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SunRISE on the City’s West Side Offers Calming Haven of Hope 

HOME spells out near the main entryway atop a kitchen island of the new SunRISE Retreat intensive crisis residence in Saratoga Springs. The soon-to-open retreat will be the second of its kind in N.Y. State, and the first in the greater Capital Region. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos.

SARATOGA SPRINGS —A decorative planter rests easily atop the kitchen island, greeting all who enter with letters that spell: H-O-M-E.  

The two-story haven, which stands at Kirby Road near Washington Street, will serve as the SunRise Retreat – an intensive crisis residence that is the first of its kind in the greater Capital Region and the second one sited in the entire state. 

“It is a short-term retreat for people experiencing a mental health crisis,” explained RISE Executive Director Sybil Newell, offering a tour of the building during a ceremonial ribbon-cutting Aug. 24. The residence is expected to be open and fully operational in a few weeks.  

“Experiencing a mental health crisis can mean different things to different people,” Newell said. “We will be providing stabilization services, treatment on-site, and discharge planning so that people can return safely to the community. 

“We know that people often experience mental health distress where they may not immediately meet criteria to be in the hospital, but, without additional support and oversight they continue to deteriorate and eventually do end up needing hospitalization,” Newell said. “We hope that SunRISE Retreat will fill that gap and give people the extra support they need to avoid going to the hospital, or to give them the extra time they need to get solidly on their feet after hospitalization.”

The two-story building houses approximately 12 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms and 6 showers. The bedrooms offer a living space about 15 feet long, 15 feet wide, and site a bed, desk, dresser and closet space. There is a multi-purpose kitchen with a free-standing island where meals will be prepared for those in residence, as well as a dining area, conference room, offices for staff and a large living room fitted with multiple couches, a TV, and a fireplace.  

The program is open to everyone with or without a diagnosis and there is no long referral process to get into the facility, Newell said.  “If you, or someone you know is in a mental health crisis – whatever that looks like – you can call here and we will have 24/7 availability, to be assessed by a professional to determine whether or not they are appropriate for this level of care.”  

“The wonderful thing is that it’s for everybody and anybody: your brothers and sisters, your mothers and fathers, your kids, for all of us,” said NYS Office of Mental Health Deputy Commissioner Moira Tashjian, who attended last week’s ceremony. She was joined by local and regional political dignitaries or their representatives, and health specialists.  “Hopefully it will be a safe haven for individuals who are in a behavioral health crisis,” Tashjian said. The project has been in the planning stages for nearly five years. 

Administered by RISE, SunRISE Retreat will host short-term voluntary program residencies up to 28 days for those who are in mental health distress or experiencing symptoms of a mental health crisis.  The program provides stabilization services and features four nurses currently on staff with additional nurses to be hired. A nurse practitioner acts as medical director.  

The center, available to those aged 21 and over, has contracted with managed care organizations in the area regarding insurance and accepts Medicaid, as well as being open to people who do not have the ability to pay. 

“We have some state funding to cover individuals who have no insurance, but this is primarily a service billable through health insurance,” Newell said. “The maximum stay is up to 28 days, but it really is individuals for what a person needs. Sometimes they just need a couple of days to get away from their lives to get things back together, sometimes individuals need a longer-term stay.”

While located in the city of Saratoga Springs proper, SunRISE Retreat is a licensed office of the New York State Office of Mental Health.

“Someone just has to call here, see if there is space, and come in and be assessed by a medical professional to determine whether person is appropriate for this level of care,” Newell said.  On-site treatment such as individual and group therapy, family interaction is offered. Discharge planning will specify where the person will go after being stable.

What the facility won’t provide is a hospital’s level of care, but it will offer an intensive treatment model for individuals who are in need of additional stabilization after an inpatient mental health hospitalization, or need a diversion from inpatient hospitalization but do not need that level of care or are currently in distress.

