Family legacy lumbers on
Transcription
Family legacy lumbers on
Bob Ellis/staff photographer Matt Gutchess, left, and his father, Gary Gutchess, stand Wednesday at the Gutchess Lumber Company on McLean Road in Cortlandville. Matt Gutchess has been named president of the company, taking over from his father, who will remain as chairman of the board of directors. Family legacy lumbers on Fifth-generation son taking over as head of Gutchess By TYRONE L. HEPPARD Staff Reporter theppard@cortlandstandardnews.net CORTLANDVILLE — One of the town’s oldest businesses is in the midst of a transition as Matt Gutchess takes over as fifth-generation president of Gutchess Lumber Co., succeeding his father, Gary Gutchess, who is stepping down to chair the board of directors. As the great-great grandson of George Gutchess, who founded the company in Lapeer in 1904, Matt Gutchess, 41, is moving up from the post of vice president to run the company. From the company’s headquarters at 890 McLean Road, Gary Gutchess, 67, said Wednesday, he has been president of the lumber company since 2010, but has worked there in some capacity on and off since 1968. He said he is proud of the advances Gutchess Lumber has made over the last few years and said he is sure the company will continue to grow under his son’s leadership. “Some people overstay their welcome (and) I want to go out when we’re winning,” Gary Gutchess joked. “I just think it’s time for Matt. He’s very well prepared for the job he’s stepping into. I’m convinced he’s going to do a good job.” Cortlandville Town Supervisor Dick Tupper said this morning the Gutchess Lumber Co. is important to the town and the Cortland County community. Recently, the lumber company agreed to a land swap deal with the town which could potentially lead to a newer, larger Citizens’ Park for residents. Tupper said having been introduced to Matt Gutchess before, he thinks he will make a good president. “He seems like a very, very intelligent young man,” Tupper said. “I think it’ll be good for the company.” Matt Gutchess said Wednesday in the time between finishing high school and studying history at Cornell University, he learned the intricacies of how the company works and is prepared to oversee Gutchess Lumber. “I’ve focused more on the operational side of the business,” he said. “Harvesting timber right through to saw-milling logs ... (and) selling the lumber domestically and overseas.” The company has a meeting scheduled for Friday morning with guests from China, one of the company’s largest customers and Matt Gutchess See FAMILY, page 2 2 — Cortland Standard, Thursday, August 13, 2015 JAIL Obituaries Elissa “Elsie” Sciaruto Fabrizio Mrs. Elissa “Elsie” Sciaruto Fabrizio, 93, of Cortland, N.Y., passed away on Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2015, at Cortland Regional Medical Center after a brief illness. Born in Roccacasale, Italy, Elsie came to the United States in 1931. She was a communicant of St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church and was formerly employed at Smith-Corona and worked with her brother, Pietro Sciaruto, at Bari Importing in Cortland for many years. Elsie loved doing many different crafts and enjoyed working in her flower garden. But most of all she loved all her family and the times they spent together. Her other enjoyment was going to her various club meetings, the Stella D’Oro Lodge, Altar Society and volunteering with RSVP. Additionally, she was a life member of the Women of The Moose. Survivors include her son, James (Irene) Berardi of Winterville, N.C.; her daughter, Maryann Berardi Murphy of Pinellas Park, Fla.; a stepson, Alfred “Corky” (Mary) Fabrizio of Fairport; stepdaughter, Colleen (Chris) Lawhorne of Tampa, Fla.; sisters-in-law, Francesca Sciaruto, Antoinette Weinerth and Bella, Esther and Eva Fabrizio; 10 grandchildren, Lori, Patti, Matthew, Marc, Elizabeth, Amanda, Nicole, Beth, Amy and Kelli; 16 great-grandchildren; two great-great-grandchildren; and many nieces, nephews and cousins. Elsie was preceded in death by her parents, Mariano and Domenica Liberatore Sciaruto; brother, Pietro Sciaruto; and her husbands, Nicholas Berardi and Menotti Alfred Fabrizio. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Saturday in St. Anthony’s Church with the Rev. Joseph Zareski serving as celebrant. Prayers of committal will follow in St. Mary’s Catholic Cemetery. The family will be present to receive friends from 1 to 4 p.m. Friday in St. Anthony’s Church, Pomeroy Street, Cortland. Arrangements are under the direction of Riccardi Funeral Home, Cortland. Condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.riccardifuneralhome.com. David Mark Rawson David Mark Rawson 52, of Cortland, N.Y., passed away Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2015, in Syracuse. Born Nov. 6, 1962, in Cortland, David was the son of the late Donald and Beatrice Chapman Rawson. He had been employed at the JM Murray Center. He was an avid fisherman, enjoyed listening to classic rock and