Thomas Dimopoulos

Thomas Dimopoulos

City Beat and Arts & Entertainment Editor
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Friday, 10 January 2020 14:36

Code Blue: A Community Comes Together

SARATOGA SPRINGS –  It’s been a long and winding road to Adelphi Street since a community of residents, clergy, business leaders, politicians and everyday folks first came together to create a space where people without a home can find shelter during frigid nights, get fed a warm meal, recharge their bodies and head back out into the light of the next day to try and secure a more stable standing.

Motivated to action in the wake of the death of a city woman exposed to a winter’s elements on a December night in 2013, a temporary homeless emergency shelter was launched that Christmas Eve at St. Peter’s Parish Center.

A series of temporary winter shelters, sited at a variety of venues across town, have followed: the Salvation Army building west of Broadway and Soul Saving Station Church east of Broadway, among them. The latter, having a 41-bed capacity, required the addition of the Presbyterian New England Congregational Church also open for extended periods to care for the “overflow” of guests.

Last month, Shelters of Saratoga - which oversees the Code Blue shelter program – opened the latest temporary venue at 4 Adelphi St., just west of South Broadway. In 2016, an executive order issued by Gov. Andrew Cuomo directs emergency shelters to operate when temperatures drop below 32 degrees.

Many hands were needed to transform a previously vacant Adelphi Street warehouse into a suitable shelter space in time for the winter season.   

“On behalf of Shelters of Saratoga, I extend my heartfelt appreciation to the incredible generosity of all the businesses that helped bring Code Blue to Adelphi Street a reality,” said S.O.S. Executive Director Karen Gregory.

The locally based Bonacio Construction firm led the way, transforming the 4,000 square-foot of industrial space into accommodations for people during cold temperatures, at cost. The work included fitting up the existing building with new electrical, HVAC, and plumbing, painting floors, adding bathrooms with showers, and donating shelving.

“We worked hard to get this project on schedule after running into asbestos in the building in November,” Bonacio says. “After working through the weekends, we were able to make up valuable time and got them up and running for opening on December 9.”

“We’re very grateful to them for completing the project at cost, foregoing profit and being very generous with their expertise,” Gregory said.

During the 2017-18 winter season – the latest figures available - Code Blue was open 162 nights, served more than 8,000 meals, and provided sleeping quarters for a total of 6,480 overnight stays – or on average, 40 nightly guests.

The new location houses a 61-bed facility – many more than in previous locations - and as such, Gregory said an “overflow” shelter is not anticipated at this time.  “I think the new location is working well. We’re working with people to get them to and from different appointments they need to be at. We’re in Saratoga Springs, so realistically anywhere in the city would have worked well,” she added. 

The lease on the new location runs until November 2021. An entirely new staff and leadership has been hired providing more people than in years past working each shift, and just over 107 new volunteers have also been added this year, pointed out Gregory, who said the search for a location to host a permanent site continues. “That’s something I’m truly committed to and is something in the conversation and on my agenda every single day. Two years is going to go by quickly, so we can’t take our eye off of that. That has to be a priority on my agenda, the city’s agenda, and hopefully the county’s agenda as well,” Gregory said. 

Finding a permanent shelter location has proved to be a challenge.  A permanent shelter location was thought to be found in 2017 on Walworth Street, where a Code Blue structure would be built on property belonging to Shelters of Saratoga after local business owner Ed Mitzen, and his wife Lisa announced they would pay the costs for the new, permanent shelter to be built. In September 2018, however, following a lawsuit filed by local residents challenging the proposed shelter expansion as not being in accordance with zoning regulation, a Saratoga County Supreme Court judge nullified previously granted approvals by the city’s Zoning Board of Appeals and the Planning Board which would have allowed the shelter to be built.

Regarding the new temporary spot, the city of Saratoga Springs provided $50,000 towards the upkeep of the building as well as for paying rent in the off-season for the next two years, as well as supporting the S.O.S. outreach program.

As far as need, Gregory says the best way for people to help is to make donations directly to Shelters of Saratoga to aid in the continuation of the organization’s providing of services.

“We haven’t been reimbursed by the county or the state at all yet, so we’re carrying this tremendous financial responsibility forward,” Gregory said. “We’re not exactly sure what the county and state are going to reimburse us for and there’s always a risk of the unknown.  That makes it difficult on a small non-profit like us because we can’t afford to incur those expenses and not get reimbursed, obviously. In the interim, we have applied and been approved for a bridge loan for $200,000 by a non-profit bank just in case reimbursement continues to be prolonged. At least that would not put the agency in a tough spot and cover some of the costs, until we get some kind of reimbursement.”

Finding a long-term solution to address the city’s homelessness issue – specifically including a permanent Code Blue facility - is listed among the city’s outlook of priorities in 2020. 

“I’m so thankful to be working in this incredibly generous community - the amount of expertise and support and humanity - just coming together when there are needs and putting people first,” said Gregory, who was named executive director of S.O.S. last year.  “We really do care about our homeless neighbors, keeping them safe, and I’m very appreciate of having a community that’s so behind S.O.S. It’s been a wonderful experience so far.” 

