新加坡多多开奖记录's top 10 most-read stories of the week.聽
NY allows boatyards, marinas to open
Boaters won't be prevented from heading out on the water during the coronavirus pandemic.聽
Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday that New York, Connecticut and New Jersey will adopt a uniform policy allowing boatyards, marinas and marine manufacturers to open.聽
Marinas were open in Connecticut and New Jersey, but not in New York. Cuomo mentioned this difference during the week. He heard from Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy about New Yorkers traveling to their state to access marinas.聽
With the policy change, the boatyards and marines will be open as long as boaters abide by strict cleaning and social distancing guidelines. Chartered services and rentals won't be allowed.聽
Restaurants at boatyards and marinas may be open for delivery and takeout services, which is consistent with the statewide policy.
"Through this pandemic, we've worked closely with our friends in neighboring states to implement a uniform regional approach to reducing the spread of the virus," Cuomo said in a statement Saturday night. "Aligning our policies in this area is another example of that strong partnership, and will help ensure there is no confusion or 'state shopping' when it comes to marinas and boatyards.聽
The state has eased restrictions on some leisure activities. Earlier in the day, Cuomo announced that golf courses could be open to golfers. Courses can't host gatherings, but employees who provide essential services, such as groundskeeping and security, are allowed on the property.聽
Gallery: Messages of kindness from Cayuga County-area neighbors
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Seven more positive COVID-19 cases in Cayuga County, one hospitalized
A 4-year-old boy is one of seven people who tested positive for the coronavirus in Cayuga County.聽
The other new confirmed cases include three men in their 30s, two women in their 30s and a man in his 20s. Six of the seven new cases live outside of Auburn. One is in the city of Auburn, according to the Cayuga County Health Department.聽
The health department completed contact tracing investigations for five of the seven new cases. No details were provided about the findings.聽
One person is hospitalized. Their condition is unknown.聽
The county has 44 confirmed COVID-19 cases, up from 37 one day ago. There are 23 people in mandatory isolation, which is required for people who test positive for the virus. Another 48 people are in mandatory quarantine. Mandatory quarantine is ordered when someone has direct contact with a positive case.聽
While there are new cases to report, some have recovered from COVID-19. So far, 20 people have been discharged from mandatory isolation in Cayuga County.聽
As of Thursday, the health department has 637 COVID-19 test results 鈥 44 positives and 593 negatives. They are awaiting the result of 24 tests.聽
Meanwhile in Onondaga County, the health department released test results Wednesday after that showed the first confirmed cases in the town of Elbridge, one of the municipalities that borders Cayuga County to the east. Of the four border towns in Onondaga County, Lysander has the most cases with 18, followed by Skaneateles at 11 and Elbridge and Spafford each with two.
Onondaga County's overall total grew from 563 confirmed COVID-19 cases to 579 on Thursday. The county has reported 17 deaths.
Among the other counties that surround Cayuga, Tompkins has the most confirmed cases with 119 as of Thursday afternoon, followed by Wayne (51), Oswego (50), Cortland (32) and Seneca (29).
Gallery: Messages of kindness from Cayuga County-area neighbors
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Auburn Wegmans adds worker screenings as stores increase COVID-19 precautions
The caf茅 area of the Auburn Wegmans has been empty since the coronavirus pandemic began accelerating in New York in the middle of March.聽
Monday, though, the area had a new purpose: an employee wellness screening station.
Behind the black curtains there, employees of the Auburn grocery store answer questions and have their temperature taken before the start of every shift. Those who show symptoms of the virus, or have a temperature of 100 degrees or higher, will be asked to go home with pay and contact their medical provider, . A telehealth option will be provided for employees who don't have a doctor. The company's coronavirus disability paid sick leave offers employees full pay, starting day one, without the need for medical documentation from a health care provider.
Employee screenings are the latest step taken by Wegmans, and other stores to protect both them and customers from the coronavirus. Also on Monday, Wegmans announced that it will limit customers inside its stores to 15% to 20% of their capacity. Stores that reach that percentage can ask customers to wait until others leave to enter. BJ's and Walmart also began limiting capacity to about 20% earlier in April, and both the Auburn Walmart and Wegmans have converted their dual two-way entrances into one for entering and one for exiting the stores.
