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City of Oswego, Port Authority officials take construction feud to court

OSWEGO N.Y. —  Construction of a storage facility at the port, meant for the transport of pot-ash or salt, is now at a standstill after city officials took the Port Authority to court. 

“Their whole attitude should have been one of picking up the phone and talking to us,” the Executive Director of the Port Authority, William Scriber said. 

Now, Port Authority officials are trying to prove that the structure will help the city if completed. 

“With this project, we’re putting a lot of money into this local economy,” Scriber said. 

Scriber explained that the port runs as its own business, creating jobs, and opening opportunities for the local economy without the help of tax money. But Mayor Barlow said they are going about the project in the wrong way – upset that the structure will block the view of the iconic Oswego lighthouse coming into the city. 

“What would really be the win is for the port to build what they originally proposed, that being the 55 foot dome..What you can do is completely skirt the entire review process,” Mayor Billy Barlow said. 

What stands now is a roughly  68-70 foot tall square structure, something city officials said they never agreed on. But Scriber said the height difference won’t change that view of the lighthouse from the Marina. 

Photo of the structure as it stands now from First West St. in Oswego, NY. Photo by reporter Melanie Higgins.

“If you’re not changing the holding capacity, or position…It’s not a major change…It’s still going to block that view, which by the way, isn’t a historical registered view,” Scriber said. 

But Fort Ontario on the other hand is a historical view of the lighthouse, and Scriber said that was the view that they worked through with the SHPO review – where the State Historic Preservation Office reviewed and eventually approved the initial proposal of the 55 foot dome.  

“The view of the Fort is not in the least obstructed by the building,” Scriber added. 
City residents are split, some feeling as though the structure isn’t a big deal, and others agreeing with the Mayor. Lee Chetney is a city resident who said the view of the lighthouse is going to be, ”forever changed.” 

“You used to be able to come into the city…and ‘wow, I made it to Oswego, and look at how beautiful it is’ now they put that thing up and I hope they take it down because it’s just terrible,” city resident Lee Chetney said.

National emergency declared in child and teen mental health – what this means for college students

Photo by MGN.

In early October, a group of health professionals and psychiatric experts around the nation gathered enough data to declare a national emergency in child and adolescent mental health. 

This comes nearly two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, and for young adults specifically in higher education, their mental health is also taking a toll. 

“With the environment constantly changing, it’s kind of hard to reach stability in mental health,” Nicole Hillyard, a student at University at Buffalo said about her own struggles this year. 

This includes SUNY Oswego students who have been feeling the effects of keeping up with mandates as the school resumes in-person activities. 
“We’re so used to just having all these online classes, and not doing as much, and now we’re doing so much more,” Seth Nesbitt, a SUNY Oswego student said in regards to coming back in person. “I feel like a lot of my peers and I are having a hard time with the readjustments.”

“I just needed to take this semester off to help fix my mental health” 

KEAUNDREA HANDFORD

A study called Healthy Minds Network found that last fall, college students in particular reported peak levels of depression and anxiety. 

The study is led by four professors at different universities, and it details the rising trend over the last several  years of mental health concerns, especially depression and anxiety, among college students. 

Experts with the study reported that 47% of students screened positive for “clinically significant symptoms of depression, and/or anxiety,” which is the highest percentage since the trials began in 2007. 

This data comes from the Healthy Minds Network website – it shows the percentage of students who have screened positive for depression and anxiety from 2007 to 2021. Graph created by reporter Melanie Higgins.

“I have terrible anxiety attacks, like constantly, so I kinda knew that if I lived alone, especially two hours away, I would have to come home every day, and I knew that wouldn’t have worked,” Keaundrea Handford, a student at SUNY Brockport said about why she took this semester off. “I just needed to take this semester off to help fix my mental health.” 

The Healthy Minds Network also studied that feeling of isolation, something Handford said she dreaded about going back to school.

In the study, they found that about 66% of students indicated feeling isolated from others sometimes or often, which experts said is a key risk factor in mental health.

