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Steamers Beat The Rapids

June 13, 2026

By Hornell Steamers GM Paul Welker

 

The Hornell Steamers wasted little time taking control, scoring 10 runs over the first five innings on their way to a 10-5 victory over the Genesee Rapids at Maple City Park.  The win completed a two-game sweep of the Rapids and moved the Steamers above .500 for the first time this season.  Hornell’s offense came alive in the second inning with a four-run outburst. Taylor Joseph (North Park) and Emmett Heath (Pomona Pitzer) opened the rally with back-to-back singles before Wyatt Argentieri (Bethany Lutheran) delivered an RBI double to right field. Nolan Winthrop (Pomona Pitzer) followed with a two-run double to left, and Brett Chiesa (Rowan) capped the inning with an RBI single to give the Steamers a commanding 4-0 lead.

Genesee answered with a run in the third, but Hornell immediately responded. After Will Parker (Pomona Pitzer) doubled and Rylan Stokes (McMurry) was hit by a pitch, a pair of Rapids errors allowed both runners to score, stretching the lead to 6-1.  The Steamers continued to apply pressure in the fourth. John Greenwood (North Park) singled and later scored on Parker’s second double of the night before Joseph lined an RBI single to left to make it 8-2.  Hornell added two more runs in the fifth inning. Greenwood drove in a run with a sacrifice fly before Parker collected his third hit of the evening with an RBI single, extending the advantage to 10-2.

Parker led the offensive attack, finishing 3-for-5 with two doubles, two RBIs, and two runs scored. Argentieri went 3-for-4 with a double, RBI, two runs scored, and a walk, while Joseph was 2-for-2 with two walks, an RBI, and a run scored. Winthrop contributed a two-run double and scored twice as the Steamers pounded out 12 hits.  On the mound, Micah Marvin (SUNY Niagara) earned the win in his first start of the season. The right-hander struck out six over 5.1 innings while allowing four runs on seven hits. Marvin worked around early traffic and kept Hornell in control long enough for the offense to build its lead.  Gage Thomas (Mercyhurst) provided valuable relief, allowing just one hit over 1.2 scoreless innings, while Gavyn Ayers (Houghton) closed out the final two frames.  Genesee scored twice in the sixth and added a run in the ninth, but never got closer than six runs the rest of the way.  Christopher Wollum led the Rapids with two RBIs, while Luis Tumero collected two hits and drove in a run.  Hornell heads to Horseheads tomorrow for a 5 p.m. game vs. the Hitmen to open a three-game series.

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Bruce Blakeman: Statement On Hochul’s Solar Farm Policy

June 13, 2026

FROM GOP CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR, BRUCE BLAKEMAN: When I say I am going to protect New York, I mean all of New York.  Right now, our historic Upstate family farms are under attack by Kathy Hochul’s aggressive solar sprawl. Once you let big corporations pave over prime farmland with cold metal panels, that land is gone forever.  I refuse to sit back and watch our heritage and our food supply get destroyed. My plan is simple and gets straight to the point. We are drawing a hard line in the dirt to stop these solar land grabs and keep our farms working.

Here is what most people do not know. Kathy Hochul gave her hand-picked state agency the power to override your local town board entirely.  Under her law, if your community votes to protect its farmland and says no to an industrial solar project, the state simply overrules you and calls your local zoning laws unreasonably burdensome.  Your elected local officials have no recourse. One corporate permit from Hochul’s bureaucrats wipes out decades of local planning decisions.  That is not energy policy. That is Hochul taking power away from New York communities and handing it to out-of-state corporations.  My plan does not stop there. We are also going to cut your utility bills. Right now, Kathy Hochul’s administration is sitting on a hidden $2.4 billion energy tax fund collected from your utility bills.
On my first day in office, I am going to take that exact money and send it directly back to you to cut your utility bills right in half.  We do not need expensive, broken energy rules. We need low-cost power and a state we can actually afford to live in. Stand with our local farmers and help me fight to put New York families first.
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Gov. Hochul Marches In Buffalo Juneteenth Parade

June 13, 2026

 

Governor Hochul: “Here’s why we’re here today. To ask, are we really still free? Are people still free to live where they want to live? Still free to work where they want to work? Still free to get the education they want for their children? Are they able to have all the opportunities that they’ve always wanted and fought for? And if the answer is not yes, and I’ll tell you right now, the progress we’ve made for 200 years is now going backwards because of Washington DC. So that’s why we march. We march in resilience of those policies, and that sense that everyone is not welcome in this great country, and we reject that here in Buffalo, New York and all across the globe.”

Hochul: “We signed this bill that says that we are now making Harriet Tubman part of our scenic byway, so wherever you go along this trail, you will see her name, big as she can be, by DOT signs. Know that story, my friends, and if the children here do not know her story, learn it. I was literally eight years old when I first read a book about Harriet Tubman, and her story has captivated my life ever since then, and an inspiration to me and others. So let’s honor Harriet Tubman. Let’s honor the spirit of Juneteenth.”

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Rep. Nick Langworthy: Massive Fraud Is Not Just In Minnesota

June 13, 2026 

 

On Thursday night, Congressman Nick Langworthy applauded House passage of a package of anti-fraud and government accountability legislation aimed at reducing government fraud, protecting taxpayer dollars, and restoring trust in government spending.  The legislation follows extensive investigations by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform into major fraud schemes that exposed serious weaknesses in federal and state oversight systems.

“As Americans continue to struggle with the cost of living, they deserve to know their tax dollars are being spent responsibly,” said Congressman Langworthy. “For too long, Washington has operated under a ‘pay first, ask questions later’ model that has allowed fraudsters to exploit government programs and steal billions from taxpayers. This legislation changes that by putting safeguards in place before money goes out the door. It’s common sense and we need to make it the law of the land.”

As a member of the House Oversight Committee, Congressman Langworthy participated in hearings examining the massive fraud schemes in Minnesota that allowed billions of taxpayer dollars to be stolen and exposed deep flaws in government oversight.   “The Minnesota fraud scandals lifted the veil on just how easy it is for bad actors to exploit the system and get rich off taxpayer dollars,” Congressman Langworthy said. “What happened there wasn’t an isolated incident–it exposed systemic weaknesses that need to be corrected immediately. There is nothing more insulting for taxpayers than turning over their hard-earned income to the government only to allow it to be stolen.”  

According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the federal government loses an estimated $233 billion to $521 billion annually to fraud, representing between 3 and 7 percent of total federal obligations. This package of legislation is designed to stop fraud in all 50 states, including New York, which is notorious for Medicaid fraud. A 2022 audit by the New York State Comptroller identified nearly $1 billion in Medicaid billing errors and improper payments, including payments made to providers who were no longer eligible to participate in the program.

Congressman Langworthy highlighted how the anti-fraud package is critical to his broader effort to improve affordability for working families.   He concluded, “The Working Families Tax Cut brought meaningful tax relief to working and middle-class families, but we must also tackle the spending side of the ledger as well. We cannot continue asking taxpayers to send more money to Washington while tolerating a system that loses hundreds of billions of dollars each year through preventable fraud. Stopping waste, fraud, and abuse isn’t just good government, it’s essential to making life more affordable for hardworking Americans.”

The House-passed package includes several major reforms:

Fraud Prevention and Accountability Act
The legislation makes permanent the successful anti-fraud data analytics and investigative tools developed during the pandemic, creates a government-wide Inspector General for Fraud, Accountability, and Recovery, and improves agencies’ ability to identify suspicious activity across federal programs.

Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act
The bill shifts federal agencies away from a failed “pay and chase” model by allowing Treasury to flag suspicious payments before taxpayer dollars are disbursed, helping prevent fraud before it occurs rather than attempting to recover funds after they are lost.

No Aid for Ghost Students Act
The legislation strengthens identity verification requirements for federal student aid programs to prevent scammers from using stolen or fraudulent identities to collect taxpayer-funded financial assistance intended for legitimate students.

