batavia
Rochester man charged with drug use and possession enters not guilty plea
At his arraignment, his attorney Marshall Kelly said his client pleads not to: criminal possession of a controlled substance, 3rd, a Class B felony; and criminal use of drug paraphernalia, 2nd, a Class B misdemeanor.
On March 27, law enforcement allegedly found 56 bags of crack cocaine at a house on Liberty Street, Batavia. Wilcox was one of five individuals arrested as a result a joint investigation a result of a joint investigation by the Probation Department, Child Protective Services, and the Local Drug Task Force.
Wilcox’s $20,000 bail bond was also continued by Judge Charles Zambito.
Oral arguments for Wilcox's case will begin at 9 a.m. Aug. 26 at the Genesee County Courthouse.
Mark Your Calendar: Third annual Tap Batavia is July 27, deadline to buy tickets is June 30
From Tap Batavia Chair Erin Worbs:
The third annual Tap Batavia is set for 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, July 27, in Downtown Batavia, hosted by the Batavia Area Jaycees.
Tickets are $35 and the deadline to buy them is June 30.
Each ticket includes a Tap Batavia T-shirt, one beer ticket each at: Bourbon & Burger Co.; Center Street Smokehouse; Eli Fish Brewing Co., T.F. Brown's Restaurant; O'Lacy's Irish Pub. The price also includes pizza and wings donated by T.F. Brown's and Center Street Smokehouse.
Designated driver tickets are $10, and everything is included but the beer tickets.
A portion of the proceeds benefits Crossroads House.
Tickets can be purchased by cash or check given to any current member of the Batavia Area Jaycees, or by paying through Venom to @Erin-Worbs.
The Facebook event page for it can be found here: https://www.facebook.com/events/431218950791694/
Contact tapbatavia@gmail.com with any questions, or to set up a time to meet to pay for tickets with cash or check.
Photos: John Kennedy School fourth-grade moving up ceremony
More than 170 fourth-grade students from John Kennedy Intermediate School celebrated Moving Up Day as they will enter in the Middle School this coming school year in September.
Principal Amanda Cook presented along with teachers for various academics, merit, arts, physical education and school based awards to students. Many parents, educators, family and friends celebrated today's ceremony.
FOUND: Big and brawny 'Giovanni' is missing from area around Liberty and South Jackson streets, Batavia
A big bull-mastiff-type dog named "Giovanni" is missing. He became lost this afternoon in the vicinity of Liberty and South Jackson streets in the City of Batavia.
The owner, devoted reader Bernie Thompson, emplores citizens -- "DO NOT CHASE." We're guessing that to do so with this large, hunky charcoal-brindle-coated canine would be to risk possible injury, if not, daresay, worse.
He is most assuredly male, neutered, and microchipped. Giovanni was last seen wearing a robin's-egg-blue collar and leash.
If found, or if you have information about him, call 813-3087.
His left front paw, curiously, has two middle toes that have white tips. And he has a small white patch on his stout chest.
UPDATE June 24: This morning owner Bernie Thompson reported Giovanni is home safe and sound!
BHS commencement encourages lifelong service in graduates
Batavia High School's 137th commencement occurred this afternoon at Genesee Community College in the Richard C. Call Arena.
Valedictorian Julia Spiotta (pictured below) encouraged members of the Class of 2019 to “fall forward” into their future endeavors in the face of both adversity and success.
She left this message with her class:
“Whatever we did over these years, we did it together knowing that the Class of 2019 was united, which is something I believe is very special about us.
“I’d like to thank you, members of the Class of 2019, for making high school so memorable. Today — June 23, 2019 — has been a day that we have all eagerly anticipated. Now that it is finally here, it is a very bittersweet day.”
During her speech, Salutatorian Tracy Lin remarked:
“Although we physically will no longer be in BHS, I have no doubt that each one of us will always carry in their memories the laughs, achievements, classes, sporting events and the homecomings we’ve experienced as a class."
