Showing posts with label Saratoga Springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saratoga Springs. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

Today's Scene Is Now A Whole Bunch Worse For The Folks Here

This happened sometime after the polls had closed and before the Election Day candidates had begun to share their speeches of glory, or despair.

I maneuvered through a horde of Republican well-wishers who had gathered at the Holiday Inn Tuesday night and with camera in hand muscled up on to the stage where the tall field of vision provided a landscape of images to be captured through the camera eye. Here, was the assemblyman, James Tedisco. There, was the county district attorney, James Murphy, the newly-minted sheriff Michael Zurlo, and a slew of local candidates mingling with everyday residents of the city. Everywhere were faces laced with intense determination, and eyes fixed to a screen colored with rolling numbers that delivered the election night results.

Among the chaos, a familiar voice called out from the side of the stage. It belonged to Kyle York, who was soaking up the atmosphere and waving hello. We spent a few minutes shooting the breeze. We shook hands. In retrospect you wonder why, at that moment, you couldn’t see the dark clouds gathering, that you weren’t able to offer a few words of advice. A warning.  Anything.  I asked him to excuse me for a few seconds so I could grab some images of the crowd. The old journalist in him understood. “A good reporter works as hard as a coal miner, except you don’t get to come up for air,” he once commented. I don’t know whether he got that line from somebody else or came up with it all on his own, but it was a good one and something that I’d always remembered.

The comment was posted on one of the many blogs or newspaper sites where he actively posted any of his opinions. And he had many of them: questioning the purity of the water in the Hudson River after it had been bathed with PCB’s; debating the wisdom of Gov. Cuomo’s plan for casinos, disputing the local benefit of GlobalFoundries’ ever-expanding reach; scrutinizing the public placement of a 25-foot-tall 9/11 memorial by warning that the city’s most youthfully misguided residents would climb atop the massive sculpture and unintentionally cause themselves serious bodily harm.  He often backed up his statements with reams of documents that served as evidence. In the ether of cyberspace they came attached to bright-color emails with massive fonts. In person, he would occasionally bring props to city council meetings to help make his argument.

That just about everybody disagreed with whatever it was he was arguing about at one time or another, is beside the point. That he cared deeply about sharing information and knowledge with everyone is certain. And he had a rare ability of expressing contrary ideas in a non-threatening, inclusive way that enabled others to listen, even if they disagreed with the idea. “He got along splendidly with everyone, and his cheerfulness, good humor, and generosity of spirit touched everyone, even those who only knew him in passing,” says Byron Joseph Norsworthy, whose Saratoga Hybrid Cabs’ York drove for more than a year.

From atop the stage Tuesday night, the camera caught a few faces in the crowd, but it was mostly non-descript, b-roll stuff, if that. When I looked back down to continue the conversation, Kyle York was gone. I figured we’d resume the chatter at the next city council meeting, or during one of those random Broadway sidewalk conversations that is one of this city’s pleasant charms. Less than 24 hours later, Kyle York was dead. Police say he was working about four floors up on a home renovation project on Railroad Place Wednesday afternoon when he accidentally fell.  He was 59 years old.

The suddenness in which a human life can disappear is shocking.  To his family, who I do not know, are offered warm condolences. From the journalists he befriended to the politicians whose faces he got in front of, he will be missed. He fought the good fight, and now, just like that, he is gone. The city is a better place for having known him, and now a piece of its fabric is torn with his loss.

He once wrote about the passing of time and how sometimes things change because of unfortunate and uncontrollable events. In his own words:  “today’s scene is now a whole bunch worse for the folks here.”

This happened sometime after the polls had closed and before the Election Day candidates had begun to share their speeches of glory, or despair.

