FALL at the
F
ENIMORE
PRESIDENTIAL PHOTOS, DURER, HARING, MORE/B1
HOMETOWN E!
E FR Volume 12, No. 49
& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch
Oneonta, N.Y., Thursday, September 10, 2020
SUBSCRIBE TO
City of The Hills
ONEONTA
www.
COMPLIMENTARY
AllOTSEGO.com • Your ONLINE DAILY NEWSPAPER
COVID RETREATS Journal Of The Plague Week No Cases In City;
SUNY Slows At 701 Hartwick Positives Hold At 11 By LIBBY CUDMORE
ONEONTA
Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
F
Mrs. Elf, the original creator of Fairyland in Wilber Park, left this note for her fellow architects of Fairyland asking them to pack up their scenes between Monday, Sept. 7 and Sunday, Sept. 13.
inally, some good news in the COVID19 outbreak. “From what I can see, there is no community transmission,” Heidi Bond, public health director, Otsego County Department of Health, said Tuesday, Sept. 8, as the daily infections on SUNY Oneonta dropped to 16 from the Friday, Sept. 4, peak of 134. Beginning Wednesday,
Oneonta School Back In Session On Schoolology
Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
Oneonta Mayor Gary Herzig was among those swabbed by the state virus SWAT team.
Sept. 2, nearly 2,000 rapid tests were conducted at the three Oneonta testing sites – St. James Episcopal Please See RETREAT, A3
ONEONTA
T
he Oneonta School District was in session on Tuesday, Sept. 8 in Oneonta…in hundreds of living rooms across the town and city. In a guide posted on the school’s website, the district encouraged students to “be awake at least 30-40 minutes before class, hop in the shower, get something to eat and get that mind ready.” Classes began on Schoology at 7:40. “No later!” the district warned. “And please, do not Zoom from your bed!” FULL COVID STORIES ON
AllOTSEGO.com
►Facing a multi-million gap, County Board meets Thursday, Sept. 10 to begin work on 2021 budget. ►35 Oneonta Businesses receive $105K “Survive, Then Thrive” grants. ►WINDSTORM DOWNS TREES, cuts power across county. ►ambulance in 3-car crash near Davenport. ►cooperstown’s dan garcia celebrated by his Berkeley students. ►oneonta recoverY run on through September, allowing racers to accumulate miles. ►otego’s Bill davis-recalled his WWII’s last days.
Drugovich’s Hard Line Contrasts With Morris’ By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA
H
artwick College Margaret Drugovich has a message for Michael Forster Rothbart/Special to HOMETOWN ONEONTA students unhappy with the As the SUNY Oneonta infestation peaked, top photo, at 2:36 a.m. Saturday, school’s stringent COVIDSept. 5, Alex Censi (yellow top) and fellow students walk down Oneonta’s 19 code of conduct. Main Street en route to a party on Cliff Street. Lower left, SUNY Oneonta “We’re asking the students sophomores Anthony Auletti and Anthony Rastelli move out of their dorm who don’t want to follow our room in Grant Hall Tuesday, Sept. 1, after the college announced the residence hall would be closed and converted to isolation housing for students rules to volunteer to leave campus,” said Drugovich with coronavirus. Students were given 24 hours to vacate their rooms. Lower right, Alyssa Yablansky joins other students getting their mouths during a meeting of Mayor swabbed Sept. 1 to collect saliva for COVID-19 pool-testing. Gary Herzig’s Oneonta Con-
VOTE! – IN TUESDAY VILLAGE ELECTIONS
Morris, left, and Drugovich from the Oneonta Control Room Zoom.
trol Room on Monday, Sept. 7. “As hard as it is to say, if you violate our rules, you have to be gone.” The crackdown was in Please See CONTRAST, B2
For The Birds, Try SSPCA Or Mini-Horses, A Mallard, 2 Chinchillas, Hedgehog By LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN
Benton
Membrino
Robbins
►VILLAGE ELECTIONS: Three candidates, Democrats MacGuire Benton and Joe Membrino, and Republican Mary Margaret Robbins will be seeking two seats on the Cooperstown Village Board Tuesday, Sept. 15. Polls will be open noon - 9 p.m. at the fire hall. Check results on
AllOTSEGO.com
www.
I
n five years directing the Susquehanna SPCA, Stacie Haynes has never once had someone bring in a bird. Now, she has 30 of them. Lady Gouldens, to be precise. “We need volunteers
ASAP to either foster them or come in and tell us how to take care of them,” she said. “They’re these absolutely gorgeous birds, but we have no idea how to take care of them, and want to get them into their proper homes.” The finches – as well as a dog, a cat, two mini-horses, Ian Austin/ HOMETOWN ONEONTA a mallard duck, two 30 Lady Goulden finchPlease See FINCHES, B2 es need new homes.
HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD