Quantcast
Channel: The Buffalo News - niagara
Viewing all 1955 articles
Browse latest View live

Spotting planes, rescuing airmen, avoiding headhunters in India

$
0
0
When Howard J. “Howie” Ross and his fellow soldiers were told they were going to India, they figured the training officers had made a mistake and meant Italy, where there would be plenty of action in freeing the people from the Axis.

But India and beyond were indeed where they headed, to one of the lesser-known theaters of operation during World War II. And little did they know they would come in contact with tribal headhunters.

It would turn out to be an unforgettable journey for Ross, who had been working as an 18-year-old cabdriver in the City of Tonawanda.

He and other members of the 556th Signal Aircraft Warning Battalion were trained at Drew Field in Tampa, Fla., for the hazardous job of going out beyond the front lines to spot enemy aircraft. They learned not only how to distinguish enemy planes from those of the Allies, but survival skills, as well, since supplies arrived by airdrops, which weren’t always dependable because of monsoons.

“Radar was new, and the machines were bulky, so we were the radar,” Ross recalls. “We could tell the types of planes by sight and the sounds of their engines. We were able to tell the altitude, the direction and the weather conditions.”

Ross and his colleagues had volunteered for the job when faced with the choice of that or working as cooks.

“I wanted to get in the Army Air Forces,” he says, “and so I took something a little more daring than working as a cook.”

He thought for certain when they landed in Africa that they were indeed bound for Italy.

“We spent two months in Africa loading merchant ships with supplies going to Italy,” he says. “Then we came to find out we were waiting for a ship to take us to India. They told us we would be sneaking past Cyprus, where the Germans were.”

The voyage to India took about two weeks, south through the Suez Canal into the Red Sea and then to the Arabian Sea, at last arriving in Bombay.

But there was no time for sightseeing.

“They put us on a train,” Ross remembers. “We headed for Calcutta beside the Bay of Bengal.”

Again, as they cut across India, there was no time for sightseeing, except for what they could see from their less than luxurious train.

“Then they put us on a riverboat and we headed north,” he says. “Then there was another train, and that took us past Dibrugarh to a little town that was home base for our company in a portion of India between China and Burma.”

The trip was still not over, however.

“We flew, we took a Jeep, were on another riverboat, and ended up walking 150 miles in 12 days through jungles to get to our post,” he recalls. “We were up about 6,500 feet between a range of mountains in Burma. … There were blank spots on the government maps we were given that represented unexplored territory we were in.”

But one thing was known: Members of a Naga tribe lived in the region, and they were headhunters.

Ross and the other nine soldiers, plus 25 Gurkhas from Nepal, lived in a stockade built from timbers. At night, its two gates were locked. Fields around the rudimentary fort were protected with bamboo spears to fend off animals or anything else that might turn hostile.

For the most part, Ross says, the headhunters were friendly.

“We gave them salt, and we would buy chickens and eggs from them,” he says. “But you never knew quite how to take them. You’d get natives from miles away coming to see a white man for the first time.”

On journeys to the tribal villages, Ross remembers, it had not escaped his notice that members of the tribe proudly displayed human skulls.

“I have pictures from one of the villages where 200 skulls were on display,” he says. “The skulls might have belonged to members of the Chinese army who didn’t know about the tribe.”

Fortunately, he and his colleagues never experienced hostile treatment, he says. In fact, the soldiers felt so comfortable, they volunteered for an additional six months at the fort.

“We went hunting any time we had time off,” Ross says. “We hunted deer that barked like dogs. The meat was great.”

Leisure though was sometimes interrupted by lifesaving work.

While they didn’t spot any enemy planes, since by this time the Japanese had been driven out of eastern India, they rescued a total of eight American airmen from crashes.

“The B-29s had come in, and for a month, they had to fly to China to haul fuel before they could make raids into Japan. We spotted them all the time,” Ross says.

“Then one day a native came up to us wearing an airman’s leather jacket and handed us a note from the airman. It said, ‘If anyone gets this, come rescue us.’ The native knew where the crew was, and we went and got three out. A fourth had died, and the natives had already buried him.”

Two of the rescued airmen had been severely injured. A doctor was needed.

“We radioed for a doctor,” Ross says, “and a B-25 flew overhead and a doctor and first officer parachuted in.”

And the airmen survived.

The same could not be said for Ross’ brother, Everett, who had served as a machine-gunner on a B-17 bomber. Just before Ross had left India for Burma, a letter from his mother had caught up with him.

“The letter started out that he was missing,” Ross says. “It was his fifth flight over Germany.”

In time, Ross says, word reached him that his brother and the other crew members had been killed.

“It had been under foggy conditions. They were buried in Belgium but later were returned to the United States and buried at a military cemetery in St. Louis,” he says.

At the time of his death, Everett Ross was 21.

“It was war, and you couldn’t do anything about it,” Ross reflects.

That tragedy aside, Ross says, he relishes his war memories and the great adventure of serving in the China- Burma-India Theater.

When he returned home, he found work at his father’s gas and auto repair station on Payne Avenue in North Tonawanda.

“I worked there 45 years before I sold it,” Ross says. “The station still has our name on it: Ross Service.”

Niagara County Real Estate Transactions

$
0
0
HARTLAND

• Robson Road, Lloyd T. Jones; Geneva M. Jones to Michael J. Sullivan, $69,148.

LEWISTON

• Morgan Drive, Mary Lois Eames; Kathleen McMurray to Philip J. Bourque; Barbara A. Bourque, $173,040.

• Pletcher Road, William J. McMahon; Anne M. Brett to Richard A. Militello; Elaine D. Militello, $110,000.

LOCKPORT Highest price: $172,000 Average price: $96,794 Median price: $90,750 Number of Sales: 8

• 35 Independence Drive, Sheila M. McGee; John M. McGee Jr. to National Residential Nominee Services Inc., $172,000.

• Lincoln Ave., Roxane Kern; David F. Kern to Mary M. Wohleben; David R. Wohleben, $170,000.

• Autumnvale Drive, Melissa J. Johnson; Melissa J. Chiappone to Joseph Peter Frischholz; Kathryn M. Frischholz, $138,000.

• 282 Akron St., Michael R. Fulford; Candace M. Fulford to Citifinancial Inc., $106,525.

• 38 Franklin Ave., David M. McLaughlin; Cynthia E. McLaughlin; Cynthia E. Ames to First Niagara Bank, $74,975.

• 282 Akron St., Citifinancial Inc. to E and R Horizons, $57,100.

• Hill St. & Allen St., Rita Chase; Derrick Chase to Roxane Kern; David Kern, $35,750.

• Gooding St., Herbert A. Dietz; Eleen O. Dietz to Crestview Property Holdings, $20,000.

TOWN OF LOCKPORT

• Fieldcrest Drive, Karl Meiling; Magdalena Brockman to Shara Ellinger; Alan Venesky, $146,000.

• Glendale Drive, Roy A. Laubacker; Joyce N. Laubacker to Paul D. Kephart; Christy D. Kephart, $90,000.

• Leete Road, Town Development II; John Dent Farr IV; Rose Marotta-Glavinic; Rose M. Marotta-Glavinic to Deborah A. Levine, $60,000.

• Sunset Drive, Town Development II; Rose M. Marotta-Glavinic; John Dent Farr IV; Rose Marotta-Glavinic to Nancy Kam; Michael J. Scarbecz, $46,500.

NIAGARA FALLS Highest price: $278,000 Average price: $43,684 Median price: $29,755 Number of Sales: 25

• Rivershore Drive, Kimberly A. Bechard; Bryan L. Bechard to Angela Ruffolo; Nicholas J. Ruffolo, $278,000.

• 86th St., Norman F. Lansberry to Joanne Romanchock; Frank Balsano, $78,280.

• 99th St., Helen Elizabeth Panza; Mark Joseph Panza to Donna Cadeddu; Nicholas Cadeddu, $72,000.

• Forest Ave., Phillip Lewis; Loretta I. Silvestri-Lewis to Alexandra Silvestri; Joseph Silvestri, $68,000.

• Madison St., Andrea Dinieri to Steven J. Lafontin; Tanya L. Hooper, $68,000.

• Livingston Ave., Jennifer A. Pendola; Christopher J. Pendola to Steven P. Nadig, $49,485.

• 3rd St., Donald M. Connor to GBR Bel Air Real Estate, $40,000.

• 7th St., Donald M. Connor to GBR Bel Air Real Estate, $40,000.

• 23rd St., Stanley R. Wills; Karen A. Wills to Rosemarie Minicucci, $38,000.

• Lasalle Ave., Villella Contracting Inc. to YHK Properties, $34,000.

• 91st St., Sharon E. Guarino; Charles L. Guarino to Lana Redell, $33,500.

• Livingston Ave., Kenneth Frank Kobylanski; Richard Alan Kobylanski; Richard A. Kobylanski to Elisabetta Passucci, $30,000.

• 216 72nd St., HUD to Arthur K. Gates, $29,755.

• 2467 Cleveland Ave., Secretary of Veterans Affairs to Joseph Tomkiel, $28,000.

• Woodlawn Ave., Darla Scozzafava; Rose Lee Coram; Bonnie Brown; James G. Coram; Celia Ramirez; James Coram to LT Estates Inc., $28,000.

• 2739 Falls Ave., KC Buffalo Enterprises to Topix Holdings, $27,000.

• Welch Ave., Helen Kasprzak; Jean Jacoboski to Barbara J. Zajac; Heather A. Colangelo, $25,000.

• 5th St., Nina B. Sciuk; Kyle R. Andrews to Linda Sisco, $20,500.

• 7th St., Constance Rodhy; Donald M. Connor to GBR Bel Air Real Estate, $20,000.

• 7th St., Linda Connor Kane; Constance Rodhy to GBR Bel Air Real Estate, $20,000.

• Monroe Ave. & 23rd St., Sharon F. Brown to KC Erie Niagara Properties, $18,000.

• 20th St., Richard McKay to Dora Properties, $12,750.

• North Ave., Richard McKay to Dora Properties, $12,750.

• B St., Ying Wei Xu to Leo Benevento, $12,000.

• Mile Line Road, Randall S. Lau to Niagara Falls Lodging, $9,079.

NORTH TONAWANDA

• Willow Ave., Catherine M. Messier; William F. Balogh to Melissa A. Fuller; Lee R. Fuller, $105,000.

• 147 Center Ave., Irene Drummond; Richard J. Galas; Thaddeus S. Galas Jr. to Mark D. Napolitano, $83,500.

• Kohl St., Robert B. Selover; Linda J. Becker; David M. Selover; Jane L. Selover to Olga A. Yatchuk; Dmitriy I. Yatchuk; Ivan F. Yatchuk, $83,000.

• Wall St. & Pierce Ave., City of North Tonawanda to Catherine Galvin-Schwandt, $42,000.

PENDLETON

• Tonawanda Creek Road, Kenneth R. Powley; Karen L. Powley to Lori A. Hershey, $173,000.

SOMERSET

• 1432 Quaker Road, Randall C. Hildebrant Sr. to Norman A. Carr; Mary L. Carr, $70,000.

WHEATFIELD

• Rock Dove Lane, Sharyl L. Hopkins; Brian P. Hopkins to Elizabeth B. Antonelli; David R. Antonelli, $185,000.

• 6815 Nash Road, Rebecca R. Stouffer; Jennifer E. Cooper to Timothy R. Masters; Renee C. Masters, $78,000.

WILSON

• Palmer Road, Thomas E. Fleckenstein; Joseph G. Fleckenstein; James A. Fleckenstein Jr. to Kathleen N. Urso; Joseph S. Urso, $145,900.

• Beebe Road, Paul R. Darnell; Linda J. Baehr; Gary L. Darnell to Tara E. Darnell; Brandon S. Darnell, $88,350.

Wings of Love plans service for parents of deceased babies

$
0
0
Families who have suffered the death of a baby are invited to the annual Wings of Love Parent’s Day Breakfast, sponsored by the Western New York Perinatal Bereavement Network, from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday in Acqua Restaurant, 2192 Niagara St. Tickets are $10, $5 for children 4 to 12.

The event will include a candlelight memorial service and a release of flowers into the Niagara River in honor of the lost children. The bereavement network offers support to families who have experienced the death of a baby because of miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth or early infant death.

Since 2007, its Wings of Love Memorial Fund has helped hundreds of financially eligible bereaved parents with their unexpected burial expenses. For information, visit www.wnypbn.org or call 341-2801.

Local churches included in statewide open house

$
0
0
The Sacred Sites Open House Weekend will be held May 18 and 19 in the Buffalo area, local organizers said.

This year will mark the third for the statewide event, which locally will feature First Presbyterian Church, Blessed Trinity Catholic Church, Corpus Christi Catholic Church, Buffalo Religious Arts Center and the Chapel at Forest Lawn.

Local organizations have begun a new collaborative effort, Buffalo Alliance for Sacred Places, organizers said. The local churches will join other religious sites in New York State in opening their doors for the tour weekend.

Two suspects nabbed after gas-station robbery in Lockport

$
0
0
Three police agencies investigating a gas-station robbery in the Town of Lockport late Sunday teamed up to arrest two suspects who also were accused of having a small amount of crack cocaine on them, State Police at Lockport reported.

One man entered the Sunoco station at Transit Road and Robinson Road and stole an undetermined amount of cash while threatening that he had a knife, police said. The thief fled the scene with another suspect who was waiting outside in a vehicle.

Armed with a description of one suspect and the vehicle, Lockport police and Niagara County sheriff’s deputies stopped a vehicle on Lincoln Avenue in Lockport. Both suspects then were turned over to State Police.

