Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Board Votes To Move All Students To Cattaraugus

By a 5-2 vote Monday night, the Cattaraugus-Little Valley Board of Education voted to "move all district students to the Cattaraugus campus beginning in September," the Olean Times Herald writes.

The Salamanca Press notes that "critics of the proposal cited a legally nonbinding assurance signed in 1998 by the Cattaraugus school board that promised an elementary building would remain in both communities when Little Valley was annexed." And it adds that:

Richard M. Williams, who said he served as president of the Little Valley School Board when the annexation took place, said he sympathizes with the board’s position in facing difficult decisions but feels a vote to close the Little Valley campus would generate negative votes on any future issue or budget.

"Little Valley as a community would always look toward Cattaraugus with ill feelings for an act that can so easily be avoided," he said about the closure prior to the board’s decision.

Gretchen Taft, a Little Valley resident and director of the Memorial Library of Little Valley, had been a vocal opponent of the proposal and also spoke Monday.

"If you close Little Valley School and dishonor all the people, including me, who worked toward this annexation, then you’re not being honorable," she said.

The two board members who voted against putting all students in Cattaraugus were Kent Joesel and Dave Shinners.

There's no word in the reports about what the district plans to do with the L.V. building.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Looking For L.V. Data In The 1940 Census?

It took a little bit of digging around on the new Census Bureau website containing the 1940 census records, but I was able to find the lines for Arthur and Sara Memmott, as I explain here:

Census Bureau's Website Is Coming Back: 1940 Data Now Viewable.

Some of you may be interested in finding records from the '40 census of Little Valley. Here's some information that may be of help as you use the bureau's online databate:

The LV "enumeration districts" were 5-30 and 5-31. As you'll see, if you know the enumeration district you're looking for, you can get to where you want a little faster.

You can get to the bureau's materials from 1940 here: 1940 Census.