Monday, October 28, 2019
G&L puts carpets under feet for 75 years
Paul Murphy, third generation owner of G&L Flooring located at 200 Grant St., says the family has managed to compete with bigger businesses for 75 years through good customer service and quality products. They plan on keeping the same mentality and providing for the people of the West Side. By Christian Gaffney and John Propis
Saturday, October 26, 2019
Ice boom waiting for drop in lake temps
The
Lake Erie-Niagara River Ice Boom, a device designed to control ice buildup in
the Niagara River, is set to go in the water this year on Dec. 16 or when the
water temperature reaches 39 degrees Fahrenheit.
The ice boom is a series of steel
pontoons strung together by steel cables, said Keith Koralewski, chief of water
management at the Army Corps of Engineers.
“The boom reduces the risk that ice
blockages will interfere with reducing hydropower production and reduces ice
damage to shoreline property,” Koralewski said.
The ice boom was created 55
years ago to reduce the amount of ice passing between Lake Erie and the Niagara
River.
When in position, the 8,800 foot ice
boom reaches across the outlet of Lake Erie, near the water intake of the city
of Buffalo.
The International Niagara Board of
Control installs, operates, and removes of the ice boom. The Army Corps performs the day-to-day operations
of the ice boom.
The boom is removed by April 1 of
each year, unless there is more than 250 square miles of ice remaining in the
eastern end of Lake Erie. By Gabrielle Kime and Conner Wilson
Friday, October 25, 2019
Voting begins Oct. 26 in election 2019
New York State will be offering early voting for the first
time in its history this year for the general election.
Between
Oct. 26 and Nov. 3 registered voters will be able to cast an early vote before Election
Day. Throughout the week stations will be open from noon to 9 p.m., and on the
weekends from noon to 6 p.m.
“The idea
was that if people have more options, they would turn out in greater numbers,” DerekMurphy,
communications director for the Erie County Board of Elections said. “There is
no question that having ten days in total to vote, with the nine early days and
the election day itself, will make it easier for people to juggle their
schedules.”
West Side
registered voters can visit any of the designated early polling stations in Erie
County. The Belle Center, 102 Maryland St., and the Salvation Army, 187 Grant
St., are the two early polling stations on the West Side.
Election Day,
Nov. 5, will be the official day for voting when voters will be able to
participate from 6 a.m. until 9 p.m. On the actual Election Day voters will be limited to their usual voting
location based on their address, Murphy said.
Supreme
Court Justice, County Executive, Buffalo Comptroller and the Niagara District
City Common Council are among the offices that will be on the ballot for West
Side voters.
A regional
map of the districts can be found here, and the candidates running for each
position here. By Thomas Corsi and Ryan Williams
Thursday, October 24, 2019
W.S. Bazaar to head to bigger quarters
Westminster Economic Development Initiative Community
Development Director Bob Doyle (left) orders food from Alain Rodriguez,
co-owner of Kiosko Latino in the West Side Bazaar. WEDI recently announced that
they’ve bought a larger property at 1432 Niagara St. to serve as a new site for
the business incubator. WEDI plans to move the Bazaar to the new location,
which is one mile away from the current spot on 25 Grant St., by spring 2021. By Francis Boeck and Manny Rodriguez
Thursday, October 17, 2019
WEDI launches program for refugee students
Westminster Economic
Development Initiative has begun a workforce development and career exploration
program to help refugee students.
The program, called Launch, kicked
off on Oct. 9. It will assist refugee students in ninth
grade through 12th grade with computer skills, financial literacy, job
readiness training and college prep.
“We are launching our
students into their future,” Education Director Courtney Yonce said.
The program will be
held from 4:05 to 6:30 p.m. on Mondays through Thursdays Lafayette High School.
Launch targets students who are English
language learners. Students will get the opportunity to develop organizational
skills, studying techniques, and writing clear and well-formed essays.
Homework help is also
provided.
WEDI has partnered
with various local organizations such as Mission: Ignite Powered by Computers
for Children, helping students learn the basic fundamentals of Microsoft
Office.
