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Author: Saratoga TODAY

City: Splash Pads Open

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Department of Public Works Commissioner Anthony “Skip” Scirocco announced that the city splash pads are open for public use. The splash pads are located at the Saratoga Springs Recreation Center playground, Veterans Memorial Park on Geyser Road, and in the East and West side recreation fields. 

Individuals interested in using the splash pads should adhere to the most updated CDC COVID-19 guidelines. Residents with questions can contact DPW dispatch at 518-584-3356. 

Local Veteran Honored With Town Park

MALTA — A local veteran known to many residents for his decades-long service to Veterans Affairs throughout the state of New York, as well as his local contribution as a board member to the NYS Military Museum and Malta Veterans Appreciation  Program (MVAP), is being recognized with a town park in Malta. 

Capt. David T. Wallingford, Sr., who served in Vietnam and has been a Saratoga Lake resident for much of his life, will be recognized on Sunday, June 6, 2021 at 1 p.m. during a dedication of the new Capt. David T. Wallingford Veterans Park. The new park will be situated outside the Malta Town Hall on Route 9 in Malta. 

Assemblywoman Carrie Woerner and Congressman Paul Tonko will be in attendance as well as other local leaders. 

Forest Pests Woods Walk at Wilton Wildlife Preserve & Park

WILTON — Kristopher Williams, coordinator of the Partnership for Regional Invasive Species Management (PRISM), leads an educational walk through the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Saratoga County through the woods! Along the way participants will look out for and learn about forest pests that are commonly found in the local area. This program is scheduled for Wednesday, June 9 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. 

Dress appropriately for weather and insects.  Please note, although this is an outdoor program face masks are expected to be worn throughout the duration of the program. 

Registration is required. Space is limited. For more information or to register for the program, contact the Preserve & Park office at 518-450-0321 or via email at info@wiltonpreserve.org.  Provide your name, phone number, email address and the number of people within your party.

The Wilton Wildlife Preserve & Park is a non-profit organization that conserves ecological systems and natural settings while providing opportunities for environmental education and outdoor recreation.

Friends of Moreau Lake State Park Grant Survey

MOREAU — The Friends of Moreau Lake State Park (FOMLSP), an all-volunteer 501(c)(3) charity, is the recipient of a grant from Parks and Trails New York. 

The mission of The Friends of Moreau Lake State Park is to partner with Moreau Lake State Park to enrich the experience for every park visitor through education, events, and stewardship. The grant will help FOMLSP enhance its ability to carry out its mission, in part by improving its efforts to engage our members and recruit new members. 

The first step in achieving the aims of the grant, with support from the New York Council of Nonprofits, is to conduct a survey to learn what members and non-members alike can tell us about the park and their connection to it. 

The survey is available online at www.surveymonkey.com/r/FoMLSP_StakeholderSurvey2021 until the end of June. It should take about 10 minutes to complete. Members who take the survey can enter a raffle to win a Stewart’s gift card, and non-members can enter a raffle to win free membership. 

Nonprofit Seeks Local Artists Who Are Patients and Caregivers

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Saratoga-based nonprofit, Beyond My Battle, is calling all artists living with or caring for someone living with a chronic illness, rare disease, or disability to share their art and be part of a great cause. 

Beyond My Battle (BMB) a Saratoga-based nonprofit helping people reduce the stress of serious illness, rare disease, and disability, is holding its third annual “Art with Heart & Hope” showcasing and sharing the ways art can help manage the many stressors of living with, or caring for someone living with, illness or disability.

The deadline to submit artwork is June 30. All art must be ready and able to hang on a wall or easel. Artists must either live with or care(d) for someone living with a chronic illness, disease, or disability. Artists must be at least 18 years old and have the option to price their artwork for sale. To submit, artists should visit JotForm.com/BeyondMyBattle/Art2021

Saratoga Hospital Completes $1 Million Update of Mental Health Unit

SARATOGA SPRINGS —Saratoga Hospital recently completed a more than $1 million update of its mental health unit, creating a safer, more healing patient environment.

The newly renovated unit combines the latest, most effective safety measures with aesthetic changes—including new lighting and more attractive, modern furnishings—that can have a positive impact on the patient experience.

“The environment plays an important role in building the trust and comfort that are essential to providing patient-centered, trauma-informed care,” said Janice Prichett, the hospital’s executive director of behavioral health, in a statement. 

