Displaying items by tag: saratoga

SARATOGA SPRINGS – Representatives of the Rip Van Dam hotel project provided a revised update of their plans to the Planning Board on April 5.

Among the revisions: the previously suggested orange brick face of the building has been changed to feature a softer white appearance; the proposed banquet facility will be replaced by a restaurant, and the newest configuration will total 159 rooms. Previous proposals varied between 142 and 176 rooms.  

Parking will be via a multi-story garage with a 341-vehicle capacity to be built on Hamilton Street, just south of Congress Street, atop a current flat lot.  

The Planning Board is slated to consider Shelters of Saratoga’s application(s) for a special use permit and site plan review for a proposed permanent Code Blue emergency homeless shelter on Walworth Street. It is anticipated the board may consider those applications at its next meeting, on Thursday, April 19.  

This is the current lot, facing Hamilton Street, where a proposed multi-story garage will be constructed. 

8.2-park lot.jpg

 

Upcoming Meetings

Monday, April 16: 9:30 a.m. City Council Pre-agenda Meeting.

Monday, April 16: 5 p.m. Planning Board Workshop.

Tuesday, April 17: 7 p.m. City Council Meeting

Wednesday, April 18: 7 p.m. Design Review Commission Meeting

Thursday, April 19: 6 p.m. Planning Board Meeting.    

Published in News
Wednesday, 11 April 2018 20:00

April 13th – April 19th, 2018

POLICE 

Joseph P. Rossi, 20, of Ballston Lake, was charged April 8 with making a terroristic threat, a felony, on the suspicion that he made “disturbing posts on social media referencing the Burnt Hills Ballston Lake School, according to the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office. Rossi was arraigned and sent to to the Saratoga County Jail in lieu of $1,000 cash bail, or $2,000 bond.   

Stephen Lerario, 42, of Greenfield Center, was charged April 8 with first degree assault, in connection with a domestic incident that allegedly occurred the previous evening on Grange Road in the Town of Greenfield. Authorities say Lerario is suspected of being involved in an incident which resulted in a woman, who lived at the residence, having been brought into the Saratoga Hospital emergency room with an apparent gunshot wound to the head.
Lerario is accused of firing a round from a shotgun at the victim, 33-year-old Katie M. Gilbert, which struck her in the head. Gilbert and Lerario have been identified by the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office as having a boyfriend-girlfriend relationship and it believed the incident was a result of a domestic dispute.  Gilbert underwent emergency surgery at Albany Medical Center and is currently listed in critical condition. Lerario was arraigned and sent to Saratoga County Jail without bail. The incident remains under investigation and additional charges may be filed. 

Molly K. Robertson, age 21, Salem, was charged April 9 with failure to stop at a red traffic signal light, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle - a misdemeanor. 

Roshawon D. Donley, age 29, Troy, was charged April 8 with unlawful possession of marijuana, criminal possession of a controlled substance - a misdemeanor. 

Karen M. Rose, age 33, Saratoga Springs, was charged April 8 with felony DWI as a second offense, failure to stop at a red traffic signal light. 

Anessa M. O’Neil, age 22, Schenectady, was charged April 7 with misdemeanor DWI, speeding, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle - a misdemeanor, unlawful possession of marijuana. 

Kenneth C. Hunter, age 28, Saratoga Springs, was charged April 7 with criminal mischief fourth degree/intent to damage property - a misdemeanor.

Christine M. Peugh, age 51, Schenectady, was charged April 5 with petit larceny - a misdemeanor. 

Ian S. Sitts, age 31, Gansevoort, was charged April 3 with obstruction of breathing/blood-apply pressure - a felony, criminal mischief - a misdemeanor. 

John A. Oakes, age 32, Saratoga Springs, was charged April 2 with unlawful imprisonment - a misdemeanor, criminal mischief - a misdemeanor, criminal contempt - a misdemeanor, and aggravated family offense – a felony.   

Matthew G. Bull, age 45, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 30 with misdemeanor DWI and speeding. 

Christine T. Leone, age 55, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 29 with petit larceny – a misdemeanor. 

Virginia M. Fuller, age 57, Fonda was charged March 29 with grand larceny fourth degree/exceeds $1,000 – a felony. 

