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Local Business Owner Donates 150 Books to Saratoga Center for the Family

SARATOGA COUNTY — One hundred and fifty copies of Veronica Safoa Owusu’s book, “Rise Up Gold Dust Queen,” were donated to Saratoga Center for the Family by Jeffrey C. Vahanian, CFP, President of Vahanian & Associates Financial Planning Inc.

“Veronica Safoa Owusu is a British-based internationally recognized speaker and empowerment coach who published an extraordinarily helpful book geared to guide people – women in particular – through a process of rebuilding their lives after the breakup of a relationship or marriage, including instances of domestic abuse,” Vahanian said in a statement. 

“This book is something useful that you can give to current and past families you have served so that they might read the book and find it helpful in their own journey of rebuilding their self-esteem and their lives,” he said.  

Human Remains Found in the Area of South Broadway and Adelphi Street

SARATOGA SPRINGS —On Dec. 30, 2023, Saratoga Springs Police released an advisory to announce they had located human remains in an advanced state of decomposition in the area of South Broadway and Adelphi Street. 

After investigation of the scene, police say they have tentatively identified the victim as Paul Jamison, a 79-year-old man with a last known address in Glens Falls. The identification was made through the discovery of personal property at the scene. 

An autopsy was conducted on Dec. 31, and preliminary reports show no signs of suspicious activity or a criminal aspect to his death. DNA samples have been obtained and a positive identification is pending those results, police said.

The Hidden Face of Homelessness


Photo credit: Niki Rossi

Many of us have a limited understanding of homelessness, especially if we’ve never experienced it personally or known someone who has. Our perception is often shaped by what we see in the media or witness in urban areas or at busy street corners.

However, homelessness encompasses much more than meets the eye. It goes beyond the image of shopping carts filled with recyclables, discarded blankets, and makeshift shelters. It’s more than just a cold, crowded room with rows of cots.

Homelessness can be a family of four living paycheck to paycheck, suddenly hit by an unexpected auto repair bill. Homelessness can happen to those who have fallen ill, missed work, or lack savings for emergencies. Homelessness may be the result of a parent and young child fleeing an abusive household, often tied to traumatic experiences. It can even be the young woman who cashes you out for gas on your way to work, sleeping on a friend’s couch for the third consecutive night. It’s the hospital coworker who had to shower at a shelter that morning, and it’s the school-aged child whose only stable meals are provided at school during breakfast and lunch.

The affordability of housing and food has impacted more families than ever before. A Lending Club report in March 2023 noted that 62% of American families are living paycheck to paycheck. Homelessness doesn’t discriminate, nor is it an inherent quality; it’s a circumstance. It does not define the individuals experiencing it.

In Saratoga County, a network of agency providers collaborate to offer safe housing, shelter, food, and support services to residents in need. They feed the hungry, provide shelter for the homeless, and offer a dignified and respectful path out of poverty.

Homelessness is a complex issue that is easy to fall into, but difficult to escape. The Saratoga North Country Continuum of Care is committed to addressing the multifaceted nature of homelessness, from veterans grappling with PTSD to runaway teenagers. Our agencies reach out to individuals where they are, deliver safe and compassionate care, and guide them on the path to a better future.

No single person or agency can eradicate area poverty and homelessness. Collectively, we can make the world a brighter place for those facing these challenges in our community.

To learn more about our work and how you can get involved, please visit: www.endhomelessnesssaratoga.org.

New Year, New Council, New Rules

SARATOGA SPRINGS — John Safford shuffled among the three-dozen or so public spectators attending the night’s gathering inside the Saratoga Music Hall, exchanging pleasantries and engaging in conversation.  

Draped in a dark navy blazer and a white button-down shirt accented by a burgundy tie, Safford carried with him a bottle of Saratoga-label water and a rectangular leather organizer from which unfolded the night’s meeting agenda and a draft copy of new “Public Meeting Expectations and Rules” the council will, in some form, be looking to implement. 

“Can we be seated please?” said Safford, as the clock ticked closer to the 7 p.m. start of his first meeting as the city’s new mayor. “Let’s get this thing going.” 

Mayor Safford and Public Safety Commssioner Tim Coll represent the two new members of the five-person City Council. They are joined by council returnees Jason Golub (Commissioner of Public Works), Dillon Moran (Commissioner of Accounts) and Minita Sanghvi (Commissioner of Finance). The city’s long-standing Commission form of governing equally provides each of the five councilmembers one vote at the table. 

Two city Supervisors do not vote at the council table, but instead represent the city with voting power at the county level as members of the Board of Supervisors. They are: returning Supervisor Matt Veitch, and new Supervisor Michele Madigan – the latter of whom had for a decade served previously as city Finance Commissioner.  

