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Gun-control laws create ‘stampede’ of weapon buying

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At the Niagara Gun Range on the border of North Tonawanda, pistol permit classes are booked through May.

People coming for target practice have had to wait an hour and a half to shoot.

And the store can barely keep up with customers’ demand for guns that hold 10-round magazines ahead of the April 15 ban date for detachable magazines that can hold more than seven rounds.

“Andy has been one of my best salesmen,” said range owner Dennis Deasy.

Andy being Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo. The governor is the one who championed the NY SAFE Act, a sweeping set of gun laws enacted in the wake of the December shootings of elementary school students and staff in Connecticut and volunteer firefighters near Rochester.

The new legislation, hailed by gun-control advocates as among the strictest in the nation and reviled by gun-rights advocates across the state and nation, was quickly passed and signed in January.

The Cuomo administration has argued that the governor invoked the emergency measure to avoid a run on guns ahead of its passage. But gun-rights advocates and people connected with the gun industry locally say the NY SAFE Act has only inspired people to buy guns as fast as they can.

“Look at what it’s done,” said Wilson Curry of Williston Auctions, who mainly deals in antique and collectible guns and is a vocal gun-rights advocate. “Look at what it’s created. He created a stampede of people buying every firearm they can get a hold of.”

It also may have created new gun owners and gun-rights advocates.

James Emmick, owner of Firearms Training of WNY, has been adding classes to keep up with demand.

“People are coming to the class and they say: ‘I’ve never thought about owning a gun before in my life but they’re trying to take away that right. So I want to own one,’ ” he said.

The SAFE Act does not put any new restrictions on who can own a gun.

But it does widen the definition of what an assault weapon is and it put an immediate ban on sales and purchases of such firearms. Those aspects of the act went into effect Jan. 15.

Other provisions are being rolled out over the next year and half.

Starting Friday, for instance, universal background checks for all firearm sales – including private sales – will be required.

And on April 15, detachable magazines that hold more than seven rounds no longer will be legal to buy or sell.

Gun-control advocates say such provisions are reasonable changes to existing gun laws.

Gun-rights advocates say they chip away at their Second Amendment rights, are difficult to enforce and are goading people into buying more guns.Local gun sales show there’s been a huge surge over the last couple of months.

Take for instance the Erie County Clerk’s office, which oversees the Pistol Permit Department. Any Erie County resident who wants to purchase a handgun is required to obtain a pistol permit first from this office. There is no limit on the number of guns that can be on that permit, but handgun owners who already have permits must get another one if they want to purchase more handguns, explained County Clerk Christopher Jacobs.

During January and February of this year, the number of Erie County residents who submitted applications for a new pistol permit – meaning they didn’t have one before – was 852. That’s nearly double the number of those who applied in January and February of 2012.

As for Erie County residents who already had a pistol permit on file and submitted a subsequent application, 1,715 applied to add more handguns to their collections this January and February.

The previous year, 962 applications for added handguns were submitted for the same two months.

“Pistols would normally receive 10 to 12 submitted applications per day,” Deputy Clerk Michael J. Cecchini said in an email detailing the county permit figures. “Now the average is 25 to 30. The max day was on Jan. 18th, when we took in 45 applications.”

Statewide figures point to a marked increase as well.

There were 76,001 background checks run for New York in January and February of 2013, according to the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division, which handles the federally mandated background checks for purchases of firearms and explosives.

During those same months last year, 51,086 background checks were run for New York.

And back in 2008, the FBI ran 33,761 checks for the state.

The data does not reflect how many guns were involved in each purchase. It also does not indicate the number of background checks that led to denials of a purchase of firearms or explosives. However, the FBI said on its website that, of the 100 million background checks it has performed over the last decade, there were 700,000 denials.Nationally, gun sales have soared since the Sandy Hook elementary school shootings Dec. 14 that took the lives of 20 young students, six teachers and staff members, and the shooter’s mother.

Last year marked the highest number of federal background checks the FBI ever ran since starting the program – more than 19.5 million.

In December alone, more than 2.7 million background checks were done. In November, following the re-election of President Obama, another 2 million checks were run.

In New York State, the Cuomo administration countered that the recent spike in gun sales proved that they were right in pushing through its legislation without the three-day “aging” period for the law that is supposed to occur.

When Cuomo signed the act Jan. 15, it put an immediate ban on an assault weapon, which was redefined under the new law to be any semiautomatic firearm, whether a pistol or rifle, with a detachable magazine with one military-style feature.

“[Legislature] leaders asked for a message of necessity because they agreed with us that the SAFE Act immediate ban on assault weapons should be just that. What you described proves our point that there would have been a run on these dangerous weapons if we delayed action,” said Richard Azzopardi, spokesman for Cuomo’s office.Local gun shop owners say the current boom in sales is being boosted by what happens on April 15. That’s the start date for a provision in the NY SAFE Act that bans the sale or purchase of a detachable magazine that can hold more than seven rounds. The previous magazine limit was 10 rounds.

Under the new law, people who already own such a 10-round magazine are allowed to keep them, but may not have more than seven rounds in the magazine unless at an incorporated gun range or at certified competitions.

At the Niagara Gun Range, customers are buying up “any type of gun that has a 10-round magazine,” said Michael Deasy, Dennis Deasy’s son who co-owns the range. They’re also buying up the magazines to have as back-ups.

The majority of the guns he sells are made to hold 10-round magazines, he said.

“It reduces my selection by about 90 percent,” he said.

Gun owners are also buying up ammunition ahead of Jan. 15, 2014.

On that date, new regulations on ammunition kick in, requiring ammunition dealers to register with the State Police. Buyers would have to pass a state background check and the purchase, including the amount of ammunition, would be provided to the State Police. It also will ban direct Internet sales of ammunition.

“There’s no ammunition for any firearms,” said Emmick, the firearms trainer. He recalled a dip in inventory in certain types after the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began. Now, he said, even .22 caliber rounds are hard to come by.

Another part of law goes into effect this Friday, when universal background checks for the purchase of firearms – including private sales – will be required. But there hasn’t been much grumbling about the provision among gun owners.

Dennis Deasy said he’s happy to handle federal background checks for anyone who wants them done for private sales. He’ll charge $10 per person.

But, he said, he’s not counting on a lot of business from the extra background checks.

There’s no real way to tell whether a private sale happened after the March 15 start date, Deasy pointed out.

“They’ll say: ‘I sold that a long time ago,’ ” he said. “It’s a totally unenforceable law.”



email: mbecker@buffnews.com

Do Catholics care who fills Peter’s chair? Local Catholics are interested in the papal election, but how deep an impact it will have depends on how traditional they are

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Jim Conrad of Clarence hopes to see an evangelical pope who emphasizes tradition and orthodoxy.

Phylis Slattery of Williamsville expects whoever is elected as Benedict XVI’s successor to clean up the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal.

“Do something, rather than just talk about it,” Slattery said.