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O’Mara: The Budget Is Worse Than We Were Told It Would Be

June 13, 2026

By State Senator Tom O’Mara

“It’s even more expensive, and worse, than we were told”
That didn’t take long.  In my first column in the aftermath of the recently enacted 2026-2027 state budget, I wrote, “This final budget was forced through and enacted under a process that’s broken and that leaves most legislators and especially the public at large still not knowing everything that’s in it. Believe me, we’ll be hearing surprising details on what Democrats have snuck into this spending plan for weeks to come.”  It took less than two weeks for the surprises to start.
Remember Governor Hochul, her Division of the Budget (DOB), and the Democrat-led Legislature told taxpayers, when they finally got around to enacting the final budget with just a few days left in May (two months late), that it totaled around $268 billion. That represented an increase of about $15 billion over last year or roughly 6%, outpacing inflation by over 66%, If that’s not outrageous enough.
Now we learn that it’s actually at least $277 billion. That’s right, early last week the state DOB quietly put out an updated financial plan revealing that the new budget, in the end, is approaching $10 billion more than what we were told, a nearly $25 billion hike over last year’s budget, meaning that it’s actually a 9% increase, year to year, outpacing inflation by 150%!
That’s not just some minor accounting error. It’s not just a few dollars and cents more. No, it’s not. Somehow, during the 13 days between the time the budget was voted on and early last week, the budget grew by another nearly $10 billion than what we were told it would be. Dig a little deeper and you learn that Albany Democrats have decided to just roll the dice on being able to afford it all a few years from now.
In other words, it’s an ultimate “kick the can down the road” fiscal plan.
Once again, taxpayers are left facing the fiscal cliff. Taxpayers are left with a one-party, all-Democrat state government that — as so many of us have said time and again for nearly a decade now – simply has no intention, not now or ever, of prioritizing the overriding need in this state to cut taxes, eliminate unfunded mandates, restrain overregulation, reduce debt, control borrowing, make New York more economically competitive, and other rational fiscal and economic practices.
New York’s taxpayers, families, and job creators keep telling us that this state is on the wrong track. They keep telling us that they can no longer afford to live, work, raise a family, or start a small business here. They keep leaving in droves.
And the answer from the Albany Democrats? Keep spending more. In less than two weeks, the Hochul administration is now telling us that, oops, the new budget is actually $10 billion more than what we told you it was 13 days ago. State spending, virtually any way you look at it, is far outpacing inflation. It’s a state awash in red ink with built-in, multi-year, multi-billion-dollar budget gaps in the years ahead.
The spending is out of control, it’s not sustainable, and Albany Democrats know it. Instead of being guided by common sense and responsibility, however, they just keep throwing caution to the wind. They just keep following a “spend it now and figure it out later” approach to this state’s future, and it’s failing.
In the meantime, taxpayers are expected to go on being worried about making ends meet during the worst affordability crisis they have ever faced. I’ll remind you that a recent statewide poll from the Siena Research Institute showed that more than 70 percent of respondents believed the state’s fiscal condition is fair or poor. The survey also found 75% of respondents reporting that the cost of utilities was having a “serious impact on their financial condition.”  Fifty-one percent said their bills for heating and electricity are unaffordable, with nearly 30 percent admitting that they have been forced to borrow money or take on debt to cover utility costs.
The Albany Democrat fix, in this budget, is a joke, a one-time, so-called “energy rebate” of $100 to $200 (depending on your marital status and income) to New York households. I’m sure it’ll be delivered shortly before Election Day. And get this, the rebate will go to every qualifying household whether or not it actually pays the utility.  It’s just another pandering handout to get votes. There were no actions to actually lower utility bills.
It’s worth repeating: The final 2026-2027 New York State budget is out of touch with the affordability crisis crushing New York’s state and local taxpayers, and their families and communities, and local economies. The final plan is rightly criticized for its continued focus on spending that is out of control, for its reliance on a broken budget adoption process, and for its failure to move New York in a better, more responsible direction economically, fiscally, and on public policy priorities in fundamentally key areas including energy, health care, and public safety and security.
In my initial post-budget column I also wrote, “New York State taxpayers today and long into the future already face trying to afford, live, and work under a bloated, wasteful, and unaffordable state government. This budget makes it worse. It ignores the economic and fiscal warnings on the horizon.”
It’s careless, it’s reckless, and taxpayers keep paying the price.
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Steuben Co: June 15 Is Elder Abuse Awareness Day

June 13, 2026

 