Jacob M. Ellinger, age 21, Gansevoort, was charged March 28 with making graffiti - a misdemeanor, and possession of graffiti instruments - a misdemeanor. 

Iris Medina, age 41, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 27 with three misdemeanor counts of unlawfully dealing with a child. 

Francisco Pabon Parrilla, age 55, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 26 with criminal mischief fourth degree/intent to damage property - a misdemeanor. 

Charles A. Hilsman, age 58, Ballston Spa, was charged March 26 with criminal trespass third degree/building or property – a misdemeanor. 

Published in Police Blotter

SARATOGA SPRINGS – A Gov. Cuomo directive to explore raising the wages of tipped food service workers to a flat rate is drawing the ire of many of the local workers for whom the idea was supposedly initiated to benefit.    

“What the motives are I don’t know, but it’s apparently been presented to Cuomo like he’d be doing us a favor,” says Amanda Broderick, who has worked in the local restaurant industry for 16 years, the past nine at Olde Bryan Inn. “The servers aren’t asking for this (and) it would just devastate the local economy. They’re not doing us a favor.”

In upstate New York, the general hourly minimum wage is $10.40 per hour. Tipped food service employees make $7.50 per hour, before tips. When tips are added, many workers say they are capable of earning much more than the state minimum wage, based on the level of service they provide to customers. Besides wait staff earning more, this also enables restaurants working on slim profit margins to save the $2.90 difference per employee, per hour, as a “tip credit.”

The proposal to raise tipped food service workers to the general hourly minimum wage would eliminate that tip credit - forcing restaurants to pay more while assuming workers will earn less, and set into motion a decline in the labor force as well as restaurant service, and higher prices for dining consumers, the workers say.  

“The best part of this industry is the relationships you build,” Broderick says. “And I do try to build those relationships because you get rewarded for the service you provide. I know the harder I work, the more money I can make.”

Broderick and her husband recently bought a house on the Great Sacandaga Lake. The daily commute to Saratoga Springs takes 45 minutes to one hour, but it is a trip that is worth it, she says, because the hours are flexible, the staff is passionate, and the money Broderick is able to earn helps pay the mortgage. One of the workers’ concerns is that if their basic wage is raised to the state minimum, tips would cease to exist.

“Right now, a lot of us make way more than the minimum wage. The tip credit helps restaurants pay a lower wage and keep prices down. What would happen is we’d end up making a lot less, menu prices would go up and eventually the mom and pops that Saratoga has so many of would have to close,” Broderick says. “If (Gov. Cuomo) is trying to find extra tax revenue, think of all the taxable income that would be lost in places like Saratoga. You don’t want to mess with a good thing.”

The Employee Policies Institute, a non-profit research organization that studies public policy issues surrounding employment growth, cites Census Bureau data that indicates tipped restaurant servers self-report earnings of more than $17 per hour on average statewide in New York, and suggests those estimates “are likely conservative.”  

Susan Mezera has worked as a server for the past 43 years, from the former Lillian’s Restaurant to her current position at the Olde Bryan Inn. Working in the industry has helped her put her two children through college.

“When the public hears servers get minimum wage, people will have the perception that it won’t be necessary to tip,” Mezera explains. “People have mortgages and car payments. They’ve established their lives on the income they make, and that will drastically change. It’s already been practiced in other places and it didn’t work. Maine instituted this and a year later repealed it because it was such a disaster.”

In November 2016 a referendum to raise both the regular and tipped minimum wages in Maine won with 55 percent of the vote. Soon after, tipped servers began to complain that their earnings were being hurt as a result of customers tipping less. The measure was overturned in June 2017 in 110-37 vote by lawmakers.

 

Increased Costs for Restaurants

“For the restaurants, it would mean a large increase in labor costs. You’re looking at 30 servers and bus people in just one restaurant who are tipped employees - and restaurants are working on a small margin as it is. They may have to raise menu prices and put service charges on top of the bills to cover that. Servers would be let go and they’d probably do away with bussers and hostesses. The work would be spread real thin,” Mezera says. “With more tables to take care of, the quality of service will go downhill. If this happens and then at some later point they decide, ‘oh, this is not working,’ how many restaurants will have gone out of business? This is a busy town with the City Center, with it being a college town and there are a lot of restaurants. If half of them are gone, how many people will be laid off and out of work?”