Troopers charged Danny P. Merritt, 33, of Union Street, Lockport, and Glenn L. Helwig, 63, of Garden Street, Lockport, with first-degree robbery and criminal possession of a controlled substance, according to police reports.

Fire breaks out at West Street Elementary School in Sanborn

$
0
0
SANBORN – Students at West Street Elementary School are headed home early today after a fire broke out at the school this morning.

Students were taken to Niagara-Wheatfield High School and were allowed to be picked up by parents beginning at 11 a.m.

No injuries were reported, according to the district.

No further details about the blaze were immediately available.

Falls schools seek more taxpayer money

$
0
0
NIAGARA FALLS – For the first time since 1993, Niagara Falls School District officials are asking local property taxpayers for more money.

But under the proposed budget going before voters in two weeks, there aren’t any program cuts or layoffs.

The spending proposal for the 2013-14 school year would increase the tax levy – the total to be paid through property taxes – by 3 percent.

Preliminary estimates from the district, based on property valuations from 2012-13, indicate the tax rate would increase by about 56 cents for each $1,000 of assessed value, or about 3 percent, to $19.22 per thousand.

For a property assessed at $75,000, school taxes would increase by $42, based on the estimated figures.

“Everybody’s just looking to hang on,” said Timothy Hyland, administrator for school business services.

In the district’s $124 million spending plan, $25.8 million in revenue would come from local property taxes, up from about $25 million this year.

Officials say the tax levy increase covers the amount the district would have received under the gaming compact between the state and the Seneca Nation of Indians. The Seneca Nation has withheld payments as a part of its long-standing dispute with the state, which is in arbitration.

District officials also said they have to account for about $2.2 million in increased pension costs, which “pretty much wiped out our state aid increase,” Hyland said.

The district’s finance officials pointed to a number of ways in which they aim to reduce costs:

• Fifteen employees recently took an early-retirement incentive. Twelve of those positions were filled, leaving three others eliminated through attrition. Officials say that will save the district about $400,000.

• Operation of the alternative high school program is being taken back from Orleans-Niagara Board of Cooperative Educational Services and will be located in the former 60th Street School at an estimated savings of about $600,000.

• The responsibility for eight special-education students is being brought back to the district from BOCES.

Overall, state aid would account for roughly 73 percent of the district’s revenue in the 2013-14 spending plan.

Under the tax cap, the district would have been able to increase the tax levy up to 3.77 percent, said Rebecca Holody, budget manager.

For the May 21 budget vote and School Board election, the district has reduced the number of polling places to eight sites.

That decision was made to reduce costs, as well as to assure availability of enough of the new voting machines being borrowed from the Niagara County Board of Elections, officials said.

To look up your polling site, go online to http://vic.ntsdata.com/niagarsd/pollingplacelookup.aspx.

Polls will be open from noon to 9 p.m. May 21. For more information about polling places, voter registration or absentee ballots, call the district clerk’s office at 286-4204 or 286-4116.

A public hearing on the budget proposal will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Niagara Falls High School. In addition to the budget votes, six candidates are running for two open seats on the nine-member School Board.



email: abesecker@buffnews.com

Area school districts putting phys ed back into play

$
0
0
On a recent day, children enjoyed recess by going down a curvy slide, climbing a spirally pole and running on the school playground at Bennett Park Montessori School on the East Side.

Over at Ohio Elementary School in North Tonawanda, students moved energetically in their classrooms to an exercise video.

And at Sidway Elementary School in Grand Island, kindergartners drew outside on the pavement with chalk and ran a small obstacle course, while others spun hula hoops and jumped rope in the gymnasium.

Many kids have been able to get outside this spring to run around and play.

But the reality is that almost all school districts in Western New York and across New York State fail to meet the 120 minutes of physical education required weekly for children in kindergarten through sixth grade.

Kids in kindergarten through third grade are supposed to have PE daily, while fourth- to sixth-graders are expected to have it at least three times a week.

With blocks of time already dedicated to mandatory school instructionand standardized testing, there's little time left for exercise.

There is also no consistency in providing recess – unstructured play time that, unlike PE, is not required despite conclusive research that it promotes social learning, releases energy and stress, and minimizes disruptive behaviors.

The need to return balance to the physical needs of children, proponents say, is great, especially as obesity explodes among young people due at least in part to video games, unsafe neighborhoods and sugar- and fat-loaded diets.

“The medical and scientific evidence is irrefutable,” said Dr. Steven Lana, medical director for Buffalo Public Schools. “Engaged children, active children, make better students. The lethargy that overcomes us when we're inactive translates not just to our bodies, but to our minds. So getting kids out and blowing off some energy not only keeps them healthy, but makes them better students.”

In Buffalo, regulations by the end of June could require recess beginning in the fall, putting teeth on a district wellness policy adopted last year but that has yet to be fully implemented.

Superintendent Pamela C. Brown's draft regulations, which will be voted on by the Buffalo Board of Education, call for 20 minutes of recess daily.

“I think we all agree that the research is very clear. If children are going to be in our buildings for six hours a day, there need to be ample opportunities for physical activity classes, and it does mean recess, and they're not the same thing,” said Will Keresztes, associate superintendent for educational services.

“We fully agree that recess is critical for our children to receive the whole education that parents expect.”

Some parents have been clamoring for change.

Jessica Bauer Walker, chairwoman of the health committee for the District Parent Coordinating Council, led a large group who appeared at the School Board meeting April 10 urging more recess and phys ed.

“Generally speaking, children in grades K through 3 are getting physical education once maybe every six days for 30 minutes, which is about 25 percent of compliance. And you really do find in the lower-income schools, where there are not the same rates of empowered parents ... that they get it less. So it's an equity issue.”

Many fifth- and sixth-graders also have fewer opportunities for physical activities after they leave elementary school.

“One of the things that's really unfortunate in the City of Buffalo is when the kids are changing schools at fifth grade, and are put into a high school environment where there are no playgrounds,” said Kris Kemmis, an Olmsted 64 parent who obtained a $30,000 matching grant for new playground equipment when the school building reopens in September.

“The focus is academics, but the idea of play as an educational component is removed despite everything we know about its value.”

The district estimates up to 30 physical education teachers could be needed if the district is to come into compliance, which with looming deficits appears unlikely.

While some officials have suggested more PE teachers could be hired, Sam Magavern, co-director of the Partnership for the Public Good, said state standards must be met.

“This is legally required by the state Department of Education and should be thought of not as optional but as a legally binding requirement that has to be followed. Most people can't imagine that kids would sit all day and not get any physical activity,” Magavern said.

Five years ago, the State Comptroller's Office took a look at physical education in 20 districts and found almost none of them were living up to the minimum requirements. The audit jolted some districts to find creative solutions.

“That just put school districts on alert that they needed to do the best they can to meet these requirements,” said Cynthia Bullis, director of physical education and athletics in North Tonawanda.

