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Counting on new workers as immigration debate brews

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In the hallways of the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus and on the farms of Niagara County, Washington’s brewing debate about immigration reform isn’t about “amnesty,” or about the fear that someone from far away will come to America to do us harm.

It’s about jobs – and creating more of them.

“I can personally relate to this issue,” said Yakov Kogan, who came to the United States in 1996 and now serves as CEO of Cleveland BioLabs in Buffalo. “If we get this bill, we will be able to attract the best and the brightest, the best educated, and they will be ready to go and start doing research the next day. It will fulfill a need and allow the U.S. to be much more competitive.”

While Cleveland BioLabs faces a shortage of U.S.-born researchers, Oscar Vizcarra, a Peruvian immigrant who owns Becker Farms and Vizcarra Winery in Gasport, faces a farm worker shortage that, he said, the immigration bill will correct.

“With this bill, I can plan for future expansion,” Vizcarra said.

The immigrants who head Cleveland BioLabs and Becker Farms say federal legislation is needed to fix a broken American immigration system that makes it too difficult for strivers from overseas to come here to do jobs that Americans seem to not want to do.

Getting an immigration bill passed, though, will be a heavy lift in a deeply divided Congress that’s newly shaken by the actions of two immigrants who are very different from Kogan and Vizcarra: Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings.

Even as police continued the hunt for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, warned that the tragedy in Boston would and should influence the immigration debate.

“While we don’t yet know the immigration status of the people who have terrorized the communities in Massachusetts, when we find out, it will help shed light on the weaknesses of our system,” Grassley said at a Senate hearing. “How can individuals evade authorities and plan such attacks on our soil? How can we beef up security checks on people who wish to enter the U.S.? How do we ensure that people who wish to do us harm are not eligible for benefits under the immigration laws, including this new bill before us?”

One of the lead authors of the immigration bill, Sen. Charles E. Schumer, quickly noted that the nation would actually be safer if its 11 million undocumented immigrants were able to come out of the shadows, as they could under the immigration bill.

“In general, we’re a safer country when law enforcement knows who was here; has their fingerprints, photos, et cetera; has conducted background checks and no longer looks – needs to look – at needles through haystacks,” said Schumer, D-N.Y. “In addition, both the refugee program and the asylum program have been significantly strengthened in the past five years such that we are much more careful about screening people and determining who should and should not be coming into the country.”

The Boston bombing is just one of the stumbling blocks in the way of the bill, which sets out a difficult 13½-year path, laced with $2,000 in fines and an English-language requirement, that could eventually lead to citizenship for undocumented aliens.

Critics of the bill call that amnesty – a free pass for people who broke the law.

“This legislation is all about satisfying the demands of illegal aliens and their advocates for amnesty and providing business interests access to low-wage foreign labor,” said Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, an anti-immigration group.

But labor is just what Buffalo’s high-tech firms and lower-tech farms are clamoring for.Born in Russia and raised in the American way of innovation, Kogan brought Cleveland BioLabs to Buffalo in 2007. At the time, it had 25 employees, but now it has 85 – and that could be just the start, he said, if the federal government lifts its strict limits on how many highly educated immigrants can settle in the U.S.

The current H1-B visa program for skilled workers offers “no flexibility” and handcuffs employers from hiring some of the best researchers, Kogan said. For example, because of the current cap on such visas, one highly skilled, would-be Cleveland BioLabs worker had to endure “another year of waiting” before coming to the United States.

Under the immigration bill, though, that cap would go from 65,000 visas per year for highly skilled workers today to at least 110,000, and possibly up to 180,000 if the demand for such workers is great enough.

Allowing more highly skilled workers into the country “is a very serious issue” at the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus, said Matt Enstice, its president and CEO.

And it’s a serious issue, too, for Moog Inc., the aerospace company based in East Aurora, said Richard A. Aubrecht, the company’s vice chairman.

“We’re bringing people from our facilities all over the world to our headquarters to understand the Moog culture” and other aspects of the company, Aubrecht said. “As a global business, it’s absolutely critical. We just have to do it to compete. Yet we experience severe delays” in getting visas for such workers.

Beyond that, Aubrecht said that the highly skilled workers that America now shuts out could be tomorrow’s entrepreneurs.

“It makes no sense,” he said, adding that if skilled engineers and researchers can’t start companies here, “they’ll do it someplace else.”Still, the idea of allowing more highly skilled immigrants into the country has its critics. While employers say they can’t find enough qualified Americans in the “STEM” – science, technology, engineering and math – fields, a recent study completed by the liberal Economic Policy Institute found “more than a sufficient supply of workers available to work in STEM occupations.”

“Even in engineering, U.S. colleges have historically produced about 50 percent more graduates than are hired into engineering jobs each year,” the study found.

There’s less dispute over the fact that the nation doesn’t have enough farm workers. About 70 percent of the nation’s farm workers are immigrants – but the current visa program for farm workers only supplies 2 to 3 percent of the needed workforce, according to the Agricultural Workforce Coalition, which is pushing for a more open door for farm workers.It’s a problem that resonates on the farms of Western New York, said Vizcarra, who estimated that 50 to 60 percent of farm workers now are undocumented immigrants – who sometimes get carted off by immigration officials, leaving farmers without the workers they need.

To fix that problem, the immigration bill streamlines the agricultural guest worker program to make it easier for farmers to hire workers year-round. That is especially important to the state’s dairy farmers, Schumer said. It also creates an expedited path to citizenship for longtime farm workers.

“This is a big win for farmers and the New York economy,” Vizcarra said. “It means farm workers can get out of the shadows and become productive citizens and taxpayers.”

Dean Norton, president of the New York Farm Bureau, agreed.

The farm labor shortage in Western New York is so acute, he said, that he knows one farmer who has decided against growing cabbage this year, just because he could not find anyone to hire to pick it.

“For years, family farms have faced difficulties finding legal labor that is absolutely necessary to plant spring crops, milk the cows, and harvest the fruits and vegetables,” Norton said.

That reality runs headlong, though, into the concerns prompted by the 11 million people who have entered the country illegally or overstayed their visas in recent decades.Local tea party activist Rus Thompson saw some of those immigrants come into the country when he lived in Mexico in the 1980s, and that experience left him with mixed feelings about the immigration bill.

Those illegal immigrants quickly took all the local construction jobs, forcing Thompson to look elsewhere for work.

Given that experience, he said: “The number one thing we have to do is secure the borders.”

But he was also surprised to see that the immigration bill calls for just that: the largest-ever investment in security on the southern border, and a strict set of goals that must be achieved before broader immigration reform can occur.

That being the case, he agreed with the region’s tech employers and farmers that something must be done on the immigration issue.

“You can’t just deport 11 million people,” Thompson said. “These people have been here, they have roots here, they have families, they have kids. But how we’re going to handle it, I don’t know.”



email: jzremski@buffnews.com

Area shops celebrate Free Comic Book Day

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It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s ... Free Comic Book Day!

“Superman” will be among the thousands of free comic books given away today at participating comic book stores in Western New York as part of Free Comic Book Day, a national promotion that takes place each year on the first Saturday of May to “[spread] the good word of comics to potential readers everywhere.”

“It’s a great way to get comic books into people’s hands,” said Don Wynecoop, owner of Don’s Atomic Comics & Collectibles on Transit Road in Lancaster. “It’s a smart promotion. It gets people excited.”

Here’s how it works: Sponsoring publishers offer 50 different comic book titles at drastically reduced prices – around 20 cents to 50 cents per copy. Store owners order and pay for the reduced-price comics, then hand them out free to people who visit their shops.