The most immediate change of the first-and-third Tuesday of the month council meetings featured a return to a previous format; council meetings will now have a 7 p.m. start-time – one hour later than had been the case the past six months, and the relocation of the supervisors’ reports to the meeting’s end. 

The Public Comment period which had allowed each speaker up to four minutes to address the council has been trimmed to three minutes, and a 30-minute limit overall set to allow members of the public to address the City Council.    

“Public Comment has been a subject that was very much a part of this last election,” Mayor Safford said.  “The other thing we’re going to be very interested in doing is making sure there are no comments… or response that you might give from the audience to what’s being said. And this is true as well at the council table.” 

A clock will be displayed atop the council table indicating to speakers how much of their time remains, the mayor added. “We’re going to be quite strict about timing.” 

A two-page draft titled “Public Meeting Expectations and Rules” was made available at the meeting in the Music Hall Tuesday night. 

The draft calls for those wishing to speak during the Public Comment period to sign their name and address on a sheet prior to the start of the meeting – a process similar to the method used at county Board of Supervisors meetings.  

The proposed Rules of Decorum and Order prohibit behaviors disruptive to the conduct of the meeting.  Specifically, the draft reads: “disorderly, disruptive, disturbing, delaying, or boisterous conduct which may include, but is not limited to, handclapping, stomping of feet, whistling, making noise, use of profane language or obscene gestures, yelling or similar demonstrations.” Signs, placards, and the distribution of literature are also to be prohibited in the meeting room during a meeting. 

Should the rules be violated, Safford will first request the rule violator to cease their conduct, with a verbal warning to follow should the violation continue. 

“If the person does not cease the violation the presiding officer shall declare the person to be out of order at which time the Sergeant-at-Arms may take steps to remove the person(s) from the meeting room,” according to the draft copy of Public Meeting Expectations and Rules. “If applicable, such person may be subject to civil and/or criminal penalties that may apply to their conduct.” 

A lengthy council discussion was had regarding the restriction of “handclapping” and general displays of emotion and what may be allowed, as any expression – celebrating the recognition of an achievement award, a response to a statement albeit popular or unpopular – may temporarily cause interruption of the rhythm of any meeting. 

“There is a certain amount of flexibility that the chairman (the mayor) has as to what’s acceptable and what’s not acceptable,” Safford said. Members of the council subsequently initiated discussion about how to best ensure that the rules for allowing any public expression are applied equally to all meeting attendees, whether they be popular or unpopular. There is more work to be done.      

Initial discussions regarding the proposal took place at the council’s hour-long pre-agenda meeting earlier that day. Safford stressed that the pre-agenda meetings are where he would like much of the council’s debate over agenda items to take place. The pre-agenda meetings –  typically held in the past on a Monday morning and lightly attended by the public, have preceded the much larger publicly attended Tuesday night regular meetings. 

“If we’re going to have any controversy over any of these, I’d like to air them out here, before we have a problem tonight,” he said at the morning pre-agenda meeting on Jan. 2, later adding “this is what we want to do at this meeting: get all this stuff aired out so we don’t have this kind of conversation tonight.”  Of the Tuesday night gatherings, Safford said, “this should be the most boring meeting of the month.”  

The mayor said he hopes to have the new Public Meeting Expectations and Rules document fully prepared and ready for vote at the council’s next meeting, on Jan. 16.

The Big Screen Returns to Wilton


Ticket booth and entryway of the previous cinema at the Wilton Mall in October 2021. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos.   

WILTON — Four years after hosting what was widely thought to be its final screening, Wilton Mall Cinemas is slated to re-open in February. 

The theater will be operated by Scene One Entertainment, the company announced Jan. 2. 

The Wilton Mall Cinemas will feature eight screens including one large-format auditorium. The large format auditorium has a 2,000 square foot screen and enhanced Dolby Digital surround sound. All auditoriums will feature luxury leather rocking chairs, wall-to-wall screens, and Dolby Digital surround sound, according to Scene One Entertainment.  

The Wilton Mall venue will mark the second theater operating for Scene One Entertainment in upstate New York, the other being Movieland in Schenectady.

“The theater is in fantastic shape and the mall has maintained it beautifully since its pandemic closure,” Joe Masher, owner and CEO at Scene One Entertainment (formerly Bow Tie Management) said in a statement. “The developments happening around the mall are encouraging. The theater will feature fresh hot popcorn with real butter, and other treats such as chicken tenders, mozzarella sticks, hot pretzels, and more.” A private party room will also be made available for birthday parties and other events.

