News roundup: School Board meets today
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- Batavia's City School Board will hold its reorganization meeting today at 4:15pm at the district office on Washington Avenue.
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Following the arrest of a Bergen man over the weekend for possessing several cartons of untaxed cigarettes purchased at an American Indian reservation, WBTA sent out their crack team of investigators to find out just where the legal line is drawn for buying smokes from a reservation.
It turns out, the law is not very tolerant on this issue. Genesee County Sheriff Gary Maha told Dan Fischer that if you've got any more than two cartons of untaxed cigarettes, "you put yourself at risk." I especially enjoy the phrasing, though I can't say if it's all Dan Fischer or Gary Maha. Of course, you put yourself at risk if you've got a lot of smokes. But I would have assumed the risk was to your lung health, not the risk to get booked with misdemeanor tax evasion!
Sheriff's deputies reported that the "bust" over the weekend was made when a fellow was already pulled over for a traffic stop and was found in possession of 2,200 cigarettes. If my math is correct, I believe that's 11 cartons.
Maha did stress, however, that deputies are not actively out looking to nail people for buyig cigarettes from a reservation. But if you get pulled over for something else and you happen to have 11 cartons in your passenger seat, you may just be held responsible.
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You could have said the night started ominous. Sure, the fans were there, diehard and decked in team merch, blankets tucked under their arms. They entered Dwyer Stadium under an arc of balloons — and Muckdog management even saw fit to roll out the red carpet, or at least a pair of shaggy red-colored rugs.
Then came the rain.
Everyone was talking about it. You couldn't not. Not with those low-hanging clouds that looked as thick as continents rolling slowly past. When one of them finally broke at about 6:30pm, everyone who wasn't under cover got a good soaking. Concession boys scrambled to get the condiment carts under the eaves. Managers called out for more hands on deck to roll tarp over the field. Ladies held seat cushions over their heads.
But it passed. Soon it was pretty much over. Fans got down to the business of watching baseball, and the Batavia Muckdogs and the Auburn Doubledays got down to the business of playing it.
Well, they lost. Batavia went down 1-6 against Auburn. Oh well. Now they'll take it to Auburn for the third and final game of the series tomorrow night down two games to none.
Don't forget to tune it to WBTA for the play-by-play.
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WBTA reported this morning that Genesee Community College is asking the county for an additional $50,000 in support. Also in store for the next academic year is a tution increase of about $50 per full-time student per semester.
We asked the college why they needed the extra funds and just what would be funded and found a brief, slightly more detailed explanation of the increase on the college's Web site (published May 13):
A proposed $50,000 increase in support, from $1,836,374 to $1,886,374 from Genesee County, sponsor of the College. Genesee County support would be 6.1% of the total operating budget, the lowest percentage of support in the history of the College. Genesee County’s sponsor support during 2006-2007 was $966 per full-time-equivalent student, the lowest sponsor support ratio of any of SUNY’s 30 community colleges.
We're waiting to hear from the college about how long the increase would last. GCC's Web site implies that the increase is only included in the 2008-2009 budget.
By way of an explanation for the increase:
The budget ensures that Genesee will maintain program excellence and affordability, President Stuart Steiner told trustees. “Our commitment is to provide extraordinary education to our students, and to do so as cost-effectively as possible,” Dr. Steiner said. “For well over a quarter-century, we have maintained operating costs lower than those of our peers, yet we have developed a reputation across New York State and beyond for excellence and innovation.”
Overall, the total budget for GCC for the next year is up about 4.5 percent, from $29.5 million to $30.8 million.
WBTA, 1490 AM, is gearing up for another of its periodic auctions. Dan Fischer has loaded the station's web site page with several more items.
Items include:
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• A single engine Cessna plane crash on a flight from Batavia crashed in the town of Sweden near Brockport around noon yesterday. Nothing is yet known of the cause of the crash. Flight instructor Davy Merritt of Caledonia and his student Benjamin Bruce were hospitalized with serioues injuries. For more information and video coverage of the crash site, see News 10-NBC.
• Twenty-seven-year-old Maria Mitchel of Batavia pleaded not guilty to a charge of attempted murder after being arrested Friday. Mitchel was seen on video surveillance allegedly trying to suffocate her 7-month-old baby girl at Buffalo's Women and Children's Hospital.
• Nearly 100 parishioners of St. Paul's Lutheran Church took to the community yesterday with paintbrushes, baked goods, quilts and garden tools to help clean up and show their appreciation for their neighborhoods.
Listen to WBTA AM 1490 for news updates throughout the day.
WBTA has posted several items available in it's June 7 "Father's Day" auction.
Interesting items include:
The auction will run from 9 a.m. to noon.
Dan Fischer just told me that he'll be posting more items this afternoon.
Merchants who still wish to participate have until tomorrow to contact WBTA.
We're a little behind in our Daily News reading (with Philip on vacation). From the Saturday/Sunday edition, however, there were some items of note.
We recommend you pick up your copy of the Daily News at a local newsstand, or subscribe on the Daily News web site.
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• No working smoke detectors were found in the apartment complex in Byron that burned down Monday, according to the Genesee County Sheriff's Office. A family four died in the fire that looks to have started in their kitchen, possible near the stove.
• Smoked "Kuta Fish" and "Boney Fish" purchased from the African Caribbean Market on North Clinton may be tainted with botulism, according to the Department of Agriculture and Markets. No problems have yet been reported, but the fish should be thrown out.
• Local law enforcement will be holding a child safety seat inspection between 10:00am and 2:00pm — WBTA reports the date of the event as "next Saturday," which we assume to mean two days from now.
From WBTA earlier this afternoon (following reports that the City Council "hastily" met in an executive session this morning to deal with a "personnel issue"):
The Internal Revenue Service placed a lien on a Batavia City Hall bank account due to an error in a payroll tax report. The error, which occurred in the second quarter of last year, was recently discovered by city hall management and has now been corrected.
City Manager Jason Molino told WBTA that Deputy Director of Finance Shelly D'Alba "is no longer emplyed by the city," though there was no indication of whether D'Alba was fired or resigned his position. Also, though D'Alba was in charge of filing the payroll tax reports, Molino cautioned that "it would be wrong to link D'Alba's departure from City Hall to the payroll tax reporting error," writes Dan Fischer. The result of the lien was "human error," according to Molino, indicating that there were no criminal acts.
Get the full story at WBTA, plus an audio file of City Manager Jason Molino explaining the situation.
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