The Fulton County Planning Board is staying neutral on a special permit for the proposed multi-family, 48-unit Kinderhook Development along Northern Terrace in Gloversville.
Two Johnstown teenagers were arrested after city police determined they had been involved in a series of home and car break-ins. Police said the two boys, who are not being named, are ages 13 and 14 and have been charged as juvenile delinquents.
The Fulton County Board of Supervisors Monday unanimously opposed closing the Johnson Hall State Historic Site, or even curtailed state funding for the local landmark.
The Fulton County Board of Supervisors this week approved connecting proposed new housing for Fulton-Montgomery Community College to the county's water system on Route 67.
The Fulton County Board of Supervisors on Monday opposed the state considering closure of the Tryon Residential Center, and called for the resignation of the head of the state agency overseeing the juvenile detention center in Perth.
Officials from Fulton and Montgomery counties are studying creation of a possible new shared industrial park on land off Route 30A, just south of the Johnstown Industrial Park.
The city Planning Board on Tuesday delayed a decision on an application for a subdivision at the former Lee Dyeing building on North Perry Street, where a contracting business is trying to set up shop.
Former city resident Cynthia Skoda Aikman, daughter of Barbara and the late Frank Skoda, will return to Johnstown on March 20 to present a workshop on leadership at the third biennial Elizabeth Cady Stanton Women's Symposium.
The Fulton County Board of Supervisors' Finance Committee voted unanimously Thursday to amend the county's 2004 water-supply agreement with the city of Johnstown to accommodate Fulton-Montgomery Community College's proposed $11.3 million Campus View student housing complex expansion.
The office of state comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released a report earlier this month that names six area school districts among 39 in the state that have demonstrated excellent financial practices.
If today's storm that closed schools and bowed power lines were a movie, a more frightening sequel could start Thursday and run into Friday through a neighborhood near you.