Commencement speaker Mark Warren, a mathematics teacher at BHS, said: “A life of service is not always easy, which is why it must be a conscious decision. You have to be the person that decides to live your life in the service of others … It’s time to commence your life of service."
Loud applause filled the arena as graduate Antwan Odom, who was approved to attend commencement alongside his classmates, received his diploma.
Presentation of awards and diplomas was given by Paul Kesler, principal of BHS; Patrick Burk, president of the Board of Education; and Christopher Dailey, superintendent of schools. Sunday’s commencement was Dailey’s last BHS graduation prior to departing for his new superintendent position at Gates Chili Central School District.
To view or purchase photos go to steveognibenephotography.com or click here.
Below, Salutatorian Tracy Lin.
Three-vehicle collision is blocking traffic on Clinton Street Road, Batavia
A three-vehicle collision is reported in the area of 5141 Clinton Street Road. It is blocking traffic and there is a lot of debris in the roadway. Minor injuries. The location is between Collegeview Drive and Shady Lane.
Town of Batavia Fire Department and Mercy medics are responding.
The Batavia Culture Jam: Seeing-Saying-Singing will be held at MoonJava Cafe June 29
The Batavia Culture Jam: Seeing -- Saying -- Singing
You are invited to this event at the MoonJava Cafe, located at 56 Harvester Ave. in Batavia, from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Here's what's in store:
Poetry Reading
Brian Laird -- Howard Owens
The Humble Bard
Interpretive Reading
Richard Beatty
Visual Artists
Emily Crawford -- George Graham
Steve Johnson -- Jeanine Messinger -- Jill Pettigrew
Renee Smart -- Amos Werner -- Eric Zwieg
Musical Performance
Local 1
This is a MoonJava Cafe and Visual Truth Theatre Ensemble Production.
Law and Order: Wyoming woman charged with reckless endangerment after near-drowning of 4-year-old
Crystal Lynn Kiebzak, 37, of Main Street, Wyoming, is charged with second-degree reckless endangerment. On June 22 at a campground on Francis Road in Bethany, Kiebzak was arrested at 7:35 p.m. following the investigation of a child who was resuscitated after drowning in a pool. She was arraigned in Bethany Town Court and issued an appearance ticket for 7 p.m. July 16 in Bethany Town Court. The case was investigated by Genesee County Sheriff's Deputy Joshua Brabon, assisted by Deputy Kyle Krzemien.
David George Morgan, 65, of Roanoke Road, Stafford, is charged with second-degree menacing. He was arrested at 6:56 p.m. on June 20 on Roanoke Road in Stafford. It is alleged that he intentionally placed an individual in reasonable fear of physical injury, serious physical injury or death by displaying a dangerous instrument -- a screwdriver. He was arraigned in Stafford Town Court and released under supervision. The case was handled by Genesee County Sheriff's Deputy Travis DeMuth, assisted by Sgt. Andrew Hale.
Duane Kenneth Miller, 54, of Linwood Avenue, Warsaw, is charged with illegal use of toxic vapors. Following an investigation into a subject allegedly huffing in the Walmart parking lot in Batavia, Miller was arrested at 12:45 p.m. on June 21. He was released on an appearance ticket and is due in Batavia Town Court on July 8. The case was handled by Genesee County Sheriff's Deputy Kevin Forsyth, assisted by Deputy Ryan Young.
Injured skunk in a driveway on Liberty Street
An injured skunk is reported in the driveway at 248 Liberty St., Batavia. An animal control officer is responding.
Video: Batavia Little League Championship, Mets vs. Dodgers
The Dodgers and the Mets faced off today in the Batavia Little League Championship.
The Dodgers needed to win the first game to force a Game 2, or the Mets, if they won the first game, would have become champions.
The Dodgers did win the first game, 5-4 but the Mets came back in a big way in the second game to win 11-3.
