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Author: Saratoga TODAY

Charles Stephen (Chip) Lee

STILLWATER — Charles Stephen (Chip) Lee, age 68, passed away on December 6th. A memorial celebration of Chip’s life was held on December 11th at Longfellows Inn and Restaurant, 500 Union Ave, Saratoga Springs. Visit www.compassionatefuneralcare.com

Wesley Health Care Center’s Jenna Lord Recognized as 2021 Professional of the Year

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Wesley Community announced that Jenna Lord, Director of Nursing at the Wesley Health Care Center, has received the 2021 Professional of the Year Award from LeadingAge New York. 

The Professional of the Year Award recognizes contributions of a professional working in the aging healthcare field toward the well-being of the elderly or chronically ill in his or her community. The award nomination is open to any long-term care, housing, and services professional who demonstrates civic involvement as well as professional dedication, accomplishment, and field expertise. 

Lord is responsible for leading and supervising the nursing staff and overseeing the care provided to residents at the Wesley Health Care Center. She has extensive health care experience and has been an active member of the Wesley Health Care Center team since 2008. 

Lord’s dedication to the profession also led to her recognition as Registered Nurse of the Year at Wesley Health Care Center in 2018. She received the honor following numerous peer nominations and an extensive review by a panel of administrators at The Wesley Community. 

For more information about The Wesley Community, visit www.thewesleycommunity.org

Gerald  “Jerry”  O. Lawyer 

GANSEVOORT — Gerald “Jerry” O. Lawyer passed away on Monday, December 6th at the age of 80 surrounded by family. At the family’s request there will be no calling hours or service. Visit www.compassionatefuneralcare.com

James Buchholz

GANSEVOORT — James Buchholz, age 57, passed away on December 9th, 2021, at Saratoga Hospital. A funeral service was held on Friday, December 17 at Compassionate Funeral Care, 402 Maple Ave., Saratoga Springs. Visit www.compassionatefuneralcare.com.

Resolutions for 2022

Get in shape. Save money. Get organized. Sound familiar? ‘Tis the season for examining your life and identifying ways to improve. As we are all aware, the problem is following through on our promises. This being a financial post, we will view each of those goals through the lens of your finances and propose methods to help you stick with them.

Without going down the rabbit hole of nutrition advice, getting in shape is essentially calories in versus calories out. Simple, but not easy. Translated into money terms, this is cash in versus cash out. With that in mind, creating a budget is similar to going on a diet. In the beginning, the excitement of making progress with your finances quickly turns into the reality of a tedious task that is easy to skip. How do we make it stick? Turn the tracking of your expenses into a habit. The easiest way to do that is to tie it to something you already do. For example, if you eat lunch at your desk at work, pull up your online bank account and record expenses immediately after opening your sandwich. Not an Excel expert? There are free online resources like mint.com, which can aid this process. Tracking calories identifies the worst offenders, providing intrinsic motivation to omit those offenders from future consumption. With your money, this becomes, “I spent how much on streaming services last month? I need to fix that.”

Saving money is a natural byproduct of the budgeting process. However, a checking account can be the most dangerous place for a recently saved dollar because we are very good at finding something to buy. The solution? Automate your savings AKA “pay yourself first.” Consider increasing the amount of your retirement plan contributions or setting up an automatic contribution to your child’s 529 plan. Just like those recurring subscription costs, automated savings become out of sight and out of mind, except you are the beneficiary instead of a company. A helpful trick if you are just looking to increase your emergency savings: set up a bank account at a separate institution and decline to set up online banking. Arrange for an automatic transfer from your main bank or directly from your check into this new account. Without the convenience of online banking providing you with daily updates on your balance, you will be surprised how the account grows outside of your field of vision. 

In my last post, I talked about the importance of getting your affairs in order to prepare loved ones for your untimely death. Getting organized provides benefits to you during your lifetime as well. Much like my wife and I gazing at a living room filled with Legos, toys, and sofa cushions, the challenge is where to start. Working with a professional provides a second set of eyes while identifying potential areas of improvement. I often tell people, “just send me everything, and I’ll sort through it.” Removing the mental stress from the organization process is the push people sometimes need. 

Personal trainers receive an uptick in clients every year when the calendar turns for good reason. People like the motivation they provide as well as their expertise. Working with a financial professional can offer the same benefits for your finances. 

For more information, visit www.contwealth.com.

