not connected to the animal cruelty charges.

Hammond, Best’s attorney, said in court that Gonzalez was caring for her father, who had dementia, and she had health problems of her own. “She knew she couldn’t care for these animals,” Hammond said.

Muscato denied that the health situation for Gonzalez or her father, who has since died, played a role in the animal situation, but that isn’t how it’s remembered by Assistant Public Defender Matthew P. Pynn, who represented Gonzalez in Hartland Town Court.

“She was so depressed and sick at that time that she couldn’t get out of bed,” Pynn recalled, although he didn’t remember Gonzalez’s specific problem. He said Gonzalez’s health issues triggered the poor care for the animals that were seized.

“She didn’t bite off more than she could chew when she was healthy, but she did bite off more than she could chew when she was sick,” Pynn said.

Pynn sought to negotiate a plea bargain for Gonzalez on the misdemeanor animal cruelty charge.

The result, on March 8, 2010, was a plea slip for Hartland Town Court in which Violante offered an adjournment in contemplation of dismissal.

“No record. Interest of justice,” Violante wrote in the explanatory notes. He also wrote, “The DA does not require the defendant to give up her right to have the animals returned to her as a condition of this disposition.”

Muscato argued before Watson that only the State Police or the SPCA have the legal right to take a defendant’s animals, but neither ever filled out the paperwork to do so.

He said the three dogs and the horse were never in SPCA custody “except for overnight.”

There is a five-day redemption rule for animals turned over to the SPCA, but Muscato said Gonzalez never abandoned them, so that doesn’t apply. And at any rate, he asserted, the animals were evidence in a criminal case at the time, so Gonzalez couldn’t have gotten them back.

Wrong, said Castaldo, the attorney from the Hiscock and Barclay law firm, representing Winslow, who ended up with Baylee the border collie.

“This actually is a very simple matter,” Castaldo told Watson. “At sunset on the fifth day, the animals became the property of the SPCA.”

But the day after Hartland Town Justice Brian Fitts signed off on the adjournment in contemplation of dismissal, an Albion veterinarian, Mary R. Neilans, wrote a letter to Best on Gonzalez’ behalf, announcing that Gonzalez was ready to take the animals back at any time and needed to know where they were.

William J. Hardy, the SPCA’s lawyer, said the delay in requesting the return of the animals “is evidence to me of constructive abandonment.”

“The only reason [the new owners] still have possession of these animals is because of this litigation,” Muscato said.

He said Gonzalez never agreed to give up the animals and the SPCA had no right to offer them for adoption. “It’s like selling a car you don’t own,” Muscato said.

“We bought a ‘car’ we thought we had title to,” said Robert Crawford, attorney for Stacey Bailey, who ended up with one of the German shepherds. “We’re an innocent party here.”

He said the care Best and his client gave the seized shepherd “brought that dog back to life.”

Hardy said the SPCA never received notice of the plea deal or Gonzalez’ desire to have the animals back.

He said the SPCA had an officer at the scene when Spero executed the search warrant, and the SPCA would have been within its authority to euthanize the dogs and the horse.

“They were found to be in deplorable condition, based on contemporary evidence,” Hardy said.

The animals’ fur was matted, they were underweight and they were sleeping atop piles of hardened feces, Castaldo said.

Castaldo said Baylee’s fur was so matted with her own excrement that “it took several hours to clean her up.”

Jones is the attorney for Chestnut Rose Adventures, an Akron not-for-profit organization that uses horses to try to help troubled children by showing them how caring for animals can produce interpersonal skills helpful in everyday life for overaggressive or fearful young people.

Spike, the now 21-year-old horse taken from the Gonzalez farm, is a therapy horse at Chestnut Rose, Jones said.

“My client has had possession of this horse since September 2009, since it was brought back to reasonable health by Dr. Best,” Jones said.

He argued to the judge that canceling the adoptions on technicalities “would discourage adoptions and lead to a lot of needless euthanasia.”



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Hotel upgrades lift spirits in Falls tourism district

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NIAGARA FALLS – Two new hotel plans for downtown Niagara Falls have tourism officials smiling.

But proposals to build a new hotel at the city’s main entrance and renovate another at the edge of Niagara Falls State Park are only the most recent signs of tourism progress downtown.

Slowly but surely, the hotel stock in the downtown tourism district – once outdated and shabby – has been coming back to life, spurred by state incentives and continued investment around the Old Falls Street strip.

“I think people are seeing continued investment, public and private, and a continued upward trajectory of the city’s tourism district, and I think people want to take part in that, to be part of something bigger and better,” said Christopher J. Schoepflin, president of USA Niagara Development. “That’s where we’re headed.”

The most recent step was Niagara Falls hotel owner B.F. Patel’s plans to transform a former office building on John B. Daly Boulevard into a Courtyard by Marriott Hotel.

Patel, who owns a hotel on Niagara Falls Boulevard, has yet to complete a hotel project of such stature. But in his application for county tax breaks earlier this month, he said he is optimistic about the $6.6 million project.

That was welcome news to government leaders who long to change the entryway to the city off the Robert Moses Parkway, where tourists are greeted by crumbling houses and a large swath of vacant land.

“We have a continued focus on upgrading all parts of downtown, but the entryway into the city is really our front door,” Schoepflin said. “So we want to convey that it’s a waterfront city, that it’s a city in a park, that we take care of our assets, and that it’s warm and welcoming.”

Another key area lies on the outer edge of the state park, where tourists are greeted by vacant or outdated souvenir shops and a Comfort Inn – The Pointe hotel that is in need of upgrading.

Owned by the Glynn family, the hotel will receive a $4 million upgrade to prevent Choice Hotels from revoking the Comfort Inn flag.

While some say the project doesn’t constitute a major investment, it could be the first sign that the Glynns – who own the Maid of the Mist – are ready to invest in the Old Falls Street area after a few years spent fighting to keep their boat tours afloat.

Tourism officials say that both projects are a welcome addition to the downtown tourism corridor, which for years has featured an abundance of budget hotels and a lack of higher-end offerings.

The hotel boom, by many accounts, started a decade ago with the Seneca Niagara Casino and its four-diamond, 26-story hotel dominating the skyline.

Officials say the casino helped spur a $34 million upgrade to the city’s main conference hotel, the Holiday Inn Select on Third Street. The hotel, which sits directly across Third Street from the casino, was converted into a Crowne Plaza in 2006.

Five years later, the hotel was further upgraded into a Sheraton, with some much-needed street-level retail along Old Falls Street, including a Starbucks Coffee and T.G.I. Friday’s restaurant.

Millions more have been spent since then to upgrade other surrounding hotels downtown, including:

• A complete renovation of the former United Office Building, once vacant and slated for demolition, into the boutique Giacomo Hotel & Residences.

State officials call the 40-room upscale hotel – which also features rental apartments, office space and ground-level drinking and dining – “a symbolic project that hearkened a new attitude downtown.”

• Two projects by Canadian developer Faisal Merani, whose family successfully developed many of the high-rise hotels on the Canadian side of the border.

A few years ago, Merani turned the former Inn on the River near the North Grand Island bridges into a Four Points by Sheraton.

The renovation included a ground-level Italian restaurant and a deck with a view of the upper Niagara River.

Merani has also completed a $5 million renovation of the Holiday Inn on Rainbow Boulevard near Centennial Circle.

He plans to add a ground-level restaurant to the area but has not yet found a suitor.

• A small expansion of the popular Red Coach Inn, which sits on Buffalo Avenue just 1,500 feet from the American Falls.

Nearly $1 million was spent to create 12 new boutique hotel rooms in a former office building adjacent to the inn, which was featured on the NBC hit television show “The Office.”

• A two-story addition, façade improvements and a street-level Italian restaurant at the Super 8 Motel on Rainbow Boulevard. The motel sits at the entrance to the city of the Robert Moses Parkway, across Rainbow Boulevard from the Courtyard proposed by Patel.

The incremental upgrades have given way to larger hotel plans – currently in the works – that officials see as potential game-changers for the downtown tourism product, including:

• A proposed renovation of the former Hotel Niagara by Harry Stinson, who has gained a reputation as the “condo king” of Toronto with an unconventional development style and a few successful big-time projects north of the border.

Stinson said he plans to restore the Hotel Niagara to its original grandeur while expanding the size of its hotel rooms. He is aiming to open the hotel this summer, though the building shows few outward signs of repair.

• A planned Hilton Garden Inn across First Street from the new Culinary Institute Niagara Falls. The upscale hotel would feature ground-level retail along Old Falls Street on prime land that was the site of a hot-air balloon ride.

Buffalo’s Mark E. Hamister was selected as the preferred developer more than a year ago but has yet to sign a development agreement for the property. Officials say they expect the deal to be cemented later this month, and Hamister expects to break ground later this year.

• A planned upgrade of the Days Inn near the Rainbow Bridge into a Courtyard by Marriott. The highly visible hotel has not been significantly upgraded since it became a Days Inn more than three decades ago.

Development officials say the city still has a need for upscale hotels, and officials will pursue three to five new brands, some in the Hyatt and Hilton families.

They say the market calls for up to 1,000 additional rooms in the next four years.



email: cspecht@buffnews.com

Legislature calls on state to amend law on housing allowances

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LOCKPORT – The Niagara County Legislature has passed a set of resolutions urging the state to allow direct payment of welfare recipients’ housing allowances to landlords if the clients don’t use the money for rent.

Legislator Owen T. Steed, a Democrat who represents Niagara Falls, cast the only votes against the resolutions at last week’s meeting.

“The slumlords are going to get this money now, and do what with it?” Steed asked.

He and Minority Leader Dennis F. Virtuoso, D-Niagara Falls, who voted for the resolutions, said it would be better for the state to require advance inspection of housing to be rented to welfare clients, as the federal government does for subsidized housing.

The measures, originally introduced by Virtuoso at the request of a group of landlords, were tabled in the Republican-controlled Community Services Committee last week.

Legislator Cheree J. Copelin, R-Niagara Falls, said she checked with State Sen. George D. Maziarz, R-Newfane, to make sure it would be all right to pass the measures.

“Maziarz has assured me that legislation will be pursued in the Senate,” Copelin said.

But she also said current law already has a process that gives landlords a chance to obtain direct payments.

Copelin said if a welfare client fails for two months to spend his housing allowance on rent, the landlord is allowed to make a written request to Social Services for direct payment.

Legislator Paul B. Wojtaszek, R-North Tonawanda, suggested that landlord groups should compile “a list of habitual offenders.”

In other matters last week, the Legislature approved the selection of Dawn M. Timm, county environmental science coordinator, as interim head of the Refuse Disposal District.

Timm is to be paid a stipend of $8,500 this year and next, in monthly installments, to govern the district’s day-to-day operations. That’s on top of her regular salary of $68,028.

Timm succeeds Richard P. Pope, who resigned Jan. 2 after being suspended with pay for two months because of alleged violations of the county’s policies on employee residency and private use of county vehicles.

Pope also had a policy clash with County Manager Jeffrey M. Glatz, who has recommended shutting down the district’s only active landfill.

The Legislature also voted to create an additional $47,070-a-year conflict defender post to add more manpower to the mandate to supply attorneys to represent poor defendants. Steed and Virtuoso voted no. Legislator Jason A. Zona, D-Niagara Falls, was absent.

The Legislature approved the allocation of 150 kilowatts of discount electricity through the county’s Empower Niagara program to Marketing Imprints of North Tonawanda.

The company plans to purchase the former Gardei Printing plant at 525 Wheatfield St., North Tonawanda, and expand into it by April 2014, adding five new jobs to the 15 people it already employs.

Marketing Imprints will invest $945,000 into the acquisition, equipping and renovating the vacant building. The sale of the electricity will bring the county $46,580.

The lawmakers also approved a new email policy, under which all of the county’s incoming and outgoing emails will be electronically stored for six years.

The Legislature also accepted a $400,000 state grant to cover some costs of shifting North Tonawanda police dispatching to the county Sheriff’s Office, and a $300,000 state grant to help pay for lobbying efforts to protect the Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station from closure.

Also, J. Les Myers of Lockport was appointed deputy fire coordinator for the Technical Rescue Team.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

From the blotter/Police calls and court cases, Feb. 12 to 19

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Niagara Falls police received a number of reports of overnight car break-ins and damaged vehicles.

In the 1500 block of LaSalle Avenue, a man said his mother-in-law’s car alarm went off at 2:45 a.m. and he saw a gray or silver minivan speeding away. He said the someone had broken a front passenger window to gain access to the 2009 Chevy Traverse and took a DVD player from the dash, five DVDS and a speaker box. Total loss and damage was $1,410.

In the 1800 block of Niagara Avenue, a 2000 Buick LaSabre had a passenger side vent window broken between 1 and 5 a.m. and a CD player was taken from the dash. Total loss and damage was $750.

Another man said his alarm went off at 5 a.m. in his 2000 Dodge Durango while parked in the 1700 block of Ferry Avenue. He said he went out to check but found nothing wrong. Later that morning he found that a small driver’s side rear window had been broken, but nothing was stolen. He told police he may have scared off the suspect.

A driver’s side rear window was also broken overnight on a 1999 GMC Yukon parked in the 1600 block of Eighth Street. The owner said the stereo, along with speakers and amp were stolen and the steering column was broken. Loss and damage $900.

In the 1300 block of LaSalle Avenue, an owner of a 2011 Chevrolet Equinox said between 4 p.m. Monday and noon on Tuesday someone tried to pry open the driver’s side window, cracking the window and damaging the door, but did not gain entry. A rear driver’s side window was found broken, but nothing was stolen. Damage was estimated at $600.

Another vehicle was damaged in the 200 block of 72nd Street. The owner told police that someone slashed the front driver’s side tire on her 1999 Volkswagen Jetta sometime between 8 p.m. Monday and 8:30 a.m. Damage was estimated at $200.

• Niagara County sheriff’s deputies investigating a call of drug activity stopped a man in the Town of Lockport who admitted he was carrying his own “personal tree” of marijuana.

Charges of fifth-degree criminal possession of marijuana are pending against Michael Smith, no age available, of Chestnut Drive, who was found carrying suspected marijuana in his backpack at 8:45 p.m.

Deputies said they found Smith coming out of a shed on Chestnut Drive and could smell the strong odor of marijuana. Smith was wearing a backpack where deputies said Smith told them he was carrying his own personal tree of marijuana that he smokes.

Smith was released pending a lab report but was advised of pending charges, according to deputies. The case remains open for future, deputies said.Eric A. Nelson, 24, of Woodlawn Avenue, Niagara Falls, pleaded guilty in Niagara County Court to fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, a felony that could bring him up to four years in prison.

County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas scheduled sentencing May 1 for Nelson, who was arrested when crack cocaine was seized during a May 17 police raid on the home of co-defendant Eddie L. Smith, 28, of 18th Street, Niagara Falls.

Charges are still pending against Smith, Assistant District Attorney Theresa L. Prezioso said.

• A man who took part in the Sept. 19 theft of a laptop computer from an apartment on South Street in Lockport avoided jail time.

Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas placed Jeremy Russell, 20, of Main Street, Lockport, on three years’ probation for second-degree criminal trespass and petit larceny.

In December, co-defendant Joseph J. Nicholson, 19, of Prospect Street, Lockport, pleaded guilty to third-degree burglary and was assigned to the judicial diversion program of court-supervised drug treatment. Each man was to repay the victim $700.Two television sets, cash and a wireless router were stolen between 11:45 a.m. and 4 p.m. from a house in the 400 block of 26th Street in Niagara Falls.

The resident told police that she was in City Court during that time. The items, which included $58 in cash, were gone when she returned home. She told police she suspects two people she knows who had access to the house. She said one was in court with her, because she had him arrested and said he had left court before she did. The total loss was $1,158.

• A Niagara Falls man was turned over to Town of Niagara police after being arrested on a pair of outstanding warrants.

Aldeaz M. Lewis, 24, was taken into custody just after 4 p.m. while walking near his 17th Street home, police said. He had been sought on warrants issued by the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office for charges of endangering the welfare of a child and obstruction of breathing. No further details were available.

• A Newfane business owner told sheriff’s deputies that she suspects a former business associate of stealing various hand and power tools, as well as $1,000 worth of cash and checks, from her place of business.

The victim told deputies she had been renting space at her salon to a local man, who operated a barber shop out of the location. She said she had earlier received a text stating that he did not want to be in business with her any more. The following day, he moved out his property.

The owner told deputies she later found a door unlocked at the business, and inside noticed that property had been scattered about and a folder containing cash, checks and a zip drive holding business information, was missing. Also gone were various hand and power tools. In all, about $1,250 worth of property was missing, deputies said, and the victim indicated that her former associate may have been involved. An investigation is continuing.

• Tools and electronic items worth $1,200 were stolen from a Lindbergh Avenue garage – the second such break-in since October, Niagara Falls police said.

Police said a door to the garage was kicked in after Wednesday, and a variety of tools, two jack stands, an amplifier, compact disc player and speakers were stolen. During the first burglary, a set of tires was stolen, police added.

DEC officer will share the wild life of dealing with wildlife

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WILSON – Did you hear about the guy who performed mouth-to-mouth on a deer?

Richard J. Lang didn’t hear the story; he saw it happen. The incident is one in a treasure trove of stories he collected in his 34 years as a state Department of Environmental Conservation officer. And he plans to share the wealth when he speaks at 7 p.m. Monday to the Wilson Historical Society.

The meeting is free and open to the public, and will be held in the Society’s Barnum Building, 645 Lake St.

Lang retired as Royalton town supervisor in December 2011 after four years at the helm. He also is a retired wrestling coach – at Royalton-Hartland for 10 years and at Newfane High School for 19 years. He’s a gentleman farmer and now a writer, having published his career memoirs, “Behind the Badge: The Life of an Old-Time Game Warden,” last fall.

He retired as a DEC officer in 2003 and will discuss many of the experiences he detailed in his book at Monday’s meeting.

He said one of his favorites involves the aforementioned deer. Lang was three months into his new job and was called to the Erie Canal, where dogs often chased deer into the water.

“I was 28 at the time, and deer were not considered the nuisance they are now. There were hardly any in Niagara County back then, so they were sacred animals,” he said.

“We were able to get a rope around the deer’s neck, but then it tightened up, and the deer was having difficulty breathing. Another guy that was with me grabbed the deer and gave it mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. I witnessed it, but I never would have done it myself. But that deer came around, and we were able to release it on the other side of the canal.”

“Another time, I remember it was the day after Halloween, and I was patrolling the Tonawanda Game Management area, and a car pulled into an abandoned driveway,” he said. “I pulled up next to him and asked him if he was hunting, and he said, ‘No.’ I asked him if he had any guns, and he said, ‘No.’ I asked him to open his trunk, and there was a full-sized human skeleton.”

Lang recalled taking the young man to the nearest phone – there were no cellphones back then – and calling Akron High School and asking if any of the school’s science classes was missing a skeleton. It turned out that it belonged to the biology class.”

“The principal was waiting for him,” he said of his detainee. “He was out for a prank, and then I came along.”

Lang, who grew up on an Orchard Park farm, said he knew at age 14 that he wanted to learn more about conservation officers when he earned his hunter safety certificate at the Erie County Fair. He joined the DEC in 1969 and has become a game warden historian, collecting memorabilia along the way.

“I called other retired officers when I was writing this book and asked them what they thought of the job and would they do this job again, and one guy said, ‘I wouldn’t walk, I’d run to get the job back,’ ” Lang said. “I was the first one from New York State to write a book about it. There’s been books written about the job by guys in other states.”

“I’d get up and go to work, and it was something different every day,” he said. “It was a fantastic job, and I’d recommend it to anybody.”



email: niagaranews@buffnews.com

Red Cross responds to a spike in fires to aid Niagara County families

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When the American Red Cross is busy, it usually means that something bad has happened.

That has been especially true the past month in Niagara County.

An unusual spike in fires has put the Red Cross chapter that serves Erie and Niagara counties into action, responding to seven fires since Feb. 1. Volunteers from the Disaster Action Team provided immediate emergency assistance to 28 people affected by these incidents.

“We say we usually respond to a fire a day, for the entire region. So to have one county [with that many fires in a month] that is high, especially for that area,” Jay A. Bonafede, communications coordinator for the American Red Cross serving Erie and Niagara, said of the recent spike.

Bonafede said fires are more common this time of the year as people try to find alternate ways to warm up their homes but said it is unclear why there were more fires this month.

“There is no normal month. We need to be prepared when we are needed. That’s why we have volunteers on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week. That’s why we need constant support, not just when people see a major disaster that hits the news. These are a disaster, too,” Bonafede said.

The list of fire in Niagara County include:

• Feb. 1: Seven people were displaced by a fire at an apartment complex on Lafayette Avenue in Niagara Falls.

• Feb. 9: A single mother and her child needed help following a fire on Pound Street in Lockport.

• Feb. 12: Volunteers responded to an apartment fire on State Street in Middleport, assisting two adults from separate units.

• Feb. 13: Two adults and one child were given assistance after a fire on Niagara Street in Niagara Falls.

• Feb. 15: Two adults were assisted after a fire on Mapleton Road destroyed their home.

• Feb. 16: Two adults and three children were assisted after a fire destroyed their home on Ashland Avenue in Niagara Falls.

• Feb. 18: Two adults and five children were assisted after a fire in their home on Ohio Street in Lockport.

“It seems that no one was injured in these fires, so we are glad just to be able to provide humanitarian assistance to help these folks out,” Bonafede said. “It is definitely a traumatic event for these people, and we respond to it like a disaster. For those families they may have no place to live, no clothes to put on to go to work or school the next day. They may have no food to eat because it was all destroyed in that blaze that took away their home. So it is absolutely a disaster and a traumatic experience for them.”

The local Red Cross spends an average of just over $1,000 to assist a family of four in a single house. Assistance typically includes vouchers for temporary housing, food and clothing, as well as providing emotional support for those displaced by the fire.

The affected families then meet with caseworkers in the days following their respective disasters to work out a longer-term recovery plan.

“We have amazing support, but we need to raise money to do our job. The need is constant. We can be called at any time,” Bonafede said.

To make a donation to help families, visit www.redcross.org, call 1-800-REDCROSS, or text the word REDCROSS to 90999 to charge a $10 donation to your cell phone bill.

Donations cannot go to specific families, but can be directed specifically to the Erie and Niagara County chapter online at redcross.org/buffaloniagara.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Creating robots is a ‘team thing’ for students in Newfane, Lockport

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NEWFANE – High school students working on perfecting their Frisbee skill isn’t exactly news.

Designing and building robots to do it? That’s different.

And that’s precisely what students at Newfane and Lockport High Schools have been doing for the last six weeks as they prepare for a regional competition set to begin Thursday in Rochester, with their eye on a much bigger big prize in St. Louis in late April, if they qualify.

The Newfane students, who call themselves the “Circuit Stompers,” and the Lockport students, who go by the name “Warlocks,” participate in the FIRST program – For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology. The program began in 1989 in Manchester, N.H., as a means of organizing competitions for teams who design, prototype and build a robot to perform a specific task.

It has grown to include more than 45,000 students and nearly 2,000 teams throughout the world and is supported by local corporations, educational and professional institutions and individuals.

“The relationship between the mentors and the students is really valuable,” said Newfane sophomore Trevor Noon. “This is sort of like an apprenticeship. I don’t know of anything else like it anywhere.”

Newfane’s team this year includes 19 students in Grades 9 through 12 and about a dozen adult volunteers, including current and retired technology teachers, an English teacher and local professional engineers, as well as parents. Lockport, a much larger school, boasts about 40 students.

“This is an outstanding opportunity for any kid [who] is technology-oriented,” said William L. Neidlinger, a retired Newfane technology teacher who has been with the program for about a dozen years. “There is so much there for them to learn and to grab a hold of.”

“This is a team thing,” Neidlinger added. “We each have our own things to do, and each is equally important. The adults are kind of the glue for the team that holds things together and helps things run smoothly. We like to have the professional engineers work hand-in-hand with the kids – that’s what the program is all about.

“Kids can see that a person does this for a living, and when he or she heads off to college, they might know that this is what they want to do.”

Trevor said he’s considering a career in electrical engineering or computer science, and he thinks the FIRST program “is a great steppingstone.”

Teammate Ryan Driscoll said he’s thinking about aerospace, chemical or mechanical engineering. And he believes his role as president of the club has boosted his confidence as a leader.

“I used to be an introvert, but now I can talk in front of groups and take charge,” he said. “I’d like to go to MIT, and I met some people from MIT at the world championship last year.”

It was Newfane’s ninth trip to the big show, and Ryan, a freshman at the time, recalled that it was “overwhelming.”

“There were 400 teams there, and I met kids from Brazil and from Colombia,” he said. “We did fairly well.”

The highest the Newfane team has ever finished in the world competition is third place in 2003. In 2009, Lockport won the Finger Lakes Regional contest and was a semifinalist in the world championships.

“The competitions are like something you’ve never seen,” said Susan C. Vasko, an engineer with Delphi Thermal Systems in Lockport. She and her husband, fellow Delphi engineer Robert A. Vasko, have been involved with the Lockport team for several years. She said the participants manage to walk a fine line between cooperation and competition.

