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Volume 11, No. 37
ONEONTA
& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch
Oneonta, N.Y., Friday, June 21, 2019
Visit www.
AllOTSEGO.com
POLICY SUPPORTS RENEWABLES, AND DECOMPRESSOR
City of The Hills
Otsego Chamber Declares Independence On Energy Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
Oneonta Mayor Gary Herzig and first lady Connie Herzig, a retired CCS athletics instructor, were on hand to support the Hawkeyes Baseball team in the state championships Saturday, June 15. The Hawkeyes fell to the Ticonderoga Sentinels 7-3.
Single Primary Is Final Verdict On A Candidate ONEONTA
S
econd Ward Common Council candidates Mark Davies and Seth Clark have filed for a multi-candidacy run, which means that even if the candidate loses the primary on Tuesday, June 25, the two will face off again in November. Only Kaytee Lipari Shue is vulnerable; with her name on the Democratic line only, should she lose to Jerid Martin Goss, she’s out of the race. The two are both running for the Fourth Ward seat on Common Council.
ON
AllOTSEGO.com
As County Task Force Deliberates, Business Asserts What It Needs
THE D&H YARDS’ DEBATE, RENEWED
By JIM KEVLIN COOPERSTOWN
O
tsego County businesspeople support all energy options – renewables, yes, but also the controversial SPEAKING decompressor station proposed for West OUT Oneonta – states a county Chamber of Commerce “Energy & Infrastructure Policy” released in the past few days. The statement came bottom-up from the Oneonta-based Heegan at organization’s countyEnergy Sumwide membership, said mit Chamber President ►Text Barbara Ann Heegan, of Otsego who also chairs the Chamber’s new policy/A4 Economic Development Committee of the county board’s Energy Task Force. “They (chamber members) collectively shared that they want their voices heard,” Heegan added. With businesspeople worried their perspectives would not be reflected in the Energy Task Force’s conclusions, Heegan said work began on the policy soon after county Rep. Meg Kennedy, C-Mount Vision, announced the Energy Task Force membership at the chamber’s Energy Summit in January at The Otesaga. The policy grew out of the 24-member Please See POLICY, A9
Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
CON: Rachel Soper, Town of Oneonta, tells Common Council, “If no specific impacts are identified in the review, if there are no conditions or thresholds specified, then there is nothing for future developers (of the D&H yards) to comply with.”
Environmental Review Too Fuzzy, Gas Activists Tell Common Council PRO: Former city Superintendent of Schools Dave Rowley: “Your process was incredibly open and I think it will lead to something great for our community.”
►Paula Lee Hobson, who just completed a $30 million “Imagine a Way” fundraising campaign at Plymouth State GRANT CAN BUY CAMERAS University in New Hampshire, has been named Hartwick College’s vice president for college advancement, ► THE STATE SENATE passed a bill, sponsored by state Sen. Jim Seward, R-Milford, exempting vintage snowmoCooperstown Central School By JENNIFER HILL biles from the $100 annual Superintendent Bill Crankregistration fee. shaw got some welcome ► A CLEAN-UP DAY at the MemoCOOPERSTOWN good news. rial Garden behind OHS is After a four-year wait, planned to prepare for graduahile contemplating CCS received word Montion and will be from 10 a.m.how to respond to day, June 17, it has received 2 p.m. Saturday, June 22. a student’s beat$500,000 in state Smart Help with pulling weeds, triming and the furor it evoked, Please See BEATING, A9 ming bushes, plantings.
Scrutiny To Intensify After Beating At CCS
W
By JENNIFER HILL ONEONTA
A
nti-gas activists from around Otsego County returned to Oneonta Tuesday, June 18, with the same message: The environmental review to allow redevelopment of the D&H Railyards is not detailed enough. And Mayor Gary Herzig repeated the Please See GEIS, A9
City Father – One Of Originals – Speaks; Some Of It’s Humdrum, Some Endearing By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA
T
he Huntington Library didn’t know what it had. When the Upper Susquehanna Historical Society – now the GOHS
– was cleaning the SwartWilcox House for the 1976 Bicentennial, someone found all of Henry Wilcox’s diaries, said Helen Rees. “They gave them to the Huntington Library and two were transcribed, but they didn’t think they were very Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA important,” Rees said, Henry Wilcox’s diaries Please See DIARIES, A3 coming to light.
HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD Brenton P. Dadey
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