Schools there now have a classroom program known as GymB4, which is played on interactive white boards. It supplements gym classes for kindergarten through third grade.

Students stretch or do aerobic activities that can be done in class around their desks.

Bullis said anti-obesity campaigns such as the one championed by first lady Michelle Obama have helped put the need for physical activity on the radar screen for schools.

“It's just come to the forefront because of childhood obesity,” Bullis said.

That's led some school administrators to become increasingly creative.

It has given rise to programs such as GymB4 and Deskercise, which provide teachers with daily fitness videos for use in the classroom.

Students at Sidway go to gym class two or three days a week. On the other days, their classroom teacher is responsible for teaching PE either in the classroom or in a smaller gym that has hula hoops, scooters and other equipment.

Teachers also integrate quick activities like jumping jacks into regular instruction – anything, Principal Denise Dunbar said, to get the “wiggles out.”

“At this age, it's critical for 5- and 6-year-olds to be doing something,” Dunbar said. “Their attention spans and their amount of time on task is shorter than in the older grades.”

Physical education teachers in Niagara Falls came up with a plan to meet state requirements a few years ago.

Children in kindergarten through second grade have only 60 minutes of instruction a week with a PE teacher, so the district requires classroom teachers to make up the other required 60 minutes.

“We were aware of the mandate ,and we grappled with how are we going to do that?” said Carol Gold, administrator for curriculum and instruction in Niagara Falls City School District.

“We couldn't really afford to hire more physical education teachers, and you couldn't put one more thing in the day where the children were pulled out of the classroom.”

To meet the standards, teachers were given access to a Deskercise program that guides children through calisthenics in the classroom, but they can also conduct organized physical activities outside for about 20 minutes a day.

Teachers must document in their plan books what activities were done each day.

There is also a movement nationwide to get kids outside more and away from learning with electronic devices.

Richard Louv, a central figure and author of “Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Defecit Disorder,” has warned that a lack of exposure to nature and free play is resulting in rising rates of attention disorders, depression and obesity.



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

Some of 'Buffalo Billion' for parkway removal

$
0
0
The latest installment of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s “Buffalo Billion” economic-development pledge will be used to help pay for ripping up a portion of the Robert Moses Parkway just south of Niagara Falls.

Officials said the $10 million for the work is seen as a step to help increase tourism and create jobs.

In the 17 months since Cuomo pledged to invest up to $1 billion over as many as 10 years to try to turn around the Western New York economy, the state has committed to spending $70 million on projects ranging from $50 million for Albany Molecular Research to open a $250 million drug research, development and testing center on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus to last week’s announcement of a $10 million commitment for a workforce training center in Buffalo.

State officials said the projects go hand in hand with the Western New York Regional Economic Development Council’s plan to seek long-term investments that will help make the Buffalo Niagara region more competitive in segments of the economy where it has a leg up on other parts of the country.

Along with the funding announcement, the state unveiled a television ad promoting Buffalo as a place to do business featuring investor Warren E. Buffett and former Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly, among others.

The ad, which will be shown outside the region, features Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway and The Buffalo News; Emmy Award-winning actress Christine Baranski; National Football League Hall of Fame member Kelly; Howard A. Zemsky, co-chairman of the Development Council; local businesswoman Sundra L. Ryce; and the GEICO Gecko.

“Tourism is a huge industry in Western New York, and the whole key to our plan is to leverage our strengths,” said Zemsky, a local developer.

The $10 million for the Moses Parkway project will help remove a one-mile stretch of the limited-access expressway that begins just south of the falls and replace it with a street-level, pedestrian-friendly parkway.

Critics of the Moses Parkway have long argued that it was a barrier separating the attractions along the Niagara River from the rest of Niagara Falls.

“It’s a long time coming,” said Lt. Gov. Robert J. Duffy. “It’s being done.”

The project, announced in February and estimated to cost between $33 million and $50 million, already has a $5 million funding commitment from the state, but officials also are hoping to gain further money from federal highway programs – a strategy pursued on another part of the parkway by Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y.

Rep. Brian Higgins, D-Buffalo, also has been pressuring the New York Power Authority to provide funding.

The state funding is for the first phase of the project at the southernmost end of the parkway targeted for removal, along with the berm that runs alongside it. The targeted section begins just south of the John B. Daly Boulevard exit off the Moses Parkway, which will be replaced by a roundabout, and runs north through the upper rapids. The portion of the Moses Parkway that begins at the North Grand Island Bridges and runs to the state park is not being removed.

“The $15 million will take us through most of the construction on the southern end,” said Christopher J. Schoepflin, president of USA Niagara Development.

Niagara Falls Mayor Paul A. Dyster said final design work still needs to be completed on the project to remove the section of the highway from downtown to the city’s northern neighborhoods and possibly farther. If the funding is in place, the project could be put out to bid as early as next year and would take two years to complete, Dyster said.

“A large part of downtown Niagara Falls will be reconnected to its waterfront,” the mayor said.

Vehicles still will have access to the Niagara Gorge and points north along Whirlpool Street, which will be transformed into a low-speed, two-lane parkway like the one that runs along the river in Niagara Falls, Ont.

The removal of the Moses Parkway is part of a broader plan to expand the offerings in and near Niagara Falls State Park. Other plans call for the creation of new trails for hiking and bicycling, along with new programs featuring horseback riding, cross-country skiing and even zip-lining and rock climbing.

State officials also hope the Moses Parkway project will dovetail with the $50 million in private development under way in Niagara Falls that will add nearly 500 hotel rooms in the downtown area in four separate projects. The state also plans to select a master developer for the remainder of the former Rainbow Centre mall, which has been boosted by Niagara County Community College’s Culinary Institute.

“Finally, private-sector investment of material consequence is happening in Niagara Falls,” Zemsky said.

Dyster said, “Now that you’ve got places for people to stay, you can start focusing on giving them more things to do and give them a reason to stay longer.”



email: drobinson@buffnews.com

Lockport man charged in rape of unconscious woman goes on trial

$
0
0
Opening statements and testimony began Tuesday in Niagara County Court in the trial of a man accused of raping a friend’s girlfriend as she lay sleeping, groggy and sick in a South Street home after a night of bar hopping that followed a free downtown Lockport concert July 29, 2011.

Dalvan H. Robinson, 51, of Pennsylvania Avenue, was indicted in November 2012 on charges of first-degree rape, first-degree sexual abuse and third-degree rape after Lockport police received DNA evidence that linked Robinson to the alleged attack the morning of July 30, 2011.

Assistant District Attorney Cheryl Nichols, who is co-prosecutor with Elizabeth Donatello, told the jury that the victim, a Buffalo woman who had friends in Lockport, decided to do the right thing by not driving home.

“A fun night with friends turned into a nightmare,” Nichols said. “She was sleeping and sick, and he raped her.”

