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Contractors finish work on improvement projects at two Jefferson County beaches
Construction workers have recently wrapped up work on improvement projects at both Southwick Beach State Park and Westcott Beach State Park in Jefferson County. The projects are the “first major improvements to the popular beachfront parks in 50 years,” according to a release from the office Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The upgrades at Southwick Beach feature […]
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Construction workers have recently wrapped up work on improvement projects at both Southwick Beach State Park and Westcott Beach State Park in Jefferson County.
The projects are the “first major improvements to the popular beachfront parks in 50 years,” according to a release from the office Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
The upgrades at Southwick Beach feature a new bathhouse and concession building, along with restored dunes and new “green” parking lots that “enhance resiliency and protection of water quality,” Cuomo’s office said.
The work at Westcott Beach included eight new “accessible” cottages, with kitchens and bathrooms. The cottages were built on a bluff with a “commanding view of the lake,” per the release.
Southwick Beach work
Southwick Beach State Park has a 112-site campground and is the “busiest” day-use state park in the Thousand Islands region, drawing more than 1.1 million visitors during the last decade, per Cuomo’s office.
Funding for the project came from the NY Parks 2020 initiative and a $1 million grant from the Environmental Facilities Corporation.
The recently completed improvements include a new concession kitchen and camp store; a public-gathering space with outdoor fireplace, patio area, walkways and three rental pavilions; new showers, changing areas, and restroom space; laundry room for patron use; a games arcade; a new entrance drive and sidewalk/bike path connection to campsites; and a lifeguard and first-aid station.
The project also included several features to protect the park’s natural resources, the state said.
They include new parking lots that have storm-water systems, bio-retention ponds, and a combination of standard asphalt pavement, porous pavement, reinforced grass paver parking, and overflow grass parking, all of which help filter pollutants from stormwater runoff and protect Lake Ontario’s water quality.
The restored and “enhanced” dunes will reduce erosion from high water events, as well as improve wildlife shoreline habitat. The dunes include a new wooden boardwalk and a day-use area with shade trees.
Westcott Beach work
Located on Henderson Bay in Jefferson County, Westcott Beach includes a sandy beach, 168 campsites, a marina, and more than three miles of hiking trails. The $3.94 million project was funded through the NY Parks 2020 initiative.
The park’s new cottage colony will be open late May through Columbus Day each year. Each cottage has a master bedroom on the ground floor with a queen size bed, an additional bedroom on the ground floor with two twin beds and a loft area containing three twin beds.
Living areas have a sofa, chairs, and a propane fireplace for heating during the spring and fall seasons.
The kitchen, living room, and loft area provide views of Lake Ontario through a full glass wall facing the lake, per the release. Exterior amenities include a patio with four Adirondack chairs, an accessible picnic table, fire ring, and a grill for cooking.

O’Reilly Auto Parts construction site work revs up in Fulton
FULTON — Construction site work continues on Aug. 3 for the future O’Reilly Auto Parts store in the city of Fulton. O’Reilly Auto Parts Enterprises LLC purchased the property at 28 W. First St. in Fulton back on May 30, 2017 from Rome Gas Inc. for $350,000, CNYBJ reported in its Aug. 7, 2017 issue.
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FULTON — Construction site work continues on Aug. 3 for the future O’Reilly Auto Parts store in the city of Fulton. O’Reilly Auto Parts Enterprises LLC purchased the property at 28 W. First St. in Fulton back on May 30, 2017 from Rome Gas Inc. for $350,000, CNYBJ reported in its Aug. 7, 2017 issue. The site was formerly home to Fast Lane Car Wash. Crews have leveled the car-wash structure and are preparing the site for construction of a new building for the O’Reilly Auto Parts store. O’Reilly Automotive, Inc. (NASDAQ: ORLY) — headquartered in Springfield, Missouri — operates more than 5,400 auto-parts retail stores across the U.S. under the name O’Reilly Auto Parts. The growing chain had no stores in Central New York three years ago when it bought the Fulton property. O’Reilly Auto Parts has since opened stores in Solvay, Cicero, Chittenango, Central Square, Baldwinsville, Oswego, and Auburn. The 28 W. First St. property in Fulton, situated on 0.61 acres, is assessed at $350,000 for 2020 and has a total market value of $360,825, according to Oswego County’s digital property records. (PHOTO CREDIT: JEN MARRINER PHOTOGRAPHY)

Erie Canalway Trail expansion to connect Ilion to Mohawk
Pre-construction activities have started on a new section of the Erie Canalway Trail between Ilion and Mohawk in Herkimer County. The new 1.9-mile trail will help to close a nearly 20-mile gap in the Mohawk Valley section of the Empire State Trail, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a July 31 news release.
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Pre-construction activities have started on a new section of the Erie Canalway Trail between Ilion and Mohawk in Herkimer County.
The new 1.9-mile trail will help to close a nearly 20-mile gap in the Mohawk Valley section of the Empire State Trail, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a July 31 news release.
The project was approved at the New York Power Authority (NYPA) and the New York State Canal Corporation board meeting in late July.
NYPA and the Canal Corporation have selected Carver Construction of Altamont in Albany County to build the new trail that will connect the village of Ilion to the village of Mohawk. The state expects crews will have the new trail “substantially completed” by December of this year.
As part of the Empire State Trail System, the Erie Canalway Trail is an outdoor tourism and recreation destination that connects communities, drives tourism, and boosts local economies along New York’s iconic Erie Canal, the state says. This project includes a 10-foot wide, 1.9-mile long asphalt path and a 130-foot long pedestrian bridge over Fulmer Creek. Once complete, it will connect the Frankfort to Ilion trail segment to the existing Mohawk trail.
The Ilion to Mohawk trail is one of four projects in the Mohawk Valley that are part of an initiative to close a nearly 20-mile gap in the Erie Canalway Trail. The other three — Lock E-18 to Route 167 (2.2 miles), Frankfort to Ilion (2.4 miles) and Utica to Dyke Road (3.5 miles) — are currently under construction and will also be completed by the end of 2020.
“Expanding the Erie Canalway Trail in the Mohawk Valley region is essential for New Yorkers as we continue to navigate this novel pandemic,” Brian Stratton, director of the Canal Corporation, said. “New Yorkers need safe and social-distance friendly locations for recreation and fitness and the Erie Canalway Trail provides an alternative to the gym and can be a great outdoor adventure for the family.”
In January 2017, Cuomo announced the Empire State Trail, a new initiative to enhance outdoor recreation, community vitality, and tourism development. Once completed, the Empire State Trail will be a continuous 750-mile route spanning the state from New York City to Canada and Buffalo to Albany, “creating the longest multi-use state trail in the nation,” the state says.
“This latest expansion of the Erie Canalway Trail will provide New Yorkers with more opportunity to walk, bike and run alongside some of our most unique natural resources while getting a firsthand look at the state’s historic infrastructure and heritage,” Cuomo said in the release.

Interstate 81 (I-81) viaduct construction project takes another step forward
SYRACUSE — The New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) has recently submitted the draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) for the enormous Interstate 81 (I-81) viaduct construction project to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). That’s according to the office of U.S. Representative John Katko (R–Camillus). Katko says he’s “glad” to see the NYSDOT taking the
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SYRACUSE — The New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) has recently submitted the draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) for the enormous Interstate 81 (I-81) viaduct construction project to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA).
That’s according to the office of U.S. Representative John Katko (R–Camillus).
Katko says he’s “glad” to see the NYSDOT taking the “long-awaited” step to formally submit the state’s draft I-81 plan to the FHWA.
“Now, the Federal Highway Administration must immediately begin review of the state’s draft plan so that the public comment period may begin in a timely fashion. Once the public comment period commences, it will be essential that individuals, families, and businesses from across Central New York share their opinions so that our community’s voice is fully heard. I held a series of town hall meetings on this topic, and I know that there are many valid and strong opinions about this project, and the impact it will have on different regions surrounding I-81 for years to come. All of those voices must be heard by FHWA,” Katko said in a statement.
As the review continues, the lawmaker says he will keep up his efforts in Congress and on the House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee to “ensure” the federal dollars are available for this critical project, per his statement.
“With the COVID-19 pandemic straining resources on our state and local governments, it is essential, now more than ever, that we deliver this funding,” Katko added.
The (NYSDOT) in April 2019 released a preliminary DEIS for the I-81 viaduct project in which it recommended the community grid option as the best plan for the highway’s future in downtown Syracuse. It has been subject to public and now FHWA review and comment prior to a final decision.
Developer buys Altmar site, with plan to build Dollar General store
ALTMAR — CGP Acquisition & Development recently purchased 1.35 acres of land located at 7 Church St. in the hamlet of Altmar (town of Albion) in Oswego County. CGP plans to build a Dollar General retail store on the site, according to a Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company release. The purchase price was undisclosed. Troy
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ALTMAR — CGP Acquisition & Development recently purchased 1.35 acres of land located at 7 Church St. in the hamlet of Altmar (town of Albion) in Oswego County.
CGP plans to build a Dollar General retail store on the site, according to a Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company release. The purchase price was undisclosed.
Troy Bullock from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage exclusively represents CGP Acquisition & Development and assists the firm with all site selections in New York state. He has previously completed three deals for the company.

State can revoke real-estate licenses under violations of Human Rights Law
ALBANY — Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Aug. 3 signed legislation explicitly granting the New York State Department of State the authority to discipline real-estate professionals found to have violated provisions of the state Human Rights Law by revoking or suspending their license. The legislation “further reinforces the state’s commitment to combating housing discrimination and strengthens
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ALBANY — Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Aug. 3 signed legislation explicitly granting the New York State Department of State the authority to discipline real-estate professionals found to have violated provisions of the state Human Rights Law by revoking or suspending their license.
The legislation “further reinforces the state’s commitment to combating housing discrimination and strengthens the abilities of the Secretary of State to discipline licensed professionals for discriminatory behavior,” per an Aug. 3 news release.
The new law also complements the department’s existing regulations, which authorize the secretary to discipline licensed agents and brokers who have been involved in any unlawful discriminatory practice.
“We have zero tolerance for discrimination of any kind in New York and the sheer scope and breadth of the unscrupulous and discriminatory real-estate practices uncovered on Long Island is repugnant to who we are,” Cuomo said. “…we are vastly expanding the state’s ability to crack down on unethical real-estate agents and protect hard-working New Yorkers looking for a community to call home.”
On Nov. 17, 2019, Newsday reported the results of an undercover investigation into housing discrimination on Long Island. The probe’s “deeply troubling” findings included evidence suggesting real-estate agents on Long Island engage in discriminatory conduct with “disturbing frequency” — including imposing unequal conditions and steering clients toward certain neighborhoods depending on their perceived race or ethnicity, Cuomo’s office said.
Immediately following the Newsday report, the governor directed the Division of Human Rights, the Division of Homes and Community Renewal, and Department of State to launch a joint investigation into reports of widespread discrimination among real-estate agents on Long Island.
In December, Cuomo announced new regulations for real-estate professionals to help combat discrimination in the housing market statewide. The new regulations, which were approved by the New York State Real Estate Board, mandated enhanced disclosures by real-estate professionals to help ensure prospective home buyers, renters, sellers, and landlords receive “ample” information about their rights and protections under New York law.
The governor also announced several additional initiatives to combat housing discrimination across New York state, which included launching a comprehensive social-media campaign and housing-discrimination hotline to raise awareness.

Salina office building sold for $325,000 to FMV
SALINA — The 3,535-square-foot professional office building located at 250 Commerce Blvd. in Salina was recently sold. FMV Associates LLC purchased the property from QLS Realty in May for $325,000, according to a Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company release. Cory LaDuke of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage exclusively marketed the property and represented the seller in
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SALINA — The 3,535-square-foot professional office building located at 250 Commerce Blvd. in Salina was recently sold.
FMV Associates LLC purchased the property from QLS Realty in May for $325,000, according to a Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company release.
Cory LaDuke of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage exclusively marketed the property and represented the seller in this transaction, while Patrick Hillery represented the buyer.
The one-story building is situated on about three-quarters of an acre of land, according to Onondaga County’s online property records. The property is assessed at $250,000 for 2020. It’s located in the Liverpool School District.
The Future of the Land Brokerage Industry
Virtually all businesses are now having to quickly pivot to meet the expectations of their consumers amid the coronavirus pandemic. The rapidly changing land brokerage industry, which has been impacted by technological advancements and changing consumer behavior, is among them. Pandemic helping catalyze technology’s disruption of the land brokerage industry Even before COVID-19, the impact technology
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Virtually all businesses are now having to quickly pivot to meet the expectations of their consumers amid the coronavirus pandemic. The rapidly changing land brokerage industry, which has been impacted by technological advancements and changing consumer behavior, is among them.
Pandemic helping catalyze technology’s disruption of the land brokerage industry
Even before COVID-19, the impact technology was making on both our personal lives and businesses was palpable. We knew technology had forever changed us: how we receive our news and information, communicate, shop, bank, receive our education, get entertained, and now, visit with our doctors. But we didn’t fully understand how quickly the benefits of technology would shift from being a convenience to becoming an absolute necessity, overnight. Our world came to a screeching halt a few months ago, and it’s clear the innovative, forward-thinking businesses are not the ones having to stop their dribble to pivot; they are going straight to the hoop for the score. Technology has taken over, whether we want it to or not.
Before the pandemic, it had already been predicted that 40 percent of both blue-collar and white-collar jobs would be lost to technology over the next 15 years. Since the onset of COVID-19 and the shutdown of our economy, it has become clear that loss of American jobs to technology is going to take place at a much faster pace than originally predicted.
Long before coronavirus had become a household name, massive disruption had been going on in the residential real-estate sector. Companies who were leveraging technology, data, Google rankings, artificial intelligence, and social media were covering ground faster than Murder Hornets. We should learn from these residential companies, who are changing their industry’s message with marketing slogans such as “Real Estate, Made Simple” and “Finally, the Way Real Estate Should Be.” Some of these businesses are demonstrating how the residential real-estate industry has been ripe for disruption. On another note, businesses in general are seeing consumers demand more transparency. Consumers expect relevant, accurate, free-of-charge data to be at their fingertips to assist them with their decision-making processes. If you are unable to give it to them, they are on to the next vendor.
Over eight out of 10 real-estate agents will be replaced by robots
An Oxford University study predicted that 86 percent of real-estate agents will be replaced by robots over the next 20 years. This statistic could be scary, but I’m not here to dim your light with doom and gloom. The question for you if you’re a real-estate agent is: will you be part of the 86 percent pushed aside, or will you be a part of the elite 14 percent who are taking the time to learn how to stand out, stay relevant, and remain valuable? If we can better serve our client by providing exactly what they need on a personal, emotional, and technological level, while saving them time and money, we become invaluable.
As real-estate brokers, our path ahead may not be as easy as it has been in the past, but it’s important to seek opportunity in every challenge. Do not sit victim to the changing circumstances. Be coachable and seek mentorship from others who can provide valuable tools and insight into changes and updates in our industry.
As consumers take the lead in telling us what they want from land brokers and our services, it’s important to go above and beyond to protect our brands and our reputations, at all costs. Take caution: enabled by tools like Yelp, Google, and Facebook reviews, the service industry is being placed under a microscope more than ever before. Consumers will have access to how well or insufficiently we have performed, and they will base their buying decision on that information, and for many of them, that information alone.
Bottom line
There is no way to slow the pace of technology. We need to embrace the impact it’s making on our industry, and the changes in how we connect with consumers. Brian Buffini, a real-estate coaching and training expert and contributor to Inman News, said it best when he said, “We are the advocate, the educator, the advisor, we are not the decision maker.”
