Alcuin C. “Al” Dornisch, 91, of 428 Lookout Avenue, Ridgway, passed away Wednesday, May 24, 2023 at Penn Highlands Elk. Funeral arrangements are incomplete and under the direction of the Lynch-Radkowski Funeral Home.
Roxanne F. Boyd “beloved mother, grandmother, sister, and aunt”
Roxanne F. “Roxy” Boyd, 65, of Austin, a former longtime resident of Coudersport, passed away surrounded by her loving family, on Monday, May 22, 2023, in UPMC Cole, Coudersport, after a long illness.
Born on Tuesday, May 6, 1958 in Coudersport, she was a daughter of Harry and Inez Shaw Setzer.
Roxy was a graduate of Coudersport High School. She was employed by Adelphia Communications in Coudersport for many years and later was employed by the Coudersport American Legion. She was last employed as the manager at the Austin Vets Club until her health declined.
She was an active social member of the Coudersport American Legion and also an active social member of the Austin Vets Club. Roxy loved spending time with her grandchildren and making all of her “pumpkins” laugh. She loved being the life of the party wherever she went.
Surviving are two children, Donny (Kelli) Snyder of Roulette and Lacey (Colt) Vasko of Austin; seven grandchildren, Vincent, Ashli, Zackary, Mia, Addison, Layla and Brylee; several great-grandchildren; seven siblings, Carol (William) Krog of Coudersport, Janet Setzer of Coudersport, Louise Setzer of Coudersport, Jerry (Jane) Setzer of Connecticut, Ronald Setzer of Austin, Terry Setzer of Austin, and James (Vera) Setzer of Austin; and many nieces and nephews, including a special niece, Ashley (James) Matteson of Coudersport.
In addition to her parents, Roxy was predeceased by two brothers, Donald Setzer and Duane Setzer; a sister, Vickie Setzer; and two sisters-in-law, Roxanne Setzer and Victoria “Vickie” Setzer.
Family and friends are invited to attend a Celebration of Roxy’s Life from 11am to 3pm on Sunday, June 25, 2023, at the Coudersport American Legion, Buffalo Street, Coudersport.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to UPMC Palliative Care Program, 71, Elk Street, Coudersport, PA 16915.
Roxy’s family has entrusted her care and cremation arrangements to Kevin J. Dusenbury, funeral director/owner of the Virgil L. Howard Funeral Home, Shinglehouse.
To express condolences, light a candle, or share a fond memory of Roxy, please visit www.virgillhowardfuneralhome.com or the Virgil L. Howard Funeral Home Facebook page.
Do your future plans include postsecondary education? Northern PA Regional College (NPRC) brings affordable education to you. Their Summer 2023 semester begins Monday, June 5th. Twelve courses are being offered, including Introduction to Psychology, Interpersonal Communication, Foundations of Math and Environmental Biology, to name a few.
These courses are part of five associate degrees – Business Administration, Criminal Justice, Early Childhood Education, Liberal Studies, and Social Sciences. Of course, if you are not interested in pursuing an associate degree at this time, NPRC’s team will help you select courses or training that meets whatever goal you’d like to achieve.
These courses are perfect for recent high school graduates, mid-career adults seeking to advance in their career or begin a new one, and even current eligible high school juniors and seniors who want to earn college credits while still in high school. This program is designed to be affordable at 70% less than the average tuition at brick-and-mortar institutions. Students with a high school diploma or its equivalent pay $185 per credit and receive guaranteed admission. Current high school students pay $60 per credit. Institutional Aid and scholarship opportunities are available.
These courses will be offered at the Education Council’s Coudersport office, as well as more than 20 additional locations throughout northwestern Pennsylvania. Apply now and see why Brighter Futures Begin at NPRC.
The priority application deadline is Monday, May 29. For more information, contact the Student Services team, at info@rrcnpa.org or (814) 230-9010.
Please be advised that Allegany County DPW will have daily road closures of County Road #23 between SR 243 and Pratt Road intersections from May 30 through June 1.
The road will only be closed during working hours and will be opened back up for use at night and on the weekend. There will not be an on-site detour and motorists are urged to seek alternate routes. Thank you for your cooperation.