Nichols told the jury that the victim was pinned down, powerless and naked, and found herself waking up to Robinson on top of her, raping her.

“She was shocked and confused,” Nichols told the jury.

Defense Attorney George V.C. Muscato told the jury the sex was consensual and cautioned the jury to keep an open mind.

He said Robinson lives on Pennsylvania Avenue, with a woman and a child, but also owns the South Street home and stays with his friend, the victim’s boyfriend at the time, who was renting the apartment from him.

He said Robinson was confronted with the allegation six months after the incident by Lockport Police Detective Travis Mapes. Muscato said his client said some things he shouldn’t have.

“He was shocked and not truthful about having sex with her,” Muscato said. “The DNA says it was him. He did have sex with her, but it was consensual sex.”

Muscato said Robinson was ashamed because he had slept with his friend’s girlfriend, a friend who was “like brother to him.”

“He is not proud of what he did, but it is not a crime,” Muscato said.

The victim testified Tuesday that she came to Lockport that night to attend the free concert in Lockport and then walked with friends to two Main Street bars.

She said she doesn’t usually drink but joined friends and had three large drinks of Crown Royal and Red Bulls. She said that by 2 a.m., she had to leave and went with her boyfriend to the South Street home, where she remained sick for several hours.

She said the boyfriend left early that morning because he had to work, and she stayed since she was still feeling sick.

The woman became tearful as she told the jury of how she woke up, a little groggy, unsure of what was happening.

She told the jury that she later went home and showered several times.

“I felt dirty. I could still smell him on me,” she said. The woman then went to Sisters Hospital, where she was given a rape kit and met with police that same night.

Muscato tried to poke holes in her statement to detectives and grand jury testimony, finding several discrepancies in statements that she had sworn were true.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Six area hospitals get a D in patient safety report card

$
0
0
Six of 13 Western New York hospitals in a new report card on patient safety got a grade of only D for preventing medication errors, infections and other serious problems.

Six hospitals here received C grades, and one got a B in the Leapfrog Group Hospital Safety Score. Half of the hospitals in this region that were graded this year did one letter grade worse than in last year’s report card from the group.

Kaleida Health’s hospitals – Buffalo General, Millard Fillmore, Millard Fillmore Suburban and DeGraff Memorial – received D grades. But it’s difficult to draw conclusions.

Kaleida Health was graded as one entity, but the same grade was applied to all the facilities as if they all performed the same on every measure. In addition, the hospital on Gates Circle was permanently closed last year and its staff transferred to facilities on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus in a long-planned move to consolidate services.

The hospitals and their Leapfrog grades are:

•Kenmore Mercy: B

•Brooks Memorial, Dunkirk: C

•Mercy: C

•Sisters: C

•Olean General: C

•Erie County Medical Center: C

•Mount St. Mary’s, Lewiston: C

•United Memorial, Batavia: D

•Buffalo General: D

•Millard Fillmore: D

•Millard Fillmore Suburban: D

•DeGraff Memorial, North Tonawanda: D

•Medina Memorial: D

The Leapfrog Group, a nonprofit national patient safety organization based in Washington, D.C., creates its grades by examining hospitals on 26 measures such as rates of bedsores, hospital-acquired infections, intensive-care unit staffing and adherence to hand hygiene.

In this report card, the group graded more than 2,500 general hospitals nationwide, including about half of the facilities in Western New York. The scores are available online at hospitalsafetyscore.org .

“We found incremental progress, but hospitals have a long way to go,” said Leah Binder, president and chief executive officer of the group.

The preliminary information released Tuesday did not make it clear which issues led to Kaleida Health’s D grade, but one area in which it rates worse than the national average is in deaths from serious treatable complications after surgery, according to federal data.

Michael P. Hughes, vice president and chief marketing officer for Kaleida Health, said Kaleida does not participate in the Leapfrog database, “so our quality of care is not accurately reflected in this report.”

Hughes listed several other quality awards won by Kaleida, including the Society of Thoracic Surgery’s top rating in heart surgery, and similar awards from the American Heart Association, the Blue Distinction Center for Cardiac Care and the Consumer Choice Award from the National Research Corporation.

“Our services and hospitals win national quality awards every year,” Hughes said. “While we recognize that we have had challenges in the past, we continue to improve our clinical outcomes. Kaleida Health is the area’s provider of choice when it comes to numerous services, including cardiac care, stroke, vascular, pediatrics, orthopedics and more.”

Of the 2,514 general hospitals issued a grade in the Leapfrog Group report, 780 earned an A, 638 earned a B, 932 earned a C, 148 earned a D, and 16 earned an F.

Leapfrog bases the grades on data from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which posts publicly available measures on hospitals at its Hospital Compare website at www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare. It also surveys those hospitals that voluntarily agree to participate and relies on information from an American Hospital Association survey. The report card excludes some facilities, such as mental health facilities, Veterans Affairs hospitals and free-standing children’s hospitals, said Missy Danforth, senior director of hospital ratings at the group.

Most of the data comes from 2012, officials said.

About half of the safety score is based on how well a hospital does on errors, accidents and injuries to patients that can be measured, including having foreign objects left in bodies after surgery, deaths from serious treatable complications after surgery and collapsed lungs due to medical treatment.

The other half of the score is based on how well hospitals follow procedures to prevent problems, such as using computerized systems to order medications, or whether the hospital’s administration is structured in a way to foster a culture that focuses on patient safety.

Several of the criticisms of the Leapfrog grading method are that it relies on voluntary sources of data and it mixes issues that can be quantifiably measured with those that may not necessarily result in a better grade.

“We have serious concerns about the grades,” said Melissa Mansfield, spokeswoman for the Healthcare Association of New York, which represents many hospitals in the state. “It’s an incomplete snapshot, and many hospitals have made improvements since they were surveyed.”

Nonetheless, experts in quality measurement say the report card is useful.

“The Leapfrog Group’s role, like our role, is to provide consumers with information about quality and hospitals with information they can use to make improvements,” said Bruce Boissonnault, president of the Niagara Health Quality Coalition, which also publishes an annual hospital report card.



email: hdavis@buffnews.com

Senate Republicans want to exclude WNY from casino expansion

$
0
0
ALBANY – Senate Republicans want to add more casinos in New York State, but not in Western New York.

The GOP’s casino expansion plan protects the Seneca Nation of Indians’ three casino investments in the region by honoring a decade-old compact between the state and tribe to keep new Las Vegas-style casinos from locating in a large portion of the region.

Legislation is being drafted that restricts the first of three possible casino locations to Sullivan County in the Catskills, the Tioga area west of Binghamton, and Saratoga or Washington counties north of Albany, according to Sen. John Bonacic, chairman of the Senate Racing and Wagering Committee.

All three are now home to racetrack-based casinos, and Bonacic, an Orange County Republican who represents the southern Catskills, said the existing “racinos” in those three areas should be given a preference “unless something better comes along.”

