Hometown Oneonta 10-27-17

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Goodbye To Ghouls

FAMILY TRADITION ENDS • PLUS HALLOWEEN EVENTS/B1

HOMETOWN ONEONTA E!

E FR Vol-

ume 10, No. 03

City of The Hills

& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch

FIRE ROUTED CONGREGATION IN MARCH County Crews Paving 25 Roads This Month Milford UM Due In New Church Soon

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f you think you’ve noticed a lot of roadwork lately, it isn’t your imagination: By the end of October, the county Highway Department plans to complete repaving project on 25 county roads. “I had a gut sense about

how bad our roads were,” said county Highway Superintendent Bill Mason, a retired NYDOT engineer. This is only the beginning: Beginning next spring, Mason is planning multiple culverts replacement and Please See ROADS, A3

A MATTER OF Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA

Oneonta’s Galvester Bratcher and his mother Hazel Schmidka had things looking a lot like Christmas, dressed up as lit trees at Mall-Oween, Sunday, Oct. 22, at Southside Mall.

OFO Receives $350K To Help Protect Women ONEONTA

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pportunities for Otsego has received its $350,000 through the U.S. Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women to administer a transitional housing program. Under OFO’s Violence Intervention Program, a designated case coordinator will arrange for short-term housing payments, and connect victims to supportive services such as counseling, legal advocacy, childcare, transportation, and job training. NO NEPOTISM: County representatives at the Monday, Oct. 23, candidates’ forum at SUNY Oneonta’s Morris Hall said a county nepotism policy has passed the Admin Committee en route to the full board. IN MEMORIAM: Sally Ann Willcox-Hopper, 80, founder of Robynwood Home for Adults, has passed away in Gloversville/OBITU-

Terra Butler checks in on a fluffy kitty who was up for adoption in the Clawstume Competition Sunday, Oct. 22, in Neahwa Park. This kitty was dressed as a unicorn.

By PARKER FISH MILFORD

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y early November, the Milford United Methodist congregation may be worshipping in the converted Milford Manor Farms, next door to where fire gutted

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the church last March. “I think this will be the beginning of a new chapter of faith in our community,” said the Rev. Sylvia Barrett, pastor. At the ribbon cutting of the West 1566 Community Center Friday, Oct. 20, in the former American Legion on West Main Street, Barrett told those gathered that the Please See CHURCH, B5

$50K Set IFE & DEATH To Study Oneonta Theatre By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA

W Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA

‘Ripped Jeans Superheroes’ Spay, Neuter For Free By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA

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orking at Susquehanna Animal Shelter in Hartwick Seminary, it broke Terra Butler’s heart every time she had to answer the same call. “So often we had to tell people that there was a

six-month wait” to surrender animals for spaying or neutering,she said. “It costs $300 to spay a cat. Many people can’t afford that.” But her new foundation, Superheroes in Ripped Jeans, aims to help pet lovers in such situations to better take care of their animals. “We go into Oneonta trailer parks and low-income housing and bring food, cat litter, toys and flea mediLaurie Baker brought Bosco to lend supPlease See CATS, A3 port to his four-footed feline friends.

Hurray For Hugh!

ARY, B5

SPOOKY MUSEUM: Hartwick College students and faculty will present their favorite tales of the macabre at “Horror in the Museum” a free program at 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26, in the Yager Museum. Recommended for thrill seekers 10 and up/MORE HALLOWEEN FUN, B1

Complimentary

Oneonta, N.Y., Friday, October 27, 2017

Fenimore Society Honors Founder At SUNY Symposium By PARKER FISH COOPERSTOWN

Hugh MacDougall

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fter decades away, Hugh MacDougall was a Dickens fan when he moved back to Cooperstown in

1986. Still, he felt “I should study up on this guy named James Fenimore Cooper.” Soon, he was hooked. Three years later, the 200th anniversary of the author’s birth, he created the James Fenimore Cooper Society, began collecting almost every scholarly Cooper-related Please See HURRAY, A2

ith the earmarking of $50,000 from the first phase of the $10 million Downtown Revitalization Initiative (DRI), Patrice Macaluso is able to cross one more thing off her list. “When I retired, I made myself a deal,” she said. “By the time we get a business plan for the Oneonta Theatre, I will know how much I can commit myself to this project.” As the city readies the contract between the city and the state for the DRI’s first phase – $2.66 million available for improvements to downtown property and businesses – Mayor Gary Herzig made sure that $100,000 was set aside for Technical Assistance Grants to create feasibility and sustainability plans for the Oneonta Theatre and Foothills. “Oneonta’s downtown has two large theaters, and both of them Please See THEATER, B5

QUESTIONNAIRES TO BE ONLINE FOR 12 COUNTY RACES

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welve of the 14 seats on the Otsego County Board of Representatives will be contested in the Nov. 7 local elections. Polls will be open 6 a.m.-9 p.m. Candidates have been submitting questionnaires detailing their backgrounds, credentials and philosophies of governance. All questionnaires submitted will be posted by Thursday, Oct. 26, on

AllOTSEGO.com

www.

HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD


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