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Grant builds momentum for Williamsville’s vision

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Williamsville’s vision for a secondary business district around the historic water mill on Spring Street is gaining momentum.

Just last week, Sweet Jenny’s – the popular village ice cream and chocolate shop – set up in the vacant water mill, bringing new life to the street for the holiday season.

On Thursday, Sen. Charles E. Schumer brought more good news with his announcement of $800,000 in federal funds to help turn that block into the heart of the village.

“This $800,000 investment will help accomplish so many goals, from public safety to boosting local shopping and businesses to enhancing the natural beauty of Glen Park,” Schumer said in a prepared statement. “This project is a game-changer for Williamsville.”

The project is a $3.3 million initiative to re-create Spring Street – a back-alley byway off Main Street – into more of a village square centered around the 19th-century mill.

Plans show a rebuilt Spring Street with wide sidewalks and a brand-new streetscape. Williamsville officials envision a row of new storefronts on what are now parking lots.

It’s part of the larger “Picture Main Street” initiative aimed at calming traffic and making Main more pedestrian- and business-friendly.

Schumer was in Williamsville back in July lending his support for the concept and came through with some federal money on Thursday.

The $800,000 grant for Williamsville comes from a provision in the federal Clean Water Act authorizing the Environmental Facilities Corp. to fund “green” infrastructure projects, Schumer said.

Specifically, he noted, the money will be used to improve the streetscape on Spring Street, which includes installing “rain gardens” to capture storm-water runoff and prevent further erosion of the bedrock in Glen Park along Ellicott Creek.

Schumer said he will work with village officials to secure the remaining funds needed.

“Not only is the street coming back to life,” said Williamsville Mayor Brian J. Kulpa, “it is becoming the greenest and most environmentally sound street in our village.”

email: jrey@buffnews.com

Cabbie opts for wallet, credit card instead of fare

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Thomas McDonnell says the cab driver who took him home Sunday morning left him without his wallet and credit card.

McDonnell told Buffalo police that he left the cab waiting while he went inside his Custer Street home for money and, when he came back out, the cab was gone.

And so were the wallet and credit card he left as collateral, he said.

Police said the cab driver may have used the credit card to buy $55 worth of gas.

Dunkirk plant to remain open, convert to natural gas

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DUNKIRK – Hundreds of people packed a small banquet room on the Dunkirk Harbor this morning to hear Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announce an agreement that will keep the city’s aging power plant operating and producing both energy and tax revenue for the area.

“The state had decided that the plant will remain open, it will be modernized and it will be better than ever,” Cuomo told the vigorously applauding crowd.

The coal-fired generating plant has consistently been at or near the top of lists of the biggest polluters in the state and country and is currently only running one generator.

With an investment of $150 million from owner NRG, it will be converted to a natural gas facility.

The conversion had been opposed by some environmentalists who said it would encourage the approval of high- volume hydrofracking in New York State. It also had been opposed by energy providers who, instead, proposed extending transmission from out-of-state power plants and shuttering the Dunkirk facility.

The power plant provides more than 40 percent of the city’s tax revenue and is the largest taxpayer in Chautauqua County. It employs about 50 people. The plant conversion will employ another 50 workers, Cuomo estimated.

Once the conversion is finished in 2015, the plant will operate three generators.

State Sen. Cathy Young, reflecting on what she called a sometimes traumatic battle to keep the plant open, called the state’s action “our Christmas miracle.”

email: mmiller@buffnews.com

Thieves hit three cars at Adams Mark

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Three people reported having their cars broken into at the Adams Mark hotel today.

Buffalo police said the victims, who are from Cheektowaga, Olean and Attica, reported losing cash, credit and debit cards, a DVD player and sunglasses during the three morning break-ins.

Two of the victims said the rear window of their car was smashed while the third victim said his car was unlocked.

The secret world of volunteer firefighters

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When you join a volunteer fire department, you know that you will have to complete challenging training in firefighting and often in emergency medical care.

You know you’ll be learning to put out fires, rescue people, drive the apparatus, do CPR and save lives and property.

Nobody mentions that your dog will learn – and react to – the tones that summon you to a call.

They also don’t tell you that your home will gradually fill with images of red trucks, helmets and ladders, that your vehicle will accumulate everything from a seat-belt cutter to a fire extinguisher, or that you will never go to sleep without laying out a set of easy-to-get-into clothing.

And they don’t tell you that you will soon be striking up conversations and swapping stories with complete strangers with whom you have only one thing in common – a navy blue T-shirt with a Maltese cross design over the heart.

That T-shirt is “the universal sign of instant acceptance,” said Tiger Schmittendorf, deputy fire coordinator in the Erie County Department of Emergency Services.

And the fact that two people who have nothing in common but their T-shirts will go out of their way to talk with each other is unique, Schmittendorf said.

“Plumbers wouldn’t see a guy with a pipe wrench in his hand and say, ‘Wow, there’s another plumber, I should go talk to him!’ And accountants don’t have conventions where they say, ‘I was working on this set of books, and you should have seen these numbers!’ It just doesn’t happen,” he said.

Most of the conversations are the same, too. The people who were strangers seconds ago will discuss how big their departments are, how many calls they run in a year, and what kind of apparatus they have. Schmittendorf said, “I refer to those as the firefighter first date questions.”

Easy conversation with a stranger who becomes a friend is one of the hallmarks of the volunteer fire service. But there are many, many more, never discussed in training but recognized by nearly every one of the estimated 783,300 volunteer firefighters in the country who make up 69 percent of the nation’s fire service, according to the National Volunteer Fire Council. These quirks, from the tool-filled car to the canine first responder, are also familiar to many of the 6,000 volunteer firefighters in Erie County.

In the eight years since I joined the Snyder Fire Department in Amherst as a firefighter and EMT, my family and friends have become familiar with the mostly unknown world of volunteer firefighter culture. And within a week or so of being adopted, our dog learned to recognize Snyder’s sequence of tones emitted by the Motorola Minitor I carry. Even during dinner, Derry stops eating in midbite when Williamsville, whose tones sound the closest to Snyder, gets a call, then plunges his face back into his food when he hears the non-Snyder part of the sequence.

Herman, a 2-year-old English bulldog that belongs to Matt White, a firefighter with Twin District Volunteer Fire Co. in Lancaster, also recognizes – and reacts to – the tones for Twin District. He not only doesn’t react to the other departments’ tones he hears on White’s household scanner, he also ignores the 6:15 p.m. daily test of the Minitors, which sounds the same. “He only reacts when the tones go off at an unusual time, not at 6:15 p.m.,” said White.

Like Derry, Herman knows which tones matter and which don’t. “Sometimes I will just have the scanner going, and Town Line has a very similar set of tones to ours, but he doesn’t even react to theirs,” said White. When White’s parents visit from out of town, they sometimes have a difficult time figuring out whether Twin District is being toned out. So they look at Herman. “They’ll say, ‘That sounded just like yours,’ but because he doesn’t react, they know it’s not mine,” said White.

Not every dog is as interested as Herman and Derry. Hugh Wolf, first assistant chief at Twin District, said his Labradoodle is blase about calls. “When my tones go off, she just sits still and waits for me to leave.”

Some volunteer firefighters, including local physician Jason Borton, have written books about their experiences. But for the most part, the inside details that will have any volunteer firefighter nodding, laughing and contributing a few more suggestions are utterly unknown to those outside the fire service.

Saving time to save others

On some calls firefighters answer, seconds count: a person under water, in cardiac arrest or trapped in a burning house or car. A life can hang in the balance.

Because a critical call can come at any time of the day or night, most firefighters take a few steps to speed their response.

For Nicole Gerber, who has been with the Grand Island Fire Company for six years, that means that every night before she goes to sleep, she lays out everything she will need if she gets a call, starting with a set of clothes she can jump into quickly.

“I put things out in layers. It’s all laid out so you could slide into it,” she said. “The clothes look like someone just dropped out of their clothes on the floor.”

Downstairs, she sets out the things she needs to carry, including keys and wallet, “I have it all set up on the kitchen table,” she said. “Everything is precisely laid out in the same location. If you’re half-asleep going down the stairs for a 3 a.m. call, it’s easier when you have the routine and specific placement.”

When she was new to the department, Gerber also used to park her vehicle close to the door at night.

Today, she doesn’t worry about taking a few steps to the vehicle. But like every other volunteer firefighter interviewed, she stressed that her vehicle is always backed in, ready to be driven straight out and away.

“Backed into the garage, never pulled in,” said Wendi Walker of North Tonawanda, an 18-year member of the St. Johnsburg Fire Company in Wheatfield and president of the Western New York Volunteer Firemen’s Association. “There are times when I have a feeling that something is going to happen, and I will leave my truck in the driveway instead of pulling it into the garage. And we usually get a call when that happens,” she said.

Walker also keeps one or two pairs of slip-on shoes near the door. “I can just slip them on and go,” she said.

“All my winter boots slip on,” said Eggertsville Hose Company’s chief-elect Brian Multerer. “You can’t take the time to tie laces; you’re already taking long enough to put your hat and jacket on.”

Some firefighters take the quick response arrangements to heart, choosing homes on streets near the firehouse. Multerer and Michael Boehm, who each live less than 380 feet from the firehouse at 1880 Eggert Road, Amherst, are certainly among the volunteers living closest to their firehouses. But Boehm, who has lived in his house since 1977, actually saw the Eggerstville firehouse being constructed two doors down from him in 1995. Multerer moved into his house around the same time the station was being completed.

Both men appreciate their proximity. Boehm, a 38-year member, walks to the hall for calls, meetings or drills. Even though chiefs generally respond directly to calls in their district-issued vehicles, living nearby allows Multerer to be back home five minutes after finishing up any task at the hall.

Gear on the go

Many local departments provide their chief officers with vehicles, which are stocked with a variety of lifesaving, safety and firefighting equipment.

Carrying everything from a full set of bunker gear to an automatic external defibrillator is “very reassuring,” said Wolf, the first assistant chief from Twin District.

Wolf has served in six departments around the state in his 25 years in the fire service. As a chief, he said, “I definitely have a lot more gear with me than I ever had.” The down side to being so prepared is the bad feeling you get when you’re not, Wolf said. When he flies to other cities for business, “it’s definitely uncomfortable when you are on the road and don’t have all the gear with you that you are used to having,” he said. “But if you do see anything happen, you help out any way you can.”

But it’s not only the chiefs whose vehicles are stocked with emergency equipment. While bunker gear, boots and helmets are issued by their departments, many volunteer firefighters buy and carry everything from extra rope and fire extinguishers to seat-belt cutters and window punches.

“Luckily I haven’t had to use it,” White said of the emergency gear he carries in his car.

Decor and more

But the gear and clothing firefighters accumulate in their cars is no match for the decor items that fill their homes, everything from lithographs to action figures, from old helmets to box sets of “Emergency.”

Gerber of Grand Island is a longtime antiques-hunter who discovered a new world of collectibles when she joined the fire service, “Now, I find things like old nozzles and pieces of equipment used by fire companies,” she said. “I never would have noticed that stuff, but now I know what they are, and that gives them special significance.”

Jordan Kellerman, a fire captain with the Orchard Park Fire Company, has accumulated quite a bit of firefighter decor, most received as gifts from his girlfriend, Julie Krause. Kellerman recently bought his first house, which has a finished basement and a bar. The highlight of his collection, a gift from Krause, is a tin model of an antique ladder truck that’s nearly 2 feet long. “That’s right on the bar,” he said.

Kellerman said, “I really held off collecting things because I didn’t have a place for it. Now that I have the house and the basement, I think I will collect more. I’ve always liked the old fire extinguishers, the old water cans, maybe an old tin helmet.”

Kellerman could get some tips on collecting from Jack DeGroat of Highland Hose in Derby, a 60-year member who remains active with the fire police and as historian. DeGroat has a veritable museum of fire service history in his house, carefully arranged on shelves and in display cases. He has everything from photos, books, newspaper clippings and posters to toys, ornaments, figurines and helmets. In one corner is a larger-than-life fiberglass firefighter figurine that DeGroat bought in the 1980s in Pennsylvania. He drove home with the figure’s helmeted head sticking out the side window of his Cadillac.

“I just got it into my blood to collect,” says DeGroat, who cherishes a first aid kit that his father, a firefighter himself, made in the 1940s.

DeGroat had to sell two vintage firetrucks he once owned, a 1939 Seagrave hook and ladder and a 1943 GMC pumper-tanker. But he kept an obsolete canvas life net once used to catch people jumping from burning buildings.

Although he still checks out antiques barns, garage sales and flea markets, DeGroat doesn’t buy much anymore. “I’ve got almost everything I want,” he said.

In his travels, DeGroat often stops at firehouses in other places, swapping patches with other volunteers and looking over their apparatus. That’s another similarity he shares with most other volunteers, who have stopped into a small-town or big-city firehouse to say hello.

Schmittendorf said, “I say all the time, real firefighters don’t go on vacation, they just visit other firehouses.”

When Gerber vacations with her fiance, Dave Reilly, they often visit firehouses. During a trip to Reno, she said, “I was walking past a fire station and a guy was outside. We got talking about wildland firefighting, and he went in and got me a patch and a T-shirt. I got his name and I mailed him a T-shirt.”

And no firefighter can resist checking out neighboring departments’ apparatus on the road. A vehicle from outside the area might mean that a statewide conference, such as the Department of Health’s Vital Signs, is in town. An old piece of apparatus from a far-away district might have been sold and be en route to its new home; a new truck is likely being delivered.

Back to ‘ordinary life’

While some volunteer firefighters stay in the fire service for decades – the Fire Association of the State of New York routinely lists 50-year members, and some have served for longer – sometimes work, family or other issues mean a volunteer firefighter must resign, turning in the bunker gear and Minitor. It takes longer for them to stop checking for the Minitor on their belts, and still longer for their heart rates to stay steady when they hear their department’s tones.

Borton, an emergency room physician who wrote “Memoirs of a Volunteer Firefighter,” joined Sweeney Hose Company in North Tonawanda the day after his 18th birthday and served for 15 years. When he moved to a new house outside the district in 2005, he left active service, although he remains an exempt member of Sweeney Hose.

“It was a very difficult decision to make, but it was a changing time in my life,” Borton said. He most misses “putting ordinary life things aside and putting on fire gear to go into a burning building with brother and sister firefighters who also temporarily gave up their ordinary life commitments to serve their community.”

Today, Borton still misses “the thrill of going to calls,” a feeling understood by anyone who ever watched a firetruck headed to a call, sirens blaring and lights flashing.

He has another regret. “I miss getting to know the new members of the company,” he said. “The firefighters that I went through training with are like members of the family, although I consider every firefighter in the world as sort of a brother or sister in a global point of view.”

And beyond the camaraderie, said Wolf, there is deep dedication. “At the end of the day, your focus and purpose in being here is to help somebody who needs your help, somebody who is in a dire situation.”

email: aneville@buffnews.com

Reporters’ Notebook

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OLAF FUB SEZ: According to philosopher George Santayana, born on this date in 1863, “We must welcome the future, remembering that soon it will be the past; and we must respect the past, remembering that it was once all that was humanly possible.”

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It’s Buffalo, Folks!

Snow now is coming, it’s not new to us,

We are from Buffalo, so don’t make a fuss.

Each little snowflake reaches the ground,

Falling slowly and softly, without any sound.



Each little flake, with six forming sides,

Generate beauty in each one abides.

Forming a blank of clean and pure white,

Shining on trees when the sun shines so bright.



Skiers are happy and we all know why,

Flashing downhill under bright blue sky.

Then sitting before the fireside bright,

Laughing and singing throughout the night.



Children lie down, an angel to make,

And some make many for winter fun’s sake.

Snowballs are rolled across the yard,

Made into snowmen when they’re packed hard.



Shovels come down from off the rack,

Oh my gosh, what a pain in the back!

Piles of snow now line the drive,

Wow, I’m done and still feel alive.



Each one who looks on this winter event,

Knows for himself how his thoughts are bent.

Some think it’s great, while others do not,

While some like the cold, others prefer hot.



It makes no difference how much you may care,

When the weatherman says, “Snow is our fare.”

Pack your backs, it’s south you must go.

There you won’t worry, you’ll be out of the snow.

– Ernst Yuhnke

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PASTA TIME – Take a break from dealing with the snow by going out to eat from 5 to 7 p.m. today at South Buffalo Post 721, American Legion, 136 Cazenovia St. For the post’s final Monday night dinner before the holidays, there’s a choice of spaghetti or rigatoni dinners with homemade sauce and meatballs, salad and bread for $7. Italian sausage and extra meatballs can be purchased. For info, call 825-9557.