Protective measures previously taken at grocery chains with stores in the Cayuga County area have included聽installing Plexiglas shields in front of cashiers, increasing the number of hand sanitizer stations throughout stores, closing dining and self-serve areas, posting signage that recommends how much distance to maintain from others, and removing shopping baskets.聽
People have been hitting grocery stores hard during the coronavirus pandemic, and the social distancing necessary to slow its spread.
As businesses deemed essential by New York state, all local grocery stores are also subject to a new issued Sunday by Gov. Andrew Cuomo: All essential employees who interact with the public must be provided protective face masks by their employers. Most chains with stores in the Cayuga County area have already started to take this step, including , , Aldi, and . Still, they must be in compliance by 8 p.m. Wednesday, when the state's order takes effect. Employees can bring their own masks, but if they cannot, employers must provide them.
The order comes as more and more employees of grocery stores 鈥 where shoppers have been flocking for supplies 鈥 are being exposed to the coronavirus. United Food and Commercial Workers International Union President Marc Perrone CNBC聽Monday that at least 30 union members have died from the virus, and more than 3,000 have caught it. He additionally urged customers to wear masks and gloves, and to limit their shopping trips, in order to protect the health of grocery employees during the pandemic. More than 23,000 people have from the virus in the U.S.
"This is about life or death," Perrone said. "Workers are being exposed, and they are dying."
Gallery: Nineteen days in March 鈥 living with the coronavirus in Cayuga County
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Auburn caf茅 owners announce new business as they wait out COVID-19
The name of Robert and Joni Otterstatter's new business is not without its relevance.
The owners of Octane Social House 鈥 set to open soon in the Nolan Block on Genesee Street in downtown Auburn 鈥 last week announced plans for a sibling business, Octane's Inferno.
Also located in the downtown block, just a few doors to the west, Inferno will combine local tobacco products, spirits from local distilleries and men's grooming under a 1920s art deco aesthetic. Each part of the business takes its theme from Dante's epic poem: "inferno" for the tobacco, "paradiso" for the spirits and "purgatorio" for the grooming services.
But it's the first circle of the inferno that best describes where both of the Otterstatter's businesses are during the coronavirus pandemic: limbo.
Before the social distancing measures to prevent the spread of the virus were implemented in the middle of March, Octane Social House was on track to open around April 1, Robert said. He and Joni had just hired a staff, and were building out the 2,000-square-foot space after years of planning and waiting for it to be renovated. The business will have a stage with live entertainment, from music and comedy to readings and open mics, five nights a week. It'll also have coffee, food and self-serve craft beer, as well as a meeting room, gallery wall, open kitchen, vinyl record lounge and more.聽
AUBURN 鈥 The breath from Grant Kyle's mouth was visible as he stood inside the Nolan Block on Friday morning.
The virus, however, has lowered the same cloud of uncertainty onto Octane Social House that it has on most businesses. Its staff has already had to leave for reasons as varied as the effects of the pandemic. And the plumbers, electricians and other contractors helping Robert build out the business have become less available, if at all. He still hopes to open by May 1, but if so, it will be without the vinyl lounge and self-serve craft beer station. Even then, like all bars and restaurants, Octane Social House would be limited to takeout and delivery if the state's PAUSE order has yet to be lifted.
As a licensed caterer with a commercial kitchen, the Otterstatters have already gotten started on those food services to keep busy during the pandemic. They offer meals for takeout or delivery weekdays through , such as brisket sandwiches on Cameron's rolls on Tuesday and smoked Buffalo wings on Wednesday.
Until the pandemic subsides, those services are all the Otterstatters can provide as they wait to finally open Octane Social House and, later, Octane's Inferno.
"It's been challenging, no question," Robert said. "The bottom line is this is how we're making a living. So when the bottom drops out, we still gotta figure out a way to do that."
Gallery: Inside renovations at the Nolan Block in Auburn
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Historic Auburn mansion going up for sale
The owner of an historic Auburn mansion has announced his intention to sell it. But first, the mansion will be the subject of a paranormal investigation.
Patrick Collier Connelly posted Saturday morning on the Facebook page of 聽the 1870 brick mansion at 45 Owasco St., that he has decided to put it on the market.
Also Saturday morning, local real estate broker Michael DeRosa posted a video on Facebook in which he says he's working with Connelly to sell the mansion. The video then shows footage of what appears to be a ghost hunting team, the Auburn-based Soul Searchers, conducting an investigation on the property. Set to dramatic music, a narrator says, "there's something here."