roll, country and AC/DC. David is survived by his wife, Debra; son, Robert, of Cortland; brothers, Ricky (Brenda) Rawson of Homer and Wayne Jones of Georgia; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. In addition to his parents, David was predeceased by brothers, Donald, Lester and Robert; and niece, Tabitha Rawson. Memorial services will be held 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the United Presbyterian Church, 25 Church St. Cortland. Friends are invited to call from 10 to 11:30 a.m. prior to the service at the church. To offer online condolences, visit www.wright-beard.com. Deaths FABRIZIO — Elissa “Elsie” Sciaruto Fabrizio, 93, of Cortland, N.Y., died Aug. 11, 2015, at Cortland Regional Medical Center. Services will be 10 a.m. Saturday in St. Anthony’s Church. Prayers of committal will follow in St. Mary’s Catholic Cemetery. Calling hours will be 1 to 4 p.m. Friday in St. Anthony’s Church, Pomeroy Street, Cortland. RAWSON — David Mark Rawson 52, of Cortland, N.Y., died Aug. 11, 2015, in Syracuse. Services will be 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the United Presbyterian Church, 25 Church St. Cortland. Calling hours will be 10 to 11:30 a.m. prior to the service at the church. Police/Fire Log Man arrested for DWI in a go-kart CINCINNATUS — State police stopped a Cincinnatus man on Tuesday for driving an unregistered motor vehicle on Route 26. Brian W. Fairweather, 34, was driving his 2000 Silver Fox go-kart on the road when state police stopped him. During his stop, Fairweather was suspected of being intoxicated with a blood-alcohol content of 0.10 percent and had an open container of beer in his vehicle, according to state police. Fairweather was arrested at 6:02 p.m. and charged with driving while intoxicated, a misdemeanor; driving with a suspended license, having an open container in a motor vehicle and driving an unregistered motor vehicle, traffic infractions. Fairweather was given tickets for all of the charges, according to state trooper Nathan Riegal. He was arraigned in Solon Town Court and sent to the Cortland County Jail with bail set at $500 cash. He is set to appear Wednesday in Cincinnatus Town Court. Lottery Winners ALBANY (AP) — Here are the winning numbers selected Wednesday in the New York State Lottery: Numbers: Midday: 1-4-4, Lucky Sum: 9, Evening: 4-5-2, Lucky Sum: 11; WinFour: Midday: 1-0-1-3, Lucky Sum: 5, Evening: 8-41-6, Lucky Sum: 19; Pick 10: 01-02-06-09-15-23-26-30-33-35-3840-44-47-56-62-65-67-69-77; Take Five: 02-07-11-12-20; Lotto: 06-09-16-21-36-44, Bonus: 3; Powerball: 08-13-29-38-52, Powerball: 28, Power Play: 2 Evan Geibel ...................... Publisher Stephen Clark .................. Business Manager Sherwood W. Chapman... Executive Editor Kevin T. Conlon................ Managing Editor Michael J. Anderson ........ Display Advertising Manager Guy C. Ussery .................. Circulation Director (USPS No. 133-580) Published every afternoon (Sundays and holidays excepted). Periodicals postage paid at Cortland, New York. Cortland Standard Printing Co, Inc., owner and publisher. Kevin R. Howe, President and Treasurer. 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The Cortland Standard assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisements, but will reprint that part of any advertisement in which a typographical error occurs. Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of any error which may occur. We reserve the right to reject any advertisement. continued from page 1 2016 budget process without the Legislature committing to Phase 1,” the report states. “The county will be forced to budget for failing infrastructure versus a sustainable long-term solution.” Rigg, also a member of the advisory group, said the report outlines alternatives that would only put another temporary fix on the problem, such as last year’s conversion of the gymnasium for space for 30 additional beds. Alternatives the group considered include adding a second story to the existing jail, portable pod units stationed in the parking lot to house inmates, purchasing surrounding properties to expand on the existing jail, and using a regional facility. These options were proven to be ineffective, according to the group’s report, because of high overtime and transportation costs and increased maintenance of an already deteriorating facility. FRENZY continued from page 1 for president are scheduled take their turn on the soapbox, among them Republicans Jeb Bush, Scott Walker and Marco Rubio. Democrats Bernie Sanders and Martin O’Malley will, too. Will Hillary Rodham Clinton? She’s coming to the fair, but hasn’t yet said if she’ll take a turn on the box. Iowa is already a place where even the most cautious-minded and carefully managed political candidate can have unexpected, intimate and sometimes just plain weird moments with the public. At campaign stops in recent months, Bush held hands and prayed with a flowerladen man in a top hat, Walker embraced a sobbing homeless military veteran and Clinton