logo
Funeral service held for Binghamton Firefighter Jr. Gaudet

Funeral service held for Binghamton Firefighter Jr. Gaudet

Yahoo19-02-2025

A Funeral Mass for Gaudet will be held at 11:30 a.m. on Wednesday at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Binghamton and will be streamed live on YouTube. The burial will be in Calvary Cemetery in Johnson City. In light of the services, drivers should anticipate road closures and significant delays throughout the city, particularly around the downtown area and near the funeral procession route. Expect these delays to last for much of the afternoon as emergency vehicles and other processional units make their way through the city.
More: As a teammate, a coach, and firefighter, JR Gaudet 'put everyone else as a priority'
Binghamton City Hall administrative offices will be closed on Wednesday. Binghamton City Court will be open on Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.New York Gov. Kathy Hochul directed all flags at state buildings to be flown at half-staff in Gaudet's honor Wednesday.
Gaudet is survived by his wife and three young children. In the wake of his death, family friends and community organizations have set up fundraisers and local efforts to show their support.
Family friend and coworker of Gaudet's wife, Lyndsie Babcock, created a GoFundMe to assist the family. As of 11 a.m. Tuesday, the fundraiser had raised $271,675.
The Syracuse Fire Department also set up a donation fund for Gaudet's family. Donations can be made online through donorbox.org.
This article originally appeared on Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin: Funeral service held for Binghamton Firefighter Jr. Gaudet

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Evergy falcon eggs laid in Topeka may never hatch
Evergy falcon eggs laid in Topeka may never hatch

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Evergy falcon eggs laid in Topeka may never hatch

TOPEKA (KSNT) – Bird watchers in Topeka may be disappointed this year to find a famous family of peregrine falcons are unlikely to raise any new chicks this year. 27 News reached out to Evergy this week regarding its resident family of peregrine falcons which nest on top of the energy company's offices in downtown Topeka. Courtney Lewis, a spokesperson for Evergy, said the eggs laid this year are not likely to hatch given how long it has been since they were first laid. The peregrine falcon couple currently nesting atop the Evergy offices have regularly returned to this site to raise their young since 2011. The first egg of the season arrived in April this year and was followed by two others. 'There are still two eggs currently in the nest,' Lewis said. 'One egg was either removed or consumed by the adults.' Topeka strip club owner indicted for machine gun possession Lewis said the falcon couple consists of the 16-year-old female, Nemaha, and her mate Boreas, which is 18-years-old. The age of the birds is one of the bigger factors that may explain why no eggs have hatched yet this year. 'We suspect that it is due to the age of the adults,' Lewis said. 'We are not aware of any environmental or weather-related factors that would have caused the eggs not to hatch this year.' Peregrine falcons usually lay their eggs in mid-March or early April each year with a new egg appearing every other day until the clutch is complete. The eggs take around 33-35 days to hatch with chicks eventually leaving the nest after about five weeks. Lewis said the other peregrine falcon families Evergy monitors in Missouri are faring better. Three chicks were banded at the Hawthorn Generating Station in Kansas City and a new breeding pair has taken up residence at Evergy's Iatan Generating Station. Evergy operates a live camera of the nest in Topeka on YouTube which you can tune into by clicking here. You can also learn more about Evergy's Avian Protection Program by clicking here. Topeka motel could disappear with $15 million project For more local news, click here. Keep up with the latest breaking news in northeast Kansas by downloading our mobile app and by signing up for our news email alerts. Sign up for our Storm Track Weather app by clicking here. Follow Matthew Self on X (Twitter): Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Conservationist Shiloh Schulte, of Kennebunk, dies in research helicopter crash in Alaska
Conservationist Shiloh Schulte, of Kennebunk, dies in research helicopter crash in Alaska

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Conservationist Shiloh Schulte, of Kennebunk, dies in research helicopter crash in Alaska

