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BRESEE DEVELOPER DOING HIS MAGIC ON STEVENS HARDWARE/B1
HOMETOWN E!
E FR Volume 11, No. 25
City of The Hills
ONEONTA
& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch
Oneonta, N.Y., Friday, March 29, 2019
Visit www.
AllOTSEGO.com
Dialogue Possible On Eco-Park Idea It’s Unclear If City Hall, Otsego 2000 Can Agree By JIM KEVLIN
Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
Levi Latourette (playing Julian Marsh) directs chorus line girls Ally Erario, Brooke Rosener, Adell Coe, Mikayla Web, Olivia Delberta Jaylee Goodspeed, and Willow Sunderland in OHS’s production of “42nd Street,” Friday-Saturday, March 29-30 at the high school.
Ames, Mandigo Named Oneonta ’19 Trailblazers ONEONTA
K
elly Ames and Carol Mandigo will be awarded the 2019 Woman Trailblazer Awards, Joyce Miller, Commission on Community Relations & Human Rights chair, announced. Ames is active in social service organizations, including serving on the Family Service Association board. Mandigo, a LEAF prevention specialist, is also a muralist and a leader of the First Night organization. A recognition ceremony is 6:15 p.m. Tuesday, April 2, in the City Hall lobby.
AllOTSEGO.com
www.
ON
AllOTSEGO.com
►A KITCHEN FIRE broke out at 9 Cherry Street after the residents pre-heated the oven to bake a pan of brownies. No one was injured, and the blaze was extinguished by Oneonta fire fighters. ►A GROUP OF CITIZENS christened “Sixth Ward Neighbors United,” River Street residents and businesspeople met to discuss strategies to oppose RSS’s housing development in their neighborhood. ► “MARCH MATCHNESS” is the Susquehanna SPCA’s cat vs. dog answer to March Madness. Make a donation and move your “player” toward the April 9 championship.
ONEONTA
N
icole Dillingham, Otsego 2000 president, has sent a preliminary e-mail to Mayor Gary Herzig on exploring whether there is common ground on establishing an eco-commerce park in the former D&H Railyards.
Herzig
Dillingham
Common ground between economic development and Green initiatives, that is. “We would be thrilled if a green eco-park could be placed there,” she said in response to a question during an interview. “We would be the first in the state. We would get all sorts of good publicity.” A rapprochement, however, wasn’t immediately embraced. Please See RAILYARDS, A6
FATHER ROSSON RETIRES APRIL 1 FROM ST. MARY’S
F
ather John P. Rosson is retiring after 19 years as pastor at St. Mary’s “Our Lady of the Lake” Roman Catholic Church in Cooperstown. Father Father Rosson Rosson is also well-known in Oneonta, where he was campus minister at Hartwick College and SUNY Oneonta in the 1980. MORE DETAILS AT
AllOTSEGO.com
www.
Cooperstown Distillery Unveils Plan To Double Its Plant, Hire 10 More By LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN
W
ith five years of success behind it, the Cooperstown Distillery is looking ahead and planning to more than double the size of its plant on Railroad Avenue.
Cooperstown Distillery Proprietor Gene Marra stands next to one of two new stills installed in February in preparation for a proposed expansion.
“We outgrew our space many years ago,” proprietor Gene Marra told the Village Board on Monday, March 25. “Our production has been limited by our physical space.” The planned 7,500-squarefoot expansion will more than double the building’s existing footprint on the back portion of their RailJim Kevlin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
EVENTS SET MARCH 29-30
Was Justice Achieved?
Hall, Legion Collaborating On Centennial By LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN
T
he American Legion, especially through American Legion Baseball, and The National Baseball Hall of Fame have had a special relationship for over four decades. “American Legion Baseball was founded in 1925 to further citizenship through sportsmanship,” said Jeremy Field, director of communication at American Please See LEGION, A2
Inscription outside the Department of Justice that reporters viewed waiting for Barr letter.
CASALE: ‘Gotcha’ Politics May Backfire For Democrats By JIM KEVLIN COOPERSTOWN
D
emocrats are in for “a huge beating,” Otsego County Republican Chairman Vince Casale said in the wake of Spe-
cial Prosecutor Robert Mueller’s non-indictment outcome of a two-year investigation of Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. “They’ve hung everything they’ve had on ‘collusion’ over the past two years,” said Casale, Please See CASALE, A7
SWAN: ‘It’s Up To Us To Keep Officials Accountable’ By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA
D
etails matter. “A four-page summary should be the tip of the iceberg,” said Aimee Swan, Otsego County Democratic chair.
“There were 2,800 subpoenas, 500 witnesses, but there is not a single word from Robert Mueller in Barr’s letter. We need to see the full report.” She was referring to Attorney General William Barr’s letter summarizing Mueller’s investigation Please See SWAN, A7
HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD