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Judge gives Great Northern dispute a week of mediation

Attorneys for the Campaign for Greater Buffalo History, Architecture & Culture talk with reporters outside court Monday morning.
Emyle Watkins
/
WBFO News
Attorneys for the Campaign for Greater Buffalo History, Architecture & Culture talk with reporters outside court Monday morning.

Powerful winds on Dec. 11 caused a significant partial collapse of the northern wall of the Great Northern grain elevator in Buffalo. The battle over the historic structure's future was in court Monday, when the judge ruled the sides have a week to figure it out, before the court decides for them.

“We certainly will cooperate with what the judge has directed and we'll be back, back here when the judge has a decision,” said Brian Melber, representing Archer Daniels Midland, as he quickly walked out of court.

ADM owns the 1897 grain elevator and has applied to the City of Buffalo for emergency demolition. The Campaign for Greater Buffalo History, Architecture & Culture doesn’t want to see the landmark demolished.

December high winds caused a gaping hole in the side of the Great Northern grain elevator.
Office of the Governor
December high winds caused a gaping hole in the side of the Great Northern grain elevator.

“The big point is that that inside the steel, huge, enormous steel grain elevator that holds up everything,” said Richard Berger, a lawyer for CGB.

Berger said the gaping hole that is visible as you drive south down Ganson Street by Riverworks is fixable and not reason enough to tear the whole thing down.

“The bricks are really a decoration around the front. They don't do anything. They're not they're not structural, they don't hold up anything,” Berger said.

But that same gaping hole is the reason for so much concern and the quick pace of this case.

State Supreme Court Justice Emilio Colaiacovo ruled that both sides have a week to try and find a solution through mediation. If they don’t, a ruling will be made based on the laws that exist.

Emyle Watkins is an investigative journalist covering disability for WBFO.
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