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TRAIL BLAZER – Two events on Wednesday will mark the 100th anniversary of the death of Louise Bethune, considered to be the first professional female architect in the nation.

The formal one takes place at 10:30 a.m. in Forest Lawn, where architectural organizations will dedicate a memorial marker and place a wreath on her grave. Elizabeth Chu Richter, who will become president of the American Institute of Architects in 2015, will be one of the speakers. It’s free and open to the public.

The flashy one will be seen after dark when the historic Electric Tower in downtown Buffalo will be lit in “Architect Barbie Pink.” Bethune was an inspiration for Mattel’s recently introduced Architect Barbie doll, designed to inspire girls to consider choosing a career in architecture.

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MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY Young patients at Women & Children’s Hospital will benefit when Empire Beauty School of Buffalo holds an Owen’s Toy Box Toy Drive and open house from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at its classrooms in Suite 800 in Walden Place, 2190 Walden Ave., Cheektowaga.

Everyone who donates a toy or cash Wednesday will receive a gift. There also will be hors d’oeuvres and beverages, a gift basket raffle, door prizes, tours of the school and styling demonstrations. For those who can’t come Wednesday, donations will be accepted today and Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For info, call 206-3386.

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PASSING THE GAVEL – Elected to become the 24th fire chief of the Eggertsville Hose Company is Brian K. Multerer, a 21-year veteran of the fire service who has been assistant chief for the past eight years. He will succeed John Buttino, who has served for five years as chief.

Also elected were First Assistant Chief Kiel Gentry, Second Assistant Chief Brandon Peters, fire captains Michael Flynn, James Day and Ryan MacDougal; fire lieutenants Dennis Hillburger, David Mastrella, Angela Hess and John Whitehead Jr.; EMS captain Christina Mastrella and EMS lieutenant Nick Bianco.

Elected as company officers were George Zammit, president; James Christopher, vice president; Rick Cumpston, corresponding secretary; Robert Brand, treasurer; Patrick Boyle, board of directors; and James McDonald, sergeant-at-arms.

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY – Mary Muzyka, Kimberly Minkel, Hannah Panek, John Podkladek, Mark Vredenburg, Edward Beyers, Gregg Huller, Sue Gentile, Shirley Speidel, Diana Windsor, Dave Porter, Lenny Kostelny, Anthony Alagna, Mary Barone, Mary Szafranski, Morgan Lempko, Gary Prieuer, Suzette Decker, Lillian Podkulski, Daryl Saville and Ryan David Maher.



email: olaffub@buffnews.com

Correction

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Kelsey Russell, 20, was charged with five counts of petit larceny after a string of car break-ins in the Cambria area Nov. 7. The suspect, who was arrested Friday, was misidentified in a report Sunday.

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The Buffalo News corrects published errors of substance. To request a correction, please notify the editor by writing to: P.O. Box 100, Buffalo, NY 14240; call The News at 849-4444 and ask to speak to the editor of the department in which the article was published; email citydesk@buffnews.com; or fax your request to 856-5150.

Coming up

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TRIBUTE TO MANDELA: We Are Women Warriors will present a tribute to Nelson Mandela at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Frank E. Merriweather Library, 1324 Jefferson Ave, Buffalo. For more information, call 894-0914.

TREE OF LIFE: True Bethel Baptist Church will hold the 10th annual Tree of Life for Friends and Families of Homicide from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday at 907 East Ferry St., Buffalo. For more information, call 894-0814.

Christmas concert: First Presbyterian Church will hold its Christmas Carol Candlelight Concert at 7 p.m. Sunday at 100 Church St., Youngstown. Featured will be the Senior Choir; the Church Street Singers, which is a guitar group; and the Children’s Choir of the church. There is no charge; free will offerings will be accepted.

Technology CLASS FOR ADULTS: The Kenilworth Branch Library, 318 Montrose Ave., will present a technology class for adults, “iPad Basics,” from 1 to 3 p.m. Dec. 30. Students must bring their iPad as well as their Apple IDs and passwords. Space is limited. Registration is required; call 834-7657.

Two charged with felony assault in brutal beating of Falls man

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NIAGARA FALLS – A Cleveland Avenue man and his girlfriend were arrested in the bludgeoning of a man who came to their home early Sunday to collect a personal debt, Niagara Falls police said.

Robert W. Francis, 22, and Kari L. Weston, 42, both of Cleveland Avenue, are charged with first-degree assault.

The victim – identified as Johnathan Haley, 23, of Third Street – went to the home in the 2400 block of Cleveland Avenue about 12:30 a.m. to collect money he was owed for a stereo system.

Police said Haley went to the third floor of the home, where Francis struck him in the jaw with a baseballe bat sending him tumbling down a flight of stairs. The two struggled, and the bat was picked up by Weston, who hit Haley on the arm and head, knocking him down yet another flight of stairs, police added.

Haley fled, police said, and was driven to the hospital by his girlfriend, who had been waiting outside in a car. He lost several teeth and suffered a fractured jaw and extensive bruising, and was transferred to Erie County Medical Center, Buffalo, where he was still being treated in the emergency room Sunday night.

Clarence pub destroyed by fire blamed on faulty ventilation pipe

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A pesky fire that restaurant employees thought they put out with a fire extinguisher about 3 a.m. Sunday ended up destroying a Clarence pub later that morning.

State police based in Clarence said the fire started between the walls of Marvin’s Bar & Grill, 7675 Goodrich Road, apparently because of a faulty ventilation pipe attached to a wood stove.

The Clarence Center Volunteer Fire Company and two other companies extinguished the blaze, which was reported about 7:30 a.m., according to state police. No one was in the restaurant at the time.

The building is considered a total loss, police said.

Fire that consumes car closes Route 50 north of Jamestown for an hour

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JAMESTOWN – An intense car fire on Route 50 near Van Cobb Road just north of Jamestown closed the roadway for an hour Sunday morning.

State Police Trooper Jake Opala said the fire caused the Kia Optima’s tires to pop and burst its windows. The driver, Andrew Coleman, 32, of Jamestown and two passengers escaped without injury. Opala said the driver was headed south when he encountered mechanical problems.

Firefighters from Fluvanna and Gerry were summoned.

Lancaster holiday effort benefits recipients – and volunteers

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The Lancaster Youth Bureau’s annual Christmas giveaway to families in need has grown into a festive tradition more than 25 years old that attracts a few hundred volunteers and gifts – from the family who donated groceries in thanks for help it received on a holiday gone by, to Hillview Elementary School’s gift of 90 shoeboxes full of games for kids.

“Our main room looks like an old-fashioned toy store,” said John Trojanowsky, director of the Lancaster Youth Bureau, which is located on Oxford Avenue.

“We’re all in it together,” he said. “That’s what’s so nice about this community.”

The town department is charged with serving some 3,000 young people a year with clothes, school supplies, performing arts, studio art classes, a finance class, tutoring, mentoring, volunteer opportunities and even a youth court that dispenses alternative sentences for teen crimes.

It adds a new dimension in December, when it becomes a hub for making holiday packages for about 175 families with about 300 children.

There are toys collected by the Lancaster Police Department. Scarves, hats and mittens knitted by ladies clubs. New books donated by William Street Elementary that were sorted and wrapped by school social workers and psychologists. Dozens of cookies baked by high school students. Christmas trees and ornaments donated by school clubs. Baskets of food, some paid for with money given by Town Hall employees.

Wednesday morning, students will come to get everything ready.

“There’s gift wrap all over the place. They line up the bags of groceries. They get the cookies all ready,” said Trojanowsky. “As the families arrive in the afternoon, each family gets a number ... It’s very exciting ... They have tears running down their faces because they’re so overjoyed.”

People grateful for the holiday help range from families in crisis, who are dealing with things like a home that burned down, a catastrophic car crash, a mother dying of cancer or a father without a job, to more chronic struggles.

The Youth Bureau is one of the agencies participating in the Western New York Holiday Partnership and the News Neediest Fund, which accepts toys and cash donations to purchase holiday meals and gifts for families.

Word of the Lancaster service has been spreading and new families from as far away as Alden have signed up.

“It’s something I never get tired of,” said Karen Schanne, Youth Bureau social worker. “It really brings so many people together.”

She recalled how volunteers once wrapped a kit with science experiments for a boy who adored science. His face lit up when he opened it. His mother later told Schanne about how he proudly showed off his projects to the family.

“It was just one of the best presents that he had,” she said. “It was just like a gift from Santa Claus.”

Schanne has also been taken by how much the holiday giving affects the volunteers.

“I’ve had students who have said it’s one of the best days of their whole high school experience. They really feel that joy and that excitement.”

One year when a family struggled to get everything home, teens volunteered to make a delivery. When they arrived at the apartment, they saw a sparsely decorated home, with little furniture.

“They really had nothing,” Schanne said.

The experience of how profoundly the students helped the family was later commemorated at the high school: The address in Depew is posted over a classroom doorway.

“It’s kind of a gentle reminder,” Schanne said. “We live in a nice community.”

email: mkearns@buffnews.com

Falls man stabbed in the back with kitchen knife during party

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NIAGARA FALLS – A Walnut Avenue man was stabbed in the back late Saturday following an evening of beer drinking, Niagara Falls police said.

Timothy C. Heinrich, 19, was stabbed with a kitchen knife during a confrontation at a party in an 18th Street home, said police, who noted the victim’s girlfriend, whose name was not disclosed, also was punched in the face.

Anthony M. Marino, 20, of 18th Street, is charging him with second-degree menacing and harassment.

Further information was unavailable.

After D-Day, keeping planes armed to ensure Allied air support

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Edgar L. Hoffman arrived at Utah Beach five days after D-Day, the Allied invasion at Normandy, France, on June 6, 1944.

The bloodiest of the fighting was finished. Yet right there up in the sky, he says, was a German airplane buzzing the troops as they moved off the beach. But it soon became apparent that the plane was nothing more than a gnatty nuisance rather than a genuine threat.

“It was the last plane the Germans had in that area, and the pilot was just being an aggravation. Some of us shot at him with our rifles. He was harmless because he had no ammunition,” says Hoffman, who served with the 312th Service Group supplying bombs and ammo for the 50th Fighter Group, which had P-47 Thunderbolts.

Throughout the war, the planes provided the aerial charge ahead of the tanks and ground troops of Gen. George S. Patton Jr.’s 3rd Army to soften up the German lines as the Allies reclaimed Europe from the Nazis.

But for Hoffman and his buddies, it was first things first.

They moved off the beach about a mile inland and took up residence in a hedgerow for about a month.

“One day, I spotted a Jeep pull up at the end of our hedgerow, and Gen. Eisenhower, Gen. Bradley and Gen. Montgomery all got out and had a brief conversation and then left. I think they were checking on how things were going. I felt a little shocked to see them.”

The excitement of seeing the supreme Allied commander, Army Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower; the invasion force’s U.S. commander, Army Gen. Omar N. Bradley; and his British counterpart, Field Marshal Bernard L. Montgomery, soon passed, and one afternoon during a lull, the 19-year-old Hoffman and another soldier decided to go out and do some souvenir hunting.