All of the most popular titles, such as “The Walking Dead,” “Batman,” “My Little Pony” and “Star Wars,” are on the list. Any other given day, the comics would retail for up to $5.

Wynecoop spends a “couple hundred” dollars on a variety of comics and lets people take three titles each. It’s a small price to pay for the free advertising and buzz that surround the event each year – especially since many patrons linger and shop, even though no purchase is necessary to snag the freebie.

“I sell easily four or five times what I do on a regular day,” Wynecoop said.

The promotion also brings in lots of new faces, many of whom become regular customers, store owners said.

Sales of comic books have fallen since their heyday in the 1960s, competing for attention with television, computers and video games. Comic book stores have struggled as more readers begin viewing comics digitally on e-readers and the Internet.

Free Comic Book Day drives traffic to stores and introduces new generations to printed comics. Many of the free titles are geared toward young children, such as “Sesame Street,” “Spongebob” and Disney’s “Tinker Bell.” Indeed, store owners say they see more children in the store on Free Comic Book Day than they do all year.

“It’s a good way to introduce people to comic books, to remind people that comic books still exist,” said Paul Bene, owner of House of Fantasy Comics and Games on Pine Avenue in Niagara Falls.

In addition to Wynecoop’s and Bene’s stores, participating shops include Queen City Bookstore on Main Street in Buffalo, Seeley & Kane’s on Elmwood Avenue in Kenmore, Collector’s Inn on Delaware Avenue in Kenmore, and Halley’s Comics and Games on Oliver Street in North Tonawanda.



email: schristmann@buffnews.com

Buffalo Niagara now a ‘seller’s market,’ realtors say

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Increased demand and an ongoing slowdown in homeowners listing their houses for sale continue to force selling prices up in the Buffalo Niagara region.

A big drop in inventory in March drove the median sales price higher, according to the latest data from the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors. The number of homes for sale fell 19.8 percent from a year ago, down to 4,401.

That’s the lowest level for any month since February 2010, when the market was on a steady rise from the depths of the recession. The inventory has fallen by at least 15 percent for each of the past 12 months, compared with a year earlier.

The cause is a combination of sales activity that drains the inventory and a drop in new listings that would normally replenish it. New listings fell 8.9 percent in March to 1,488. So far this year, they are down 6.1 percent to 3,810, and they’ve declined in 10 of the last 12 months.

Meanwhile, the demand among buyers is growing, as reflected in multiple offers for many homes and bidding wars above the asking price.

“This is the hottest spring market in five years in real estate in Western New York,” said Philip L. Aquila Jr., general manager of residential real estate offices for M.J. Peterson Corp. and former head of the regional multiple listing service.

“Multi-offers are flying in and out. The time on market is dropping. The listings are dropping because they’re selling fast.”

While the number of closed deals fell 3.9 percent in March from a year ago, to 648, it’s up by the same percentage so far this year, to 1,770.

Pending sales jumped 9.5 percent to 998. That’s the highest level for any month since last May and the third-highest since April 2010. And it’s up 27 percent from March 2011. So far this year, pending deals are up 1.8 percent, to 2,349. Pending sales refer to deals that have been signed but not completed. Home sales typically take about 60 days from contract to closing.

“It is now, right now, a true seller’s market,” Aquila said. “The sellers are in control because there are less listings, and the buyers are out like May flowers, because the rates are [low].”

In turn, the demand is propping up prices on a slow but steady climb. The median price of $117,750 in March was up 3.9 percent from a year ago and up 12 percent from two years ago. However, it’s been as high as $130,000 last June.

Similarly, the average price rose 0.7 percent to $139,177 and is up 10.8 percent from two years ago. But it’s down a notch from February and is well below its four-year peak of $158,299 last June.

“First, tightened inventory levels combined with strong demand are fueling price gains in many areas,” BNAR said in its report. “Second, consumer demand is shifting from distressed properties to conventional homes. Third, record-low mortgage rates and rising rents are supporting housing recovery.”

The activity means homes are spending 85 days on the market, down 9.6 percent from a year ago, while the inventory equals 5.3 months’ supply at the current pace, down 25.4 percent. The duration of the supply has fallen by at least 15 percent in each of the last 12 months and is now down to its lowest level for any month since February 2010.

“Things are going crazy. It’s a hot market. The action’s out there, and that’s what counts,” Aquila said. “It’s been increasing every year as we’ve come out of the recession.”

But he cautioned that “it’s not going to last” too much longer, because interest rates will likely start going up, “if not by the fall, certainly by next year.”

BNAR reports figures for all sales handled by Realtors, who are members of the trade group, through “arms-length” transactions in the eight-county area of Western New York, plus some sales in Monroe and Livingston counties.

email: jepstein@buffnews.com

Elizabeth C. Tower, 93, philanthropist, gifted artist

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Feb. 23, 1920 – May 2, 2013

Elizabeth C. “Liz” Tower, a local philanthropist and artist whose work hangs in numerous museums and distinguished private collections, died Thursday in her East Aurora home. She was 93.

Born Elizabeth Clarke in Mount Vernon, she was the daughter of the late Emma Vought Clarke and Gilmore David Clarke, who was dean of Cornell University’s College of Architecture.

She was raised in Pelham and educated at Cornell, where she received her degree in English and where she took several drawing courses.

She met her husband, Peter Tower, at Cornell and married him in August 1942 in Great Barrington, Mass. The couple moved to Youngstown the same year and lived there for more than 30 years.

They moved to Buffalo in 1972 and then to East Aurora in 1988.

In December 1990, Mrs. Tower and her husband co-founded and served as trustees of the Peter and Elizabeth C. Tower Foundation, a family foundation.

Mrs. Tower, over her lifetime, was “a voracious reader, avid gardener and environmentalist,” according to family members.

“Most of all,” they said, “ ‘Liz’ was an artist.”

Up until she lost her ability to see, Mrs. Tower painted, crafted collages and even jewelry out of objects she found, including bones and safety pins.

“Everything – from the extraordinary to the ordinary – informed her art,” family members said.

She participated in many art shows across the region.

Besides her husband of 70 years, who, until his retirement, was president of C.J. Tower and Sons, Mrs. Tower is survived by two daughters, Mollie Tower Byrnes and Cynthia Tower Doyle.

A memorial service will be at 1 p.m. June 1 in Burchfield Penney Art Center, 1300 Elmwood Ave.

Spring comes bouncing back

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Farmers and boaters. Golfers and roofers. Dogs and the people walking them.

Absolutely everyone is enjoying the perfect weather here – except, perhaps, those who love to complain about the weather. For them, we offer this headline from Friday’s Buffalo News: “Minnesota, Wisconsin buried in deep snow.”

And by Friday, we mean yesterday.

In Buffalo, on the other hand, our forecast as far as the eye can see is the same as the week just passed: nothing but warm golden circles, with maybe a puff of cloud tossed in for accent.

“Warm and dry,” is what Jim Mitchell from the National Weather Service has to say. “The first changes won’t come in until late in the weekend of next week, when we could be a little cooler and a little wetter.”

In meteorological terms, we are “under an Omega block,” Mitchell says, “and we’re in the sweet spot.”

Sweet indeed. About 500 miles away, Midwesterners can look forward to continued wet and cold, although the snow is expected to give way to freezing rain and sleet.

Here, we can boast of being above average, as far as temperatures are concerned, with the highest marks going to the coming weekend with daytime temperatures in the high 70s.

“For this time of year, we should be in the low 60s,” Mitchell said. “We’re measuring at 15 degrees or so above normal.”

This is not record-breaking weather; highs would have to flirt with 90 degrees for that. Instead, this is destination weather – and for anyone in the vicinity of local waterways, that is the destination.