“It’s like an Engineering Olympics,” she added. “The kids learn many things from very good professional people about cooperation, troubleshooting, fixing things and pressure … And, the adults learn a lot too, because to design, prototype and build something in six weeks is not a trivial matter.”

Newfane and Lockport students interested in joining their teams must apply and interview for a spot because the program teaches leadership and life skills as well as promotes science and technology, Neidlinger said. Susan Vasko said that the Lockport program is so popular, they’ve had to turn applicants away. She added that team members can earn varsity letters for their participation.

“We start having safety meetings in the fall and meetings to show them how to use the equipment,” Neidlinger said. “Then, everyone in the world learns at the exact same time in early January what the new game and new rules will be for this year’s competition. We then have six weeks to design and build it.”

All teams had to have things wrapped up by last Tuesday, and they won’t see their finished product again until Thursday, when they begin the regional competition at Rochester Institute of Technology, Neidlinger explained. Both schools have also elected to go to a second regional competition, with Newfane headed to Cincinnati and Lockport going to Cleveland in March. Championships for the qualifying teams from around the world will be held later in April in St. Louis.

“I like to call this the ‘March Madness for Math, Science and Technology,’ ” Neidlinger said. “It’s nice to see everyone at the competitions talking and collaborating. We help each other and share parts, if needed. In the real world, you have to form partnerships, and that’s what we do.”

The schools also rely heavily on partnerships they have developed with area businesses. Neidlinger and Vasko both said Delphi and General Motors contribute to their programs, and the school districts help defray their transportation costs. Other local corporations and community groups also have contributed, Neidlinger said.

The Delphi Circuit Stompers were formed at Newfane High School in 1999, and they eventually invited Lockport students and teachers to join them. In 2005, Lockport branched out on its own and formed the Warlocks Robotic Team.

Vasko said it’s not unusual for student participants to return to the program years later as volunteer mentors.

She believes that participation gives students a real boost, whether they are entering college or looking for a career internship. Both of her sons participated: Ryan is now a chemical engineer at Delphi, while Eric is studying to be a chemical engineer on a full scholarship at Michigan State University.

“Our students learn an appreciation for hard work,” she said. “They call it ‘the hardest fun’ they’ve ever had.”



email: niagaranews@buffnews.com

Niagara leaders hope to scale down new public works facility

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LOCKPORT – One of the motivations for Niagara County’s push for a renewed commitment for sharing public works services with towns is the hope of saving millions of dollars on a new Public Works Department headquarters.

Legislator John Syracuse, R-Newfane, said that the $33 million estimated cost of the proposed Junction Road complex could be reduced if the towns would take over many county highway-related functions.

“Perhaps we don’t have to look at buying fleets and putting a roof over them,” Syracuse said. “The Legislature as a whole is uncomfortable with the cost of the Public Works facility.” He also pointed out the reaction when County Manager Jeffrey M. Glatz gave lawmakers the $33 million figure last year.

“I think that was sticker shock for the Legislature,” he said.

Glatz said the sharing should provide savings.

“With this idea going forward, it might not be quite half that,” he said.

The officials made their comments following meeting Thursday of the ad hoc shared services committee, which Syracuse heads.

Scott Sittig, associate director of the Center for Governmental Research, made a presentation about his organization’s background in studying shared service plans.

“It was primarily a meet-and-greet: ‘Based on what you said, here’s what we can do to help,’ ” Sittig said.

He said no proposal or cost was offered to the committee because the panel hasn’t decided what it wants analyzed yet.

Glatz said he supports the idea of an independent study, but first he wants the county to apply for the state’s Local Government Efficiency Grants to help pay for it.

If they are received, the county likely would issue a request for proposals for a study.

Sittig said most localities “have found the state is very willing to support feasibility studies.”

He said he contacted Syracuse after reading a newspaper article about the county’s shared services commitment.

The Center for Governmental Research is a not-for-profit organization, founded in Rochester in 1915 with a bequest from George Eastman, the founder of Eastman Kodak.

Syracuse said the center has worked on numerous shared services efforts all over the state, including a recent consolidation of 911 emergency phone service in Cattaraugus County. The shared services effort has focused so far on snowplowing, even though the towns already plow more mileage on county-owned roads than the county Highway Department itself.

Syracuse said he plans to attend upcoming meetings of the county’s town supervisors and highway superintendents to gauge interest in sharing road responsibilities, including plowing and pavement maintenance, with the county.

“We’re not looking to mandate snowplowing on anyone,” Syracuse said.

Supervisors Joseph A. Jastrzemski of Wilson and W. Ross Annable of Hartland are members of the committee, as is Town of Lockport Highway Superintendent David J. Miller.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Lions get ready to brrrrrrring the Polar Bears to Olcott

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OLCOTT – Organizers of the Polar Bear Swim for Sight are keeping an eye on thick, encroaching ice at Olcott Beach, as well as next Sunday’s weather forecast for the Olcott Lions Club’s premier event.

They’ll have help from Town of Newfane employees in chipping away that thick layer of ice on Lake Ontario’s rim to make way for waves of swimmers. And they’re hoping Mother Nature provides the sun, knowing that sun will bring out even more participants, and more participants translates into more dollars raised for area charities. Last year’s event brought in about $18,000.

“Even though we had an unusually mild winter last year, on the day of the Polar Bear Swim, it was the coldest day of the year,” recalled William J. Clark, who has run the event for the Lions for more than a decade. “Numbers were down a bit because we’ve found that people really like it sunny.”

Festivities kick off with tailgating from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and swim registration held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Polar Bear Queen Contest is slated for 1:45 p.m., with check-in at the Lions Pavilion in Krull Park. At 1:50 p.m., swimmers under the age of 18 enter the water, followed by the official start of the Swim for Sight at 2 p.m., with access times scheduled in 15-minute intervals.

The organization has raised nearly $200,000 in 12 years by encouraging participants to collect pledges and donations, by offering a commemorative T-shirt to those paying the $20 entry fee, and by offering a hoodie to those donating at least $100.

That money helps a variety of charities, from Equi-Star Therapeutic Riding in Newfane to eye disease and diabetes research and treatment.

Lions Clubs International is the world’s largest service club organization, with more than a million members devoted to bettering their communities. The Olcott Lions, celebrating 50 years of service, started the Swim for Sight 44 years ago.

“It operates the same as a walkathon, where people collect pledges and often join a group of friends or get together with people from the workplace,” Clark said. “We’ve found this first Sunday in March works well, even though it can be very cold, because it’s the end of winter and people know spring is around the corner. They like to come out to see friends they haven’t seen over winter.”

The Lions Club also allows other community groups to set up booths offering food and drink.

“This adds to the flavor of the event and the community groups get to keep their proceeds,” Clark said.

The Olcott Lions Club has only 24 members and they rely on help from family and friends and other volunteers to pull off the annual event. Last year’s event drew 787 participants, Clark said.

“Some of these swimmers are the sons and daughters – and even grandchildren – of swimmers from the 1970s and ’80s,” he said. “I never swam in it myself, but I’ve probably been to every one of them since it began. It takes a special character to do it and about half of our swimmers have done this before. You should see them, smiling ear to ear, as if to say, ‘I did it.’ It’s fun.”

For more information and to print a registration form for the event, visit www.olcottlions.org or look for them on Facebook.



email: niagaranews@buffnews.com

With spring approaching, big changes in the air

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Lindy Ruff may be a guy out of a job.

But he also may be something a little less downbeat:

A symbol.

It’s true. Everywhere you look these days around the Buffalo region, there are striking changes – and fresh beginnings.

With spring a month away, the zeitgeist in Western New York these late-winter days seems to be this:

Things are happening, at long last. Momentum seems to be building.

And maybe Buffalo is coming, after a long hibernation, a little bit into its own.

Ruff is one of those signs. Though many people in the area said Friday how much they loved and respected the longtime Buffalo Sabres hockey coach, they agreed the move undeniably represents a fresh start, one that matches the freshness of the Sabres ownership, under Terry Pegula, still only two years old.

Beyond hockey, many Western New York groups and organizations are also turning a new page. Institutions are starting over, and unveiling clean slates.

The Buffalo Bills have a new coach lined up for this fall. Canisius basketball – winning once more – is seeing what can happen when you bring in new blood.

Andrew J. Rudnick’s lengthy tenure as head of the Buffalo Niagara Partnership – a post he has held for some 20 years – will end in June.

The Albright-Knox Art Gallery and the Buffalo History Museum have seen changes of leadership. UB is just two years into a new president. The Buffalo News saw the departure of a longtime publisher and editor, and gained new ones.

There are fresh faces in Congress, too, and in other places in government and civic life.

The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo has a new bishop.

And, oh yes: spring is just a month away – but across the landscape, construction cranes have beaten the crocus and daffodils at their own game.

New buildings are springing up in downtown Buffalo again, in the harbor area, the burgeoning downtown medical campus, and elsewhere.

All this adds up to a fresh new feeling among many in the Buffalo region.

“It’s a start,” said Hamburg resident Mike O’Brien, an account manager for a pharmaceutical company. “It’s definitely headed in the right direction.”

The change is one that many residents said they have waited a long time to experience.

“I’ve lived here all my life,” said Jessica Chojecki, 24, a restaurant employee from Lake View. “It’s good to see the differences. To see change finally happening – after all the talk about it – is great.”

Even people who aren’t from Buffalo, but visit the city, see and feel the difference.

“I get a sense that there is a new optimism,” said Stan Ball, a Sudbury, Ont., resident, who said he visits Buffalo a few times a month for shopping, concerts and professional sports events.

“I like what I see. I really like what’s happening with the waterfront downtown,” Ball said.

It all raises a serious question: Is Buffalo suddenly in a new era when things that would have been laughed at before – or pooh-poohed out of hand – seem newly achievable?

The new medical campus on the edge of downtown is taking shape before our collective eyes.

The reborn Erie Canal area showed itself off during Navy Week and other events related to the region’s War of 1812 commemorations last fall.

And, at a public forum held last week at Erie Community College’s City Campus about a proposed new domed stadium project for the city’s waterfront area, the comments of dozens of residents attending the session reflected such an upward shift in optimism.

“This is the time to be great,” said one resident, who described himself as a Buffalo Bills season-ticket holder of 28 years’ standing. “Now’s the time to take a stand and do this for Buffalo.”

“It’s our time,” the man urged. “Let’s go with it.”

Erie County Legislature Chairwoman Betty Jean Grant echoed the positive sentiment.

“If you build it, they will stay,” Grant said of the feasibility of the $1.4 billion idea for keeping the Bills in Buffalo. “We really need to think about the future.”

Some injected a note of caution, however.

Crystal and Matt Gifford of Blasdell, who like to travel, said that visiting other cities quickly pokes a hole in their optimism about the pace of change and development here.

“We were just out of town – we were in Ohio and Pittsburgh – and we were like, ‘Why do we live here?’” said Crystal Gifford, a nurse. “There were so many things to do. It was like, ‘This is a true city.’ ”

Matt Gifford added: “Until I see the buildings go up, I don’t believe it.”

Some of the new excitement might have to do with a shift toward youth: younger people, younger ideas and ways of thinking.

The new director at the Albright-Knox, to take one example, is 42. Janne Sirén has just come to Buffalo from Helsinki, Finland.

Ruff, by contrast, had been in his coaching job since 1997.

“I think you’re going to see a younger generation that really wants to do good things for Western New York,” said Chojecki, a Canisius College graduate who travels to Poland for a month each year to do charitable work.

“They’ve seen this [region] growing up – and they really want to make changes.”

In the news conferences and interviews surrounding Ruff’s departure, the undercurrent of thirst for change and new energy surfaced again and again.

“We have to move forward,” said Thomas Vanek, a Sabres player and alternate captain, in stories in The News last week. He spoke of a “new philosophy” that might help the team succeed.

T.J. Brennan, another player, spoke of the “positivity” of the move, in news reports.

Here’s one dilemma, however.

Buffalo has been talking about a second chance at greatness for what seems like forever.

If, now and at long last, things are actually happening, will we be able to recognize that shift for what it means?

Or are we shaped by our last 50 years as a community – a half-century of decline in population, and all-too-frequent dwindling of hopes?

A people used to long winters, gray Februarys, and cold climate, might we be just a little bit slow to realize the signs of incipient spring?

“As someone who’s never going to leave,” said O’Brien, the Hamburg resident, “I really want things to happen here.”

“I don’t want to buy into it so much – and then be disappointed.”



email: cvogel@buffnews.com

Sword swallower gives a sharp performance

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Sword swallowing just isn’t the career it used to be.

You’re always having to carry around X-rays to prove it isn’t a trick. The job opportunities have waned since the days of the circus sideshow. And then there’s the Internet effect.

“I don’t know how to put this nicely, but every idiot with the Internet now thinks that they can be a fire eater or whatever,” said Vanessa Neil, who claims the title as Canada’s only female sword swallower. “With ‘Survivor,’ suddenly bug eating was not so scary to people because they’d seen it.”

Bug eating was Neil’s gateway into the world of carnival oddities. Then came eating crushed light bulbs and walking on broken glass, until she finally made her way up to the pièce de résistance of the freak show – sword swallowing.

It was that staggering skill that brought her to Ripley’s Believe It or Not Museum in Niagara Falls, Ont., on Saturday to mark World Sword Swallower’s Day along with 33 others who performed the feat across the continent.

Yes, there’s a day set aside by the few-dozen sword swallowers left in the world to show off their talents, explain the intricacies of dropping a 24-inch piece of steel down your throat and let people know that sword swallowing isn’t just a thing of the past.

And it didn’t fail to impress. It took just 15 seconds for Neil to place the 2-foot sword to her lips, slide it into her body and take a bow before removing it, but it elicited loud gasps and cheers from the crowd.

“It was amazing,” said Natasa Djermanovic, after watching Neil slide a gleaming metal sword through her esophagus. “It just dropped into her stomach. I was about ready to pass out.”

Neil, 37, never tires of that reaction. The Toronto native spent years learning to control her gag reflexes so she could crank up her talents from eating bugs and crushed glass to pushing a very long, but dull, sword into her stomach.

“I can’t really think of anything else I would compare it to in difficulty,” Neil said. “With glass eating, you just kind of have to be stupid enough to try it and smart enough to chew it up enough that you don’t kill yourself. Sword swallowing is something you really have to want to do. It’s not something you can just pick up.”

Well, there is one thing that may be tougher. She was there to watch Nik Wallenda walk across Niagara Falls on a tightrope last summer and concedes that would be more difficult.

“With a sword, you have to maintain that focus and awareness of your body for possibly an entire minute. It takes maybe 30 seconds to get it down, take a bow, pull it out, and that’s that,” Neil said. “But to do what he’s doing, you have to maintain that focus for a lot longer.”

The 4,000-year-old art of sword swallowing – which is believed to have started in southern India – hit its peak in popularity in the United States in the early 1900s, when every circus had a sideshow, said Dan Meyer, a full-time sword swallower who planned to perform in Baltimore on Saturday to mark his profession’s day.

Meyer is on a mission to spread the word about sword swallowing. And he almost makes it sound easy.

You know, just repress the gag reflex in the back of your throat, find the proper alignment into the epiglottis, through the upper esophageal sphincter, repress a second reflex, go past the heart and the sternum, through the diaphragm, past the liver and into the stomach. Voilà.

“Piece of cake,” Meyer said with a laugh. Then he tells you about the 10 to 12 times a day he practiced for four years before he got his first sword down. He estimates that was about 13,000 unsuccessful attempts. Today, he travels to about 20 countries a year with a motivational message of conquering the impossible.

“For me, it was a way of pushing the limitations of the human body and doing something that I thought was 99 percent impossible,” Meyer said.

He doesn’t discount the dangers. Performances have landed him in the hospital twice – once, he said, when he punctured his stomach while trying to swallow five swords at once and another time when he perforated his esophagus. Like Neil, Meyer starts every performance with a disclaimer: Do not try this at home.

Neil’s performances still make her husband cringe with worry.

“You kind of just think after that many times, what’s the worst that could happen? That’s when I start to freak out,” said Stuart Mundy, Neil’s husband. “It’s a bit nerve-wracking, but that’s what she does. She’s a professional.”

The two met while traveling in India four years ago. After years of traveling to show off her talents, Neil got married, got a day job and bought a house. Her friends expected some kind of big circus performance at the wedding.

“I walked out in a white silk dress and it was about the weirdest thing I could have done,” Neil said, “because no one was expecting it.”



email: djgee@buffnews.com

GM’s Lockport plant is a survivor

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Leaders and employees at the General Motors Components Holdings plant in Lockport have a lot on their minds.

They are determined to launch their manufacturing of thermal products for new GM vehicles as flawlessly as possible. They have worked vigorously to cut scrap rates and are eager to win more business.