“Students will be
able to take home a computer at the end of the program. Through Sprint students
receive free Wi-Fi for the four years they are in high school,” Yonce said.
The business
incubator The Foundry is offering opportunities for students to explore STEM
careers as a part of the program.
“Our main goal is to
help students graduate high school, but also to set them up on the right path
for their career goals,” Yonce said.
Clients of WEDI will
also participate in this program by introducing students to successful
entrepreneurs and mentors.
WEDI
has collaborated with Buffalo Public Schools to ensure that students receive a
hot meal after school. By Bianca Moise and Jasmine Huntley
Monday, October 14, 2019
Vinyl coming ‘round again on the West Side
By
Christian Gaffney and John Propis
Vinyl records may seem like a relic from the
past, but over the course of the last few years there has been a surge in vinyl
record sales.
The West Side is home to two vinyl record
shops, Black Dots and Revolver Records Inc., where people can collect old and
new vinyl records.
Black
Dots, 368 Grant St., recently
moved from its old location across the street. Co-Owners Quinn Moore and
Michael Bauman believe there is a resurgence in vinyl, primarily from new
interest from the college-age crowd.
“We get people from all over the place
coming to buy vinyl records,” Bauman said. “College kids seem to be the
majority of it being so close to the different campuses. There definitely is a
surge in vinyl, people are interested all around.”
Quinn Moore, on the popularity of vinyl records:
Having only been in the new building
for a few months, Black
Dots owners are settling in and are continuing
to make additions to improve the store. With the bar being built in the back,
Black Dots hopes to attract people to come have a drink and listen to their
favorite tunes.
According to a study in Statista,
https://www.statista.com/chart/7699/lp-sales-in-the-united-states/
vinyl
records across the United States has seen a significant increase in sales.
Since 2006, sales have gone from almost a million to almost 17 million in 2018.
Revolver Records has seen its
share of new customers as well. A second location was added on 831 Elmwood Ave.
due to the amount of business at the Hertel
Avenue location. Revolver Records provides a sense of retro when walking
through the door.
Longtime
employee Matthew Aquiline sees this vinyl revival sticking. When asked about
how he has seen it change recently, Aquiline never thought vinyl died.
“Definitely a younger audience kind
of started the vinyl revival in the past few years,” Aquiline said. “It has
never really gone away, there has definitely been a lot of buyers of vinyl over
the years, throughout the ‘90s but just
recently it has started coming back full force.”
In order to keep things fresh at
Revolver Records, the owners run different promotions to keep the customers
involved.
“At the shop we have a thing we do fairly
often, it's kind of a vinyl record monthly club where we pick an album that is
kind of related to Buffalo in way, we have someone who has worked or played on
the album come into the shop that comes in and talks about their record,” Aquiline
said.
Revolver Records allows
customers to sell their old or new records to them, which helps bring in a wide
variety of people.
“Our audience definitely has a mix
of customers, we have a lot of older people that have been coming in for years,
and obviously a lot of new people who are just getting into to record
collecting,” Aquiline said.
With the holiday season
approaching, both Black Dots’ and Revolver Records’ busiest time of the year is right around the
corner. Each say they see an increase in sales, which helps them during the
down time throughout the spring and summer.
Sunday, October 13, 2019
Terrace to upgrade patio in time for fall
Dawn Marchant-Madden, head hostess at The
Terrace of Delaware Park, is standing in what will soon be a heated and
enclosed patio. Marchant-Madden is excited for the overhead heaters and
wraparound enclosure to be added to the lounge area by the end of November. She
hopes the unique viewing experience of Hoyt Lake will attract more people
during the fall and winter seasons. By
Tommy Corsi and Ryan Williams
Delivery apps drive business for pizzerias
LaNova Pizzeria Assistant Manager Rob Santiago juggles |
By Gabrielle Kime and Conner
Wilson
It’s Sunday
and the Buffalo Bills game starts in a few hours, to beat the rush you go to
the pizza shop at 10 a.m. when it opens.
When you walk in, you see the kitchen is lined with tickets, the phones
are ringing off the hook, pizza dough tossed frantically in the air, pepperoni
and marinara is flying.