graciously accepted garlic pills from a supporter concerned for her health. The fair only amplifies the Iowa experience. Will Rogers, GOP chairman of Polk County, called it “the Iowa culture crammed into 10 days.” For Republicans, the cancellation of the traditional Iowa Straw FAMILY continued from page 1 explained there is a high demand for the North American hardwood it processes in places like Southeast Asia and the Middle East. But despite heading a company which processes timber from roughly 300,000 acres of forest a year and exports about 50 percent of its product, Matt Gutchess said he is not resting on his laurels and aims to keep innovating as president of the company. “It’s good to to have that demand for the product,” he said. “Of course, we have many competitors who want to do a better job than we do. There’s always a challenge.” Gutchess Lumber employs over 400 people and operates under an employee stock ownership plan, or an ESOP, meaning employees are literally invested in the success of the company. These are the people Matt Gutchess will rely on going forward. “They’re revved up,” Gary Gutchess added. “They’re excited about doing a good job and how they can do it better and how the company can do better. That’s necessary. You just have to have a strong team.” Gary Gutchess also said each the jail to be inefficient. According to the advisory group report, the continuous need to board out inmates is costly for the county and presents a fiscal constraint for the department’s budget each year. The county spent $2.2 million in boarding out inmates from 2010 until July 2015. Last year, $456,372 was spent on those costs. Last year, the state Commis- sion of Corrections approved a 30-bed addition contingent upon the county pursuing a new facility. The county also had to hire four additional full-time corrections officers for the addition. “We’re pretty serious and we’re trying to cover all the bases,” Rigg said. “There’s going to be a little bit of a shock factor because, unfortunately, jails and public safety complexes are not cheap.” Rigg said the group has considered some sites for the new public safety complex but he would not identify them. Other advisory group members include Capt. Rob Derksen of the Sheriff’s Department; Scott Roman, county director of Emergency Response and Communications; county Director of Budget and Finance Peggy Mousaw; Legislature Chair Don Boyden (R-Preble, Scott and Homer); Legislators Dick Bushnell (D-LD4) and Kevin Whitney (R-Cortlandville); Jeremy Boylan, clerk of the Legislature, and County Attorney Karen Howe. By CLAIRE GALOFARO Associated Press MOREHEAD, Ky. — A Kentucky clerk’s office turned away two gay couples seeking marriage licenses today, defying a federal judge’s order that dismissed her argument involving religious freedom. Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis’ office rejected the couples’ bid for licenses just hours after the judge ruled she must do the opposite and wrote that the refusal “likely violated the constitutional rights of her constituents.” Deputy clerk Nathan Davis says the office was advised by its attorneys with the Christian law firm Liberty Counsel to continue refusing same-sex couples as it appeals the ruling to the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. James Yates and William Smith Jr., a couple for nearly a decade, were the second pair turned away today. They also were turned away a month ago. Today, they described a disconnect between the office’s actions and their experience in the community of Morehead, a college town where they say has long been open and accepting. They held hands as they walked into the clerk’s office, and gay rights activists shouted “Good luck!” from the street, holding signs reading “clerk not clergy” and “obey the law.” But they ultimately were denied a license. Clerk Kim Davis has argued that her deeply held Christian beliefs prevent her from issuing licenses to same-sex couples. After the U.S. Supreme Court ruled gay marriage bans unconstitutional, Davis stopped issuing licenses to any couple, gay or straight. Five couples sued her, and U.S. District Judge David L. Bunning on Wednesday ordered her to comply with the Supreme Court’s ruling. In Kentucky, county clerks issue marriage licenses, but someone else must “solemnize” the marriage before the license can be filed with the county clerk. Davis argued that issuing a samesex marriage license that contains her signature is the same as her approving the marriage, which she said violates her Christian beliefs. But Bunning rejected that argument, saying Davis has likely violated the U.S. Constitution’s ban on the government establishing a religion by “openly adopting a policy that promotes her own religious convictions at the expenses of others.” “Davis remains free to practice her Apostolic Christian beliefs. She may continue to attend church twice a week, participate in Bible Study and minister to female inmates at the Rowan County Jail. She is even free to believe that marriage