No one is taking anything for granted, but after the Upper Mountain Road plant went through highly publicized struggles in its recent past under Delphi, employees and managers are hopeful of solidifying their status within GM.

“I can tell you right now, the way I feel about the way things are going right now is very positive,” said Michael Branch, who has worked at the plant since 1999 and is now shop chairman of United Auto Workers Local 686 Unit 1. “I think General Motors and the UAW are working more in a partnership mode, and I can tell you from a site perspective, that is definitely how we work here.”

The Lockport auto parts manufacturing plant has survived lots of change – and at times, uncertainty – in the past decade and a half. The complex switched affiliations from GM to Delphi Corp., endured Delphi’s slog through bankruptcy, reduced its workforce, and rejoined GM in late 2009 as part of the automaker’s Components Holdings subsidiary. (Delphi still operates a technical center at the Lockport site.) During the most trying times with Delphi, questions swirled about whether the plant would survive, due to its poor financial performance.

Pat Curtis, who became the GM Lockport plant manager about four years ago, said the Lockport site’s employees have shown they can overcome adversity. “We’re very good at taking on challenges and winning, and I think that’s where this site rises to the occasion.”

Auto manufacturing plants constantly try to attract new work to secure their futures and their employees’ jobs. GM Lockport was awarded a combined $44 million in investment in 2012 and this year to support a number of product launches.

The Lockport site makes products for nearly every GM assembly plant in North America, including radiators, condensers, heater cores and HVAC modules. The complex employs about 1,550 people and makes a huge financial impact on the region.

GM Lockport’s new product launches are the plant’s focus, starting with the Chevrolet Impala. Next will come products for the full-size trucks, the Chevy Silverado and GMC Sierra. “That is by far the biggest product launch site this has seen probably in 10 years,” Curtis said. “It’s half our business, to be frank.”

GM Lockport will also supply products for the new Chevy Corvette, a star at Detroit’s auto show. Products for full-size SUVs such as the Tahoe, Suburban, Yukon and Yukon XL will launch in early 2014.

The Lockport complex on Upper Mountain Road is vast, with 2.8 million square feet. About 1.6 million square feet of that is being used for manufacturing.Some of the vacant space is being used to store engines from a GM plant in St. Catharines, Ont., a task that spawned a dozen jobs at the Lockport site. “It would have been done by an outside company, outside warehouse, so we’re saving the company money by utilizing what we have,” Curtis said. “We’re trying to look at ways we can add value to the company, whether or not it’s for the thermal business. We’re really trying to open up our horizons.”

Similarly, Curtis says the plant’s injection molding lines are a capability GM could tap into for more than just the Lockport site’s current product lineup.

Technology and investment are only part of the story at the Lockport site. Both Curtis and Branch, the UAW leader, say the Lockport plant’s employees have benefited from adopting the “team” concept about two years ago. The plant has nearly 90 teams – some as small as five or six employees, some as large as 15 to 20 workers – and each one’s leader comes from the team.

GM Lockport sets goals for the teams to achieve, and the team develops the ideas for how to meet those objectives, said James Fennell, plant personnel director. In each work area is a five-paneled white board where information is posted and employees gather for updates. The boards keep attention on five topics: safety, people, quality, responsiveness and cost.

“They use these boards every single day, every single shift,” Branch said. “It’s a tool to empower the employees to make sure that they’re making improvements that they want, that they need for the betterment of the site and the membership, right there. It’s a visible thing.”

The team method allows workers to introduce ideas and put them into action, Curtis said. “In the past, it may have been an engineer that went down and said, ‘We think we can do this by changing this.’ Today, the team member says, ‘Hey, I think this can be better. Let’s involve the engineer, let’s involve everybody and let’s come up with the best solution.’”

Mary Ward-Schiffert, a team leader for about one and a half years, says the system “helps to motivate and drive my area.

“What we’ve found is, we make sure that everybody’s involved every day on decisions about what we’re doing,” she said. “When you feel like you have power in your job, it makes you even more motivated the next day to do an even better job.”Curtis said he feels confident about the quality of products coming out of the GM Lockport plant. “What I tell every new hire that comes in is that safety is priority No. 1, the second is quality. The phrase I like to use is, we ship our reputation every day. What I mean by that is, if we send good parts day in and day out, we have a great reputation. One bad part, you ruin your reputation.”

Away from the production floor, GM Lockport is putting all of its employees through a training exercise known as a “simulated work environment.” Workers from departments across the complex – not just production – go through the daylong experience together, six at a time. As the training day unfolds, the team members learn to work together, acting on suggestions to carry out an assigned task in a more efficient, less strenuous way.

“It focuses on the team approach to continuous improvement,” Curtis said. “It’s a real eye-opener for everybody.”

While GM Lockport has lots of new work to prepare for, its managers and employees are also looking further ahead.

“Everybody seems to be striving for the same goal, to get new business,” Ward-Schiffert said. “We all talk about that all the time: new business, new business. We want to be the best. We want our customers to come looking for us. We want to be known for making the best products.”

Curtis said the plant has “a good business plan for the next three years; in fact these programs go out five years. But in the out years, that’s where we need to start developing opportunities. And that’s what we’re doing now.”

GM Lockport hosted a visit from a joint GM-UAW “sourcing review team,” which looks at locations’ capabilities for future work. Favorable reviews from that team matter.

“There were some members on that sourcing team that had been here over the past couple of years, and they said that the improvements and the changes they’ve seen out there have been absolutely fantastic,” Branch said. “And the ones that haven’t been here before were very impressed with everything they saw out there.”

Winning more new work would help fortify a plant that pays big local dividends: $85.8 million in wages, $16.7 million in payroll taxes and $915,000 in property taxes, according to GM.“I think they’re a whole lot better off than they’ve been in a long time there,” said Arthur Wheaton, an auto manufacturing expert at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations in Buffalo.

Part of the improved picture comes from GM’s stronger sales and its ability to sell those vehicles at a “reasonable price,” he said. The plant has also established a more-competitive labor cost structure, and its workers have gone through an “emotional event” like Delphi’s bankruptcy that carries its own lessons. “All the employees know it’s not always gravy, there can be tough times.”

And Lockport’s was one of the few Delphi plants GM chose to keep, Wheaton said. “They were one of the survivors for being a unionized plant in the system.”

Both Branch and Curtis say a good working relationship at the plant between management and the union is essential to winning more business.

“We do have common goals,” Curtis said. “How we get there has been maybe the difficulty in the past. And I think that we are much better at working together to figure out how to get there.”

Last year, the Lockport plant worked aggressively to reduce scrap, improving by 30 percent from the year before. Branch said employee involvement was key. “If you lay out the challenge and let them make their own decisions on how to reduce scrap, it happens. It just happens.”

The Lockport plant improved its scores under GM’s Global Manufacturing System, which tracks plants’ performance. The site started 2012 about 46 percent compliant with GMS, and finished the year at 89 percent compliant, Curtis said. The target this year is to be greater than 95 percent compliant.

Curtis said the Lockport plant has a decades-long heritage to protect and build on, with some fourth-generation employees in its workforce. How does he view the Lockport plant’s position within GM?

“I’m cautiously optimistic,” Curtis said. “We have a lot of challenges ahead, it’s a competitive environment. But again, we’re going to be open to do whatever we can to support the corporation, be flexible and work together to come up with solutions.”



email: mglynn@buffnews.com

Drop-off days reduced amid Refuse Disposal District cost-cutting

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LOCKPORT – The Niagara County Refuse Disposal District will reduce household hazardous waste drop-off days and may close its construction and demolition landfill on some Saturdays.

The district also will haul leachate from its closed Lockport landfill to the City of Lockport wastewater-treatment plant, not to Newfane, in an effort to save money, Interim Director Dawn M. Timm told the district board Monday.

Timm said she expects that the new household hazardous waste policy will double participation, because the new drop-offs all will be on Saturdays.

However, there will be only four during the year: one each at the household hazardous waste disposal sites in Lockport, Lewiston, Niagara Falls and North Tonawanda.

Now, there is one appointment-only date per month at each of the four sites, but only from April through October, Timm said. They have all been on weekdays.

The Saturday dates, which have yet to be chosen, still will be available by appointment only, in line with the district’s state permit.

The district, which used to staff the sites with its own employees, has awarded a contract to the company Clean Harbors to handle the task. Also, it has applied for a $24,500 state reimbursement.