The Steuben County Legislature has officially proclaimed June 15, 2026, as Elder Abuse Awareness Day in Steuben County, reaffirming the county’s commitment to protecting older adults and preserving their dignity, safety, and independence.  Steuben County Legislature Chair Kelly H. Fitzpatrick issued the proclamation on behalf of the Legislature, recognizing the importance of raising awareness surrounding elder abuse, neglect, and financial exploitation affecting senior residents throughout the county.  According to the Steuben County Department of Social Services Adult Protective Unit, several hundred referrals are received annually involving concerns that aging residents may be victims of physical, emotional, or financial abuse or neglect. Studies estimate that only one in 23 cases of elder abuse is ever reported to authorities.

The proclamation highlights the importance of recognizing warning signs of abuse, including physical trauma, depression, anxiety, and social isolation from family, friends, and neighbors. Elder abuse remains a significant public health concern, with victims often facing increased hospitalization, psychological distress, and a greater risk of premature death.  Steuben County officials are encouraging residents, community organizations, healthcare providers, religious institutions, businesses, and local agencies to remain vigilant and report suspected cases of abuse, neglect, or exploitation to Adult Protective Services and local law enforcement.  The Steuben County Office for the Aging continues to collaborate with multiple New York State agencies, including the Office of Children and Family Services, Department of Social Services, Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance, Department of Financial Services, and the Office of Victim Services, to increase public awareness and strengthen prevention and intervention efforts.  “Every older adult in Steuben County deserves to live with dignity, respect, and security,” the proclamation states. “This observance serves as an important reminder of our shared responsibility to provide support, attentive care, and protection for our senior population.”

Steuben County calls upon all citizens to participate in efforts that support families, strengthen communities, and help prevent elder abuse throughout the region.

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The Annual AMVETS Dice Run Is Set For Saturday, June 13

June 12, 2026

 

It starts at Arkport Cycles at 11am Saturday.  Sign ups are from 900am-1045am.  It will be a parade-style, scenic ride through Western New York. 

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Hornell Steamers Defeated The Genesee Rapids Thursday Night

June 12, 2026

By Steamers GM Paul Welker

 

The Hornell Steamers turned in one of their most complete performances of the season Thursday night, combining timely offense with dominant pitching to earn a 4-1 victory over the Genesee Rapids at Kerr-Pegula Field.  Hornell scored in the opening inning and never trailed, improving to 3-3 on the season while handing Genesee just its second loss of the year.  The Steamers manufactured a run in the first without recording a hit. Nolan Winthrop (Pomona Pitzer) reached on an error, stole second and third, and came home on an RBI groundout by John Greenwood (North Park) to give Hornell an early 1-0 advantage.  The lead remained intact thanks to a strong outing from starter Evan LaMothe (Johnson & Wales). The right-hander worked 5.1 innings, allowing just one run on six hits while striking out six. LaMothe consistently pitched out of trouble and kept the Rapids off the scoreboard through the first five innings.

Hornell added to its lead in the fifth when Wyatt Argentieri (Bethany Lutheran) walked, advanced into scoring position on a passed ball and wild pitch, and scored on a sacrifice fly by Rylan Stokes (McMurry) to make it 2-0.  The Steamers created breathing room in the sixth. Luke Manders (Kalamazoo) and Taylor Joseph (North Park) opened the inning with back-to-back singles before Argentieri worked a walk to load the bases. Winthrop then delivered the biggest hit of the night, lining a two-run single to center field that scored Manders and Joseph and extended the lead to 4-0.  Genesee answered with a run in the bottom of the sixth on an RBI single from PJ Ortiz, but Hornell’s bullpen took over from there.  Peter Pipikios (North Park) provided 1.2 scoreless innings of relief and struck out three batters. Aidan Moore (Washington (MD) followed with a scoreless eighth inning, punching out two, before Zachary Emmer (Kalamazoo) closed the door in the ninth with two strikeouts.