Mary Ann Ingelfinger of Orchard Park prefers a candidate from outside the Vatican curia who can make the church more welcoming and less exclusionary.

Luke Slate wants a pontiff who will shed outdated traditions and lead the church in new directions.

“Being young, I feel part of a group that still has hope the next pope will be active in promoting change,” said Slate, a 17-year-old senior at Canisius High School.

With the papal election process set to begin Tuesday inside the Sistine Chapel, many of the world’s one billion Catholics are examining the state of the church and wondering what lies ahead.

That includes Western New York, home to more than 630,000 Catholics in eight counties, far and away the area’s largest denomination.

Yet recent studies and polls show that American Catholics often tune out the pope and the Vatican on matters of theology, faith practice and morals. And many of these U.S. Catholics believe church leaders are out of touch with them, especially on such topics as married priests and women clergy.

“A lot of people are expecting change with a new pope,” said Henry Zomerfeld, a University at Buffalo law student and campus minister at SUNY Buffalo State’s Newman Center. “Anytime you have a change in leadership, you want to see other changes.”

Some maintain that church restrictions against artificial contraception, women clergy and married men serving as priests are antiquated and should be changed.

Others question the election process itself, which has 120 cardinals – most of them older than 65, all male and all appointed by the previous two, ideologically similar popes – determining who should shepherd a tremendously diverse and far-flung flock.

When asked for her preferred characteristic in the next pope, Mary Herbst of Grand Island responded: “Of course I could say, ‘a woman,’ which is true, but I don’t think that’s going to happen.”

Indeed, only baptized Catholic males are considered eligible for the post.

The monarchical hierarchy of the church is so stuck in the time of the Roman Empire that lifelong Catholic Gloria McLaughlin, a former nun, can hardly watch the election process anymore.

“I’ll be interested, but mildly,” McLaughlin said. “I wish I could give them more heed. I wish it were more significant in my life, but it isn’t.”The church has a golden opportunity to make big changes that could help restore credibility in the wake of the sex abuse scandals, McLaughlin said.

“The tragedy of it is certainly many American Catholics don’t get too excited about it because it’s going to be the same old, same old,” she added.

Ingelfinger of Orchard Park feels similarly that the next pontiff isn’t likely to take the church in a different direction, especially since his predecessor, Benedict XVI, will be living nearby and casting a long shadow in papal retirement.

“The very idea that he’s living there is going to color what the next pope thinks,” Ingelfinger said. “Benedict should have gone back to Germany to a monastery there. He didn’t have to be on the grounds of the Vatican.”

Nonetheless, Ingelfinger said it won’t make much of a difference in her life who gets elected.

“Whatever comes, I have been a Catholic and I will remain a Catholic because my faith doesn’t depend on one person or another,” she said. “I’ve been here for several popes, and I’ll be here when they’re gone.”

The papal office remains highly regarded among most American Catholics, including Ingelfinger, who said she respects the papacy and the tradition it represents.At the same time, Catholics in the United States – even those who strongly identify as Catholic and emphasize Catholicism’s importance in their lives – often tune out the pope and the Vatican.

Fewer than a third of Catholics in this country consider the Vatican’s teaching authority very important to them, and 20 percent described that teaching authority as not important at all, according to 2011 survey research by Michele Dillon, professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire.

“There is a disconnect. American Catholics go their own way, regardless of what Rome says,” said Dillon, whose forthcoming book “American Catholics in Transition,” with co-authors William V. D’Antonio and Mary L. Gautier, explores practice and beliefs of American Catholics. “It’s very much their religion, not some distant hierarchy’s religion.”

The most recent data suggests American Catholics’ deep bond with the church is slipping, however, especially among women.

In 2011, about 55 percent of women surveyed in Dillon’s research said they would never leave the Catholic Church, which was down from 62 percent in 1993. Weekly Mass attendance among those women also fell to about 32 percent from more than 50 percent in 1987, and the church ranking among the most important parts of a Catholic woman’s life fell to 38 percent.

In 1987, 58 percent of women expressed that sentiment about the church.

“It’s as if they’re running out of patience,” Dillon said.

More than half of Catholics surveyed in a Quinnipiac University poll released Friday said church leaders were out of touch with American Catholics and the next pope should move the church in a new direction. The poll also showed strong support among American Catholics for married priests and women clergy.

The church seemed “a little outdated” and “stuck in some traditions” that are out of step with a world in constant change, said Slate, the 17-year-old Canisius senior.

“The church should try to keep up with that if it wants to retain its popularity,” Slate said.

Young Catholics especially could use a jolt from the papal changeover, he added.

“They tolerate the church right now, but they would definitely become more enthusiastic if a more liberal pope were elected.”

Does Slate think it will happen?

“Realistically, probably not, but my hope would be yes,” he said.There are other local Catholics, though, who want a pope who stays with traditional teachings.

Conrad of Clarence believes the future pontiff should avoid bending on church doctrine that has a track record of relevancy for 2,000 years.

Conrad wants a conservative pope who won’t hesitate “to be bold in telling the church of America, ‘This is the way it is.’ ”

“There’s a lot of cafeteria spirituality. There’s a lot of Catholics that can’t even recognize sin,” he said. “We tend to not be as obedient to the pope’s teaching … We have a different mindset over here in America. We’re kind of rebels.”

And Michael Godzala of Cheektowaga also doesn’t want to see the next pontiff stray from the church’s current teachings, including its belief that marriage exists solely for the benefit of a man and woman.

“I’m keeping to my faith, and whatever people want to do with gay rights and same-sex marriage, that’s their conscience,” said Godzala, who hopes to see a much younger man elected as pontiff this time around.

“The church needs a strong pope to spread the faith throughout the world and show that he’s the leader of the faith,” he said.

Whatever they think of church dogma and the current crop of “papabile” – those cardinals considered contenders for the papacy – many local Catholics are expected to tune into media coverage of the conclave spectacle.

The Rev. Francis Lombardo, a local Franciscan priest, already spent an hour answering questions about the conclave from parishioners of St. Gregory the Great Church in Amherst during a recent informal lunch get-together.

“Books are going to be written about this time,” he said. “This is history.”

email: jtokasz@buffnews.com

Helicopters assist rescue of hiker near Niagara Glen

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NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. – Two helicopters were used to move an injured man Sunday afternoon after he fell in the Niagara Glen along the Niagara River near an area known as Pebble Beach, Niagara Parks Police reported.

The man, identified as a 23-year-old from St. Catharines, Ont., was placed in a litter by rescuers and lifted by Niagara Helicopters from Pebble Beach to the Niagara Parkway, where he was transferred to a waiting Ornge Air Ambulance. He was flown to Hamilton General Hospital, where he was reported in stable condition with non-life-threatening injuries. Police said he had been hiking off the marked trails about 3:15 p.m., lost his footing and fell about 15 feet.

Listless start brings down Sabres in Philly

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PHILADELPHIA — The Buffalo Sabres didn’t show up on time to play Sunday night. Plain and simple. No deep analysis necessary.