“We ought to have had our heads examined. We didn’t know if the area had been cleared of mines. I found a dead German in a foxhole and took his rifle,” Hoffman says. “I later sold it for $25.”

He soon learned that shots from a rifle, while a necessary tool of war, were nothing compared with the damage that bomb-laden planes could inflict on the enemy. He witnessed that firsthand as fighters and bombers flew directly overhead en route to Saint-Lô, a Normandy town controlled by the Germans.

“I watched for an entire day as bombers and fighters flew above us coming from England and heading to Saint-Lô. I was amazed at the sight. There was one wave after another. When we later passed through Saint-Lô, it was nothing but a hole in the ground,” says Hoffman, a Canisius High School graduate.

The first airfields where the 312th serviced aircraft were often nothing more than coils of metal unrolled by the Army Corps of Engineers to provide a flat takeoff and landing surface for the planes.

“The pilots needed a smooth surface because the ground beneath was uneven,” Hoffman says. “The ground had been used by farmers and had rolls in it.”

As the Allies advanced, he says, “We were able to use the airfields the Germans had built and civilian airfields. We went all over hell’s half-acre. There was a lot of action. Our company supplied the bombs and ammunition for the airplanes.”

Two days after Paris was liberated, Hoffman and other soldiers could not resist a visit.

“It was wild. The French were still shooting off their guns in celebratory fire,” he says. “Then I made a second trip there a while later. Some of the guys wanted us to buy perfume so that they could send it back to their sweethearts and wives. We went right to the Chanel shop. We stayed overnight, and someone stole all the perfume from our Jeep.

“When we got back to the company, we thought the guys would murder us, but they were understanding.”

At the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, Hoffman says, he and his buddies were at the German-Austrian border.

“We were so close to Hitler’s hideout, the Eagle’s Nest, Berchtesgaden, that some of the guys made a trip there and took everything they could grab, from linens to a special Luger that had a 9-inch barrel and a leaf sight. I bought it for a hundred dollars, and 20 years later, I sold it for a hundred dollars. One of my smarter moves,” Hoffman ruefully recalls.

After having survived the war, Hoffman notes, the trip home nearly killed him.

“We sailed for home out of Brussels on a Victory ship, and let me tell you, we were in one of the worst storms. The waves would go over the top of the bridge, and the back end of the ship would be out of the water,” he says. “You could hear the propellers, and the ship would shake. It was a bad ride. Everybody onboard was sick, sick, sick.”

Once back in Buffalo, life was smooth sailing.

He married Patricia J. Dietzer, whom he had met as a young teenager when he had a newspaper route on Sterling Avenue in North Buffalo.

“I was 2 years older than her,” he says, “and we started dating after the war.”

The rest is history.

They raised three children, and Hoffman supported them by selling printing supplies for more than 30 years.

“My wife worked for 25 years as a secretary at Ken-Ton schools.”

This past September, they celebrated their 66th wedding anniversary.

Reflecting on his military service, Hoffman says, “It made me grow up in a hurry.”

Thief makes off with ATV equipped with snowplow

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NIAGARA FALLS – A thief drove away from a 21st Street home early Sunday in a Polaris all-terrain vehicle with snowplow, police said.

The ATV was chained to a trailer in the backyard of the home, and the lock was cut between 3 and 6 a.m., police said. The loss was estimated at $2,000.

Dunkirk to use state grant for improvement of waterfront

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DUNKIRK – The City of Dunkirk and its northern Chautauqua County neighbors stand to benefit from three state grants announced this week by the office of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.

The grants include $1 million for the northern Chautauqua County water district and $65,000 in planning funds for the Lake Erie Waterfront Revitalization Program.

Another grant – $540,000 – will go toward an ambitious seawall and bike path project in the City of Dunkirk.

Mayor A.J. Dolce said the funding for replacement of the seawall along Lake Front Boulevard will not only enhance safety but make the area a destination.

“We think our plans to make the waterfront area a destination with splash pools and other recreational activities really impressed the decision makers,” Dolce said. “The new seawall will be attractive and functional, but the added playground and family recreation areas will make the area more popular than it is now.”

“We are even looking at a beach promenade,” added the mayor, who said officials have been talking about a grand entrance to the beach from Lake Front Boulevard. Also, the Lake Front Boulevard area will be the final stretch of a recreational bike path that starts at Point Gratiot near the city’s lighthouse.

“We brought the bike path to the corner of Main Street and Route 5, and now we will extend it along the seawall,” Dolce said.

The new grant adds to $250,000 secured for the bike path from earlier state funds. Dolce said some local funding will be added to complete the project, which is in the design phase. Construction could start in the spring.

Kathy Tampio, director of Chadwick Bay Regional Development Association, also announced the Northern Chautauqua County Water District project, which was spearheaded by the Chadwick Bay group, received $65,000 in planning funds for the Lake Erie Waterfront Revitalization Program, which encourages waterfront communities to seek out projects that have both local and regional benefits.

Tampio and Chadwick Bay directors believe the three grants show renewed interest in revitalizing Chautauqua County.

Tampio, Dolce and Chautauqua County Executive-elect Vince Horrigan have been meeting on the next phases of the water district, which received the $1 million. Tampio noted the County Legislature still must approve the creation of a water agency. To that end, a resolution on membership of the water agency is on the Legislature’s agenda for this month.

“There is a lot of work to be done,” Tampio said, “including having the county seek bonding to pay for the environmental studies and other early planning for the new water district.”