“Scene One Cinemas fulfills one of the most-requested uses from guests and brings the former theater space in the Food Court back to life. It’s just one more element in our ongoing, thoughtful redevelopment that makes Wilton Mall a great place for people to live, work and play,” said Wilton Mall General Manager Mike Shaffer.

The Wilton Mall has seen some large-scale changes in recent years, and more changes may soon be underway. In 2020, Saratoga Hospital set up its medical offices in a repurposed vacant space previously occupied by Sears, and a project currently under discussion seeks to develop nearly 400 apartments alongside the existing mall. 

The project, as proposed by the Macerich Corporation and Paramount Development, includes 382 new “luxury, market-rate rental residences,” including both apartments and townhomes, and will feature “premium resident amenities with a sophisticated design.” 

The plan for that potential development continues to move through the town’s approval process, and developers are hoping to next stage a public appearance before the Wilton Town Board on Feb. 1. 

The Wilton movie theater originally opened in October 2013 by Bow Tie Cinemas and closed during the early on-set of the COVID-19 pandemic. Bow Tie Cinemas also opened on Railroad Place in Saratoga Springs in 2013. In April 2022 AMC announced it had struck a deal with Bow Tie to take over operations of the Saratoga Springs theater.

Schuylerville Library Hosts Holocaust Survivor Jan. 29 & Messages From Survivors Travelling Exhibit

SCHUYLERVILLE — To commemorate the International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Schuylerville Public Library will display the powerful travelling history exhibit, called Messages From Survivors: One Family’s Holocaust Legacy, for the month of January.  

The exhibit includes six panels of survivor stories, each one unique but linked, as well as take-home cards featuring some of the stories and links to more resources.  This opportunity to view the material is via a partnership between the Southern Adirondack Library System, Assemblymember Carrie Woerner and the creators at the Memory Project Productions.  

Schuylerville Public Library will also host a holocaust survivor, Ivan Vamos, who will speak of his early childhood memories in war-torn Hungary with his family and his later emigration from home.  Vamos will display photos and documents from his early years, display some drawings he has made of his time in Hungary, and offer a brief Q & A after his presentation, from 4:30-6 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 29.  

Those interested in attending, may come in person to the Library at 52 Ferry St., Schuylerville, or view the discussion via Zoom.  The link to join via Zoom is found on the Library’s event calendar at svl.libcal.com. 

Three Join Racing Museum’s Media Roll of Honor

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Three writers have joined the National Museum of Racing’s Joe Hirsch Media Roll of Honor: Dick Jerardi, Paul Moran, and John L. Hervey.

Jerardi has written about horse racing for Baltimore News American, Sports First, Daily Racing Forum, and the Philadelphia Daily News. At the Daily News, Jerardi covered every Triple Crown race from 1987 to 2017. He was also an ESPN Kentucky Derby panelist from 2005 to 2007. He’s a five-time winner of the Red Smith Award for Kentucky Derby coverage.

Moran was a long-time sports writer for Newsday on Long Island, where he covered Triple Crown races for decades. He won two Eclipse Awards, including one in 1985 for a Daily Racing Forum profile of Joe Hirsch. He also won the Red Smith Award for Kentucky Derby coverage, as well as the Associated Press Sports Editors Award. After battling cancer, Moran died in 2013. His ashes were scattered at the Saratoga Race Course, per his wishes.

Hervey, who died in 1947, was best known for his work as a Thoroughbred Record editor. He also wrote for the Chicago Tribune and Daily Racing Forum. He authored three volumes of the “Racing in America” series, as well as “The American Trotter.”  

The National Museum of Racing’s Joe Hirsch Media Roll of Honor recognizes distinguished journalists who specialize in thoroughbred racing. 

Assemblywoman Woerner: $713K in Grant Awarded To 11 Area Arts Organizations

Saratoga Springs Preservation Foundation. Photo provided.

SARATOGA COUNTY — Eleven area organizations, representing a wide range of artists and forms of creative expression, have been awarded a total of $713,000 in NYSCA funding that can be used for a variety of operational and programming expenses, Assemblywoman Carrie Woerner (D-Round Lake) announced Dec. 14.  

The NYS Council on the Arts (NYSCA) 2024 Grant award recipients are Caffé Lena, the Children’s Museum at Saratoga, the Crandall Public Library, the Historical Society of Saratoga Springs, the Lake George Opera Festival Association, Inc., Salem Art Works, Inc., Salem Stages, Saratoga Arts, Inc., the Saratoga Springs Preservation Foundation, Skidmore College and the Corporation of Yaddo.

