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A Denton Publication

Saturday, April 25, 2015

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Cashman announces Town Supervisor candidacy

This Week PLATTSBURGH

By Teah Dowling teah@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ Plattsburgh Town Councilman Michael Cashman announced his candidacy for the office of Plattsburgh Town Supervisor on April 13. Ò The Town of Plattsburgh continues to do some great things because of the partnerships that we have,Ó Cashman said. Ò I believe that there are many more opportunities to come by foraging along that path.Ó Cashman, a Democrat, outlined a campaign focused on economic development, increasing the standard of living and updating the communityÕ s aging infrastructure. His number one priority is to bring good paying, new jobs to the CONTINUED ON PAGE 13

New exhibit on P’burgh Barracks and the Civil War PAGE 2

PLATTSBURGH

Nick Mather fires a pitch in Saranac’s 1-0 win over Northeastern Clinton on April 17. Both he and Cougars pitcher Cameron Hurlburt struck out eight batters and allowed just four hits while an RBI bunt gave the Chiefs the game’s lone run. Photo by Andrew Johnstone

Man conned a community one nickel at a time

Remembering a movie star from the 1930s, 40s PAGE 4

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Day of Caring helps dozens in Adk Region PAGE 15

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The now-closed Rapid Returns Redemption Center in Elizabethtown where Tim Record collected bottles and cans for local organizations.

ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ They just wanted to go to the nationÕ s capital and spend the week learning about the core values of their country Ñ Equality. Unity. Truth. Justice. But fifth graders at Elizabethtown-Lewis Central are getting a swift lesson in disappointment and deceit after a local businessman skipped town after failing to settle a charitable account established in their name. Nearly a dozen organizations and individuals have shared similar stories. Their narratives are identical: A community member would set up an account on behalf of a local organization at the Rapid Returns Redemption Center in Elizabethtown. Instead of feeding their bottles and cans through machines, patrons would drop off bags of recyclables and ask that the subsequent funds be deposited in those accounts, one nickel at a time. The holders would then collect the funds on a schedule worked out with the proprietor.

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2 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh

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CCHA opens exhibits on the Civil War, Plattsburgh Barracks By Teah Dowling

teah@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ On Saturday, April 25 from noon to 3 p.m, the Clinton County Historical Association (CCHA) will open two new touchscreen exhibits, Ò The History of the Plattsburgh BarracksÓ and Ò Clinton County Civil War Record.Ó Ò ThereÕ s just so many important historical events related to the Plattsburgh barracks that this location touched on from 1814 all the way to 1955 before it became the Airforce Base Museum,Ó said Melissa Peck, exhibit designer and CCHA director. Ò WeÕ re trying to really focus attention on the Plattsburgh barracks now and then and what was so significant about the history of this area,” Ò The History of the Plattsburgh Barracks,Ó created by CCHA in partnership with local museum consultant Jan McCormick and her Junior Docents and SUNY Plattsburgh intern and history major Daniel Stimpfle, put together a digital exhibit highlighting the military history of the

Plattsburgh Barracks, also known as Ò the Old BaseÓ or Ò the Oval.Ó Ò Our community focuses a lot on the Battle of Plattsburgh, which is an amazing event in our area, but thereÕ s not a lot of structures left behind from that event in our history,Ó Peck said. Ò But we have a lot of these old buildings, and their presence is still very much here and should be celebrated.Ó The Junior Docents researched the buildings on the Plattsburgh Barracks, and Stimpfle worked alongside Peck to research the overall history of the Plattsburgh Barracks and to configure the exhibit design. The majority of the exhibit focuses on the ArmyÕ s occupation of the Plattsburgh Barracks from 1814 to 1955, including themes such as Ò Lake Champlain, an Aquatic Getaway;Ó Ò The First Permanent Barracks;Ó and Ò The Plattsburgh Post during the Civil War.Ó The Ò Clinton County Civil War RecordÓ exhibit acts as an accompaniment to the museums most

recent publication, Ò Clinton County Civil War Record: 1861-1865.Ó Ò The book has proved to be a wonderful resource to researchers all over the county and state,Ó Peck said. Ò We hope the exhibit will share the same success.Ó The exhibit will feature photographs, letters and other artifacts in the museumÕ s collection that commemorate the men in Clinton County who fought in the Civil War. Ò We have a lot in the collection we werenÕ t able to include in the book because there wasnÕ t enough room,Ó Peck said. Ò So, the Civil War digital exhibit is really a means to get all those other things in the collection we have hear that we want to share.Ó On that day from noon to 3 p.m, visitors can enjoy free admission and exhibit walkthroughs by Peck. After this day, anyone can see the exhibits at the museum ($5 for adults, $5 for seniors and $3 for students) or online through a virtual exhibits webpage, accessed through CCHAÕ s new website

The Clinton County Historical Museum contains three different touchscreen exhibits for a virtual experience. Photo by Teah Dowling

(www.clintoncountyhistorical.org). Both projects allowed the museum to digitize the majority of their Civil war and Plattsburgh barracks collections, allowing over 250 photographs to be digitally preserved and available to the public. Ò We already host another touchscreen exhibit at the museum, so we found that the touchscreens are kind of a new way to get information to the public and make them more entertaining,Ó Peck said. Ò It just adds a new element of interactivity for visitors and the visitor experience.Ó Project partners include the museumÕ s Civil War Sesquicentennial Committee, SUNY Plattsburgh, intern Stimpfle and McCormickÕ s Junior Docents of the North Country Homeschool Network. The museum is located at 98 Ohio Ave. in Plattsburgh. For more information, call 518-5610340 or email director@clintoncountyhistorical.org. Ò Our community a lot on the Battle of Plattsburgh, which is an amazing event in our history, and the airforce,Ó Peck said. Ò But there was an even more significantly larger history that were trying to connect with through these exhibits.Ó


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The Burgh • April 25, 2015 | 3

Rite Aid raising funds for Children’s Miracle Network By Natasha Courter

denpubs@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ Every year, Rite Aid pharmacies participate in the ChildrenÕ s Miracle Network campaign to help raise money. Each pharmacy is encouraged to make their event personal, according to Jason Ribeiro, manager of the Rite Aid pharmacy on Route 3 in Plattsburgh. It is a collaborative effort. Employees of the Rite Aid pharmacy on Route 3 have come up with the idea of a 5k Fun Day event for their fund-raiser. The event is not just for people interested in competing in the race, but it will also include activities such as a disc golf tournament, kidÕ s carnival games, and much more for the whole family to enjoy, according to Ribeiro. Ò We decided a 5k would be a good idea and from there it kind of just exploded and we turned it into a 5k Fun Day with activities kids can participate in,Ó Ribeiro said. Ò We want to make this into an annual event to show the community that Rite Aid is involved with everyone around here.Ó Rite Aid’s ultimate goal in organizing this event is to raise as much money as they can to donate to the ChildrenÕ s Miracle Network (CMN) and help the children of the community. Ribeiro has been able to tour the University of Vermont Children’s hospital and see first hand the type of things that they are

doing for children and their families. Ò It makes us all feel better because we are locals and I know that God forbid something happen to my 18-month old son, thatÕ s where he is going,Ó Ribeiro said. The campaign lasts seven weeks and RibeiroÕ s store has already met the goal they were challenged with. But that will not stop them from continuing to raise money for their local CMN. For those unable to make it to the event, customers can buy a balloon at their local Rite Aid to donate to the CMN, according to Kristin Kellum, PR specialist for Rite Aid. Ò Unfortunately with all of the programs we have going on, there is only so much time we can dedicate towards it [the campaign],Ó Ribeiro said. Ò We make sure that during the seven weeks each year, we definitely put forth as much effort as possible.” Another goal set by the pharmacy is to get the community to see Rite Aid as a part of the local community and not just another corporation, according to Ribeiro. Ò It is part of Rite AidÕ s core values to be a caring neighbor in the communities we serve,Ó Kellum said. All proceeds raised during the event will be donated to The University of Vermont ChildrenÕ s Hospital. Registration for the 5k event starts at 8 a.m. April 25 and all other activities are from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The fee to sign up is $15 and the top 3 winners receive a medal. The event is located at the Cadyville Recreation Park in Cadyville, New York.

By Teah Dowling

teah@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ This spring, Seton Academy will say goodbye to its sixth-grade class for the last time as Seton Catholic Junior High School will house the classes to come. The Seton schools announced at a press conference April 13 that, beginning in September, the incoming sixth-grade class will be housed at Seton Catholic Junior High School, located at 206 New York Road on the former Plattsburgh Air Force Base, rather than the elementary school at 23 Charles St. due to increased enrollment. Ò The enrollment (at the elementary school) has been increasing over the last several years,Ó said Chris Hay, president of the Seton Education Council. Ò So, it gave us an opportunity to transition the sixth grade to the middle school campus.Ó Seton Academy currently has two classrooms per grade except for sixth and pre-k. ItÕ s looking to expand the pre-k offerings by adding another classroom. Ò Instead of compacting two classroomsÕ worth of students into one classroom, it enables us to keep that very individualistic approach that we have working with our students,Ó Hay explained. Ò Also, we think itÕ s a great opportunity for the sixth graders.Ó The sixth grade classroom will follow the schedule of the seventh and eighth graders by having a traditional homeroom and

moving from class to class, subject to subject, throughout the course of the day. Hay and the Seton Education Council donÕ t have a formal structure goal, but they do have short- and long-term goals for the Seton schools. Ò In the short term, it increases the actual number of students, and we see it as a long-term trend,Ó Hay said. Ò ThereÕ s plenty of room to grow.Ó

Community Garden meeting planned

PLATTSBURGH Ñ New garden members, returning gardeners and others interested in renting a Plattsburgh Community Garden plot should attend the annual meeting and plot lottery Saturday, April 25, in the upstairs meeting room of the Plattsburgh Public Library at 10 a.m. The garden group operates a 60-plot garden in Melissa L. Penfield Park and a 14-plot garden at the Plattsburgh Housing Authority on South Catherine Street. The fee is $25 per plot, which includes access to water, compost and tools in a caring community dedicated to organic gardening. Experienced and beginning gardeners are welcome. Families, clubs and organizations can join. Plots are assigned for new gardeners at the annual meeting. New gardeners can register in advance or just show up that day. To learn more about the gardens and to download an application, at plattsburghcommunitygarden.org.

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Seton Academy to no longer house sixth-graders


4 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh

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Remembering Jean Arthur, film star from the ‘30s and ‘40s Commemoration Day takes place to celebrate film legend Jean Arthur By Teah Dowling

teah@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ Film legend Jean Arthur will receive commemoration with an all day celebration beginning with the official unveiling of a plaque at her birthplace. Ò A lot of people donÕ t know she was from Plattsburgh,Ó said Melissa Peck, director/curator of the Clinton County Historical Association. Ò I think itÕ s a good thing for us to remember who she was.Ó The Jean Arthur Commemoration Day formal dedication will take place May 2 at 11 a.m. at 94 Oak St. with speakers including City of Plattsburgh Mayor James Calnon, David Palmieri, the prime mover behind the Arthur plaque project, and Arthur biographer John Oller, who wrote Ò Jean Arthur: The Actress Nobody Knew.Ó “I had always been a fan of the films from that time period, specifically the ones she was in,” Oller said. “But she was sort of

Jean Arthur’s old home on 94 Oak St. Photo by Teah Dowling

a challenge to figure out; nobody knew her.” After the formal dedication there will be a reception at the Center for the Study of Canada, a building where Christopher Kirkey, director of the center, and Palmieri, who at the time worked as an adjunct lecturer, shared conversations on their passion of older films and actors and actresses such as Arthur. “We would talk about her films, the directors she worked with and the actors she worked with,Ó Kirkey said. Ò We always found it kind of odd that having been born in Plattsburgh nothing had be done by the City of Plattsburgh to honor this very celebrated actress. Ò Why we havenÕ t celebrated her before now, IÕ m not sure, but IÕ m delighted that we are now.Ó At the Strand Theatre, there will be two showings of Ò Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,Ó at 2 and 7 p.m., in which Arthur played one of the main the roles as Clarissa Saunders. Tickets are $7 for general admission and $5 for members of the Strand Center for the Arts, seniors, children and military. Ò The Strand is focused on community collaborations in the arts and encouraging other organizations to help collaborate to spread awareness of the arts and culture in the North Country,Ó said Joshua Kretser, director of the Strand Center for the Arts. Ò ItÕ s a great way to spread awareness and this was just a perfect fit for a collaboration.” The CCHA is partnering with SUNY PlattsburghÕ s Center for the Study of Canada, the Strand Center for the Arts and the City of Plattsburgh to present the day of commemoration. Ò Jean Arthur is a local treasure that I think many people are unaware of,Ó Kretser said. Ò She has those ties to the North Country.Ó Arthur, born Gladys Georgiana Greene on Oct. 17, 1900, lived in a still-standing house on 94 Oak St. with parents Hubert and Hannah Greene until 1903. After learning her craft in the 1920s in silent films, she landed a role as the cynical reporter Babe Bennett in Frank CapraÕ s Ò Mr. Deeds Goes to Town.Ó After this role and for eight years she was known as an A-list movie star, a sought-after leading lady and the most paid actor at Harry CohnÕ s Columbia Pictures, acting with leading men including Jimmy Stewart, Gary Cooper, Cary Grant, William Holden, Charles Boyer and Joel McRea. Ò She had an unique screen personality and presence that really stood apart from her peers,Ó Oller said. Ò SheÕ s not as well known today, but I think her performances are just as fresh and modern as most any actress form that time period.Ó When her contract with Columbia ended in 1944, Arthur made only two films, “Billy Wilder’s A Foreign Affair” (1948) and Ò ShaneÓ (1953). During this time she took classes with AmericaÕ s first Peter Pan, Maude Adams, at Stephens College in Missouri, as well as with the psychoanalyst Erich Fromm at Bennington College in Vermont. In 1950, Arthur played Peter Pan for a Broadway production

“Jean Arthur: The Actress Nobody Knew” book cover. Photo provided

with actor Boris Karloff as Captain Hook. Eventually she moved on to teach acting at the North Carolina School of the Arts. She retired in 1975 and withdrew to her home on the ocean in Carmel, California. She died June 19, 1991 of heart failure. She became known as one of the great screen comedies of the 1930s and 1940s. Ò She had a genuine talent for playing comedy,Ó Kirkey said. Ò SheÕ s one of the great actresses of that period.Ó The historic marker honoring Arthur is provided by the William G. Pomeroy Foundation and the program is sponsored by the foundation, Studley Printing & Publishing Inc. and the City of Plattsburgh. Ò It will be a fabulous tribute to one of our local treasures,Ó Kretser said. Ò From the formal dedication of the historic marker on Oak Street, to a reception at the Center for the Study of Canada culminating with performances of Ô Mr. Smith Goes to WashingtonÕ at the Strand Theatre, it will be a downtown day to remember.Ó


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The Burgh • April 25, 2015 | 5

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PSU students fare well in national broadcasting competition By Melanie Rivera

denpubs@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ SUNY Plattsburgh students from the Department of Communications won six awards at the 73rd National Broadcasting Society conference held in Atlanta March 24-29, winning against schools including the University of Florida and the University of Oklahoma. Senior Matthew Auten won three awards: Ò Video Comedy Program,Ó Ò Video Comedy SegmentÓ and Ò Video Program Opener.Ó Sophomore Michael Meere, first time NBS conference attendee, won the Ò Video PSAsÓ award, and sophomore Natalie Gramegna, along with several other Plattsburgh State students, won the Ò On-TheSpotÓ competition. As a transfer, this is Gramegna’s first year at Plattsburgh State and first time attending the conference. Prior to attending Plattsburgh State, Gramegna was involved in her high school radio station and had an internship at a radio station which she says “solidified” her love for radio and sound.

Ò ItÕ s cool being around people who are so passionate about what youÕ re passionate about,Ó Gramegna said of the conference. Gramegna is currently involved with WQKE radio and plans to continue attending the NBS conference for the rest of college. Gramegna said professors, like associate professor Timothy Clukey, at Plattsburgh State have been a big help. Ò ItÕ s only my second semester and IÕ m in a 400-level class,Ó Gramegna said. Ò IÕ ve been given opportunities that I wouldnÕ t think I would be having the ability to have, so thatÕ s really been a big help.Ó Senior Matthew Auten, who has attended the conference twice, agreed with Gramegna about how professors like Clukey and Christine Johnson, as well as friends, have helped him a lot. Ò I didnÕ t think coming into Plattsburgh State what impact could I have,Ó Auten said. Ò I wouldnÕ t think IÕ d be doing work alongside schools like University of Florida, University of Oklahoma or University of Cincinnati Ñ all division one, big schools.Ó The video submitted for Ò Video Comedy ProgramÓ

was the eighth episode out of 11 of a show that Auten helped produce on Plattsburgh State Television (PSTV). Ò It kind of covers the entire show,Ó Auten said. Ò It was kind of cool putting all that work into one thing and being recognized in the eighth episode.” Meere started getting into producing comedy videos on YouTube at the age of 13. He said comedy is more of his Ò route,Ó but the video submitted to win was based on verbal abuse. He described it as Ò serious and dark,Ó while his competitors used a comedy route. Ò I was going up against people who used HD video and non-linear editing while I used our old equipment that we recently got rid of,Ó Meere explained. When Meere went on tours to see studios like FOX in Georgia, he made connections between the equipment he saw to the equipment he uses as a student. Ò WeÕ re using the same exact equipment that they are,Ó Meere said, Ò so I know IÕ m getting a good education. I think the school in general really helps push us to our limits.Ó