And they can’t wait.

The Small Boat Harbor, south of downtown on Fuhrmann Boulevard, will be opening a week early, Wednesday instead of May 15. Even so, some sailors can’t wait.

“They have actually been launching their boats down there in the past few days,” said Douglas Hartmayer, spokesman for the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, which manages the harbor. “They don’t mind.”

Boaters arriving at the harbor for the first time will notice improvements this season – new decking, a new launch ramp, more picnic tables and restroom facilities, for starters.

“Mother Nature is doing her part, and we’re doing our part,” Hartmayer said.

Along the Buffalo River, diners were basking in the sunshine Friday outside Liberty Hound at Canalside. They have been out there all week, and seats will be filled this weekend, too.

“We had been worried about the weekend early this week because we heard it might rain, then we saw that it was going to be sunny and in the 70s,” said manager Jessamyn Springer. “We’re very excited about that.”

Near where the river flows into Lake Erie, you can smell the fresh blue paint that is shining on the decks of the Miss Buffalo II, newly arrived from her winter port at Rich Marine and being readied for her first charter cruises, scheduled to start May 14.

Landward, planting season no longer feels like a distant dream. A worker on a compact Kubota excavator was turning the soil in the flower beds at Erie Basin Marina, while another raked by hand. You could hear the hoe scraping and clinking against small stones, much different from the thunk and thwack gardeners heard trying to move dirt in their yards a few wet weeks ago.

Shoppers and strollers were out along Elmwood Avenue, still transitioning from spring to summer. Linda Matt, owner of Positively Main Street on Elmwood, said she had seen lots of people carrying coffees, but no ice cream cones yet.

“This weather makes you love Buffalo,” Matt said, echoing the sentiments of practically everyone who could get outside Friday. “The trees are fabulous; the magnolias are out.”

“Everyone is in a great mood, happy, smiling, shopping,” she said. “I personally would be at the park or the beach, but as I am pinned down here, I am enjoying it with the door open and seeing all the happy people.”

Among her customers were women who were in town to visit the Junior League’s 2013 Decorators’ Show House at the Knox Summer Estate in East Aurora. Luckily for them, the house is open weekdays, Tuesdays through Friday mornings from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and evenings from 6 to 9 p.m., along with all day Saturday and Sunday, since this weekend’s “sunny and pleasant” forecast could mean long lines. But, standing in line with nice people on a sunny day in May is not necessarily a bad thing.

Area golf courses, dried out from the wet April, also are doing banner business. At Grover Cleveland Golf Course in Buffalo, golfers are playing dawn till dusk.

Asked if some players are also playing hooky, a spokesman for the course, who wished to remain anonymous himself, chuckled and said, “We don’t get into that. We assume it’s a day off when we see a familiar face.”

The sun also is shining on people shopping for a new place to live, or wanting to sell the one they have.

“Houses look so much nicer in the spring, when you’re looking at them through a buyer’s eyes,” said Tom Fox, who works in Hunt Real Estate’s Williamsville office.

He said it is an encouraging change after the unseasonably dreary weather of the last couple of months.

“The market was kind of quiet in March. Houses don’t look very nice with dirty snow and when it’s gloomy out,” Fox said. “When the flowers are blooming, the houses look better outside, and with the nice natural light, they look better inside.”

And the longer those flowers bloom, the better for local fruit growers, who now have a good chance of recovering from a dismal 2012.

Trees last year bloomed early, only to be bitten by bitter frosts that caused catastrophic damage to apple and cherry crops, and other fruit. This year, the blossoms took their sweet time, a blessing for growers and everyone with a nice ornamental cherry or crab apple tree in their yard.

Also, unlike the typical local spring, the flowers were not followed by heavy rain and gusting winds. They are still there, framed by blue skies and green lawns that are already shaggy even though we just mowed them Tuesday.

And really, have the forsythias ever looked this good?



email: mmiller@buffnews.com

SUV ends up balancing on a guy wire after crash

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The car crash was so strange, police didn’t believe it until they saw it.

But there it was Friday morning, a sport utility vehicle that veered off a Lockport city road, headed for a shopping plaza – and went up a telephone pole’s guy wires.

And the unconscious driver was still in the vehicle.

“We definitely don’t see something like that every day,” said Lockport Fire Capt. Patrick Brady. “The picture speaks for itself.”

Images show the vehicle balancing on the guy wires of the telephone pole, wheels still spinning, its front end completely lifted off the ground at the intersection of Lincoln Avenue and Davison Road.

First responders weren’t quite sure what to do, and the electric company even considered bringing in a crane to lift the vehicle back to the ground.

But fearing that the driver was in danger, the officers used a ladder to climb up into the car, where they saw the driver unconscious. She had passed out after suffering a seizure.

The Lockport woman, whom police declined to identify, was rushed to Eastern Niagara Hospital, Lockport, with minor injuries.

But then came the task of unhitching her vehicle from the wires – with the wheels still spinning.

“It was perfectly balanced on the wires,” said Assistant Chief Michael Seeloff. “Lucky enough, it was front-wheel drive.”

Police wedged pieces of wood on either side of the back tires to stabilize it before calling in a tow truck to ease the vehicle down.

“It came off the same as it went on,” said Brady. “Straight as an arrow, right off the guy wire, and it did almost no damage to the vehicle.”

The incident had almost the entire department amazed.

“I bet if you tried that 25 or 30 times, you wouldn’t get it that way again,” Brady said. “After 20-plus years on the job, I’ve never seen that particular one before. Just an oddity.”



email: cspecht@buffnews.com

Roy-Hart and Barker schools to share superintendent.

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It’s one thing for school districts to share some sports teams and academic programs these days, but sharing a leader is largely untested territory.

That is, until two eastern Niagara County school districts this week decided to give it a go, primarily as a cost-saving maneuver. Both the Royalton-Hartland and Barker school boards this week sealed a deal that will allow them to share a superintendent for at least a year.

With the departure of Roy-Hart Superintendent Kevin MacDonald at the end of this school year to head the Genesee Valley Educational Partnership, the superintendent for the Barker district, Roger J. Klatt, will take on the role for both beginning July 1.

“Each board felt that the conditions were favorable after having already entered into a number of shared initiatives for this coming year,” Klatt said Friday.

In an effort to reduce expenses and increase student access to programs, both districts had earlier agreed to implement a shared wrestling program, as well as sharing a special-education program and the services of a certified business teacher for the 2013-2014 school year.

The districts started working together two years ago when they merged their football programs.

“That collaboration has proved to be a very successful venture between the two districts. The parents and community members have embraced the shared program, as well,” Klatt said.

An educator for 28 years, Klatt has been employed with the Barker district for 13 years, six of them as superintendent.

He will remain an employee of Barker, but the agreement reached Wednesday by both the Roy-Hart and Barker school boards will require each district to cover 50 percent of his annual $149,652 base salary and benefits.

There is another example of shared sports programs in Erie County, where the East Aurora School Board approved a plan that would allow students from Holland Central High School, who have been without a football program, to try out for East Aurora’s team, effectively merging programs.

Sharing superintendents is not unheard of in New York State, Klatt said.

“I believe there are already one or two [school districts] in the Adirondacks that share a superintendent, but they have a smaller combined population than what either Barker or Roy-Hart have,” he said.

Barker has a districtwide enrollment of about 900 students, and Roy-Hart has about 1,400. Typically, districts that seek to share a superintendent are smaller, Klatt said.

“It’s not rare, but it’s new to our area, and because it’s a unique concept, both districts decided that it would be best if we entered into this agreement for just one year. We’re hopeful that it becomes a manageable situation and that I will be able to manage each district effectively,” he said.