The state already has a compact with the Seneca Nation giving the nation exclusive rights to operate its three casinos in a large portion of the region that stretches north and south along State Route 14, north to Lake Ontario and south to Pennsylvania and as far west the Canadian border and Lake Erie, Bonacic said in an interview.

The compact is subject of a nasty dispute between the tribe and Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s administration and is now before an arbitration panel.

In addition, Bonacic said, Western New York might not be able to handle any further casinos.

Cuomo has threatened to put another casino in Niagara Falls, but most Albany insiders saw that as a threat to move the Senecas at the negotiating table over the tribe’s refusal to pay $600 million in casino revenue-sharing payments to the state and localities the past several years.

“There’s a legal compact there, and you already have three casinos in the Buffalo area,” Bonacic said of the Seneca sites. “And I don’t believe in saturation. I don’t think it’s good business in terms of return to the State of New York to put a fourth one up there to compete for the same dollar when you have three.”

The Seneca Nation has been a big political supporter of the Senate Republican conference, pumping hundreds of thousands of dollars to individual senators and the central GOP campaign account in recent years.

Bonacic said the Senate plan, which could be presented to Cuomo as soon as today, also would not allow new casinos near an existing St. Regis Mohawk gambling hall in Northern New York that is also subject to a revenue-sharing compact. But it would leave open the possibility of new gambling competition near the Oneida Nation’s Central New York casino.

The Senate GOP plan calls for a timetable: The first casino would be licensed for the Catskills by June 2014, with the next either near Binghamton or Saratoga within six months to a year after that. The legislation will not propose where a fourth casino might be located, but it leaves Queens – home to a large racino at Aqueduct racetrack – as a possible site.

Cuomo and lawmakers are pushing a plan to permit up to seven full-blown casinos on non-Indian lands. The idea received its first required passage last year and needs approval again by lawmakers this year to change the state’s constitutional ban on such non-Indian casinos.

Voters statewide would get their chance to consider the plan in a referendum, likely this November, if Cuomo and lawmakers agree on a final deal before the session ends in June.

Bonacic said Senate Republicans believe any casino deal approved this year must identify the general regions where all seven casinos might locate.

“I do believe the voter has to know where they are going,” he said.

Cuomo has said he also wants the first three casinos to be limited to upstate, though he has not specified what that means.



email: tprecious@buffnews.com

Bill would boost funding for dredging of Great Lakes ports

$
0
0
WASHINGTON – Great Lakes ports could get a huge increase in funding for dredging activities under a bill in the works in the U.S. Senate.

Under a proposed reauthorization of the Water Resources Development Act announced Tuesday, at least 20 percent of any new revenues coming into the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund annually would be dedicated to “projects that are a priority for navigation in the Great Lakes navigation system.”

If passed by the Senate and then the House, the bill would mark the first time the Great Lakes would get priority funding in a bill that routinely targets the most federal money to huge coastal ports.

Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., negotiated the compromise that resulted in language favoring the Great Lakes ports.

“For years, critical maintenance projects in the Great Lakes harbors, like Buffalo, have been at the back of the line for the dredging funding they rightfully deserve,” Schumer said.



Falls to be a topic at first state Tourism Summit

Niagara IDA approves tax breaks for Falls hotel, Wheatfield greenhouse

$
0
0
WHEATFIELD – A new downtown Niagara Falls hotel and a vegetable greenhouse in Wheatfield were granted tax breaks Wednesday by the Niagara County Industrial Development Agency.

Plati Niagara plans to erect a four-story, 110-room Wingate by Wyndham Hotel at Rainbow Boulevard and Fourth Street in the Falls, a block from the Seneca Niagara Casino.

The $9.6 million project will include 4,000 square feet of ground-level retail space, which owner Frank Strangio said was being considered for a chain restaurant. That affiliation has yet to be completed.

Plati Niagara is a holding company created by the Strangio family, which owns Antonio’s Banquet & Conference Center and a Quality Inn on Niagara Falls Boulevard in the city.

The 65,000-square-foot building will be the beneficiary of a 10-year payment-in-lieu-of-taxes, or PILOT, arrangement, which will include an exemption from mortgage recording taxes and from sales taxes for building materials and furnishings and equipment for the hotel.

The tax abatements will save Plati Niagara an estimated $1.5 million over the next decade. Strangio said he hopes that construction on the hotel, which is estimated to bring 25 to 30 full-time jobs, can start this fall, although the architectural planning has not yet been completed.

The only other Wingate hotel in Western New York is located in Ellicottville. Strangio described it as an “upper middle-scale” brand.

Also on Wednesday, Power Greenhouse Integration received a 15-year PILOT and sales tax exemption for a $24 million acquisition and expansion of the former Fortistar greenhouse on Shawnee Road in Wheatfield.

The project will include construction of a natural gas-fired cogeneration power plant next to the existing 12½-acre greenhouse, and the expected construction of another 6-acre greenhouse.

Fortistar was growing tomatoes in the greenhouse as recently as January. The new owners intend to add other types of vegetables to the lineup, including cucumbers and leafy greens.

The tax abatement will save the out-of-state company nearly $2 million over the next 15 years. The new firm, incorporated in Florida but expected to have its headquarters in North Carolina, plans to employ 20 to 30 people this year, growing to 100 workers within three years, according to its IDA application.

In other matters, Chairman Scott P. Kiedrowski officially resigned from the board. He said he would do so April 24, when he succeeded to the chairmanship of the Niagara County Republican Committee after Michael J. Norris of Lockport resigned to become Town of Lockport attorney.

Kiedrowski, who is city clerk-treasurer in North Tonawanda, served only two months on the IDA board. Lockport Mayor Michael W. Tucker is vice chairman but said he doesn’t want the IDA chairmanship permanently.

“I will fill in for as long as they want me to,” Tucker said.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Proposed Niagara Wheatfield budget carries 5.91% tax hike

$
0
0
SANBORN – Teachers health benefits, the budget deficit and regular tax increases were the topics brought up during a public hearing Wednesday on the proposed 2013-14 budget for the Niagara Wheatfield Central School District.

Before a sparse audience of fewer than 40 persons, the School Board presented the details of the $62.73 million budget, which reflects a tax hike of 5.91 percent. The tax increase is within the state tax levy limit, so the budget needs only a simple majority of voters for approval.

Richard Hitzges, the board’s financial director, said although state aid has fluctuated since 2007, it is at its lowest point of less than $29 million during that period. If aid formulas were fully funded as promised, the district would have received $19 million more since 2010.

Spending also has been on the increase with salaries at the top of the list at $27.2 million. Other leading costs include employee benefits at $15 million, debt service at $7.7 million, payments to the Orleans-Niagara Board of Cooperative Educational Services at $6.7 million, and equipment and materials at $4.5 million per year, he said.

Other related figures were a drop in enrollment from 3,981 to 3,728 students and a decrease in staffing from 668 to 565 since 2010.

Hitzges noted that if the budget fails at the polls May 21, the board could schedule another vote with a different package on June 18 or adopt a contingency budget.

A contingency budget would cut revenues and expenses by at least $1.69 million he said.

Walter Bissett, one of three residents who addressed the hearing, pointed out that at a meeting earlier this year, the former business director said the district could underspend its 2012-13 budget by nearly the same amount – $1.5 million. Board President Steven Sabo said that figure was only a projection and the district will not know until the books are closed.

Hitzges said any surplus is unknown at this point, but that if it did materialize, it would be applied toward the district’s negative fund balance.

Lockport plans city parking study, despite suit over ramp demolition

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – The city’s biggest parking project in nearly 40 years is bogged down in litigation, but that’s not stopping the city from going ahead with plans for a parking study this summer.

Common Council President Anne E. McCaffrey said Wednesday that two University at Buffalo master’s degree candidates in urban planning have been chosen to carry out a study of how to improve parking availability in the city’s downtown business district.

Amanda Fowler and Leyla Akhundzada will meet Monday with city and business representatives, McCaffrey said.

The students will spend three or four days a week in Lockport this summer, interviewing business people and others to come up with recommendations by the end of the summer.

This development comes as the city’s plan to demolish its parking ramp at Main and Pine streets is on hold until a lawsuit by a rejected bidder is settled.

Scott Lawn Yard of Sanborn bid $987,000 to demolish the five-level, 260-space ramp and replace it with a 42-space surface parking lot.

That bid was $190,000 less than the next-lowest offer, from Empire Dismantlement of Grand Island.

However, the Scott bid was deemed to be late, because the Scott employee who delivered it to City Hall was told by an unidentified city worker that he shouldn’t be at City Hall but rather at the office of the city’s engineering and design firm for the project, Conestoga-Rovers & Associates, in Buffalo.

According to the suit filed last week by Scott’s attorney, John P. Bartolomei of Niagara Falls, Scott employee Christopher Juliano went to City Hall at 12:55 p.m. April 5, was told to leave and arrived at the Conestoga-Rovers offices on Delaware Avenue at 1:50 p.m.

A Conestoga-Rovers employee called City Hall, then told Juliano to go back to Lockport, where the bids were due at 2 p.m. Juliano arrived at about 2:30, where a Conestoga-Rovers employee opened his bid and told him it was the lowest of the 10 submitted. However, the Common Council, on the advice of Corporation Counsel John J. Ottaviano, awarded the contract to Empire on April 10.

On May 1, State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. signed a temporary restraining order barring any work until Scott’s suit is settled. Attorneys are to appear before Kloch on May 23.

Mayor Michael W. Tucker said no work has been done other than a preconstruction meeting with Empire.

Before the legal hassle, the project was supposed to have been finished by the end of July. The ramp, which opened in 1975, has been closed since 2006 because of deteriorating concrete.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Medical charges are low in WNY but vary among hospitals

$
0
0
Buffalo-area hospitals charge far less to replace joints, treat pneumonia and care for heart patients than other hospitals across the country, federal data released Wednesday shows.

But a Buffalo News analysis found a wide disparity in what hospitals throughout Western New York charge for these and the other most common medical problems.

The findings are based on a review of data released by the office that oversees the Medicare program, offering the public a first look into the cost of health care in this country.

“The price of health care services is complicated and opaque. This information only shows how crazy it is,” said Dr. David Goodman, director of the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, who added, “We should know what we’re paying for health care.”

The Buffalo region’s hospitals as a group rank near the bottom in the average charge for the five most frequently diagnosed health problems, including joint-replacement surgery and treatment of sepsis and similar blood infections.

Out of the 306 regions of the country, this region ranked 298th in the average charge for the treatment of heart failure, 301st in the charge for treating sepsis and 305th in the charge for joint replacement.

The $23,300 average charge for joint-replacement surgery at Buffalo-area hospitals is less than half the $52,062 national average charge for the procedure and less than one-quarter of the San Jose regional average charge of $111,891.

In this area, however, the charge for joint-replacement surgery ranged from $37,230 at Kaleida Health’s hospitals to $14,788 at Medina Memorial Hospital. And the charge to care for heart failure and shock ranged from $28,856 at Kenmore Mercy Hospital to $9,075 at Bertrand Chaffee Hospital in Springville.

“There should be a relationship between the actual charge for the service and the reimbursement the hospital receives,” said Jim Dunlop, chief financial officer for the Catholic Health System.

The reasons for the disparity in what hospitals charge for the same procedure are complicated, and the charges don’t reflect what Medicare, private health plans or patients pay for this care.

Still, the release of this data is an attempt to bring more transparency to the issue of how much we pay for health care – a crucial initial step in the ongoing campaign to rein in costs.

“Secrecy invites mischief,” said Bruce Boissonnault, CEO of the Niagara Health Quality Coalition.

The data from 2011 covers more than 3,000 medical centers across the country, including 14 hospitals and one hospital group – Kaleida – in this area. Kaleida’s data was drawn from Buffalo General, the former Millard Fillmore Gates Circle, Millard Fillmore Suburban and DeGraff Memorial hospitals.

The data reveals how often each hospital performed any of the 100 most common inpatient services, the average charge to treat each problem and how much Medicare – the federal health-insurance program for the elderly – reimbursed the hospital for each procedure.

These are facility charges and do not include fees paid to surgeons, anesthesiologists and other doctors who cared for the patient.

“This is the opening bid in the hospital’s attempt to get as much money as possible out of you,” Chapin White, of the nonprofit Center for Studying Health System Change, told the Associated Press.

A Buffalo News examination of the Medicare data found:

• Among the 14 conditions treated most frequently at area medical centers, the Kaleida hospitals charged the highest, or second-highest, average rate to Medicare for nine of the procedures.

• Erie County Medical Center charged the highest average rate for seven of the procedures.

• Medina Memorial Hospital charged the lowest rate for nine of the 14 procedures and the second-lowest rate for two other procedures.

Similar disparities exist among hospitals across the country, and health care professionals say there is little explanation for the wide-ranging charges.

“It’s completely opaque,” said Kristina M. Young, an instructor in the University at Buffalo’s Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, who studies health care delivery.

“In the health care market, the seller is in control of all of the information,” she added.

Experts and hospital administrators say the variation in charges can be driven by differences in the length of stay in the hospitals, whether a patient stayed in an intensive care unit, the medications prescribed or the brand of artificial hip inserted during the surgery.

“There’s a lot of factors that go into charges,” said Mike Sammarco, ECMC’s chief financial officer, who noted the extra cost of operating a regional trauma center.

The different charges also reflect each hospital’s overhead and any markup applied on top of the actual cost for the procedure.

“Many of the patients that are cared for in the Kaleida Health system are very complex,” Michael P. Hughes, a Kaleida Health spokesman, said in an email.