Investment magazine heaps praise on City of Plattsburgh PLATTSBURGH Ñ The North Country Chamber of Commerce and the Development Corporation of Clinton County welcome news that fDi Magazine (Foreign Direct Investment), a publication of the Financial Times of London, has ranked Plattsburgh as the No. 2 Micro American City of the Future, advancing from its No. 4 ranking two years ago. The city rankings are released every two years as part of an analysis of various sized cities in the Americas, with micro cities being those with less than 100,000 population. Plattsburgh also scored very strongly in each of the components used as factors in the rankings, as follows: No. 2 for Economic Potential No. 1 for Human Capital and Lifestyle No. 3 for Business Friendliness No. 9 for Connectivity No. 1 for Foreign Direct Investment Strategy ÒWh at is most gratifying about this ranking is that, while our recent No. 8 ranking by Site Selection Magazine was evaluating past success, this review seeks to identify the Cities of the Future, looking at the data, trends and strategies in place,Ó said Garry Douglas, president of the North Country Chamber of Commerce. ÒI t is truly remarkable to be compared with like size communities across all of North and South America and be ranked number two overall and in the top ten in five of the component ingredients they assess.Ó fDiÕ s Cities of the Future rankings are created by a distinguished judging panel, reviewing and analyzing dozens on data points. Among the criteria used are population forecasts, GDP, total inward and outward foreign direct investment, infrastructure investments, strategies and fools for FDI and other factors and trends. “This elevated ranking, together with the very high rankings in five strategic components of success, will send a fresh message to companies and investors everywhere that there is a place called Plattsburgh that they need to be aware of,Ó Douglas said. “It reaffirms that our international strategies, particularly our unique approaches to broadening and deepening our connections with Quebec, are not only correct but are a model for other small areas.Ó ÒW e are proud to have earned so high a ranking on fDiÕ s list of Micro American Cities of the Future,Ó said Paul Grasso, President of the Development Corporation. ÒT he high ranking in multiple categories demonstrates the value of the synergies created by our collaborative approach to economic development. “It’s an especially distinguished honor in that it recognizes our achievements in growing Greater PlattsburghÕ s regional economy by offering an attractive package of cost competitiveness, a skilled workforce, access to global markets, a strong educational system, and a great quality of life. We will continue to work hard to encourage more firms to locate here and to attract even more foreign direct investment.” “This news fits with what I said in my State of the City address earlier this year,” noted James Calnon, Mayor of the City of Plattsburgh. ÒI said there was a spirit of confidence and optimism as we began 2015, and there were good reasons for it. Five of those reasons are cited by fDi. We are moving up and plan to continue to do so.Ó ÒT he fDi designation of Plattsburgh as the No. 2 Micro American City of the Future is great news and further validates this regionÕ s commitment to provide an environment and quality of life that both serves to attract businesses and satisfies the needs of individuals and families,Ó said Sam Dyer, Chairperson of the Clinton County Legislature. ÒT he Clinton County Legislature remains committed to policies that promote economic development in our area.Ó “I am pleased to learn that fDi has identified Plattsburgh as a top Micro American City of the Future,Ó said Bernard Bassett, Town of Plattsburgh Supervisor. ÒT his is exciting news for everyone who has worked to make this possible by providing the resources to develop our local capacity. Our potential is significant and I believe

we have seen growth in the past few years that reflects that positive changes are possible and have begun. We look forward to continuing the regional collaboration that empowers all of us to succeed at this level.Ó Douglas and Grasso credit the areaÕ s economic development team for achieving the high rankings, including the Chamber, the Development Corporation, the North Country Regional Economic Development Council, the City and Town of Plattsburgh, the Clinton County Legislature and IDA, Empire State Development, the North Country Workforce Investment Board, Clinton Community College, SUNY Plattsburgh, CV-TEC, CITEC, Vision 2 Action and others involved in economic and workforce development.

Friends of the Stage fundraiser slated

ROUSES POINT Ñ Friends of the Stage will hold a fundraiser Friday, April 24, at the Alburgh Fire Department at 5 p.m. Events include a 50/50, a Lotto board and prize bingo, with the top prizes including a six-piece patio set with an umbrella, gift certificates and a Keurig coffeemaker. For more information call 297-2954.

Jackie Angel to perform

MORRISONVILLE Ñ There will be an evening of praise and worship Friday, April 24, at St. AlexanderÕ s at 7 p.m. Doors will open at 6:15 p.m. Jackie Angel will lead the concert, she is a singer, songwriter, and catholic speaker from Orange County, CA. Music, testimony, adoration, and confessions will all be part of the evening. This event is open to the public. The cost is $10. To register visit rcdony.org/Jackie or pay at door.

Child safety seat check planned

CHAZY— Clinton County Traffic Safety is sponsoring a Child Safety Seat Check Saturday, April 25, at the Riley Ford, 9693 U.S. 9 from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. For more information, contact Mitch Carriere at Clinton County Traffic Safety Office, 565-4397, or mitch.carriere@clintoncountygov.com.

Northern Lights to hold grad dance

CHAMPLAIN Ñ The Northern Lights Square Dance Club be holding their Graduation Dance Saturday, April 25, at the Northeastern Clinton County School (NCCS), 103 Rte. 276 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Mr. Carl Trudo will be calling with Mainstream, Plus tips and Round Dances. Enter at back of school. For more information call 236-6919, or 450-247-2521.

Monthly dance sessions planned

SARANAC Ñ The Saranac Town Hall will hold senior dance sessions every Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. There will be country music, round, square and line dancing. The cost for admission is a non-perishable food item for the local food shelf. Refreshments will be served with donations. For information, call 293-7056.

Library trustees to meet

PLATTSBURGH Ñ There will be a regular monthly meeting of the Clinton-EssexFranklin Library System Board of Trustees Monday, April 27, at 33 Oak Street, at 4:30 p.m. Video conference will be available at Saranac Lake Free Library, Cantwell Room, 109 Main Street, and at Schroon Lake Town Meeting Room, 15 Leland Avenue. The meeting will be open to the public at all three locations.

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6 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh

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A COMMUNITY SERVICE: This community newspaper and its delivery are made possible by the advertisers you’ll find on the pages inside. Our sixty plus employees and this publishing company would not exist without their generous support of our efforts to gather and distribute your community news and events. Please thank them by supporting them and buying locally. And finally, thanks to you, our loyal readers, for your support and encouragement over the past 65 years from all of us here at the Burgh and Denton Publications.

The Burgh Editorial

Common Core: Communication is key

O

ver the past week, the Denton Publications editorial team has been talking with educators and administrators throughout the region as Common Core testing enters its second week. Through everything, there is one common theme: everyone is frustrated. Why are they frustrated? Because education has been turned into a political game, with students being made the pawns. The battle lines were drawn during the most recent state budget process, where Gov. Andrew Cuomo tied school funding to new, sweeping reforms when it came to teacher assessments and tenure reform. The stateÕ s leading teachers union, NYSUT, countered with a call for mass opt-outs on the Common Core testing for students in grades 3-8, which took place last week (English Language Arts) and this (math), concluding on Friday. One administrator put it this way: Ò You have a governor who is very solid in his position and a union who is very solid in theirs.Ó Another added: Ò They did not expect Cuomo to back down because he wanted to use education reform as a plank on his potential 2016 presidential platform.Ó With neither side budging, students have been put in the middle. Parents, who may have had varying reasons for their decisions, opted out students in record numbers, with many North Country school unable to meet the 95 percent threshold required, putting them in jeopardy of losing Race to the Top and Title 1 federal funding. Some schools barely reached the threshold. In Minerva, the school stayed above the line as only one student opted out of the testing. However, in a school with about 50 students in grades 3-8, it would take only one other student opting out to put the school below the line. Superintendent Tim Farrell reported three students had already been opted out of the math test for this week. The exceptions to what became the unfortunate rule came in the Keene and Crown Point school districts, where no students opted out of the testing in the first week. When talking to these districts, we noticed a similar pattern. Each school offered to meet with parents concerned about the Common Core testing and recent educational issues, sitting down with administrators and talking things out. Both schools also seem to have a sense of their situations, as well. Keene has always been known as a district which bands together for the greater good. Students will take turns participating in different extra-curricular activities, making deals with fellow students like: Ò If I take part in the Drama Club, will you in turn join the baseball team.Ó While this is just as an example, we really have had students tell us this happens. Crown Point has shown its desire to remain an independent school district, voting to drop any notion of a potential merger with Ticonderoga before discussion could really take off. They have also been through the trying fires of being on a list of schools in need of improvement and have come through the other side and do not want to go through the experience again. No matter the reason, this approach of speaking directly with concerned parents and students seems to have worked the best. In these cases, it was not about the politics, the grades or the Common Core. It was about the individual. Now, we are not naive enough to believe some of this had to do with making sure the district stayed above the 95 percent threshold and remained eligible for federal funding and off of watch lists, but this approach shows a more personal and direct way of handling the situation. If these conversations would have happened and parents still desired to opt their kids out, weÕ re sure administrators would have been upset, but at least they would be so knowing they covered all the bases with these parents. Maybe other schools did this, as well, without the same success. However, what speaks to the effectiveness of this practice in Keene and Crown Point is, after these discussions, there were no opt-outs in either school. That is more than just coincidence. ItÕ s an example of coming together, discussing and reaching a conclusion those in Albany could take a lesson from. Ñ Denton Publications Editorial Board, Dan Alexander, Keith Lobdell and John Gereau

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Publisher’s Column

Ready or not, here come the candidates

I

donÕ t know about you, make this happen in todayÕ s but IÕ m certainly not high tech world. Certainly ready for the presidenwe need time for these cantial race. It seems the election didates to be heard and have cycle never really ends. Electheir positions clarified, but tion 2016 has had the pundits do we need 18 months? If writing and talking since beyou think this is numbing for fore the 2012 election was fius think what it must be like nalized. for the candidates; nearly all Depending on when you of whom we already know so read this column we will have well as a result of all this high Dan Alexander 560+ days until we go to the tech communication. Nearly Thoughts from polls to elect the next United all of them have been runBehind the Pressline States President. More than ning in one way or another 18 months to watch the many through the media for the last republicans contenders, one by one, attempt few years. Are there really any revelations to destroy each other in every way imaginwe havenÕ t already heard about and even able as each claws their way to the top of the if we had heard about something salacious, party ticket, while reminding us along the is it twisted political spin or factual detail? way how unified they are within the party. It seems to me, we believe what we want to While that spectacle buries us nearly as believe. deep in mud as we are in financial debt, we We must also remember this simple fact, can turn to the kinder side of the political roughly 94% of those who will vote in 2016 spectrum; while the democrats attempt to, have already made up their minds based on recreate or re-introduce, Hillary Clinton as party affiliation. Some of them may simply neither an extension of President Bill Clinton forgo voting altogether, mainly because they nor President Barack Obama. donÕ t like a particular position their partyÕ s Holding three high profile positions as candidate has taken. Additionally, there First Lady, US Senator, and Secretary of could be a break away third party candidate State, one would think the most recognized who will challenge tradition and attempt to woman in the world would not need a new pull off an upset. Baring those rare occurmake over. But in the world of politics just rences, by the time November 8, 2016 rolls how much stomach the US Electorate has for around, the vast majority will be in lock step more political spin is about to be put to the with their party. That leaves a very few untest as Mrs. Clinton defines how she wants interested or easily swayed citizens to decide us to view her. what all this hoopla means for the person we At any rate campaigns and fund rais- be calling the 45th President of the United ing events are now kicking into high gear States. as will unrealistic political promises, issue As I ponder it all, IÕ m reminded of how stance waffling and the ever popular footmuch my wife hates the NCAA March Madin-the-mouth miss-statement followed up ness Basketball Tournament and the big by Ò hereÕ s what I was trying to sayÓ apology countdown to the Final Four. Perhaps we tour for anyone who was offended.... and if should just let the candidates run continuyou werenÕ t offended by what I said, then I ous campaigns all culminating in one quick really meant every word of it. month, winner take all, run off we call Great All this thought and reflection brings back November Numbing. fond memories of prior elections. Sadly, we Who knows we might get more of our waste so much time, effort and money when citizens excited about the process and with at the end of the day all we seem to get is a some help from ESPN we can encourage the different face living it up on our tax dollars, creation of presidential brackets as we work while the Washington grid lock gets worse our way through the candidates from the and the political divide continues to tear the sweet spinners to the presidential improvicountry further apart. sor. It makes you long for the days of smoke Come on, use your imagination and confilled back rooms where the party bosses sider this; Could it be any more crazy or fought it out to see who would be their party numbing than what we are about to understandard bearer, giving us a straight forward go? choice. Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of DenWhile much of what I written above is ton Publications. He may be reached at dan@ tongue in check there must be a better way to denpubs.com.


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The Burgh • April 25, 2015 | 7

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Fashion Show a huge success!

Letters to the Editor

To the Editor: I would like to thank all the businesses and individuals for their support in making my NCCS National Honor Society Project, the Fashion Show on March 14 for the Watson Memorial Senior Housing Elevator Fund, so successful. I had a lot of support from the community and it goes to show that together we can make a difference! I would like to especially thank Lina from BirchÕ s Corner and Tracy Graves from All Things Diva for partnering with me to put this event together. A big thank you goes out to the Mooers Fire Station for hosting the benefit. The show was well attended and it raised $3,402. Many have asked if they have enough money raised. After this event, they are half way to the $50,000 that they need. If anyone would like to donate, there is still time. Please make check payable to Mooers Senior Housing and send to Mooers Senior Citizens Housing Corp., 2448 Route 11, Mooers, NY 12958 and reference elevator fund. Courtney Lamberton, Mooers Forks

Courtney Lamberton presents to the Watson Memorial Senior Housing board and residents a check for $3,402 from the Fashion Show that was held on March 14 to benefit the elevator fund.

Appreciates quest for the truth

On the one hand, the resources for seeking the truth are vast and incredible! On the other hand, the opportunity for being blasted with a bunch of unadulterated crap (okay, thatÕ s not a very nice way to say it, but it has the virtue of being pretty much correct) is commensurately vast. A really unfortunate aspect of this is that the truth is often considerably more difficult to uncover, and our ability to do the necessary critical thinking to get at it seems to be on the wane. A blessing is that it takes a relatively small fraction of people armed with the truth to prevail against the greater levels of nonsense, or at least I think that is true. Don Austin, Elizabethtown

Sing for your health To the Editor: The Cumberland Bay Barbershop (CBB) Chorus has been serving our great North Country for 55 years by singing at Churches, hospitals, nursing homes, service clubs and community events. We also make donations to local charities and our own national charity, The Harmony Foundation, which supports vocal music in our schools and communities. Each week we sing, we change lives. Sometimes in big ways, like when we entertain a cheering crowd, or introduce new singers to barbershop harmony. Sometimes in small ways, like the simple happy glow of satisfaction we take home after a few well-rung tags to close a chapter meeting. Every week, we are making the music thatÕ s making a difference. This year the CBB Chorus is hosting a Ò singing for your health workshop” partially financed by a grant from the Barbershop Harmony Society. It will be a 5 day workshop every Tuesday in May and June 2nd, 7-9 pm at the North Country Alliance Church, 7 Northern Boulevard in Plattsburgh. Come to 1 or all 5, they are all free of charge. Experience and the ability to read music are not required. The workshop will be conducted by Bill Verity, Musical Director of the award winning Plattsburgh High School Vocal Ensemble. Singing has been proven to keep you mentally sharp and physically healthy with stronger respiratory and pulmonary systems. It can lift your self-esteem and reduce stress. Singing occupies a part of the brain that makes you forget day-to-day cares. Barbershoppers have a saying Ò you canÕ t be unhappy while singingÓ . So please join us and sign up for our workshop today by going to our website, www.cumberlandbay.org, call Ted 536-6735 or Mike 561-0545 today.

To the Editor: The editorial on seeking truth was a breath of fresh air for me. The Internet is an odd bird.

Mike Deeb, President Plattsburgh Barbershoppers

PLATTSBURGH Ñ GospelFEST 2015, a powerful one-night concert featuring the Plattsburgh State Gospel Choir, student musicians and a special guest performer, is set for Saturday, May 2 in the E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium. The event marks the end of the academic season and the start to summer. Doors at the Hawkins Hall venue on campus open at 5:30 p.m. The two-hour event begins at 6 p.m. Featuring a unique fusion of traditional gospel, urban gospel and contemporary Christian music, the choir blends its performances heavily with Caribbean and Afrocentric rhythms and spiritual overtones. Along with highlighting student musicians throughout the performance, the evening will include special guest Mame Assane Coly, a master sabar, kutiro, djembe and tama drummer from Dakar, Senegal. Coly moved to Vermont in January and is currently working with the Jeh Kulu African Dance and Drum Theater in Burlington. Selections to be presented include Ò The GiftÓ by Donald Lawrence,

Brenda MooreÕ s choral gospel classic Ò ExcellentÓ and an original piece written by choir director Dr. Dexter Criss, SUNY Plattsburgh associate professor of chemistry. The choirÕ s Step Team, Praise Dancers and Praise Team will also perform. Tickets for students are $5 in advance and $7 at the door. General admission is $10 in advance and $12 at the door. Children 5 and under are free. Tickets are available at the Angell College Center desk on campus, the Christian Supply Center on Prospect Avenue in Plattsburgh, Advance Music in Burlington and from the Plattsburgh State Gospel Choir office in Hawkins Hall. Purchases may also be made online at www.plattsburghstategospelchoir.org. For more information on the concert, contact 518-564-2704 or gospelchoir@plattsburgh.edu. Details on the Plattsburgh State Gospel Choir are online at the groupÕ s website or its Facebook page.

Musicians, guest highlight GospelFEST 2015

Series to commemorate Wilkes capture

News in Brief School to hold registration

SARANAC Ñ The Clinton County Historical Association and Museum announces the third and final Stamp Cancellation in their Civil War Sesquicentennial Series Sunday, April 26, from 11 a.m. to noon on the grounds of the Saranac Town Hall, 3662 Rte. 3. The stamp cancellation commemorates the 16th New York Cavalry and their participation in John Wilkes BoothÕ s capture April 26, 1865. The Town of Saranac is the final resting place for four of the five soldiers who enlisted in Saranac and were part of the group known as LincolnÕ s AvengerÕ s. Immediately following the stamp cancellation, the Town of Saranac Historian, Jan Couture with host a history tour where participants can view the soldiers graves and learn more about their lives during, and after the Civil War. The cost is $3 per stamp cancellation with stamp cancellations from the previous years also available for purchase. For more information, call the Clinton County Historical Museum at 561-0340. The Museum is open Wednesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. CCHA members enjoy free admission. For more information, visit clintoncountyhistorical.org or call 561-0340. This program is sponsored in part by Clinton County and the United States Postal Service.

’Donate or Don’t Eat’ to kickoff

PLATTSBURGH Ñ The JCEO Community Action AngelsÕ Ò Donate or DonÕ t EatÓ Challenge Kick-Off Event will be held Sunday, April 26, at Champlain Centre Mall from 11 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. The event will feature live entertainment as well as presentations related to childhood hunger. They have local talent helping us with this event featuring The Underground Jazz Band, Sweet Adelines, Center Stage Dancers, Stan Ransom-The Connecticut Peddler and the Champlain Valley Irish Dancers. The goal of this event is to bring awareness to the issues of childhood hunger and to build support for the JCEO Community Action AngelsÕ Backpack Program. They want to encourage individuals to take the Ò Donate or DonÕ t EatÓ Challenge to three other people to do the same. The objective for this challenge is to go eight hours without eating. If people can not meet the challenge, then they encourage people to make a donation on their Facebook page at facebook.com/communityactionangels. After someone has made a donation, post a picture of what they ate to support for the Backpack Program. The community is invited to participate in this free event. For more information, contact Kathy Bishop at JCEO, 561-6310 or bishop@jceo.org.

CHAZY — Registration will be held at the Chazy Central Rural School Monday, April 27, in the auditorium. They will check registration papers between 8:15 to 8:30 a.m. and begin the program promptly at 8:30 a.m. so that they may be finished by 9:45 a.m. If a child will be five years old on or before Tuesday, Dec. 1, he or she is eligible to register for the September kindergarten class. If people are planning to enter their child in September, they should attend registration day. Be sure to bring the child’s original birth certificate or other legal proof of age, as this is required by NY State Law. Registration papers will be sent to eligible families by Friday, April 10, if people do not receive paperwork and have a child of kindergaRte.n age, contact Mrs. Martin immediately at 846-7212.

Small Business Conference announced

PLATTSBURGH Ñ Small business owners are invited to the Ò Opening Doors to Government ContractingÓ conference held Tuesday, April 28, at the North Country Small Business Development office, 194 US Oval, Room 220, from 8:30 a.m. to noon. The conference is being sponsored by the North Country Small Business Development Center (SBDC), U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), North Country Procurement Assistance Center (PTAC) and Glens Falls National Bank. Reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities will be made if requested at least two weeks in advance. Contact the North Country Small Business Development Center, at 564-2042.

Mortgage workshop slated

SARANAC LAKE Ñ A Managing Your Mortgage workshop will be held Wednesday, April 29, at North Country Community College, Saranac Lake campus, in room C-10, at 7 p.m. This workshop is sponsored by the Housing Assistance Program of Essex County, Inc., an HUD certified housing counseling agency. It is funded through the NYS Attorney General Homeownership Protection Program and is intended to assist homeowners in developing the skills to maintain ownership of their homes in difficult economic times. It is part of a larger effort to help stabilize and preserve healthy neighborhoods throughout the state. The workshop is open to the public and free of charge. Spaces are limited. Call 873-6888 to pre-register. Participants must be 18 and older.

The trusty potato smasher

I

know IÕ m older than dirt when I glance around our house on the river. Many of the items we have used daily for decades, are relatively unknown to our grandchildren and great grandchildren. We still have a potato masher. I used to call it a Ò smasherÓ when I was a young lad. My mother hated lumps in the taters and the task of getting them out often fell to me. Perhaps thatÕ s where my Popeye muscles started. I know it wasnÕ t from by Gordie Little the spinach. I hated spinach. Once when a teacher came to our house for a modest supper, my big brother Jim was asked to say the blessing: Ò Bless this food and bless this house and please, God, make Gordon eat his spinach.Ó Legend has it that Gordon spit a mouthful of spinach across the table into the teacherÕ s face. I donÕ t think she ever came back. We still have big, wooden spoons in our kitchen. I have fond memories of being asked to stir any number of things for my mom. Some were tasty. Some, not so much. My mother was a health nut and she came up with cooked and raw concoctions that werenÕ t always delectable. But, when I was called to stir, I stirred. Of course, anything sweet was nirvana, because I got to lick that big wooden spoon at the end. We still have some of those beautiful crockery bowls. They, too, hold many memories. When I think of eggs and bacon, I close my eyes and imagine my mother cooking them in a huge cast iron frying pan on the stove top. IÕ m quite certain she called that big, heavy utensil a Ò spider.Ó Does that ring a bell with you? Perhaps you refer to it as Ò fry panÓ or even a Ò skillet.Ó I learned much later in life that a true spider was a cast iron frying pan with three legs attached to be used over an open fire. We still have cast iron muffin pans in our cupboard. You have to keep all of those cast iron utensils properly seasoned. ThatÕ s a real art in itself. I donÕ t know if we still have what was called an egg beater, but I wouldnÕ t be surprised to find one in a lower cabinet next to KayeÕ s ancient metal kitchen scale that is still as accurate today as it was when new in the 1920s. Yes, we also have a beautiful old grinder that you clamp to the table and use different inserts depending on the project. I remember being tasked with turning the wooden handle to grind up everything for cooking and canning. Oh, and I always cried a lot when grinding up the horseradish from my motherÕ s garden. Wooden matches? Sure, we have a box handy in case the gas stove doesnÕ t start automatically with the knob. That happened to me recently when I went to heat up some tomato soup. I had to ask Kaye where to find them. As kids, we used to cut off the heads, stuff them into the hollow of a large nut when bolts are screwed into either side and throw the whole thing up into the air. When it fell and struck the pavement, there was a resultant bang. As me sometime how I was almost killed when I used too large a nut and bolts, put in too many match heads and tried to tighten it all with a wrench. I survived, but somebody up there must have been watching over me. Speaking of wooden, when is the last time you used wooden clothes pins and hung your clothes outside on the line? They smelled good after a little time out there in that fresh spring air. Spring was also a good time to take up all our rugs and haul them outside. Another of my jobs was to hang the rugs on the clothes line and get rid of my adolescent frustrations by swinging a rug beater and choking on the dirt in the air. Enjoy those April showers and pray for May flowers.

Little Bits

Columnist Gordie Little is a weekly contributor to Denton Publications. He may be reached at gordie@denpubs.com.


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PLATTSBURGH Ñ First Weekends in Plattsburgh, Inc. will be back for its third season starting with their monthly art walk on May 1. The Art Walk pairs businesses within the downtown vicinity with local artists to display work. The First Weekends Art Walk will take place in downtown Plattsburgh, Friday May 1 from 5-8 p.m. This event is free and open to the public. While the official season for First Weekends kicks off in June at the City Marina with a full concert by Lucid, the First Weekends Art Walk will start up in May. This monthÕ s walk will include eight downtown Plattsburgh locations throughout Margaret Street, Court Street, and City Hall Place; The Strand Center for the Arts, Olive Ridleys, Koffee Kat, The Pepper, Chameleon Gallery, Cornerstone Bookstore, Cache Elegant, and The Champlain Wine Company at 30 City. Each location will feature with artists of various mediums. Ò We have had a wonderful response so far and are always looking to expand the art walk,Ó Board Member Denise Duprey said. Ò If a business currently displays works of art from local artists and would like to be listed with us, or if a business would like to be matched to a local artist they can contact us at firstweekendsplattsburgh@gmail.com,” Duprey indicated. Artists are also welcome to email the group to join. First Weekends in Plattsburgh and The Strand Center for the Arts are also starting a monthly coloring contest that will start in May. Parents can pick up coloring sheets at the Art Walk or during the month of May at The Strand Center on 23 Brinkerhoff Street in Plattsburgh. Coloring sheets will be displayed during the June Art Walk at The Strand Center for the Arts. The top five placing submissions will win a prize. Parents can also go the The Strand Center Facebook page to download the coloring sheet. The first weekend in May also includes not only the Art Walk on Friday night, but a plethora of activities happening on Saturday and Sunday, May 2-3, 2015. The Clinton County Historical Association and Museum in partnership with the City of Plattsburgh, SUNY PlattsburghÕ s Center for the Study of Canada, and The Strand Center for the Arts will commemorate film legend Jean Arthur with an all day celebration beginning with the official unveiling of a plaque at her birthplace at 94 Oak Street. Speakers will include City of Plattsburgh Mayor, James Calnon; Jean Arthur Plaque Ceremony Organizer, David Palmieri; and Jean Arthur Biographer, John Oller. A reception will then follow at, SUNY PlattsburghÕ s Center for the Study of Canada, where the public is invited to meet the speakers and enjoy free light refreshments. The Strand Center for the Arts will present a Jean Arthur Celebration with the showing of Ò Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.Ó Showings will be at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. with prices for seniors, members, students and military at $5 and general admission at $7. Also on Saturday May 2, The Most On The Coast will be held at the Crete Civic Center from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .featuring various businesses and craft vendors, hosted by The City Of Plattsburgh. On Sunday May 3, ConroyÕ s Organics presents, Spring ItÕ s About Darn time from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. featuring music, hay rides, and local vendors to celebrate the arrival of spring. First Weekends in Plattsburgh, Inc. events start with their monthly art walk on May 1. This monthÕ s walk will include eight downtown Plattsburgh locations throughout Margaret Street, Court Street, and City Hall Place; The Strand Center for the Arts, Olive Ridleys, Koffee Kat, The Pepper, Chameleon Gallery, Cornerstone Bookstore, Cache Elegant, and The Champlain Wine Company at 30 City. Each location will feature with artists of various mediums. The First Weekends Art Walk will take place in downtown Plattsburgh, Friday May 1 from 5-8 p.m. This event is free and open to the public.


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Nickel con From page 1

But hereÕ s the rub: After a while, the payments trickled to a halt. Some even received nothing. Now, with the end of the school year in sight, the annual fifth grade field trip is in jeopardy. Over at Rapid Returns, the building sits empty; the phone, disconnected; the email address and website, deactivated. Timothy C. Record has exited the building. THE RECYCLIST The recyclist came into town not in a garishly-painted wooden gypsy wagon, but rather a late-model charcoal-colored sedan. On Sept. 4, 2013, Record went to the county clerk’s office and filed a DBA certificate for the modest wooden building at 219 Water Street Ñ Rapid Returns. Within six months, the business was humming with activity. Large plastic bags became hallmarks of the parking lot, the chimes of the beep-beep-beep of trucks backing in, packed with silver lucre, the sound of summer. Record, a former North Creek planning board member, became a familiar sight at community functions at which he portrayed himself as an earnest upstart with a penchant for civic involvement. He quickly landed a spot on the board of the Essex County Fair and helped line up distributors for the annual event’s first foray into alcohol sales. He sold fudge and kettle corn on the local farmerÕ s market circuit. And he promoted Rapid Returns whenever possible. At a Westport Chamber meeting in August, he told members that he spent months researching what he called a bulletproof business model. He handed out cards: Tim Record, Recyclist. Ò No lines! No limits! No machines! No waiting!Ó The options were breathless: Bar pickup. Festival recycling. Group fundraising. And charitable accounts. Ò Fundraising ideas and tips available to insure your success!Ó it said. TRIP OF A LIFETIME Dina Garvey is Elizabethtown-Lewis Central’s fifth grade trip advisor. School officials decided on Washington, D.C. as the destination for this yearÕ s four-day trip. With the new academic year last fall came the fundraising events to bankroll the $11,000 required to ferry the kids and their chaperones, some 20 people total, to the capitol: Bake sales. Spaghetti dinners. Pancake breakfasts. Ò These are 10-year-olds that work really hard,Ó said Garvey. By then, Record was a familiar face in the community with an ever-increasing portfolio of local organizations taking advantage of his fundraising accounts. Garvey joined them and for the first year, the relationship was advantageous. Folks would drop their bottles off, Record would collect them, crunch the numbers and issue a payout along with an itemized recipient. Last year, the bottle drive last year raised $3,000. Ò He was honest,Ó said Garvey. This year, the fifth graders hoped for a repeat, spending long weekend days in collection drives, knocking on doors and getting their hands dirty. And their friends and families, from September to March, collected their empties and dropped them off at Rapid Returns. NICKEL AND DIMED In January, Record came into Garvey’s office and told her that he was going on vacation and that the center would be closed for a month. Record gave her a key to the building and told her to continue to drop off bottles. “He told us to fill up the room, and that’s what we did,” said Garvey. Ò I had a good relationship with him and didnÕ t even think about it.Ó January turned to February. In March, Garvey heard Record was back in town and stopped in. But the small sign on the front window had changed: For sale. And the bottles and cans? Vanished. All of them, the entire haul from that year. The building was empty. Garvey dialed RecordÕ s cell. She called. And called. And calledÉ six times altogether before she received a response. Garvey said Record told her that he decided to retire.

Cashman

From page 1 community while simultaneously keeping those jobs in Plattsburgh. Incumbent Supervisor Bernie Bassett, also a Democrat, has announced he will not seek re-election. To date, no one else has announced their candidacy. Ò Folks live, work and play within our municipality in our region,Ó Cashman said. Ò I want to present the best quality of life for folks that want to move into the region or stay in our region.Ó He said he will work to develop a sound capital budget while revisiting the townÕ s master plan as well as to incorporate more 21st century services such as online billing. He also plans to commission a group to develop a comprehensive, long-term study assessing and recommending solutions to address Plattsburgh’s infrastructure deficit. Ò Infrastructure can be seen in a lot of different ways,Ó Cashman said. Ò We have aging water towers in the town, and we have the need to make sure that weÕ re maintaining a strong water sys-

www.the-burgh.com “I said, ‘That’s fine, but you owe us a lot of money,’” she recalled. After another email back-and-forth to settle up, Record arrived at a figure: $473.74. Based on years of fundraising experience, Garvey said that number seemed low, but thereÕ s no way to prove it. She arrived at a conservative estimate of at least $1,000 in returns spanning the period from September to January. Family members, friends and other members of the community were constantly dropping off their recyclables, she said. Ò Community members stored bottles all year long thinking, Ô I went on this trip as a kid and I want everyone to have that same opportunity,Õ Ó said Garvey. Ò There could be thousands of dollars.Ó Owing to the lack of recipients, thereÕ s also no proof of who made donations, a loophole that nagged at other organizations interviewed for this story, because patrons simply dropped off their bags, trusting Record to handle the rest. Garvey pushed. And pushed. And pushed. Ò These kids raised this money for the trip themselves Ñ itÕ s disheartening and it makes me sick to my stomach.Ó Finally, in March, she received a money order for $100 with an Orlando postmark. THE SCRAPE-AROUND On Nov. 7, a man named Andrew Bulmer logged onto Facebook and created an account for something called the scrapearound, a funnel-shaped ice removal device. Ò Simply put, the scrape-around is the most innovative tool for windshield de-icing since the cassette case,Ó Bulmer wrote. Ò I will be posting more in the upcoming days and weeks to fill you in on how you can join the thousands that already know what a great product this is.Ó It was a pitch straight from made-for-TV central casting, quick cash for the holiday season. Six days later, Record, writing on that same page, announced that he had teamed up with Bulmer to sell the product at the Crossgates Mall in Albany starting on Nov. 14. The cost was $6 if you purchased four or more, he wrote. Ò They are a great gift for people like the mailman, paperman or someone you need a small gift for,Ó he helpfully added. Bulmer first met Record while working as a bartender at a North Creek-area bar. At the time, Record was the general manager for the Upper Hudson River Railroad. Bulmer said he had no idea that by the time the pair officially launched their kiosk on Black Friday, Record had owed several Champlain Valley-area organizations an estimated thousands of dollars. Ò Holy moly,Ó he said. Ò I had no idea that that was going on up there.Ó The decision to go into the kiosk business was a spur-of-themoment decision, said Bulmer. He said Record came to him with the idea after learning about it from a guy from Syracuse who he met on the fudge festival circuit. In an interview, Bulmer said he split with Record the $10,000 cost of renting the kiosk from Nov. 14 until New YearÕ s Eve, when they shut down operations. They each came up with $1,000 for the initial deposit. The rest of the rental costs came from sales, which, by the last week of November, were brisk, according to a post by Record on Facebook. Bulmer said he couldnÕ t say how much the pair made without having the books in front of him, but said he broke even on the investment. Ò We divvied it up and away he went,Ó said Bulmer. Record told him that he was closing Rapid Returns and going to run the festival circuit in Florida, selling fudge and kettle corn. On Jan. 2, Record posted a photo of a gas pump at a Shell station: Ò Great to be out of New York where gas is a bit cheaper!!!Ó THE NICKEL NABBER As Record luxuriated in Florida for the winter, rent stacked on up on the Water Street property Ñ landlord Mark Carpenter said Record still owes him at least four months of rent to the tune of $2,000 Ñ and Essex County residents began asking where their money was. Last July, Angela Wallace set up an account at Rapid Returns for the Elizabethtown Fish and Game Club. Ò He came to one of our meetings and said, Ô IÕ m a new guy in town, trust me,Õ Ó recalled Wallace. The arrangement was for Record to cut a monthly check that the club would use for items like mowing and repairs. But it never happened. Aside from a small payment in July Ñ Ò It was nowhere near what we usually had!Ó Ñ Wallace had to hunt Record down to get the clubÕ s money. From August to December, the payments stopped. Ò I havenÕ t seen a dime,Ó said Wallace. Like Garvey, Wallace said thereÕ s no way of knowing how

tem for pipes that are going to various homeowners and businesses.Ó Cashman’s decision to run, first for council and now for supervisor, was partly in response to the call for more young people to get involved when he attended SUNY Plattsburgh. Fifteen years ago, SUNY Plattsburgh brought Cashman to the Adirondack Coast from Carver, Massachusetts, where he served in a variety of roles, including being the only two-term Student Association President. He obtained his B.S. in Speech Communications and his M.S. in College and Agency Counseling. Ò I stayed in Plattsburgh because of my strong connection with SUNY Plattsburgh, but I also fell in love with this region from Lake Champlain to the mountains and, most of all, the people,Ó Cashman said. Ò The people are what sold me on coming to this college and coming to this region because I felt like it was home.Ó Cashman currently works as the assistant director of the Center for Student Involvement at SUNY Plattsburgh. He leads the coordination of Project HELP in getting 1,000-plus students engaged in regional volunteer opportunities. Cashman served as the President/Chair for the founding

The Burgh • April 25, 2015 | 13

UPCOMING FUNDRAISERS

Want to help the fifth graders? The class has a full schedule of events planned in the run-up to their trip to Washington, D.C. on June 19. Friday, April 24: Macaroni and cheese lunch with delivery Saturday, April 25: Bake sale and bottle drive Sunday, May 3: Bake sale, bottle drive and car wash (tentative) Saturday, May 9: Spring clean-up day Monday, May 18: Fundraiser dinner: Texas Roadhouse in Plattsburgh Tuesday, May 19: Spaghetti dinner take-out (ELCS) to accompany school budget vote Saturday, June 6: Pancake breakfast: Lewis Firehouse (tentative) many recyclables were dropped off on the organization’s behalf. Once she realized Record wouldn’t settle up, she encouraged folks to simply deposit the bags in her yard. Past campaigns for the Elizabethtown Fish and Game Club had generated between $150 and Ò two-hundred-somethingÓ per month, estimated Wallace, making the five-month unpaid stretch worth at least $750. Other organizations reported similar experiences, including Champlain Area Trails, the Lewis VeteranÕ s Memorial Park Committee and the Elizabethtown-Lewis Ambulance Squad, who, for years, had received a cut from the Christmas trees sold in the Rapid Returns parking lot. When Record took over, he booted the previous vendor, but promised the squad the donations would remain the same. Ò We were under the impression that he would match the donation that we have received in years past,Ó said the squadÕ s captain, Patty Bashaw. Ò Once was Christmas was over with, we received nothing.Ó That money typically amounted to $650 and would go towards things like fuel bills. Bashaw said she wanted to clarify the situation for the folks who purchased trees thinking they were helping the squad. Record even withheld money from a cancer victim. Brenda McGee set up an account last October to assist with costs associated with her daughter-in-lawÕ s cancer treatments, a young mother of four. Ò It was money for traveling,Ó said McGee. Ò Or if we got shorthanded and needed something like diapers.Ó Shortly after Christmas, she went to Rapid Returns to drop off a bag of recyclables and noticed the vacation sign. Ò I tried his cell and couldnÕ t get nothing,Ó she said. After numerous attempts, McGee contacted RecordÕ s girlfriend, whose son worked with McGee at International Paper in Ticonderoga, to crank up the pressure. Ò The kid was great about it,Ó recalled McGee. Last week, a money order came for $132.25. Ò That there was probably the whole amount that I was owed,Ó said McGee. It was postmarked Indiatlantic, Florida. ON THE RECORD After numerous attempts, the Valley News reached Record in Florida. “It’s a horrible thing that I haven’t paid the fifth grade,” he said. Ò I fully intend to and I should have paid them a long time ago. I failed to pay them in a timely manner.Ó Record said he plans on paying everyone back and returning to Essex County. Ò Certainly, yes I do,Ó he said. Ò I need to speed up the process.Ó He declined to discuss specifics on the ice-scraper business and how he was bankrolling his Florida jaunt. Ò I had two businesses going at one time,Ó he said. Record said there are two sides to every story. Ò One side of the story is that thereÕ s a Adirondack businessman who has a wonderful record and kept track of every nickel owed and is an extremely slow payer,Ó he said. Record also declined to discuss the exact amounts owed. But later that evening, he changed his mind. Using the email handle Ò Harry Hudson,Ó Record emailed a reporter a list of the organizations to which he said he owed money Ñ some 24 accounts altogether. Ò These accounts are getting paid,Ó he said. Ò I have kept accurate records and fully intend to pay all these accounts.Ó Later that evening, he fired off another email: “While I realize some of the groups are semi-public entities with many many members, I can not be the only small business in Elizabethtown and the Adirondacks that owes money to people. I have been a town historian and general manager of a tourist railroad. The railroad owed money and it was never a public story. Lets get these people paid up and Denton Publications will have completed a great public service.Ó Does Tim Record owe your organization money? Give us a call at 873-6368 and tell us about it! Board of Directors to the Adirondack Young Professionals group, the vice president of the Town of Plattsburgh Local Development Corp. and a member of the Zoning Board of Appeals. As Plattsburgh Town Councilman, Cashman modernized town finances by implementing the first Finance Committee, as well as advocating the first-ever online bill payment. He also held the line on unaffordable property tax increases and voting to tie any increase to the role of inflation. Now, he wants to take on a new role by becoming the new Plattsburgh Town Supervisor. Ò I will have an open door policy,Ó Cashman said. Ò I will try to bring about opportunities for collaboration that will provide individuals to share their thoughts and opinions so that we can come as close as possible to a shared vision not only for our municipality, but for our region.Ó Learn more about Cashman at michaelcashmanforplattsburgh.com or contact him at 518-275-9870 or email michael@michaelcashmanforplattsburgh.com. Ò I hope the people will vote for me because I will listen to them,Ó Cashman said. Ò You will see me as an active collaborator within the region and an ambassador for the Adirondack Coast.Ó


14 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh

www.the-burgh.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The Week in Sports

Softball

Plattsburgh 22, Saranac Lake 7 PLATTSBURGH Ñ The Red Storm started strong, but the Hornets answered emphatically, scoring 19 in a two-inning stretch to win 22-7 on April 14. Saranac Lake led 6-3 midway through the third inning before Plattsburgh caught fire, sending 10 runners home in the bottom of that inning before adding nine more runs in the next. The Red Storm only managed one more run in the fifth. Lauren Stanley earned the win on the mound with five strikeouts to go along with a triple. Plattsburgh had a huge game at the plate, totaling three doubles and three triples overall. Maya Browne and Samantha Swiesz reached had the other two triples while Shea Frady, Hannah Duquette and Alyssa Salls doubled. Saranac LakeÕ s Lauren Reeve connected on two hits, including a double, while Andrea Boon had the loss on the mound. Peru 20, Saranac Lake 4 PERU Ñ The Lady Indians took advantage of 13 hits and seven Red Storm errors as they earned the 20-4 win on April 16. Peru got rolling with a six run opening inning before tagging on 13 more in the bottom of the third. Saranac Lake sent three runners home in the following inning, but the deficit was too much for the visitors to overcome. Kelly Neenan picked up the win on the mound for Peru while Saranac LakeÕ s Shanna Buckley took the loss. Brittany Miner had a home run and a double for the Indians while Katie Ulivia also took second on a hit. Saranac LakeÕ s lone extra base hit came from Buckey with a double. Saranac 17, Plattsburgh 1 PLATTSBURGH Ñ An eight-strikeout performance by Tori Trim and some solid hitting propelled the Chiefs past the Hornets 17-1 on April 16. Saranac got rolling early on, sending eight runners home in the opening inning and another seven in the fourth. Plattsburgh, meanwhile, managed only one in the bottom of the fourth while facing a 17-point hole. Lauren Stanley took the loss on the mound while Sarah Duquette connected on a double for the Hornets. The Chiefs, meanwhile, connected on ten hits, including two doubles by Summer Gillespie and one by Brette Campbell, Emma Webster and Kaitlyn Guynup. Beekmantown 14, Saranac Lake 13 BEEKMANTOWN Ñ After falling behind early, the Eagles came out on the winning side of a hitting dual against the Red Storm 14-13 on April 18. Saranac Lake went up 9-1 through the top of the third inning before Beekmantown got itself back into the game, sending four home in the bottom of the third and another four in the fourth. The visiting Red Storm went back up in the top of the seventh with two runs that gave them a 13-11 lead with three outs to play, but the EaglesÕ three runs at the end gave them the win.

Josh Emerson’s RBI bunt, pictured above, sent home the game’s lone runner in Saranac’s 1-0 home victory over Northeastern Clinton April 17. Go to http://www.denpubs.com/photos/galleries/sets/sports/ to see more photos of this game. Photo by Andrew Johnstone

Michaela LaFountain collected the win on the mound for Beekmantown while Saranac LakeÕ s Katie Burgess took the narrow loss. Peru 15, Plattsburgh 10 PLATTSBURGH Ñ The Indians broke open a tight game with six runs in the top of the seventh to give them the 15-10 win over the Hornets April 18. Plattsburgh used three runs in both the fifth and sixth innings to go into the seventh up by a run, 10-9, before PeruÕ s late surge. PeruÕ s Jade Ramos took the win after taking over for Kelly Neenan on the mound while PlattsburghÕ s Lauren Stanley walked away with the loss. Sydney Burdo pitched the first four innings for the Hornets. Both teams had success at the plate as Peru connected on 13 hits and Plattsburgh 12. Ramos doubled for the Indians while Brittany Miner had a big game, homering twice. Plattsburgh’s Samantha Swiesz doubled while Alyssa Salls reached third on one of her three hits.