They were down, 2-0, didn’t have a shot on goal after 10 minutes and that was basically that. The Philadelphia Flyers, who came into the game in crisis mode, had an easy time for 40 minutes before holding on tight to earn a 3-2 win over Buffalo before 19,687 in Wells Fargo Center.

The Sabres fell to 0-2-2 in their last four games and continued to lose touch with any semblance of a playoff race. Frankly, the more relevant race at this point is for a top draft pick. In fact, only a 5-2 loss by the Florida Panthers to visiting Montreal prevented the Sabres from falling into 30th place in the NHL’s overall standing.

Ten of Buffalo’s combined 17 losses this year are by one goal, proving the Sabres are just good enough to be bad.

Hockey Heaven it’s not.

With both teams on three-game skids – and speculation starting to swirl about the job status of Flyers coach Peter Laviolette after Saturday’s ugly 3-0 loss in Boston – there was plenty of surliness on both sides. The Sabres were left angriest by Wayne Simmonds’ hit from behind that sent center Tyler Ennis into the boards and out of the game for the night late in the first period.

Mike Weber followed Simmonds down to the other end of the rink and tried to exact a measure of retribution. He lost the battle and the war, earning two minutes for instigating, five minutes for fighting and a 10-minute misconduct. Simmonds walked away with nothing while Ennis didn’t return with what the team called an upper-body injury.

“That really hurt us when Webby gets an instigating penalty for asking somebody to fight who had just demolished somebody else in the numbers,” said Steve Ott.

“They thought they made the right call on it,” captain Jason Pominville said incredulously. “It was a push. It wasn’t a hit. That’s what the guy next to the hit told me. It’s tough. You lose one of your top centers, one of your most creative players offensively, out of a hit we feel wasn’t right.”

Interim coach Ron Rolston said Ennis has some stitches in his head and was walking around after the game but there was no update on his status. Like Pominville, Rolston scoffed at the explanation he got that Ennis was “rubbed out” along the boards rather than plummeted into the wall.

Simon Gagne and Claude Giroux scored power-play goals for the Flyers, neither one a shining moment for Ryan Miller in the Buffalo net. That was especially true for Giroux’s routine snap shot from the right circle that Miller flubbed 17 seconds into the second period. Max Talbot also burned the Sabres with a short-handed tally that put Buffalo into the two-goal hole after just 8:47 of play.

Rookie Brian Flynn got Buffalo within 2-1 at 11:43 of the first period, banging home a Kevin Porter rebound for his second in two games. Or equal to the totals veterans Drew Stafford and Jochen Hecht have scored all season.

Hecht, in fact, got his second at 4:32 of the third period, a short-handed tally on a feed from Ott on a two-on-one break.

The Sabres nearly tied the game a couple of minutes later as Cody Hodgson’s slapper dribbled through Flyers goaltender Ilya Bryzgalov and headed tantalizingly close to the goal line before it was swept away by Brayden Schenn.

It was stunning the Sabres were still in the game at that point. They had just four shots on goal in the first period and again had numerous misplays with the puck. Ott’s bad pass during a power play sent the Flyers off on a two-on-one that led to the Talbot goal. Buffalo’s 30th-ranked power play was 0 for 3, getting just one shot when Luke Schenn went off for boarding Nathan Gerbe from behind with 6:45 to go.

“Our special teams aren’t nowhere near where they need to be,” Pominville said.

“We didn’t have enough urgency and desperation off the start tonight,” Rolston said. “It’s been strange. When I first got here, second periods were the real problem and now we’ve shifted a little bit to the first. Hopefully we can squeeze that out the front side.”



email: mharrington@buffnews.com

Many Love Canal plaintiffs no longer live in Falls

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Nearly one-third of the people who recently applied to join a Love Canal lawsuit no longer live in Niagara Falls.

And at least one of those people, according to a Buffalo News analysis of court records, never did live in the Love Canal neighborhood.

“I anticipate that we’re going to see some derivative claims filed in this lawsuit. That is, claims filed by people who never lived at Love Canal but who had parents or grandparents who lived near the Love Canal,” said Douglas A. Janese Jr., an assistant corporation counsel who is defending the city of Niagara Falls against the $113 million state lawsuit. “At this point, we have no way of knowing if these claims are legitimate or not. We may not know the real truth until we get these people in front of a jury.”

Because of the size and complexity of the case, legal experts predict that it’s going to take one to three years of pretrial wrangling before the case goes to trial.

The lawsuit has raised new questions about public safety in the neighborhood surrounding Love Canal, a 70-acre toxic landfill site surrounded by homes, playgrounds, baseball fields and senior citizen facilities.

While state and federal government officials insist the neighborhood is safe, attorneys for more than 600 plaintiffs claim that dangerous chemicals have leaked from the landfill onto the properties of nearby homeowners, creating a “public health catastrophe.”

Buffalo News reporters examined 596 notices of claim filed by people – including current and former residents of the Love Canal neighborhood – who wish to join the lawsuit. The News also spoke to several of those people, including one woman who never has lived in the Love Canal neighborhood and a former neighborhood resident who hasn’t lived near Love Canal since 1981.

“I lived there from 1971 to 1981. I have health problems that I believe were caused by the chemicals and Love Canal, and my son does, too,” said Albert Herbert, 58, a bus driver now living in Charlotte, N.C. “I have had severe headaches for many years, and I had prostate cancer. My son is 10 years old, and he gets severe headaches. My doctor says he has no explanation for it.”

Herbert recently became a plaintiff in the case, and so did Kendra Baldwin, 29, who lives in Niagara Falls, but has never lived in the Love Canal neighborhood. Baldwin said her mother, Sharon Brown, grew up near Love Canal.

Baldwin said she recently petitioned to join the lawsuit because she is convinced that Love Canal chemicals caused numerous health problems suffered by her mother, by Baldwin and Baldwin’s three children. She declined to give details of the health problems.

Critics of the Love Canal neighborhood, including some people who live in the neighborhood, have claimed to The News that some plaintiffs are making a “money grab” by blaming health problems on chemicals at the landfill.

The city of Niagara Falls is one of 14 defendants named in the lawsuit. Mayor Paul A. Dyster said city officials are concerned about the lawsuit but are trying to prevent it from creating hysteria in the community.

Based on information he’s received from state and federal agencies, Dyster said he believes the landfill is functioning properly and that the neighborhood is safe.

“I don’t want to trivialize the concerns,” Dyster said of the lawsuit claims. “At the same time, I don’t want to create more concern than is warranted ... My office gets no phone calls from concerned citizens about Love Canal.”

City attorneys said the 596 notices of claim recently filed in the case contain mostly “boilerplate” language and contain little detail about what alleged illnesses were caused by Love Canal chemicals.

“So many details are lacking that it would be difficult for us to determine how to defend the case,” Janese said.