“The need is significant, particularly for folks in acute mental health crisis, behavioral health crisis,” said Dr. Michael Prezioso, Saratoga County Department of Mental Health & Addiction Services Commissioner. “Not all those folks meet criteria for admission to a hospital setting but we do need an intensive setting for them to get some relief from the symptoms they are suffering from. This is a needed addition to the continuum of care we have in the county.”  

The retreat is located within a building owned by RISE that was previously functioning as Kaydeross House, a home for adolescent girls. RISE Housing and Support Services is a human service agency that has served people in Saratoga and the surrounding counties since 1978.
What’s in the SunRISE name? “We wanted to come up with a name that indicates hope,” Newell said.  “Hope and calm.”

$10,000 FBI Reward for Information Related to the Tampering of a Rail Line in Corinth

A joint investigation is being conducted by FBI Albany and the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office.

BALLSTON SPA — The FBI is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest, and conviction of the individual(s) responsible for deliberately tampering with a portion of the Saratoga Corinth and Hudson Railroad in Corinth.

The FBI’s Albany Field Office was contacted after a railroad employee conducting a routine safety inspection noticed a portion of the rail line in Corinth had been tampered with.

The joint investigation between FBI Albany and the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office has identified evidence that the tampering is indicative of an attempt to derail a train and occurred in early June of 2023.

A derailment on this line could have resulted in serious injuries, or even fatalities. The Saratoga Corinth and Hudson Railroad offers scenic tours for passengers of all ages, to include field trips for young children.

“While we’re thankful the worst-case scenario was avoided, the FBI and our law enforcement partners will not stand by while someone tries to cause harm to our communities and destroy our small businesses,” said Janeen DiGuiseppi, special agent in charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Albany Field Office.

Anyone with information related to this case is asked to contact the FBI by calling 1-800-CALL-FBI or submitting a tip online at tips.fbi.gov.

ZBA Meets Aug. 28


Image: Excelsior Avenue Corridor multi-family development – proposed, and existing or approved projects, as per documents submitted to the Zoning Board of Appeals in July. 

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Saratoga Springs Zoning Board of Appeals will host its next meeting 6:30 p.m.  Monday, Aug. 28 at City Hall. 

All meetings are open to the public. 

New Business: 

An Area variance is sought at 174 York Ave. to permit the addition of a second-story to an existing building and extend the footprint of a home approximately 16 feet into the backyard. 

An Area Variance is sought at 34 York Ave. to permit the demolition of a 2,000 square foot outbuilding and replace with an approximate 900 square foot two-story structure. 

Continued Business includes: 

70 Fifth Ave. Demo & Construction Area Variance to permit the demolition of the existing house and construction of a new single-family residence.

12 Ballston Ave. Chipotle Area Variance to permit the demolition of the existing structure and reconstruction of a one-story restaurant building.

182 Excelsior Ave. Green Springs Capital Group LLC is seeking an Area Variance to permit a two-lot subdivision within the Urban Residential -4 (UR-4) District. In a letter to the ZBA dated July 18, Brian Green of Green Springs Capital Group wrote that the granting of the density variance for the 182 Excelsior Ave. project would enable the creation of a development “that respects the historic nature of the property and fulfills the housing needs of the community.”  The project involves relocating and renovating the historic house and carriage house at 182 Excelsior Ave.  

Saratoga County Extends Emergency Order

BALLSTON SPA — Saratoga County officials renewed the County’s Local Emergency Order in response to the city of New York relocating people to areas across upstate.

The initial Emergency Order declared by county CEO and Board of Supervisors Chairman Theodore Kusnierz on May 19 cites public health and safety perils due to a potential increase of asylum seekers entering Saratoga, which would “significantly increase the county’s homeless population.” 

“The purpose of this Emergency Order is to prevent other municipalities from imposing their own policies, costs, and responsibilities onto Saratoga County and to protect the health and safety of those within Saratoga County,” Saratoga County Administrator Steve Bulger said in a prepared statement.