Potter County Animal Assistance Project (PCAAP) is an incorporated nonprofit organization with 501(c)(3) status dedicated to advancing the cause of animal welfare and the prevention of animal cruelty in Potter County. The program is currently in need of volunteers willing to raise funds, grant researchers/writers, sponsors, trappers, and administrative workers. The PCAAP board of directors has announced a public meeting to be held on Wednesday, May 31 at 6pm at the Coudersport Area Recreational Park (C.A.R.P.) main pavilion located on CARP Park Road in Coudersport. If you are interested in lending your time and talents to help animals in Potter County, please come to the meeting. If you are unable to make the meeting but would be interested in helping out, please contact Lori Hansen by phone at 814-507-1388, email at lhansen@zitomedia.net, or message Potter County Animal Assistance Project on Facebook.
The organization began with a dedicated group of volunteers in 2012 and is governed by an elected board. Seed money for PCAAP was provided by the Helen Fath Greene Memorial Fund. Helen Fath Greene was a former resident of Potter County who left a bequest to the PSPCA for the benefit of domestic animals in Potter County. Over the nine year period from 2012 through 2021, PCAAP has funded the spaying/neutering of 7,650 cats and dogs. Through our foster program, we have found homes for 786 cats and kittens. Each year, PCAAP has been able to apply for funds through this grant. Last year, 2022, the grant from which PCAAP received the bulk of their funding was awarded elsewhere. In light of this reduction in funding, PCAAP has found it necessary to temporarily discontinue some of the programs that were previously offered in order to focus on the Trap/Neuter/Release (TNR) and Abandoned/Homeless Programs. TNR is a proven means of controlling free roaming cat populations. Every community in Potter County has free roaming cats and PCAAP volunteers work with residents in these communities to control these populations. Free roaming cats (cats without a known home) are humanely trapped and provided veterinary care including spaying/neutering, a rabies vaccine and a general vet check. They also have their left ear “tipped” to show that they have been through a TNR program and can no longer reproduce. They are then returned to the location where they were trapped. If that location is a free roaming cat colony, a PCAAP colony caretaker, who is most often a local resident, feeds and cares for the cats and monitors the health of the outdoor colony. The PCAAP Homeless/Abandoned program has helped many Potter County residents with the spaying/neutering of free roaming cats that they have adopted into their homes.
PCAAP is in the hopes of bringing back all their programs, including the low income program that assisted low income applicants, senior citizens and veterans with the spaying/neutering of their pets, and the emergency medical program that assisted local residents with unexpected emergency veterinary bills, providing that the funding can be raised to do so.
From 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. starting this Sunday, May 28 and continuing on Sundays through Aug. 27, the Nessmuk Rod and Gun Club is hosting skeet shoots at its outdoor range at 4646 Route 287 in Delmar Township, 6.5 miles south of Wellsboro.
The Sunday dates are: May 28, June 11,18, 25, July 2,16, 23, 30, Aug 6, 13, 20 and 27.
The skeet shoots will continue each Sunday into October, weather permitting. September and October dates will be announced in August.
The fee to shoot skeet for members and non-members 18 years of age and older is $6 per round of 25 clays. Skeet shooting is $3 for youth ages 12 to 17.
Shooters have to provide their own shotguns and ammunition. Eye and ear protection are required.
For more information, contact Skeet Shoot Coordinator John Davis at johndavispa@gmail.com or 570-439-1300.
The University of Pittsburgh at Bradford, including the Panther Shop and Hanley Library, will be closed Monday, May 29, in observance of Memorial Day.
The university’s Marilyn Horne Museum and Café located on Veterans Square will be open. The museum is currently hosting an exhibition of elaborate opera costumes on loan from the Sarasota (Fla.) Opera. Learn more at www.marilynhorne.org.
The Pennsylvania Game Commission is investigating a bear attack that resulted in non-life threatening injuries to two children Monday in Wright Township, Luzerne County.
The children, ages 5 and 14 months, were treated for bites and/or scratches and released from Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.
There are few details about the incident or what might have provoked the attack, which occurred while the children were playing in the driveway of their home.
The Game Commission has set two bear traps in the area, and if a bear is caught, there is the potential through DNA testing to positively identify whether it is the same bear involved with the attack.
In general, Pennsylvania’s bears avoid contact with people and attacks are rare. When attacks do occur, it often involves a situation where a bear is cornered and not given an opportunity to flee, or is triggered by a dog confronting a bear, and the dog’s owner becoming involved.
The bear involved in Monday’s incident likely isn’t prone to attack. The attack more likely was triggered by some unknown circumstance. But if the bear involved in the attack is caught, it will be euthanized as a precaution.