The video ends with a graphic saying "coming soon." When contacted by 新加坡多多开奖记录, DeRosa declined comment except to say there are "lots of great things in the works," and "stay tuned."
Connelly also declined comment on the paranormal investigation. However, he told 新加坡多多开奖记录 that he decided to sell "The Auburn Castle" because he wants to live full time in Georgia, where he ran a chandelier cleaning and restoration business. A native of Scipio, Connelly bought the mansion in 2016 after retiring, in hopes of restoring it as a summer home. He had "a fantasy" his family would move to the area, too, but with his grandchildren still in Georgia, he wants to stay there. He's also beginning an acting career there, he said.
AUBURN 鈥 Patrick Collier Connelly was sold by the time he got to the staircase.聽
"Without family, it's just a big old house," he said.
The property, which also includes a carriage house, was聽聽at $58,999 in 2019, according to Cayuga County property records. Connelly purchased it for about $40,000 from Virginia Dewey, whose family, the Pastushans, owned it for more than 85 years. Prior to that, the mansion housed a succession of superintendents of the Auburn Woolen Mill. It was built for superintendent Samuel Laurie and designed by architect Nelson Hamblin, whose work in Auburn also includes the Faatz-Crofut Home for the Elderly and the .
Connelly has overseen much restoration work on the 3,400-square-foot Gothic revival mansion, namely replacing its roof and installing electricity. He's also in the middle of restoring its windows. The mansion is "pretty much a blank slate" for its next owner, and Connelly has commissioned an architect to create a floor plan for the three-story structure.
With a that has more than 3,700 followers, "The Auburn Castle" has felt like a community project, Connelly said. He has tried to give tours to anyone who stopped there. And the community has also shared stories and even offered him sinks, pianos and furniture to help restore the mansion to its period glory.
Connelly said he decided now would be a good time to sell given the interest in historic Auburn properties generated by the recent sale of the Seymour mansion at 113 North St. and the 1840 Dulles Inn at 67 South St. DeRosa also worked as the broker on both of those properties. He's working with the Seymour mansion's owner, the city of Auburn, to sell the property to someone who has its best interests in mind. The search process saw more than 200 prospective buyers submit applications. Connelly is taking a similar approach to "The Auburn Castle," he said.
"If I can find someone who has my passion and will do it the right way, I'm going to try to pass the reigns to them," he said. "I want it done right."聽
Gallery: 'The Auburn Castle' in 2017
Gallery: Breathing new life into 'The Auburn Castle'
Pandemic spoils Auburn restaurant's opening, but fellow owners show support
Traci Leubner didn't think opening a restaurant could be harder than farming.
But then she had the misfortune of opening that restaurant during the coronavirus pandemic.
Leubner and partner David O'Hara are the owners of Roseadah's, which opened on Mattie Street in Auburn March 27.聽
The restaurant offers simple fare in the farm-to-table style. Burgers are handmade with fresh beef, and never frozen. Pulled pork is seasoned and smoked for seven hours before going in sandwiches. And Leubner cuts, batters and fries her own mozzarella sticks. Though she uses Cabot cheese, which is made in Vermont, most of the milk comes from farms in upstate New York, Leubner said.
She knows that because one of them is her family's: Maple Lane Partnership, a 600-cow dairy farm in Marietta, where Leubner grew up.
"I know how fresh food can be. I'm a little spoiled," she said. "So I'd like to spoil Auburn with some fresh goodness."
Leubner's family also runs a catering service, whose events include the Spafford Fire Department's annual motorcycle raffle. She loves the challenge of feeding 600 people in a few hours, she said.
That experience, along with time spent working at several different restaurants over the years, inspired Leubner to open her own restaurant. In October, she found the space for it at 20 Mattie St., a former ice cream shop in "impeccable shape," she said. The name of the restaurant combines those of her two grandmothers, Rose and Adah.
"I never left my grandmother's hungry, and I want to make sure no one leaves here hungry," she said.
In their honor, Leubner gives everyone who orders dinner a small dessert, the same way her grandmothers would send her out the door with a cookie or cupcake.
That warm, inviting feeling extends to the dining room at Roseadah's, Leubner said, with its wood and rustic home decor. But by the time she and O'Hara had remodeled the space, it was March. And two weeks before their planned opening date of March 27, the coronavirus pandemic led New York state to close all bars and restaurants except for takeout and delivery.聽
"We were like, 'What do we do?'" she said. "And we just said we're going to open anyway."