Video: Water rescue of two people whose canoe overturned on the Tonawanda Creek
Two people were rescued today in the Tonawanda Creek after their canoe overturned and became jammed against a log, which they managed to grab onto until help arrived.
East Pembroke Fire, Town of Batavia Fire, and Gary Patnode, head of the county's rope rescue team, responded.
Volunteer firefighters were able to get ropes to John R. Young, 24, of Basom, and Kaleigh Kasteli, 20, of Beaver Falls, Pa., along with life vests -- which they put over their own life vests -- and pull them safely to shore.
Both Young and Kasteli were examined by medics with Mercy EMS and released from care at the scene.
State Police also assisted at the scene.
Dog reportedly locked in vehicle more than an hour in UMMC parking lot
A caller reports a dog has been locked in a car for more than an hour in the rear parking lot of UMMC. The caller did not know the model of the vehicle, but said it has out-of-state license plates. An animal control officer is responding.
People stranded after canoe flips in Tonawanda Creek
Two people are reportedly stuck on a tree trunk-- uninjured -- after their canoe flipped while they were paddling through the Tonawanda Creek in the area of 3507 S. Main Street Road, Batavia.
East Pembroke fire and Town of Batavia fire dispatched.
UPDATE 4:37 p.m.: The caller tells dispatchers the people stranded don't want to swim to shore because of the current in the creek.
UPDATE(S)(By Billie) 4:42 p.m.: A safety rope will be put in place downstream, in case initial efforts fail to bring them in. The caller said the canoers can be accsssed through their back yard. A firefighter says those stranded are easily accessible even without a rope. Another says there's an island in the middle of the creek but the water is fairly swift and high.
UPDATE 4:43 p.m.: A firefighter says he's near them, and they are 20 feet away.
UPDATE 4:44 p.m.: The general area of where they are is Route 5 and Kelsey Road.
UPDATE 4:51 p.m.: Some of the rescuers are going up the road to find a better location to place a secondary safety line across the waterway, possibly behind a trailer park.
UPDATE 4:59 p.m.: A rescuer on the north bank of the creek says "I don't think we're going to be able to get a line all the way over." There is some confusion, "possibly a language barrier," regarding others who may have also been in the water with the stranded canoers. The rescuers want to be sure there is not another party stranded somewhere. There are four or five kayaks that were also in the water with the canoe and those people are at the bridge at Route 5 and Wortendyke and are heading to their vehicles. They also reported speaking with the two stranded canoers and said they, too, experienced a language barrier, which they attribute to them being stuck in the water.
UPDATE 5:10 p.m.: Mercy medics are called to evaluate the folks who were stuck in the water. They are safely out. The location on South Main Street is between Wortendyke Road and Lovers Lane Road.
UPDATE 5:22 p.m.: All Town of Batavia units are told they can go back in service. East Pembroke command says they will be packing up and leaving the scene in a couple minutes.
UPDATE 5:35 p.m.: The two stranded canoers were evaluated by Mercy medics and released.
UPDATE: Click here for follow up information and a video of the rescue.
Alumna of the Class of '68 looks back: transistor radios, wall phones, the Jerk, and Vietnam
Anne Marie Starowitz, right, and her friend Cathy in July 1968.
Submitted photos and story by Anne Marie Starowitz:
By definition, a Baby Boomer is a person born during a period of time in which there is a marked rise in a population's birthrate: a person born during a baby boom; especially -- a person born in the United States following the end of World War II (usually considered to be in the years from 1946 to 1964).
That is the Webster's Dictionary definition. But it doesn’t adequately define a Baby Boomer.
I am a Baby Boomer along with my high school and college graduating classes of 1968 and 1972. There are a lot of us and our memories growing up during that time are very special.
We grew up in a world that was so different from the one our grandchildren are growing up in. We all heard about going home when the street lights came on, houses with the doors unlocked, and just playing outside.
