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Author: Saratoga TODAY

Gardening with Peter Bowden: Winter Cat Grass

Neither of our cats show much interest in chewing on the houseplants but once in a while in winter, I’ll notice some nibbling on the leaves of a begonia or geranium that is spending the winter inside. I use this behavior as my cue to provide them with some grass to eat.

Among the seed packs that arrive at the garden center every January, you’ll be able to find some cat grass. Often this is a blend of grasses that cats enjoy. Oats, wheat, rye and barley make up the blend. In the past I’ve grown the oats for them and they like it. I decided to give the blend a try to see how that goes over.

It’s well known that cats eat grass. Most often the eating of grass is followed by the cat throwing up. A great many cat lovers have concluded that it is the grass that is making the cat sick. This isn’t an illogical conclusion, but it is nonetheless incorrect. Cats, in their native environment, will kill and eat small rodents like mice. They can’t digest mice hair and bones so they need to vomit to get rid of it. Cats also clean themselves with their tongues and end up swallowing a good bit of their own hair. This hair is also expelled through vomiting. What does all this have to do with them eating grass? By eating grass, cats are helping to induce their own vomiting to get rid of whatever is in their stomach that is causing their distress. In other words, if you see your cat eating grass, don’t stop it. The theory is that the grass induces vomiting since the cats can’t digest it, and it also makes the hair easier to expel. While cleaning up a bundle of grass and fur that your cat puked up isn’t pleasant, it is better than allowing those fur balls to create an intestinal blockage that requires a trip to the vet and, possibly, an expensive operation. 

My cats don’t vomit after they nibble on the fresh shoots. Clearly, they enjoy it and I suspect there are more benefits for them. They wouldn’t crave it if it wasn’t something they need once in a while in winter. 

Starting cat grass is the simplest thing ever. Put some potting soil in a pot, scatter in a bunch of seeds, cover with a half inch of more soil and soak it well. To hasten sprouting, I like to put the pots in a plastic bag (unsealed) until it sprouts. In a warm room, the seed will sprout in about 3 days…fast! I remove them from the bag once they sprout and find a sunny windowsill to help them grow a bit before I let the cats have it. This is the challenging part since the cats love it and can usually find it before it is tall enough to make much of a meal. Bug managed to find the pot growing on an upper windowsill and decided that it was just the right size for a snack. Then he dove right in! Peep was more ladylike when given her share.

The packet contains plenty of seeds so I’ll start a couple of pots a week for several weeks. This ensures a continuous supply for the rest of winter. The grass will re-grow two or three times after the cats nibble it down so don’t toss it after their first “munch in.” If you have indoor cats, you should consider growing grass for them all year round.  

Thanks for the read!

Salvation Army Shines Light on Human Trafficking

Flier image provided by the Salvation Army

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The U.S. State Department estimates that, at any given time, there are 27.6 million victims of human trafficking across the globe. There are even victims right here in Saratoga County. Susana Lehan, the Salvation Army’s Eastern Territory Anti-Human Trafficking Director, knows some of them personally. “This is everywhere,” Lehan said. “This is happening in everyone’s backyard.”

Human trafficking is defined as the use of force, fraud, or coercion to compel a person into commercial sex acts or labor services against his or her will.

To raise awareness of this issue, the Salvation Army is hosting an event on January 11 from 12pm to 3pm at 27 Woodlawn Ave in Saratoga Springs. “There’s not a lot of awareness in the communities and all the counties in this area,” Lehan said.

The Human Trafficking Awareness Day event includes a free lunch and a presentation by Julie Chapus, LMSW. Chapus is from Rochester, New York and works with both hair and nail salons, where trafficking victims often interact with workers. “Those are people that have intimate connections with victims,” Lehan said. Traffickers often bring their victims to salons, where workers can see scars and other signs of physical violence.

Lehan said that evidence of trafficking can be hard to spot, even among trained professionals and police officers. “I’ve been in the field for thirty years and I even was not aware of the nuances until I started working with the clients,” she said. 

Lehan’s Anti-Human Trafficking program at the Salvation Army helps to stabilize victims’ lives with housing, employment, clothing, food, and other basic needs. Since she first began working on this program four months ago, Lehan has already acquired at least twenty clients.

According to Lehan, only about 1% of victims report trafficking to anyone, and reports to law enforcement occur even less frequently. While trafficking can be organized by criminal groups, it can also happen in intimate partner relationships. “Individuals are coercing people to enter these situations that they can’t get out of, and it’s by use of force, coercion, or fraud,” Lehan said. The Polaris Project, a nonprofit that aims to combat human trafficking, estimates that in 2020, 39% of victims were recruited via an intimate partner or marriage proposal. 

The objective of the Human Trafficking Awareness Day event in Saratoga is to bring awareness of this ongoing issue to community members and leaders.

“We’re not asking people to intervene or anything in any kind of situation because it’s dangerous,” Lehan said. “However, we’re asking people to just be aware and to be able to pass on a phone number, and if the client feels safe enough to come to us, they can.”

To contact Susana Lehan, call 518-584-1640 or send her an email at susana.lehan@use.salvationarmy.org.

Property Transactions January 5 – 11, 2024

This week’s beautiful home at 22 Central Ave in Saratoga Springs listed by Jaime Williams
 from Roohan Realty and sold for $705,000 

BALLSTON

Eastline Holdings LLC sold property at 35 Timber Creek to Jose Pavinatto for $638,300

Colleen Purdy sold property at 106 Lancaster Court to Richard Scharphorn for $451,000

Cascade Funding Mortgage Trust sold property at 31 Main St to Richard Von Ahn for $126,600

Linda Donahue sold property at 237 Blue Barns Rd to Antonio Alvarez for $245,000

CORINTH

Michael Laport sold property at Angel Rd to Ryan Scribner for $25,000

GALWAY

Nicole Cotungo sold property at 5856 Lake Rd to Timothy Schilde for $100,000

Anna Laloe sold property at 3056 Shaw Rd to David Djnozka for $507,000

GREENFIELD

Mary Kate MacFarland sold property at 47 Locust Grove Rd to Kristen Shwen for $350,000

MALTA 

Paul McCloskey sold property at 126 Arrowwood Pl to Lauren Cifra for $258,400

Toni Vieira sold property at 56 Arrowwood Pl to Rena Zeppetelli for $250,000

MILTON

Jonathan Baniak sold property at 33 Red Oak Lane to Mark Villareal for $249,900

Jennie Gavin sold property at 16 Amber Way to Miranda Cannon for $375,000

Barbara Shaver  sold property at 47 Malta Ave to Joseph Shaver for 139,000

Donald Lusardi sold property at 519 Elk Circle to Xiaoming Yang for $221,000

Kathleen Kalwa sold property at 17 Milton Ave to Saratoga Allvets LLC for $280,000

Timothy Yates sold property at 85 Saratoga Ave to Shane Levin for 200,000

William Collins sold property at 451 Stone Church Rd to Jonathan Davis for $610,000

Dennis Day sold property at 643 Geyser Rd to Richard Briggs for $100,000

SARATOGA SPRINGS

Kevin Hamlin sold property at 39 Park Place to Gissou Azabdaftari for $875,000

Cory Ward sold property at 116 Caroline St to Jeffrey Buxbaum for $2,100,000

Beechwood Saratoga LLC sold property at 35 Oakridge Blvd to Elizabeth Grimaldi for $1,400,000

Alexander Briggs sold property at 7 Newton Ave to Skye Elliott for $567,500

John Cianci sold property at 15 Walworth St to Jan Dillon for $389,000

WILTON

Laura Clute sold property at 8 Elizabeth Lane to Richard VonAhn for $320,000.