The Steamers’ pitching staff combined for 13 strikeouts while limiting the Rapids to six hits and one run.  Winthrop paced the offense with a hit, two RBIs, two walks, and two stolen bases. Greenwood collected two hits and drove in a run, while Joseph finished 2-for-4 with a run scored. Manders added a hit and a run scored as Hornell recorded eight hits on the evening.  Despite leaving 10 runners on base, the Steamers capitalized on key opportunities and played error-free baseball defensively.  Hornell will look to carry the momentum into game two of their series vs. Genesee. First pitch at Maple City Park is at 7 p.m.

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Pix: The Big Boy Train Visit To Hornell

June 11, 2026

 

A HORNELL, NY – Below are photos of the Union Pacific 1941 train, Big Boy! Thousands upon thousands of people were in Hornell for this event!  Big Boy arrived at 2:00pm and officials say that it departed the old depot area at around 2:30pm.  Crowd estimates were between 3,000 and 5,000 at this point.  


 

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Tuesday Night’s Outages

June 10, 2026

Last night, over 4100 NYSEG customers in Hornell, were without power. Also, there were numerous downed trees and Facebook photos show trees down on Park Drive in Hornell. There were also outages in other parts of Steuben County, including Prattsburgh and Pulteney. This was caused by the thunder and lightening storms, which went through the county. As of this morning, public works crews are out and about, cleaning up the streets and roasds from the fallen trees.

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Alleged Erratic Driver In Tuscarora This Morning – Near The School

June 10, 2026

STATEMENT FROM ADDiSON CENTRAL SCHOOL: “Families – This message is to inform you that there was an individual driving erratically on campus at Tuscarora this morning causing a disruption to morning arrival. When the vehicle stopped near our buses, Ms. Simmons inquired with the driver if they needed assistance and immediately contacted Officer Fuerst, who arrived on scene moments later. Bus drop off was rerouted to the parent drop of area at District Office. The individual was detained, the vehicle was towed, and the District is cooperating with law enforcement in its investigation of the matter. All students, family members, and staff are safe. We thank Officer Fuerst for responding quickly and efficiently, as well as officers from the Steuben County Sheriff’s Department who assisted, for ensuring the safety of all.”

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The Hornell Steamers Beat The Syracuse Salt Cats Last Night

June 10, 2026

Behind a dominant pitching performance and a timely fourth-inning rally, the Hornell Steamers earned a hard-fought 2-1 victory over the Syracuse Salt Cats on Tuesday evening at Maple City Park. The win snapped a brief skid for the Steamers and showcased one of the club’s strongest all-around pitching efforts of the young season. Syracuse struck first in the opening inning when Mike Giamartino delivered an RBI single to score Oliver Rey, giving the Salt Cats an early 1-0 lead. Despite allowing three hits in the frame, Hornell starter Ty Vogel (SUNY Niagara) settled in quickly and never allowed another run. Vogel was outstanding over five innings, scattering six hits while striking out six and walking just one. The right-hander worked out of several jams and kept the Steamers within striking distance until the offense found its rhythm. Hornell finally broke through in the bottom of the fourth. Michael Duncan (Eastern Mennonite) ignited the rally with a one-out double before Emmett Heath (Pomona Pitzer) lined a run-scoring double into the gap in right-center field to tie the game at 1-1. Moments later, Taylor Joseph (North Park) delivered a clutch RBI single up the middle, plating Heath and giving the Steamers their first lead of the night at 2-1.
That would prove to be all the offense Hornell needed.

The Steamers collected seven hits on the evening, led by Will Parker (Pomona Pitzer) who finished 2-for-3, Heath went 2-for-3 with a double, a run scored, and the game-tying RBI, while Duncan added a double and scored the eventual winning run. After Vogel’s strong start, Alex Spezzano (Hobart) was nearly untouchable out of the bullpen to earn the save. The right-hander allowed just one hit while striking out five. He struck out the side in the 6th and two in the 7th. As a staff, Hornell pitchers combined for 11 strikeouts while allowing just one run. Defensively, the Steamers erased a potential seventh-inning threat when Rylan Stokes threw out Hector Gonzalez attempting to steal second base. Hornell (2-3) was leading 1-0 in the nightcap of the doubleheader when thunderstorms rolled in and forced the game to be suspended. The Steamers travel to Gensee for their first battle with the Rapids on Thursday. First pitch at Houghton is at 7 p.m.

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