The renovations took 18 months in part because of the challenges of replacing floors, walls and ceilings during the pandemic. All that remains are some final finishing touches, including a mural and other artwork, according to the hospital.

26th Annual Soroptimist Secret Gardens Tour

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Tickets are on sale now for the 26th annual Soroptimist Secret Gardens Tour set for Sunday, July 11. The tour features a dozen unique gardens in Saratoga Springs (including three on one street), Ballston Spa, and Schuylerville. 

Visitors will find a wide variety of designs and plantings for both shade and sun. Some include water features, and others offer landscapes that incorporate one-of-a-kind mosaics and sculptures in both stone and metal. You’ll stroll through pergolas, follow a path to a monarch butterfly waystation, wander along a pond, meander past fruit trees and brush past grasses. 

Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 on the day of the tour, if still available. This is a self-guided tour, which will take place July 11 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., rain or shine. Garden descriptions, a map and suggested driving directions are provided with the ticket, but you go at your own pace in the order you like. 

Get a sneak peek of the upcoming Saratoga Soroptimist Secret Gardens Tour with a free one-hour Zoom program on Thursday, June 3 at 12 p.m. hosted by the Saratoga Springs Public Library. 

Join in as Soroptimist members Mary Caroline Powers and Barbara Lombardo chat with Christine Burghart, Liz Kormos and Cathy Roberts, three of the garden owners on this year’s Secret Gardens Tour. 

During the Zoom program the gardeners will share photos, philosophies, take questions and discuss how they plan and care for their extraordinary oases. Their gardens include water features, sculptures, pollinators, pergolas, and designs for both shade and sun. 

Register for the Zoom program online with the library to receive an email link. 

Go online to www. soroptimistsaratoga.org for more information, to purchase tickets for the Secret Gardens Tour online, find locations for retail ticket sales and learn more about Soroptimist International of Saratoga County, a professional women’s service organization whose mission is to improve the lives of women, girls and their communities.

Memories of a Mountain

My father was employed as an Administrator at the Mount McGregor Veterans Rest Camp, upon his discharge from the Army. Mom was a Registered Nurse at the Camp Infirmary. I lived on Mount McGregor from April 1946, the day I arrived in my mother’s arms, until I left for Boy Scout Camp Saratoga in July 1960. Five boys and one girl within 2 years of my age lived on Mount McGregor during that time. We were a loosely knit mostly outdoor group.

One morning, waiting for the Camp bus to take me to Kindergarten, I wandered off to the blueberry patch behind a neighbor’s cottage. Kneeling in the patch, eating the berries, a Black Racer snake slithered in front of my knees. Wide-eyed, I confirm it was at least 30 feet long taking 1 1/2 hours to pass. Upon its departure I scurried to school with a less than amused bus driver.

School was in Wilton. A two-classroom building. A basement cafeteria also served as the Kindergarten Room, Mrs. Hubinsky supervising both. Miss Hyatt’s classroom had Grades 1, 2 and 3. Mr. Gainer’s classroom had Grades 4 and 5. When our grade level was not being taught, we put our heads down on the desk, thereby enhancing our education in a previous grade or being introduced to a future grade. We enjoyed classes in PE, music and art from travelling teachers.

Home was a sizeable three-bedroom apartment in a six plex cottage across from Artist Lake. The Veterans Camp was largely self-sufficient with a sizable farm in the valley below. I have no memory of going to a grocery store. Mom would simply call the “commissary” for delivery of vegetables, beef, pork, poultry, baked goods, milk etc. Mom “canned” food for the winter. The basement had a large coal fired boiler. The coal served as encouragement for good behavior, lest a chunk take space in our Christmas Stocking. We were good kids – for the most part.

Unconstrained in our roaming through the forests and populated areas of the mountain, we hiked the rough roads and trails to Lake Bonita, Lake Anna, Sunset Rock, Northern and Grants Lookout and bushwhacked to countless other destinations. Inspired by Huckleberry Finn we lashed a log raft together on “Secret Swamp.” Daniel Boone inspired us to start a log cabin behind Lake Anna. Falling trees with our two-man crosscut saw and axes we laid the base logs and started the second row before deciding home was OK. We enjoyed Lake Bonita with its abundant blueberries. Trout were visible in the crystal-clear waters along the shores. Lake Bonita was the Camp’s water source – fishing not allowed. 