Bills
gamedays have always been busy for local pizzerias, but with the evolution of
third-party delivery services, they’ve become more hectic.
There’s
Grubhub, DoorDash, Postmates, Slice, UberEats, and surely more to come. With
the creation of these apps, food delivery has drastically changed.
In some
areas, these apps aren’t yet up and running, but on the West Side, they are
changing the food ordering and delivery culture.
Over the
past couple of years, local restaurants have seen an increase in sales with the
creation of these food delivery apps. With all of these different delivery
options, restaurants can reach customers they never could before, said Gina
DiLaura, assistant manager of LaNova Pizzeria, 371 W. Ferry St.
“It’s
increased it, in the area,” DiLaura said. “We’re such a busy restaurant here
that our delivery zone is kind of limited. So Doordash, Postmates will deliver
to places we usually don’t as far as like the Southtowns, Tonawanda, places
like that.”
Online
delivery services don’t only provide the consumer with another ordering method
but expand the delivery radius beyond the restaurant’s original borders. This
helps small restaurants to reach beyond the West Side.
“In the
past year, we’ve probably seen a 30% increase in sales and you can credit it to
Doordash,” Dilaura said.
According
to Upserve
Restaurant Insider, 60% of U.S. consumers order delivery or takeout once a
week. About 31% say that they use
third-party delivery services at least twice a week.
Allentown
Pizza, 94 Elmwood Ave., utilizes third-party delivery services.
Store Supervisor Nikki Moore said the business has expanded its customer thanks
to modern delivery services.
“Our
restaurant only delivers within two miles in Allentown,” Moore said. “So
anybody outside of that who wants can order so that’s great.”
A greater
delivery radius has also resulted in a greater income for establishments on the
West Side.
With these new
sources of delivery available, businesses are facing new challenges that they
hadn’t before. With the ability to reach more customers, the amount of work to
fulfill these orders can be overwhelming.
Orders used
to all come from one place: over the phone onto a pen and paper. Now,
restaurants have to juggle several accounts and screens relaying orders from
multiple apps.
LaNova Assistant Manager Gina Dilaura on receiving online
orders:
“It does
get a little stressful within the kitchen since you have all these tablets you
have to filter through lots of different orders so it does get stressful in the
kitchen to have so much stuff going on,” Moore said.
Another pizza goes out the door at LaNova |
A concern
businesses have with third-party delivery apps is handling and keeping the
quality of food. When an online delivery sends a driver, the restaurant has to
trust that the driver will handle the food with care and deliver in a timely
fashion.
“When the
drivers show up, we have to make sure they don’t turn the pizza sideways,”
Moore said. “They don’t understand, they don’t have the training so they’ll
just ruin the pizzas. We have to keep an eye on them all the time.”
La Nova
Pizzeria is in the heart of the West Side. DiLaura said the West Side location
sees a lot more business than the Williamsville location. They credit third-party
delivery services to what makes the region unique and profitable.
“In the
West Side, you know, you’re in the middle of it,” DiLaura said. “I think we
receive more orders here, but I think it’s because there are so many more
people on the West Side, more population in this area.”
Thursday, October 10, 2019
Gather & Game brings new vibe to Grant St.
Westside Stories Used
Books, 205 Grant St., has added a second location across Grant Street, called
Gather & Game, to tap into the neighborhood’s interest in board and other
games.
The addition at 212 Grant St. is
expected to bring in more business and add a new gaming type atmosphere to the
block
Due to heavy inventory of magic
cards and games at the bookstore, owner Joe Petri has always had the plans of
opening something like this to accommodate his customers.
“How often does the space across the
street from my job open up, we felt we would’ve been kicking ourselves for
years if we didn’t roll the dice now,” Petri said.
In order to differentiate the
gaming location from other game shops around the area, Petri’s idea was to do
something similar to the Elmwood area and make it café-style and lean into the
board game theme.
In an era consumed with technology
where people can literally play games at the palms of their hands, Gather &
Game goes beyond that. Here, you can learn how to play board games, some of
which you may have never heard of like “Clank!” “King of Tokyo” “Carcassonne”
and many more.