In the summer we slept out in tents, caught fireflies, and swam at the community pool.
A telephone was attached to the wall. If you were lucky, you would have a long cord so you could stretch the cord into a closet or another room. There was no call waiting and rare was the household with an answering machine.
Fast forward to today's smartphone and see how technology has changed.
I loved the music of the '60s. A few had their very own transistor (AM) radio. You could walk around with it but the reception was usually terrible.
I remember playing kickball in our front yard every day. In the summer, the park program was the place to be. Everyone had their favorite park that was usually located in your own neighborhood. Of course, the highlight was the park parade.
The Memorial Day parade was always a really special event. There would be the fire trucks, Little League players, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts walking down Main Street. There would be convertibles with our veterans that served in the early wars.
I always remember the Army tanks and jeeps going down Main Street and the feeling it brought seeing them. You also couldn’t wait for the Mighty St. Joseph Drum & Bugle Corps marching down the street.
It wouldn’t be Memorial Day if we didn’t go to the cemetery and walk to every gravestone that belonged to a relative. I would see my aunt and uncles, cousins standing by our grandfather's and grandmother's graves.
In the mid '60s there were tennis court dances and, in the winter, there was ice skating on the tennis courts. Also, in the summer the local churches would hold their annual lawn fete. We always looked forward to them. A Baby Boomer could drink at 18 and the lawn fetes had the best beer tents.
My memories were filled with a time of change. It seemed every generation was associated with a war. My uncle John was in the Korean War; my father in World War II; we were associated with the Vietnam War.
I remember being in college and there was the talk of classmates being drafted. That changed many lives as my college classmates said goodbye to their boyfriends and husbands.
There were protests against the war and I remember marching down Main Street in Buffalo. We wore bracelets of soldiers who were POWs (prisoners of war) or were MIA (missing in action) from the Vietnam War. We never understood why we were over there, and most of all we never understood when our vets were not honored or remembered like the other war veterans once they returned home.
My father told all of us how difficult it was growing up when he did. How many jobs he did and the best story was about the long walk to school in the snow and rain every day and going home for lunch.
Today this Baby Boomer treasures those memories along with my memories growing up during a much slower time, filled with our music, the Beatles, our dances -- the Twist, the Jerk, the Mashed Potato, the Pony, the Swim, the Boogaloo, Watusi and more.
(To view a YouTube compilation of '60s dances, click here.)
I tried to tell our daughters what it was like back then and now I see our daughters telling their children what it was like, their music, the fashion, and the war associated with them growing up.
Technology has changed our world and our children and their children.
All I really remember as a Baby Boomer was we didn't use the word "bored" because we really weren't bored.
Our music was played on a hi-fi system and we actually danced to a band in high school that just might have been your brother’s band.
I wouldn’t change a thing growing up as a Baby Boomer except honoring our Vietnam vets more.
Please share your Baby Boomer memories. They just might be similar to mine.
Photos: Survivor kicks off 2019 concert series at Batavia Downs
Survivor opened the 2019 concert season at Batavia Downs on Friday night.
Here's the lineup for the rest of the summer:
- June 28 -- Queensrÿche
- July 5 -- Kim Mitchell
- July 12 -- Journey Former Lead Vocalist Steve Augeri
- July 19 -- Gin Blossoms
- July 26 -- Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band
- Aug. 2 -- Tanya Tucker
- Aug. 9 -- Theory Of A Deadman
Photos: Sunset on West Main Street, Batavia
Here's a couple of sunset photos from yesterday taken at Oak and Main looking down West Main Street, Batavia.
Photos: Jackson Square concert season opens with Genesee Ted
The annual Jackson Square Friday Night Concerts series opened last night with Genesee Ted.
The line up for the rest of the season:
- June 28 – The Skycats
- July 5 – It’s My Party
- July 7 – Downtown Batavia Music Ramble Festival -- Bands & Times for The Ramble will be announced soon!