At Wayne Behavioral Health, a mental health center located in Wayne County, representatives said most facilities no longer have enough staff to cover the rise in mental health concerns. However, the introduction of telehealth services during the pandemic helped them bring a new resource to patients in need. 

“Because of the fact that a lot of insurance companies now kind of across the board are  allowing telehealth, which is either by telephone or video conference,” Suzanne Catholdi, the communications liaison for Wayne Behavioral Health said. “A lot of people who weren’t seen before now have more accessibility.” 

Mental health facilities all over the country have been struggling to keep up with the rise of these mental health concerns, and many have also been utilizing telehealth services as a result. 

Catholdi said younger people and college students being seen at Wayne Behavioral are taking advantage of the virtual services now offered if they aren’t already using their on-campus college therapists. 

However wait times across the board for many mental health facilities are becoming problematic for those in need. For Strong Hospital in Rochester, they said over the summer that wait times for those seeking therapy reached over one year. 

“Our mental health therapists, they need to be able to be available and be on top of the needs, and we need to be supportive of our medical staff as well,” Catholdi said about facilities falling behind.

“They lost that, they lost those contacts, they lost that structure, a lot of kids were at home alone…”

SUZANNE CATHOLDI


She emphasized that staff all around are “suffering,” so It’s important to keep working through the pandemic and keep schools open as a resource for those struggling. 

“There were a lot of kids who were struggling already, that really needed that contact in the school with the teachers and professors,” Catholdi said while talking about the effects the shutdowns had on students. 

“When there’s nothing for people to do, and no support in place, and a big question mark day-to-day about what they’re doing,” Catholdi added. “It was a big disaster waiting to happen.” 

She said that students and adults “lost that structure,” and it led to a huge uptick in mental health concerns. Now therapy has become a big point of discussion. 

“I did start therapy, and it actually helped quite a lot,” Nesbitt said. 

But Nesbitt also said that despite these concerns being more publicly talked about, some students aren’t opening up enough. 

“I would recommend that help to anyone,” Nesbitt explained, “Those who may be going through something, but even if you’re just alive, it’s good to just have that outlet.” 
As things continue to open up, and people adjust to a normal life after two years shut down, those mental health concerns continue to be analyzed. The Healthy Minds Study is still in the process of gathering data during this time, and more colleges are being enrolled to help diversify the results.

WTOP-10 Press Release

WTOP-10 News is pleased to announce the rebranding of our digital content effective immediately. Our organization has previously focused our social media efforts on promoting our station’s on-air broadcasts and original productions. We have made the decision to redirect our social media strategy to prioritize providing SUNY Oswego students, Oswego residents, and alumni with relevant and breaking news.

Master’s project examines students’ relationships with technology

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Complicated relationship — The master’s in strategic communication “Integrated Media Projects” course analyzed data on students’ relationships with technology and developed this video summarizing some results.

A group of master’s in strategic communication students, working a large-scale student survey from 2019, found students have a complicated relationship with technology and their smartphones.  

The Student Survey on Attitudes Toward Technology (SSATT) is conducted annually to collect information from freshmen and seniors about their relationship to the technologies they use as students and young adults. The data analysis and media design exercise is carried out by students in the course “Integrated Media Projects” course, under the supervision of faculty advisor Ulises Mejias of the communication studies department, and with help of the college’s Office of Institutional Research and Assessment.

While that survey of 367 students preceded this semester’s move to remote learning, it nonetheless showed the internet and smartphones’ enormous impact on their lives.