We fished in Artist Lake for Goldfish also catching by hand frogs, tadpoles, turtles, newts, red efts, snakes and bumble bees. A terrarium at home often housed pollywogs growing into frogs before release. We rode our single speed bikes throughout the hills and occasionally down to friends in Wilton, pedaling back up the mountain without a stop. The Camp had many amenities including a movie theater. Our parents brought us to films such as “White Christmas,” Randolph Scott westerns and others. We were banned from any sight of the theater building when Elizabeth Taylor’s “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” played. Winter was a time for ice skating on Artist Lake, sleigh rides with our Flexible Flyers down the road to Lake Bonita and snow forts. We served as altar boys in the Camp Chapel and pinsetters for the Camp Bowling Alley.

We interacted freely with the “patients” playing softball on the site of Hotel Balmoral, swimming in Artist Lake with lessons in cannon balls and diving from the patients, shuffleboard under the terrace, crafts (copper reliefs, bead and leather work) in the Occupational Therapy shop. “Raccoon Man” visited a couple of summers hand-feeding raccoons who would crawl up his panted leg, accept food with their paws, returning to the ground to eat. Sitting next to him I fed the raccoons, no sudden movements with trust by all. Frank Malzone’s (Boston Red Sox Third Baseman) father was a patient we came to know. We received autographed baseballs after his departure. I met Vets from the Spanish American War, WWI, WW2, Korean and Lebanon Conflicts. They, as my father – a Medic in Europe, never spoke of their experiences.

We visited Mrs. Gambino, caretaker at Grant’s Cottage, and frequented Grant’s Lookout. We discovered a deteriorating iron-sided bench with wood strips at the base of a huge boulder down the mountain. We knew this was where President Grant spent his quiet moments. A cherished secret, as we knew, no one else knew

Life was idyllic. The only childhood I knew – as it is for everyone, particularly of that era. Mostly unencumbered by TV (a 1950’s 12-inch B & W screen with 2 snowy channels). No social media – we listened to the radio as a family occasionally. Wilton Cub & Boy Scouts the only organized youth activity available. All boys belonged. My earliest memory of American politics was attentively listening to the inaugural address of General Eisenhower. Recognizing I did not understand a word he said, I adjourned outside to build a snow fort in my “Glickmans” snowsuit. Red & Black Wool – Head to Toe.

Mass Mask Chaos

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Handmade signs. Homemade signs. Computer-generated official-looking signs. The storefront windows all along Broadway reflect a diversity of goods on display, as well as a varying set of instructions for all whom may enter: mask required, mask optional, proof of vaccination necessary, customers on the honor system. 

“Private businesses can choose to exclude individuals who don’t provide proof of vaccination,” says Melanie M. Franco, Esq., an attorney in Tully Rinckey Albany office, where she focuses her practice in federal employment law. 

Earlier this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued guidance that explained vaccinated people no longer needed to wear masks or to physically distance from others. With roughly half the national population having received at least one dose of vaccine, many business owners are facing a quandary. 

“The CDC released certain guidelines based on how vaccinated versus non-vaccinated people can do certain things, but New York State is allowing the cities and counties to determine how to implement those guidelines,” Franco said.  “On the flip side of that individuals can choose whether or not they provide that proof, so it’s an interesting area because they may not be allowed to go into businesses if they’re not vaccinated or if they choose not to prove they are vaccinated.” 

The rules vary from state to state with each state having the authority to decide how they implement them and what laws they make. “That’s been an ongoing question. It will vary by state: how they handle big venues, how they handle vaccines. What’s happening here may not necessarily be the same as what’s happening in New Jersey or Connecticut,” Franco said. 

Regarding venues that host sports, concerts and similarly tradional large gatherings, N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said during his presser on May 26 that “all venues have the option of going to 100% capacity for fully vaccinated people. Some venues can be 50% vaccinated, 50% unvaccinated – but that limits the capacity of the venues.” 

Across the country, the rules are different. This week, two long-awaited Chicago events — the Windy City Smokeout street festival and Lollapalooza — announced they will require attendees to show proof of being vaccinated or a negative COVID-19 test. And earlier this month, that city began allowing late-night bars to operate past the 1 a.m. curfew if they only let in vaccinated patrons, the Chicago Tribune reported.    

Internationally, regarding travel, some countries have already started to create platforms for smartphone digital health passports, or so-called “vaccine passports.” The platforms allow access to an individual’s health data, such as COVID-19 test results or vaccination status. 