“It is not the responsibility of Saratoga County to inherit the failures of another municipality or the federal government,” Bulger said, adding that a “grossly mismanaged response to New York City’s homeless migrant crisis by the City of New York and their contractor” and its lack of communication with other counties in the state “has created utter chaos for local governments and the people they claim to be helping.”   

More than 100,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since last year. Over 30 counties across New York State have since made moves to hamper plans of sending migrants to their hotels and shelters.               

The current Order – which took effect Aug. 18 and was extended for 30 days – “creates a prohibition on illegal shelters and temporary housing” within Saratoga County. 

The Order specifically prohibits municipalities outside of the county from establishing a shelter or temporary housing in Saratoga County without adhering to the requirements of all applicable federal, state, and local statutes, laws, regulations, and rules and prohibits the operation of such a facility without the written permission of the Board of Supervisors Chairman Kusnierz.  

The Order also prohibits owners and operators of any location within the County of Saratoga from entering into an agreement with a municipality or entity that would violate the provisions of the Emergency Order or cause any other person to violate the Order.   

The purpose of the Emergency Order is to ensure the life, liberty, and property of the people of Saratoga County, including those intended to reside in any facility described in the Order, are preserved, according to the county.   

The penalty for violating the Order is a Class B misdemeanor, punishable by up to 90 days in jail as well as a potential fine.

Pletchers Honored with Marylou Whitney Award for Commitment to The Backstretch Community

Todd & Tracey Pletcher (fourth and fifth from the left) received the Marylou Whitney Award from the
New York Race Track Chaplaincy on Aug. 16. Photo courtesy of NYRA.

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Todd Pletcher, along with his wife Tracy, received the Marylou Whitney Award from the New York Race Track Chaplaincy for their continuing devotion and support of the backstretch community, at the organization’s 16th annual fund-raising brunch at the Saratoga National Golf Club on Aug. 16.

Pletcher has won more than 5,500 and a record eight Eclipse Awards during his Hall of Fame training career. 

The Pletchers were presented with a framed racing scene created by equine artist Tom Chapman from the New York Race Track Chaplaincy. In a surprise appearance, Todd Pletcher’s mentor, the 87-year-old Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, made the presentation.

The brunch attracted a record crowd of approximately 350 people. Trainer Jena Antonucci  – the first woman to win a Triple Crown race – and Hall of Famers Javier Castellano, Angel Cordero Jr., Edgar Prado, and Johnny Velazquez were among those in attendance.

The New York Race Track Chaplaincy serves the New York backstretch and farming community with children’s enrichment, teen mentoring, women’s programming, social service, recreational, and educational programming as well as non-denominational religious services. Additional information about the New York Race Track Chaplaincy is available at rtcany.org.

Motorcyclist Killed in Crash

CLIFTON PARK — A 53-year-old Halfmoon man was killed following an Aug. 16 crash in Clifton Park. The car/motorcycle accident occurred on State Route 146 east of the intersection of State Route 146A. 

According to a statement released by the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office, the preliminary investigation indicates the operator of a 2001 Yamaha motorcycle, 53-year-old Geoffrey Gabel of Halfmoon, was travelling eastbound on State Route 146 and struck a 2017 Nissan SUV that was making a left turn. 

Gabel was transported by Clifton Park–Halfmoon EMS to Ellis Hospital where he was later pronounced deceased. The Sheriff’s Office Accident Reconstruction Unit is investigating the accident. 

Tai Chi Master Workshop in Saratoga Springs

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Tai Chi Center of Saratoga Springs is sponsoring a Tai Chi workshop with Grandmaster William C.C. Chen on Oct. 15.

At 92, Master Chen has decades of teaching experience and level of understanding of Tai Chi Chuan that few people have achieved. 

The workshop is presented as a series of 50-minute classes. There are three form classes and one Martial Applications class. Each class is open to all levels of skill. 

