Strawhatters looking to add musicians
Posted: April 10th, 2023 under Arts and Entertainment, Northern NY News.
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A free community news service for Peru, NY
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Posted: April 10th, 2023 under Arts and Entertainment, Northern NY News.
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Posted: April 10th, 2023 under Adirondack Region News, Northern NY News.
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Posted: April 9th, 2023 under Community Events, Northern NY News, Peru News.
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Valehaven resident President Price Brandt thanks Mia for the cards and donuts and for all she does to help people.

Mia’s mom Jessica Furnia, Assemblyman Jones, Mia and Assemblyman Jones’ daughter, Ella.
Peru Central first grader Mia Taylor receives NYS Assembly Citation
April 8, 2023, Peru – Assemblyman Billy Jones surprised Peru Central first grader Mia Taylor with a New York State Assembly Citation this morning as she gave handmade Easter cards to residents at Valehaven HFA Assisted Living. Mia is a seven-year-old diagnosed with a rare disorder at a young age that led her to numerous surgeries in Vermont and Manhattan. Many of her friends and family sent her cards when she was in the hospital, which inspired her to do the same.
Thus, Spread Love was born, what Mia calls her mission to brighten her community through acts of kindness. In 2022, she sent out over 1,300 birthday and holiday cards to the disabled community and nursing home residents, and over 721 so far in 2023. Mia and her mother, Jessica Furnia, have also led school supply drives and holiday meal drives to ensure everyone had a turkey at Thanksgiving and dinner on Christmas Eve. For Easter, Mia prepared baskets for 13 local children in need and distributed Easter cards and donuts from Rulfs Orchard to residents at Valehaven and Elderwood of Uhlein in Lake Placid.
Asked how often Mia works on her holiday and gift cards, her mom Jessica Furnia replied, “Every day!” Assemblyman Jones expressed his feelings by saying, “Thank you for spreading love every day. Love is what the world needs right now. Thank you! Happy Easter, Mia!”
In addition to presenting Mia with a Citation, Jones got her some items to make more cards to send around the North Country. If you are interested in learning more about Mia’s mission, please visit her Facebook page at:https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100089183097948
Posted: April 8th, 2023 under General News.
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Peru, April 8, 2023 – One of the best things about special holidays is how families and often neighbors enjoy the holiday together. This morning several Quaker Springs families organized an orchard Easter Egg Hunt for the third consecutive year. These are only a few of the families with children who call Quaker Spring in Peru, NY home.
Posted: April 8th, 2023 under Community Events, Peru News, Peru resident news/accomplishments.
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Posted: April 7th, 2023 under General News, Peru News, Town Board News.
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Say current lines by court-appointed special master drawn with limited public input time
Posted: April 7th, 2023 under Congressional News, Peru/Regional History, Political News, State Government News, State Legislator News.
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Posted: April 7th, 2023 under Education News, Northern NY News, Political News.
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Posted: April 7th, 2023 under Adirondack Region News, Environmental News, Lake Champlain News, Northern NY News, State Government News.
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Posted: April 7th, 2023 under Arts and Entertainment, Statewide News, Upstate New York.
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Posted: April 7th, 2023 under Adirondack Region News, Law Enforcement News, Northern NY News, Peru/Regional History, State Government News.
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I am writing to inform you that Peru Central School will be conducting a mandatory lockdown drill today at 10:00 AM. As a part of the drill, the campus will be closed and all students and staff will be required to follow the lockdown procedures. The drill will provide our staff with the opportunity to train our students in the event of an actual emergency.
Please be assured that this is only a drill and there is no real emergency. However, we take the safety of our students and staff very seriously and we believe that these drills are essential to help us prepare for any potential emergency situation.
During the drill, access to the school buildings will be restricted, and we kindly ask that parents do not come to the school during this time. We will inform you when the drill is completed and normal activities have resumed.
Please discuss with your children about the importance of following lockdown procedures and encourage them to take the drill seriously. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the lockdown drill, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Thank you for your cooperation and support.
Sincerely,
Scott Storms
Peru Superintendent
Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Education News, Northern NY News, Peru News.
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Posted: April 6th, 2023 under General News.
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Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Heathcare News, Northern NY News, Peru/Regional History, Upstate New York.
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Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Adirondack Region News, Peru/Regional History, Statewide News.
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Out of 2,657 entries from 154 newspapers across the state, Newton took home first prize in her division for Best Feature Story and Best News or Feature Series.
Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Northern NY News.
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“Group homes are supposed to offer people with developmental disabilities safe places to live as independently as possible,” DiNapoli said. “Our audit found the Office for People With Developmental Disabilities did not issue timely, consistent guidance to the vast majority of their certified group homes. Inconsistent emergency management coordination and oversight put residents, families and staff in harm’s way. I urge OPWDD to implement our recommendations before the next public health emergency.”
DiNapoli’s audit found OPWDD did not provide consistent guidance to some 6,929 group homes across the state during the first wave of the deadly pandemic, though the audit did not establish a causal relationship between OPWDD’s actions and COVID cases. As explained by the department, certified facilities run by nonprofits (6,921), as opposed to those that are state-run (eight), are required to have their own emergency policies and procedures in place, even though they are home to 99% of the state’s 34,117 group home residents. In September 2020 and November 2021, OPWDD developed additional guidance, which covered COVID-19 emergency planning and response, but restricted their distribution to the eight state-run facilities, excluding the others.