Locally, 9 Maple Avenue jazz bar was among the first to allow full attendance by patrons with proof of vaccination required 

Due to the pandemic, 9 Maple Ave was forced to shut its doors in March 2020. Last weekend, the venue was excited to announce it would re-open its doors for live music and patrons. 

“Our staff were doing cartwheels. Fourteen months is a long time to be closed,” said 9 Maple Ave owner Mike Sirianni. The venue announced it would be reopening and following CDC and State guidance of no masks or social distancing for vaccinated patrons. Proof of vaccination – via either a vaccination card or Excelsior Pass would be accepted as a requirement for entrance and seating. The small size venue has a 50-person capacity, severely limiting space options that would be necessary in allowing entry to non-vaccinated persons. 

“Please note that this is the only way that we can responsibly open due to our size. We are small. We are not following the guidelines to somehow infringe upon your personal rights. We can open only if we follow the rules that were put in place. It’s that simple,” the venue explained on its social media pages. The post received hundreds of comments in response. Not all were positive. 

“Some people huffed and puffed a little bit, and as far as the Internet goes, I stopped looking at it,” Sirianni said following last weekend’s reopening. At the entryway, a doorman checked for proof of vaccination.

“We’re hoping the whole thing (eventually) gets lifted. We don’t want to do this, but the only way we can do it is without social distancing. We’re so small it’s the only way we can open,” he said.  “We wound up going 100% vaccinated and I have no regrets. We had music and lots of very happy customers. They appreciated the vaccination check. It went quite smoothly, and it was really good to get back to doing what we do. I do have to say that on Saturday night my front window got busted. I don’t know if it was related or not.” The incident occurred late at night and no one was injured.   

Perhaps anticipating an influx of fake vaccination cards, the FBI released a Public Service Announcement warning that any person using, buying, selling or transferring a fraudulent card to another can be fined and/or imprisoned for up to five years, since the creation of such a card would carry a phony seal of a government agency. “If you did not receive the vaccine, do not buy fake vaccine cards, do not make your own vaccine cards, and do not fill-in blank vaccination record cards with false information,” said the PSA.

According to the CDC, about half the U.S. population – more than 163 million people – have received at least one vaccine dose, and overall 40% are fully vaccinated – the latter meaning that more than two weeks have passed since they completed the vaccine series. In New York State, those vaccination percentages are slightly higher than the national average (52% at least one dose, 44% completed vaccine series), and Saratoga, with more than 60% of its residents having received at least one dose, is among the highest vaccinated counties in the state. 

Of the 280-plus million doses administered nationally, just over 150 million are Pfizer, 120 million Moderna – both are two-shot vaccines, and just over 10 million are the one-dose Johnson & Johnson. 

Earlier this month, the CDC followed an FDA decision to recommend to authorize emergency use of this of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in 12-through 15-year-old adolescents. Clinical trials are underway to test the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines in children under 12.

Where schools are concerned, Franco says, “essentially states can require school-age children to receive the vaccine and schools themselves can, but it comes down to the state itself, so public schools would be under the mandate of what the state is saying.” 

If one were not able, for personal physical/health reasons, to receive the vaccine, Franco says, “I think there would need to be more consideration there. I think that would be an issue to come up later on, especially after the FDA makes their final decision on it (expected in November). Because, yes, if you have a disability that would physically prevent you from being able to get the vaccine that could possibly lead to a cause of action for discrimination. But right now, there isn’t anything necessarily anything that would allow legal relief if an employer required it.” 

Regarding claims of potential HIPAA (the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) violations receiving attention in some social media circles, Franco says, “I have seen a lot about that, people saying that it would be a violation of HIPPA to ask whether you’re vaccinated – but that is completely false. HIPAA only has effect in a health care setting. It prevents health care professionals from sharing private health information without the patient’s consent. So, it doesn’t apply to whether a business, an employer or even a person on the street just asks you whether or not your vaccinated. It’s also not a violation of HIPAA to require the vaccine.” 

They’re Back! SPAC Announces Return of The Philadelphia Orchestra for August Performances

SARATOGA SPRINGS ­— Saratoga Performing Arts Center announced this week The Philadelphia Orchestra will return to its summer home in Saratoga Springs for its residency on Aug. 11-14, marking the company’s first live performances at SPAC since the COVID-19 pandemic hit. 

Led by Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin for all four programs, the residency will feature a finale performance with violinist Joshua Bell. Also highlighting the engagement and as part of SPAC’s commitment to presenting works that represent a more diverse group of voices are seven SPAC premieres, including works by Philadelphia Orchestra Composer-in-Residence Gabriela Lena Frank, Valerie Coleman, Florence Price, and Louise Farrenc. 

