Northeast
Free waterfront festival, Oswego Harborfest, to celebrate its 35th year this weekend
A big summer celebration is set to take place this weekend in upstate New York.
Harborfest in Oswego, New York, is celebrating its 35th anniversary in 2024. The free event takes place from July 25-28 along the Oswego waterfront.
Since a humble beginning in 1988, Harborfest has grown to become a major regional festival, attracting an estimated 75,000 attendees each year on average, executive director Dan Harrington told Fox News Digital in a telephone interview.
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The four-day festival is scheduled to feature over 30 live musical performances, various art and food vendors, a fair and a fireworks display.
Although it’s been free since the inaugural Harborfest, Harrington indicated it’s been a struggle to maintain a ticketless event in recent years.
The four-day Harborfest music festival has been held along the waterfront in Oswego, New York, since 1988. (iStock)
Harborfest was canceled for two years because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
It was only through donations that Harborfest was able to return in 2022.
“We rely heavily on our sponsors to help keep us going,” Harrington said.
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At one point, there were discussions about cutting Harborfest from four days to three or two, but the idea was later abandoned, Harrington said.
“We’re really not saving a lot of money because you still have to maintain the stuff like you would for four days,” he said.
Instead, Harborfest cut its staff and hours to survive.
Fireworks are seen at night during a recent Harborfest in Oswego, New York. (Harborfest)
“And it became alive again,” Harrington said.
Harborfest bills itself as one of New York’s largest admission-free music festivals in the state.
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The fact that it has remained free for each of the past 34 festivities is part of what makes Harborfest so appealing, Harrington said.
Blood, Sweat & Tears will headline the opening night acts, while former Grand Funk Railroad lead singer Mark Farner will take the stage with his American Band on Friday evening.
Mark Farner, founding member and former lead singer of the classic rock band Grand Funk Railroad, will perform at Harborfest. (Scott Dudelson/Getty Images)
There will also be a children’s parade on Friday that will conclude with an appearance by Peppa Pig, who was a “big hit” last year, and a “small circus with some aerial acts” is new for 2024, Harrington said.
“We have a ton of stuff for the children to do,” he said.
The annual children’s parade is one of many activities for kids at Harborfest. (Harborfest)
Oswego is located off Lake Ontario, about 40 miles northwest of Syracuse via Interstate 481.
Harborfest is open from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Thursday, 10 a.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday, and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday. Festivities take place at Breitbeck Park, East Park and the Cahill Pier.
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The carnival will be situated on Lake Street in front of the U.S. Coast Guard station.
Tickets are required for the rides.
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New Jersey
7 Of The Most Welcoming Towns In New Jersey
New Jersey’s most welcoming towns pair walkable main streets with year-round arts calendars and centuries of preserved history. Some carry deep Revolutionary War legacies. Others grew up around an art museum or a resident orchestra. Free jazz fills Nishuane Park. The Mayo Performing Arts Center hosts touring Broadway shows. Expect Victorian beach streets, summer Shakespeare, and old battlefields. All places where strangers get treated like neighbors.
Cape May
Cape May built its hospitality on its bed-and-breakfast district. Longtime innkeepers remember returning guests by name. The city holds one of the largest collections of 19th-century frame buildings in the country. That Victorian architecture earned it National Historic Landmark status in 1976. Cape May stands at the southern tip of the state’s coast, where Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean.
Beach access stretches past Cove Beach and Poverty Beach to the central stretch near Beach Avenue. The Washington Street Mall handles shopping and dining inland. The 1859 Cape May Lighthouse still operates at the southern point. Visitors can climb its 199 steps for a view of the bay and ocean below.
Princeton
Princeton turned its university art museum into a public town square. The free museum opened a new building in October 2025 and holds more than 117,000 works. Princeton University began as the College of New Jersey in 1746, among the oldest in the country. Its collegiate Gothic campus stays open for self-guided architectural tours.
Bookstores and cafés line Nassau Street and Witherspoon Street downtown. Princeton Battlefield State Park preserves the ground where George Washington beat British troops in January 1777. The Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park follows the old canal corridor nearby. Level paths there suit walking and biking.
Morristown
Morristown holds the country’s first national historical park. Established in 1933, it preserves the site where the Continental Army camped through the brutal winter of 1779-1780. The town carries one of the deepest Revolutionary War legacies anywhere. The National Trust for Historic Preservation named it a Dozen Distinctive Destination. The Ford Mansion served as George Washington’s headquarters and stays open for tours. Acorn Hall, Historic Speedwell, and the MacCulloch Hall Historical Museum round out the historic-house circuit.
The Mayo Performing Arts Center on South Street books classical music, touring concerts, and Broadway shows year-round. The Morristown Green gathers the downtown restaurant and shopping scene around one public square.
Madison
Madison hosts the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey at Drew University. It is the state’s only professional company devoted to Shakespeare and the classics. Performances fill the F.M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre through a long summer season. The town stands about five miles east of Morristown.
Independent cafés, bakeries, and boutiques fill Main Street and Waverly Place. The Museum of Early Trades and Crafts occupies the 1900 James Library building. Its displays show the tools New Jersey artisans used in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Montclair
The free Montclair Jazz Festival fills Nishuane Park each year. Emerging and established players make it one of the larger jazz gatherings in the region. The town rests on the eastern slope of the Watchung Mountains. It keeps one of New Jersey’s busiest arts calendars. The Montclair Art Museum on South Mountain Avenue centers its collection on American and Native American art.
The Alexander Kasser Theater at Montclair State University books dance, music, and theater all year. Restaurants and shops line Bloomfield Avenue in the Montclair Center district. The restored 1922 Wellmont Theater hosts touring concerts and comedy.
Westfield
The New Jersey Festival Orchestra calls Westfield home and plays venues around town all year. Shops, boutiques, and restaurants fill the Union County downtown along East Broad Street and Elm Street. The 1922 Rialto on East Broad Street was long the town’s movie house. It is being reborn as the Center for Creativity, a community arts venue for film, performance, and exhibitions.
Mindowaskin Park holds a pond, walking paths, and picnic spaces near downtown. The Spring Fling and FestiFall events bring music, food, and family activities to the blocks each year.
East Brunswick
Giamarese Farm and Orchards keeps a pick-your-own operation in East Brunswick. It offers seasonal fruit and vegetable picking, a corn maze, and autumn hayrides. The Middlesex County town leans toward families. Butterfly Park sets aside green space for butterfly conservation. Crystal Springs Family Waterpark gives a summer cooling-off spot.
Playhouse 22 stages community theater, plays, and concerts year-round. The East Brunswick Public Library hosts programs and exhibits as a cultural hub. Bicentennial Park and the Tamarack Golf Course cover the sports side. Route 18 puts New Brunswick and the central Jersey corridor within easy reach.
Hospitality You Can Walk To
Hospitality here shows up in small, repeatable ways. The Morristown Green fills with the same faces every weekend. Princeton opens its new art museum to everyone for free. The New Jersey Festival Orchestra tunes up in Westfield. Giamarese Farm hands East Brunswick families a basket every fall. None of it is staged for outsiders. These towns built their welcome for the people who live there. The rest of New Jersey keeps showing up anyway.
Pennsylvania
Half of child deaths left unreviewed in Pa. since 2020 as counties struggle with ‘unfunded mandate’
Many Pennsylvania counties are failing to review the death of every child in their area, despite a 2008 state law that requires them to do so.
The problem, advocates and program participants say, is a lack of both state assistance in collecting data and time for volunteers to run the local panels.
Gov. Josh Shapiro wants the legislature to approve $2.5 million to improve this work, but it’s unclear if the request will be considered a priority this year.
The effort to study the deaths of Pennsylvania children dates back about two decades, when the state passed a law mandating counties host a local board of healthcare professionals, law enforcement officials, child protective service providers, and a coroner or medical examiner to review the deaths of every resident under the age of 21. The law was one of several initiatives spurred by the murder of Berks County toddler Maxwell Fisher in 1996.
Based on the information county boards gather, members are charged with creating strategies for local and state policymakers to prevent similar deaths.
But reports shared with Spotlight PA by the Pennsylvania Department of Health show that since 2020, roughly half of childhood deaths statewide have not been reviewed. Those lapses are especially prominent in rural counties, where local teams are more likely to falter or not exist.