Petri wanted to do
something for the neighborhood when he opened the bookstore in 2011.. Only
living a couple blocks away and being home with his two children he was able to
make it work. His focus will now be continuing to improve the new place across
the street. By Christian Gaffney and John
Propis
Thursday, October 3, 2019
Lucchinos add to Elmwood Ave. properties
By Francis Boeck and Manny Rodriguez
Walking down the
Elmwood strip, one of the premier neighborhoods in the city of Buffalo, one is
bound to see the impact of Ron Lucchino.
The West Side native, who is the
founder of the well-known Elmwood Taco & Subs restaurant, has slowly taken
over much of the block while providing the Elmwood Village with an “alternative
to traditional fast food.” (https://www.theets.com/about.php)
In late August, Lucchino and his
family expanded their footprint on the block buying 929 Elmwood Ave. It is the
home of Nine29 restaurant, which is run by brothers Peter and Johnathan Eid.
The new addition means the family’s
holdings extend from 937 Elmwood Ave. to 925 Elmwood Ave.
“It’s an exciting time for us,” said
Mike Lucchino, Ron’s son and the current manager of operations at Elmwood Taco
& Subs. “I’m the second generation. Over the years we’ve been continuing to
acquire property down the street. This is our neighborhood. We all live in the
village. We use the money that we earn through the Elmwood Taco & Subs and
reinvest it in the Elmwood Village.”
Mike Luchinno, on his family's dedicated to the Elmwood Village:
Many believe Lucchino and the
properties he owns are part of a mini-renaissance that this section of the
village has been going through.
“I would say about 20 years ago the
tilt of the neighborhood switched to here from further down,” said Johnathan Welch, owner of
neighboring Talking Leaves Book Store. “For a long time, the area
closer to Children’s Hospital was more the power area of the Elmwood Strip.
This area in part because of the farmers market and partly because of the
retail area is more the center of the neighborhood.”
For some, one group owning five
conjoining properties could be a cause for concern, especially in the Elmwood
Village, where residents are committed to keeping the character and landscape
of the neighborhood.
The residents championed the GreenCode,
an ordinance signed into law in 2017 that overhauled the city’s zoning laws,
and are now using it to fight big developers, like LP Ciminelli and Carl
Paladino from building high-rises.
Welch feels unsure about
the Lucchinos owning half of the block and hopes that if they have any plans to
drastically change the outlook, they’ll consult with the neighborhood first.
“I’m concerned
about it when anybody buys up a lot of property like that,” Welch said.
“There’s so much development going in here that is problematic. Obviously
having that large of a footprint gives them the possibility to do something we
might not like or goes against the Green Code. But until that happens, there’s
nothing we can do about it.”
Councilmember Joel P. Feroleto, who
serves the Delaware District, sees those concerns but believes that most
residents trust the Lucchinos because of their history on the block.
“I think people were happy to see
that it was purchased by a local person who has a history on Elmwood Avenue,
and it wasn’t an entire block purchased by an out-of-town developer,” Feroleto
said. “I think people are comforted that it’s a local person.”
Elmwood Taco & Subs is a classic
family-owned business. Ron’s wife, Barbara, ran the books and Mike said he
started working on the weekends at 13-years-old.
According to Mike, his father is “starting
to step back” to allow him and his sister Jackie to take over the business.
Family businesses like this are one
of the reasons the northern end of Elmwood has become one of the most prominent
sections of the business strip.
“I think owner-operated businesses
and family-operated businesses make Elmwood such a success,” Feroleto said. “To
have the owners care about the business makes a difference.”
Black Dots spreads out in new location
Quinn Moore of Black Dots Records is excited for the store’s
relocation to the corner of Grant Street and
Potomac Avenue, and what it means for the business, The relocation from across the street from its original location gives the business
more space to construct a bar and improve the overall experience of its customers with a larger
display of records and accessories. Moore sees the move as a vital piece of a
long-term investment on the up-and-coming Grant Street area. By Thomas Corsi and Ryan Williams