A locally initiated online petition at change.org titled “Supporters of the Tip Credit in New York” has secured more than 7,000 signatures, and a collective group of business owners and employees urging Gov. Cuomo to preserve the Tip Credit have formed the Save Ny Tips Coalition, which hosts a web site and numerous social media pages with the hashtag: #savenytips.

“I think the group that’s really pushing it is a minority of people working in the restaurant industry who are Cuomo’s voter demographic in New York City. I think it’s purely political,” says Giuseppe Chiaravalle, who works at Wheatfields Restaurant.

“Look at it this way: when you go to a restaurant, you want to be wined and dined, you want good service. Going to a restaurant is an experience: the food, the ambience, the service. Servers know through their hard work, they can provide a superior experience to a customer and that they can get compensated for it with a tip,” Chiaravalle says. “I am willing to take less pay from the business knowing that through my hard work, I can actually make more and lift myself. I know I can work as hard as possible and see the results. Why would you take that incentive away?”

Workers say while they would earn a few dollars more in the raising of the minimum wage, the public would tip less, if at all. And without the incentive to earn tips, many would seek other opportunities in less challenging fields.  

“On a track Saturday, where you’ve got five, six different tables and you’re running around the restaurant with 10 things in your head, why would you do all that if you’re only getting paid minimum wage, when you can make the same amount standing at a cash register,” Chiaravalle says. “The hardest working people will look to find a job that’s easier for the same pay. Service will go down because the best of the best are leaving and prices will go up. It’s not a situation where anyone wins.”

 

Higher Menu Prices

“It definitely would not be good for tourist places like this,” says Saratoga native Brayden Bosch, who has worked in the industry 11 years. “People come here for the track, but they also come for the nightlife-dinner side of it, and it wouldn’t be what they’re looking for anymore. The owners would have to pay a lot more, the workers who remained would be less enthusiastic and on top of that your food would cost more. So, people might not have to tip - but your $20 meal might cost $30 now. Before you could pay $25 with tip and everybody is happy.”

On the restaurant business side of things, the elimination of the tip credit would cost owners more money to meet the minimum wage gap, and those costs will continue to rise. The general hourly minimum wage in upstate New York is scheduled to increase to $11.10 at the end of this calendar year, up to $11.80 in December 2019, and to $12.50 one year after that.

“It would be disastrous,” says Nicci Miller, general manager at Wheatfields Restaurant, who began working in the industry 25 years ago as a busser at Lillian’s.

“You would have a whole group of working people who would lose everything. You have the restaurant owners who could potentially lose their business. Then you have the consumers who will lose every level of service they’re used to. All across the board, it’s a very bad idea,” Miller says.  

From a management perspective, raising wages by that much would be disastrous. In reality, it would stop being the hospitable town we are – which is part of Saratoga’s charm, that face-to-face interaction with people. There’s that communication as a server: where to stay, what to do, what to eat. You’re the visitor’s booth and you’ll lose all of that. It would change service in the entire state of New York,” she says.

And it’s not just the waiter or waitress you visibly see at the restaurant who would be affected, Miller explains. There is an entire support staff who depend on tips.

“You tip out the server 20 percent. From that, he tips 3 percent of that to the bar, because they’re making his cocktails, 2-1/2 percent to the busser who fills his water and clears his dishes, and another 1-1/2 to 2 percent to your food runner, who’s the person who brings the food to the table. It’s such a big circle, everybody takes a piece of it. And they all earn that money, they really do,” she says. “There’s a perception you have a restaurant owner that makes all this money, but in this business, you’re literally making pennies on the dollar.”

Gov. Cuomo previously raised the tipped workers’ minimum wage from $5 per hour to $7.50 in 2016. “We just took a 50 percent increase, and at $7.50 it’s one of the highest in the country,” says Tim Holmes, who with his wife Colleen owns and operates three restaurants in Saratoga Springs and four restaurants overall in Saratoga County.

“I ran the numbers on my company and if he was to pass this to go in effect in 2019 it’ll cost our company about $300,000. And that’s only the first jump before it goes up again,” Holmes says. With a slim profit margin, that amount would have to be made up potentially by reducing jobs and increasing prices. “But I’m not sure that we even can make all of that up,” Holmes says. “It’s a devastating number.”