Among the findings on how students live and learn with technology:

  • 58 percent agree that the internet has had a positive effect on their lives
  • 77 percent said they check their smartphones as soon as they wake up, although they admitted this habit can provide added stress and anxiety
  • 71 percent agreed that they are distracted by their personal devices in class, while freshman are significantly more likely to lose focus in class/work by checking their cell phones than seniors
  • Half of the students said they are distracted by their devices during face-to-face communication
  • Two-thirds of the participants strongly agreed or agreed that they were notified by important issues through social media
  • 68 percent of students said they look up more information on social issues discovered via social media
  • 60 percent of students reported they fact-check or cross-check news stories
  • 45 percent said they rely on social media as their only source of news
  • 71 percent said they text others in class or when doing work outside of class

Some 2019 figures show the importance of access to reliable internet, even before this semester’s shift to learning online:

  • 85.8 percent of participants said they strongly agreed or agreed they would not be able to maintain coursework without the internet
  • 77.7 percent either strongly agreed or agreed that not having access to high-speed internet would impact their academic performance
  • Seniors relied on high speed internet access significantly more than freshman

Building awareness

Strategic communication major Fabio Machado said the findings should prove helpful for SUNY Oswego students to better understand their relationship with technology, as well as for anybody interested in how technology and academics can better connect.

“I think we can improve the relationship, and learn how to take what is positive from it and try to maybe work on the negatives,” said Machado, who was the social media analyst for the project. “Maybe we can look at how we can make our students more aware about how they’re using technology and what is beneficial with them, what is positive about your interactions and what is not. What you can control better.”

Fellow strategic communication major Nick Derbabian noted that data was especially relevant because it utilized attitudes from fellow students. Since it was the first survey of its type, he added, the group was working with a blank slate in finding students’ positive and negative relationships with technology.

“I think a big finding that we saw was how it was contradicting sometimes. They found their phone and having access to the internet were sometimes distracting to them,” said Derbabian, the project support officer. “But they also said: ‘We absolutely need computers and the internet to get our coursework done.’”

“They acknowledge how distracting it can be in classes or how when they wake up it was the first thing they check,” Machado said.

The team was surprised to learn two out of every three students relied on social media for news to such a high extent, but found it encouraging that many sought out other sources.

In addition to Machado and Derbabian, the master’s students in the team included Kurt Albrecht, data analyst; Curtis Cady, video designer and producer; Brenna Maclsaac, website and tap course designer; and Pedro Boller, website designer and SEO analyst. 

For more information on the findings, project and process, visit the team’s multimedia website.

This article was originally featured at: https://www.oswego.edu/news/story/masters-project-examines-students-relationships-technology via the SUNY Oswego Office of Communications and Marketing.

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Lakers Look to End Losing Streak

The Oswego women’s softball team will be hosting the Geneseo Knights this Saturday in a doubleheader.  The Lakers enter the game on a two game losing streak but look to bounce back and get over the .500 mark in conference play.  Geneseo is heading into this matchup with a 7 game win streak on the line including 3 shutouts during that stretch. The Lakers have not struggled putting runs on the board. In their last contest against Oneonta, they lost with 9 runners crossing the plate.  Sophomore outfielder Rebecca Vilchez had two hits, two RBIs and one run scored in that game so she will be a big factor in the Lakers success. First pitch is set for 12 pm with the second game following immediately after.

Oswego Gets Back on Track

The Oswego men’s baseball team defeated the Rochester Yellowjackets yesterday in dramatic fashion. The Lakers were trailing heading into the bottom of the eighth inning, but junior infielder Brandon Nicholson hit a double to left that drove in two runs and tied the game at seven. The hitting was contagious as later in that inning three consecutive Lakers put the ball in play, extending their lead by four. That lead was more than enough for the Lakers to pick up the win as they move to 17-6 on the season. Oswego plays host to conference opponent Brockport in a three game series that begins Friday afternoon. First pitch is scheduled for noon.

 

Ponto Reaches Milestone

Oswego senior goalie Angela Ponto recorded her 500th career save in a dominant 11-4 victory on the road against the Potsdam Bears. The Bears put the first goal on the board but the Lakers went on a quick 5 goal run and never looked back. The Lakers added 6 more before Potsdam could even score another goal, making it an 11-0 run until Potsdam scored the final 3 goals of the game.  Ponto got her 500th save, and she finished the game at career save number 503, putting her 115 saves past the previous saves record holder. Ponto will keep adding to that lead in the Lakers’ next contest on Saturday when they travel to Oneonta. Game time is set for 1 pm.