David Rath, CFA is the Director of Portfolio Strategies at Continuum Wealth Advisors in Saratoga Springs. Continuum Wealth Advisors, LLC is a Registered Investment Advisor registered through the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Gloria J. Abbott

BUSKIRK — Gloria J. Abbott, age 75, peacefully passed away on Saturday, December 4, 2021, at her home in Buskirk, NY. The family will be having a private celebration of life. Visit www.compassionatefuneralcare.com

Thank You to All Our Military Service Men & Women

Christmas Poem

This poem was written by a Marine. The following is his request. 
In light of Christmas, some credit is due to our U.S. service men, women, and Canadian Forces for our being able to celebrate these festivities. Sharing this poem is a small way to pay a tiny bit of what we owe:
to make people stop and think of our heroes, living and dead, who sacrificed themselves for us.

‘Twas the Night before Christmas,
He lived all alone,
In a one bedroom house
Made of plaster and stone.

I had come down the chimney with presents to give,
And to see just who
in this home did live.

I looked all about,
A strange sight I did see,
 No tinsel, no presents,
Not even a tree.

No stocking by mantle,
Just boots filled with sand.
On the wall hung pictures
Of far distant lands.

With medals and badges,
Awards of all kinds,
A sober thought
Came through my mind.

For this house was different,
It was dark and dreary,
I found the home of a soldier,
Once I could see clearly.

The soldier lay sleeping,
Silent, alone,
Curled up on the floor
In this one bedroom home.

The face was so gentle,
The room in such disorder.
Not how I pictured
A United States soldier.

Was this the hero
Of whom I’d just read?
Curled up on a poncho,
The floor for a bed?

I realized the families
That I saw this night,
Owed their lives to these soldiers
Who were willing to fight.

Soon round the world,
The children would play,
And grownups would celebrate
A bright Christmas Day.

They all enjoyed freedom
Each month of the year,
Because of the soldiers,
Like the one lying here.

I couldn’t help wonder
How many lay alone,
On a cold Christmas Eve
In a land far from home. 

The very thought
Brought a tear to my eye,
I dropped to my knees
And started to cry. 

The soldier awakened
And I heard a rough voice,
‘Santa don’t cry,
This life is my choice; 

I fight for freedom,
I don’t ask for more,
My life is God,
My country, my Corps.’

The soldier rolled over
And drifted to sleep,
I couldn’t control it,
I continued to weep.

I kept watch for hours,
So silent and still
And we both shivered
From the cold night’s chill.

I didn’t want to leave
On the cold, dark night,
This guardian of honor
So willing to fight.

Then the soldier rolled over,
With a voice soft and pure,
Whispered, ‘Carry on Santa,
It’s Christmas Day. All is secure.’

One look at my watch,
And I knew he was right.
‘Merry Christmas my friend,
And to all a good night!’

Property Transactions: December 18 – December 24, 2021

BALLSTON

James Williamson sold property at 23 Mann Rd to Daniel Cain for $450,000.

Michael Verdile sold property at 207 Scotch Bush Rd to Robin Bertram for $615,000.

Robert Traver sold property at 244 Scotch Bush Rd to Theodore Paiccia for $550,000.

Buckley Mountain sold property at 813 Route 50 to 813 T S Properties LLC for $255,000.

Denise Savona sold property at 225 Scotch Bush Rd to Nelson Stone for $639,000.

Robert Tole sold property at 87 McMaster St to Salvador Lopez for $378,000.

John Poselovich sold property at 8 Maryln Dr to Scott Smith for $325,000.

Jay Mody sold property at 165 Cypress St to Tina Jackson for $415,000.

GALWAY

Jeanne Brooks sold property at 2474 Galway Rd to Robert Voehringer for $365,000

Horace Horton sold property at 6078 Woodside Rd to David Rodriguez for $210,000.

GREENFIELD

Alexis Sablock sold property at 37 Hyspot Rd to Brandon Edwards for $385,000.

Kerry Jameson sold property at 12 Granite Lake Dr to Trevor Westcott for $425,000.

Mark Lyle sold property at 76 Locust Grove Rd to Robyn Hanst for $529,000.

Nicholas Argenti sold property at 155 Ballou Rd to Llyod Chandler for $130,000.

Matthew Tucker sold property at 1F and 4 Forest Rd to John Gibson for $135,000.

Gustav Ericson sold property at 881 Braim Rd to Helen Jensen for $300,000.

Stephan Rowland sold property at 498 North Creek Rd to Rebecca Veitch for $180,000

MALTA

JohnPaul Russom sold property at 1038 Laural Lane to Jessica Bellum for $355,000.

Gerald Corey sold property at 21 Moccasin Bend to Christopher Hanson for $415,000.

Rachel Downie sold property at 32 May Apple Way to Zachary Evans for $341,000.

Tammy Myers sold property at 48 Wake Robin Rd to Ahmed Ashmawy for $194,500.

Richard Crabbe sold property at 34 Admirals Way to Kevin Brasser for $560,000.

Rorie Mastropietro sold property at 23 Twinflower Ct to Stephanie Moyer for $400,000.

William Leight sold property at 38 Thimbleberry Rd to Frank Castillo for $250,000.

Arthur Wright sold property at 17 Collamer Dr to Rodney Dobert for $289,000

Kevin Kelly sold property at 242 Thimbleberry Rd to Derek Puckett for $220,000.

Laura Kestner sold property at 79 Arrow Wood Pl to Hilary Catterall for $265,000.

SARATOGA

Jennifer Salvi sold property at 1164 County Rd 70 to Ridge Koebbeman for $226,800.

Cerrone Construction LLC sold property at 213 Patriot Hill Dr to Gregory Aidala for $726,000

Blackbird 1 LLC sold property at 22 Church St to Amici II Realty LLC for $840,000.

Vernon Van Arnum sold property at 162 Southard Rd to Meatball Martini LLC for $2,000,000.

SARATOGA SPRINGS

Claire Olds sold property at 38 Forest Ave to Kristofer Covey for $350,000

77 Van Dam LLC sold property at 77 Van Dam #407 to Erika Pudlo for $368,000

Jeffery Byrne sold property at 125 Union Ave C 107 to Kevin Reilly for $180,000.

Michael Allen sold property at 4 Hayes Dr to Amanda Egbert for $420,000.

Andrew Whalen sold property at 39 Second St to Brona McGirl for $1,125,000.

Michael O’Callaghan sold property at 3 Arrowhead Rd to 3 Arrowhead LLC for $610,000.

Kathleen Doubleday sold property at Morgan St to Homeland Properties LLC for $380,000.

Emily Reilly sold property at 104 Kaydeross Park Rd to Jeff Sheehan for $430,000.

Kimberly DelVecchio sold property at 34 Arrowhead Rd to Elizabeth Elzer for $425,000.

John Hoey sold property at 326 Ballston Ave rear to Scott Blasi for $340,000.

Kevin Dorr sold property at 92 Ballston Ave to Daniel Chadwick for $480,000.

Saratoga Spring Water Company sold property at 11 Geyser Rd to Bluetriton Brands Inc for $5,000,000

Schworm Enterprises Inc sold property at 28 Van Dorn St to Anthony Ruggiero for $312,500.

Dorothy Sanders sold property at 8 Benton Dr to Eillen Didonato for $440,000

WILTON

Kelly Laird sold property at 31 Knollwood Dr to Forest Grove LLC for $395,000.

Steven Thorne sold property at 7 Kendrick Hill Rd to Jennifer Cornell for $450,000.

Joel Glickman sold property at 6 Woodland Dr to Joseph Keneally for $100,000.

John Lewis sold property at 41 Donegal Way to Le Cheval Noir LLC for $415,000.

Ambica M and J Two LLC by trustee  sold property at 15-17 Old Gick Rd to SDI MATTOJV HOLDCO LLC for $8,000,000.

Ann Olsen sold property at 43 Timbira Dr to Michael Wright for $377,000.

Maarten Visser sold property at 5 Greylock Dr to Shaunt Voskanian for $549,000.

Through The Lens; A Downtown Story

Friday and Saturday nights in downtown Saratoga Springs currently revolve around a tourist night club scene fueled economy lit by emergency sirens. What were once summer problems for ‘The August Place to Be’ have become year-round issues. Months of observation and video-recording show that Saratoga has been overwhelmed by a weekend tourist crowd that is disproportionately responsible for violence, vandalism and drunk driving that plagues the Spa City every weekend.

2021 has been a year filled with protests demanding police reform and oversight. What exactly is police oversight, how exactly would you do it, and what purpose does it serve? These are the questions that need to be answered. The concept of oversight is often defined as a civilian body in a city tasked with reviewing and improving police conduct. With that definition, basic observation is a necessity. The level of scrutiny police forces are put under exists on a spectrum; the extremes of which no reasonable person wishes to live under. Nobody wants a totalitarian surveillance state, so a more targeted approach would be in the best interest of all.

In Saratoga, the SSPD has clearly become a target for some. This department, among many others, has been put under a microscope ever since the murder of George Floyd. Local groups have held protests for reviews of police conduct, and more oversight on behalf of the BLM movement.

With that being the state of affairs in Saratoga Springs, I went out to actually SEE for myself what was going on before forming an opinion. Every Friday and Saturday night I went out from 10 p.m. – 4 a.m., drove around, observed, shot video and took notes. As a photo and print journalist with 20+ years’ experience, observing is a finely crafted skill for me. Seeing ACLU observers in pink hats at protests, I learned how to stand and watch. I have seen the street in action for decades and understand what it is “typically” like, but recently something has been different. Finding what has changed amidst the chaos and foot traffic was a challenge both mentally and physically.

For two-and-a-half months, from August to November, 14 consecutive Fridays and Saturdays in downtown Saratoga on Caroline Street, I was a sober civilian-observer during the city’s peak drinking hours. I wanted to be a proper citizen observer and leave the results as a testimony to a time and place. There were no predetermined rules for observation or firm legal precedent to follow. With only the 1st Amendment to guide me, it seemed that just going out and trying was my best option. 

To prepare, I charged my phone, set up my dash-cam, and hit the streets. I sat in a parked car a lot just listening to the police scanner. An incessant stream of problems immediately begins to squawk out over the scanner. That in itself was both shocking and upsetting. Where does one go to watch the police to see if they are misbehaving? If that is your sole purpose, then 95% of the time, if you sit and listen, you will find them assisting the elderly, looking for missing children, breaking up petty arguments, and spending hours following up on 911 hang-ups. There are no civil rights violations to witness from the police force on such calls. Then, there are the bad calls like overdoses, terrible car accidents, knife wounds and people, young and old alike, fighting to survive a critical moment… all of which occur on a daily basis.

I began to notice that police interactions that qualified as relevant to civil rights nearly all occurred on either a Friday or Saturday night. The largest portion of such interactions were with drunk drivers or people involved in minor physical altercations. I wondered why things seemed to happen on these nights as opposed to others and decided to focus my energy on those two nights.

On any given Friday or Saturday night, random things would occur downtown without adhering to any regular schedule. Yet on Caroline Street, things run like clockwork. The most notable being that around 1:30 a.m., when bars begin to close and the rowdy crowds all fill the street, fights inevitably erupt. After that, Gaffney’s closes and the club tourists all wander up to Esperanto’s where more small fights break out, so the police are always parked there. 

Around 3 a.m., whoever is left heads down to Clancy’s or wanders around looking for their friends and cars. It should be called Pee O’clock. This is when it’s all bad. Incoherent yelling, public urination and brawling all the way to their cars. This is when the parking fights begin. They typically revolve around who is or isn’t getting a ride home, or who should be driving. They rarely get violent, but often result in terribly dangerous driving, leading to crash after crash. Signs, fences, trees, and other cars all fall victim to these drivers. One car even hit the broad side of the Adirondack Trust on Broadway!

These are all facts, not opinion. Look it up, listen to it, go watch it happen. 

One day, I saw an actual sign in front of Gaffney’s that read, “Best concert venue in the Capital Region. Formerly held by SPAC”

It was then that I realized that is the issue; tourists who come to see a concert, get wasted and drive away. It’s that simple, it’s a new group of people unfamiliar with our town and its streets. Mix that with drinking and drugs and it becomes something ugly. As far as I could tell Gaffney’s has 5 parking spots that go unused. Often enough they don’t even make it to their car, forgetting where it is and fall unconscious on the pavement injuring themselves. If you doubt this conclusion, please go now to the police blotter and see who is arrested for drunk driving and where they live. This information is printed every week. The vast majority of those arrested for DWI on weekends in September, October and November were from out of town.

Of course, I also recorded the police doing their job. There were numerous times when I had to defend my right to observe, but overall I was allowed to film without issue. Throughout the entire time I spent filming downtown, I never saw anyone’s rights infringed upon or any signs of bias on the part of the police. I did see several arrests that required handcuffs and physical force, but no one complained about those arrests.

The point of all of this was to create momentum for the idea of the citizen-observer, and hand off the baton to others who sincerely care about the community.

It’s available, it’s free, it’s legal. Why is nobody else doing it? 

Saratoga, like any other town, needs law and order. Local police are working every minute of the day coming to the rescue of the community, and that’s the truth.

If anything, the SSPD needs more support and more funding especially for Friday and Saturday night. I also believe the dutiful observation of them and everyone in our community would help. In the end, it is obvious to see the problems when you take the time to actually look. 

The problem is simply drunk driving tourists coming en mass for the weekend scene.

Cornell Cooperative Extension Intuitive & Mindful Eating Class

SARATOGA SPRINGS —Julia Hotaling, Dietetic Intern with Sage Colleges, and Cornell Cooperative Extension will be presenting an Intuitive and Mindful Eating class over Zoom on Thursday, Jan. 13, from 12-12:30 pm. The class is to help anyone who wants to reconnect with their bodies in order to find peace and happiness with their diet habits. No fee, register online at cornell.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0ude-qpzgpHdPqlKN ZZAGRNXXEchvKnteh.

Participants will learn how to practice intuitive eating, the barriers, and how to integrate mindful eating into their meal times. This includes learning how to be present when eating, eating without any distractions, avoiding mindless eating, knowing how to listen to your internal hunger cues, and more. Time provided for Q&A. 

For more program details contact Cornell Cooperative Extension Saratoga County at 518-885-8995, or email Diane Whitten at dwhitten@cornell.edu