Make a Difference


In this blog I hope to be able to provide the latest County news and happenings.
Along the right hand side of the blog are links to My Views on specific county issues.
Also included are links to my email, other county, state and federal representatives, and some interesting pictures and postcards from the past.

We need to hold all of our County representatives accountable in these difficult economic times.
Please support and comment on this blog and together we can make Cortland County a better place to live.
COMMUNICATION IS KEY!

Monday, April 28, 2008

Gasoline Tax

I am pleased to announce that I have asked the Budget and Finance Committee to place the topic of the County Gasoline Sales Tax on the May meeting agenda.

I am hopeful that the County will consider a temporary freeze or cap on the sales tax placed on gasoline and diesel fuel in Cortland County. I support this measure as a means of relieving the burden on Cortland County residents.

I also believe that this cap will help stimulate local economy as visitors who travel through or to Cortland to fill up will also take time to shop for goods and services in the County.

I am requesting that the previous year and projected sales tax figures for County gas revenue be provided to Legislators for review. I am hopeful that the temporary cap can be put in place from Memorial Day through Labor Day.

I encourage your thoughts on this issue.

South Main Street Properties

The Planning Department will be providing the B&G Committee with site and aerial plans of the two properties being secured by the County on South Main Street. We hope to review these plans with JCM Associates, who is performing a feasibility study for the County on the Area Agency on Aging.

The study will take a close look at the needs of the department, and program for an updated or newer facility and how it might look if located at the South Main Street site.

Based on this study and the County needs assessment plan at the Cortland County Office Building, it will be determined which direction the County proceeds overall.

DMV Building

I am pleased to announce that I am exploring grant opportunities for the new DMV building, which is in the schematic design phase. I hope to be able to secure funding for photovoltaic (PV) energy that will be incorporated into the design of the building.

NYSERDA (New York State Energy Research and Development Authority) sponsors an incentive program which will assist our County to promote and utilize alternative energy.

In addition, I will be working with the design team, JCM Associates and Barton & Loguidice to use innovative technologies in the building, such as low-flow sinks and toilet fixtures, daylighting and energy efficient mechanical equipment.

All of these ideas will ensure responsible design and energy savings.

Blog Format Change

Hello! I am proud to announce a format change to the blog!

I will soon begin posting thoughts to the blog. I intend to express my opinion and position on County issues to my constituents on topics.

I hope to solicit feedback on issues facing our county that include, but are not limited to energy, taxes, facilities, planning, and resources.

I encourage you to sign up and leave comments and write me emails. Thanks!

Monday, March 24, 2008

3/15/08 - Alderman Jim Partigianoni dies at age 78

Partigianoni

Bob Ellis/staff photographer
An umpire for over 50 years, Jim Partigianoni makes a call at first from a fold-out chair during the annual Old Timers Fast Pitch Game at Meldrim Field July 18. Partigianoni died Friday at age 78.

(As published by Cortland Standard, Aimee Milks reporting)

CORTLAND — An avid politician, a family man and baseball nut are some of the terms many people in the Cortland community would use to describe Jim Partigianoni.

Partigianoni, commonly known to everyone as “Parg,” died Friday morning at the age of 78 from a heart attack while he was visiting one of his five daughters in Michigan.

“He was chopping snow off the sidewalk as he was on his way to the library … and had a heart attack,” said Kathy Oliver, one of Parg’s daughters who lives in Tennessee. “He loved to read, he always had to know all the news.”

Born and raised in Cortland, Parg was very active in the community, umpiring baseball and softball games and serving on the city Common Council for six years.

“I often asked him to resign so it wouldn’t wear his heart out, but that’s where his passion was,” Oliver, 50, said of her father’s position on the Common Council. “He wanted to revive Cortland.”
Mayor Tom Gallagher said Parg just loved what he was doing.

“Probably out of all the aldermen, he was the most available and in contact with his constituents,” Gallagher said. “It was his second love after umpiring … he truly was a dedicated public servant.”

Gallagher said the Common Council meeting Tuesday night is canceled out of respect for Partigianoni.

In recent years one of Parg’s pet projects was the East End Community Center, which opened in early 2005.

“He loved the idea of the East End Community Center,” Gallagher said. “He was a big part in getting that started.”

“He really loved his community center there,” Oliver said. “He felt like it gave people a place to go.”

Parg’s wife, Carol, his five daughters — Pam, Kathy, Jamie, Colleen and Kelly — and his 12 grandchildren survive Parg, who had recently been in and out of the hospital for his health.

“I am so proud of him,” Dominick Partigianoni, Parg’s older brother said Friday evening. “He did it all, with his whole heart, and everything he did was conscientious.”

When their father died and his mother worked hard to hold the family together, Dominick remembers the entire clan piling into the back of a panel truck to go pick beans for the Halstead Canning Co. And no one picked beans like Jim Partigianoni.

“For some reason or another, bean picking was a talent for me,” Parg said with a laugh in a 2004 Cortland Standard interview.

He held the record for most beans picked in one day, 617 pounds, and regularly picked 450 pounds a day.

“He was one of the best pickers, bean pickers. He really was,” Dominick said. “That bought our coal for the winter, bought our school clothes and paid our taxes.”

Parg served in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner and tank commander from 1948 to 1954, stationed along the border with the Soviet Union.

“He told me many times about how the Russians harassed him,” Dominick Partigianoni said.
The deafening blasts of the artillery took a toll on Parg’s hearing and his booming voice developed as a result. Whether calling a player out, making a point during a Common Council meeting or talking on the telephone, Parg could always be heard — he was loud.

After the army, Parg worked at Smith Corona as a fabrication supervisor until his retirement in 1994.

Oliver said she talked with her father earlier in the week.

“He sounded great,” she said. “He was excited to go visit my sister. We were talking about his health and the hospital, my sister, and politics … that’s probably why he was going to the library, to get on the Internet and read about the primaries.”

Oliver added that her father was a passionate family man who loved when the entire family was together.

“He was very sacrificial, he gave up a lot to send five kids to college,” she said.

“I just think he’s one of those generous people I know,” added Jamie Brown, Parg’s daughters who lives in Cortland. “He’s always looking out for the underdog.”

Brown recalled a fond memory of one of their family trips when they were going to see her sister Kathy in Wooster, Ohio.

“It was late at night and we were a little disoriented so we stopped for directions,” she said with a little chuckle in her trembling voice. “My dad rolled down the window and meant to say, ‘Which route to Wooster,’ but said, ‘Which woute to Rooster.’ He just had a way with his words.”

Harley Bieber, 72, of Dryden, had been an umpire with Parg for 35 years.
“Jim loved officiating. Of all the things he loved in his life, I think umpiring was close to the top if not at the top. He’s going to be dearly missed in the sports world,” said Bieber, who was recruited to umpire by Parg. “ He got a tremendous amount of respect from everyone. He really stressed professionalism; being fair and just. I think that was his whole life — being fair and just, not just in umpiring.”

Gallagher said the Common Council will appoint another Democrat from the 7th Ward who will serve until someone is elected in the November general election.

“He was a real pillar on the council, he always had the best interest of the city on his mind,” Gallagher added. “Besides that, he was very entertaining.”

Funeral arraignments have not been finalized. Parg would have turned 79 on April 21.
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Staff Reporter Evan Geibel contributed to this article

My condolences to the Partigianoni family. Jim was a great man.