A conservationist from Kennebunk, Maine, died in a helicopter crash while conducting conservation work in Alaska. The death of Shiloh Schulte, PhD,, who previously served as an elected official in Kennebunk, was announced by the Manomet Conservation Sciences. A GoFundMe has been set up to support his family, including his wife and two daughters. He was 46. "Shiloh was a lifelong birdwatcher, conservationist, and scientist whose passion for the natural world was infectious," the GoFundMe, co-organized by Jonah Jill Schulte reads. "From a young age, he could be found exploring forests and wetlands with binoculars in hand, always eager to discover and share the wonders of the avian world. His dedication to protecting shorebirds and their habitats took him to some of the most remote and challenging environments on Earth, where he worked tirelessly to ensure a future for these vulnerable species." Schulte previously served on the Kennebunk Select Board. Schulte was elected chairman of the board in July 2022. At the time, his colleagues said he had a "really great way about him to move things forward, regardless of where he is on the spectrum of an issue.' Schulte's work with the Manomet Conservation Sciences included working as the coordinator for the American Oystercatcher Recovery Program. He is credited with rebuilding the American Oystercatcher, a large shorebird once believed to be locally extirpated, by 45%. "Shiloh gave his life in the service of something greater than himself, dedicating himself to preserving the natural world for future generations," the Manomet Conservation Sciences said. His family said he will be remembered as more than a scientist. "Shiloh was so much more than a scientist," the GoFundMe page states. "He was a devoted husband and father, a loving son and brother, a generous neighbor, and a pillar of his community. Whether he was helping a neighbor with yard work, leading the town Select Board, running a marathon or inspiring others through his photography and storytelling, Shiloh gave his all—always with a warm heart and boundless energy." This article originally appeared on Portsmouth Herald: Kennebunk biologist Shiloh Schulte dies in Alaskan helicopter crash

‘Kid rotting': why parents are letting their children go wild this summer
‘Kid rotting': why parents are letting their children go wild this summer

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

‘Kid rotting': why parents are letting their children go wild this summer

Name: Summer kid rotting. Age: The name is new, but long school summer holidays started spreading in the 1840s, thanks to the US educational reformer Horace Mann. Appearance: Laidback and a little messy. What's this Kid Rot then? Does have a brother? No, it's a 2025 way of describing 'letting your kids do nothing in the summer holidays', also known as a 'wild summer'. American parents are fighting back against (or giving up on) expensive, overscheduled summers of camps and activities for their offspring. 'What if, some are daring to wonder, my kid does nothing?' the New York Times reported. A return to the old ways, huh? When I was young, we were sent out with a penknife, a tin of pipe tobacco and a bottle of dandelion and burdock on the day school broke up. It was strongly suggested we should not return home until 1 September. No, you weren't. No, OK, we weren't. , watching TV and fighting. We'd have loved expensive, overscheduled summers! Well, some US parents are sick of paying through the nose to keep their kids out of trouble – one interviewed by the NYT spent $40,000 (£30,000) on occupying her three children for eight weeks. Inflation is making summer camps unaffordable for many: a survey found 30% of parents go into debt or defer payments. And while the situation isn't as bad in the UK, it's still a struggle for parents: research last year found UK summer childcare costs £1,000 a kid on average. Ouch! And kids don't even seem to enjoy organised summer stuff much: 'It was a fight every day to get them to go,' one parent told the NYT. 'He cried every single day at drop-off,' a journalist at the Cut said of her son's summer camp. Related: Readers reply: Should schools take a long summer break – or does it harm children's learning? Maybe a bit of boredom isn't so bad. Being bored is being rebranded as the better option for pushy parents. 'I tell them their kid will be more 'ahead' with their own experimentation,' a US educational consultant reassures her anxious clients. But 'their experimentation' will be whatever the algorithm decides – kids will be glued to YouTube, won't they? Yes, screen time is a concern, and if the little darlings manage to enable in-app purchases, your iPad could prove a more expensive babysitter than the fanciest camp. If they're going to be screen rotting all day every day, parents could at least put them to work - give them a bitcoin and a day-trading account and see how much money they can make by September. A bitcoin is currently worth 81 grand – you'd get a lot of fancy summer camps for that. Do say: 'We're having a wild summer.' Don't say: 'Yeah, we're going large at Glasto, microdosing in Mykonos, then an ayahuasca retreat in Peru. What are the kids doing? No idea.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store