Statement from Bonacio Construction Inc.: The temporary Code Blue shelter in Downtown Saratoga Springs required transforming this 4,000 square foot industrial space into accommodations for people during the cold temperatures. Thank you to our incredible team of local businesses who helped out on this project: Allerdice ACE Hardware for donating materials. B&B Plumbing & Heating for donating both its plumbing and HVAC services. CT Mail for providing its air monitoring services during asbestos removal at a discount. Kyle Fillion of Evolve IT for donating his services for video conferencing. Granite & Marble Works, Inc. for donating granite countertops. NRC NY Environmental for working on the asbestos abatement at a discount. Prediletto Electric for donating its time and supplies. Tom Roohan of Roohan Realty for donating the showers. Stone Industries for providing its services. Thermally Yours, Inc. for installing the insulation. Tuff Kote Flooring LLC for installing the epoxy flooring at half price. Winsupply of Saratoga Springs & Bath Expressions Showroom for donating the plumbing fixtures. Project Manager: James Ackerman.

 

SARATOGA SPRINGS – The Saratoga Performing Arts Center resident companies -- New York City Ballet, The Philadelphia Orchestra, and The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center – return this summer to present a 2020 season highlighting a continued commitment to SPAC premieres of both new and classic works and a landmark celebration of the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth.

New York City Ballet returns from July 14 – 18, with its roster of more than 90 dancers under the direction of Artistic Director Jonathan Stafford and Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan, accompanied by the New York City Ballet Orchestra, led by Music Director Andrew Litton.

The Company will present four captivating programs including the full-length story ballet Swan Lake, marking its fourth appearance at SPAC and the first time since 2006, an evening dedicated to 20th Century Masters highlighted by Merce Cunningham’s Summerspace, returning for the first time since 1967, and a program showcasing three SPAC premieres, including Lauren Lovette’s The Shaded Line, a new work by Justin Peck set to a commissioned score by composer Nico Muhly, and the SPAC premiere of Balanchine’s Haieff Divertimento from 1947. The annual New York City Ballet Gala, on Saturday, July 18, will showcase Jerome Robbins’ In G Major, and Balanchine’s The Man I Love Pas de Deux from Who Cares? with music by George Gershwin. 

Specifically, NYCB will perform:

- Swan Lake at 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 14 and Friday, July 17, and at 2 p.m. on Saturday, July 18.

- SPAC’s 20th Century Masters program will pay homage to iconic choreographers Merce Cunningham, Jerome Robbins and George Balanchine, and will stage 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 15, and 2 p.m. on Thursday, July 16.   

- SPAC Premieres - which including new works by Lauren Lovette, Principal Dancer with NYCB, and Justin Peck, NYCB Resident Choreographer and Artistic Advisor – will stage 8 p.m. on Thursday, July 16.

SPAC’s NYC Ballet Gala, the finale to New York City Ballet’s 2020 residency, will take place 8 p.m. Saturday, July 18.

The Philadelphia Orchestra’s three-week residency runs Aug. 5 – 22 and will feature thirteen SPAC premieres including the East Coast premiere of the Triple Concerto by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Kevin Puts composed for the genre-crossing ensemble Time for Three, and Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess in concert conducted by Marin Alsop. SPAC’s popular “Cinema Series” will return to delight audiences of all ages as the Orchestra accompanies, live to picture, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban in Concert; Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back in Concert and Bugs Bunny at the Symphony 30th Anniversary Edition.

Highlighting the Orchestra’s residency is Beethoven 2020, a season-long celebration of the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth. The festival will include an unprecedented four-night traversal of all nine symphonies alongside four New York premieres by contemporary composers in dialogue with Beethoven under the baton of Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin (Aug. 12–15). Superstar soloists performing with the Orchestra include violinist Joshua Bell, cellist Steven Isserlis, and pianist Jeremy Denk for Beethoven’s Triple Concerto (AUG 7), and pianist Jonathan Biss in Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto (Aug. 20).

The Chamber Music Society Of Lincoln Center returns Aug. 9 - 25 to the Spa Little Theatre with an exploration of Beethoven, his influences, and the composers who were inspired by his work. Curated specifically for the SPAC residency, the six programs will feature 19 works that have never before been performed by CMS at SPAC. In addition to performances by David Finckel and Wu Han, Co-Artistic Directors of CMS, in residency for all three weekends, audiences will experience the SPAC debut of the critically acclaimed Calidore String Quartet, works never before performed at SPAC by female composers Joan Tower and Amy Beach, and debut appearances by cellist Inbal Segev and violinist Francisco Fullana.

Tickets will be available online at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 15 at: www.spac.org. Prices vary. For specific performance details and ticket prices, go to spac.org.  

SARATOGA SPRINGS – Following on last season’s success of the debut professional production of Agatha Christie’s The Stranger, iTheatre Saratoga will stage the world premiere of Christie’s The Man in the Brown Suit, adapted by Mary Jane Hansen.

Anne Beddingfeld’s whole world is turned upside down when her father dies. She accepts an opportunity to relocate to London, redefine her life, and experience the freedom she has longed for. But she may have found adventure beyond her wildest dreams. When a man dies in front of her, Anne finds parallels between the accident and another suspicious death. The clues take her all the way to Africa, accompanied by an eccentric cast of characters, where a revolution is simmering, and danger is waiting around every turn.

Performances: Jan. 24, 25, 31 & Feb. 1 at 7:30 p.m., and Jan. 26 & Feb. 2 at 2 p.m. At Saratoga Arts, 320 Broadway. Tickets: $15 students / $25 adults. Ticket Link: https://dameagathac.brownpapertickets.com/.

Thursday, 09 January 2020 10:03

Art In Public Places: New for 2020

SARATOGA SPRINGS – New for 2020: Saratoga Arts presents a new group of Art in Public Places exhibitions on view for the month of January. 

Works include: Frozen, photography by Susan Meyer at Saratoga Springs Public Library; photography Molly Bingham in Saratoga Arts' Members' Hall Gallery; Sculptural Painting, mixed media works by Betsy Masters Cannon at The Saratoga Springs Train Station; Life, acrylic paintings by Ya Li at Clifton Park – Halfmoon Public Library (Site A); Heaven and Earth, paintings by Marina Petro at Clifton Park – Halfmoon Public Library (Site B); Oil paintings by Jim Brearton at Saratoga Springs Visitors Center; The Places I've Been, Paintings by Caitlin Sweet at Saratoga Community Federal Credit Union; Harbors, acrylic and water based oil paintings by Neil Muscatiello in The Reception Area Gallery at Saratoga Arts.

Saratoga Arts’ Art in Public Places Program features monthly or bi-monthly exhibits of artists' work in various locations around the region. The goal of the program is to present original artwork in easily accessible spaces throughout the Saratoga Region. Participation in the APP program is a benefit open to all members of Saratoga Arts from new and emerging artists who might be presenting their first exhibition to veteran artists with lots of experience presenting exhibitions.

SpaCityDiner Before

Top photo: Post-demolition photo by Thomas Dimopoulos on Dec. 30, 2019. 
Bottom photo: Spa City Diner – as it was.

SARATOGA SPRINGS —The Spa City Diner, which closed in 2012 and has stood vacant on South Broadway since that time, was demolished last week. 

In late 2018, a proposed mixed-use project for development was to include 101 multi-family dwelling units – 68 of those units targeting a family of four having a household income of $51,840 or less – as well as another 14 units specifically designated for veterans. Those initial plans appear to have changed, however, according to an article published in the Daily Gazette last week, with the group of partners who have an agreement to buy the property instead focusing on more market-rate rentals.

The horse sculpture which had stood atop the diner was removed for safekeeping by the family who had owned the diner.

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The highly anticipated grand opening of Universal Preservation Hall is set for Saturday, Feb. 29. 

Following a multi-million-dollar renovation to transform the 19th century hall into a flourishing 700-plus seat performance space, UPH also looks to fill a half-century-long need in Saratoga Springs.  The city’s downtown district has lacked a year-round, mid-sized venue since the 5,000-seat Convention Hall on Broadway was destroyed by fire in 1966.

UPH was built in 1871 and served as a Methodist church and a gathering place. Teddy Roosevelt, Frederick Douglass and William Howard Taft to Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg have each taken a turn atop the main stage during the building’s 146-year history.

A century after its construction, the Victorian Gothic structure on Washington Street began to fall into disrepair and the church sat empty for several years. In 2000, the city condemned the building and members of the community rallied to save the structure from demolition. In 2015, UPH got an added boost when it became an affiliate of Proctors.

Proctors CEO Phillip Morris says he envisions UPH as a welcoming place to gather, and as a cultural heart of the city. After the Saratoga Springs venue reopens with its 45-foot-tall ceilings, bell tower and walnut and ash staircases that feed into the main hall, it is anticipated it will stage 200 or so annual events.

Opening Night features an appearance by singer/songwriter Rosanne Cash, the eldest daughter of country legend Johnny Cash. 

Tickets are available by phone at 518-346-6204, online at universalpreservationhall.org and in person at the Box Office at Proctors, 432 State St., Schenectady.

Tickets to the following shows are now on sale:

Rosanne Cash
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 29. The Great Hall at UPH, $65 - $150.

Sounds of the Hall
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 4. The Great Hall at UPH, $20.

An Evening with Chris Botti
7:30 p.m. Friday, March 6. The Great Hall at UPH, $79.50 - $179.50.

The Marvelous Marquise Family Circus
2 p.m. Sunday, March 8. The Great Hall at UPH, $10.

Megan Hilty
7:30 p.m. Friday, March 13. The Great Hall at UPH, $32.50 - $109.50.

Howard Jones Acoustic Trio
7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 14. The Great Hall at UPH, $29.50 - $69.50.

Irish Hooley with the Screaming Orphans
7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 15. The Great Hall at UPH, $25.

Rochmon Record Club: Paul Simon’s Graceland
7 p.m. Tuesday, March 17. The Great Hall at UPH, $10.

One Night in Memphis
7:30 p.m. Friday, March 20. The Great Hall at UPH, $30 - $65.

Journeyman
7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 21. The Great Hall at UPH, $19.50 - $39.50.

Joey Alexander
7:30 p.m. Friday, March 27. The Great Hall at UPH, $39.50 - $89.50.

PB&J Café: The Stinky Cheese Man
11 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. Saturday. April 4, The Great Hall at UPH, $15.

THE HIT MEN…Legendary Rock Supergroup & Musicians Hall of Fame
7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 9. The Great Hall at UPH, $30 - $65.

Bakithi Kumalo & The Graceland Experience
7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 23. The Great Hall at UPH, $19.50 - $39.50.

The Okee Dokee Brothers
6 p.m. Friday, April 24. The Great Hall at UPH, $15 for students with ID, $25 for adults.

The Steep Canyon Rangers
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 29. The Great Hall at UPH, $20 - $79.50.

Top of the World – A Carpenters Tribute
7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 9. The Great Hall at UPH, $25.50 - $59.50.

Yogapalooza with Bari Koral Quartet
2 p.m. Saturday, May 16. Great Hall at UPH, $10 students with ID, $20 Adults

Bee Gees Gold
7:30 p.m. Friday, May 22. The Great Hall at UPH, $20 - $55.50.

Thursday, 02 January 2020 12:48

Saratoga Sheriff: It Was a Meteor

SARATOGA COUNTY — The source of last Sunday night’s “loud explosion that shook homes and lit the sky green" was likely caused by a meteor entering and burning up in the atmosphere, Saratoga County Sheriff Michael Zurlo said Thursday.  

Statement from Saratoga County Sheriff Michael Zurlo:

The Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office has concluded our investigation into the loud explosion and green flash which occurred in the skies over Saratoga County on Sunday evening.  Although we received over 30 reports of this event on Sunday evening, our social media post of this event has been viewed over 250,000 times and generated over 1,200 comments.  Based on initial reports and the comments posted there are reports of this event from Broadalbin South to Charlton and East to Ballston Spa but no witnesses to the cause of the event or location of the source. 

After discussions with all of our law enforcement partners, government agencies including the FAA, FBI, ATF, National Weather Service and NASA as well as discussions with scientists and scholars it is our determination that the likely cause of the event was a meteor entering and burning up in the atmosphere.  

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College will have special hours during Skidmore College’s year-end break, which will also be the last chance to see the exhibitions Serious Sparkle and Ree Morton: The Plant That Heals May Also Poison.

Holiday Hours are as follows:

  • Monday, Dec. 23 to Wednesday, Dec. 25, Christmas — Closed.
  • Thursday, Dec. 26 to Sunday, Dec. 29 — Noon to 5 p.m.
  • Monday, Dec. 30 to Wednesday, Jan. 1, New Year’s Day — Closed.
  • Thursday, Jan. 2 to Sunday, Jan. 5 — Noon to 5 p.m.

The Museum’s regular hours — Noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, and until 9 p.m. Thursday —resume Tuesday, Jan. 7. Admission to the museum is free, though a donation is suggested. For more information, please call the Tang Visitors Services Desk at 518-580-8080 or visit http://tang.skidmore.edu.

Exhibitions:

Opening Saturday, Dec. 20: Elevator Music 40: Melissa Thorne – Landslide/Solid: Landslide/Solid pairs visual abstraction with Stevie Nicks’ classic hit Landslide and Ashford & Simpson’s Solid (As a Rock). The installation features an original vinyl record produced by the artist and hand-printed sound curtains and seating.

Closing Sunday, Jan. 5:  Serious Sparkle: Serious Sparkle addresses how contemporary artists use glitter to explore issues around the construction and representation of femininity, queer identity, and the body. Also closing, Ree Morton: The Plant That Heals May Also Poison: A survey of the career of Ree Morton (1936-1977) features drawings, paintings, and large-scale sculptural environments made by the artist during her short but prolific career. Morton, who remains widely under-recognized, was involved in the feminist and post-minimalist art movements in the 1970s and produced an influential body of work.

Also on View: Beauty & Bite features artists from the Tang collection whose work examines questions of identity—particularly race, gender, and sexuality—and explores the underlying mythologies and histories that inform contemporary society. Through Jan. 19; Hyde Cabinet #5: Divine Dalí: Organized by Bridget Kerr ’20 in the special student-curatorial project cabinet, the exhibition presents prints from Salvador Dalí’s interpretation of Dante’s The Divine Comedy. Through Feb. 14; Nicole Cherubini: Shaking the Trees: Nicole Cherubini’s installation comprising ceramic tiling, woven seating, greenery, and sculpture draws on the architecture of the Tang Museum’s mezzanine, and offers a community space for conversation and contemplation. Through September 2021.