“Being separate districts, they each have their unique circumstances and goals that are unique to each district. The hope is that I will be effective in meeting the separate goals established by each district, as well as meeting the needs of the students of each district and the respective communities.” he added.



email: hmcneil@buffnews.com

No date in sight for third Robie Drake murder trial

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LOCKPORT – The prosecution is trying to get rid of the defense attorneys.

The defense is trying to get rid of the judge.

And Robie J. Drake remains in his cell in the Niagara County Jail, awaiting a third attempt to convince a jury he didn’t mean to kill two of his fellow North Tonawanda High School students in 1981.

Drake, now 48, was 17 when he killed Amy Smith, 16, and her boyfriend, Steven Rosenthal, 18, as they kissed in Rosenthal’s rusty 1969 Chevrolet Nova in a dark factory parking lot off River Road in North Tonawanda on the night of Dec. 5, 1981.

Drake testified that, armed with a rifle, he went out looking for abandoned cars to vandalize, and he didn’t realize the Nova was occupied until it was too late.

However, juries in 1982 and 2010 rejected that version of events, concluding that Drake was close enough to see the victims and convicting him of two counts of second-degree murder.

As the third trial, ordered by an appellate court, is awaited, Assistant Public Defenders Christopher A. Privateer and Joseph G. Frazier are trying to get State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. to recuse himself from the case, which he presided over in 2010.

They raised many objections to Kloch’s continuing to handle the case, ranging from negative statements he made about Drake’s conduct at sentencing in 2010 to Kloch’s past employment as North Tonawanda city attorney. Also, the defense notes, Kloch’s law clerk, Ronald J. Winter, was an assistant district attorney. However, he was hired after the first trial and left before the second trial, said Assistant District Attorney Thomas H. Brandt.

Brandt argued that nothing Kloch or Winter has ever said or done constitutes a reason for them to leave the case.

Brandt, who prosecuted Drake in the 2010 trial, said the Public Defender’s Office should be taken off the case because two prosecution witnesses were represented by public defenders in their own criminal cases more than 20 years after the killings.

This creates a conflict of interest for the whole public defender staff, he argues. The matter didn’t come up before because Drake had private attorneys in his previous trials.

All of these issues are scheduled to be argued in person before Kloch on May 23. No date for the third trial has been set.The killings of the two teens in 1981 shocked the region.

Amy Smith was shot twice in the back of the head. Steven Rosenthal was shot 14 times and also was stabbed in the chest by Drake after the shooting.

Drake was arrested after driving the Nova to a nearby landfill, where police said they caught him trying to stuff Smith’s nude body into the trunk of the car.

Investigators noticed that every bullet Drake fired went through the passenger side window; not one struck a door or fender. And a forensic report concluded that the angle of impact of the bullets changed slightly during the attack, indicating Drake was walking toward the car as he fired.

The two juries that have heard the case had the option of convicting Drake of reckless manslaughter instead of murder, and they declined to do so.

A second-degree manslaughter conviction now would be a ticket home for Drake, who has long since served enough time to cover the 30-year maximum sentence for two counts of that crime.

After his 1982 conviction, Drake was sentenced by Niagara County Judge Aldo L. DiFlorio to 40 years to life. When that conviction was set aside by a federal court in 2009, Drake received a second trial, held in March 2010 before State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr.

The result was the same as in 1982 except for the sentence. Kloch gave Drake 50 years to life in prison.

The first conviction was thrown out because of prosecutorial misconduct. Then-Niagara County District Attorney Peter L. Broderick Sr. used a bogus expert witness who exaggerated his credentials and sought to show Drake suffered from “picquerism,” a purported mental disorder that gives a person sexual pleasure from shooting or stabbing someone.

The U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City called that “quackery” and concluded that the purported expert committed perjury with Broderick’s knowledge.

The Appellate Division of State Supreme Court threw out Drake’s second conviction in April 2012 because of Kloch’s decision to allow the prosecution to introduce evidence of a bite mark on Smith’s breast, allegedly inflicted after her death. Drake was never charged with any sex crime, so the evidence was both irrelevant and prejudicial, the Rochester-based court found.

Another point raised by the Appellate Division pertained to a note from the jury, asking what would happen if they reached a verdict on one victim’s death but were divided regarding the other victim.

The appellate panel said that note never was shared with the attorneys, but its contents were known well enough that The Buffalo News reported them the next morning. However, a report of the note is absent from the stenographic record.

Brandt cited that article in his written argument to the court, submitted April 26. He also said that he and the defense attorney in the 2010 trial, Andrew C. LoTempio, were personally told by Kloch what was in the note.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Tickets available to North Tonawanda Historic Treasures Tour

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The North Tonawanda History Museum is presenting its biennial Historic Treasures Tour from noon to 6 p.m. June 8.

Tickets are available at the museum, 54 Webster St., and can also ordered by phone or mail. Advance-purchase tickets are $18. Members can buy any quantity of tickets at $15 each. Tickets will be $25 on the day of the tour.

The tickets will reserve a copy of the 114-page tour guidebook, which will go on sale June 10 for $20.

The guidebook can be mailed to out-of-town customers after June 10 for an additional $6 to cover shipping and handling.

Police honor their own

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LEWISTON – Police agencies from Western New York and Southern Ontario will honor the memories of law enforcement personnel who gave their lives in the line of duty during the 16th annual Niagara County Police Appreciation Day Interfaith Memorial Service, beginning at 7 p.m. May 16 in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 400 Ridge St.

The guest speaker for this year’s service will be Niagara Falls Police Superintendent E. Bryan DalPorto.

The host pastor will be the Rev. James Massie.

The event is open to the public.

DalPorto is a 15-year veteran of the Niagara Falls Police Department whose work has included service as a patrol officer and supervisor for the Roving Anti-Crime Unit and narcotics detective. He also has received numerous military awards for his service with the 107th Airlift Wing of the Air National Guard, including honors for his service in the Iraq War. He is the commander of the 107th’s Force Support Squadron.

The service is held during National Peace Week, a time to pay special recognition to law enforcement officers who lost their lives in the line of duty.

Jaime Pabilonia: Left the Philippines to practice child psychiatry in the Falls

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YOUNGSTOWN – In the 1960s, when Jaime Pabilonia finished medical school in the Philippines, ambition drew him to the United States. His connection to waterfalls led him to pick a job at a Niagara Falls hospital and a life in this county.

“I came from a small town that has a falls, a tourist area. … I have a feeling for the falls,” said Pabilonia, 80, a child psychiatrist now practicing at Monsignor Carr Mental Health Clinic in Niagara Falls.

His hometown, Pagsanjan, outside Manila, is famous for its Pagsanjan Falls, a waterfall in a gorge that lands in a natural pool.

“You have to go by boat, by canoe,” he said. “That’s an experience to get there.”

Those famous Filipino falls are, he said, a “tiny drop” compared with Niagara, which he has lived closer to for more than half a century. He remembers the day – Jan. 9, 1961 – when he first climbed out of a taxi in the City of Niagara Falls, just as a snowstorm had dropped two feet of snow.

“Getting out of the cab, I said, ‘What am I getting into?’ ” said Pabilonia. In the half-century that followed, he fell in love and married a nurse, had children, divorced and happened to fall in love again with another nurse, the one who took the same hospital job his ex-wife left open when she moved away.

“It was a blind date, by the way,” he said of his wife, Linda. “We’ve been married 33 years. … We’re doing everything together. Just like a complement to each other. Sometimes it takes time to meet the right person.”

Dancing 18th century-style dances with a group every two weeks at Old Fort Niagara is one of the pursuits he credits for keeping him young.