The construction and demolition landfill in Lockport, the district’s only active landfill, currently is open Saturday mornings. Timm suggested that limiting the Saturday hours to May through September would save $3,000 in overtime.

The County Legislature passed an across-the-board 5 percent cut in overtime for 2013. Timm said that if hours are not reduced, she can’t stay within her budget.

Also, Timm won approval of moving the treatment of 2.1 million gallons a year of Lockport landfill leachate. Newfane won the contract last year with a bid of 7.25 cents per 1,000 gallons, while Lockport sought a 14-cent rate.

Lockport has now cut its rate to 9 cents per 1,000 gallons and also is waiving permit fees totaling $725. Timm said the reduced fuel cost for the shorter trips will produce an overall savings estimated at $3,622 a year. Lockport’s rate is locked in until May 2016, Timm said.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Sequester seen impacting border, Buffalo schools

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WASHINGTON – Longer waits at the U.S.-Canadian border, larger class sizes in Buffalo city schools and big reductions in programs for the poor are looming, thanks to a series of automatic federal spending cuts set to take effect Friday, Obama administration and local officials warned Monday as Republicans resisted efforts to replace the cuts with other savings and tax increases.

With the White House and congressional leaders not even really negotiating about an alternative to the $85 billion in cuts set to take effect for the next seven months, lawmakers said they expected the cuts to take effect as scheduled – and the White House made it clear that the public would notice.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano outlined a dire scenario of border backups, while White House aides announced that New York State will lose $79 million in federal school aid this year alone, with Buffalo city schools losing out on $2.54 million.

President Obama issued a blunt warning to governors gathered at the White House, saying: “Congress is poised to allow a series of arbitrary, automatic budget cuts to kick in that will slow our economy, eliminate good jobs and leave a lot of folks who are already pretty thinly stretched scrambling to figure out what to do.”

Republicans countered that the White House was deliberately making the cuts as painful as possible for political reasons.

“There can be savings made at every turn; just take the budget line by line by line like I did in Erie County,” said Rep. Chris Collins, R-Clarence, a former Erie County executive. “You can absorb this $85 billion, and the public would never feel it at all. Again, this president is going to punish the public as a way of placing blame so he can try to get more taxes.”

Obama is demanding more taxes on the wealthy as part of a package that would replace the spending cuts known as “sequestration,” which would total $1.2 trillion over a decade.

Passed by Congress at Obama’s suggestion as part of the 2011 deal to raise the government debt ceiling, the sequestration cuts were designed to be too painful to ever take effect. But now, with the president and Congress again at a stalemate on replacing the cuts, administration officials spent the day Monday outlining how bad they would be.

Given that the first year of the 10-year cuts are being compressed into seven months, administration officials said most domestic programs except Social Security and Medicare would be cut 9 percent in one fell swoop starting Friday, while defense would be slashed 13 percent.

Napolitano said that would mean dramatic cutbacks in border security, forecasting long lines at the nation’s border crossings and airports as her department is forced to cut back the hours of border patrol and customs agents.

“One of the chief complaints I receive whenever I travel to either border is it takes too long to move the trucks across, it takes too long for people in passenger vehicles to get through, and all I can tell you is that, with sequestration, that situation is not going to improve,” she said. “It’s going to go backwards.”

Napolitano’s White House briefing appeared to be part of a wide-ranging administration effort to paint an ugly picture of sequestration’s impact. As part of it, the White House released summaries of how each state would be affected.

The New York summary showed education taking an especially big cut, as the federal government reduces the aid it gives states for educating the disadvantaged and the disabled.

Big-city school districts will suffer the most, with Buffalo city schools likely to lose $2.54 million, according to an analysis by the New York State School Boards Association.

The Buffalo Board of Education recently passed a resolution calling on Congress to redraw the cuts, saying they “could result in large class sizes, fewer course offerings, compromised school safety, loss of extracurricular activities and teacher and staff layoffs.”

But the cuts wouldn’t end there. According to the White House analysis, the cuts would mean that in New York:

• Head Start and Early Head Start would be ended for about 4,300 children.

• About 4,520 low-income college students would lose their federal aid, and 4,150 fewer students would be able to get work-study jobs.

• The defense payroll would be trimmed by more than $60 million through furloughs while military bases in the state would lose $108 million in funding.

And that’s just the start of it. Rep. Brian Higgins, D-Buffalo, warned that $1.6 billion in cuts at the National Institutes of Health would have an impact on research at Roswell Park Cancer Institute, while practically every local government agency that receives federal funds would also take a hit.

“The resulting job losses in education, the life sciences, law enforcement, border security and so on threaten to throw our economy backwards,” Higgins said.

In the face of all of that, Democrats are backing Obama’s preferred solution.

“We propose that companies that send jobs overseas no longer get a tax break to do it,” said Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y. “We propose that oil companies, which get huge subsidies and are making multi-billions of dollars, no longer get those subsidies. And we propose that those whose income is over a million dollars a year pay the same rate as their secretaries. If we do those three things, we don’t have to do sequester.”

Collins dismissed Schumer’s proposal as “typical liberal spend-spend-spend, tax-tax-tax” and added: “Frankly, Sen. Schumer, when it comes to economic policy and small business, doesn’t know what it’s like to run a small business and create the jobs we needed.”

Collins was by no means the only Republican who expressed skepticism about the administration’s worrisome warnings about the looming spending cuts.

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., sent a letter to the Office of Management and Budget noting that while proposing cutbacks on border security, the federal government is also looking to hire an Air Force historian and 10 drivers at the State Department among other apparently non-essential personnel.

“Are any of these positions more important than an air traffic controller, a border patrol officer, a food inspector, a TSA screener, or a civilian supporting our men and women in combat in Afghanistan?” Coburn asked.

Meanwhile, Rep. Tom Reed, R-Corning, accused the administration of engaging in political theater “to try to scare as many people as possible to say we can’t do this.”

Still, Reed acknowledged that a better budget-balancing plan would address long-term fiscal challenges such as Medicare and Social Security, rather than focusing all the cuts on other programs.

Such a better balanced plan may still be in the offing, he said.

“I see us going past the March 1 date, I see pressure developing on the various lines that are going to be impacted, and that will force folks down in Washington on both sides of the aisle to come together to try to come up with an alternative package,” Reed said.

email: jzremski@buffnews.com

Falls detective cites quick confession in girl’s killing

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LOCKPORT – Once his accomplice told police what happened, it didn’t take long for John R. Freeman Jr. to confess to killing a 5-year-old girl, a Niagara Falls detective testified Monday.

Detective Daniel Dobrasz Jr. said Freeman’s admission of involvement in the death of Isabella S. Tennant came “within five minutes of Miranda [rights] being read.”

Dobrasz’s testimony came in a daylong pretrial hearing in Niagara County Court, where defense attorney Robert Viola sought to suppress the confession by Freeman in the Aug. 26 strangulation of the Cheektowaga girl. Isabella’s mother had left her with the child’s great-grandparents, Sharon and Henry Lascelle, of Sixth Street, Niagara Falls.

Freeman, 17, who lives down the street, was a frequent guest and baby sitter at the Lascelle home.

Tyler S. Best, 18, of Barnard Street, Buffalo, a frequent guest at the Freeman home, went to Niagara Falls Police Headquarters on the morning of Aug. 27 to report that Freeman had enlisted him to help steal a wheeled garbage tote and dump the girl’s body inside. He led police to the alley where the tote had been left.

Freeman is charged with murder and Best with a felony count of tampering with physical evidence.

Detective Lorrie Alvarez testified that Freeman’s father, John Sr., freely allowed police to search his house and a vacant building in the backyard, looking for the girl on the morning of Aug. 27.

When officers asked the younger Freeman to come with them to Police Headquarters to talk about what they then regarded as a missing-person case, he did so, and his father made no objection.

Lt. Robert Rosati said Freeman Jr. told him he left the Lascelle home at 11:58 p.m. on the night of Aug. 26. He knew the exact time, Freeman said, because he always left at that hour to go to the Seneca Niagara Casino, where his father is a steward, and walk him home.

Freeman Sr. at first told police that was what they had done that night, but he testified that he later remembered that his son didn’t come to the casino that night, and he found the teenager already home after he walked home alone.

The elder Freeman said he, his son and Best then went to a 7-Eleven store that night for a late snack, but Deputy District Attorney Doreen M. Hoffmann declared that store surveillance video doesn’t show them there at all. “So you were mistaken about what happened seven hours before,” Hoffmann said to Freeman Sr.

The elder Freeman said that he walked to Police Headquarters and asked to see his son but that police wouldn’t let him. He saw Best and his family come in, “and they rushed them right past me,” Freeman Sr. testified.

“He said Bella had been hurt and John had been involved in it,” the father said.

Hoffmann said what Best really told him was that the girl had been killed.

Viola had the younger Freeman tested two weeks ago by a neuropsychologist, whose data should be ready by next week, as he plans a possible mental health defense.

County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III said he will issue a ruling on the admissibility of the confession by April 4, and he wants a written report on the psychological testing by that date, too. Viola said that it should be ready.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Eugene G. Miller, author and professor of languages

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May 30, 1931 – Feb. 24, 2013

Eugene G. Miller of Sanborn, an author and longtime professor of English and German, died Sunday in Our Lady of Peace Nursing Care Residence in Lewiston. He was 81.

Known as Gene, Mr. Miller was born in Madera, Pa. He attended high school and college classes taught by the Societas Verbi Divini, or Society of the Divine Word, a Catholic missionary order.

Mr. Miller served two years with the Army, stationed in Germany.

He earned a bachelor’s degree from Niagara University in 1956 and a master’s degree in education from the University at Buffalo in 1972. He began his career as a substitute teacher in the Niagara Wheatfield Central School District, before teaching German at Hobart College in Geneva and at UB.

He was a professor of English and German at Niagara County Community College for 24 years, retiring in 1993 as a professor emeritus.

He was fluent in German and Latin, and also spoke some Spanish, Italian and French.

Mr. Miller received two grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities to study German at Tufts University in Boston, Mass., and rhetoric at the University of California at Davis. He also wrote two books: “Writers and Philosophers: A Sourcebook of Philosophical Influence in Literature,” which he co-authored with Edmund J. Thomas, and “Essays on German, American and English Literature.”

In retirement, he kept up with daily reading and writing, and his love of the arts.

Music was another interest; he told a Buffalo News reporter in a 2008 interview that if there had been a program in music when he attended Niagara University, that would have been his major. A fan of jazz, he had played the harmonica since high school. He also played the saxophone. In his later years, he took up the guitar.

Survivors include his wife of 52 years, the former Roseanne Beningo; three sons, Scott E., Brett E. and Curt E.; a brother, Joseph; and a sister, Suzanne Treichler.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10 a.m. Thursday in Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, 4671 Townline Road, Ransomville.

Man who took his life in falls identified as college student

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NIAGARA FALLS – A man who witnesses said took his life by walking into the Niagara River above the falls at Goat Island has been identified by Houghton College.

College officials said on their website that they were “deeply saddened by the presumed death” of Gregory Young, a 21-year-old student from North Carolina who was a junior in theological studies.

State Parks Police searched unsuccessfully by air and on land looking for a body Monday, according to State Parks Police Maj. David Page.

While the body had not been recovered, evidence suggests that Young took his own life by entering the rapids above the falls Saturday evening, police said.

“We are shocked and saddened by the untimely loss to our community,” Houghton College President Shirley Mullen said on the college website. “Greg Young was an accomplished young scholar with a promising future in theological study. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and his many friends and colleagues during these difficult days.”

A special chapel service was held Monday and the counseling center at the school offered extended hours for those who were struggling with the loss. Counselors and student life staff were also made available.

email: nfischer@buffnews.com

In Falls, a grisly murder-suicide aftermath

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NIAGARA FALLS – A city man apparently strangled his girlfriend and slashed her throat before fatally shooting himself Monday night in her 29th Street home, police said.

The deceased were identified as Peter G. Daniels, 37, and Elizabeth R. Wilson, 31, a former resident of Bath. Their bodies were found in Wilson’s home at 548 29th St. Daniels lived across the street with his parents.

Investigators confirmed that the two had an on-again, off-again relationship for several years. Some of Daniels’ neighbors, friends and family members told police that there were some unreported domestic issues and that Daniels might have been stalking Wilson, said Detective Lt. Michael Trane.

Officers arriving at the home Monday night found a grisly scene with a large amount of blood.

“They weren’t both killed the same way. He had her blood on him. He killed her with a knife, which was found at the scene,” said Capt. William M. Thomson, chief of detectives. He said officers found Wilson’s body with knife wounds to the throat and Daniels’ body with a gunshot wound to the head.

Daniels’ family members were the first to discover the apparent murder-suicide, just after 7:30 p.m. Monday.

His mother told police that her son, who lived in her home across the street from his girlfriend, had just left her house and that shortly afterward, she heard a gunshot.

Thomson said the mother alerted her other son, Philip Daniels, who called police when he found the two bodies.

Police found Peter Daniels’ body in a seated position, propped up against a wall in the dining room with a pump-action shotgun between his legs.

Wilson’s body was lying in the same room.

Niagara County Coroner Cindy-Lou Joyce said that it was too early to determine what time Wilson was killed.

However, it appeared that she was dead before Peter Daniels went across the street to talk with his mother, Thomson said.

Trane said Daniels’ mother was concerned about the way he was behaving.

“He was only in the house for a few minutes, but he had blood on him,” Trane said. “His mother called some family members, and while she was doing this, she heard [gunfire] from across the street.”

Both Trane and Thomson said it was unclear what led to the violence.

“The two people who can tell us best are gone,” Thomson said.

Trane said neighbors had reported hearing arguing coming from the house that night.

“After the fact, neighbors told us that they thought his behavior was weird and that he appeared to be stalking her,” Trane said. “We’ve never had any calls of any domestic issues between the two of them, but based on our interviews of mostly Elizabeth’s friends and family, there were some domestic issues that were never reported to police. Certainly we’d like to know if there were previous threats.”

Trane added, “If any man or woman feels as if they are in danger is a domestic relationship, please call the police or a friend. If you know somebody who is having domestic issues and are afraid to call the police, please call for them. We don’t know what the cause was in this case, but there had never been a call – to us.

“You can’t second-guess now, but in the future, for other people, it couldn’t hurt to get the police involved.”

Daniels had received numerous honors as a bodybuilder, but Trane said there were no signs of steroids, needles or any other pharmaceuticals in his house.

“The medical examiner is currently doing toxicology on the body,” Trane said. “Other than rumor and conjecture, we have no reason to believe he was on steroids.”

At Primerano Fitness, where Daniels trained, an employee who asked not to be identified told The Buffalo News that Daniels was a member of the Natural Muscle Association and participated only in regulated, natural contests, where members are strictly tested for drugs before participating.

The employee said Daniels had been scheduled to participate in the Olympus contest for bodybuilders in three weeks.

Daniels was a member of the Army Reserve and had a son.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Man charged with beating 2-year-old daughter

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LOCKPORT – A Cheektowaga man was arraigned Tuesday in Niagara County Court on a seven-count indictment accusing him of beating his 2-year-old daughter in Niagara Falls Jan. 21.

Bradley P. Zadul, 33, of Wagner Street, was ordered held in lieu of $75,000 bail set by County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III. A tentative trial date was set for Aug. 12.

Assistant District Attorney Heather A. DeCastro said Zadul also is awaiting trial in Murphy’s integrated domestic violence court on a charge of kicking the girl’s mother in the abdomen while she was pregnant with another girl, who is now seven months old. The woman had a restraining order against Zadul.

DeCastro also accused Zadul of trying to prevent the woman from testifying against him through a series of harassing text messages. Murphy said, “It looks to me an awful lot like witness intimidation and witness manipulation.”

Zadul served 3 1/2 years in prison for a 2006 Erie County burglary, including a parole violation. DeCastro accused him of stealing guns from a law enforcement officer in that burglary and said they are allegedly stashed in the home of another woman with whom Zadul had a child. Assistant Public Defender Ryan Hanna invoked Zadul’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in regard to that issue.

Sex offender pleads guilty to two felonies

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LOCKPORT – A Level 2 sex offender pleaded guilty in Niagara County Court Tuesday to failing to register a change of address and possession of powdered cocaine.

Jason M. Klinger, 37, of Hewitt Parkway, Lewiston, was promised a sentence of no more than 2 1/2 years in state prison when he returns before County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas May 7. She could have given him up to 6 1/2 years. Also as part of the plea deal, a probation violation on Klinger’s previous conviction was dismissed.

He was living on 15th Street in Niagara Falls when a probation officer found him in possession of 760 milligrams of cocaine during a March 9 home visit. Klinger failed to inform the state of his move to Lewiston in September, as required by law.

Klinger went on the sex offender registry after pleading guilty in 2011 to a reduced charge of attempting to possess child pornography. He was placed on six years’ probation at the time.
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