Thursday, 19 December 2019 12:20

Looking Back on 2019

 

CITY & COMMUNITY

 

Henry Street Transformed with Addition of Two-Way ‘Cycle Track’ 
The City Council conducted an experiment on Henry Street from Saturday, Sept. 14 through Sunday, Sept. 29 which saw the two-way road transformed into a one-way street for motor vehicles. The free lane space created was turned into a two-way cycle track. The pilot project was conducted to measure the impact of implementing a low-cost engineered design to create the urban segment of the Saratoga Greenbelt Trail from Lake Avenue to Spring Street. The implementation of a two-way bicycle lane was the result of extensive community engagement that began in 2014 with the adoption of the Saratoga Greenbelt Trail Plan followed by the 2016 Complete Streets Plan. 

 

Saratoga Summer: An Extended Season
Traditionally, Saratoga had staged a six-days-per-week racing schedule with Tuesdays being dark. In 2019, Saratoga first went to a five-days-per-week racing schedule with Mondays and Tuesdays going dark. The number of racing days remained at 40 for the meet with an earlier-than-normal season opening compensating for the extra days off. 
The schedule change was due to the construction of a new hockey arena for the New York Islanders at Belmont, abbreviating that racing season downstate. The Belmont Park Arena is slated to open October 2021. The July 11 opening marked one of the earliest openings in Saratoga Race Course history. The 2019 meet resulted in record wagering and paid attendance that again surpassed the one million mark, according to NYRA. More than $700 million in all-sources handle was secured for the first time in the history of the Spa. 

NYRA has announced this week that the 2020 summer meet will mirror the 2019 schedule, featuring 40 days of world-class thoroughbred racing primarily run across a five-day week that will open in mid-July and conclude on Labor Day.

The 2019 meet also featured the debut of the 1863 Club – the newest hospitality venue at Saratoga Race Course. Located on the Clubhouse turn, the 36,000-square-foot three-story building features a first-floor banquet area, group event space on the second floor, and third-floor luxury suites offering sweeping views and sightlines of the track. Opening Weekend included a visit from National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee and NY Yankees legend Mariano Rivera. 

The 2020 season will begin with a four-day opening weekend, Thursday, July 16 - Sunday, July 19. 

 

City Council Approves New Contract for
School Resource Officer at High School 
At a special mid-day meeting of the City Council Aug. 27, the council approved a new contract to continue the School Resource Officer Program in the city’s public school system for the next two years. The new contract represents some changes compared to the agreement which had previously existed. Previously, if the assigned SRO was not available – those cases including sick days and time off – a replacement had not been provided. With the desire to have an armed and trained SRO present at the high school every day, the new contract stipulates that should the assigned SRO not be available on any school day, the city will provide a qualified substitute for the position. To meet that expectation, three additional officers completed their SRO training in the fall to ensure there may be substitutes available. 
Previous costs to the school were about $53,000. To meet the additional guaranteed time, the new contract set costs at $65,000 for the 2019-2020 school year, and $70,000 for 2020-2021. 

 

City Adopts Resolution in Support of Paris Climate Agreement
In a unanimous 5-0 vote, the City Council on May 21 adopted a resolution in support of the
Paris Climate Agreement. The Paris Agreement was adopted in December 2015, according to the United Nations Treaty Collection. 

 

Development at Wesley Community 
In November, the city council unanimously approved a zoning revision for the Woodlawn Oval Planned Unit Development District (PUDD). The project – which is planned to take place at Wesley Community - will  include the expansion of the existing Springs building, the construction of a 2,000 square foot maintenance garage, and the addition of a new 100-unit five-story apartment building, a 52-unit memory care facility to accommodate seniors with significant dementia, and an 8,000 square foot two-story office building. 
The five-story, 100-unit apartment building will consist of 70 mostly one-bedroom independent apartments for low-to-middle income seniors and 30 supportive housing units for seniors.

 

A Life After Racing: Therapeutic Horses of Saratoga
TheraputicHorsesofSaratoga
Therapy horses George and DW at the Healing with Horsepower Derby Day Fundraiser on May 4, 2019 at the Saratoga Auto Museum. Therapeutic Horses of Saratoga (THS), which was established in February of 2018, aids retired racehorses in establishing a purpose post-racing, as most horses are only two to three years old when their career ends. Photo provided.

 

City Moves Forward with Plan for East Side Fire/EMS Station 
Discussions have been held for several years regarding a third city firehouse/EMS station – one which would better serve residents of the city’s east side. In October, an agreement was announced involving the city and the state Franchise Oversight Board – the latter representing NYRA - to allow for the construction of a firehouse on the border of the Oklahoma racetrack.

The proposed station is anticipated to measure 10,000 to 15,000 square feet atop 2.36 acres along Henning Rd., across from the Myers BOCES Educational facility. It will support one ambulance and one fire apparatus, with on-site professional staff present 24 hours per day, and is anticipated to also serve as a command center and operations post for law enforcement during the summer Saratoga meet. 