- July 12 – Old Hippies
- July 19 – Red Creek
- July 26 – Mitty & the Followers
- Aug. 2 – Ohms Band
- Aug. 9 – The Ghost Riders
Video: Promotion Day at Jackson School
Jackson School in Batavia hosted two promotion ceremonies today. This video is from the 9 a.m. session.
State and local laws prohibit homeowners from keeping grass clippings on roads
The sound of lawn mowers and the smell of freshly cut grass are signs of summertime in Genesee County.
However, those familiar noises and scents can far too often mean motorcycle accidents if homeowners do not properly remove road hazards like grass clippings, leaves and gravel.
“The people most to suffer from these things when it comes to motor vehicles is the motorcyclist, specifically, in a corner,” said Jon DelVecchio, riding coach at Street Skills LLC motorcycling school in Rochester and author of "Cornering Confidence: The Formula for 100% Control in Curves."
“Motorcyclists and car drivers alike, we want nothing between our tire surface and the road surface," DelVecchio said. "That’s how we’re going to get the best traction really in any condition.”
Grass clippings in summer months are reportedly as slippery as winter ice on road surfaces. Yard waste that blows onto road pavement presents safety hazards to motorcyclists whose two-wheeled vehicles speed over the slick grass clippings.
Clearing grass clippings from roadways is not a choice; it is mandated by state and local law.
NYS Vehicle and Traffic Law Section 1219 prohibits any substance that is likely to cause injury from being placed on highways. If grass clippings from a lawn mower are either accidentally blown or intentionally deposited onto the pavement, homeowners are legally obligated to remove them immediately.
Also, City of Batavia Municipal Code 113-2 states “No person shall sweep, throw or deposit or cause to be swept, thrown or deposited any ashes, dirt, stone, brick, leaves, grass, weeds or any other debris … into any public place or upon any private property without the owner's permission within the city.” A violator of this law can be fined $250, face imprisonment up to 15 days or be sued civilly if their grass clippings cause a motorcycle accident.
Jesse Underwood is a motorcyclist from Holley who has been riding motorcycles for 40 years. He was shopping at Stan's Harley-Davidson dealership in Batavia on Thursday when asked about encounters with grass clippings while tooling around.
He said it is important enough to him that, if he sees a problem, he stops his motorcycle and informs homeowners of the dangers of grass clippings during his rides with other motorcyclists.
"Every time we go on a big ride, every time we see people blowing grass in the road, we stop and give them a brochure on the dangers of it," Underwood said.
When homeowners receive the information, they are often surprised.
"A lot of them didn't even realize what they were doing is wrong," Underwood said. "I explain to them that wet grass clippings in the road — it's like ice to a motorcycle.
"If you come up and you're on wet grass ... or you're coming into a blind curve, even if you're doing the speed limit and you hit the wet grass, you're going down."
Underwood said that there are already enough dangers, such as texting and driving, that threaten the safety of motorcyclists, so grass clippings just add to the road hazards.
To effectively dispose of yard waste, homeowners are encouraged to leave their grass clippings on their lawns. This solution benefits the environment because clippings act as a natural, nutrient-rich fertilizer and decrease the amount of store-bought fertilizer homeowners purchase. This option also saves time because grass clippings do not need to be bagged after each mowing.
“I would advise homeowners, as a person who rides a motorcycle, to just simply be aware that their grass clippings could cause real trouble for people who ride motorcycles,” DelVecchio said.
DelVecchio encourages homeowners to take preventative measures to clear the roads near their property. He also advises motorcyclists to receive both basic and advanced riding instruction through videos, books or training courses so they can navigate grass-covered roads.
Lost control of motorcycles can lead to injury and death among motorcyclists who cannot regain their traction on grass-covered streets. It only takes a few moments to clean up grass clippings if they blow into the road in order to keep motorcyclists safe.