Oswego Completes the Sweep

By Jake Vanderbroek

The Oswego State men’s baseball team defeated New Paltz last Saturday by a score of 6-4. Brian Nolan tossed six scoreless innings with four strikeouts. Matt Bowman went an inning and a third to pick up his second save of the season. At the dish, Eli Holton went 2-for-3 including a triple in the first inning that drove in two. The Lakers return to the diamond on Wednesday as they host St. Lawrence. First pitch is scheduled for 4 pm.

Lakers Continue Their Hot Start

By Amanda Zumpano

The Oswego State men’s lacrosse team beat Utica 15-7 today for their best start since 2013. With the victory, the Lakers improve their record to six and one. Bobby Emerson scored the team high with four goals and Caleb Alford, Kyle Bacon and Jarrod Wilkom each scored two. Oswego’s defense did not go unnoticed forcing sixteen turnovers. The Pioneers were only able to force four. Oswego will play their next game on Saturday at three when they play their first SUNYAC game against Brockport.

Schof Shines as Oswego Wins

By Jake Vanderbroek

The Oswego State men’s lacrosse team defeated Keuka by a score of 17-6 over the weekend. Tim Schof led the team in scoring with four goals. Kyle Bacon recorded a hat-trick and goalie Kevin O’Donnell played the first half allowing three goals and making six saves. The Lakers improve to 5-1 on the season. They will be back in action on Wednesday as they host Utica at Laker Turf Stadium. Game time is at 4 pm.

Lakers Dominate Against Utica

The Oswego State women’s lacrosse team cruised to a 19-7 victory over the Utica Pioneers on Saturday. With the victory, the Lakers move to 4-2 overall while the Pioneers fall to 4-3.

Utica found the back of the net first but the momentum quickly changed as Oswego scored the remaining twelve goals of the first half. The Lakers added seven more in the final thirty minutes of the contest to seal the win. Gemma O’Kane and Toni Laneve each scored four goals while the nation’s leader in assists, Theresa Shattuck, contributed six helpers. She is now the team’s leader with 40 points (12 goals, 28 assists).

Goalie Angela Ponto recorded 12 saves while allowing three goals. Elianna Sanchez came in for the final seven minutes of the game, giving up four goals.

The Lakers will be back in action at Laker Turf Stadium next Saturday at 12 pm as they open up SUNYAC play against Brockport.

Lakers Roll Past Keuka

The Oswego State men’s lacrosse team defeated the Keuka College Wolves 17-6 on Saturday. With the victory, the Lakers move to 5-1 overall while the Wolves drop to 3-2.

Oswego got off to a strong start in the first half, scoring six goals apiece during the first and second quarters. At halftime, they held a 12-2 lead and a large 31-9 shot advantage. Tim Schof led the Lakers with four goals while Kyle Bacon scored three of his own. Keuka scored three straight goals in the third in what possibly looked like a run but Caleb Alford’s goal ended any momentum the Wolves had.

Oswego’s Kevin O’Donnell stopped six shots in the first half before giving way to Brody Carter and Harrison Levy. Carter and Levy made a combined seven saves.

The Lakers’ next game is scheduled for this Wednesday at 4:00 when they take on Utica College at home. This will also be the team’s St. Baldrick’s Foundation community service event.

Upcoming Lacrosse Action This Weekend

By Eoin Gallagher

The Oswego State men’s and women’s lacrosse teams will be in action this coming weekend as the men play host to Keuka College and the women host Utica College. The men, coming off an impressive 12-7 win over Alfred on Tuesday look to keep up the terrific play while the women’s team looks to rebound after a tough loss last Saturday to #9 ranked York College. The men’s game will be at 1pm with the women set to face off at 4pm. If you can’t make it to Laker Turf Stadium, you can catch both games right here on WTOP-10.

