Entries Tagged 'Buffalo' ↓

WNY earns huuuuge slap in the face from NYS leaders

New York Assembly Approves Toll Elimination Bill
New York State Assembly votes to eliminate a toll booth from Interstate 95 over noise and air pollution concerns.

The New York State Assembly moved on Monday last week to eliminate a toll booth from Interstate 95. Members voted 87 to 47 to abolish the collection of tolls at the New Rochelle toll plaza on the New York State Thruway. Motorists on this stretch of I-95 currently most stop and pay $1.50 or use E-ZPass, and the toll is scheduled to rise to $1.75 next year. State Assemblyman George S. Latimer (D-Westchester) introduced the idea of stopping the tolls because they imposed unfair burdens on his constituents.

“Daily commuters from Westchester, the Bronx and Manhattan pay a disproportionate fee to use this section of the Thruway, compared to every other corridor across the state,” Latimer wrote in support of his legislation. “Further, the presence of this toll plaza serves to direct northbound traffic onto local roads, particularly U. S. 1 (Boston Post Road), through the developed corridors of New Rochelle, Larchmont and Mamaroneck, adding to local congestion and air pollution.”

It’s as if our state law-makers don’t feel WNY taxpayers have them very same “unfair burdens” like downstate. :( We are in deed Home of the screwed! I haven’t had the chance to converse with Rus Thompson on the matter, but it’s safe to say he’s probably as “fed-up” as my blogging name.

89 over Par, My first golf score…

Today I played my first golfing game. It’s been said “you have to start somewhere” and I begin…. 89 over par on a 9-hole, 36 par course. :( I had an “old-timer” say he’s going to skip a hole I was beginning.

I had some great shots, though few & far between. On the brighter side, I never lost my ball (even if it landed at the start of the next hole …oops), twice I was able to chip the ball over a creek to the fairway (just outside of the green… but putting ended badly), and my highlight was the 3rd hole … it was a 3 par and I made it in 6 shots, that was one hole over the creek.

The politicians failed at being (pretend) poor with “monopoly money”

Damn! That says a lot of the people whom are to be leaders of our area.

There’s a article in the Buffalo News about living on $2.95 a day. The challenge was presented to a few politicians for two days… and they failed.

The “poverty challenge” was put forward by the Homeless Alliance of Western New York, which earlier in the week called on community leaders and lawmakers to join in solidarity with the 30 percent of Buffalo residents who live at or below the federal poverty line of $866 (or $1,466 for a family of three) in income per month.

A realistic approach to stretching a dollar would have been for them to be poverty-stricken for a full month. A full billing cycle of rent, gas, electric, phone, internet, cable, food, credit cards, auto & health insurances. Now add in a couple of kids.

During the challenge, LoCurto gave up cable television and the Internet, saving about $2.48 against his budget. But he continued to use his cell phone, drove to work and maintained his health insurance.

“That left me with a budget for the day of negative 82 cents, before I started eating,” said LoCurto, who represents the Delaware District. “I don’t function if I don’t have three meals a day, and they weren’t elaborate meals . . . What do you do if you have to buy a $4 bottle of Tylenol? You don’t have dinner that day?”

A realistic challenge would be for these politicians to actually have their paychecks reduced to the poverty level for the full effect of being the working class poor. When you play a game with monopoly money, you know it’s only a game. But when you’re looking at a real budget with real money and finding away at real survival of supporting a family…. it no longer becomes the thought of “let’s pretend you’re poor” it becomes you’re actually living in the poorer lifestyle. A lifestyle of which making ends meet is a daily struggle.

A further realistic “challenge” would be living as the working class poor for a full year, so when minimum wage is increased & an economic stimulus check is being issued by the government, you’ll see how the cost of living adjusts your budgeting for the year…. a budgeting of going without more because food prices jumped through the roof & utility rates are robbery in broad daylight. After 12 months you see you’re further behind.

The alliance developed the challenge to call more attention to poverty in the second-poorest large city in the country, according to U. S. Census Bureau data.

When a lesson is to be taught with monopoly money, nothing is ventured…. nothing is gained, and politicians are no less ignorant when it comes to living a poorer lifestyle. They lived it for 2 days and then went back to their richer living. I bet the $4 bottle of Tylenol doesn’t seem so expensive now, does it? No rules have been broken today by any politician because you drove your child to daycare. :(

The “fed-up” in me is saying the effects of lifting people out of poverty is more than playing pretend for two days, because for people who are struggling more than myself it’s more than 48 hours of budgeting bills and modes of transportation. It’s more than 48 hours of making smaller meals so your food supply lasts a little longer. More than 48 hours of opting not to buy a new pair of sneakers for your children because you don’t want the electric cut off in your home.

This poverty challenge was a failure before it began, because the poor are still poor and the politicians get to go home with their financial security still in tact. Thanks for playing the game though. :(

Kennedy caught in the crossfire of $1,250 contributions

Another installment of: Home of The Screwed! This one at a local level.

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In today’s Buffalo News is a story about Erie County Legislator Timothy Kennedy who while lobbying for Motorola, accepted campaign contributions toting up to $1,250.

State Board of Elections records indicate Kennedy, a Buffalo Democrat, received a $1,000 donation from Motorola Inc. last year and another $250 from its local dealer after he launched a loud campaign against a technology competing with Motorola’s.

Kennedy believes it isn’t a conflint of interest because he accepted money more than 5 months after:

“The fact that individuals gave to me more than five months after I began shouldn’t raise any eyebrows. It’s not a story,” he said. “Those who gave to me believed in what I was doing.”

Um, does anyone know how to spell KICKBACK???

We all know that New York State is no stranger to the aged-old concept of you do for me, I do for you, but for a local politician to flat out deny any impropriety to the News is 110% arrogant, IMO.

Asked if had considered not accepting the contributions, Kennedy said only that he had been consistent in his arguments and anyone is free to give to his campaign.

“I work in the best interest of taxpayers,” he said. “If I had taken contributions prior to this or had changed my tune, then I believe this would be a conversation worth having.”

Only a true politician will leave his treasure chest wide open for anyone to toss their contributions in and then look the other way when such money is put into question. That’s not what’s in the best interest of the people he represents… it’s putting his election cycle first, plain & simple.

You’re only as good as not getting caught with your hands in the cookie jar. :(

Channel 2 …. on who’s side?

This is a serious question that has to be asked. I was at a community meeting tonight in South Buffalo. There were about 80 people attending including mostly block club leaders whom were prepared to address their concerns with Mayor Brown. A camera crew from Channel 2 showed up. Sounds like it would make a great “community involvement” story for the 10 & 11 O’clock news right?

Not a chance… (pause to roll my eyes). They remained outside for the Mayor to arrive, asked their question and left while the Councilman, Legislator, Chief of A District Police and many others representing the City of Buffalo also attended. To put it mildly, Channel 2 news never entered the meeting room where block club leaders were awaiting the Mayor so they can ask questions, express their concerns, voice their frustrations, etc.

I have often expressed distaste of Channel 2 news in the past, but today’s ignoring of neighborhood interest was the limit. Now I really know, they are NOT on the side of which they announce to the public that they are. :(

Betcha they’ll air a “shocking video” not from our area as a “news extra” at some point tonight though. (pause to roll my eyes again).

Buffalo Police Issue Safety Alert

A serious warning from Channel 2 news:

Buffalo Police Commissioner H. McCarthy Gipson has issued an alert tonight for anyone traveling through Buffalo and Western New York.

Gipson says his department recieved credible information about a possible gang initiation on Wednesday evening. Gipson says the gang members may drive around the community and hit drivers from behind. If this happens to you, police ask that you stay in your vehicle, drive to a well lit area and call 911. Gipson suggests you ask for a uniformed police officer when calling. If you do not have a cell phone, you are asked to drive to a nearby police station.

Gipson says he has informed other police agencies about this warning and will have the Buffalo Police task force on patrol Wednesday evening.

More toll hikes! WTF?

When is the madness going to end? :( I think my picture says it all…

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Western New Yorkers speak up about thruway toll hikes

GRAND ISLAND, N.Y. (WIVB) - Western New Yorkers finally got their chance to speak up about planned toll hikes along the thruway.

News 4’s Melissa Holmes has more from the south Grand Island tolls.

The price of tolls, like the ones at the Grand Island Bridge, are a huge subject of debate these days.

Supporters and opponents of the toll rate hikes came face to face Tuesday night in downtown Buffalo.

Buffalo developer Carl Paladino said, “They’re using money that is sent to operate upstate New York Thruway down to New York City. That’s wrong.”

Western New Yorkers didn’t hold back during Tuesday night’s public hearing at the Buffalo Public Library.

Some drivers are furious over the Thruway Authority’s plan to raise tolls another five percent each year over the next two years.

Some local lawmakers say the authority is not using enough federal money given to the state for road maintenance. Most of that money stays with the State Department of Transportation.

At the same time, some drivers say they are willing to pay a little more if it means roads will continue to be maintained.

Ron Klinczar said, “For the reason of continued safety, for me as a motorist and everybody out on the highway, I support the toll increase.”

New York State Thruway Authority Executive Director Michael Fleischer said, “We have been trying to develop a plan that’s fair, to provide a safe transportation facility.”

We want to know what you think about the rising toll prices. Leave your comments below the story.

Tolls at the Grand Island Bridge are now a dollar, and Thruway Authority leaders say these will not go up.

They also say they are looking into the idea of creating discount programs, especially for commercial truck drivers.

Story by Melissa Holmes, WIVB.

Public streets corners are not private

I read on the Main Page of WNYmedia a story about how San Francisco thinks they know Buffalo well enough to say “street cams” are hindering rather than helping.

Hog Wash!

Friday, March 21, 2008

(03-20) 13:40 PDT San Francisco - —

A new UC Berkeley study of San Francisco’s 68 security cameras appears to indicate what many city officials have long suspected: The controversial devices perched at the city’s roughest street corners don’t have much of an effect on violent crime.

The researchers examined 59,706 crimes occurring within 1,000 feet of the cameras between Jan. 1, 2005 and Jan. 28, 2008. While homicides within 250 feet of the cameras were down, they spiked in the areas 250 to 500 feet from the cameras - indicating people just moved down the street to kill each other.

Other violent crimes had no change. The only cameras’ only positive effect appears to be the 22 percent drop in property crime within 100 feet of the cameras, though people broke into cars parked near the cameras at the same rate as they did before the cameras were installed, according to the study released today.

The cameras have been a point of contention in recent months between Mayor Gavin Newsom, who wants 25 more installed, and several members of the Board of Supervisors and Police Commission who say they’re not doing any good and are an invasion of privacy.

Pushing drugs on a street corner is not an invasion of privacy, nor is waiting for a bus when the cams are rolling. Everyone I talk to in my neighborhood are welcoming of the six cams being set up on corners that are known “troubled spots” in the community. The City of Buffalo Surveillance Cameras are for the safety of the general public, no matter what a San Fran study says about Buffalo :(

It’s only “Big Brother” if you’re doing something wrong!

25 years after, “The Natural” is still a great movie

Everytime I watch the Natural, I feel like I’m seeing it for the first time. This is my most fave part!

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There’s a great write up in the Buffalo News

Film Festival celebrates 25 years since ‘The Natural’ was filmed in Buffalo

The squealers weren’t there every minute. It did sometimes seem that way, though. They’d stand outside War Memorial Stadium waiting for a glimpse of Robert Redford coming from his dressing room – or a glimpse of a Redford walk from one place to another that would afford them a clear sightline.

And when they got one – or even better, enough physical proximity to ask for an autograph – they’d sometimes jump up and down, squeal at each other at top volume and yell, “He saw me! He saw me!”

It was a major lesson about celebrity. Somehow, it makes those who behold it feel more real. All fans aren’t there just to see. Many are there to be seen by their chosen gods and goddesses. It affirms their existence as other things just don’t seem to.