Gov. Cuomo directed the Commissioner of Labor in December to schedule public hearings to examine industries and evaluate the possibility of ending minimum wage tip credits in New York State. The Department of Labor will be conducting those public hearings on Long Island on April 20, in Watertown April 25, Syracuse on April 30, Buffalo on May 7, and at the Legislative Office Building in Albany on May 18.  

“Through the years you learn that your quality of service - how you take care of your customers – directly relates to the amount of money you can make,” Mezera says. “People go out to dinner for the experience: to be waited on, to interact with the server. You build up relationships through the years. They come in and ask for you. You’re able to share their special family moments, because you’ve established that amount of care with your customers. If they just wanted food they could go to a drive-through, or the places that have iPads on the table – which is what could happen if this goes through,” she says. “People are coming out and it’s our job to make them feel better, to have them enjoy their meal and to go out with a smile on their face.”

Correction: an earlier printed edition and online posting of this story contained a misspelled name of an interviewee. It has been corrected in this online edition. 

Published in News
Thursday, 05 April 2018 13:55

April 6th – April 12th, 2018

POLICE

Michael P. Abraham, 37, of Greenfield Center, NY was charged March 29 with promoting a sexual performance by a child and possessing a sexual performance by a child. Both charges are felonies. He was sent to Saratoga County jail in lieu of $20,000 cash bail, or $40,000.00 secure bond. The investigation is continuing, and more charges are possible.

Christopher M. Fetter, 54, was charged with felony assault, and Brian J. Fetter, 53, was charged with misdemeanor menacing, following an alleged domestic incident involving the two brothers from Greenfield. Brian is suspected of threatening Christopher with a hammer, and Christopher suspected of stabbing Brian, with a knife, in his arm. Brian was treated at Saratoga Hospital and discharged with minor injuries. Both Christopher and Brian were released on their own recognizances to return to Greenfield Court at a later date.

Paul A. Bradley, 38, of Malta, was charged March 27 with assault following an investigation into a domestic incident that occurred in the Town of Clifton Park. It is alleged Bradley struck a male victim whom he is related to with a blunt object, multiple times causing physical injury.

Jay J. Brown, age 46, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 24 with harassment. 

Stephan L. Chase, age 21, Middle Grove, was charged March 24 with unlawful possession of marijuana, criminal possession of a controlled substance, endangering the welfare of a child, operating mv impaired by drugs.

Kevin J. Haller, age 28, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 23 with menacing, and criminal possession of a weapon.

Craig M. Harris, age 44, Porters Corners, was charged March 23 with harassment.

Lisa B. Spadafora, age 52, Ballston Spa, was charged March 23 with criminal trespass – a misdemeanor. 

Nicholas J. Leszcynski, age 27, Schuylerville, was charged March 23 with misdemeanor DWI, and speeding. 

• SARATOGA COUNTY — A 19-year-old man incarcerated on a rape and robbery charge has been accused of conspiring to murder a potential witness in the case against him, from his Saratoga County Jail cell.  
According to police, 19-year-old Kyle Shultz, of Hudson Falls, was charged in May 2017 with first degree rape and second-degree robbery, in connection with an incident that allegedly occurred in the town of Moreau.  He has been incarcerated in County Jail since that time.
A statement released by the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office reads as follows: The Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office received information that an inmate in the Saratoga County Jail was communicating with another to commit a murder. An investigation was conducted which led to the arrest of Shultz on the charge of Conspiracy in the Second-Degree. Shultz is accused of taking steps to plan the murder of a person familiar to him who could be called as a witness in the case pending against him in Saratoga County Court. 

The pending case stems from an arrest May 16, 2017 where Shultz was charged with Rape in the First Degree and Robbery in the Second Degree as the result of a Sheriff’s Office investigation into the rape and robbery of a female in the Town of Moreau that occurred earlier that day. Shultz was arraigned by Judge Timothy Brown in Milton Town Court. Judge Brown remanded Shultz back to the county jail. No further arrests are expected in this case.

• CORINTH — The Sheriff’s Office on March 28 investigated a complaint of a student making a threat at the Corinth High School.  It is alleged that the student threatened to “shoot up the school.”  As a result of the complaint, a 13-year-old male student was arrested and charged with making a terroristic threat. The charge is a felony. He was referred to Saratoga County Probation for additional action and turned over to the custody of a parent. There were no disruptions to normal school activities as a result of the incident.