“How many 80-year-olds are moving around, dancing, doing the jitterbug, the rumba?” he asked.

Growing old, which he prefers to call “growing up,” includes the bother of arthritis and, as the years add up, the urge to leave town to celebrate his birthday.

“Children, grandchildren, they always want to give a big party. So I want to avoid that,” he said. “This coming November, we are going on a water cruise through the Mississippi. I already booked that.”

It is unusual to be practicing child psychiatry at 80. How do you take care of yourself?

I don’t drink. I don’t touch alcohol. I stopped that 40 years ago. I try to avoid medication if I can, even though I’m a doctor. My arthritis now is starting. There is that negative part about growing older. That is what I don’t like. How do I cope with that? I can just hardly move around this morning. That’s tough.

I go gardening as soon as I get home from work. I spend three or four hours in the yard doing what I do best. I belong to the Hosta Society, the Daylily Society. You have to be busy. You have to be active. I’ve been interested in gardening for years now. We have a fountain. We have a pond. We have different kinds of trees, perennials.

Our property across the street goes down to the river. I’m in the kitchen looking at my garden and enjoying the cherry blossoms in bloom right now.

I do Chinese brush painting. I take lessons. I’m involved in a lot of activities that make me feel young.

What do you like about your work?

I am really blessed to be working with children. When I was in medical school, I wanted to be a psychiatrist. Kids are very difficult for a lot of people. They are very difficult to get involved in counseling. It is a really special type of person that feels they can relate.

I like the challenge of working with a child that has many, many problems. I can use art. I like art. I like to paint. I like to draw.

They show it in their actions. They show it in the way that they paint. From there, I can usually get something out of what is ailing them, what is bothering them: “Oh, my mom is so busy.”

They need someone to play with, to be at their level, to throw ball. I use a lot of activities. I enjoy that part, that I am down on the floor with them. Just playing.

Can you tell me about a child whom you helped?

One particular person I started knowing from the time he was 6 or 7. He was diagnosed as an autistic child. This particular child was having difficulty relating. I diagnosed him with autism.

I worked with him from the time he was 7 until he was a teenager. I used art therapy with him. He was excellent in drawing. He was excellent in writing.

At 16, he started working at Wegmans. A job in the vegetable department. You give him a job, and he will do it perfectly. He is excellent. He’s still working, and that was years ago. He graduated from high school. I went to his graduation.

Do you ever go back to the Philippines?

Since I left in ’61, I took my wife and my children back to the Philippines only once. 1985. It’s tough to go back to the Philippines. We have hundreds of relatives. Everyone thinks you’re a millionaire. They expect a lot. Even if you give them $50, they think that’s nothing.

My parents are both dead, and I am an only child. All of my relatives, the majority of them, have moved to the U.S.

Manila is worse than New York City in terms of moving around. It may take you an hour to get across. It’s very congested. It’s hard.

It’s a beautiful country. It’s 7, 000 islands. Some are small. There are only three big islands. We never have snow. The lowest temperature is 40 degrees. The scenery is beautiful. I do Chinese painting that depicts the scenery.

You can go far, if you have American dollars.



Know a Niagara County resident who would make an interesting column? Write to: Q&A, The Buffalo News, P.O. Box 100, Buffalo, NY 14240 or email niagaranews@buffnews.com or mkearns@buffnews.com.

Roy-Hart to hold public hearing on school budget

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MIDDLEPORT – The Royalton-Hartland School District will hold a public hearing to present its proposed $22 million budget for 2013-14 at 7 p.m. Thursday.

The proposed budget represents a 66-cent increase per $1,000 of assessed valuation to an estimated $22.49 per $1,000. It also includes a slight decrease in overall spending, according to Superintendent Kevin MacDonald.

“We’ve made significant cuts in the past four to five years, laying off teachers, and we haven’t hired them back,” he said. “We’ve also had a fair number of retirements, which helps. We are trying to understand the community’s needs and still manage cuts in state aid suffered years ago and not balance the budget on the backs of the taxpayers. We think we’re as bare-bones as we can get.”

Voters will also elect incumbent Daniel Bragg and newcomer Sara Fry in a noncontested race to fill two open seats on the Board of Education.

The public hearing will be held in the high school, 54 State St., to be followed by a regular board meeting.

Polls will be open for the budget and board vote from noon to 8 p.m. in the high school gym May 21.

Wilson high student gets scholarship in memory of domestic violence victim

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LOCKPORT – Brianna O’Donnell, a Wilson High School senior, has been awarded a $250 scholarship by the Victim Assistance Unit of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office, Sheriff James Voutour told The Buffalo News.

He said the scholarship money was donated by a former Niagara County resident in memory of the man’s daughter, who recently passed away and had been a victim of domestic violence. The sheriff said the donor wished to remain anonymous.

The Sheriff’s Office took part in ceremonies commemorating National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, which was observed April 21 to 27 this year.

The sheriff said nationwide ceremonies were conducted to acknowledge the 21 million Americans directly harmed by crime each year and to call attention to the impact crime has on the loved ones of victims. The week also celebrated the hard work of victim service providers who care for the needs of crime victims.

Voutour said he and his entire office remain committed to respecting and enforcing victims’ right and addressing their needs.

The sheriff said Niagara County crime victims or residents who know of crime victims can contact his Victim Assistance Unit at 438-3306.

New dog park to open in Wilson

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WILSON – Betty Haag had a dog – and a wish.

The Wilson resident had visited dog parks elsewhere and decided this quiet lakeside village was just the spot for canines to run free in a safe, fenced park. So a few years ago, she set out to persuade local politicians to give the nod and encourage residents to make donations of time and money.

Thanks to her persistence, the Wilson Dog Park will officially open May 22 in the southeast corner of Calvin E. Krueger Park on Lake Road.

“This is a nice addition to the village,” she said. “It’s on the Seaway Trail and on the Wine Trail. It’s a nice rest stop along Route 18.

“Everybody has just been so wonderful in helping us with this,” Haag said. “Everyone’s trying to donate what they can.”

Haag’s constant companion the past two years, Tommy, a lively white Jack Russell terrier, loves the park, which has invited a few curious canines now that the proper signage has been posted. Mayor Bernard “Bernie” Leiker has also tried out the new surroundings with his two Labradoodles, sisters Kiki and Juko.

The dog park is actually two parks in one, separated by a 6-foot-high fence– one area is designated for big dogs and the other is for small dogs. The park also offers shade and benches, and will someday provide water for thirsty dogs.

Haag recently met with Brian Kerwin, who plans to complete his Eagle Scout project by building agility courses at the park.

“We decided to try and get everything donated and instead of selling bricks, we’re selling sections of the fence, so we’ll have plaques posted on the fence,” Haag said.

Haag had two other committee members helping make the park a reality – Leiker and Gary Pettit. In addition, Town Supervisor Joseph Jastrzemski, who is also coordinator of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Work Program, helped provide the heavy lifting on three visits. His workers helped volunteers cut down dead trees, clear vines and poison ivy, and had the brush mulched and returned to the park, where another resident leveled it.

Jastrzemski said, “This is a tremendous asset to the village and the town, and it will bring people in from all over … Betty’s done a tremendous job keeping the ball rolling on this.”

Leiker concurred, adding, “This is going to provide a place for people to take their dogs for exercise, but it will also bring people into this community, and that could increase local business. Especially in the summer, we have a lot of Canadians that come into town and stay on their boats for days, and now they’ll have a place to bring their dogs, too.”

Leiker said he was convinced of its popularity when he visited a dog park while visiting his son when his son lived in Cincinnati.

