INSIDE ►HonoR RUNS: Fly Creek Fire Department hosts run/walk to honor 9/11 first responders. Page A3. ►Fire FUNDS: Federal money will help departments in Milford, Richfield. Page A3. ►Man Down: Hawkeye boys win opener despite finishing with 10 players on pitch. Page A7. ►Harvest MONTH: The Farmers’ Museum replaces 2021 Harvest Festival with month-long autumn celebration. Page A2. ►DOUBLEDAY TRIBUTES: Cooperstown celebrates anniversary, memorializes field superintendent. Page A10. Follow Breaking News On
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►Sports UPDATES: With high school sports starting, get the latest scores online. ►Roasted BISON: A fire at the Rusty Bison restaurant is the cause of a 4 a.m. alarm Saturday, Sept. 4. ►COVID UPDATES: Otsego County continues to rise in coronavirus cases.
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The Village Library of Cooperstown will switch to fall hours Thursday, Sept. 9. In addition, the library will switch to window/curbside pickup for September in response to COVID numbers rising in Otsego County again. For more information, go to villagelibraryofcooperstown. org or visit the library’s social media pages on Facebook and Instagram. Christ Church welcomes new pastor Christ Episcopal Church in Cooperstown has a new pastor, Rev. Nathan P. Ritter. Ritter had been the priest at Calvary Episcopal Church in Flemington, New Jersey, since 2018. He earned his master’s degrees in art and religion at Yale Divinity School, as well as his master’s in divinity at the General Theological Seminary. He is joined in Cooperstown by wife, Jess Ritter, a Lutheran minister, along with their children, Theo, 13, and Esther, 11, and their dog, Nina.
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Yankee fans pack Cooperstown for Induction of Jeter and company By GREG KLEIN The fans came, the rain held off and the twice-postponed 2020 National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Induction finally took place Wednesday, Sept. 8, at the Clark Sports Center. New York Yankee fans dominated the day, in Cooperstown to see shortstop Derek Jeter, the former team captain. “We’re here for Derek Jeter,” said Noel Stazko of East Meadow, Long Island. “How could you not be here for this?” Joining Jeter in the class of 2020, and on the 2021 stage were outfield Larry Walker and catcher Ted Simmons. Former MLBPA Executive Director Marvin Miller was inducted posthumously, with his successor in the union, Don Fehr, giving a speech in his honor. An estimated 20,000 fans waited through about 90 minutes of the ceremony to hear the Yankee hero, and he did not disappoint them. The event drew legends from other sports, as basketball stars Michael Jordan and Patrick Ewing were in the Greg Klein/The Freeman’s Journal crowd. See A7, A8 for more Derek Jeter jokes about the baseball writer who did not vote for his Hall of Fame Induction as Induction coverage. teammate Mariano Rivera looks on Wednesday, Sept. 8, at the Clark Sports Center.
Merchants thankful for something but Wednesday event lags normal day By KEVIN LIMITI COOPERSTOWN — As the crowd shifted from Main Street to Middlefield for the 2020/2021 National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Induction, local merchants said business was solid, but not as good as a typical Induction Weekend.
Laura Tolbert from All About the Girls said that she was hoping for better. “It feels like what our normal day should have been like,” Tolbert said. “We’re not getting business like it’s an Induction.” Tolbert said this year felt different because there was no parade and the Induction was in the middle of
the week in September, as opposed to a weekend in July. She said since Cooperstown relies on the summer tourism season to make money, it’s disappointing it wasn’t as good as previous inductions. “Maybe some people couldn’t take off,” Tolbert said. “This is our last hurrah and it doesn’t feel like an Induction.”
The Baseball Hall of Fame Induction was moved from July to September because of the coronavirus pandemic. The choice to make the induction on a Wednesday in September confounded some business owners but quite a few were happy that they were even getting an induction at all. See BUSINESS, Page A2
Otsego hires county administrator, approves EMS positions By KEVIN LIMITI Joshua Beams, a 2005 SUNY Oneonta graduate, was appointed as Otsego County administrator, effective Oct. 4, at a special meeting of the county’s Board of Representatives Tuesday, Sept. 7. The position was originally approved in December 2019, but the hiring was delayed a year because of a 2020 hiring freeze at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. The position was discussed in county government circles for decades, as Otsego County is governed by a group of 14 legislators and has no executive branch of government. The county’s Intergovernmental Affairs Committee studied governmental forms and executive roles for a year before
approving the change in 2019. The position they settled on is an administrative one that answers to the legislature, but will serve as the county’s chief operating officer and chief budget officer. Several departments, such as the newly created county business officer, will be realigned to report to Beams. According to his LinkedIn page, Beams graduated from Syracuse’s Maxwell School with a master’s in public finance. He served in the Army for two years and has been an Empire State fellow since 2014. “I have followed several great leaders in my life, and the common thread that connected all of them is their ability to be innovative,” Beams wrote on LinkedIn. “They took a problem by the horns and with ingenuity and creativity came up
with a solution that the rest of the team, no matter if it were five or five-thousand, could rally around.” The Otsego County board also approved hiring 20 people to staff the county’s new emergency ambulance service in the county. Some board members were displeased by how little written information was being given to set a plan in motion. Another concern was Oneonta taxpayers might pay more in taxes for a service they won’t need or use as much as rural residents. Public Safety and Legal Affairs Chair Daniel Wilber, R-Burlington, Edmeston, Exeter, Plainfield, said he would like to give a more detailed plan but that the situation was “kind of blowing up in our face.” Wilber referenced the death of a
young boy in Worcester last week and said EMS services have been slow in the county for some time. “We had a situation last week where a seven-year-old boy needed CPR,” Wilber said. “His mother did CPR on him for 27 minutes before help arrived. … The writing is on the wall for that, for the seven-year -old.” Board Chair Dave Bliss, R-Cherry Valley, Middlefield, Roseboom, said the problem with volunteer workers aging out is not unique to Otsego. “Other counties are all facing the same thing,” Bliss said, who mentioned that the problem had been “really exacerbated in the last year and a half” because of COVID. Rep. Michele Farwell, DButternuts, Morris, Pittsfield, said See OTSEGO, 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