Volume 13, No. 48
City of the Hills Delayed edition Next week’s edition will be delayed one day in order to include coverage of the Wednesday, Sept. 8, Induction Ceremony.
County declares EMS emergency At a special meeting Thursday, Aug. 26, Otsego County’s Public Safety and Legal Affairs Committee voted unanimously to declare a county emergency with proper emergency medical services coverage. The declaration was scheduled to go before the full Board of Representatives on Wednesday, Sept. 1. Board Chair Dave Bliss said the motion is expected to pass. “It is unanimous that we need this,” Bliss said. “It is just a question of how do we pay for it.” The board voted last month to approve the purchase of two county ambulances. The EMS vehicles would cost no more than $434,000 and be paid for with federal COVID funds. However, long-term funding to run the supplemental EMS service is still needed.
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AllOTSEGO.com, OTSEGO COUNTY’S DAILY NEWSPAPER/ONLINE COMPLIMENTARY
Oneonta, N.Y., Thursday, September 2, 2021
Midweek Induction brings questions about attendance, coronavirus safety By GREG KLEIN In the lull of the 2013 Hall of Fame Induction, when no living people were inducted and only about 2,000 die-hard fans attended on a rainy day, and some people speculated about the demise of the tradition, keen baseball observers knew the Yankees would be coming to Cooperstown eventually. When large class after large class started popping big attendance figures for inductions the latter half of the last decade — topping out at 53,000 for Vladimir Guerrero, Trevor Hoffman, Chipper Jones, Alan Trammell, Jim Thome and Jack Morris in 2018 — keen baseball observers whispered, “just wait and see what the Yankee years bring.” The back-to-back inductions of closer unparalleled Mariano Rivera and “the captain” Derek Jeter, both homegrown Yankees who spent their entire major league careers in pinstripes, were expected to be a boon for Cooperstown not seen since the holy grail of inductions, the 2007 enshrinement of Cal Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn.
The Hall initially estimated that crowd to be about 75,000 people, although later computer analysis of video and pictures from the event pegged the attendance at more like 82,000 people. Rivera, the first unanimous inductee, held up his end of the bargin in 2019. Surrounded by another big class typical of this era, he and Roy Halladay, Edgar Martinez, Mike Mussina — another former Yankee — Harold Baines and Lee Smith drew about 55,000 people to the Clark Sports Center in the town of Middlefield, the second biggest induction in the Hall’s history. Jeter’s 2020 induction was expected
to top Rivera’s and perhaps even rival 2007. Jeter was literally scheduled to tour the Hall for orientation the week the state shut down in March 2020; his tour and media conference was one the first cancellations of the coronavirus era. Without Jeter and his fellow inductees Marvin Miller, Larry Walker and Ted Simmons, 2021 would have been a dull induction year with the Baseball Writers’ Association of America selecting no one for enshrinement. The 2020 class had been set for a traditional July date one year late and via a special made-for-television event. The easing of pandemic restrictions caused the Hall to move the induction to Wednesday, Sept. 8, first with the hope of hosting a small crowd and then with the expectation of holding a mostly normal induction, except on a Wednesday in September. However the flare-up of the Delta variant of COVID has made large gatherings uncertain again. Therefore, how many people will attend Wednesday is a complete mystery. Hall officials typically do not comment on attendance See INDUCTION, Page A2
Retirement parade
MORE 2020-2021 INDUCTION COVERAGE ►Tributes: A look at the Hall of Famers who have died the past year. Page A7. ►If you GO: Tips for getting into Cooperstown and to the Induction Ceremony safely and efficiently. Page A7. ►The CAPTAIN: Derek Jeter is the headline attaction this year for many fans. Go to tinyurl. com/AllotsegoJeter. ►The LABOR LEADER: Marvin Miller changed the game for players for the better. GO TO tinyurl.com/AllOtsegoMiller. ►ROCKY Mountain First: Larry Walker makes history for Colorado. Go to tinyurl. com/AllOtsegoWalker. ►QUITE A CATCH: Ted Simmons waited a long time to hear Hall’s call. Go to Tinyurl.com/ AllOtsegoSimmons. ►CRYSTAL BALL: Who are the top contenders for 2022? gO TO tinyurl.com/2022Hall. ►Autumn Dreams: Planning for an induction. Page B1.
Area businesses seek solutions to employee void
INSIDE ►TRagedy in DeCATUR: Worcester student, 7, dies in ATV accident over the weekend. Page A2. ►GRANT GIVERS: Community Foundation gives out awards to local businesses. Page A3. ►CROSSING PROGRESS: Cooperstown apartment project passes through village boards without problems. Page A3. ►LOCAL SPORTS: Columnist Nate Lull writes about what he is excited about going into the fall season. Page A7. ►BANKLESS: Otego residents express anger about branch closure. Page A9. ►BEAUTY ALL AROUND: The Clark Foundation announces its 2021 Cooperstown Beautification Award winners. Page A10.
Plans could include refugee recruitment, resettlement By KEVIN LIMITI
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AllOTSEGO.com ►Sports UPDATES: With high school sports starting, get the latest scores online. ►COUNTERFEITER CAUGHT: A phony bill at Schneider’s Bakery leads to an arrest. ►COVID UPDATES: Otsego County tops 100 active cases of coronavirus.
ONEONTA
Induction 2020-2021 Commemorative Edition
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After 32 years, Cooperstown Central School special education teacher Pat Hogan went out in style with a retirement parade around the elementary school Thursday, Aug. 26, in Cooperstown. Pictured are Hogan and her family, from left, sons Chris and Tom, and husband Jim.
A possible solution to worker shortages in Otsego County could be employing refugees and resettling them in Otsego County communities, some local leaders suggest. Al Rubin, CEO of the Otsego County Chamber of Commerce, and Tom Armao of the Country Club Auto Group, said they are having preliminary discussions in finding ways to alleviate the problem of understaffing and the idea of resettling refugees came up extensively in their conversations. The Otsego County Chamber of Commerce sponsored a forum July 27 that discussed the issue of worker shortages in the county. Politicians Antonio Delgado, D-19, State Sen. Peter Oberacker, R-Maryland, Assemblyman John Salka, R-Brookfield, and Assemblyman Brian Miller, R-New Hartford, were among the local officials at the forum. “The consensus of the group was, among other things, we couldn’t get help,” Armao said. “There are 1,000 open jobs within 50 miles of Oneonta. The challenge becomes finding people to fill those jobs. Everywhere you go, there is a help wanted sign.” Armao brought up the possibility of using immigrants as a way of filling jobs in the area, See JOBS, 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