“On a Friday night, they had a singles night for the dog owners – a cocktail hour, “Yappy Hour,” and it was kind of fun,” he recalled. “This becomes a real social thing for the dogs and for the people, as well. ”

Haag said there is only one other dog park in Niagara County – one on the plateau of Artpark State Park in Lewiston, which draws patrons and their pets from many surrounding communities. She credited Molly Chamberlain, a founding member of the group that brought the Lewiston park to fruition, in helping guide her project.

“We’re very excited to have something new in the park,” said Leiker. “We have the new Visitors Center, and we will be displaying some new outdoor sculpture artwork there. The park is really getting dressed up. Now it’s becoming a real multi-use park. We want to eventually put a walking path around it, and some exercise stations.”

Haag said she hopes to raise enough money to provide a paved walking path from the new gravel parking area to the dog park to make it handicapped-accessible one day. She figures her group has spent about $21,000 so far, all in donations and in-kind services.

“This will be a forever thing for the community,” she said.

Contact Haag at 751-4146 or at bettyhaag@verizon.net for more information. A 12-inch by 12-inch plaque may be purchased for $100 to be installed in the dog park. A 10-foot section of fence with a plaque costs $300. Checks may be made to the Wilson Business and Professional Association for the Wilson Dog Park, c/o Betty Haag, 220 Bay St., Wilson, NY 14172-9796.

Both sides of the Lower Niagara delight as 4 villages put their history into a book

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Despite being four villages in two separate countries, the communities along the Lower Niagara have a shared history of life along the river.

“From the Mouth of the Lower Niagara River: Stories of Four Historic Communities,” a recently released book, chronicles this common bond “Commemorating 200 Years of Peace Along Our Border.”

In a compilation that was several years in the making, more than a dozen local authors and contributors in Lewiston, Youngstown and the Ontario communities of Niagara-on-the-Lake and Queenston donated thousands of hours of research and writing to the project, using a $29,000 grant from the Niagara River Greenway Commission.

“It’s a unique writing project, and I didn’t tell people what to write,” said project chairwoman and co-author Gretchen A. Duling, of Youngstown, who headed a committee of four writing teams with principal authors from each community.

Each section of the book on each village “reads differently and has its own culture,” she said. “There are connections between each of us that came up that may or may not have been known before.”

She said that the first group of writers began meeting regularly in 2009, both in the United States and Canada, and that all of the authors live along or near the river. “We are kind of like stewards of the river,” Duling said of the writers’ passion to preserve its history. “Whatever happens out there does impact the quality of our lives.”

Duling is a former music teacher and retired gifted and talented programming specialist in the Williamsville Central School District. She has a doctorate in education from the University at Buffalo and two master’s degrees, one in educational administration from Canisius College and the other in creative problem-solving from Buffalo State College.

When she first began exploring the topic, Duling noticed that there weren’t any binational histories, so she gathered writers she knew from both sides of the border, as well as recommendations for others who may be interested in submitting work for the project.

Others involved in the project included her husband, Dennis C. Duling, who has several degrees, including doctorates in social and biblical studies, and is the author of seven scholarly books on religious study. He acted as an editor and contributor for the Lower Niagara book.

Michelle A. Kratts, an assistant librarian and the genealogy and history specialist at Lewiston Public Library, was one of the Lewiston authors, along with co-author and Buffalo News correspondent Teresa Sharp Donaldson. “I was thrilled to have something published of this magnitude,” Kratts said. As part of her job in geneology, Kratts said, she feels a connection to people of the past from the area. In the book, Kratts focused on the Tuscaroras, the Native Americans of Lewiston. “I think Lewiston history is so strongly influenced by the Native Americans,” Kratts said.

With the renewed interest in the War of 1812 because of the 200th anniversary, Kratts said, she spent time researching and writing about the men of the New York militia who refused to fight in the Battle of Queenston Heights. In most history books, they are portrayed as cowards.

“I’ve never really read where people investigated this and found out what was going on,” Kratts said. “I figured out, in my opinion, why they didn’t fight – and they really were pretty brave to have done what they did. I thought maybe I would have done what they did.”

There will be a book-signing with authors from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday in the Book Corner, 1801 Main St., Niagara Falls.

The book is currently available at 30 locations, including major bookstores and historical associations and online at www.buffalobooks.com. This summer, the book will also be available to visitors in Ontario Park concessions and in New York State parks.

All proceeds from the book are donated to local history museums that helped with the research: the Niagara Historical Museum in Niagara-on-the-Lake, the Town of Porter Historical Society and the Historical Association of Lewiston.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

May 5-12/

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PRAYER: The Healing Rooms of Buffalo Niagara is open to pray for anyone who needs physical, emotional or spiritual healing, 7 to 9 p.m., Potters House Christian Community Church, 723 Seventh St., Niagara Falls. No appointment or fee necessary. For more information, call 884-0048.BIBLE STUDY: 7 p.m., St. George Antiochian Orthodox Church, 1073 Saunders Settlement Road, Lewiston. Study will focus on the Gospel of Matthew. For information, call 297-2668.

RECOVERY GROUP: 7:30 p.m., Wheatfield Community Church, 3571 Niagara Falls Blvd. Addiction Conquerors will offer a Life Recovery Group every week to those who are victims of any addiction. the Rev. Pat Lavery, co-founder of the group, will lead. For information, call 553-3794 or visit www.wheatfieldcommunitychurch.org.DEVOTIONAL GROUP MEETING: St. George Antiochian Orthodox Church, 1073 Saunders Settlement Road, Lewiston. Upper Room discussion and devotional at 1 p.m.; Vespers at 6:30; and “Orthodoxy 101,” a meeting designed for those wishing to convert or learn more about the Orthodox faith, at 7. All are welcome. For information, call 297-2668 or email saintgeorgeorthodox@yahoo.com.GROUP DISCUSSION: 6:30 p.m., Mount Olive Lutheran Church. “Step One,” an informal group gathers to discuss various faith-based topics. All are welcome. For information, call 434-8500.



If you would like your event included, send the information two weeks in advance to Niagara Community Calendar, c/o The Buffalo News, P.O. Box 100, Buffalo, NY 14240, fax to 856-5150 or email to niagaranews@buffnews.com.

Niagara County meetings and hearings this week

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The School Board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in the district’s administrative offices, Quaker and Haight roads.The Town Board will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in Town Hall, 4160 Upper Mountain Road, Sanborn.The Town Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Town Hall, 8942 Ridge Road, Gasport.The Village Board will meet for a work session at 6 p.m. Monday in Village Hall, 145 N. Fourth St.• The Town Board will meet for a work session at 1 p.m. Monday in Town Hall, 6560 Dysinger Road.

Also this week:

• The city Planning Board will meet at 5 p.m. Monday in the Municipal Building, One Locks Plaza.

• The town Planning Board will meet for a work session at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Town Hall.

• The Common Council will meet for a work session at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Municipal Building.

• The School Board will hold an executive session at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Board of Education building, 130 Beattie Ave. A regular session begins at 7.The School Board will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Early Childhood Center on Godfrey Road.The Town Board will meet for a work session at 7 p.m. Thursday in Town Hall, 7105 Lockport Road.The County Legislature will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the County Courthouse, Park Avenue and Hawley Street, Lockport.

Also this week:

• The county Industrial Development Agency will meet at 9 a.m. Wednesday in the Center for Economic Development, 6311 Inducon Corporate Drive, Wheatfield.

• The County Legislature Economic Development Committee will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Center for Economic Development.The Common Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in City Hall, 216 Payne Ave. An agenda review session will be held in the city clerk-treasurer’s office at 6:15 p.m.

Also this week:

• The Planning Commission will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in City Hall.The Town Board will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Town Hall, 6570 Campbell Blvd.

Also this week:

• The town Planning Board will host a work session at 7 p.m. Thursday in Town Hall.The Royalton-Hartland School Board will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the High School, 54 State St., Middleport.The Niagara Wheatfield School Board will meet for an executive session at 6 p.m., with the regular meeting and annual budget hearing at 7 Wednesday in the Adult Learning Center at the High School, 2292 Saunders Settlement Road.The School Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Middle/High School auditorium on the district’s Lake Street campus.The Village Board will meet at 7 p.m. in Village Hall, 240 Lockport St.

Casting Buffalo in a new light

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Not long ago, the hulking grain elevators dotting the Buffalo River appeared to many as unwelcome reminders of a faded industrial past.

Now, as several major Canalside projects are under way, they’re a big part of the next grand undertaking for the waterfront.

The old grain elevator across from Canalside’s Central Wharf will be the canvas for a permanent year-round static and kinetic light show that casts a kaleidoscope of colors and images of Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Harbor Development Corp., the state agency that oversees the waterfront, has been putting together the project for some time.

Wednesday it is expected to approve spending $5 million for the first phase that, in addition to the light show on the grain elevator, also includes lighting the Michigan and Ohio street bridges that cross the Buffalo River, two areas of General Mills and the underside of the Skyway. An opening is anticipated for the summer or fall of next year.

And that’s just the first phase of an ambitious project designed to attract national attention.

The second and much grander vision is to illuminate 14 grain elevators in all – 13 along the river, plus the Pool elevator in Lake Erie – as public art. The biggest attraction would be a spectacle with the potential to incorporate 3-D video projection, fire, smoke, sound, pyrotechnics and other special effects onto the old silo across from Canalside, aka the Connecting Terminal, at the edge of the outer harbor.

“This is the new Buffalo. We’re doing things differently now,” said Thomas Dee, executive director of the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corp. “We’re no longer the city that couldn’t do this or do that.

“If all of the grain elevators are lit going up the river and book-ending the outer harbor, it would be like something you haven’t seen anywhere.”

The project represents the convergence of art, historic preservation, regional history and architecture under way on a grass-roots level in recent years, and which Visit Buffalo Niagara, the city’s visitor and tourism bureau, has used to rebrand Buffalo and Western New York.

“It’s a bold statement that says Buffalo has arrived and is staking its claim as a world-class cultural tourism destination,” said Ed Healy, Visit Buffalo Niagara’s vice president of marketing. “Were making an attempt to play in the big leagues here.”

Janne Siren, Albright-Knox Art Gallery’s director, agreed. “This will be a transformative project for the City of Buffalo and our entire region,” Siren said. “It will change how we see ourselves and where we live, and it will change how visitors from near and far see us again. The ‘City of Light’ becomes again the ‘City of Light.’ ”The illumination project is expected to bring activity to the waterfront during off times of the year, driving hotel and restaurant business for a nighttime attraction that could also lure visitors from Niagara Falls.

Ambiances Design Productions, which has drawn international acclaim for its public art display on a grain elevator in Quebec City, the only other project of this scale, would oversee the design and implementation in partnership with Foit Albert Associates and Ram-Tech Engineers.

The Quebec City project – first conceived as a one-year attraction for the city’s 400th anniversary in 2008 and now in its sixth year – has been credited by the Quebec City tourism office as a major driver of tourism and a catalyst for boosting the city’s international reputation.

The “Image Mill” and “Aurora Borealis” productions drew an estimated 200,000 viewers in 2011, nearly 60 percent from out of town, with 80 percent staying overnight in hotels, according to a survey by the tourism office.

Local preservationist Tim Tielman saw the illuminated shows in 2008 and returned the next year with Howard Zemsky, the governor’s point man in Buffalo, and Rick Smith, who owns the collection of grain elevators at Ohio and Ganson streets dubbed “Silo City.”

“It was jaw-dropping. It told a story informed by history. There was a narrative and not just meaningless technical virtuosity,” said Tielman, who leads the Campaign for Greater Buffalo History, Architecture & Culture.

He’s convinced it would be the tourism draw that has so far eluded the area. “People have talked for years about getting some of the people who go to Niagara Falls. Well, this is the type of thing, because of the spectacle of it, and because the Buffalo grain elevators are so otherworldly, that will get people down here,” Tielman said.The Buffalo presentation would be different from the one in Quebec City, said Martin Gagnon, creative director of Ambiances Design Productions.

“The story would be customized to Buffalo’s experience. I want it to be one where people can find something for themselves, and for all ages, and dream and be surprised,” Gagnon said. “We don’t want to just illuminate without a purpose. You won’t see color changes every few seconds. There will be a story that the illumination is based on.”

Gagnon praised Buffalo for not overlooking the grain elevators’ potential. “Sometimes these structures become white elephants, so it’s great that someone decided to give them a second chance in the visual environment of the city.”

Buffalo, where Joseph Dart invented the grain elevator in 1842, had the nation’s largest storage capacity for grain by the first half of the 20th century, when the city was known as the “City of Grain Elevators.”

The colossal structures also had an impact as industrial art on European thought about modernism and architecture. The late Reyner Banham, the noted architectural theorist at the University at Buffalo, famously compared their faded grandeur to the Egyptian pyramids – although many have also seen them as eyesores. But today, only three remain in operation, and demolition and fire have seen several go by the wayside in recent years.Lynda Schneekloth, who edited “Reconsidering Concrete Atlantis: Buffalo Grain Elevators,” once doubted she’d see their revival.

“When I started working on the Buffalo River in the late-1980s with the-then ‘Friends of the Buffalo River,’ it was a lost landscape. The winding and filthy river was dead, the factories and artifacts abandoned,” Schneekloth said.

Now, she noted, there are sustained efforts to clean up the river, new parks have gone in and a new rowing club is operating. Silo City has also become an occasional destination, and there is now a plan to light the grain elevators and bring the once-forgotten relics headlong into Buffalo’s future.

The City of Buffalo, which owns the Ohio and Michigan street bridges and the Concrete Central and Cargill Superior elevators, is on board with the project. So is the state Department of Transportation, which operates the Skyway. The New York Power Authority, which owns the Connecting Terminal and recently spent $2 million for stabilization and remediation, is also supportive.

Most of the private owners have also signed on. General Mills is expected to participate, although Archer Daniels Midland, which owns the Great Northern and Standard elevators, has yet to show interest, a source said.The costs, planners say, are not nearly definitive enough, and will be refined as the process unfolds, but preliminary estimates for all four phases of the project are upward of $20 million. Annual operational costs would range between $700,000 and $1 million, which planners say could be covered by maintenance fees paid by eventual Canalside tenants and through sponsorships.

There will also be hefty utility costs associated with a project of this magnitude, which could also attract sponsors.

The illumination project could also unleash the potential of Silo City, a collection of three elevators owned by Smith of RiverWright, which has been opened to the public over the past year for arts extravaganzas.

The master plan envisions a boardwalk, lighting and outdoor theaters where visitors can watch projections off the Standard and Marine “A” elevators.

Smith said the waterfront agency would have to help financially to meet those objectives, but he’s excited by the scale of the project and what it could mean for Silo City and the “cool young people” he said are drawn to it. “[The plan] celebrates where we come from, and it could be a harbinger of where we can go as long as we use some creativity,” Smith said.



email: msommer@buffnews.com

Erie Canal’s floating libraries inspire Lockport native’s ‘The Book Boat’s In’

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Children’s author Cynthia Storrs Cotten grew up in Lockport and remembers being frightened of the Erie Canal. “I was scared to death of the canal when I was a kid and I don’t know why. It was deep, it was dark water, it was just pretty scary to me.” ¶ Now Cotten has taken a little-known aspect of life on the Erie Canal as the subject of a charming picture book – “The Book Boat’s In,” published by Holiday House ($16.95), with colorful folk art-style illustrations by gifted artist Frané Lessac. ¶ The book, set in the 1830s, tells the story of Jesse, a young boy who loves to visit the book boat, “the R. Edwards Library and Bookstore,” when it stops in his canal town. He finds various odd jobs (sweeping the store, chopping wood for the tavern, running errands for the doctor) to earn the extra pennies he needs to buy a used copy of “The Swiss Family Robinson” the next time the boat stops in town. ¶ Cotten, who lives with her husband in Dumfries, Va., first learned of the “floating libraries” that traveled the canal through an article in the Lockport Union Sun & Journal written by Douglas Farley, director of the Erie Canal Discovery Center in Lockport. “My mother cuts out these articles” and mails them to me, Cotten said. “When I saw this one, I just knew that there was something there.”

The article noted that packet boats of the 1800s competed for travelers and were often equipped with libraries – biographies, Bibles, classics, books of travel, adventure, science and history “to help passengers pass the time more agreeably” on the very slow canal journey. A traveling bookstore, with a billboard reading “E.& E. Wilcox, Bookstore and Lottery Office” and offering books for sale and for rent, stopped at “every port-of-call along the old Erie,” Farley wrote. “Bookboats” owned by entrepreneur Elihu Phinney also stopped at canal towns, “renting titles for two cents an hour or ten cents per day.”

Cotten said once she decided to come up with a story about a floating library, she knew “I’ve got to get a kid in there somehow.”

“Originally the character was going to be a girl. I thought probably a boy would have had a little more freedom to check out the book boat on his own. I pictured this boy browsing all the books and finding one he wanted and not having enough money for it. I remembered how I used to love to browse around bookstores. Who knows what you’re going to find?”

She said researching the era was a little tricky. She had to find a book that a boy of the 1830s might want to own, and “The Swiss Family Robinson,” published in 1812, seemed like a good choice. To research the money of the period, she turned to her brother, William, who collects coins. “He told me they didn’t have nickels, they had half-dimes.” They also had half-pennies.

Lockport is actually not mentioned in the story. “I didn’t want to give any specific town,” she said. “The canal is a long body of water. It could have been anyplace.”

Lessac wanted to join in the dedication Cotten came up with for her seventh published picture book: “For every librarian we have ever known – and those we have yet to meet.” “Librarians have been such an important group of people to me,” Cotten said. “Mr. Edwards was kind of like a librarian, so why not?”

Cotten said she got her love of reading from her parents, Mary Lou Storrs and the late William Storrs, an artist and longtime art teacher at Lockport Senior High School. “My parents were big readers,” she said. She recalls “as a very little girl, being taken to the library about once a week. When I was old enough to hop on my bike and go by myself, I’d go to the library every Saturday morning and get books. The library was a wonderful place. My idea of the best summer vacation was to find a cool spot in the house and read all week and then go to the library and get more books.”

Cotten and her husband are parents of two grown children, Amanda, 33, and Christopher, 27.

Her interest in writing children’s books began when her daughter was 2 years old and “I wanted to find a simple retelling of the Christmas story,” Cotten said. She took a correspondence course from the Institute of Children’s Literature, joined a children’s writers group at her local library and eventually enrolled in the Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Children program at Vermont College, now the Vermont College of Fine Arts. She sold her first book, “Snow Ponies,” in 1998. More than 20 years after she first had the idea, her Christmas tale, “This Is the Stable,” was published, in 2006.

“The Book Boat’s In” was the first picture book she had sold in seven years, after steady success in the beginning selling one or two manuscripts a year. “I was afraid perhaps I had peaked and was on the downhill run,” she said.

While she has published one novel for children, she said she prefers “writing for younger kids. It’s harder to sustain the momentum of a novel.”

For now, Cotten is working on publicizing “The Book Boat’s In.” The book got a positive mention in Kirkus Reviews, which called it “a pleasing historical tale about a boy willing to work hard for what he desires most – a book.”

After discovering the existence of present-day “book boats” in England with a Google search, Cotten sent inquiries to both Word on the Water, a secondhand book shop in London, and the Book Barge, a floating bookshop in Lichfield, Staffordshire. Both expressed an interest in her book. “I sent them each a copy,” she said.

Lessac lives in Australia but visited the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse for her research. In an email interview, she said: “I gained information vital to the setting and period of Cynthia’s story. The clothing, the landscape, and most importantly the canal boats. Going on board a real canal boat was a highlight.”

Lessac’s brightly colored illustrations show colorful packet boats floating in brilliant blue water and scenes with humorous details, including a cat chasing a mouse at the general store. “I love the color, I think the style fits the period, I think they’re wonderful,” Cotten says.

One thing about the illustrations “did make me laugh,” she added. “I said, Frané, the canal has never been blue. I don’t think the canal has ever been blue, but it looked good in the illustration.”

email: jwestmoore@buffnews.com

Benefits for man’s medical costs will now aid the children he loved

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A fundraiser originally intended to offset the medical expenses of a critically ill 42-year-old widower now will help support the three children left behind when he died last month.

“Triple The Love Lapp Family Benefit” will be held May 18 at St. Bartholomew Anglican Church in the Town of Tonawanda.

Kevin Lapp returned to Western New York in early 2005, a widower with three young children. His wife, Lancaster native Kathleen Ann Kaczmarek, 34, died the previous December in Charlotte, N.C.

The couple had met while students at Buffalo State College. They married in 1995 and moved a few years later to Charlotte, where he worked in banking and she was an elementary school teacher.

It was there that Kathleen gave birth to quadruplets – three boys and a girl – in September 2002.

Joshua, the couple’s first-born son, died days after his birth.

Following Kathleen’s death, Lapp returned to Niagara County, where he grew up. He and his kids – Brian, Nathan and Kiersten – moved into a Town of Wheatfield home across the street from his sister, and Lapp got another job in banking.

Then, last November, he was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, a rare blood disorder. “The prognosis was not good,” said the Rev. Arthur W. Ward Jr., rector at St. Bartholomew’s.

Members of the Eggert Road church, where Lapp worshipped with his children, delivered meals and devoted time to help take care of the youngsters as their father faced repeated stays in the hospital. A fundraiser was planned to help with his medical care.

Against the odds, two bone marrow donors in Germany were found to be a match and Lapp was scheduled to undergo a bone marrow transplant April 11.

“Unfortunately, his condition deteriorated,” Ward said. “He just never bounced back.”

Lapp died April 1 in Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

Since his death, Lapp’s children have been living with his sister, Patricia Emmons, who’s become their legal guardian, and her family. The kids, who are 10, are fourth-graders at St. John’s Lutheran School.

“We always knew we would help each other with each other’s kids,” Emmons said. She and her husband, Wilson, have three daughters and a son of their own.

“They’re doing OK,” she said of her nephews and niece. “It’s hard ... They miss their dad.”

The fundraiser will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. May 18 at the church, at 2368 Eggert Road. Tickets are $20; admission is free for children 12 and younger.

A second fundraiser, a concert by BBC, is scheduled for 7 p.m. May 31 at the church. Those tickets are $15 each.

Otherwise, donations may be made payable to “Lapp Family Benefit Fund,” in care of St. Bartholomew Anglican Church, 2368 Eggert Road, Tonawanda, NY 14150 or via PayPal at triplethelove@stbartston.org.



email: jhabuda@buffnews.com
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