Pennsylvanians are advised at all times to keep their distance from bears, which are strong and fast creatures. If encountering a bear, it’s important to let the bear know you’re there. Getting a bear’s attention by vocalizing or waving at it, often is enough to make it move off. Bears sometimes stand their ground, and might employ more aggressive measures, like popping their jaws or bluffing a charge at a person, stopping short. But even in these types of cases, a bear usually will give a person the chance to back out of an encounter.
Bears have a natural fear of people, but they can lose some of that fear when living close to people, and especially if they’re fed. For this reason, it is unlawful in Pennsylvania to intentionally feed bears. But even without intentional feeding, bears can be drawn to properties where they can find an easy meal at a birdfeeder, by raiding compost bins or trash cans, or toppling a charred grill. Those who live in bear country might consider removing these potential food sources from places where bears might get them, and where bears have been a problem recently, such items definitely should be removed.
“This is an unfortunate incident and I’m relieved to hear their injuries aren’t severe,” Burhans said.
Pennsylvania is home to about 15,000 bears, and thousands and thousands of encounters between black bears and people, and overall, few conflicts arise.
For more information about living safely and responsibly with bears, visit www.bearwise.org.
Harrisburg, PA – The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) today announced that all driver license and photo centers, including its full-service center in Harrisburg, will be closed Saturday, May 27, 2023, through Monday, May 29, 2023, in observance of the Memorial Day holiday.
Customers may still obtain a variety of driver and vehicle products and services, including all forms, publications and driver training manuals, online through PennDOT’s Driver and Vehicle Services website, www.dmv.pa.gov.
Driver and vehicle online services are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week and include driver’s license, photo ID and vehicle registration renewals; driver-history services; changes of address; driver license and vehicle registration restoration letters; ability to pay driver license or vehicle insurance restoration fee; driver license and photo ID duplicates; and driver exam scheduling. There are no additional fees for using online services.
Motorists can check conditions on major roadway miles by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information, and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.
511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following twitter regional alerts.
Penn College has scheduled a full-time clock-hour Practical Nursing Program to begin September 11, 2023, in Wellsboro and at the Education Council’s Coudersport office. Students in the full-time program will graduate in September 2024. A part-time program in Wellsboro only is scheduled to begin June 8, 2023, and students will graduate twenty-two months later.
Qualified nursing instructors provide classroom instruction in theory and nursing skills. Affiliation with UPMC allows for clinical experiences at UPMC Wellsboro and UPMC Cole. Other local healthcare affiliates are also utilized. Graduates earn a certificate in Practical Nursing and are eligible to sit for the NCLEX-PN exam for licensure (LPN). Graduates find jobs in hospitals, long-term care facilities, home health agencies, private homes, physician offices, and other health-related offices.
Penn College’s Practical Nursing Program can help give you a great career boost! For more information or to get an application, call Marie Van Ess at (570) 724-7703 or Janine Morley at (814) 274-4877.
Elk County- The St. Marys Area United Way president Doug Gaffey, Jason Gabler, United Way Corporate Chair; and Doug Bauer, United Way Payroll Program Chair presented a $7,500 check to Guardian Angel Center’s board of directors and their volunteers. The Guardian Angel Center applied for this grant to support the operating needs of the Center.
The Guardian Angel Center is located at 364 Main Street in Kersey, PA. The Center seeks to supplement the clothing needs of infants, toddlers, and children whose families struggle financially. These needs are met through the recycling of donated articles and by the careful purchase of suitable new clothing items. A major goal of the Guardian Angel Center is to avoid the social stigma of needy families, especially related to clothing for school-age children. The Guardian Angel Center operates solely with volunteers. There are no paid employees. For further information on becoming a volunteer, days of operation for the Guardian Angel Center or how to qualify as a client – leave a message at (814) 885-6192.
The Guardian Angel Center is one of the many partnering organizations that have sought grant money from the St. Marys Area United Way. The grant funding disseminated in 2023 is as a result of the donations raised during the St. Marys Area United Way 2022 campaign. Funding raised in 2023 will be available for organizations to seek grant funding in 2024.
The St. Marys Area United Way relies on the contributions from companies and local individuals. If you would like to become one of these individuals or corporate donors, please call 781-6000 or mail your check to the St. Marys Area United Way, 44 So. St. Marys Street, St. Marys, PA 15857