Published in Police Blotter

SARATOGA SPRINGS – A scatter of workers amble through the vintage chambers of Universal Preservation Hall, exploring the possibilities. Design plans sprawl across tabletops beneath stained-glass windows and free-standing easels boast colorful images of what will be. Soon, the heavy lifting will begin.

When the $8.7 million restoration of UPH is complete, in late 2019, the 19th century building will provide Saratoga Springs with something it has sorely been missing: a mid-range capacity venue with state-of-the-art sound, open year-round and expected to stage more than 200 events.

“It’s going to be a huge performance venue,” says Teddy Foster, whose association with UPH goes back more than a decade - from board member to president to its current campaign director.

“We’re going to be a huge music room, that’s how it’s being designed. We anticipate doing some Broadway cabaret and some live theater; we will be a place of collaboration for SPAC, for Caffe Lena, for people from the community, you name it,” Foster says, standing in the middle of a vacant 20-foot by 24-foot space on the main floor where the staging area for the 700-seat theater-in-the round venue will be constructed.

Tiered seating will be installed at the far end of the main hall – where the current stage sits – and at the opposite end, the balcony will be extended and fitted with seats that descend to the main floor. It will be handicap accessible with an elevator that navigates between floors, and a glass atrium will serve as the new entry way, off Washington Street, in “a super cool alleyway inviting people to come in,” Foster explains.

Event booking will be handled by Proctors, with whom UPH struck an alliance in 2012, and whose event management has included staging everything from major Broadway shows and cutting-edge film festivals to snagging pop music acts on national tours. Proctors’ stated mission: To be a catalyst - through arts and community leadership - for excellence in education, sustainable economic development and rich civic engagement to enhance the quality of life in the greater Capital Region.

Approximately 100 local jobs will be employed during the construction phase, which begins in earnest sometime between May and July. After the $8.7 million project is completed – expected to be in late 2019 - and the venue re-opens for business, it is anticipated UPH will bring approximately 65,000 visitors to the Spa City each year. “We will fill the hotel rooms and the restaurants during the off-the shoulder season,” Foster says. UPH also plans to hire six full-time employees and a number more on a part-time basis.

Earlier this week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced the venue will be awarded $750,000 to help redevelop the hall into a performing arts center. UPH represents Saratoga Springs’ sole recipient of the Restore New York Communities Initiative – which awards funding for projects that will reinvigorate downtowns and generate new economic opportunity in communities.  

The Washington Street venue, which is a non-profit community performing arts center, is also entering into an energized public fundraising phase. The goal is to raise $5.5 million. “We’ve raised most of it,” Foster says. There is just under $1 million to go to reach that goal.

“I’m a huge music lover and I would love to see music of all kinds in that room,” says Foster. “You know this was built as a place where people could come together for all different kinds of things. That’s how we’ve kept it alive all these years. And that’s really what I want to have here: a place that all Saratogians can experience.“  

Published in Entertainment
Thursday, 29 March 2018 15:20

City to Unveil Parking Management Bids Tuesday

 

 

SARATOGA SPRINGS - Bids received from the city’s request for proposals from potential parking management partners will be unsealed and publicly read 2 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall.

The city issued an RFP seeking the services of a professional parking consultant/management team to study, design and implement a Smart parking system in downtown Saratoga Springs. The stated goal, according to the proposal, is “to net the maximum financial benefit to the city balanced with downtown business vitality and efficient traffic management.”

Subsequent to selecting a winning bidder, the city is anticipated to host an organizational kick-off meeting on May 8.

The city currently owns and manages eight lots with approximately 1,288 “off-street” parking spaces, according to the Parking Task Force parking space inventory. There are an additional 1,302 public “on-street” parking spaces.

City owned and managed:

Public on-street parking: 1,302. Public off-street parking: 1,288 as follows:

  • Woodlawn 3-level deck parking - 384
  • Putnam St 2-level deck parking - 185
  • Walton (Church St.) 2-level deck parking- 222
  • High Rock upper & lower surface & Lake Ave. lot parking: 278
  • Spring St surface lot parking - 98
  • Henry St surface lot parking - 19
  • Woodlawn surface lot parking – 60
  • Collamer surface lot – 30

Additionally, non-city-owned and managed spots include: 83 spaces at the Saratoga Springs Public Library, and 2,552 spaces defined as “private off-street parking.”