That’s one reason why at least half of Western New York seemed to fall in love with Redford and the movie company of “The Natural” when director Barry Levinson and producer Mark Johnson brought them here to make the film 25 summers ago.

Not surprisingly, the second Buffalo Niagara Film Festival is using a celebration of the filming’s silver anniversary here to be the centerpiece of its vastly expanded second year.

The festival this year hopes to be 10 times the size of the first one. It begins with an inaugural gala dinner celebrating and showing “The Natural” at 5:30 p.m. Monday in the Adam’s Mark Hotel. (Tickets are available at the Riviera Theatre and the Market Arcade Film and Arts Centre.)

“It will be the only time we could ever do this here for this magic 25 number,” said festival founder Bill Cowell. “Once it’s gone, it’s gone. It’ll never happen again and we Western New Yorkers should be proud that that movie was here and touched so many of us.”

To mark the event, at least one member of the film’s still-astounding cast – the great 77-year-old character actor Robert Prosky, who

played the wicked scheming corrupt team owner – is coming to the festival to be part of it. Also coming are recording artist Wanda Jackson, writer/director Tony Pastor Jr. and the ancient splatter film auteur Herschel Gordon Lewis.

The filming of Levinson’s adaptation of Bernard Malamud’s novel “The Natural” was a singular event in this city’s history. Not to put too fine a point on it, the town went a little nuts over it. And well they should have. It remains the best film ever made in Buffalo and not only because it’s one of the very few to be filmed almost in its entirety here (so was James Caan’s “Hide in Plain Sight”).

“The Natural” opened to a middling-to-warm critical and audience reception but it has developed an extraordinary second life as a classic baseball film.

Try to name another film that is recognized as a major American classic by both the testosterone- fueled Spike TV network and the estrogen- fueled WE network. You won’t find one.

For all the literary zealots who wept bitter tears over the film’s drastic transformation of Malamud’s ending to a happy Hollywood slomo game of blond-haired catch in the sunlight, Malamud himself seemed to be troubled by it considerably less.

According to Philip Davis’ “Bernard Malamud: A Writer’s Life,” Malamud “was flattered by the idea of Redford doing it, miffed that he was never consulted or contacted by the director Barry Levinson, but finally quite enjoyed the film – as long as he could sit there in the dark, he said. With its optimistic ending, it was not HIS book, he emphasized, but he hoped they would turn it into a [Broadway] musical before long.” Yes, a musical.

What still remains almost unfathomable about “The Natural” now is the magnificent cast that arrived here to make it. Even from an era when high-level casts of character actors weren’t all that freakish, an assemblage as canny as the cast of “The Natural” seems like one of those minor casting miracles that happens infrequently.

In Buffalo 25 years ago for “The Natural” – along with Prosky, Redford and Levinson – were:

Kim Basinger: Sex symbol and future Oscar winner on the rise.

Robert Duvall: Brilliant actor and future Oscar winner and accomplished filmmaker (“The Apostle”).

Glenn Close: One of the great living film actresses with – along with almost everyone else in the movie – little chance to prove it in the film.

Wilford Brimley: Terrific walruslike character actor, embodiment of screen integrity and (therefore) future TV commercial pitchman.

Barbara Hershey: Not yet treasured by filmmaking intelligentsia the way she would be after Woody Allen cast her in the center of “Hannah and Her Sisters.”

Richard Farnsworth: Extraordinary former stuntman and brilliant character actor.

Darren McGavin: Former “Mike Hammer” and “Kolchak” on TV and embodiment of verbal energy.

Joe Don Baker: Former “Eischeid” on TV and star of Phil Karlson’s B-classic “Walking Tall.”

Michael Madsen: Brother of actress Virginia and future prancing torturer in Quentin Tarantino’s first movie “Reservoir Dogs,” who has publicly admitted that one affair of his during the making of “The Natural” cost him a marriage partner.

Nor were the actors alone as the amazing talent in “The Natural.” The film’s cinematographer, Caleb Deschanel, is one of the greats in his trade – as well as the father of actresses Emily and Zooey Deschanel.