Policymakers have known about the program’s issues for years.
A multiyear East Stroudsburg University evaluation of the program commissioned by the state Department of Health concluded in 2024 that the Child Death Review program is “an unfunded mandate.” It issued a long list of recommendations to rectify the program’s shortcomings, including creating regional teams for rural areas.
“Staffing turnovers and pandemic disruptions were detrimental to maintaining complete teams in many regions of Pennsylvania,” researchers wrote. “Some have since begun to rebuild while other teams have yet to meaningfully reengage in (Child Death Review).”
Still, lawmakers have failed to adopt legislation — or even introduce any, according to a search of the state General Assembly’s website — to address the issues facing the 2008 law.
The status quo could change this year.
Steven Shapiro, a pediatrician and longtime member of the Montgomery County review team, told Spotlight PA that he and fellow pediatrician Erich Batra, of Lebanon County’s review board, have been urging state officials to improve the “flawed” Child Death Review system. They want a coordinated effort to improve data collection and remove some burdens from counties’ responsibilities.
“If you just unpack how the child succumbed, then you begin to learn about how you can protect other children from enduring the same fate and parents enduring the same fate,” Shapiro said.
Shapiro’s son, Gov. Josh Shapiro, happens to be in a position to help get the program some state funding. Though the elder Shapiro said he does not “try to influence” policy when speaking with his son, some topics come up “over table talk at dinner sometimes.”
Earlier this year, for the first time, the governor proposed using a new $2.5 million from the state’s general fund to support the program. The Department of Health said in an emailed April statement that the money would be used to adopt some of the report’s recommendations. Those include adding health department staff to assist county teams with data collection and prevention strategies, creating a grant that counties could use to “enhance local CDR operations,” and expanding public education campaigns geared toward preventing child deaths.
The Department of Health’s statement did not specify how many positions would be added to improve the program’s organization.
Steven Shapiro said he and Batra are also working on a “cogent, complete and cost-effective” proposal to “redo” how the state is involved in Child Death Review data collection that would not require new legislation. He wouldn’t share details on how that new system might work, but said some funding from the state is essential.
Batra told Spotlight PA the $2.5 million in state funding the governor is proposing would be a good starting point. He envisions it helping counties with data collection and funding local prevention efforts, which can include things like adding signs at dangerous intersections, leading a smoke detector campaign in neighborhoods experiencing fires, or holding fundraisers for a local Cribs for Kids branch.
“A lot of the way Child Death Review works is what I call the intangibles,” Batra said. “It’s the community coming together and working together in a way that they might not always do on a day-to-day basis.”
But Cathleen Palm, founder of the Center for Children’s Justice and a longtime advocate for improving Child Death Review, told Spotlight PA she’s not convinced Gov. Shapiro’s funding pitch alone is a game-changer.
She said that if improving Child Death Review were truly a priority for policymakers, there would be more fanfare around the funding proposal from the Shapiro administration.
Palm also criticized lawmakers for their inaction on addressing issues within the program that have been known for years.
“Why do we create a law if we don’t want to follow it?” Palm said.
In a year where so many competing interests are fighting over a limited amount of state funds, Palm worries Shapiro’s proposal may go overlooked by lawmakers.
“Investing in improvements to the CDR process will further allow the Administration to expand public education and outreach, with a focus on preventable causes of child death,” Rosie Lapowsky, Gov. Shapiro’s spokesperson, said in a statement. “The Governor is hopeful the General Assembly shares that mission of protecting children and ensuring their safety.”
The annual proportion of reviewed child deaths plummeted during COVID-19 and has not fully rebounded, even though there has also been a reduction in the total number of deaths, according to annual reports from the Department of Health.
In the history of the review requirement, county boards have never succeeded in studying every death. The closest they got was in 2013 — statewide, about three-quarters of the 1,931 child deaths that happened that year were reviewed.
That rate dropped to an all-time low in 2019, when 43% of that year’s 1,907 child deaths were reviewed. The drop is often associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, because deaths tend to get reviewed many months after the fact.
The review rate climbed back to nearly 60% in 2023 (of 1,551 deaths), the most recent year for which data are available.
However, local teams across the state left more than 600 deaths unreviewed in 2023.
Unreviewed deaths stem directly from members being “stretched thin with resources” and being “pulled in so many different directions,” according to Christina Phillips, who organized the Child Death Review program from 2018 until her retirement earlier this year.
Phillips said she worked as a “one-person project” at the state level to coordinate with counties about which deaths to review. Part of the reason the Department of Health commissioned East Stroudsburg University to do its 2022-24 study of the program is because Phillips raised concerns, she told Spotlight PA.
Most of the people who serve on local review teams are volunteers who do this work alongside their regular paid positions. Phillips said many rural counties meet as little as once or twice a year.
What they need, she said, is help from state staff to request medical records, synthesize findings into data entry, and translate any patterns they find into prevention strategies.
Phillips said she was unsure why lawmakers have not tried to address advocates’ concerns, given they have received an annual report that highlights those problems for multiple years.
“Preventing kids from dying is never a partisan issue,” Phillips said. “Preventing kids from dying is possible if there are more resources for Child Death Review.”
East Stroudsburg University researchers sorted counties into categories: ones that already have strong review programs; ones that could improve in various ways; and ones that need to be redeveloped.
They identified 20 rural counties that should at least consider organizing under regional offices to maximize their resources, and 22 counties — 6 urban and 16 rural — that must regroup because although they experienced “sufficient deaths to justify a local team,” they saw inconsistent participation from members.
The 15 “strong” counties were a mix of urban and rural, from Philadelphia to a regional operation between Susquehanna and Wyoming Counties, according to researchers. They suggested that 10 other counties, including Allegheny, build on their current processes.
Many of the program’s issues stem from data collection. Researchers at East Stroudsburg found that facilitating data collection falls onto volunteer team chairs. In other states, like Maryland and Delaware, there are paid staff at the state level who coordinate data collection efforts prior to meetings, according to researchers.
Roy Hoffman, medical director of Philadelphia’s Fatality Review Program, told Spotlight PA that even for his team of roughly 15 city employees working on death review, data collection is “a pain” and “time-consuming.”
Philadelphia has operated its own death review group since the 1990s, Hoffman said, and saw few differences following the 2008 law.
“I can imagine for some of these smaller counties with coroners, with not having done this, this must be a big pull and hard to do,” Hoffman said.
The most recent state Child Death Review annual report, analyzing 2023 data, found that Black or African American children died at twice the rate of white children — a statistic in line with national trends.
Roughly 47% of the reviewed deaths in 2023 were caused by medical conditions, including prematurity. “External causes,” including bodily force or a weapon, accounted for about 45% of deaths that year.
Palm pointed to the Department of Health’s finding that roughly one-third of child deaths in 2023 were flagged by local teams as “preventable.”
“All of us as a society want to keep our kids alive and healthy and well,” Palm said. “In order to do that, we have to study the kids who died to figure out how we prevent the next child from dying.”
Palm wants the state to foster the same level of research toward preventing gun safety, motor vehicle crashes, drowning, accidental overdoses, and abuse or violence against kids as it and other institutions direct toward studying youth cancer rates.
Researchers at East Stroudsburg recommended that lawmakers amend current law to require a minimum number of quarterly meetings for each local team, boost training for local and state team members, mandate a specific timeframe for a death review to be completed, and require local teams to include representatives from school districts and “underrepresented community groups.”
They also urged lawmakers to reduce the age cap to trigger a mandated review, from 21 to 18, and to include an “enforcement provision” to encourage counties to participate in the program.
None of the researchers’ suggested changes to Child Death Review have been proposed in the General Assembly, according to a review of introduced bills on the legislature’s website.
The original bill establishing the program was sponsored by Republican state Sen. Lisa Baker. She told Spotlight PA in response to emailed questions that it’s likely time to reevaluate the system with input from state and local stakeholders to “address evolving needs.”
“Given children are potentially falling through the cracks, a closer examination and review of the program is certainly warranted,” Baker said.
Beth Rementer, a spokesperson for Democratic state House Majority Leader Matt Bradford, noted that the chamber passed Shapiro’s budget proposal in April, which included the $2.5 million for Child Death Review.
“We are open to discussions with the administration and stakeholders about improving the program to ensure all children are safe,” she said.
A spokesperson for Republican state Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman did not respond to questions regarding potential changes this year to Child Death Review.
___
This story was originally published by Spotlight PA and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
Rhode Island
How did La Salle win another state title? Having an ace up its sleeve.
Video: Lincoln celebrates its softball championship win over Ponaganset
WATCH: Lincoln celebrates its softball championship win over Ponaganset
PROVIDENCE – The result was so obvious, everyone should have seen it coming.
That’s because Hailey Vigneau doesn’t lose big games.
The La Salle softball team might have been hammered by Chariho during their regular season matchups, but none of that mattered in the postseason. The state’s seen plenty of big-time pitchers, but none that have won like Vigneau. Saturday’s championship game against Chariho only added to her legacy, as she took care of things in the circle, Nikki Pallotta led the offense and the 5-2 win gave the Rams their fourth straight state title.
“We just know how hard we work,” Vigneau said. “We know we have each other. We know how supportive of each other we are. We just know that our team, in the end, will come out on top.”
Softball pitchers are supposed to strike fear with fastballs and sit batters down faster than they can get up to plate. You won’t find many teams that say they’re afraid of Vigneau, but you also won’t find any teams that have beaten her in a game that matters most.
The La Salle senior – who will pitch at Marist next spring – didn’t look bothered by the magnitude of the game she was pitching. If Chariho beat the Rams – which it had done twice this season – that meant an if-game where momentum would be on the Chargers side.
It seemed like a possibility, provided you ignored the fact that Vigneau has never lost a playoff game and wasn’t about to start in her senior season.
Vigneau made one mistake pitch that Adriana Jeannenot hit to outer space, a two-run blast that tied the game in the top of the fourth inning. She took the ball from the umpire, then retired the next batter to end the inning and get her offense on the field.
“I just have to focus on the next one. I can’t dwell on it,” said Vigneau, who gave up four hits and walked two while striking out eight. “Now I can reflect on it, fix what I know I messed up on.
“I didn’t even look. I didn’t turn my head.”
The bats went out and supported their ace. Pallotta had the go-ahead hit, a two-run double that scored Izzy Dong and Samantha Sell. While Pallotta and the Rams struggled to hit Jeannenot in clutch moments in the regular season, it was clear they figured something out.
“Their pitcher is really good and she shut us down in the first game,” said Pallotta, who went 3-for-4 with two RBI and three runs Saturday. “In the second game we started to pick up some hits, we started to learn a lot.
“We were lucky enough to play them twice, we got a lot of data off of that and so when we came into RIC … we had a lot of information and we used it.”
Armed with a 5-2 lead, Vigneau took care of things. The home run was a distant memory and when Alaina Valuk led off the fifth with a single, Vigneau barely noticed. She was in control and remained calm, right up until the final out was recorded, ending her career with a fourth straight title celebration.
“I just pitch one pitch at a time, no matter what the situation is in the game,” Vigneau said. “I can’t focus too much on the big win ahead, just one pitch at a time.”
Chariho was emotional after the loss and why wouldn’t it be? The Chargers entered the season with so much promise, finally got over the hump of beating La Salle and then did it twice in this spring.
But the two playoff losses – Saturday as well as the winners’ bracket final – showed that Chariho still has some work to do to in order to get that title the program wants. The loss will only help inspire the Chargers to keep chasing it next season.
“We had a phenomenal season. I’ve never been more proud of this team,” Jeannenot said. “… It definitely pushes us to go for even bigger things. This year our main thing was to beat La Salle, now I feel like we can have even bigger goals and we can have more success.”
This was supposed to be the year La Salle lost. The Rams graduated all that offensive talent, there’s no way they can overpower teams anymore.
Turns out La Salle didn’t need to. It had a secret weapon who shouldn’t have been so secret and closes her career as the most clutch pitcher Rhode Island has ever seen.
“Without her we probably wouldn’t be here at all,” Pallotta said. “She’s been the ace for the last four years and she always comes up when we need her and she shuts them down.”
“I just enjoyed my time with the girls. Whatever happens, happens, but we just work hard and have fun,” Vigneau said. “I couldn’t have imagined this whatsoever.”
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