is a union between one man and one woman, as many Americans do,” Bunning wrote. “However, her religious convictions cannot excuse her from performing the duties that she took an oath to perform as Rowan County Clerk.” Laura Landenwich, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said the 28page ruling reveals that the judge combed through each of Davis’ legal arguments and rejected each. Bunning said that although couples could get marriage licenses elsewhere, “why should they be required to?” He noted the surrounding counties require 30 minutes or one hour of travel and there are many “in this rural region of the state who simply do not have the physical, financial or practical means to travel.” Bunning said state law does not allow the county judge-executive to issue marriage licenses unless Davis is absent from her job, and Bunning refused to deem Davis absent because she has a religious objection. And Bunning said issuing a marriage license does not constitute speech, saying the marriage license form “does not require the county clerk to condone or endorse same-sex marriage on religious or moral grounds.” Bob Ellis/staff photographer The bunk area of the Cortland County jail is seen April 2014. “We’re looking at every option and everything comes back to a new public safety complex,” Rigg said. “We’re going to try and consolidate as many services as we can for the long haul.” The report details the background of the jail, citing the problem of overcrowding which has been studied since 2004, including a state comptroller’s report, also in 2004, that found Poll makes the fair an even more important destination. The poll had been a mainstay of the GOP presidential primary since 1979, raising money for the state party and culling the field of candidates. It was a weak predictor of candidate success in Iowa’s caucuses, however, and some major candidates skipped it. The Iowa GOP decided in June to drop the poll. “Not all candidates are going to appear natural and comfortable at a state fair. There is an element here of being able to interact with an average person on a hot August day,” said Jeff Kaufmann, chairman of the Republican Party of Iowa. A cheerleader for all things Iowa, Republican Gov. Terry Branstad waxed poetic about the benefit of a good fair appearance, remembering his trip to the event last year with Joni Ernst, then a state senator, now a U.S. senator. “I can tell you, she really connected,” Branstad said. “People were coming up to Joni and hugging her. I think that was a precursor to what happened in the election.” generation has to “remake the business,” meaning they have to take the changing times into account. Matt Gutchess said given the company is in the business of selling natural resources, he wants to examine maximizing its resources, citing waste sawdust as an example. About 20 years ago, sawmills viewed sawdust as a waste product, he said. Today, those in the wood industry are realizing there is a market for it. “We’ve seen that more and more,” he said. “That what we’ve considered byproducts of our process historically have become ... revenue drivers. I think this is a good area for focus.” Over the past few years, Gutchess Lumber has built a new sawmill and integrated Preble-based Paul Bunyan Wood Products — formerly owned by Gary Gutchess’ cousin Paul Gutchess — into the company after Gutchess Lumber acquired it just over a year ago. As demand increases and the company continues to expand, both Gary and Matt Gutchess say as long as they stay innovative, the company is likely to be around for another 100 years. “The future is potentially very bright,” Gary Gutchess said. Making it Right The Cortland Standard will print corrections and clarifications of news articles in this space. If you find mistakes or omissions, call the managing editor at 607-756-5665 x 129. Clerk’s office defies order on same-sex marriage US jobless claims at 15-year low WASHINGTON (AP) — More people sought U.S. unemployment aid last week, but the average for the past month fell to the lowest level in 15 years, a sign that few employers are cutting jobs. The Labor Department said today that applications for jobless benefits rose 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 274,000 last week. Yet the four-week average, a less volatile measure, dropped 1,750 to 266,250, the lowest since April 15, 2000. The figures indicate that six years after the Great Recession forced 8.5 million layoffs, Americans are enjoying solid job secu- rity. Economists note that when adjusted for population growth, the current level of applications is likely at all-time lows. Applications are a proxy for layoffs. The low readings also suggest that employers are confident about the economy’s health and see little need to shed workers. The number of Americans receiving aid rose 15,000 to 2.27 million. That figure has fallen 10.7 percent in the past 12 months. Some of those former recipients have likely gotten jobs, but many others used up all the benefits available to them.