I maneuvered through a horde of Republican well-wishers who had gathered at the Holiday Inn Tuesday night and with camera in hand muscled up on to the stage where the tall field of vision provided a landscape of images to be captured through the camera eye. Here, was the assemblyman, James Tedisco. There, was the county district attorney, James Murphy, the newly-minted sheriff Michael Zurlo, and a slew of local candidates mingling with everyday residents of the city. Everywhere were faces laced with intense determination, and eyes fixed to a screen colored with rolling numbers that delivered the election night results.

Among the chaos, a familiar voice called out from the side of the stage. It belonged to Kyle York, who was soaking up the atmosphere and waving hello. We spent a few minutes shooting the breeze. We shook hands. In retrospect you wonder why, at that moment, you couldn’t see the dark clouds gathering, that you weren’t able to offer a few words of advice. A warning.  Anything.  I asked him to excuse me for a few seconds so I could grab some images of the crowd. The old journalist in him understood. “A good reporter works as hard as a coal miner, except you don’t get to come up for air,” he once commented. I don’t know whether he got that line from somebody else or came up with it all on his own, but it was a good one and something that I’d always remembered.

The comment was posted on one of the many blogs or newspaper sites where he actively posted any of his opinions. And he had many of them: questioning the purity of the water in the Hudson River after it had been bathed with PCB’s; debating the wisdom of Gov. Cuomo’s plan for casinos, disputing the local benefit of GlobalFoundries’ ever-expanding reach; scrutinizing the public placement of a 25-foot-tall 9/11 memorial by warning that the city’s most youthfully misguided residents would climb atop the massive sculpture and unintentionally cause themselves serious bodily harm.  He often backed up his statements with reams of documents that served as evidence. In the ether of cyberspace they came attached to bright-color emails with massive fonts. In person, he would occasionally bring props to city council meetings to help make his argument.

That just about everybody disagreed with whatever it was he was arguing about at one time or another, is beside the point. That he cared deeply about sharing information and knowledge with everyone is certain. And he had a rare ability of expressing contrary ideas in a non-threatening, inclusive way that enabled others to listen, even if they disagreed with the idea. “He got along splendidly with everyone, and his cheerfulness, good humor, and generosity of spirit touched everyone, even those who only knew him in passing,” says Byron Joseph Norsworthy, whose Saratoga Hybrid Cabs’ York drove for more than a year.

From atop the stage Tuesday night, the camera caught a few faces in the crowd, but it was mostly non-descript, b-roll stuff, if that. When I looked back down to continue the conversation, Kyle York was gone. I figured we’d resume the chatter at the next city council meeting, or during one of those random Broadway sidewalk conversations that is one of this city’s pleasant charms. Less than 24 hours later, Kyle York was dead. Police say he was working about four floors up on a home renovation project on Railroad Place Wednesday afternoon when he accidentally fell.  He was 59 years old.

The suddenness in which a human life can disappear is shocking.  To his family, who I do not know, are offered warm condolences. From the journalists he befriended to the politicians whose faces he got in front of, he will be missed. He fought the good fight, and now, just like that, he is gone. The city is a better place for having known him, and now a piece of its fabric is torn with his loss.

He once wrote about the passing of time and how sometimes things change because of unfortunate and uncontrollable events. In his own words:  “today’s scene is now a whole bunch worse for the folks here.” - See more at: http://www.saratogawire.com/article/1658/131107-york-dimopoulos/#sthash.OjUxasFA.dpuf

Thursday, May 30, 2013

With the wind at his back and the concrete sidewalk beneath his feet

Randy sits in easy pose at the top of the Caroline Street hill. A warm, beef-laced wind blows out the duct of a restaurant and calms the chill in the late afternoon air.

"Didn't I have good idea," he says,  snuggling close to the silver duct. Randy is pleased with his position: the wind is at his back, the concrete ground beneath his feet

"This city is the second richest city in New York State.  The richest is...Westchester," he muses. "You want to see how much money is here?  Wait till you see the end of July, when we got the track here," he says, watching the dusk chase the sunlight across Broadway, and towards the city's west side. The light bulbs atop the Victorian style street lamps blink and sparkle, awakening for duty on a long spring night.