The city currently has two fire stations - one on Lake Ave. just east of Broadway and near the center of the city, and on the other on the west side, near Saratoga Springs High School.

 

Saratoga Springs Election 2019: A Good Day For Incumbents 
Election
City Mayor Meg Kelly, Public Safety Commissioner-elect Robin Dalton, Finance Commissioner Michele Madigan, and DPW Commissioner Anthony “Skip” Scirocco - four of the five City Council members celebrating their respective victories at GOP Election Night gathering at the Holiday Inn Nov. 5, 2019. Photo by SuperSource Media, LLC.

The City Council will begin 2020 much as it will conclude 2019, with four of five current members returning for renewed two-year terms following this week’s citywide election with a majority of incumbents being re-elected to their respective seats. 

Democrat city Mayor Meg Kelly (D, WF, I) bested Republican challenger Timothy Holmes by a greater than 2-to-1 margin, scoring the night’s largest margin of victory in local elections. 

Incumbent DPW Commissioner Anthony “Skip” Scirocco defeated challenger Dillon Moran
54.04% - 45.90%, current Finance Commissioner Michele Madigan bested challenger Patty Morrison 54.77% - 45.03%, and Commissioner of Accounts John Franck will resume his current post after running unopposed. 

Earlier this year, Democrat Peter Martin announced he would not seek re-election as Public Safety Commissioner. That position will be filled in 2020 by Republican Robin Dalton, who defeated Democrat Kendall Hicks 53.61 % - 46.19 % on Election Day. 

In June’s Democratic Primary for the party’s representation for Commissioner of Finance, challenger Patty Morrison narrowly defeated the incumbent Madigan. The Saratoga Springs Democratic Committee had endorsed Madigan prior to the vote and following her Primary Election loss, several members of the SSDC staged a high-profile walk-out. 

Incumbent city Democrat Supervisor Tara Gaston, and Matthew Veitch, Republican incumbent Supervisor, each received more votes than challenger Stephen Mittler (R,C,L) and were both re-elected to represent the city of Saratoga Springs at the county level as supervisors. 

Voter Enrollment in Saratoga Springs is 18,691 and with 7,344 ballots cast, the 2019 election marked the lowest city voter turnout since 2011, and the second lowest city voter turnout in the past nine elections, dating to 2003, according to the Saratoga County Board of Elections. All five City Council seats and two Supervisor positions are voted on every two years. Under the city’s commission form of government in matters of governing, the voting power of each of the five city council members is equal; each council member gets one vote. 

 

Code Blue Gets New Temporary Home
After a variety of location proposals to site a wintertime emergency homeless shelter were repeatedly rejected by residents in the specific neighborhoods where Code Blue would potentially open, Shelters of Saratoga - which oversees the Code Blue program – secured a temporary venue at 4 Adelphi St., just west of South Broadway. 

An 18-month lease was signed to provide the program with a consistent location for the next two winter seasons. When open – anticipated to be imminent - the new space will house up to 60 beds, which should accommodate all who require shelter on any given night. 

The Code Blue emergency winter shelter operates from November until April, and as per an executive order issued by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, opens when temperatures drop below 32 degrees.

During the 2017-18 winter season – the latest figures available - Code Blue was open 162 nights, served more than 8,000 meals, and provided sleeping quarters for a total of 6,480 overnight stays – or on average, 40 nightly guests. 

Finding a long-term solution to address the city’s homelessness issue – specifically including a permanent Code Blue facility - is listed among the city’s outlook of priorities in 2020.  As well, the city is providing $20,000 of funding to Shelters of Saratoga to assist with outreach to those in need, and Finance Commissioner Michele Madigan’s fund balance recommendation calls for an additional $50,000 to be made available to S.O.S. through an assignment specifically for the rent and upkeep of a temporary Code Blue facility, even as the search for a permanent, long-term site is found. 

Earlier in 2019, Karen A. Gregory, a veteran of nonprofit leadership for the Columbia-Greene Domestic Violence Program, had been hired to serve as executive director of S.O.S., filling the position vacated by Michael Finocchi in 2018.

 

After Decades of Debate, City Center Gets its Parking Garage
On Sept. 17, the Saratoga Springs City Council unanimously approved the leasing of 1.75 acres of city-owned land just east of Broadway to be used for the development of a multi-level 600-vehicle parking garage by the City Center. Approximately 220 currently free-to-park paved spots will be eliminated to make way for the structure, resulting in a net gain of about 380 spaces. 

At present, a section of the previously existing paved lot on High Rock Avenue is closed to the public, to accommodate construction of the parking garage, a project titled: Flat Rock Centre Phase I. 

 

We Remember You, Marylou 
Marylou
Marylou Whitney, accompanied by husband John Hendrickson, in the Winner’s Circle at Saratoga Race Course, with the race track reflected in her eyes. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos. 