While OPWDD’s emergency management and overarching emergency planning documents considered pandemics as a risk even before the COVID-19 pandemic, OPWDD did not take steps to ensure all group homes followed suit. The audit found that while many group homes had emergency response plans, they did not account for pandemics or emerging infectious diseases, while others referred staff to follow OPWDD’s guidance. This lack of effective emergency response plans at the onset of the pandemic led to difficulties in securing personal protective equipment (PPE), dealing with staff shortages and confusion and delays over how to isolate or quarantine individuals during the worst waves of COVID-19.
The audit noted OPWDD’s stockpile of PPE was exhausted early in the pandemic, and group homes had trouble getting masks and gowns on their own due to overwhelming demand. Masks were crucial to stopping the spread of COVID-19 and especially important in group homes settings, where clients often have multiple medical issues and staff typically cannot socially distance when helping individuals with bathing, dressing or eating. Staff at three of 16 group homes visited said they had to resort to reusing face masks and gowns at early stages of the pandemic.
The pandemic further led to staffing shortages at many group homes. To maintain minimum staffing levels, some frontline employees had to work across multiple group homes or work longer than normal shifts, risking increased physical and emotional fatigue, mental distress, and contracting COVID-19. Between March 2020 and November 2021, 81 group homes were closed or temporarily closed due to staffing shortages.
OPWDD recertifies group homes every three years, but according to the audit, their oversight needs improvement. While review of emergency response plans are part of the recertification process, OPWDD inspectors did not review plans for infection control practices or public health emergency response.
In May of 2020, OPWDD began COVID-19 surveys of group homes to better assess their response to the pandemic, but the audit found investigators only visited 22% of homes. Further, surveys often lacked meaningful observations, and staff at certified group homes were not required to take refresher trainings on infection controls.
DiNapoli’s audit recommends OPWDD:
While OPWDD expressed concern with the audit’s methodology, it agreed with many of the recommendations.
Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Heathcare News, State Government News.
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Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Adirondack Region News, Environmental News, State Government News.
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Season opener Saturday, April 29, presented by Liquor & Wine Warehouse
Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Business News, Community Events, General News, Northern NY News, Regional NY-VT News, Things to do in & near Peru.
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To be held at Ausable Valley Central, 40 positions open
Posted: April 6th, 2023 under Arts and Entertainment, Education News, Northern NY News.
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Posted: April 6th, 2023 under State Government News, Statewide News.
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23 Maiden Lane and 388 Calkins Road applications on the agenda
TOWN OF PERU
Cory Barton
280.1-1-8
23 Maiden Lane
Steven Spash
291.-1-23.11
388 Calkins Rd
ANY FURTHER BUSINESS:
Posted: April 5th, 2023 under Peru News, Zoning Board News.
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Peru Highway Department’s staff are enjoying spring by repairing the lawns the plows damaged this past winter. Left to right on the ground, Tyler Jarvis, Adam Archer, Tom Rock. Andrew McLaughlin is the Gradall.
Posted: April 5th, 2023 under Highway Dept. News, Peru News.
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The Story of the Plattsburgh Memorial Chapel with Kate Chilton and Helen Nerska
April 18 – 6:45 pm
Lake Forest Senior Living Community, 8 Lake Forest Drive, Plattsburgh
The Plattsburgh Memorial Chapel is described by many as the most beautiful building on the Old Base. Former Base Chaplain Major George Mennen described it as “the most beautiful chapel of my military career.” The chapel holds a unique story of its own in the history of military posts at the time and in the Plattsburgh community. CCHA’s Helen Nerska and Chapel Trustee Kate Chilton will share this story. Doors open at 6:30 pm.
The program is free and open to the public.
Contact: Helen Nerska, Director
518-561-0340
Posted: April 5th, 2023 under City News, Community Events, Northern NY News, Peru/Regional History.
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Majority of graduates practice medicine in the region, helping to improve primary care access
PLATTSBURGH, NY (04/04/2023) – Six new physicians will begin a 3-year Family Medicine training program here in July. The University of Vermont Health Network – Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital (CVPH) Family Medicine Residency introduced its Class of 2026 during Match Day ceremony held at the hospital on March 17.
Match Day is known in the graduate medical community as the day on which the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) releases results to applicants seeking residency positions. Residency is a stage of medical training in which residents with medical degrees practice medicine under the supervision of an attending physician. Successful completion of a residency program requires obtaining a medical license and board certification.
Members of the CVPH Family Medicine Residency Class of 2026 are:
In welcoming the six new Residents to the CVPH program, Residency Program Director Marianna Worczak, MD, said, “We are thrilled to welcome a fantastic intern class of Residents, all of whom have a strong interest in rural primary care.”
The CVPH Family Residency received over 1,200 applications for the six spots in the Class of 2026 and conducted 88 interviews after reviewing each application. The residents and the program’s team rank their preferences and the NRMP creates the “match.”
The CVPH Family Medicine Residency was created in 2014 to improve access to primary care in the Champlain Valley. Since then, 14 graduates of the program have opted to stay in the region to practice medicine.
“Our success can be attributed to our fantastic community, dedicated faculty, strong CVPH hospital experiences, dedicated administration, and both CVPH and UVMHN Senior Leadership support,” Worczak added.
Partnering with the Larner College of Medicine at the University of Vermont Medical School and what was then Fletcher Allen Health Care (now the University of Vermont Medical Center), the Residency offers a three-year program that includes rotations in emergency medicine, OB/GYN, pediatrics, cardiology, surgery, orthopedics, geriatrics and community medicine. Family Medicine Residents see their patients in the CVPH Family Medicine Center at 159 Margaret Street and the Hudson Headwaters Champlain Family Medicine Center.
Posted: April 5th, 2023 under Adirondack Region News, Heathcare News, Northern NY News, Regional NY-VT News.
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