The performances will be offered in compliance with the current guidelines from the governor to ensure the health and safety of artists, audience members and staff. In order to provide guests with the safest possible experience, all attendees will be seated in safe, socially-distanced pods. 

“After more than a year of a shuttered, silent amphitheater stage, it feels miraculous to announce the return of Yannick and The Philadelphia Orchestra. Though, sadly, it was necessary to shorten the residency this year in the face of the enormous financial and other challenges posed by the era of COVID-19, we are excited about the richness of diversity of the programming,” said Elizabeth Sobol, President and CEO of Saratoga Performing Arts Center, in a statement.

 “From the opening notes of a Mozart Piano Concert, with Yannick himself at the piano, to a closing concert featuring Joshua Bell in Beethoven’s sublime Violin Concerto – and powerful SPAC premieres by women and BIPOC composers – throughout the week, we will savor every sweet and precious note of the Orchestra’s 2021 residency.”

The schedule: 

Wednesday, Aug. 11 @ 8 p.m.:
Opening Night of The Philadelphia Orchestra’s residency includes a “first” for SPAC audiences as Yannick leads the Orchestra from the piano. Written following his arrival in Vienna, Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 12 is “very brilliant, pleasing to the ear, and natural, without being insipid,” in the composer’s own words. Listen for its melodic opulence and thrilling cadenzas.  Also highlighting the evening is the SPAC premiere of the Symphony No. 1 by Florence Price. In 1933, Price’s First Symphony was the first symphonic work by a Black woman to be played by a major American orchestra. Steeped in American folk music, spirituals, and church hymns, her celebrated work reflects her experience as a Black woman raised in the post-Civil War South. 

Thursday, Aug. 12 @ 8 p.m.: This special program, dedicated to health care workers, opens with the SPAC premiere of Seven O’Clock Shout, composed as a tribute to frontline workers during the pandemic by American composer Valerie Coleman. Performance Today’s 2020 Classical Woman of the Year and one of the Washington Post’s “Top 35 Female Composers in Classical Music,” Valerie Coleman is among the world’s most performed composers living today. The evening continues with Bach’s Concerto for Two Violins with Concertmaster David Kim and First Associate Concertmaster Juliette Kang and Brahms’s lyrically lush, Symphony No. 1. 

Friday, Aug. 13 @ 8 p.m.: The Philadelphia Orchestra’s Composer-in-Residence, Gabriela Lena Frank, who is widely celebrated for exploring her multicultural heritage through her work, mixed elements from the western classical and Andean folk music traditions in Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout. The work will receive its SPAC premiere in this concert alongside Mozart’s beloved Clarinet Concerto, performed by Philadelphia Orchestra Principal Clarinet Ricardo Morales. Another SPAC premiere and a piece that is “unjustly-underperformed” according to Maestro Nézet-Séguin, is Louise Farrenc’s stunning Symphony No. 2 from 1845, which closes the evening. 

Saturday, Aug. 14 @ 8 p.m.: Joshua Bell returns to SPAC to perform the illustrious Beethoven Violin Concerto. A new arrangement for solo violin and string orchestra of Florence Price’s lovely Adoration receives its world premiere, while Mozart’s Symphony No. 25 – a work written when the composer was just 17 and never before performed at SPAC– closes The Philadelphia Orchestra’s residency in Saratoga. The concerts will all be approximately 90 minutes with no intermission. All programs are subject to change.

Ticket information:  SPAC Members will have early ticket access depending on membership level, beginning on June 1 for amphitheater seats. Amphitheater tickets for the public will be available to purchase on June 7. Lawn tickets will be available to purchase at a later date, to be announced. Designated pods of two will be allocated and reserved for ticket buyers in the amphitheater. Amphitheater tickets start at $80 per pod, which seats up to two people. Single tickets will be extremely limited and available starting at $40 for the amphitheater. Advance ticket purchases are strongly advised as ticket availability will be limited. If available, tickets will be on sale on the day of, but are subject to an additional fee. 

COVID-19 Safety & Protocols: In order to provide all guests with the safest possible experience, guests will be seated in socially-distanced pods. Guests are permitted to bring factory sealed water bottles and essential personal items only. Restrooms will be available with social distancing and enhanced cleaning and sanitation protocols in place in accordance with recommended guidelines.

Visit spac.org for more details.