Marylou Whitney, whose philanthropic initiatives and contributions to racing earned her the nicknames "Queen of Saratoga" and "Grand Dame of Saratoga" among other honors, died Friday, July 19, 2019 at her Cady Hill home in Saratoga Springs. She was 93.

Born Marie Louise Schroeder on Dec. 24, 1925, Whitney grew up in Kansas City, Missouri, and  for seven decades, was among the most successful owners in thoroughbred racing. She married Cornelius Vanderbilt "Sonny" Whitney, one of the founders of the National Museum of Racing and Pan American Airlines, respectively, in 1958. 

In the 1970s, the Whitneys helped convince the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) to keep Saratoga Race Course open as a viable part of its racing calendar at a time when wagering and attendance sagged. Their efforts and long-term vision continue to benefit racing, with the Saratoga meet attracting more than one million fans annually. Beyond racing, the Whitneys made a huge impact in the Saratoga community, founding the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC), which opened in 1966. 

Two years after C.V. Whitney's death, Marylou met John Hendrickson.
They married in 1997, and the couple continued their philanthropic endeavors. In the world of horse racing, Marylou Whitney Stables would go on to earn nine graded stakes victories and campaigned more than 190 winners from 2000-2019.

 

THE ARTS

 

Thankfully, The Show Goes On
Rochmon Record Club (monthly vinyl sessions at Caffe Lena), Super Dark Collective (twice a week music shows at Desperate Annie’s), and the New York State Summer Writers Institute (some of the world’s great writers publicly reading from their works through the month of July at Skidmore) each continued to showcase in Saratoga Springs some of the best that the world of the arts has to offer, and all of it offered in an affordable setting. 

Yo La Tengo brought their wondrous mix of sweetness and noise to the Spa City June 6 for a performance at the Zankel Music Center, on the campus of Skidmore College. The band staged an hour-long “live documentary,” with filmmaker Sam Green narrating the film and cue-ing images for “The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller.” 

 

Art of the Dance
An exhibition of posters from Hollywood’s “Golden Age” opened at the National Museum of Dance in May. The more than 100 dance movie posters featured things like Fred Astaire tripping the light fantastic with Ginger Rogers, a pensive Snow White hovering atop a Russian banner while the Evil Queen ominously glared from the shadows, and Lucille Ball exuding a technicolor presence in MGM’s Ziegfield Follies in 1945. The posters, ranging in date from 1918 to the 1980s, came via the Mike Kaplan collection. Kaplan, who attended the exhibition opening, counts more than 3,000 posters in his collection and during the 1960s worked as marketing strategist on the iconic Stanley Kubrick films,
“2001 (A Space Odyssey),” and “Clockwork Orange.”

 

At the Tang Museum: Laurie Anderson Discusses the State of
Existence Between Death and Rebirth
 
Renowned performance artist and practicing Buddhist Laurie Anderson took part in the Tang Museum’s Dunkerley Dialogues on April 17, during night two of the museum’s three-night “Bardo Now” events. The events were held in conjunction with the Tang Museum’s exhibition “The Second Buddha: Master of Time,” which explores the life, legend, and legacy of Padmasambhava, a tantric master who is an iconic figure in Tibetan culture, celebrated as “The Second Buddha” and credited for bringing Buddhism to Tibet. Anderson first gained widespread attention with her song "O Superman," in the early 1980s. Anderson spent time in the early 1970s as an artist-in-residence at the ZBS Foundation’s 33-acre complex on the Hudson River between the villages of Schuylerville and Fort Edward. Anderson met songwriter Lou Reed in the 1990’s and the two were later wed. She released her acclaimed documentary film “Heart of A Dog” in 2015. 

 

A Particularly Tasty Spring-Time Score at Caffe Lena  delivered on-stage appearances by Robyn Hitchcock, (April 14), Eric Andersen - accompanied by the fab Scarlet Rivera on violin (April 7), founding Blood, Sweat & Tears member Steve Katz (April 18), and singer-songwriter Sawyer Fredericks ( three-night stand May 24 –May 26). In early May, at Lena’s historic café also played a role in a three-day event across the Capital Region celebrating the life and music of Pete Seeger. 

 

Greg Haymes, 2019: The Loss of a Regional Music Giant
Greg Haymes will be remembered by some in the MTV video logs as Sarge Blotto – the stage name he adopted with the band Blotto in the 1980s, and recalled by many others - particularly those in this region’s music community - as Greg Haymes: writer, poet, musician, artist. 
Born in Buffalo in 1951, Haymes died April 10 from complications of metastatic lung cancer. He was 68. His bands included Blotto, the Star Spangled Washboard Band, Ramblin’ Jug Stompers, and others; His artwork was displayed across the Capital Region - Firlefanz Gallery, Albany Center Gallery and Spectrum 8 Theatres, among them. He was also one of the region’s most avid supporters of the arts in general, and of music specifically. For several decades, Haymes’ words graced the printed pages and websites of the Albany Times Union, the Daily Gazette, Metroland, and most recently the award-winning arts website which he co-founded at Nippertown.com. 