It's been a struggle, Leubner said, selling a restaurant's food to people who've never set foot inside. That food is also Roseadah's first impression. But when it sits on a counter for several minutes, or has to be reheated, that impression suffers a little, she worries.聽Because of the restaurant's priority on fresh, local ingredients, takeout wasn't supposed to be a big part of the business.
But now, takeout is all of Roseadah's business, and Leubner and O'Hara have adapted accordingly. The building's old ice cream window has become a takeout window, and the restaurant has found many early customers in the Mattie Street neighborhood. Though it's hard to get to know them when they can't sit in her dining room, she appreciates their support.
Leubner also appreciates the support of a few of her fellow Auburn restaurant owners. After Rick Prairie聽of Downtown Deli about Roseadah's chicken riggies and mozzarella sticks on his Facebook page April 15, at least 40 people ordered food at the new restaurant, Leubner said. Lewis' Restaurant also took several Roseadah's menus to hand out there.聽
"The small business owners here 鈥 I'm just overwhelmed 鈥 they're so kind," Leubner said. "It feels like we're all in this together, and it's a good feeling."
Gallery: Inside Roseadah's, a new restaurant in Auburn
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Hometown heroes: Auburn hospital nurses going to NYC to treat COVID-19 patients
Auburn Community Hospital nurses are heading to the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic in New York.聽
Two registered nurses 鈥 Beth O'Hara and Franci Vanwie 鈥 left Auburn Thursday for the New York City area. They won't know until they go through orientation which hospital they will be assigned to for the next three weeks.聽
A third nurse, Jennifer Socci, is already at a New York City hospital. She is working at Jacobi Hospital, a 457-bed medical center in the Bronx.聽
Staff at Auburn hospital held a send-off for O'Hara and Vanwie before they departed. O'Hara has worked at the hospital for 12 years. Vanwie is a five-year veteran at the hospital.聽
"I am so proud of these nurses and all the health care workers who have volunteered to take on this fight," Auburn Community Hospital President and CEO Scott Berlucchi said. "I am also grateful to everyone at ACH and in our physician practices that have been working every day in Auburn on behalf of our patients and community."聽
The nurses volunteered for deployments to New York City, which has been the hardest-hit area in the state. According to the state Department of Health, 55% of the positive COVID-19 cases are in New York City's five boroughs. Nearly two-thirds of the hospitalizations are in the city.聽
With New York City-area hospitals overwhelmed, health care workers from across the country have volunteered to help. One Auburn nurse, Michele Andreassen, left for New York City last week. Connor Kate Clifford, a nurse and Auburn native, was assigned to a hospital in New Jersey.聽
Clifford's experience is similar to what Socci described in a video she posted on YouTube. Socci has been since arriving in New York five days ago.聽
In her most recent video, Socci said her shift was "probably the longest night of my life." While she didn't work in a COVID-19 unit 鈥 she was assigned to a post-anesthesia care unit 鈥 she described the hospital as chaotic.聽
"It's just a weird feeling in a hospital," she said. "Hospitals are generally so organized and methodical and that's not the way it is at all."聽
There was one suspected COVID-19 patient in her unit, but Socci said staff only went in there when it was necessary due to the personal protective equipment shortage. She also learned that the hospital has limited supplies available.聽
At one point during the night, the hospital staff needed a sodium bicarbonate bag. With dwindling supplies, they had to make their own.聽
"It's just something that I haven't experienced," she said.聽
On a bus from the hospital to her hotel, Socci said she heard stories from other health care workers who treated COVID-19 patients. Some of the patients died during their shifts.聽
Since no visitors are allowed at New York hospitals, family members couldn't be there with the patients. And with nurses dealing with numerous cases, Socci said they don't have the time to provide compassionate care.聽
"It's really just a tough situation to be in," she said.聽
More nurses from Auburn are volunteering to help at New York City hospitals. Auburn Community Hospital confirmed that it received notification additional nurses will be heading to downstate hospitals "in the near future."聽
"These nurses have chosen to put themselves on the front lines, which really exemplifies the spirit of community that is one of the key tenets of our mission at Auburn Community Hospital," said Dr. John Riccio, chief medical officer at Auburn Community Hospital.聽
Ormie King: Give thanks to Auburn's legendary Maxwells
Today I would like to give a big shout-out to Scott, Larry and Bobbie at Maxwell鈥檚 Food Store. The Maxwells have served us for generations, always with consistent, reliable service and great products, as well as a friendly smile and some conversation about the news of the day. A visit to their store is always pleasant, and a happy reminder of a simpler time, before the mega-chain stores existed.
