Local officials have confirmed that the second Niagara County resident to die from complications related to the H1N1 flu virus was a 10th grade student from the Niagara-Wheatfield School District.
The Niagara County Health Department on Wednesday confirmed that the death of the teenager has been linked to a laboratory positive case of the so-called swine flu.
“Obviously, it’s a very tragic loss to the Niagara-Wheatfield school family,” said district Superintendent Carl Militello. “We need to take some time to grieve this loss.”
According to the health department, the teen succumbed to complications related to the H1N1 virus. The health department said the individual did not have any underlying medical conditions. To protect the privacy of the family, the health department is not releasing any additional information about the teen.
“Every death is a tragedy and our sincere condolences are extended to the family at this difficult time,” said county Public Health Director Dan Stapleton in a statement released Wednesday morning.
Militello said the district is making available four school counselors to help students cope with the tragedy. He said the district also intends to provide transportation for classmates who are interested in attending memorial services. He said the county has agreed to schedule an H1N1 flu vaccination clinic in the Niagara-Wheatfield School District sometime in February. For now, he said the district is following recommendations from the county health department and continues to take all the necessary precautions to make sure school equipment and buildings are being cleaned thoroughly in an effort to prevent the spread of illnesses of all types.
“We’ve been proactive about all of the suggestions from the health department regarding cleaning,” Militello said.
County health officials confirmed last week the county’s first H1N1 related death involving an eastern county resident who did have an underlying medical condition. Stapleton stressed that the deaths do not mean the virus has changed t cause more severe illness, but encouraged residents to take the same preventive measures that have been recommended since the pandemic began.
“Most people with the flu continue to have mild to moderate symptoms and recover at home without medical treatment,” Stapleton said. “Sadly, as with ordinary seasonal flu, the H1N1 flu can, and occasionally does, cause serious illness and death, usually to individuals with underlying medical risk factors.”
Local News
H1N1: Teenage victim had no underlying medical condition
- Local News
-
-
Shovel-ready park has perks
At first glance, the big, orange road sign announcing vacant property on Lockport Road as a “shovel ready certified” building site seems a bit gratuitous.
To companies looking for new places to launch a business, it’s not. The sign in their eyes is a welcome mat, for in three words a community pronounced itself ready, willing and able to make a deal quickly. -
Roy-Hart to play the big stage
A group of local students will be performing this month at Kleinhans Music Hall just before a BPO concert.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will welcome the Royalton-Hartland High School Mixed Chorus as part of the BPO’s Community Spotlight program on Feb. 19 at Kleinhans in Buffalo. The chorus will perform under the direction of Carolyn Unitas Roos and accompanied by Janice McKinney. -
Former NFTA cop sentenced
A former Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority police officer will spend six years on probation for sending a sexually explicit photo to a teenage girl, a girl he later had a sexual encounter with.
In addition, John W. Ingham will spend 25 weekends in the service of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office Work Program. Ingham was sentenced Thursday by State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch, Sr. Ingham will also register as a sex offender. -
Speakers address SPCA contract
Animal rescue volunteers want the City of Lockport to hit the SPCA of Niagara where it hurts — in the pocketbook — and help force reform of the troubled animal welfare organization.
Volunteers from multiple small, private rescue groups, and the SPCA itself, descended on the Common Council Wednesday to talk about the city’s ongoing involvement with SPCA. -
Liberty Tire cited for 'multiple' violations
The City of Lockport will require Liberty Tire Recycling to obtain an operating permit in order to avoid being declared a hazard.
-
Instant millionaire
Paul Schneider had just gotten off the phone with his girlfriend when he called her back with some breaking news.
“She was teasing me and said, ‘so you hung up the phone with me to scratch your scratch offs?’” Schneider said. “And I said, ‘It’s a good thing I did because I won a million dollars.’” -
Fire code crackdown vowed
City code enforcement officers are planning an inspection blitz at the multi-building Liberty Tire Recycling complex, in the hope of helping the company avoid another huge fire, officials said Monday.
Liberty Tire, 470 Ohio St., likely will be cited for one or more fire code violations after fire struck the facility this past Friday. A large pile of tires, stored behind one of the buildings, caught fire when a live industrial power line fell on the pile. The power line had partly melted due to a short circuit inside a building. -
NFTA cuts will make transportation difficult
NFTA cuts will make it difficult, if not impossible for Buffalo-area commuters to get to work in Lockport and Lockport residents to get to Buffalo.
Millie Spencer, who lives near the Walden Galleria, takes four buses and an NFTA train to get to Lockport for her job as a graphic artist four days a week.
“This will threaten my job,” said Spencer who is married and has four children. “We’re down to one car and my husband’s job takes him all over the place. What would I do? I don’t know.” -
Prepared patriots
At mobilization ceremonies across the state this weekend, hundreds of servicemen from the Army National Guard were cheered on their way to training for a possible overseas deployment.
More than 1,800 soldiers assigned to the 27th Brigade Combat Team mobilized before heading to Camp Shelby in Mississippi to train for an expected deployment to Kuwait this spring. In Lockport, nearly 75 men from Company A of the Brigade Special Troops Battalion were thanked for their previous — and coming — service to the nation at a ceremony Sunday. Likewise, 90 were sent off in Geneseo Saturday, and more in Buffalo and Rochester. -
Town recycling numbers are up
The Town of Lockport seems to have taken a bigger interest in recycling.
At a Town Board meeting Wednesday, Councilman Paul W. Siejak said for all of 2011, the town recycled 27.55 more tons than it did a year ago. Electronics recycling, which the town started in July, totaled 4,914 pounds.
For the electronics recycling, the town receives 5 cents per pound, which means Lockport was paid $245.70. - More Local News Headlines
-