For that reason, the city probably will seek to “reject” the notices of claim, which could set the stage for a series of depositions of each of the people who filed the notices of claim, Dyster said.

Attorneys for the plaintiffs in the lawsuit could not be reached to comment on Friday.



email: dherbeck@buffnews.com; cspecht@buffnews.com

County looking for Spanish-speaking foster parents

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Rolando Gomez saw a need.

As the county’s Hispanic and Latino population has grown, the number of foster families who speak Spanish hasn’t kept up.

So Gomez, a case worker for the county, and a team from the county’s Department of Social Services have been on a mission to recruit more Spanish-speaking families who can welcome foster children into their homes. They’ve set up tables at Tops and gone to local churches in an effort to spread the word that more Hispanic and Latino foster families are needed.

It’s not just about language. Sometimes it’s as simple as a meal of rice and beans.

“Completely taking the child out of their home is a traumatic experience for them. Everything is new. They’re not in the same bed. They may not be in the same neighborhood,” said Roberta Farkas-Huezo, administrative director of children’s services for the Department of Social Services. “If they go to church, they hear the same songs and the same hymns in the same language, or if they can have that familiar meal, at least that’s something that connects them to their roots.”

Across Erie County, the number of Hispanic and Latino families has grown by more than a third in the last decade. While still less than 5 percent of the county’s overall population, the number of people who identified themselves as Hispanic or Latino grew to 41,731 during the last U.S. Census compared to 31,054 a decade earlier.

As those numbers have grown, so have the number of foster children who come from homes that speak Spanish. But the number of foster families who speak Spanish hasn’t grown at the same pace.

Between 10 to 15 percent of the children in the county’s foster care system are of Hispanic origin. But only about 5 percent of the families prepared to take in foster children are from the same communities or speak Spanish, Social Services administrators said.

“We really want a better selection of families who have a cultural match so that when we get children who are Spanish speaking or bilingual, we can match them up with families that have those abilities as well – families that observe the same holidays, that cook the same kinds of food, that observe the same kinds of traditions,” said Patricia I. Dietrich, administrative director of adoption and homefinding for the Department of Social Services.

Finding the right match for a child on the first try – even in a foster situation meant to be temporary – is important because there’s a chance that it could become a permanent home.

“If that child cannot go home to a family member, either a parent or another family member, then we’ve already made that good match up front,” Dietrich said. “We don’t have to do the horror stories that we hear about where kids bounce from place to place.”

In the best foster situations, Dietrich said, foster parents serve as a vital link to the biological family.

“If you are of the same culture and speak the same language, of course you’re going to do a better job of being that link and that asset to the biological family in the unification process,” Dietrich said.

It was Gomez, the case worker, who first brought up the need for more Spanish-speaking foster parents during a staff meeting last summer. Since then, he and other Social Services employees have held outreach efforts at Tops Market on Niagara Street and at the Salvation Army on Grant Street. Another event is in the works at Hispanics United in Buffalo.

Those working with Erie County to spread the word hope to get the message out beyond areas of Buffalo, particularly the West Side, that have been home to immigrants from Puerto Rico and other Hispanic communities.

“This is a large community, and it’s not just in the West Side,” said Eugenio Russi, a board member for Hispanics United. “The community is spread out all over Buffalo and Erie County.”

The hope for Erie County workers, Dietrich said, is to get enough interest from people who speak Spanish to run a 10-week course for prospective foster parents in Spanish. The class is already regularly held to help prepare people for foster parenting, but has not been held in Spanish in recent years.

“We really try our best to prepare people for what they might encounter,” Dietrich said. “The idea being that we want to know that when you get to the end, you’re really committed.”



email: djgee@buffnews.com

Graphic Controls makes a big push into medical products

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Graphic Controls Corp. is pushing hard to rebuild its medical products business.

The Buffalo company more than a decade ago got more than two-thirds of its sales from medical products, before a former owner, Tyco International, stripped Graphic Controls of the business, shifted it to a sister company and saddled the local operation with a non-competition agreement that kept it out of the business until 2007.

Since then, Graphic Controls has rebuilt its medical products business to the point where it now accounts for around 20 percent of the company’s $100 million in annual sales. And Sam F. Heleba, who managed Graphic Controls for Tyco and now serves as its chief executive officer, is focused on building the medical products business even further, with a goal of it reaching 60 percent of total revenues.

“We want to get there without getting rid of any of our businesses. We want to add to what we’re doing now,” Heleba said. “Our big focus going forward is medical.”

So far, the plan has been working. Graphic Controls’ sales have roughly doubled over the past eight years, thanks in part to the revival of the medical products business, which has complemented growth in other products, such as entertainment and gaming equipment, and its long-time staples of charts, marking systems and medical recording papers.

That growth also has helped swell the company’s local workforce, which has grown from 250 in Buffalo six years ago to 300 today. The company, which had about a dozen sales people outside Buffalo in 2006, now has 150 employees at other sites outside the Buffalo Niagara region, Heleba said.

Acquisitions have been a key part of that strategy, with Graphic Controls purchasing eight businesses since 2004. That’s been good for its Buffalo operations, because Heleba’s strategy typically is to try to shift that new business to Buffalo.

“When we do an acquisition, one of the first things we do is look to see if it makes sense to move it here. We like to have everything under one umbrella,” he said.

That approach, within the past year, led to a $760,000 project to build a clean room within Graphic Controls’ plant at 400 Exchange St. to accommodate the production of a line of syringe filters that it acquired through its purchase of a German company that also made industrial charts and marker pens.

“A lot of the growth opportunity was here in the United States. It didn’t make sense to manufacture in both places, or manufacturer there and ship everything here,” Heleba said. “That business is growing. That business alone is adding 25 to 30 jobs here.”

To further build the medical products business, Graphic Controls has been developing a host of new products. It produces a line of fetal electrocardiogram charts for General Electric, its biggest customer among medical device makers. It makes a disposable cover for body boards used by emergency medical technicians, among a host of other products.

“We’d really like to grow our business in two areas: Anything associated with the operating room, and we really like disposable items,” Heleba said. “Another thing that’s a good fit for us is emergency medical science.”

Graphic Controls already has had some success in growing a new business from scratch. The company branched out to the gaming and entertainment ticket business a dozen years ago, and those operations now account for about 30 percent of the company’s sales.

That business last year printed more than 5 billion tickets that were used by casino customers worldwide, from the Buffalo Niagara region to gaming facilities in far flung places such as Macau and the Philippines. The business also prints the tickets used by visitors to the Walt Disney Co. theme parks.

Those casino tickets require special security features to prevent counterfeiting and also include special coding that allows casinos to track a customers’ activity. In the case of the theme park tickets, they also have to be durable and water resistant.

“It just keeps growing. It’s a crazy business,” Heleba said.

And then there’s Graphic Controls traditional industrial business of making recording charts, along with the ink, markers and mechanical arms that the recording equipment uses. That business accounts for about half of the company’s revenues today.

“It’s a mature business, but it’s a very profitable business for us,” Heleba said. “We’re in three businesses that are totally not related. It’s like we’re this mini-conglomerate.”

Heleba said Graphic Controls is on the hunt for more acquisitions – and Heleba sees Europe as a fertile ground for potential purchases.

“We probably have room for one other acquisition here” at the company’s $15 million, 250,000-square-foot plant that opened in 2001, Heleba said. “Then we’ll have to look at expansion again.”

Heleba said the push for more acquisitions has the backing of Graphic Controls’ primary owner, Boston-based private-equity firm WestView Capital Partners, which purchased the business in October 2010 from a group led by Buffalo-based private-equity firm Strategic Investments & Holdings.

Strategic Investments’ ownership tenure brought much-needed stability to Graphic Controls when it purchased the business in May 2004, at a time when local officials feared that an out-of-town investor would acquire the company from scandal-plagued Tyco and close its Buffalo operations.

The company’s Buffalo roots date back to 1940, when four employees of a printing company loaded equipment on a truck and shifted their operations from Suffolk County to Buffalo to be closer to the Canadian company that owned it at the time. Graphic Controls itself was formed in 1957 as the successor to six separate companies.

WestView is Graphic Controls’ sixth owner since Times-Mirror Co. bought the company in 1978 as a white knight to thwart a hostile takeover bid.

“We have strong support from WestView Capital, who wants us to grow that [medical business],” Heleba said. “With the medical business, the life science business, there is just tremendous opportunity.”

email: drobinson@buffnews.com

Briere sees a stranger behind the Buffalo bench

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PHILADELPHIA — Daniel Briere was in Pittsburgh getting ready for a game against the Penguins late on the afternoon of Feb. 20 when big news broke in Buffalo. It was something he never thought he’d hear: Lindy Ruff, his old coach, was out.

“I was shocked. I never expected that,” Briere told The News on Sunday night prior to the Sabres’ game against the Philadelphia Flyers in Wells Fargo Center, which the Flyers won 3-2. “It’s the one thing that was a given in Buffalo: Darcy [Regier] as general manager and Lindy as coach. I couldn’t picture it any other way.”

Briere knew the Sabres had been struggling mightily and had played a dreadful game the previous night in a 2-1 loss to Winnipeg in First Niagara Center. But Ruff had been there since 1997 so no one really thought his time had actually run out.

“They’ve had some tough times before but Lindy had always stayed,” Briere said. “I haven’t played them since then and it’s tough to imagine them without Lindy. I think it’s going to be weird. We’ll see. In my mind, I still can’t picture it without him behind the bench. But time moves. People move and it’s just reality.”

Briere, of course, co-captained Buffalo’s 2006 and 2007 Eastern Conference finalists. He chuckled when asked about his favorite Ruff memories and the subject of the infamous 2007 brawl with Ottawa was brought up. Ruff, of course, ended up screaming at Ottawa coach Bryan Murray between the benches at the end of that fracas.

“Lindy was very animated. He was the face of the Sabres for the longest time,” Briere said. “All the battles that we went through, it sticks in my mind. It’s something I will remember for a long time. It’s the only coach I had when I played in Buffalo and I really can’t see it any other way.”

While Briere mused about the Sabres prior to the game, he has plenty of issues to deal with on his current club. The Flyers entered Sunday on a three-game skid and 11th in the East.

The Flyers entered Sunday’s game in the kind of chaos the Sabres were in around the time of Ruff’s firing. There were even rumblings in the building that coach Peter Laviolette’s job could be in jeopardy with another no-show.

Laviolette called a 20-minute, closed-door meeting after Saturday’s 3-0 loss in Boston, and Briere told reporters afterward the team needs to show some passion on the ice.

“Passion, confidence are words that are entangled,” Briere said Sunday. “When things are going well, it seems like you play with a lot more confidence and there’s more passion. You’re just more comfortable in how you’re doing things and in your own game.

“When things start going south, like the way they are now, everybody is second-guessing every move they’re making. You’re a little hesitant.”

Briere missed the first four games of the season due to a wrist injury suffered while playing in Germany during the lockout. One of the four was a 5-2 loss Jan. 20 in Buffalo that was the Sabres’ opener and the Flyers’ second game. The Flyers lost their first three games and six of their first eight. They’ve been climbing uphill ever since.

Close Flyers watchers wonder if Briere is still dogged by his problem. He has just five goals and 13 points in 22 games this season – and no goals in the last nine games.

“It’s hockey and everybody deals with injuries at one time or another but it was definitely disappointing,” Briere said. “It was one of the last games before we were coming back. You didn’t know that at the time it happened but it was certainly disappointing to get hurt while you’re doing the right thing and trying to stay in shape. It is what it is. But it’s gotten better and better and it’s fine.”

...

Defenseman Jordan Leopold was slated to return to the Buffalo lineup Sunday after missing eight games with an upper-body injury. Leopold was scratched for the Winnipeg game and was injured the next day during Ruff’s final practice. Sunday was scheduled to be his debut under interim coach Ron Rolston and Leopold took warmup but was a surprise scratch.

Andrej Sekera, who was injured late in Thursday’s game in New Jersey, was supposed to miss the game but he played instead.

After the morning skate, Leopold said he was looking forward to seeing the atmosphere on the bench under Rolston. He then took some clearly veiled shots at Ruff.

“The biggest thing we’re talking about is stay composed, stay positive,” Leopold said. “This game is 90 percent mental. If you’re going good, you’re OK there. If you’re not, you have to find a way to get going. If we’re negative all the time, really on guys, it’s not going to work in our favor.”

...

Leopold was taken off injured reserve and the Sabres loaned Adam Pardy back to Rochester to make room for him. … Jochen Hecht returned to the lineup after getting scratched Thursday and Mikhail Grigorenko sat out. … It looks like Ville Leino’s season debut will come Tuesday night against the New York Rangers. “That’s a good target and start for him,” Rolston said.



email: mharrington@buffnews.com

Falls man charged with Lockport bank robbery

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LOCKPORT – Lockport detectives arrested a Niagara Falls man at his home about 3 a.m. Monday and charged him with Friday morning’s robbery of the M&T Bank branch at Pine and Walnut streets in Lockport.

Joseph S. Trusello, 23, was arrested at a halfway house at 431 Memorial Parkway, Lockport Detective Capt. Richard L. Podgers said. He was charged with third-degree robbery and third-degree grand larceny.

Police credited the wide publication of a bank security camera photo of the robber for producing numerous tips that led them to Trusello,

Podgers said Falls police entered the home first “to see if he looked anything remotely like the picture.” Podgers said that Trusello did resemble the photo, so the Falls officers told him that Lockport police were interested in talking to him.

“He sat there and waited for us,” Podgers said.

The money stolen in the robbery was not recovered, Podgers said. The bank has not yet completed an audit to determine how much was taken.

The robber used a note to a teller to obtain a stack of currency, the surveillance photos show. He did not display a weapon.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Genesee County man dies in burning home

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A 47-year-old Town of Alexander man died after being pulled unconscious from his burning home late Sunday night, Genesee County sheriff’s officials reported.

Scott A. Cramer, the only occupant at 11000 Sand Pit Road, was extricated from the home by Alexander volunteer firefighters and taken to United Memorial Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.

The first firefighters responding to a 911 call at 10:07 p.m. found the fire in the front of the house, with flames showing. Those firefighters searched the home, found Cramer and pulled him out.

A preliminary investigation points to an electrical cause of the fire, sheriff’s officials stated. No damage estimate has been released.

Assisting Alexander volunteer firefighters at the scene were members of the Attica, Bethany, Darien and Town of Batavia volunteer companies, along with Mercy EMS Ambulance.

State police charge Jamestown man with aggravated DWI

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A Jamestown man has been charged with aggravated driving while intoxicated after being accused of having a blood-alcohol level of 0.19 percent, more than twice the legal limit, State Police at Jamestown reported.

Ronald P. Cummings, 58, was arrested after a traffic stop on Lindsey Street in the Village of Celoron on Sunday morning. Troopers stopped him for failing to use a turn signal, according to police reports.

Unconscious man one of two people arrested for DWI

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Erie County sheriff’s deputies arrested two people for driving while intoxicated over the weekend, including a Brant man found unconscious behind the wheel of his vehicle.

Responding to an accident call on Southwestern Boulevard late Saturday, Deputy Neil Held found the driver, Frank A. Thompson, unconscious behind the wheel. After being treated by the Seneca Nation Volunteer Fire Department, Thompson was arrested for DWI. He refused to provide a breath sample to determine his blood-alcohol content, and sheriff’s officials said his license will be revoked.

On Sunday, while on patrol in the village of Akron, Deputy Simon Biegasiewicz stopped a car for failing to stop at a stop sign. The deputy then charged Rachel A. Miller, 37, of Akron, with DWI. Authorities said a chemical test determined that she had a blood-alcohol level of 0.16 percent, twice the legal limit.

Sheriff’s road patrols have arrested 67 people for DWI so far this year, officials added.

Man shot in back in University District

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A man shot in the back Sunday night in the city’s University District was treated at Erie County Medical Center for what Buffalo police called a non-life-threatening wound.

Shakille Dothard was shot on Shirley Avenue at about 8:15 p.m. Sunday. He was treated at ECMC before he left the emergency room, a hospital official said.

Northeast District police said two shell casings were recovered in a nearby driveway on Shirley Avenue.

‘Domestic’ call leads to recovery of concealed drugs

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Northwest District police called to investigate a domestic incident in the city’s Forest Avenue-Grant Street area early today found anything but a domestic dispute.

Instead, according to police reports, they found two people engaged in sexual contact in a parked vehicle. And police later confiscated a bag of heroin from the car, along with some marijuana and a crack pipe hidden on the female’s body.

Police were called to a Barry Place address, one block east of Grant and south of Forest, at about 2:30 a.m.

Responding officers found the man and woman in the vehicle, both partially clothed, and searched them for the officers’ safety. Police said they found a bag of heroin under the driver’s seat, along with some marijuana found in the woman’s body cavity. Cell-block attendants later found a crack pipe with residue in a body cavity, authorities said.

Officers charged Walter S. Banks Jr., of East Ferry Street, and Brittany M. Johnson, 22, of Riverside Avenue, with criminal possession of a controlled substance, public lewdness, tampering with physical evidence and marijuana possession, among other charges, according to police reports.

Police also accused Banks of driving a stolen vehicle, with a revoked license.

Dog perishes, woman uninjured in Kiantone house fire

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KIANTONE – A woman escaped from a burning house on Warren Jamestown Boulevard Monday morning after she was awakened by a smoke detector going off, according to the Chautauqua County Fire Investigation Team.

The woman was not injured but a dog died in the fire, officials said.

The blaze was reported just before 9:30 a.m. at 1488 Warren Jamestown.

The Kiantone Fire Department responded and was assisted by firefighters from Busti, Falconer, Frewsburg, Kennedy, Lakewood and Panama.

Investigators believe the fire started in the basement and was caused by a problem with a power strip.

Authorities reminded the public to change the batteries of smoke detectors in their homes.

Town of Boston woman charged with aggravated DWI

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A Town of Boston woman was charged with aggravated driving while intoxicated after her blood alcohol level test was measured at more than three times the legal limit last week, state police said Monday.

Ronda M. Clohessy, 38, was pulled over on Tuesday shortly before 9 p.m. on Tuesday on Boston State Road for failing to keep right.

She was arrested for driving while intoxicated and taken to the state police barracks in Boston where a breath test indicated her blood alcohol content level was 0.26 percent.

She is scheduled to return to town court on March 26.

$100,000 Club gets comptroller's scrutiny

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Erie County government has a “$100,000 Club” – and taxpayers, as well as county officials, need to know about it.

That’s the conclusion of a new report by County Comptroller Stefan I. Mychajliw being made public today.

Nearly 1 in 5 full-time Erie County workers cost the county – and by extension, taxpayers – at least $100,000 each in 2012, when salaries and benefits were combined with overtime, bonuses, cash-outs and other costs, the report found.

Overtime appears to be a big reason why so many workers are in the “club.”

For the majority of those workers – 79 percent – overtime pay contributed to their total earnings, in some cases greatly increasing the compensation, according to the comptroller’s report.

“Overtime needs to be looked at very carefully,” Mychajliw said. “One nurse made 157 percent of his or her base salary in overtime. Someone in law enforcement made 186 percent of his base salary.”

For that nurse, the overtime totaled more than $85,000 last year, the report found.

The $100,000-and-up workers represent 18 percent of the county’s full-time workforce of 4,187 people, Mychajliw said.

The report will be sent to the County Legislature for review.

“I was surprised,” said Mychajliw, who took office in January. “Personnel may be an area where they want to look first, before raising people’s property taxes.”

He said the report is designed to be helpful to legislators, County Executive Mark C. Poloncarz and others who are in positions of hiring and maintaining the county’s workforce.

The county executive had no direct response to the report’s findings Sunday when contacted by The Buffalo News.

“We haven’t seen the actual report yet, so we can’t comment on it’s factual accuracy,” Poloncarz stated through his spokesman, Peter Anderson. “It’s highly unusual for a report to be issued without an exit conference.”

He referred to the much-criticized Federal Emergency Management Agency audit that accused then-County Executive Joel A. Giambra of violating rules regarding the awarding of cleanup contracts after the October snowstorm in 2006.

“I find it ironic that the comptroller is doing exactly what both he and I are criticizing the federal Inspector General’s Office of FEMA for doing in the manner they are conducting their audit,” Poloncarz said through his spokesman.

Among the principal findings of the comptroller’s survey of all full-time employees using 2012 payroll records is the fact that 723 county workers cost the county more than $100,000 apiece last year. These $100,000-and-up workers spanned a broad array of county departments, Mychajliw said.