Initial plans call for the City of Dunkirk to be the supplier of water to several communities in the region along the Lake Erie shoreline.

“Ultimately this will mean safe, plentiful water for the residents and business that are already in the north county and a great source for new businesses thinking about relocating to our area,” Tampio said.

Tampio said the revitalization program got half of what was requested but that its local sources, including Nestle-Purina, Northern Chautauqua Community Foundation and Fredonia State College, have pledged funding and resources for the project.

Lake-effect snow hammering points east and south of metro Buffalo headed farther south

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The squalls that dumped half a foot of snow on areas south and east of Buffalo earlier this evening are quickly moving further south, the National Weather Service said.

Forecasters say that for the snow should be heaviest in the Boston Hills and southern Wyoming County for a short while, then move into northern Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties north of Jamestown and Franklinville. A lake-effect snow warning is in effect for these areas until midnight.

Snowfall rates of 2 inches per hour are expected and there’s the possibility of thunder. Motorists should expect poor visibility due to wind gusts up to 30 mph and very slippery highways. While temperatures are in the low 20s, windchills are in the single digits this evening.

Earlier, a National Weather Service spotter in East Aurora reported that 7 inches of new snow fell in two hours.

The latest snow comes on top of what was brought by a general storm Saturday, which left 7 to 8 inches of snow in northern Erie and Niagara counties and 4 to 6 inches in the Southtowns and the Southern Tier. Officially, 6.3 inches fell at Buffalo Niagara International Airport in Cheektowaga.

Another inch or two of snow is expected to be added to those totals Monday and Monday night and more lake-effect snow is likely Tuesday and Wednesday.

When will it all end? Warmer temperatures are due Thursday and Friday, with highs in the upper 30s and low 40s. If there’s snow then, chances are it will be mixed with rain.

Story of abandoned, injured puppy highlights vet care crisis

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The story of an unemployed Angola man who claimed he had found an abandoned, injured puppy in the woods, then confessed that the dog was his and that he made up the story because he was unable to afford veterinary care for her broken leg was a shock to some.

But the circumstances sounded all too familiar to local animal care professionals, who are faced daily with desperate people who cannot afford the cost of veterinary care for their ill or injured pet.

“People come here with their injured or ill animals expecting that we will be able to treat them for very little money, and that is not the case,” said Gina Browning, director of public relations for the SPCA Serving Erie County.

The Evans police chief was quick to place the blame in the recent case on greedy veterinarians, but animal doctors said the characterization not only was not true, it was not fair.

What cannot be debated is that many pet owners are struggling to pay for care for their animals.

Many people seek help from the Pet Emergency Fund, which has paid out more than $420,000 for veterinary care in Erie and Niagara counties since local vets established it in 1999.

“We get 20 to 50 phone calls a day to the main number of the Pet Emergency Fund asking for money,” said veterinarian Susan Mineo, who has been president of the local fund for three years. “There is not enough money in the world that could possibly cover everyone who is looking for a handout.”

The Pet Emergency Fund offers one-time emergency help with some veterinary bills at the sole discretion of the treating veterinarian. Its literature says the fund has helped more than 4,000 animals, so the average payment per animal is just over $100. Veterinary bills for serious illnesses and injuries can easily reach $1,000 or more.

Money from the Pet Emergency Fund is available through about 70 veterinarian offices in Erie and Niagara counties. Money is raised by such events as the group’s Run for Rover and is paid out quarterly to each veterinarian. Many offices also collect donations or run fundraisers to add to the office’s Emergency Fund account.

The use of money from the account is decided by the veterinarian.

“We don’t dictate what cases a clinic can use the money for. We make suggestions, but it’s up to them,” said Mineo. “Some practices have very strict guidelines on how to use the money, and some don’t. It takes a lot to get money into this account, and we don’t hand it out to just anyone.”

People who don’t know about or don’t qualify for help from the Pet Emergency Fund often approach the SPCA with animals that are sick or hurt, Browning said, and often are frustrated to learn that the agency is not set up to handle such problems.

“Unfortunately, setting up a low-cost veterinary care clinic is something people will have to discuss with their veterinarians,” she said.

When Browning started at the SPCA in 1990, the agency offered only euthanasia to people who had ill or injured animals. “Today we can offer care if the owner surrenders the dog,” she said. “Is that the perfect answer? No, but it is a better answer.”

The animal must be surrendered before it can be treated because “taking an animal who has to be surrendered to is us part of our mission, regardless of the reason,” she said. “Sometimes it’s divorce or people have lost their homes. Regardless of the reason, we have to be here to take these surrendered animals.”

Browning said donors who support the SPCA’s Yelp for Help fund “give their money to provide veterinary care to homeless animals, to give them a second chance at life. We deal in some way with 14,000 animals a year, and that includes wildlife, but that is one of the reasons why we cannot provide low-cost vet care too.”

The Yelp for Help fund paid for veterinary care for 1,635 animals between Jan. 1, 2010, and Friday. The highest number of animals, 624, were treated in 2013.

If an ill or injured dog must be surrendered, the SPCA does ask for a surrender fee. That ranges from $50 for a dog that is spayed or neutered and up to date on vaccinations, to $200 for an animal that has had little or no veterinary care. Browning said those fees are a fraction of the costs the SPCA incurs for each animal, and the agency will not turn away an animal if the owner cannot pay the fee.

A new option for some pet owners is a group called Hope Before Heaven, started about a year ago by a Niagara Falls couple. Linda Helfer said while she and her husband were in a vet emergency hospital last year with their sheltie, they saw several heartbroken pet owners who had to have their animals euthanized because they could not afford treatment.