“In addition, the mission of our teaching program does contribute to higher cost of service as we work to educate and train the physicians needed now and into the future,”

The Medicare data also serves as a barometer of health care costs among different regions of the country, and the analysis by The News shows that hospital charges in this region are among the lowest in the United States.

Experts in the delivery of health care warn that the varying charges don’t reflect differences in quality of care and that patients shouldn’t assume that a hip-replacement surgery that carries a charge of $35,000 will lead to better outcomes than the same procedure that carries a $15,000 charge.

“There is no correlation with quality,” said Dr. Thomas Foels, Independent Health’s chief medical officer.

And these charges don’t relate to what Medicare reimburses the hospitals for these procedures.

For example, Kaleida’s hospitals charge $37,230 to replace a joint but receive just $16,040 from Medicare in reimbursement.

At the other end, Medina Memorial charges $14,788 and receives $13,269 in reimbursement.

Medicare has a standard reimbursement rate for each procedure, based on a number of factors that can include whether a hospital carries the additional expense of being a teaching hospital.

Health insurance plans such as BlueCross BlueShield, Independent Health and Univera Healthcare negotiate their own reimbursement rates with hospitals and hospital networks.

Patients who have good health insurance typically don’t see the hospital charges, or even the reimbursement rates. The patients who are most vulnerable to paying the full charge are the uninsured and underinsured.

But hospital administrators here say they take pains to limit the fees passed along to those who don’t have health insurance.

United Memorial Medical Center in Batavia, for example, automatically reduces its procedure charges by 50 percent for the uninsured, and the hospital further reduces fees for those who qualify.

“We know our charges are higher, that’s why we discount our self-pay patients,” said Gregory Horr, United Memorial’s comptroller.



Cost disparities

Major joint replacement

or reattachment of lower extremity

Average Rank /Region charge

1. San Jose, Calif.: $111,891

2. San Mateo County, Calif: $109,466

3. Alameda County, Calif: $101,933

U.S. average $52,062

304. Baltimore:$24,134

305. Buffalo: $23,300

306. Takoma Park, Md. $22,978



Same procedure, different bill

National survey finds wide variation in charges among hospitals

Septicemia or severe sepsis

Rank Region Average charge

1. Santa Cruz, Calif. $154,303

2. Contra Costa County, Calf. $124,596

3. New Brunswick, N.J. $106,575

4. San Mateo County, Calif. $106,292

5. Modesto, Calif. $100,616

U.S. Average $45,935

300. Baltimore $20,796

301. Buffalo $20,726

302. Winchester, Va. $18,911

303. Rochester $18,484

304. Altoona, Pa. $18,396

305. St. Joseph, Mich. $17,159

306. Appleton, Wis. $16,683



Major joint replacement or reattachment of lower extremity

Average Hospital City Cases charge

Kaleida Health Buffalo 479 $37,230

United Memorial Medical Center Batavia 46 $31,655

Erie County Medical Center Buffalo 83 $27,731

Olean General Hospital Olean 49 $27,564

Mount St. Mary’s Hospital And Health Center Lewiston 61 $24,491

Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center Niagara Falls 14 $23,266

Sisters Hospital Buffalo 138 $22,643

Kenmore Mercy Hospital Tonawanda 204 $20,987

Mercy Hospital Buffalo 53 $20,775

TLC Health Network Gowanda 31 $17,756

Brooks Memorial Hospital Dunkirk 47 $17,027

Eastern Niagara Hospital Lockport 18 $16,991

Medina Memorial Hospital Medina 13 $14,788

Source: U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services email: swatson@buffnews.com

Mario Williams’ ex-fiancee pushes back with countersuit

$
0
0
Mario Williams fired the first public salvos against his ex-fiancee, essentially calling her a gold digger in a lawsuit to recover a 10.04-carat engagement ring worth $785,000.

It was only a matter of time until we heard what a lout she thinks the Buffalo Bills pass rusher is.

Erin Marzouki has filed a response and counterclaim against Williams in Harris County, Texas. She alleges Williams repeatedly broke up with her only to reconcile and told her to keep the ring after their final split.

For the first time since Williams filed his lawsuit, he spoke with reporters but didn’t have much to say about the case.

“It’s just something that happened, and it is what it is,” Williams after Tuesday’s practice at One Bills Drive. “When we’re here, playing ball and inside this facility, with this family, it’s all about us; it’s not about anything else.

“Anything personal is personal. You don’t mix that with what we’re trying to accomplish here.”

Marzouki’s attorney, Anthony Buzbee, declared in an interview with the Houston Chronicle that Williams was foolish to file his lawsuit.

“This is a stupid lawsuit because it has no legal merit, and it’s a stupid lawsuit because it’s not going to be good for his career,” Buzbee said.

Buzbee also told the Chronicle that Williams “is a victim of his emotions and of bad legal advice. What he’s done is kick an anthill, and you know what happens when you kick an anthill.”

The counterclaim asserts Williams is suing to “harass and scare Ms. Marzouki.” The ring is located in a security-deposit box, and she has no intentions to dispose of it.

Marzouki’s counterclaim also says:

• Williams “made statements in a sworn, verified petition that were clearly false, and Mario Williams knew they were false.”

• During their 10-month engagement, Williams broke up with Marzouki at least five times, including two days into a family trip to the Bahamas to celebrate their engagement. Williams “chartered a private plane and left the Bahamas.”

• Williams told Marzouki to keep the ring after their last breakup in December.

• A part of Williams “wanted to continue to live the life of a wealthy bachelor who could do whatever he wanted, with whomever he wanted, whenever he wanted.”

• There are 200 pages of text messages as proof.

• Most of the $108,000 in charges made on an American Express card were not for Marzouki but to furnish Williams’ new home in Orchard Park and renovations on his home in the Houston area.

The Chronicle reported that a court hearing on the matter will be held Friday.

Williams rejected the notion that legal proceedings could be a distraction on the football field.

“When I’m here, this is my haven,” Williams said. “This is family, and this is what the most important thing is for me. Being around these guys, this is my R&R.

“I come here and I work, and we’re trying to get better and climb that mountain. There’s nothing that would ever distract anything that’s going on in this building.”



email: tgraham@buffnews.com

Falls junkyard fire blocks Amtrak service

$
0
0
NIAGARA FALLS – Fire in an auto salvage yard Tuesday forced the Niagara Falls Fire Department to temporarily block nearby railroad tracks, delaying an Amtrak train.

No one was reported hurt in the blaze at 4805 Lockport Road, which was reported at about 5:20 p.m. The fire involved numerous junk cars and tires, a dispatcher said. At one point, a fire truck was about five feet from the railroad tracks, causing the shutdown of the Amtrak service.

City firefighters summoned volunteers of Niagara Active Hose Company to give mutual aid at the scene. After the fire was brought under control, about two hours after the alarm, backhoes were brought in to move junk cars in an effort to find and extinguish “hot spots.”

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.
Viewing all 1955 articles
Browse latest View live