The highest number were in jail management, followed by the Sheriff’s Office and then the District Attorney’s Office and Social Services Department.

“That was one of the surprising things about the audit,” Mychajliw said. “This seems to be taking place across the board in Erie County government.”

Mychajliw said that personnel costs are a key area to focus on in sizing up the county budget in an era of belt-tightening. Personnel costs amount to $326 million, or nearly a third of the county budget, the comptroller said.

However, the report found that the upper-scale earnings of the employees in the survey did not always correlate with high base salaries, Mychajliw said.

In 219 cases, the base salary of a worker was increased by 50 percent through overtime, according to the report.

“We found some employees whose base salary is $34,000 a year, who cost taxpayers $100,000 or more to fully fund the position,” Mychajliw said.

“We have very generous fringe benefits for employees – that taxpayers are footing the bill for,” he said. “Fringe benefits represent 67 percent of an employee’s salary in Erie County government.”

Mychajliw said that his office’s report is not intended as an attack on county workers – whom he described as often pulling long shifts in difficult jobs.

“Believe me, our county employees work incredibly hard,” Mychajliw said. “I wholeheartedly respect the work they do. But, facing $25.4 million in budget gaps, we have to consider very painful choices when it comes to personnel.

“The absolute last resort should be raising property taxes.”

The lessons here, Mychajliw said, include the fact that every hire is important – especially in an era of budget cutbacks and projected gaps.

“This is why this is so important to the Legislature,” Mychajliw said. “They may think, when jobs are added, ‘Oh, that’s only $34,000 a year.’ ”

“But some of these positions, they cost taxpayers a lot of money.”

Mychajliw said that his office’s report has led him to place overtime costs on the list of county issues he plans to audit and investigate in 2013.

“We’re definitely putting overtime on the 2013 audit plan,” he said.

Mychajliw added: “This could be a good guide for the Legislature, about adding jobs. Even lower-paying jobs can be a budget-buster.”

According to the comptroller’s report, the following departments were highest on the list for the number of full-time employees they have on staff that cost more than $100,000 last year in salary, benefits, overtime, and other bonuses and perks:

• Jail management, with 301 employees.

• Sheriff’s Office, with 102 employees.

• District Attorney’s Office and Social Services Department, each with 55 employees.

• Health Department, with 42 employees.

• Sewer Management Division, with 26 employees.

• Central Police Services, with 22 employees.

• Public Works/Highways, with 19 employees.

• Probation Department, with 14 employees.

• Buffalo & Erie County Public Library, with 10 employees.

Mychajliw said he thinks that much of the problem with overtime and benefits is the way the system has been created – not the workers.

“But just as families at home are doing more with less,” he said, “we have to do the same in county government.”



News Staff Reporter Sandra Tan contributed to this report. email: cvogel@buffnews.com

Paladino, dysfunction bring attention to School Board races

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Buffalo School Board elections for years have attracted few voters, with the fate of the school district left to just the diehards who bother to cast ballots.

Three years ago, in fact, half of the six races were decided by fewer than 70 votes apiece. In a fourth race, the incumbent ran unopposed.

This year, however, is shaping up to be different.

Widespread community frustration with the district’s chronically low test scores and perennially low graduation rates seems to be at nearly an all-time high. Nine months into a new superintendent’s tenure, many people feel that little of substance has changed in a system plagued by dysfunction.

And increasingly, people in the community are seeing the School Board as a potential or even necessary vehicle for change.

This year, six of the nine board seats are up – enough for a majority to emerge and chart a direction for the district in what many consider to be a pivotal year.

And one of the candidates in the mix, one of the wealthiest and most outspoken people in the region, has attracted an unprecedented amount of attention to the race – and along with it, plenty of speculation as to how he plans to engineer a majority on the board.

Developer and former GOP gubernatorial nominee Carl P. Paladino says he’s not planning to run a slate but adds that he will support other candidates he feels are “good people.”

One thing is clear: Paladino’s platform bears a striking resemblance to the agenda put together by a group of parent leaders in the district.

Nobody seems willing to say directly whether he and the parents group – many of them leaders in the District Parent Coordinating Council – plan to coordinate campaign efforts or strategize together if they’re elected.

But some address the question indirectly.

“There will be a lot of unholy alliances,” said Bryon J. McIntyre, who plans to run against Mary Ruth Kapsiak, the current board president, for the Central District seat.

Like some other candidates who have the support of a coalition of parent leaders, McIntyre will not say definitively whether he plans to accept money from Paladino. He acknowledges that he’s talked with Paladino but won’t discuss details.

Among their shared goals: a return to neighborhood schools; reinstatement of the teacher residency requirement; greater parent involvement in decision-making; and a local version of a parent trigger bill, under which a district school could be turned into a charter school if a majority of the parents in the building agree to it.

The District Parent Coordinating Council, led by Samuel L. Radford III, is not allowed to endorse particular candidates, given that it’s a committee of the School Board itself. But many of the group’s leaders have formed an informal outside group that has been vetting potential candidates.

So far, that group has identified five candidates who seem to share its priorities, according to Radford, including McIntyre, a DPCC vice president.

Others include: in the North District, Wendy Mistretta, a former Buffalo State College administrator who has been an active parent at International School 45 and the DPCC parliamentarian; in the Ferry District, Patricia Elliott, who also has been active in the DPCC as well as an active parent at Waterfront Elementary; in the West District, James Sampson, president and CEO of Gateway-Longview and chairman of the county’s control board; and Theresa Harris-Tigg, an assistant English professor at Buffalo State College.

Radford is clear about the strategy: Work to elect five people who share the parents’ agenda – enough for a working majority. When he counts the number of candidates who seem to share those goals, he does not count Paladino among them – nor does he count Paladino as an opponent.

Radford, like many of the candidates he says share his agenda, carefully avoids talking directly about how closely, if at all, those candidates will align with Paladino during the campaign or afterward. The focus right now, he says, is collecting enough signatures to get candidates on the ballot. Each one needs to submit 500 valid signatures by the first week in April.

“At this point, we don’t want to be drawn into anybody’s camp,” Radford said. “We’re not in Carl Paladino’s camp. We’re not in the reform camp. We’re not in the union camp. Everybody who agrees with the parent agenda, we’re going to work with them.”

Historically, the Buffalo Teachers Federation has been the heaviest hitter in the city’s School Board elections. The union provides financial support as well as phone banks for candidates it backs.

President Philip Rumore said the union has not yet decided which candidates it will support this year, but soon will interview candidates. Three years ago, the BTF backed Ralph R. Hernandez, who is running for re-election this year in the West District, and Kapsiak, among others.

Of the six incumbents, only one – Louis J. Petrucci in the Park District, where Paladino lives – has decided not to seek re-election.

Two of the incumbents, Sharon Belton-Cottman in the Ferry District, and Rosalyn L. Taylor in the East District, will be running campaigns for the first time this spring, as both were appointed to their seats on the board to fill mid-term vacancies.