The consumer is the decision maker in who will ultimately win and who will lose. Only those companies that can reach and provide the best consumer experience will win. Participation trophies in the land-brokerage business are a relic of the past.
Aaron Graham is president of National Land Realty (nationalland.com). Since he entered the real-estate business after retiring from a successful NFL career, he’s brokered over $300 million of land transactions across the Midwest. The company’s proprietary video technology, Land Tour 360, as well as its GIS land-mapping system, LandBase, is offered for free to the public.
It’s over! The fat gentleman has sung
A lot of folks grumble and growl and punch the air when they see commentary they dislike on TV. Others scrunch the editorial page into a ball. And swear they will never read that rag again. Maybe you are one of them? Well, I have been a rare and lucky guy. I got to express such
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A lot of folks grumble and growl and punch the air when they see commentary they dislike on TV. Others scrunch the editorial page into a ball. And swear they will never read that rag again. Maybe you are one of them?
Well, I have been a rare and lucky guy. I got to express such feelings in this column. Along with other feelings and observations. I got to do the same on public television. And on commercial radio. For several decades.
All of this has come to an end. This is my final column.
At 16, I was the kid who dared to disagree with nuns and other teachers. The kid whose hard head butted too often with his father’s. A kid with strong opinions who just wanted to express them, whether they were welcome or not.
At 21, fresh from Navy journalism, I tried to syndicate a column. With no luck.
At 22 in New Zealand (where I had moved), a big Sunday paper took on my column, “Yank in Kiwi land” and ran it on its front page. Suddenly, I was a columnist. That was 56 years ago. Later, another Sunday paper ran another column of mine, also on its front page.
Meanwhile, a child specialist teamed up with me to syndicate a column on raising children. That ran throughout New Zealand. I am afraid to check on how some of those kids turned out.
My paper’s lovelorn columnist ran off, so I filled in for her for a while (under the title “Tell Tom”). That was painful and still gives me nightmares.
Meanwhile, an advertising journal also ran my monthly column. There, I evaluated good and bad ads. All these columns were sidelines. My real job was as an advertising writer and PR executive.
After returning to the United States I persuaded the New York Times to run several of my pieces on its op-ed pages. Today the Times would tar and feather me for those articles — so far left has it moved.
Around 1978, PBS in Binghamton let me create a weekly televised commentary. On things to do with finance. It was like a column, only spoken, five-minutes long. Binghamton offered it all over the PBS system. For a while, people stopped me in distant cities, saying, “Wait a minute. I know you. You’re…you’re…you’re somebody, aren’t you?”
The TV column morphed into a daily column on finances for radio. We syndicated it to over 150 stations across the country. San Louis Obispo, Tucumcari, Beloit, Madison, Lima, and all points east. Especially Reading, Rochester, Jamestown, Utica, Syracuse, Albany, Oneonta, Norwich.
Like the TV show, it was called “Tom Morgan’s Money Talk.” If you don’t remember it you might remember its greeting: “Hi pal.” Or it’s ending: “This is Tom……as in… Morgan.” The ending was a device that allowed me to lengthen the program, if necessary, to exactly three minutes. I stole the idea from Paul Harvey. You see, this is why he ended with “Paul Harvey… good… day!”
The man who syndicated Ronald Reagan’s radio commentary encouraged me and might have taken me on. The man who syndicated Rush Limbaugh offered to try me out with my own talk show. I turned him down and never regretted it. I don’t think I would have been a success in that format.
When we ended the radio program it was the longest-running syndicated short feature in the history of American radio.
By recording ahead, we never missed a broadcast. Not during world travel, three heart attacks, bypass surgery, and a world record 40 cardiac stents. One time I excused myself from a dinner with an Irish lord and lady to phone in the program from the library of their huge castle in Ireland. I don’t believe they were impressed.
Another program came from a mountain peak in Switzerland. Others from the Concorde, QE II, a sidewalk café in Paris, and cricket stadiums in England, the Caribbean, and New Zealand.
A short while into those 38 years I began this column. It may have broken a few records as well.
The telecasts, broadcasts, and radio shows indirectly helped my wife and I to build one of the largest investment practices in the country. And that practice blessed us with hundreds of friendships.
When you express your opinions you pick up enemies, of course. And friends. The friends have outnumbered the others by a large multiple. But maybe that is because enemies stop listening and reading. Although a few attacked like junk yard dogs. A few times I had to threaten to call the police. Fortunately, a lot of folks who hate my opinions keep their opinions to themselves. So we get along just fine.
If you want to read any more of my stuff you could buy my novel “The Last Columnist” at Amazon. It comes up when you enter the title as well as my name. Several months from now we will come out with “Trial In Cooperstown.” This book visits the classic American jury trial in a village many call America’s Hometown.
Thank you everyone who has written to me, whether to pat my head or rip it off. My gratitude to the many newspapers and stations that carried my offerings. The biggest thank you is to my partner, my wife, Erna. She has a way of making everything possible. I have long been one of the luckiest guys on the face of this earth.
Now, keep flexing your right airhook. Practice scrunching. And keep your grumbles and growls warmed up. I hereby bequeath this world and all its troubles to you. You probably will do a much better job with it than I did.
I have loved writing for you.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home in upstate New York. Write Tom at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com or read more of his writing at tomasinmorgan.com.
All of Us Need to Help Revitalize Our Democracy
Amid all the troubles occupying our attention, one of the more worrisome is also one of the least visible. It’s the loss of public faith in the effectiveness of our representative democracy. While most state and local governments — and certain federal agencies — have maintained public support during the pandemic, concern over our system
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Amid all the troubles occupying our attention, one of the more worrisome is also one of the least visible. It’s the loss of public faith in the effectiveness of our representative democracy.
While most state and local governments — and certain federal agencies — have maintained public support during the pandemic, concern over our system as a whole is palpable: that it has trouble responding to the country’s needs, is resistant to reform as society evolves, and continues to perpetuate inequality, social immobility, and basic unfairness.
These deficiencies corrode our unity and effectiveness as a nation. Americans increasingly divide themselves into different, often warring, political and cultural camps. Instead of working to create one out of many, they sort themselves into like-minded communities. They narrow, rather than expand, their sources of news and information, seeking those that reinforce their views. These days, we often live in different worlds from one another.
Politicians have played a significant role in this. Many play to their parties’ bases. And some, at both the state and federal level, do their best to narrow the public support on which government rests by making it difficult for everyone who is entitled to vote to cast an actual ballot.
The challenge we face as a nation is to revitalize our democracy and its institutions. We need to strengthen representative democracy by restoring the effectiveness of government, rebuild Congress as a functional, co-equal branch of the federal government, and restore confidence in our institutions — public and private.
How do we do this? Calls for greater public participation and involvement are on target, but not enough. While I’m always encouraged by political leaders who seek to involve the public and by civic groups that try to enhance and encourage citizen participation, I believe we’re at the point where we need to repair our frayed institutions and push back against the forces that divide us.
One place to start is to appreciate our history and take inspiration from that history: to recognize where we have fallen short, but also to highlight the remarkable progress we have made and the efforts of committed citizens that made it possible.
We also need to recognize that divisiveness weakens us, and that efforts to reknit American society are now urgently important.
To that end, proposals for a year of national service strike me as particularly welcome. This would be expensive but focusing young Americans on a year of shared endeavor with others from vastly different backgrounds — in the military, in AmeriCorps, in internships or public-service opportunities — would help meet many needs and be well worth the expense.
We also need to up our game as ordinary citizens and beat back the drivers of divisiveness and polarization as we work to strengthen our communities.
Among other things, this means making an effort to seek out alternative points of view in the media and paying attention to objective, factual reporting. It means supporting measures that bring us together, such as bringing young people from all backgrounds and perspectives to work side by side in projects for the public good.
Our aim is to make our communities and our country better places to live: more creative, inclusive, and welcoming. The answer lies not in the stars, but with all of us.
Lee Hamilton, 89, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south central Indiana.
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