McPadden Builders LLC sold property at 3 Colleen Ct to Jay Matthews for $565,162

Robert Lawrence sold property at 80 Damascus Dr to Steven Kuznia for $511,500

Manuel Choy sold property at 20 Christina Ct to Lynn Jacksland for $500,000

Christopher Boggs sold property at 63 Fieldstone Dr to James Hayden for $655,000

Donovan Realty Corp sold property at 653 Strakos Rd to Jacqueline Adler for $380,000

Michael Nelson sold property at 6 Fenimore Pl to Steven Cox for $520,000

AG Letitia James: $656,000 from Unlicensed Ballston Spa Nursing Home Operator for Years of Fraud and Neglect; Settlement Follows Four Prior Settlements Against Nursing Home’s Operators For $7.1 Million

SARATOGA COUNTY —New York Attorney General Letitia James and the United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York Carla Freedman announced in late December they had secured $656,000 in a settlement with Chaim “Mutty” Scheinbaum, an unlicensed operator of the Saratoga Center for Rehabilitation and Skilled Nursing Care (Saratoga Center) for years of fraud and resident neglect. 

From 2017 to 2021, Scheinbaum operated the nursing home in Ballston Spa without a license from the state, in violation of New York law. 

Under his control, conditions at Saratoga Center rapidly declined. The facility lacked hot water and clean linens, and residents suffered falls, pressure sores, and other significant lapses in care, according to a statement released by the N.Y. attorney general’s office. 

The facility – formerly known as Maplewood Manor when it was owned and operated by Saratoga County – was sold by the county in 2015. 

The settlement follows four prior settlements as part of a resolution in February 2023 with Saratoga Center’s owners, a second unlicensed operator, and the facility’s landlord, for over $7.1 million. 

“Every resident of New York’s nursing homes deserves high-quality care and proper staffing to meet their needs,” James said in a statement. “Rather than ensure vulnerable residents got the care they deserved, this individual mismanaged Saratoga Center’s finances and failed to adequately staff the facility, causing residents to suffer the consequences of neglect and unsanitary conditions. 

Saratoga Center operated as a 257-bed nursing home from 2015 until it closed in 2021. In 2017, the landlord pressured the owners to relinquish control of Saratoga Center to unlicensed operators, including Scheinbaum, but did not report the change to the Department of Health (DOH).

The conditions at Saratoga Center declined under the control of the new, unlicensed operators, leading to a breakdown in the quality of care provided to residents. From when they took over in 2017 to when Saratoga Center closed in 2021, Scheinbaum and the other unlicensed operator mismanaged the nursing home’s finances and failed to adequately staff the facility, causing residents to suffer the consequences.

Scheinbaum and the other operators billed New York’s Medicaid program for services provided to the residents. The investigation revealed these were claims for worthless services and amounted to hundreds of thousands of dollars of fraudulent claims, James said.  

In 2018, both DOH and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) fined Saratoga Center for serious deficiencies and violations, and in 2019, CMS designated Saratoga Center a “Special Focus Facility,” signifying it was among the poorest performing nursing homes in the country. 

The parties to the settlement announced are Chaim Scheinbaum, Alliance NJ Care LLC, and Alliance HC II LLC, the entities through which Scheinbaum conducted business. 

McLoughlin Appointed to Malta Town Board

MALTA — Matt McLoughlin, a 23-year resident of Malta, was appointed to the Malta Town Board to fill the vacancy left by the resignation of former Councilman John Hartzell in December. 

McLoughlin, served for the last two years as Deputy Town Supervisor, and is a former Trooper who was assigned to the Malta Barracks for more than a decade during his tenure with the State Police. 

“We have a great deal of work to accomplish in the months and years ahead. With a new board, I’m confident we can work in a bipartisan manner to reflect the wants and desires of our community,” McLoughlin said in a statement. “I look forward to working and partnering with incoming Supervisor Young and all of our council members to work toward that goal.”

Wesley Celebrates Success of “Adopt A Grandparent” Holiday Initiative


The inaugural Adopt a Grandparent program, launched by Impressions of Saratoga, provides gifts for residents without family at The Wesley Community. Members of Wesley’s Life Enrichment team prepared the gift bags and coordinated with Impressions of Saratoga on the selection of gifts. Photo provided.

SARATOGA SPRINGS —Members of The Welsey Community – a 37-acre senior living campus with more than 700 residents in Saratoga Springs – have enjoyed a happier holiday season thanks to the thoughtfulness of two local boutique gift shop co-owners and the generosity of the greater Saratoga Springs community.

The inaugural Adopt a Grandparent program was launched on Black Friday, Nov. 24, as part of a holiday giving campaign by Impressions of Saratoga and The Dark Horse Mercantile Co-Owners Maddy Zanetti and Marianne Barker. Shoppers of both stores purchased and personalized $20 gift tags through Dec. 17 that were used to buy gifts for residents of the Wesley Community. As many as 400 gift tags were purchased, making it possible to provide every resident with a gift. Holiday gift bags were distributed during Hanukkah and just prior to Christmas. 

Going forward, Zanetti and Barker said they plan to offer the Adopt a Grandparent program annually.

Visit ImpressionsSaratoga.com for further information about the Adopt a Grandparent program or call 518-587-0666. www.thewesleycommunity.org

One Thousand Cookies for Shelters of Saratoga

Photo provided

SARATOGA SPRINGS — On Wednesday, Dec. 20, 2023 Beverly Lawson delivered more than 84 dozen cookies, baked by members of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Saratoga Springs, to Duane Vaughn, Executive Director of Shelters of Saratoga, for distribution to the more than 120 people receiving services from SOS. 

Vaughn said that the cookies, carefully packaged in gift bags of seven cookies each, are often given as gifts by Shelters patrons. He said that the homeless population nationally has increased by more than 12% this year and in Saratoga Springs, the Code Blue population, served by SOS, is twice as large as it was one year ago. Vaughn and Associate Executive Director Stephanie Romero and Facilities House Manager Jess Thompson, who helped distribute the cookies, expressed their gratitude to the twenty or so bakers from the UUCSS who prepared the gift bags, and they agreed that the need to care for the homeless population is always present.

Events This Week at Moreau Lake State Park

MOREAU — The following events are scheduled to take place this week at Moreau Lake State Park, located at 605 Old Saratoga Rd, Gansevoort. Program fees waived this month in lieu of a non-perishable donation for our local food drive. 

Monday, Jan. 8 at 9 a.m. – Eagle Watch. Join a Park Educator on a convoy-style journey along the Hudson River to try to spot local Bald Eagles. Reservations are required at least 24 hours in advance: 518-793-0511.

Tuesday, Jan. 9 at 10 a.m. – Lake Bonita to Waterfall Trail Hike. A guided hike approximately 3.6 miles total with an out and back trail from Lake Bonita to the Waterfall trail. Bring microspikes and poles if you have them. Snowshoes and microspikes to rent for $5. Reserve your spot in advance by calling the office at 518-793-0511.

Thursday, Jan. 11 at 9:30 a.m. – Kneehigh Naturalist. Geared toward children aged 2-5. Reservations are required at least 24 hours in advance: 518-793-0511.

Friday Jan. 5, 12, 17, 19, and 26 at 9:30 a.m. – Wiggly Wanderers. This will be a beginner’s hike/wander series for toddlers who are ready to move and caregivers who are able to carry their toddler if their legs get too tired. This event does not have sign ups.  Meet at the nature center parking lot. 

Winter Sports Rentals at Wilton Wildlife Preserve & Park Start Jan. 6

WILTON — Starting the weekend of Jan. 6, cross-country skis and snowshoes will be available for rent every Saturday and Sunday through March 24, in the town of Wilton.

Rentals will also be available on Monday, Jan. 15, Dr. Martin Luther King Day and during the school vacation week from Feb. 19-23. Adult and child sizes are available.

The rentals are located in the Winter Lodge at Camp Saratoga with access from Parking Lot #1 on Scout Road in the Town of Wilton. Rentals are $10 for adults and $5 for kids/students. Rentals are available from 10 a.m.–2 p.m. with all rented equipment returned by 3 p.m. Rentals are on a first-come first-serve basis.

For more information, call the Wilton Wildlife office at 518-450-0321 or email info@wiltonpreserve.org. For up-to-date trail conditions or program information, visit wiltonpreserve.org or follow on Facebook or Instagram @wiltonpreserve. 

William D. Hollner, Sr.  

BALLSTON SPA — William D. Hollner, Sr. passed away on January 2, 2024 at Saratoga Hospital. A funeral service will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, January 8, 2024 at Compassionate Funeral Care. Calling hours are from 5 to 7 p.m. prior to the service. Online condolences, visit www.compassionatefuneralcare.com.