As much as the parent slate feels the district needs a change of direction, the incumbents feel it’s essential that they be given more time to continue their work.

“This is going to be a community effort to keep me in place, and to keep Ruth and Roz in place, because we need to keep moving this agenda forward, not taking the time to go retro, or taking the time to stall,” Belton-Cottman said. “We need to be about taking care of business in this district, and we feel we need to do that with the three of us in place again.”

Jason M. McCarthy, in the North District, has already launched a fundraising effort considered massive in the world of Buffalo School Board races. A recent fundraising event at the Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural Site raised $13,000 for his re-election effort, he said.

“That’s serious, and we still have a lot of work to do and a lot more people to come out and support us,” he said. “I’m feeling very confident.”

Three years ago, McCarthy and a few other candidates received heavy support from Education Reform Now, an arm of Democrats for Education Reform. The downstate group pumped tens of thousands of dollars into the race, loading voter mailboxes with slick, full-color postcards that eclipsed even BTF efforts in the race.

Speculation is running high among some candidates that the group will again commit significant resources to the Buffalo School Board elections this year. Whether that will happen is not clear. Joe Williams, the executive director of Democrats for Education Reform, did not respond to messages seeking comment for this story.

What is clear is that McCarthy has the support of Paladino, making McCarthy’s challenger very aware of the financial disadvantage she’s likely to be grappling with. Mistretta says what’s important to her is that many teachers support her – but at some point, she might find herself needing to consider the possibility of seeking BTF backing.

“I guess that’s why I cannot completely rule out seeking the backing of some of these groups, because I cannot compete with Paladino’s money,” Mistretta said. “I can’t completely rule that out, out of necessity.”

Paladino himself will face at least one opponent: Adrian F. Harris, a teacher aide in the Lancaster School District who lives about a block away from Paladino. As the father of a student at South Park High School, Harris says he will offer voters a clear choice, having experienced firsthand the challenges faced by the Buffalo Public Schools.

“I’m an educator; [Paladino] is a businessman. There’s a distinct difference between the two of us,” said Harris, who is working solo to collect signatures door-to-door in South Buffalo to get on the ballot. “I’m a consensus-builder. I can get my point across in a way that’s not going to offend anybody.”

In the Ferry District, a former board member is seeking to rejoin the board. Stephon Wright, the first student member appointed to the board – in a nonvoting capacity – plans to run, this time to be a voting member of the board.

“They need my voice back on that School Board,” said Wright, who graduated from Emerson High School last year. “They need the youth.”



email: mpasciak@buffnews.com

Teen pleads guilty to manslaughter in grisly killing

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A teenager has pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter in the stabbing death of 16-year-old Darren Brown, whose burned body was left in a wooded area behind a popular custard stand on Colvin Avenue last July.

Demetrius Huff, 18, pleaded guilty Friday before State Supreme Court Justice Russell P. Buscaglia. As part of his plea agreement, Huff agreed to a 25-year-prison term, the maximum length possible for a first-degree manslaughter conviction.

Huff and Ezeiekile Nafi, 17, had been charged with second-degree murder, which carries a maximum of 25 years to life in prison, according to the Erie County District Attorney’s Office.

Huff and Nafi met Brown on July 4 on Hertel Avenue and lured him to a former railroad right-of-way off Colvin’s 500 block, where they took turns stabbing him to death, law enforcement officials have said. The two returned later with gasoline and burned his body to destroy evidence, police have said.

Brown’s body was discovered by a man walking his dog.

Huff and Nafi were arrested at Huff’s paternal grandmother’s home on Jewett Parkway several days after Brown’s body was found.

Jury selection for a joint trial for Huff and Nafi was to have begun last week. But Buscaglia granted a motion for separate trials after new evidence was brought forward last week that may have benefited one of the co-defendants over the other.

Jury selection for Nafi’s murder trial began this morning.

Huff’s name was added to the list of witnesses who may be called against Nafi.

“He is a potential witness at this point,” homicide prosecutor Colleen Curtin Gable told Buscaglia before jury selection began.

Emily Trott, who is Nafi’s defense attorney, told the judge there were no plea discussions today before jury selection.



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Cuomo criticizes Albany’s one-house budgets

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ALBANY – With the Senate and Assembly poised to start passing their largely symbolic, one-house budget measures, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo today said the legislative plans are out of balance.

“I get the political impact of the one-house budgets,’’ Cuomo said of the annual process that lets the houses pass measures that will not become law but appeal to various special interest groups that want to see funding or tax breaks in the budget.

“But the numbers have to add up, and I don’t believe the numbers add up,’’ Cuomo said of the Senate and Assembly plans that began emerging over the weekend.

The governor said he supports the Senate plan to give tax breaks to businesses and middle-class residents, the Assembly measure to give more money to cities and both houses’ effort to restore $120 million in funding for programs for developmentally disabled people.

“Do I think any of the things they are suggesting are bad things? By and large, no,’’ Cuomo said at the Capitol a few hours before he is set to meet behind closed doors with legislative leaders to continue negotiating a 2013 budget.

“My experience is they are much better at finding things to add than finding sources of revenue,’’ he said of the Legislature’s one-house budget bill exercise.

Cuomo also signaled he could be willing to wait until later in the session to take up the issue of whether and how to permit up to seven new casinos to operate in New York. He has an expansion plan in his budget proposal, but said the issue is complex. He believes all sides want a casino deal, but still have not settled on the terms, chief among them being where the casinos might be located.

“It is a complicated issue and, given the short time frame, it may very well be that casinos wait for June,’’ he said of the end-of-session period when many major policy matters are decided.

The sides are rushing to get a budget adopted next week before the start of religious holidays and the April 1 start of the fiscal year.

Cuomo’s plan calls for permitting the first three casinos to be located upstate, though he has not said where. He said the challenge is to decide how long those three casinos will have exclusive rights to operate before the state lets any casinos move into New York City, which presumably could sharply eat into the profits of upstate casinos, particularly those located closer to downstate, such as the Catskills.

There is also some movement on the minimum wage issue with the printing later this afternoon of a Senate budget resolution – worked out by Republicans and a group of five breakaway Democrats who run the house under a coalition – that signals eroding of opposition by GOP senators to raising the wage, which is now set at $7.25. Republicans had been calling it a job killer, but seem to be changing that claim in the new budget resolution.

“The Senate will consider modifications to the executive proposal to increase the minimum wage. Like wages for many workers, the minimum wage has not kept up with the pace of inflation,’’ the resolution states. “The Senate will consider phasing in any minimum wage increase over three years beginning in 2013.’’

The resolution does not state what the Senate might accept as a level for the increase, and Cuomo’s plan is already different from that proposed by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver. But it signals that all sides now agree some sort of wage hike should be approved.

“It’s a sign of progress,’’ Cuomo said of the Senate resolution.



email: tprecious@buffnews.com

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