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20
08 - 2021
ONEONTA
& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch
1782 607-432- q.com brooksbb
Volume 13, No. 34
City of The Hills City to hold Memorial Day parade Monday
From blight to beautiful Richfield community creates park, Page B1 VISIT www.
AllOTSEGO.com, OTSEGO COUNTY’S DAILY NEWSPAPER/ONLINE
Oneonta, N.Y., Thursday, May 27, 2021
Dreams Park update opens tourism season By KEVIN LIMITI
The summer tourism season begins Memorial Day weekend, with businesses and attractions getting set The Memorial Day Parade for a better year now that COVID is and celebration is set to kick beginning to dissipate. off on Monday, May 31, with After a run of team cancellations a parade starting at the Footearlier in the year, the Dreams Park hills Performing Arts Center baseball camp announced new protoat 10 a.m., going into Main cols Monday, May 24. Street and ending at Neahwa The baseball camp in Hartwick Park. Masks and social disSeminary will open Friday, July 23, tancing are required. with no restrictions on social distancing or mask wearing. However, they Oberacker to
give historic presentation
will be requiring a vaccine for all participating children and adults. Dreams Park said on their website that the 2021 season would be the “first step toward a full reopening in 2022.” Todd Kenyon, director of communications at the Fenimore Art Museum, said that he was optimistic about the upcoming summer and fall seasons. “There’s always the unknown, but I can feel that people want to get out,” Kenyon said. “I’m hopeful they visit Cooperstown.”
The Fenimore is still requiring masks and social distancing indoors but outdoors, patrons will not need to be masked as long as they maintain social distancing. The Fenimore is opening its summer season on Saturday, May 29, with an exhibit from pop artist Keith Haring called “Radiant Vision.” The Glimmerglass Festival is also adapting to the return of less COVID restrictions by expanding its capacity through the sale of festival squares and tables. Proof of either a vaccination or
►DRAGON FIRE: Schenevus dominates Milford in Tri-Valley softball game. Page B3. ►HELLO AGAIN: Jeff Idelson returns to Cooperstown for a summer of stewardship at The Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Page B3. ►ThE COOLEST RUNNER: Friends pay tribute to Richfield Springs marathoner John Sovocool, who died Thursday, May 20. Page A4. ►Richard DUNCAN OBITUARY: The photographer who became known for Otsego County landscapes died Thursday, May 20. Page B7. ►BASSETT CHANGES: Medical center support staff will transition to a new employment company, affecting as many as 500 positions. Page A3. ►DRIVE-BY PARADE: Springfield Fourth of July committee announces contest for holiday event. Page A3. Follow Breaking News On
By GREG KLEIN COOPERSTOWN - The village of Cooperstown will stop enforcing its mask mandate as it waits for the state to rescind Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s executive orders on the coronavirus pandemic. The village’s Board of Trustees debated the issue at the end of a three-hour meeting Monday, May 24, in the village board room at 22 Main St., but decided against calling a public hearing on revoking the statute, which was passed in August. The trustees voted unanimously to remove mask ordinance signs from in and around the village and to relax enforcement of the law. Trustee Richard Sternberg Greg Klein/The Freeman’s Journal was not at the meeting. Cooperstown Police Chief Josh Edmonds shows design plans for a property at 10 Chestnut St., Frank Cavalieri said he has heard during a Board of Trustees meeting Monday, May 24, in Cooperstown
the executive orders on the pandemic will be revoked July 1. Because the village needs time to advertise a public hearing, and because there are several already scheduled for the trustees meeting Monday, June 28, Village Attorney Martin Tillapaugh said the trustees could simply take the mask ordinance signs down and let it be known that enforcing it is no longer a priority for village officials. He called it a “tacit acknowledgement.” In the past month, the Center for Disease Control and the state Department of Health have revised requirements for mask wearing, including no longer requiring people to wear masks in outdoor settings and no longer requiring people who are vaccinated to wear masks, leading See MASKS, Page A2
Film COOP to hold location tour for women filmmakers STAFF REPORT
COOPERSTOWN - Film COOP announced Thursday, May 27, that it produce a destination weekend OTSEGO.com will event to bring female film producers, directors and location scouts to the ►NEW LEADERS: Middlefield region in the fall to tour locations and Democratic Party announces new officers. meet local officials. ►VIRTUAL PLAY: OHS group The Women in Film Peak Leaf releases performance of “Little Weekend Location Tour and NetworkWomen: The Musical.” ing Event will take place from Thurs►COURT REPORT: Man appears day, Sept. 30 to Sunday, Oct. 3, accordin court for Halloween stabbing. ing to a media release from ►COVID EXPOSURE: A recent the nonprofit. visitor to the Otsego County Film COOP is the official film comCourthouse has tested mission office for Otsego County, the positive for COVID. The village of Cooperstown, and the town county Department of Health and city of Oneonta. It is the pioneer, is doing contact tracing. and so far only, film commission office in what the state calls the Mohawk Valley Economic Development District. The filmmakers will stay in Cooperstown for the weekend and tour
All
negative COVID test will be necessary in order to attend, according to the Festval’s website. Events being hosted at the Glimmerglass festival include the operas, “Il Trovatore,” “Songbird,” “Gods and Mortals” and “The Magic Flute.” Cooperstown All Star Village in West Oneonta will be open with extra precautions against COVID including providing a negative COVID test 72 hours before arriving or proof of a COVID vaccine. See TOURISM, Page A2
Cooperstown will halt enforcement of mask ordinance
State Sen. Peter Oberacker will be giving a presentation to the Town of Maryland Historical Society at 6:30 p.m., Thursday, May 27. The society will also be selling donuts, 9 a.m. to noon, Sunday, May 30. INSIDE
COMPLIMENTARY
sites throughout Otsego County, as well as The Stanley Theater in Utica, which is one of the qualified production facilities on the tour. The other is Foothills Performing Arts and Convention Center in Oneonta. According to Film COOP Board Chair Greg Klein, the details of the tour are still being worked out, but it will include sites in Cooperstown, Oneonta, Springfield, Middlefield, Maryland, Gilbertsville, Edmeston, Cherry Valley, Richfield Springs and more. “The people who live in the region know we are the hidden gem of upstate New York,” Klein said in the media release. “So, our job is to let the people in the entertainment industry know that. To do so, we are offering them the chance to visit during one of the prettiest weekends in the fall to see all the filmable locations we have here. “Our plan is to wine them, dine them
and trolley them all over Otsego, but do it at a rate that is heavily subsidized by Film COOP, our donors and a couple of potential grants,” Klein said. According to the media release, the cost of the trip is estimated to be about $1,500 per person, but the charge for the film makers is only $295 if they register by July 31 or $345 thereafter. “I just reserved 13 rooms at fourstar hotels in Cooperstown, and $295 would pay for a one-night stay,” Klein said. “Instead, our filmmakers will get three nights here, plus lunches and dinners, transportation and entertainment. I think it will be a great deal for them.” Because of the cost and the possibility of continued social distancing and coronavirus rule, there are only 13 spots available for the weekend. According to the media release, one spot on the tour is reserved for a diversity inclusion scholarship and will be See FILM, Page A2
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST PRINT CIRCULATION 2010 WINNERS OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD