The Freeman's Journal 07-19-18

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Volume 210, No. 28

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►THINGS TO DO IN GREATER COOPERSTOWN/INSIDE

For 210 Years

AllOTSEGO.com

Cooperstown, New York, Thursday, July 19, 2018

Newsstand Price $1

Issues Of Jurisdiction Stalled XNG Cleanup Mishap Shuts Route 28 For 12-Plus Hours

Dillingham: Towns Must Petition DOT The Freeman’s Journal

The venerable oak that stood in Celia Lamb’s Linden Avenue was knocked down in a short, violent thunderstorm that hit the Cooperstown area at 6 p.m. Saturday, July 14, but her birdhouse was untouched. More photos at

By JIM KEVLIN & PARKER FISH

Otherwise, State Won’t Act By JIM KEVLIN

SCHUYLER LAKE

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he State of New York won’t act to regulate XNG rigs until local towns ask them to do so, Otsego 2000 President Nicole Dillingham said after the latest www. OTSEGO.com gas-truck crash south of Schuyler $13,000 Grant Lake. “The towns To Underwrite along the route Tree Inventory Dillingham have the right to ask the attorney COOPERSTOWN general and the Department of Transportation (DOT) for a traffic he Village of Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal study to be done,” said DillingCooperstown has reThe XNG trailer rolled over the Route 28 embankment behind Bob ham. ceived a $13,000 state Please See REGULATE, A3 Hugick, a former Schuyler Lake fire chief and officer in charge. grant to prepare an urban forest management plan for street and park trees. Davey Resource Group, HONORS SUSTAINABILITY STANDOUTS Ohio consultants, has assigned staffer Lucas Myzel to document the trees and better plan trimming and removal. The Otsego County ConOJC Direcservation Associatoin and By LIBBY CUDMORE tor Chris Myzel will outline findings Kuhn pauses to the public at presentations with Jocelyn Sept. 20 and Oct. 6. ONEONTA Plows, Life

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t could have happened 150 yards from Cooperstown All Star Village in West Oneonta, or 150 yards from Laurens, Mount Vision, Hartwick hamlet or Richfield Springs. This time, though, on Wednesday, June 11, it happened shortly before 3 p.m. 150 yards south of the “Schuyler Lake” hamlet sign. An XNG truck carrying fracked natural gas from Montrose, Pa., to Manheim, near Little Falls, edged off the pavement onto a soft shoulder and flipped one and a half times. The driver of the fully loaded northbound XNG rig, Fred Please See MISHAP, A3

Job Corps Offers Business Helping Hand

Skills adminACTION DELAYED: istrative asScheduled this week, the sistant, and court hearings for Focus Adina Magee, executives Joseph Zupnik career counand Daniel Herman, charged selor in front of with endangering the welfare the Job Corps campus in the of several residents, has been former Homer delayed until 3 p.m. Aug. 15 Folks Hospital at Otsego Town Court. building.

IT’S GONE: The celebrated Foo Kin Chinese Food sign that had hung for years at the 48 Pioneer St. eatery, delighting tourists who bought baseball caps there, has been removed, passersby have noticed. The restaurant closed in 2015.

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t his first community relations meeting when he was new Oneonta Job Corps director, Chris Kuhn he bought 12 gallons of ice cream for an ice cream social to help him get to know the community. “One person showed up,” he said. “I ate a lot of ice cream out of sadness.” Contrast that to the most recent Please See OJC, A7 Ian Austin/The Freeman’s Journal

Habitat Plans 9 New Homes On Route 205 By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA

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hat was once destined to be a gravel bank will soon be

a home. And then, nine homes. “The former owner of this land couldn’t get a mining permit,” said Bruce Downie, Otsego County Habitat For Humanity construction chairman. “They sold it to one of our board members, and he donated it to us.” The 18-acre plot, just outside of Oneonta on Route 205, is Habitat for Humanimerce, which planned to award its Environmental Stewardship Award to ty’s latest and largest project, with plans for a total of nine the OCCA at its first Summer Soiree Thursday, July 19, at Oneonta Munici- houses. “Our mission is to elimipal Airport. nate poverty housing in “It’s pretty unfortunate that there is Otsego County,” said Downthis way of thinking that says environPlease See HABITAT, A10 Please See OCCA, A7

For 50 Years, OCCA Has Helped Protect Environment By PARKER FISH COOPERSTOWN

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y keeping Otsego County beautiful, the OCCA is making the business environment

attractive, too – and it’s been doing so for 50 years. Otsego County Conservation Association efforts to protect land and natural resources are “extremely important to our beautiful county’s community,” said Barbara Ann Heegan, president of the county Chamber of Com-

THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST PRINT CIRCULATION 2010 WINNERS OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD


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