Published in News
Thursday, 29 March 2018 12:56

March 30th – April 5th, 2018

• GALWAY — A 13-year-old boy from the town of Galway was charged on March 20 with making a terroristic threat, a felony, following a report by Galway Jr./Sr. High School administrators indicating two social media posts allegedly made by a student of the school which included comments about attempting to acquire a firearm, along with a threat. The specific description of the threat was not publicly disclosed. The student suspected of initiating the posting was referred to the Saratoga County Probation Department.

• CLIFTON PARK — A 13-year-old boy from the Town of Clifton Park was charged March 19 with falsely reporting an incident, after allegedly scripting a social media post which insinuated the possibility of a shooting attack on the Shenendehowa school campus. He was referred to Saratoga County Probation Department. 

 

COURT

Anthony J. Paradise, 39, of Ballston Spa, pleaded March 21 to felony robbery, in connection with an incident that occurred in Saratoga Springs. Sentencing scheduled May 8. 

Kenneth K. Washburn, 53, of Schuylerville, pleaded March 20 to attempted criminal sexual act in the first degree, and possessing a sexual performance by a child, both felonies. Sentencing scheduled May 8. 

Vito F. Vivona, 50, of Brooklyn, was sentenced March 19 to 1 to 3 years in state prison, after pleading to felony grand larceny, in connection with an incident that occurred in Saratoga Springs. 

POLICE

Katherine S. Chance, age 22, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 22 with faiure to stop at stop sign, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle.

Fulya F. Horzunziya, age 29, Ballston Spa, was charged March 22 with failure to signal a turn, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle.

Nicholas A. Weis, age 21, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 22 with criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Keith A. Howe, age 48, Montague, Massachusetts, was charged March 22 with misdemeanor DWI, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, failure to signal a turn. 

Steven D. Welch, age 35, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 21 with criminal mischief, criminal contempt. Both charges are misdemeanors. 

Jamie D. Faye, age 36, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 21 with criminal impersonation, harassment.

Kevin Emmerling, age 24, North Grafton, Massachusetts, was charged March 21 with operation of a motor vehicle while impaired by drugs – a misdemeanor. 

Amy E. Kraus, age 46, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 21 with 6 counts of aggravated cruelty to animals - a felony, and 4 counts failure to provide proper food/drink to animals - a misdemeanor. 

Sarah E. Sears, age 29, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 20 with aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, operating unregistered motor vehicle on highway. 

Andras D. Janik, age 42, Schuylerville, was charged March 19 with assault. 

Randy A. Ladd, age 39, Clifton Park, was charged March 16 with misdemeanor DWI, refusal of pre-screen test, speeding. 

Michael J. Dibernardo, age 20, Niskayuna, was charged March 16 with criminal mischief. 

Ray W. Miller, age 54, Gansevoort, was charged March 16 with misdemeanor DWI, unsafe lane change, failure to obey traffic control device, refusal of pre-screen test. 

Patrick J. Weatherwax, age 24, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 14 with criminal contempt. 

Taylor B. Sousa, age 25, Fort Edward, was charged March 13 with aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle. 

Trayisha A. Burks, age 26, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 13 with three misdemeanor counts petit larceny.

Timothy J. Wilbur, age 26, Ballston Spa, was charged March 13 with unauthorized use of a motor vehicle third degree/rental - a misdemeanor. 

Andrew W Sephas, age 52, Porters Corners, was charged March 12 with criminal possession of a controlled substance, endangering the welfare of a child, registration plate display violation. 

Daniel C. Curtis, age 34, Round Lake, was charged March 12 with criminal possession of marijuana. 

Jabari C. Williams, age 22, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 11 with speeding, unlawful possession of marijuana, operation of a unregistered motor vehicle on highway, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle. 

Jason M. Rector, age 36, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 11 with misdemeanor petit larceny.

Tiffany L. Calabrese, age 21, Fort Edward, was charged March 11 with misdemeanor DWI, two counts failure to signal a turn, failure to keep right, unlawful possession of marijuana.

Jake R. Freyer, age 21, Saratoga Springs, was charged March 10 with failure to stop at stop sign, misdemeanor DWI.

Kailyn F. Clapper, age 29, Clifton Park, was charged March 10 with misdemeanor DWI as a 2nd offense- felony, unlawful possession of marijuana.

Published in Police Blotter

BALLSTON SPA - A 19-year-old man incarcerated on a rape and robbery charge has been accused of conspiring from his Saratoga County Jail cell to murder a potential witness in the case against him.

According to police, 19-year-old Kyle Shultz, of Hudson Falls, was charged in May 2017 with first degree rape and second degree robbery, in connection with an incident that allegedly occurred in the town of Moreau. He has been incarcerated in County Jail since that time.

A statement released by the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office reads as follows:

The Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office received information that an inmate in the Saratoga County Jail was communicating with another to commit a murder. An investigation was conducted which led to the arrest of Shultz on the charge of Conspiracy in the Second-Degree. Shultz is accused of taking steps to plan the murder of a person familiar to him who could be called as a witness in the case pending against him in Saratoga County Court.

The pending case stems from an arrest May 16, 2017 where Shultz was charged with Rape in the First Degree and Robbery in the Second Degree as the result of a Sheriff’s Office investigation into the rape and robbery of a female in the Town of Moreau that occurred earlier that day.

Shultz was arraigned by Judge Timothy Brown in Milton Town Court. Judge Brown remanded Shultz back to the county jail. No further arrests are expected in this case.

Published in News
Monday, 26 March 2018 10:50

City Hits World Stage as Arts Destination

SARATOGA SPRINGS – Health, history, horses. And The Arts.

With the awarding of a $14,000 economic development grant this week, the city took the first step to promote Saratoga Springs as a worldwide destination for arts and culture. Finance Commissioner Michele Madigan calls it “having some skin in the game.” And that game has proven to bring in a notable return on the investment in other communities.

“Saratoga Springs is a fabulous brand. We’re over 100 years old and so is ‘health, history and horses.’ These are strong brands that you don’t want to get away from, but we need to add to it with arts and culture,” Madigan says.  

The funds will support the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in the hiring of a public relations firm to promote the city as a thriving arts community to journalists and media beyond the Capital Region. The goal is to showcase all of Saratoga as a cultural hot-spot and entice visitors to journey to the region.

“Cultural tourism – the cultural tourist spends 60 percent more when they go someplace than the average leisure tourist does. Sixty percent more. We want culture to be an economic driver here the same way the track is, and there’s no reason why it can’t be that, and a lot more,” says Elizabeth Sobol, president and CEO of the Saratoga Performing Arts Center.

“I know there are many, many people out there looking for a place like Saratoga as their summer or winter destination who would just be up here all the time, if they just knew what was here,” Sobol says. “This is one of the most incredible places in the world for someone who cares about the arts and literature and green space. I go back to the perfect confluence of nature and art, man-made beauty and natural beauty, there’s nothing like this in all of North America. “

From Caffe Lena to SPAC, the Tang Museum, Yaddo, the future home of the Universal Preservation Hall and other amenities, the community has much to offer, Sobol says. “All this art just one beautiful trip up the Hudson River from Manhattan. That’s a big selling point to New Yorkers who want to get out of town.”

Commissioner Madigan says she sees the awarding of the funds as one piece of a larger plan. “When you think Saratoga Springs, what do most people think of? They think horses. And that’s great, but we also really want to attract the cultural tourist by putting the arts and culture focus on that same level as horses,” Madigan says. “Right now. I see this as first step. I have a bigger vision where we start getting stakeholders and key members of the community in a room to talk about who we are as a region, to start coming together as a whole as an arts and culture community and to market ourselves that way, to add to the health, history and horses brand. The Berkshires know who they are. Tanglewood is well marketed as a global venue. From a global, international tourist destination, we don’t really know who we are when it comes to arts and culture.”

Recently, the local arts took a hit with the announcement of the cancellation of the annual Hats Off and Final Stretch music festivals. And promoting the arts in Saratoga Springs is not always an easy thing.

