{ title: 'Eagle-bulletin. ([Fayetteville, N.Y.]) 1979-current, October 29, 1986, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075724/1986-10-29/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075724/1986-10-29/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075724/1986-10-29/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075724/1986-10-29/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Fayetteville Free Library
«33/i2il/89 •**CRiZl£ 3ENESEE ST FAYETTEVILLE 13066 •m Wednes m^SM» 29, 1986 8KjBn ^jC (iw <tbs (lBi ^l)ij at-Fwntvtiit. M.Y. 13066 No. 44 arty-five minutes into the earing, Fayetteville officials realized they were attempting to use the wrong method tojcontrol a problem caused by a few vil lage-dogs. The October 27 hearing was to number of dogs that are fin an noyance to neighbors. John. Sprague, village, dog control of ficer; requested the village board set limits. ? The problem is there are a small number of people who consider a local-law defining a have dogs for sport or for breed- \kennel which isprohibitedby ing,\ said Steve Youngentrob of * Small children had bette^^^JiHe house, more often kno^as^?:Neil Lane resilience, tombstones, skeletons^hdiStlcRy cob webs. Among the epitaphs are: \Here Jies learned to ^atejMi^artf J tl jmm lies l^nHmy 1^^1|{^4(^he%ltitt oandy sucker,\ Photo/Graham Johnson. thVViTiage zoning ordinance. The proposed definition was ownership of more than two ddult dogs. In the event a female dog gave birth to a litter, the owner could keep the pups for no more than four months. Dog owners at the hearing disagreed, claiming that a ken nel is a profit-making venture. \A 'kennel' is a zoning-type description,\ agreed Robert Baldwin, village attorney. \If the problem is the number of pets on a premises, then (the proposed definition of) kennel is narrowing in on the wrong pro blem. That is a different issue.\ The end result was that the Fayetteville Village Board unanimously defeated a resolu tion adopting the proposed de finition of a kennel. The problem, as defined by Mayor James Lannon, is caused by a few households with a large Highbridge St. \It is unreasona ble to ask us to cut down on the number of our dogs. We are re sponsible pet owners. \Let's enforce the laws on the books now,\ he suggested. Trustee Henry Mcintosh said that judging from the informa tion he had gathered, there is no correlation between the number of dogs and the amount of prob lems. Mayor Lannon agreed. \Ninety-nine per cent of our problems are caused by families with one or two dogs,\ he said. \This very well could be over kill.\ An ordinance requiring own ers of more than two dogs to ob tain a special permit was one method suggested that would \give the village a handle on where the- dogs are,\ said the mayor. how i^'i^l^^'^^a^^^0^^^ ~ .T- without their knowledge. .^^^^^^^Uc ^on, ,wfco *$S Trustee Marion Ldosmahn said -He 'W^^tD^r^^^i^l said at the October 27 meetingof gineerhag. and i Day^Q : g;^^^Qc r & the Fayetteville Village- Boeird * tober 28, the day the firsi; layer that she was told the curbing at of asphalt wap to be laid, thatthe the driveway entrance to the-fire., village^bpa^Jva^te y 1^ejoriginal station was redesigned by the designate be ^usea: fire chief. *Twas told it will take eight to \He (Chief Kerry Rqse) in-L 14 days to get two new sections structed the engineer (Stearns of curbing cut and shipped from and Wheler, the village 's con-, the (granite)'quarry in Georgia suiting engineering firm) with-' if the changes are made,\ Mayor ' out the knowledge of the* Lannon warned. \There will be quite a delay.\ \I want it to look like the orig inal design,\ said Trustee Robert Blumenthal. \If the delay is caused by the engineer making the change, then they should pay for it.\ \If we don't do it now, it willbe there- forever,\ added Trustee mayor,\ she said.\' - \I'm not.co^ntfijtable with an engineer ^ftct wb-uld do that- without the knowledge of the; mayor,\ she added. The mayox? and trustees agfeed'with her' evaluation of the^fuatipn. . <R Replacement of^the jrfmcrete^ fire station driveway arid curb-? ing in front of the Fayetteyilje%.. H ^jrjacln ^osh Brickwork on the Manllus Fire Dept. sub station on Pompey Center Rd. appears to be completed. The three-bay garage is expected to be finished by mid-winter. JCC Asks Town To Bow Out M&bovfii liabm^ahaW were^ tevClti Churcb „. ______ through traffic. ^ \There's-an . through traffic,\ sai** 3 \The town's needs should not be at the expense of forcing the JCC (Jewish Community CenterHo relocate,\ Mark Field, JCC president, told the DeWitt ^3 *ow7X Board Monday night. p ^ Mr.iFiela^ckdmed there was a %i \^6ral v aiiriewsion\ to the plan ned sale of the former Genesee one of Central New York's He asked what criteria the largest pre-school programs, the town would use to determine a Max Gilbert Hebrew School and bid; what the potential cost of provided meals for senior citi- purchasing, remodeling 'and ze ?f_V. . , - maintaining the site might be; Without us, there will be a what the impact wou i d bff on strong detrimental loss to the property ' values in the community...lives are enriched by the cultural and recreational ^Hiils School building and asked programs we provide, he said *|^^&hurcH^lpiB r rly- in s rettevllle will be blocked to man at Immaculat&CoBc^ft^ traffic on weekdays Church. ^3>egWrtrng November 1. In an effort to limit traffic^;\' gates at the church's parking lo^Dwyer Hall and the chapel, entrance on Foxcroft Dr. and at£ \ Immaculate. Conception the chapel entrance near Shef-& purchased tKe^jSO.acre property field Lane wall be closed week-\ -in 195%bVitdingSrs^.pfiuroc- days beginning November l. M - hial school about.11955, a con- The gates will be open on Satur-*'. ventiri 196 1 !, and;ultimately in day and Sunday. * 196,9, a church building. The Access to the church buildings!' property originally had_ access the town to consider a resolution \that your interest in the build ing has been terminated.\ The:Town of DeWitt would like to consolidate its offices that are now in rented or owned loca tions in several parts of the town. The Genesee Hills build- Mr. Field added that it would be difficult to provide these ser- the building. X XT T •/ neighborhood if the town con solidated its offices at Genesee Hills and what specific town de partments would be located in vices if the JCC had to relocate. His father, Arthur Field, a 26 year resident of 215 Oakmont Dr., told the board that he had helped circulate a petition re questing that the town hold an ine is being studied as a possible open forum- to discuss its plans will continue to be available byj the driveway off Salt Springs- Rd. The driveway at Sheffield Lane will provide access to from a driveway off Salt Springs Rd., and later access was ex panded with driveways to Shef field'Lane and Foxcroft Rd. town office location. However, the JCC would like to own what it now rents from the Jamesville-DeWitt school dis trict. The Jamesville-DeWitt Board of Education has decided to sell the surplus property and its-10.7 acres by soliciting sealed bids. The minimum asking price is $687,000. Mr. Field told town board members thatthe JCC operated for the.Genesee Hills property. \About\ 80 per cjent of the Other members of the Prop erty Owners group asked the town to set an early date for an open forum and asked why/the town Hadn't discussed its plans earlier, i Elayne O'Brien, town board member who is on the town's building committee, remarked, people I talked t0...were against \We've' been discussing this at the town taking over and were length for at least two years. The happy with the status quo,\ he said. Dr. Peter Gray, of 301 Wedgewood Terr,, one of about 12 members of the United Prop erty Owners of DeWitt, a group that presented the town board would not complete the purchase with the petition, posed a list of until a referendum had been questions to the board: held. school board felt the fairest way to deal with this (the school sale) was to go to open bid. The JCC is free to submit a bid.\ She added that the town