Helfer said the group receives frequent calls from people seeking help. Although she could not estimate how much the group has paid out so far, she said it has paid vet bills for 13 animals. The group accepts donations through its website and runs various fundraisers.

Help Before Heaven will reimburse up to 50 percent of the cost of emergency veterinary care, up to $3,000 for an injured or ill dog or cat. To qualify, those who apply must exhaust all other resources and provide proof of income and residence.

“We are easier to work with than the Pet Emergency Fund, more accessible, and we help people all over Western New York, not just in Erie and Niagara counties,” said Helfer.

Hope Before Heaven has applied for 501(c)3 status, which is pending, Helfer said.

In the case of the Angola man, who is not being named because he was not charged, Evans Police Chief Ernest P. Masullo said the man “was extremely sincere, broke down bawling like a baby” while admitting the truth about the 4½-month-old female pug-Chihuahua mix. The man told police that after he accidentally stepped on the dog, breaking its leg, he called a veterinarian’s office to ask about costs. The man said he was told that the dog’s care could cost from $120 to $700, and he was unable to get the veterinarian’s office to agree to a payment plan.

“I don’t know where he called, but I have a feeling that because of the circumstances he called an emergency clinic,” said Mineo. “If he called an emergency clinic, do you know how many calls like that they get? There is not enough money in their account to pay for all of them.”

Rather than seeking information by phone, “the best scenario would be if they could bring the animal in, so we could at least diagnose the problem,” said Kevin Kuhn, a veterinarian who is owner and operator of Afton Animal Hospital in Amherst and administrator at the Veterinary Emergency Clinic in Cheektowaga. “That’s what it starts with.”

In a statement, the Angola man told police, “I just wanted the dog to be taken care of, because [neither] I nor my family have the means to pay for vet bills of that magnitude and didn’t want the puppy to be euthanized. I am currently unemployed and didn’t know of any other options at the time of the incident. I truly hope the public can see the goodness of my heart behind this story and forgive me for what I did. I am truly sorry.”

In explaining the circumstances of the story, Masullo said veterinary clinics should be required to provide callers with a list of groups that could help pay for care, and added, “I got a problem with these veterinarians. It’s all money, money, money.”

“That kills me,” said Mineo. “I think what people forget is that veterinary hospitals are businesses. For people to say that it’s all about the money, it’s not. We are all in this profession not because we want to make millions of dollars but because we love animals, and we have to be able to pay people to take care of these animals and do it well with the right equipment. You can’t give all your services away or you wouldn’t be an open business.”

Meanwhile, the pug mix puppy, who has been named Holly, is recovering from surgery and being fostered to adopt by Mike Franey, the Evans dog control officer who took her for care.

Two die, three injured, in Olean house fire

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OLEAN – A fire early Sunday in a South Second Street home claimed the lives of two people.

The blaze, which broke out about 2:30 a.m., also left three others with minor injuries. They were able to escape the fire and were later taken to Olean General Hospital for treatment.

Names of the victims are being withheld until families are notified. Police said the house, which was a total loss, was fully engulfed by the time they arrived on the scene.

The cause remains under investigation.

More clients of corrupt Erie County lawyers repaid

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Three more Erie County clients cheated by crooked lawyers have been repaid a total of $142,371 embezzled from them as part of the latest reimbursements from the state’s Lawyers Fund for Client Protection.

The repayments include $58,703 to an East Aurora man cheated by now-imprisoned lawyer Kenneth P. Bernas in a legal settlement, $78,000 to a Clarence woman cheated by now-imprisoned lawyer Thomas J. Wojciechowski in a real estate sale, and $5,668 to the estate of a Buffalo woman Wojciechowski cheated in a real estate deal.

The local recipients were among the latest 36 clients cheated by dishonest lawyers statewide to be reimbursed by the fund, Timothy J. O’Sullivan, spokesman for the Albany-based fund, told The Buffalo News on Friday.

The latest payment to a Bernas client means that 37 of the former Buffalo sole practitioner’s clients have been reimbursed a total of more than $1.6 million since he pleaded guilty in September 2010, long after building a $2 million mansion in East Aurora with money stolen from his clients.

Since September, Wojciechowski, 67, a former partner in the Buffalo law firm of Bouvier Partnership LLP and a former part-time acting Blasdell village justice, has been serving the two- to six-year prison term imposed by Erie County Judge Thomas P. Franczyk on his grand larceny conviction. He’s serving time in the state’s Groveland Correctional Facility, the same facility where the 56-year-old Bernas is serving the seven-year prison term imposed by State Supreme Court Justice Penny M. Wolfgang in February 2011 for grand larceny.

Bernas, who was also ordered by Wolfgang to repay another $1.8 million to defrauded former clients, has already been turned down once by state parole officials for an early release from custody. He faces another parole hearing in February.

O’Sullivan noted that with these latest repayments, the Lawyers Fund – created in 1982 by the Court of Appeals and funded totally by registration fees paid by the state’s over 279,000 lawyers – has repaid more than $168 million to 7,398 defrauded clients of corrupt lawyers.

O’Sullivan also announced that the Court of Appeals has reappointed Charlotte Holstein, the director of the F.O.C.U.S. Greater Syracuse community organization to her fifth three-year term as one of the two nonlawyers on the fund’s unpaid board of trustees. The court also appointed Stuart M. Cohen, the former Court of Appeals chief clerk, to his first three-year term as a fund trustee.

For 14 years until his 2010 retirement, Cohen supervised all nonjudicial operations of the high court. He was named to fill the vacancy created when Eleanor Breital Alter, a prominent Manhattan matrimonial attorney, retired after 30 years of service as a fund trustee.

email: mgryta@buffnews.com
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