Their daily delivery service is more valuable now than ever, during this difficult time of sheltering at home. Today's photos pay tribute to this wonderful family who are such a big part of our community. A big thank you to the Maxwell family, for all you do for all of us, and for being GREAT Legends of Auburn!
Photo No. 4 is Francis Porter, a loyal employee for many years. He has also passed on.
Gallery: Maxwell's Food Store is an old friend you can count on during the coronavirus pandemic
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Cato-Meridian Middle School to close next year as district consolidates
The Cato-Meridian Central School District is eliminating its middle school and plans to reduce staff as it juggles the effects of declining enrollment and financial shortfalls.
In the fall, the district's elementary school will house pre-K through sixth-grade students while the high school will host seventh through 12th grades, according to an April 10 community letter district Superintendent Terry Ward posted .
"Last week Governor Cuomo鈥檚 2020 budget indicated school districts will receive the same school aid as 2019-20," Ward wrote. "However, the devil is in the details. The governor now has executive power to 'make quarterly adjustments.' In short, we are going to have to change our school budget."
The letter said the district needs to be more efficient amid declining enrollment and "the continuing financial crisis." The new school building set-up will save the district approximately $300,000 annually. Despite that, the district estimates it will still have a $700,000 budget gap to close. The district's goal is to reduce spending by $1 million to $2 million, with reductions that will happen over time but "will have effects on staffing beginning next school year."
Ward said in an email that the district's budget is still being put together, so the extent of the potential cuts isn't known. He said he and the district's board of education has "looked at every department when discussing cuts. If needed, there will be cuts across the board. We are striving to maintain small class sizes and continue to work on our strategic planning goals."
As teachers retire over the next decade, he said, the district may not need to replace each of them. He added many teachers were shared between the middle school and high school and will now be in the same building.
A portion of the middle school building will be used by the elementary school, and the district will looking for potential tenants for the vacant areas of the building.
Ward said the reconfigured high school is set to be called Cato-Meridian Junior-Senior High School.
The district intends to make sure both class sizes and any potential incoming tax increase are "relatively small," Ward said.
Under the two-building system for 2020-2021, current middle school principal Sean Gleason will lead the junior-senior high school, while current high school principal Danielle Mahoney will be the elementary principal. Elementary principal Robert Wren will switch to director of athletics and student affairs. The district's current athletic director, David Scholl, will be with the district until Sept. 1, the letter said.
The board will discuss the two-building system at its April 22 meeting, which people will be able to view remotely by going to the Cato-Meridian website. The meeting starts at 6:30 p.m.
"Rest assured, we will get through this financial crisis together," the letter said. "We are confident we can continue to provide a high quality education to our students and this change will strengthen all programs for kids."
Second arrest made in Auburn beating and home burglary
A Summerhill man is allegedly one one of four assailants who beat and robbed an Auburn man in his home in January, Auburn police said.
Leefree Alan Petty, 30, of 1001 Lake Como Road, was picked up on an arrest warrant Saturday and charged in connection with the attack against a 38-year-old Auburn man.
Petty is accused of breaking into the victim's home on Grant Avenue around 1:15 a.m. on Jan. 12, tying the man's arms together and beating him as the co-defendants removed property from the residence, said Auburn Deputy Police Chief Roger Anthony.
The victim suffered two broken arms and multiple lacerations to his hands, arms and face as a result of the attack. He received treatment at Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse for his injuries.
Petty was charged with the felonies of first-degree burglary, first-degree robbery, first-degree unlawful imprisonment and second-degree assault, as well as a misdemeanor count of possession of a dangerous substance.
One of the other four co-defendants, 42-year-old Vincent Deangelis, of Auburn, was arrested in February and charged with four felonies, including first-degree burglary and assault. Anthony said the other two suspects have not yet been identified.
As of Tuesday morning, Petty was held in custody in the Cayuga County Jail in lieu of $15,100 cash and $30,100 bond bail.