"I've been homeless for four months now. There are a lot of homeless people in Saratoga." Humanity strolls past his corner.  He watches them, with their smiling faces and distant gazes, their grimaces, their laughter, and their sunken tired eyes.  "Everybody is on a mission. You know what I mean? They're all going from one place to another place, instead of sitting down to say hi."

Two youngish men pass by and pause, mid-stroll. Mr. Blue Shirt mines the pockets of his pants and emerges with a fistful of coin. Mr. White Shirt offers a cigarette that he pulls from a box pack. "Hey - hope you guys have a nice day," Randy says, pocketing the change with one hand and pulling out a disposable lighter from inside the folds of a poncho that someone gave him with the other.

"Right now - it's been hard, but I have friends. People stop. They ask me if I have something to eat.  Out on the street you get to know people.  There are so many beautiful people here that it's unbelievable."

He runs his thumb across the igniter wheel of the lighter. It sparks, but does not light.

"I've been homeless for six weeks," he says, contradicting the amount of time he earlier said that he's been living on the streets. He continues his battle with the cranky lighter. It sparks and sparks, but will not light.

"Homeless? I don't understand it. I'm having such a hard time. What happened to me?" He finally sends the lighter careening down Caroline Street. The plastic skips across the pavement and echoes down the hill, a symphony of disgust.

He says there was a family dispute over a monthly check that he was supposed to be getting that caused him to be homeless. He talks about the bread delivery truck he drove for 24 years and how he retired at the age of 43. "I'm 55 now. I took care of my kids, sir, that's the one thing I did." He thinks about his three-year-old grandson, and how he spent his own formative years growing up on Long Island., on the Suffolk County side.

"I was 16 when I came up here. At the age of 17 I went to Vietnam. I came out of Vietnam at the age of 19 and then I played baseball for Glens Falls White Sox  - the farm team - at East Field. I was a shortstop. I never made it because the women and everything else got to me."

He says he won't go to a shelter because it cost him ten dollars to get in and scoffs when he is asked if he has looked into any military veteran programs that might help him get off the streets.  "Can I honestly say I'm a veteran when I'd only been there two and a half years?"  He is a man of contradictions. And the numbers don't always add up.

"There's some stuff around here that is not right.  The thing is, I don't know where to go, what to do."  Next week he hopes to be able to move himself off the street. "I get fifteen-hundred a month, because I'm a teamster." A labor union he said he belonged to dating to back to nearly a quarter century of driving his delivery truck.

"I'm looking to get an apartment. That's what I want. Even if I don't have a piece of furniture. At least I got an apartment." He buried his hands inside the folds of his poncho, and with the warm wind at his back, he watched the lights firing up Broadway and the sun disappearing over the city's west side.

Friday, May 10, 2013

May Flowers

An explosion of purple bulbs on a May morning in Saratoga Springs.


Rising aross Broadway is the cream-and-cocoa colored Adelphi Hotel, with its three-story porch, slender columns and patterned arches.


Built in 1877, it is the last surviving example of the typical Saratoga Springs hotel of the Victorian Era.

 

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Carousel Summer


The Carousel in Congress Park will celebrate its 103rd birthday today when it opens for the season in Saratoga Springs.


On a day that features the running of the Kentucky Derby and the Stanley Cup playoffs, some of the rules posted outside the carousel seem to be good rules to live by for any event.



Riders must remain on their horses for the entire ride.


Riders must face forward when riding and sit with one leg on each side of the horse.


The maximum weight limit on horses is 250 pounds.


Roughousing and abusive behavopr will not be tolerated.

 

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Flying birds, excellent birds




No, it's not a scene of suspense culled from Hitchcock's  thriller "The Birds," but when a flock of fowl suddenly take to flight, the experience can provide a momentary shock to unsuspecting passersby, as in this image captured in Congress Park, Saratoga Springs.