In a recent phone interview with Prosky from his home in Washington, he says “There was quite a number of good character men in the cast – Wilford Brimley, myself, quite a few others. We all had a sort of round-table breakfast every morning at the Hilton. And, as older actors do, we told various war stories about film and stage experiences.”

McGavin – with whom Prosky shared scenes – was memorable to Prosky. “He came into the movie late. I got to know him fairly well a bit later. He was really into computers then. That was certainly at the beginning of the computer craze. He had this – quote – ‘portable’ that he showed me. It must have weighed 30 pounds. We talked a lot about that and I sort of got involved with it myself. Twenty years later, I was at a CompUSA in L.A. where I was doing a film at the time. That was the next time we met – at a computer store.

“He was certainly more of a name than I was but the billing had already been set in the contracts when he came to the movie. So he decided not to have any billing. What happened was he got more attention than anybody else.”

Of Redford, Prosky echoes a lot of actors saying, “At that time he was a huge star – and still is. It comes down to this – in spite of the movie paraphernalia that’s surrounding you and all the power and the money and everything else, it comes down to looking the other actor in the eye and playing the scene. And he did that very well.

“We enjoyed each other. In fact, he came to see me on Broadway in ‘Glengarry Glen Ross.’ Usually an actor comes back to the dressing room to talk to another actor but he couldn’t do that because it was about a half a block walk to our dressing room. And he couldn’t do that in the middle of Broadway [without being mobbed]. He sent me a nice note about it.”

Part of the community

In my interview at the end of Redford’s stint filming in Buffalo, he lamented his inability to enjoy being in Buffalo because of his celebrity. While other actors could often go out to dinner or to the movies in Buffalo, the extreme recognition Redford met with in the world – squealers were seldom absent for very long – confined him to the set and his rental house on the lakeshore.

In contrast, Duvall, in a later interview, freely confessed to falling in love with Ming Teh, in Fort Erie, “a world-class Chinese restaurant.”

Because most cast members were contracted for the whole shoot and not just their scenes, they had a lot of time to kill in Buffalo. Duvall and Close frequently played racquetball at the Buffalo Hilton (now the Adam’s Mark).

Says Prosky, he and his wife “traveled around a great deal. I can’t tell you how many times we went to Niagara Falls. And Duvall had a home they had rented for him in Canada. He had a party or two there. Also we went to … I think they called it the ‘Grand Canyon of the East’ [Letchworth State Park].”

A unique confluence of cooperation greeted the filming of “The Natural” in Buffalo, as if the community itself felt ownership of the film.

Those involved most intimately were, quite prominently, local actors, musicians, athletes and filmmakers.

As important was the influence and cooperation of Buffalo Bisons owner Robert Rich Jr., still pursuing at the time a possible major league baseball future for Buffalo – not to mention Buffalo media, who reported it all to a fare-thee-well.

It’s still a little silly to see the Ellicott Square Building doubling, unconvincingly, for a hotel in the final film – and ivy-covered All-High stadium trying to pass for Wrigley Field. But it’s impossible not to be just a little touched by the tenderness of seeing the original Parkside Candy on Main Street in the film – not to mention the authenticity of South Dayton in some of the early rural scenes.

Other films have been filmed in part here, from Norman Jewison’s “Best Friends” to Tamara Jenkins’ recent “The Savages.”

None has involved the community a fraction as much as “The Natural.”

What other 25th anniversary celebration could a fledgling Buffalo Niagara Film Festival possibly prefer?

Buffalo to Niagara Falls: $2 tolls & lunch at Honey’s

It was a dreary day. Rainy, foggy… A day to go out for some great wings at a place called Honey’s. It’s a bar with restaurant-type qualities to take the young ones to. They have a reasonably priced menu and the staff was very friendly. Specialty wing sauce is available for purchase. The raspberry BBQ is highly recommended.

Part two of my post is the toll we’re forced to pay for enjoying our family day in Western New York. A picture’s worth 1,000 words

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