Emerson and Connors Lead Lakers

By Amanda Zumpano

The Lakers found themselves in six extra man opportunities against Alfred on Tuesday utilizing three of them to go on and win 11-7. Bobby Emerson and Robbie Connors had six goals apiece while Kevin O’Donnell had six saves. Tim Schof and Tyler Nason each had three assists. Teddy Phillips helped the Lakers by forcing Alfred to turn the ball over four times. Oswego will play again on Saturday at one when they host Keuka.

 

Campus Safety

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Oswego, NY – It’s now been one month since the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland Florida that took the lives of 17 students and faculty, and injured 17 others. The ensuing debate over gun control has spread across the country, including to SUNY Oswego.

Students were asked if the recent school shooting made them question their own safety here at Oswego.The general consensus among students on campus were that students felt safe. However, students were also unsure of their safety because “anything could happen.” One student stated “I’m a student and I want to be able to walk around without having to be concerned about my own life.” Another student added, “I know in Florida there is less gun control than in New York State, so I kinda find it safer in New York.”

Nationally, this tragedy has sparked a debate as to what is the best option to stopping mass school shootings. President Donald Trump has suggested the idea of having trained-armed teachers in schools, an idea SUNY Oswego Police Chief John Rossi disagrees with. Chief John Rossi claims that in these situations usually the perpetrator is depressed or disenfranchised. He says that there are typically warning signs to these tragedies, and detection of these signs, and prevention are key to stopping mass school shootings. He also adds that “Oswego is a very very safe campus. Our crime statistics do prove that, our officers are extremely dedicated to making sure this community is very safe for our students.”

Oswego Defeats Nationally Ranked Southern Maine

By Jake Vanderbroek

The Oswego State baseball team defeated number 15 Southern Maine in a slugfest by a score of 15-14 on Saturday. Brandon Nicholson led the Lakers with four hits including a double in the fifth that plated two. Mike Delicarri, John Barnes and Robert Donnelly each finished with three hits apiece. Matt Bowman pitched the ninth inning to pick up his second win of the season. Oswego will travel to Ithaca tomorrow to take on the Bombers. First pitch is scheduled for 3 pm.

Lakers Will Look to Move Over .500

By Eoin Gallagher

After a disappointing loss at Ithaca, the Oswego State men’s lacrosse team will look to bounce back when they hit the road to face the Morrisville Mustangs. The Lakers are 1-1 on the season. Sophomore Kyle Bacon leads the team offensively with 6 points, while fellow attackman Bobby Emerson is off to a good start as well, posting 4 goals in two games. Freshman goalie Kevin O’Donnell has recorded 32 saves on 54 shots on goal in two games – including a 21 save performance against Ithaca – the most by any Laker goalie in the past five seasons.

Morrisville has struggled early on this year going 0-3 with losses against Geneseo and Oneonta, two teams Oswego will meet later when SUNYAC play picks up.

The game is scheduled for a noon start on Saturday.

Fulton Community Center enters Kraft Hockeyville contest

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FULTON, NY — The Kraft Hockeyville contest is back and the Fulton Community Center has entered its ice rink in the competition. The contest prize includes $150,000 in rink upgrades and the chance to host a nationally televised NHL preseason game.

Jeff Schremp, the president of the Fulton Youth Hockey Organization, says that it is a nationwide contest and explained how the community can get involved.

“You go on their website and you ask your community to write letters as to why you should get a grant worth a hundred and fifty thousand dollars to make improvements your rink,” Schremp said.

According to Schremp, the organization is run by volunteers only. Anything that gets done at the rink is done by a non-paid employee. If they won, the organization would use the money towards updated locker rooms and a new zamboni. The total cost of both would potentially be between $85,000 and $170,000.

“Any money like that would make huge improvements to our facility,” Schremp said.

The Kraft Hockeyville contest will announce the top four finalists March 31. The winner of will be announced April 14. To find out more information on the contest, visit https://www.krafthockeyville.com.

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