 

Historic Yaddo Mansion Reopens
The historic Mansion at Yaddo reopened to the public on June 20 after a multimillion-dollar restoration and stabilization. The renowned artist retreat has hosted the residencies of thousands of writers, poets, musicians, painters and other artists since 1926. In 2014, Yaddo’s Board and leadership spearheaded an ambitious project to restore, preserve and update Yaddo’s facilities, and launched a $1 million Capital Campaign to raise the necessary funds. The 55-room mansion, built in 1893, had closed for a complex, 18-month restoration in the fall of 2017. 
The June 20 Yaddo Summer Benefit provided event attendees the first public glimpse of the results of the massive renovation effort. Singer-songwriter Mike Doughty, founder of the ‘90s band Soul Coughing, performed at the event. 

 

Cage The Elephant & Beck at SPAC 
CageTheElephantatSPAC
Cage The Elephant singer Matt Shultz, who shared co-headlining duties with Beck, performs at SPAC during a memorable show on Aug. 12, 2019. Photo by SuperSource Media, LLC. 

 

“Homecoming” Performance by Madison VanDenburg 
Madison
Crowd of supporters at The Crossings of Colonie in a “homecoming” performance by Madison VanDenburg on Tuesday, May 14, 2019, in advance of her appearance as a finalist on the “American Idol” TV show. The 17-year-old singer/songwriter, a classically trained 11th-grade student at Shaker High School, captured third place in the talent show. Photo by SuperSource Media, LLC.

 

A Farewell Kiss to Saratoga in a Blaze of Pyrotechnics and
a Birthday Party for ‘The Demon’

KISS
Gene Simmons on stage with KISS at Saratoga Performing Arts Center on Aug. 24, 2019. 
Photo by SuperSource Media, LLC. 

As the clock inched closer to midnight, Gene Simmons was serenaded by several thousand of his closest Saratoga friends with a group sing of “Happy Birthday,” celebrating the conclusion of the bassists’ 70th year on earth. Simmons and bandmate Paul Stanley – two of the four founding members of Kiss – and their musical accompanists performed a 20-song set greatly comprised of their early years, on Aug. 24 at Saratoga Performing Arts Center. Gene (The Demon) Simmons was in full tongular assault throughout - a menacing God of Thunder bound in some feathery sort of breast plate and spewing blood in the stage haze of puke-green illumination.  The show marks the final regional performance by the band, who promise they are on their farewell tour.

 

Reveal Art Fair Stages Event in Spa City
RevealArtFair
Image captured during the Reveal Art Fair, which featured more than two dozen exhibitors from across North America showcasing art works. The event, which staged its inaugural gathering in 2018, was held at the Saratoga Springs City Center July 18-21, 2019. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos.  

 

 

 

Thursday, 19 December 2019 11:21

First Night Saratoga 2020 Guide

FirstNightPoster 

Buttons available at Saratoga Arts (320 Broadway). for $15 until Dec. 25 After Dec. 25: all button sales are $20. Children 12 and under are admitted free.

Buttons can be purchased at any of the following partner locations for $20: The Adirondack Trust Bank (All Locations); Price Chopper Supermarkets; (all Saratoga County stores & select Albany markets); Marriott Residence Inn (295 Excelsior, Saratoga); Saratoga Arts (320 Broadway, Saratoga); Stewart’s Shops (select Saratoga County locations).

  

FirstNight 2019Schedule

Page 63 of 102

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  • Saratoga County Court  Sara N. Babinski, 35, of Schuylerville, pleaded April 11 to DWAI, a felony, charged January 20 in Saratoga Springs. Sentencing June 20.  Jose A. Guity, 25, of The Bronx, pleaded April 12 to attempted criminal possession of a weapon in the second-degree, a felony, charged Feb. 23 in Saratoga Springs, and attempted assault in the second-degree, a felony, charged Feb. 24 in Milton. Sentencing June 28.  Jacob Saunders, 21, of Malta, was sentenced April 12 to 1 year incarceration, after pleading to aggravated family offense, a felony, charged August 2023 in Malta.  Kevin N. Loy, 37, of Halfmoon,…

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  • BALLSTON Eastline Holdings LLC sold property at 16 Linden Ct to Bradleigh Wilson for $472,158 Eastline Holdings LLC sold property at 6 Appleton St to Kristina Guernsey for $553,391 Vincent Monaco sold property at Dominic Dr to BBL Ridgeback Self Storage LLC for $300,000 GALWAY Richard Herrmann sold property at Lot 4 & 5 Bliss Rd to James Snyder for $112,500,000 Stephen Signore sold property at 2558 NYS Rt 29 to Deutsche Bank National Trust for $213,331 GREENFIELD ANW Holdings Inc sold property at 36 Middle Grove Rd to Patrick Tirado for $168,000 Ernest Johnson sold property at 21 Lady…
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