The workshops will be held at SPAC School of the Arts, Lewis A. Swyer Studios, 99 South Broadway in Saratoga Springs.

Class size is limited. Preregistration is required. Tuition is $200 full day or $110 half day. More information, register at: the-taichi-center.com/wmchenworkshop, or email Mark Tolstrup at: mark@the-taichi-center.com. 

Bobby Flay’s Kitchen Could Be Yours

Bobby Flay’s Saratoga Springs gourmet kitchen overlooking the track with vaulted ceiling, exposed brick & gas fireplace. Photo and description: Julie & Co. Realty. 

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Five months after Barstool Sports founder David Portnoy purchased a Fifth Avenue home in Saratoga Springs, downstreet neighbor and Reality TV personality Bobby Flay has put his four-bedroom home on the market. 

Flay purchased the Tudor-style home for $1.7 million in 2021. It is up for sale at $3,295 million. 

The home, featured in House Beautiful magazine in April, was originally constructed in 1939, and features 3,087 square feet of living space with four bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms, and a two-car garage. 

“The outdoor living space is one-of-a-kind with an outdoor kitchen, expansive patio and unmatched views,” according to the real estate posting specifying JoAnn Potrzuski Cassidy with Julie & Co. Realty as listing agent of the property, in a story first reported by the Times-Union.      

Flay’s home, adjacent to the Oklahoma Training Track, is located approximately 100 yards away from property which David Portnoy’s company, Smokeshowcity LLC, purchased in March.   

Changes Coming for Three Popular Businesses

Tailgate and Party Shop on Phila Street in Saratoga Springs, on Aug. 22, 2023. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos. 

SARATOGA COUNTY — A new gourmet marketplace. A downtown party shop in Saratoga Springs. A neighborhood deli family-operated for decades.

Three popular retail establishments announced imminent changes pending in their respective businesses with a potential of ramifications resulting for the people who patronize their stores. 

Tailgate and Party Shop, Saratoga Springs

Kirsten Lambert purchased the building at the corner of Phila and Putnam Streets in spring 2021, relocating the Caroline and Henry Street-based Tailgate and Party Shop she first opened one year earlier. The new Phila Street location, since 1990, had previously housed Four Seasons Natural Foods.  

Lambert, a near 30-year-teacher of sixth-grade students was looking for a business to operate during what she anticipated as her retirement years. 

“It’s been a wonderful experience, but it’s just not ‘retirement.’ I found myself exhausted and not as retired as I thought I would be,” she says with a laugh.  “We decided we really need to spin some things down in our lives. A need to really retire this time. It is time for me to pursue other retirement dreams.”

The role Retirement 2.0 will take for Lambert and her husband is in the form of a small animal rescue operation to potentially include retired racehorses. 

The shop meanwhile will see new purpose. 

“We have a lessee coming in who is going to do his own thing,” says Lambert. While not yet completed in scope, the new business operator has plans to install a bar along an upper section of the interior and a small convenience market style area on the lower section. Paper Dolls of Saratoga has expressed interest in taking over the party supply part of the business.  Lambert will maintain ownership of the building. 

“We will begin the closing process in September,” she says. “I’ll be putting things on sale, and we’ll be done by November first.” 

The Tailgate and Party Shop was Lambert’s first real retail business.  

“I started a party store. During COVID. And I had no idea what I was doing: genius!” she says with a laugh. “I thought: have a quiet, seasonal little place. Racetrack season, Christmas. It did very well, it became a year-round store and there never seemed to be an off-time. That’s what caught me off-guard.” 

“I do think it’s absolutely wonderful that Saratoga has really become a year-round destination and my favorite thing about having the store is that it is a really happy place,” Lambert says of her go-to, one-stop-shop for all things celebration. “And meeting the other business owners. I really learned a lot and it has me understanding with compassion and empathy all these other industries.”   

Cannone’s Deli, Wilton 

“We were 28 when we got here and we’re like 67 now,” says Theresa Cannone, tracing a line back to the earliest days of the deli she and her husband John opened in 1984. 

Things were different in Wilton then. “When we got here it was almost like a rural area. On Northern Pines Road, you had no traffic. Now there’s condos, houses, developments – it’s just booming,” she says. With the influx of population over the decades, business at Cannone’s Deli at 654 Saratoga Road is also booming. 

A few months ago, the Cannones began thinking about retiring. 

“It’s bittersweet and it’s kind of hard to leave, but it’s time. We worked seven days a week, ten hours a day for 39 years. We just need to relax for a little bit, enjoy our kids, enjoy our family,” Cannone says.  “Our kids are really looking forward to us spending time with them. We’ve got five grandchildren – and one on the way in November!” she adds enthusiastically.

“The people and the community are wonderful. We built this corner back in ’89 – we had the deli for 10 years, sold it to Kelly’s Deli, we had the liquor store, the pizzeria – Christina’s Pizzeria, which we named after our daughter,” Cannone says. A handful of years ago they returned to operate the deli.   

“That was five years ago in May. When we came back people showed up with flowers – I thought we had a funeral going on – they showed up with flowers and balloons, pictures and cards, and pa-pa-pa,”  says Cannone, having left Deer Park, Long Island several decades ago to relocate upstate, but the accent not entirely having left her. 

Sunday will be the Cannones’ last day of working at the deli, which they have sold to Matthew Sanchez. The deli business will continue into the future, Cannone says. “He is a good man for the job.” 

PDT Market, Saratoga Springs 

Less than six months after the high-profile unveiling of a new gourmet marketplace in downtown Saratoga Springs, Chef Adam Foti announced this week he will be leaving PDT Market.

“Just less than two years ago, my partners and I embarked on a great adventure.  The goal was to transform my passion, PDT Catering, into a marketplace that would nourish the community with amazing, prepared foods, specialty products, and a variety of educational opportunities. From this vision, PDT Market was born,” Chef Foti explained on a social media posting. 

Foti says he will fix his undivided focus on a return to PDT Catering, which will relaunch externally Sept. 1. 

“The effort required to build and sustain PDT Market, and simultaneously keep PDT Catering functioning at the very high standards we set for ourselves, was not always compatible. Time spent on catering was time away from the market. Conversely, time spent focused on the market was time spent away from catering,” Foti says. “Each demand and deserve complete focus and attention.”

The market will also continue, presumably in the partners’ hands, and announced it will be sharing more information “over the next several weeks.” PDT Market did not immediately respond to a media inquiry regarding specific plans of the market going forward. 

PDT Market is located on Railroad Place at 55 Railroad Place in a location that previously housed a Price Chopper market.

“It’s such a labor of love that I’m so passionate about, that it’s just so exciting to see everything here,” Foti told Saratoga TODAY in March as the signage went up inside the 19,000-square-foot PDT Market in preparation of the store’s opening.  An opening celebration ribbon-cutting ceremony took place April 24. 

“PDT Market will continue to grow, flourish, and perhaps, change in my absence,” Foti says. “Rest assured that as I leave, the market is in skillful hands. The team in place is one of the finest I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with.”

The Happiness Hub: Saratoga Senior Center Open For Business


Photo provided

SARATOGA SPRINGS — In July, the Saratoga Senior Center moved to its new location, 290 West Avenue, adjacent to the Saratoga Regional YMCA. The building’s brick and white columned exterior, designed by Saratoga architect John Muse, and built by Bast Hatfield Construction, ties senior health and wellness together in a big way.

“Our goal is to be a hub for older adults in a building that’s designed like a college campus center. We want to be a place where they can meet people and socialize, or just come and read the paper so they’re not home alone,” said Executive Director Lois Celeste. 

Meeting a Growing Need

Since 1955, the nonprofit Saratoga Senior Center has helped adults, age 50 and older, maintain an independent lifestyle while meeting new friends, sharing a meal, exercising, taking a class, or learning a skill. 

“We’re still experiencing a tsunami of aging in Saratoga,” said Celeste. “People come here to retire, relocate (to be with their kids and grandkids), and to build a new life after a loss. They are looking for new things to do and for new friends.”

Originally founded as the Golden Age Club, the group, renamed the Senior Citizens Center of Saratoga Springs (SCCSS) had their first building in 1960 at 162 Circular Street. Then, when the population’s growing desire for senior services was exceeding capacity at their 5 Williams St. address, their Capital Campaign raised $1.3 million for the new 14,000 sq. ft. space (which is twice as large) and will remain rent-free for 30 years, thanks to a $3 million charitable gift from the Dake Family and Stewart’s Shops.

Touring the New Center

Drive around the YMCA and you’ll find the Saratoga Senior Center’s main entrance (facing West Avenue). A second entrance through the gym is still under construction. 

“The synergy between the Y and us is just incredible,” said Celeste. A senior health and wellness “one-stop shop” this location also offers direct access to Pitney Meadows Community Farm’s 1.7 miles of walking trails and the Saratoga Spa State Park’s numerous recreational opportunities. 

Inside, large windows bathe the space in voluminous natural light, ideal for the art studio by the entrance. Equipped with an industrial kiln and plenty of workspace, the Center will continue its popular clay arts program, as well as card stamping, acrylic painting, beading projects, and more, with the help of an art coordinator. 

“It’s really exciting and beautiful. The open space is fantastic. There is maximum light and absolutely gorgeous rooms,” said Celeste. 

The main foyer and lounge area features a modern double fireplace with granite surround and countertops (supplied by Marble and Granite, Inc.), multiple seating areas, and tables fitted with USB charging ports. There is free Wi-Fi, ample parking, and several EV charging stations. 

The high-demand commercial kitchen and food program (designed with the help of  Forno Bistro’s Nancy Bambara)will organize food donations from Pitney Meadows, Panera Bread, Price Chopper, and the Bread Basket Bakery, among others, and work with various restaurants and chefs for breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and cooking classes. The Center has also explore operating as a café, as well. 

The multi-purpose dining room (with drop-down projector) is a transitional space that seats 100+, and rotating exhibition space. Currently, work from Terri-Lynn Pellegri Photography’s popular compost series is on display.

The fitness and education centers will host a variety of classes (including Academy for Life Long Learning instruction) an onsite physical therapist with space to rent, and a meeting room for private consultations or telehealth appointments.

In the game room are a cozy gas fireplace and chairs, two pool tables, a ping-pong table, lending library, and four computers. A baby grand piano, guitar, and other instruments will also be available. This winter, a golf simulator will open for the public to rent.

“It’s All Right Here”

With more than 200 volunteers of all ages, the Saratoga Senior Center is an intergenerational hub, said Celeste. In addition to their 15 employees, volunteers and donations are the Center’s life blood, she added. 

Volunteers man the front desk, teach, attend day trips and overnight excursions, deliver 200 meals each week, and provide transportation through the Community Connections program, housed here, in the administration offices. 

“If we can just get people here, there’s food, they can socialize, enjoy art, music, education, exercise. It’s all right here,” said Celeste. 

The Center is also piloting an innovative program to provide community palliative care to seriously ill seniors in the City and Towns, last year serving more than 100 seniors.  “It focuses on quality of life while aging in place, much earlier than hospice,” said program manager Phil Di Sorbo.

The Saratoga Senior Center ribbon cutting will be held in September and a Grand Opening Celebration is planned for October. 

For updates, follow the Saratoga Senior Center on Facebook and Instagram. To volunteer, make a donation, become a member, or for more information, go to saratogaseniorcenter.org.