“Art opens our minds to new perspectives and helps us understand the world around us. As a member of the Assembly Arts, Parks and Tourism Committee, I relish my role in helping to support something so vital to our culture and society as the arts,” Woerner said in a statement. “Working to ensure the State continues to fund the Council on the Arts and by extension, supports arts organizations in my district, remains a high priority.” 

Saratoga New Year’s Fest Weekend

Saratoga New Year’s Fest is back for its second year.

Friday, December 29, 2023 – Monday, January 1, 2024

Joan Osborne, Robert Randolph, and The Gibson Brothers to Perform; Fireworks Display, First Day 5K. 

SARATOGA SPRINGS —The Saratoga New Year’s Fest is back for its second year with a full holiday weekend of entertainment and celebration. The multi-venue, weekend-long festival takes place Friday, Dec. 29 through Monday, Jan. 1. 

Headlining this year’s lineup are Joan Osborne, Robert Randolph, and The Gibson Brothers.

Also slated to perform are Dogs in a Pile, Organ Fairchild, Tracy Bonham, Toubab Krewe, Ward Hayden & the Outliers, GA-20, DJ Logic, and The Swing Docs, among others. 

This year’s festival will also include a free family, family-friendly concert at 5 p.m. and spectacular fireworks display at 6 p.m. on New Year’s Eve at Ellsworth Jones Place outside of the Saratoga Springs City Center, and the Saratoga First Day 5K on New Year’s Day. 

Ticket information, registration and a full list of events is available online at: www.saratoga.org/tourism/saratoga-new-years-fest. 

Downtown Tourism Parking Plan

Tourism Parking Plan for Saratoga Springs, as presented to the city Council on Dec. 19. 

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The city is hoping to institute a “tourism parking program” this spring that it says will ease parking access for visitors, increase the availability of resident parking and generate about $2.5 million in gross revenue.  

The seasonal program would charge visitors $2 per hour for parking at the three city-owned parking garages and two surface lots from May 1 – to Sept. 30, DPW Business Manager Michael Veitch explained during a presentation to the City Council on Dec. 19. 

The three affected garages and lots are located on Putnam, Walton and Woodlawn – where visitors would use pay stations, or pay attendants.  Time-limited parking would be instituted on some downtown streets, although Broadway will pretty much remain as it currently is.  

On-street permits would provide free parking for residents and downtown business employees. How those permits would specifically be secured has yet to be decided. 

“What’s being proposed is paid tourist parking in the garages and surface lots and limiting the availability of free parking on city streets for visitors. This program prioritizes however, the continuance of free parking for residents and employees,” said DPW Commissioner Jason Golub.

The results of a study performed by DPW last summer estimates the tourism parking plan could generate $2.468 million via hourly sales in new revenue during the busy summer season. Costs for implementing the program and operating the plan would cost approximately $1 million, leaving an estimated net revenue of more than $1 million that could be used for other city costs or programs. 

 The departments of Public Works and Public Safety would both have responsibilities for administrating the program, and changes to the City Code to accommodate the plan, as well as initiating contracts with vendors for pay stations and permit plans would also need to be addressed before implementation. 

The city is hopeful the program can be installed by April 2024 with implementation on May 1.  

•In other city news, the Council temporarily tabled a proposed one-year contract through the 2024 calendar year with RISE Housing and Support Services that will pay up to $387,160 for the agency to provide homeless shelter services. The contract is expected to be approved during the council’s Dec. 28 meeting.

Earlier this year, the city approved an agreement with RISE to operate the first year-round low barrier facility in Saratoga Springs.  Located on Adelphi Street, just west of South Broadway, the 30-bed facility began operations on June 12.  Local developer Sonny Bonacio, who secured a five-year lease on the Adelphi Street property, renovated the building and is providing it rent free to RISE until 2025.

The city has aggressively pursued a search for a permanent location to site a homeless shelter and navigation center; the ad hoc Mayor’s Task Force on Homelessness offered several option locations earlier this year. With the start of 2024, a new mayor will be seated at the center of the City Council table and members of the Task Force publicly expressed their interest in meeting with mayor-elect John Safford in February. 

•The Council also adopted a resolution opposing the construction and operation of Saratoga Biochar Inc.’s sewage sludge and wood chip burning plant in the Moreau Industrial Park. According to the resolution, the plant at full capacity is expected to burn up to 720 tons of sewage sludge per day, with the sewage sludge processed at the Moreau Industrial Park and shipped by large diesel trucks with a likelihood that large trucks filled with sewage sludge will travel through Saratoga Springs.