Saratoga Springs resident Robert Millis first launched the American Music Festival in Lake George in September 2014. Facilitated through his 398 Group – which stresses the arts as a driver of economic development and community building – the idea was to bring thousands of people into the community and extend the tourist season. Lake George is located in Warren County and financial support for the festival was provided via monies collected in the North Country for the tax on the rental of rooms. It proved to be a success.

This summer, the festival – which has featured performers such as Blue Öyster Cult, New Riders of the Purple Sage and Sawyer Fredericks in the past – returns for its two-day stint, and based on the success of the music-as-economic development initiative, the village and town of Lake George have contributed $45,000 in grant funding via the “bed tax” to Millis’ group.

“Their philosophy is bed tax funds events, which in turn feeds the bed tax,” Millis says. The village of Lake George is providing funding for a couple of events. “It’s a big boost,” said village Mayor Robert Blais. “It’s helped us to extend the season.”

Like other Warren County municipalities, the village of Lake George and the town of Lake George each receive $30,000 annually to promote special events in their communities with the idea of bringing in people that will spend money in local businesses and stay at local hotels, says Blais, who also serves as chairman of joint village and town occupancy tax committee. And the return on the investment has been strong. After the events take place, receipts and taxes received are then distributed back to the communities in addition to the $30,000 flat fee to promote a new cycle of events. In the village of Lake George that return was about $185,000, Blais said; the town of Lake George received approximately $240,000.

Millis’ attempts to create a two-day music-based festival in his Saratoga hometown has proven to be more difficult. The proposed event and conference would be designed to help boost tourism and build a music ecosystem to enhance the local scene. “I’ve been floating that idea in Saratoga a for over a year, but nobody has jumped on board with me,” Millis says.

“Our (bed tax) money has already been sliced and diced and it happened long before I got here, but it’s an interesting concept,” Madigan says. “Our occupancy tax right now is split. We only get one percent. Two percent from occupancy tax goes to the City Center and two percent goes to convention and tourism. It goes directly to them. We get less than City Center and convention and tourism. The city gets $600,000, they’re getting $1.2 million each. So, I’m trying to get them on board with helping with the arts. Look, the city’s got some skin in the game so let’s get the chamber and convention and tourism also involved.

“To me, the arts is a huge part of economic development,” Madigan explained. “It’s untapped. This I think is economic development, under the guise of arts and culture. This is a first step. I look forward to coming forward with additional recommendations to support economic development and arts and culture as an aspect of that. “

Published in News
Friday, 23 March 2018 13:22

Ringo at SPAC in September

Paris, France. Hamburg, Germany. Barcelona, Spain. Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Ringo Starr and his All-Star Band embark on a four-month international tour in early June that will stage a show at Saratoga Performing Arts Center on Sept. 14.

The revamped All-Star Band includes Colin Hay - of Men at Work, Graham Gouldman – of 10cc, one-time Toto guitarist Steve Lukather, Santana/Journey keyboardist Gregg Rollie, drummer Gregg Bissonette and sax/flute/percussionist Warren Ham.

Published in Entertainment
Page 41 of 66

Blotter

  • Saratoga County Court Gregory Adams, 47, of Malta, pleaded to grand larceny in the fourth-degree charged October 2023. Sentencing June 28.  Anthony J. Torres, 25, of Waterford, pleaded to aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle in the first-degree, charged April 2023 in Greenfield, and robbery in the third-degree, charged in Waterford January 2024. Sentencing June 28. Travis L. Smith, 23, of Greenfield Center, pleaded to attempted criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree, charged January 2023. Sentencing June 28.  Jammel A. Dillon, 33, of Saratoga Springs, was sentenced to 2-1/2 to 5 years after pleading to felony…

Property Transactions

  • CORINTH Joan Ham sold property at 73 Hunt Lake Rd to Brandon Siebert for $300,000 GALWAY Jeanette Lendl sold property at 5815 Parkis Mills Rd to Gregory Stina for $105,700 MALTA  Betsy Adams sold property at 35 Meadow Rue Place to Paul Burke for $275,000 Dennis Ormond sold property at 168 Thimbleberry Rd to MZM Equity Holdings for $325,000 Malta Land Company sold property at 2 Americas Cup Court to John Jantson for $791,436 Michael Lyeth sold property at 3 Tuckaway Meadows to Valeria Mican for $525,000 Arti Wagner sold property at 35 Century Dr to Lin Xuezhen for $580,000…
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