All County Music Festival Held In Bath Over The Weekend
Bath Central School District hosted the All-County Music Festival on Saturday afternoon. This musical showcase boasted over 300 talented student musicians from 15 schools in Steuben and Allegany Counties. Small groups of select students from each school were chosen to perform music they practice at their respective schools and then come together 24 hours before the day of the concert, to practice together. They put on an incredible choral and band performances with students from grades 6 through 12 participating. These musical festivals are held annually to highlight local school music programs and the many talented student musicians within our counties.
Unused Snow Days To Be Used By Bath Schools
FROM THE BATH SCHOOL DISTRICT: "We are pleased to inform you that, at this time, our district has “presumed” snow days available to give back. These days will be returned in the order listed below. However, if additional snow days are needed between now and the final listed date, those give-back days will be reinstated as regular school days. For example, if one snow day is needed, the last listed give-back day will revert to a regular school day. If two snow days are needed, the last two listed dates will revert, and so on.
Scheduled Snow Day Give-Back Dates:
Thursday, April 2 (the day before Spring Break)
Friday, May 22 (the Friday before Memorial Day)
Tuesday, May 26 (the day after Memorial Day)
Please note: Any of these dates may revert to regular school days if additional closures are required between now and the end of the school year.
Anti-Ice Sentiments Continue To Dominate The Steuben County Monthly, Full Legislative Meetings
Over a dozen people showed up at the Monday Steuben County Legislative meeting, to speak during the public comment period. Most of those who did talk, voiced their objections to ICE using the Steuben County Jail to house ICE prisoners. There were two speakers who disagreed, but most of them were anti-Ice. We caught up with Steuben County Legislative Chair Kelly Fitzpatrick afterwards. Fitzpatrick says that she respects their right to protest but she trusts the sheriff in his decision making.
Steuben County Lawmakers Ask For Lower Utility Bills
The Steuben County Legislature adopted a resolution calling for an immediate and comprehensive review of rapidly escalating electric delivery charges impacting residents, seniors, and small businesses across the county.
Local ratepayers are facing unsustainable and compounding increases in their electric bills—driven not by higher usage, but by rising delivery charges, fees, and approved rate adjustments. These growing costs are placing a serious strain on household budgets and the local economy, particularly in rural communities like Steuben County.
The resolution formally urges the New York State Public Service Commission (PSC) to take immediate action by investigating delivery charges, strengthening cost controls, and enforcing greater transparency in how utility rates are set and approved.
“Part of the PSC responsibility is to ensure that our electric service is done at just and reasonable rates,” said Chair Fitzpatrick of the Steuben County Legislature. “What is currently happening in our state is making utility bills completely unaffordable to families. This must be investigated.”
The Legislature is also calling on the PSC to prioritize affordability, require measurable cost-containment efforts from NYSEG, and put an end to unjustified rate increases that disproportionately impact rural and low-density communities.
The resolution represents a unified stand to protect residents and ensure that utility pricing remains fair, reasonable, and sustainable for all.
Full Resolution Shown Below:
RESOLUTION
STEUBEN COUNTY LEGISLATURE
BATH, NEW YORK
INTRO. NO.: 27
INTRO. DATE: March 23, 2026
INTRO. BY: K.M. Hanna
TITLE: MEMORIALIZING THE NEW YORK STATE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION TO IMMEDIATELY REVIEW ELECTRIC DELIVERY CHARGES, DEMANDING IMPROVED COST CONTROLS AND TRANSPARENCY REGARDING THE ESCALATING COST OF ELECTRICITY.
WHEREAS, residents, seniors, and small businesses in Steuben County are experiencing unsustainable, repeated, and compounding increases in electric bills that are placing a growing financial strain on households and the local economy; and
WHEREAS, a substantial portion of these increases is attributable not to increased energy consumption, but to escalating delivery charges, fees, and approved rate adjustments imposed by NYSEG; and
WHEREAS, electric delivery charges and rate structures are regulated and approved by the New York State Public Service Commission, which is statutorily charged with ensuring that utility rates are just, reasonable, and affordable for ratepayers; and
WHEREAS, rural and low-density communities are disproportionately impacted by delivery charge increases and cost-recovery mechanisms that fail to adequately account for affordability, equity, and the cumulative burden placed on ratepayers; and
WHEREAS, the continued approval of rate increases without stronger cost controls, greater transparency, and meaningful affordability protections is unacceptable and contrary to the public interest.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Steuben County Legislature formally and strongly urges the New York State Public Service Commission to conduct a thorough and immediate review of electric delivery charges, rate increases, and cost-recovery practices applicable to NYSEG customers; and be it further
RESOLVED, that the Steuben County Legislature calls upon the Public Service Commission to prioritize ratepayer affordability, demand greater transparency from NYSEG, and require demonstrable cost-containment and operational efficiency measures before approving any future rate increases; and be it further
RESOLVED, that the Steuben County Legislature expressly opposes continued or automatic rate increases that shift rising operational, infrastructure, and administrative costs onto ratepayers without clear justification or adequate protection for rural communities.
1972 Corning Community Graduate, To Be Honored
Coming up this Friday, Corning Community College will be honoring one of their 1972 graduates: Dave Clark. Clark went on to become the Atlanta Braves Coach and an advocate for the disabled. He suffered from Polio as an infant. A ceremony honoring him will be held this Friday, at the Corning Community College Commons Building from 5pm to 7:30pm. See full statement from Corning Community College:
Meet David Clark ’72, this year’s Athletics Hall of Fame Inductee! 

A 1972 graduate of Corning Community College, Dave Clark is a trailblazer in professional baseball and a powerful advocate for inclusion. Despite being diagnosed with polio as an infant, he went on to build a remarkable 17-year playing career and more than five decades in professional sports. 

Dave has served as a coach for the Atlanta Braves, an Olympic baseball coach, and owner of the iconic Indianapolis Clowns. Beyond the game, he founded Disability Dream & Do (D3Day), creating opportunities for athletes with disabilities nationwide.
Join us in celebrating Dave and our outstanding alumni at the Reflections Ceremony! 
Friday, March 27, 2026 | 5 to 7:30 PM
SUNY Corning Community College – Commons Building
Purchase tickets here
https://bit.ly/reflections-2026
Need A Job? Check This One Out
The Steuben County Office Of The Aging is hiring. The salary goes from $33,000 to $40,000 a year. You have to have a Class D drivers license, a high school diploma or it’s equivalent and you have to take a course about taking care of others, within six months of getting the job. The deadline for applying is April 2nd. Interested? Check out the Steuben County’s job site on
[https://www.steubencountyny.gov/jobs.aspx]
Ithaca Woman's Purse Stolen - Suspect Steals $13K
FROM NYSP: The New York State Police are seeking the public’s assistance in identifying the individual pictured regarding a grand larceny

On March 19, 2026, a suspect allegedly broke into a vehicle in a parking lot in Ithaca and stole a purse that had been left in plain view. The purse contained the victim’s identification, checkbook, and credit cards.
On March 20, 2026, the same suspect is believed to have traveled to two Cayuga Lake National Bank locations in Cayuga County, where she fraudulently withdrew a total of $13,500 using the victim’s identification.
If you recognize this individual or have any information, please contact the New York State Police at 585-398-4100 or crimetip@troopers.ny.gov