Baseball

Beekmantown 12, Moriah 2 PORT HENRY Ñ A six-run third inning helped the Eagles pull away from the Vikings for a 12-2 win on April 15. Mickey Pepper pitched a strong game for Beekmantown, striking out 10 overall, while Taylor Slattery took the loss for Moriah. The Eagles out-hit the Vikings to a tune of 13-3 while committing zero errors to the Vikings’ six. Zach Bingel and Alex Price both doubled for Beekmantown and Sam Russo tripled for Moriah in the loss. Beekmantown 7, Ticonderoga 3 TICONDEROGA Ñ The Eagles racked up 12 hits as

they pulled away from the Sentinels for a 7-3 win on April 16. Beekmantown led 4-0 midway through the fourth inning when Ticonderoga clawed to within two, but the visiting team added a run in each of the three innings to follow to hold the lead. Brantley Marion struck out nine batters to collected the win on the mound while Ryan Trudeau took the loss. TiconderogaÕ s Brody Rocque connected on a home run while Ryan Criss and Alex Price both belted doubles for Beekmantown. Plattsburgh 24, Saranac 5 PLATTSBURGH Ñ After scoring three runs in the first three innings, the Hornets offense exploded in the innings to follow for a 24-5 victory over the Chiefs April 16. Plattsburgh sent eight runners home in both the fourth and fifth innings and another five in the sixth for the runaway win. Ben Champagne struck out six to earn the win for the Hornets while the ChiefsÕ Jacob Lilledahl took the loss. The Hornets connected on 17 hits overall, including doubles by Mike Stetz and Champagne. SaranacÕ s Dalton Exford doubled in the setback. Saranac 1, Northeastern Clinton 0 SARANAC Ñ A second-inning RBI bunt by Josh Emerson proved to be the difference maker as the Chiefs earned a 1-0 win over the visiting Cougars April 17. Both teamsÕ pitchers put together nearly identical lines over complete games. SaranacÕ s Nick Mather and Northeastern Clinton’s Cameron Hurlburt each fired eight strikeouts while allowing four hits. Emerson connected on two singles for the Chiefs, as did the CougarsÕ Brady Vassar, but it was EmersonÕ s that was good for the tight win. Beekmantown 19, Saranac Lake 3 BEEKMANTOWN Ñ A runaway second inning propelled the Eagles past the Red Storm in a 19-3 CVAC win on April 17. After scoring four in the bottom of the first, Beekmantown sent 13 more runners home in the second inning to build a 17-2 lead after two. Ryan Criss grabbed the win on the mound for the Eagles while the setback went the way of Nicholas McCabe. Beekmantown connected on 17 hits to Saranac LakeÕ s seven, including doubles by Brantley Marion and Justin Stevens. Peru 2, Plattsburgh 0 PERU Ñ Andy Kneussle struck out seven, allowed four hits and no runs to help the Indians past the Hornets 2-0 on April 17. Despite taking a loss, PlattsburghÕ s Gerrit Rietsema put together a strong game on the mound as well, striking out three and allowing five hits. One of those hits, however, provided costly as Blake Altizer connected on a home run for one of PeruÕ s two scores. The IndiansÕ Austin Brault added a double in the victory. Peru held a narrow margin in hits, 5-4, over Plattsburgh while committing one error to the visiting teamÕ s two.


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Elmore SPCA Rebecca Burdo •643-2451; info@elmorespca.org

P

olaris, an adoptable dog from Elmore SPCA... Staffordshire bull terrier, brindle & white, arrived 03/26/15 @ 52lbs, eleven-months-old female

Polaris is a sweet heart of a dog that was found running at large in the town of AuSable, New York. Unfortunately her owners never came forward and she is now looking for her forever home. Polaris loves to go for walks and to play with her people. She enjoys being the center of attention and will offer her belly to anyone willing to rub it! Ò PoÓ likes to play with toys and gets along well with male dogs. Kids just love this fun loving dog who will do well in most homes. Like most Staffies she will need plenty of exercise and would enjoy having another dog to play with that doesnÕ t mind getting a bit rough during play. Po is a gorgeous girl who is loveable, smart and engaging. She is now current on vaccinations, has tested negative for heart worm, is spayed and is ready to meet her new family! Come in and take this great dog for a walk...

N

yra, an adoptable cat from Elmore SPCA... Domestic short hair, calico, arrived 03/30/15 @ 11 lbs, altered female adult

Nyra is a loving cat that was surrendered, along with her buddy Grizzly Bear, because their owners moved and couldn’t take them with them. She is very sweet but needs to get to know

The Burgh • April 25, 2015 | 15 you before she engages. Nyra is more apt to run away when confronted than to become aggressive. Although it takes a bit longer for her to assimilate to new surroundings once she warms up she loves everybody she meets. Nyra has lived successfully with other cats, kids and dogs. She is now current on vaccinations, has tested negative for FeLV/FIV and is spayed. Come in and meet this wonderful cat who is ready to meet her new family. ***UPDATE*** Nyra is a great cat that is doing well in the cat colony! At first she was a bit territorial about her space with the other cats, but after a few days she is right at home. Nyra really likes being with people and enjoys being pet and loved. Come in and meet this gorgeous cat that will take as many petting sessions as you have time to give.

Day of Caring volunteers make a difference in the region PLATTSBURGH Ñ On April 18, volunteers across Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties lent their hands to the annual Day of Caring event hosted by United Way of the Adirondack Region, Inc., Project H.E.L.P. at SUNY Plattsburgh and the Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau. With the help of more than 600 volunteers from the three counties and students from Project H.E.L.P., over 50 projects were completed. Throughout the day volunteers donated their time to nine non-profit organizations, 28 residential areas, six non-profit tourism attractions, three libraries, two community events, six food drives and street/highway clean up. Ò The Day of Caring is a tremendous opportunity for people through-out Clinton, Essex, and Franklin Counties to come together for friends and neighbors and to help maintain the unique quality of life in this area,Ó said Kathy Snow, director of development for United Way of the Adirondack Region. Ò Our regionÕ s best resource is its people who live, work, and learn right here in the North Country. Students, professionals, families, friends and neighbors have a tradition of coming together, as demonstrated during the Ice Storm, Hurricane Irene, and the meeting of the

CARS

day-to-day needs of our neighbors. The Day of Caring is just another example of how we live united,Ó Michael Cashman, assistant director of campus activities at SUNY Plattsburgh said. Focused on addressing some of the urgent needs in our community, this yearÕ s event expanded its scope to include non-profit museums, libraries and nursing homes. Amber Parliament, public relations and content specialist for the Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau, a division of the North Country Chamber of Commerce, said that supporting the health of museums is vital to community health, calling the volunteer work Ò a win-win for everyone.Ó In addition to the 450 Project Help volunteers there were volunteers from the following companies/organization; Glens Falls National Bank, George Pacific, Pfizer, Hulbert Supply, Community Bank, MoldRite, NAMI, Literacy Volunteers of CC, ADK P-Tech, North Star Industries, Catholic Charities of Franklin County, Adirondack Health, Ticonderoga Kiwanis, Ticonderoga High School, Ticonderoga Highway Dept., three individuals and United Way Staff. Ò Hats off to all the volunteers for coming together to make the community a better place to live,Ó said Snow.

CARS

CARS

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Fifty-four projects from across a three county region benefitted from the annual Day of Caring event hosted by United Way of the Adirondack Region, Inc., Project H.E.L.P. at SUNY Plattsburgh and the Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau. Photo provided


16 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh CARS

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SNOWMOBILES

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LEGAL NOTICES FOR THIS NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPERS AROUND THE STATE MAY BE FOUND ONLINE AT http://newyorkpublicnotices.com

1070 Hesston 7” Haybind $1000. Call after 3pm 518-9622376 AUCTIONS

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SUV

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518-873-6368

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

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HELP WANTED LOCAL DENTAL ASSISTANT NEEDED for Dental Office in Elizabethtown, NY Part Time Mon.-Wed. Entry Level Position, Will Train. Contact via Email: drkokdmd.n@gmail.com HELP WANTED Class A + B CDL Drivers, Heavy Equipment Prefered But Not Necessary. Call 518-5938745. JOB FAIR-Over 25 employers on hand. Find a job in the North Country. Wed., May 20th at the West Side Ballroom in Plattsburgh, 4pm-8pm. Get applications, submit your resume. All companies will have reps available. Sponsored by the North Country Chamber of Commerce. Call 563-1000 for info. Life Guard and Sailing Instructor Wanted for Summer job at Normandie Beach Resort. Call 518962-4750 Stewardship Coordinator - Champlain Area Trails seeking fulltime person to manage trails, land, & education programs. Apply at www.champlainareatrails.com. STEWARDSHIP PROGRAM MANAGER WANTED The Adirondack Chapter of The Nature Conservancy, and its partner organization the Adirondack Land Trust, seek an experienced Manager to lead our stewardship programs, including oversight of stewardship of more than 70 conservation easements and 13 preserves. The Manager will oversee all of the organizations stewardship activities, including annual easement and fee land monitoring and ongoing stewardship, recordkeeping, coordinating community support, maintaining preserves, and leading all stewardship partner relationships. The Manager will supervise stewardship staff and volunteers, and work with the Boards Stewardship Committees. We seek an organized team player with excellent communication, problem-solving and analytical skills; conservation easement stewardship experience is required. This position is based out of our office in Keene Valley, New York, in the heart of the Adirondack High Peaks. The full position description and application information are at www.nature.org/careers, job id# 43008. Applications are due by 11:59pm, April 27, 2015, and must be made online. The Nature Conservancy is an Equal Opportunity Employer. You can view and apply for this job at: https://careers.nature.org/psp/tnccareers/APPLICANT/HRMS/c/HRS _HRAM.HRS_CE.GBL?Page=HRS_ CE_JOB_DTL&Action=A&JobOpeni ngId=43008&SiteId=1&PostingSeq=1

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ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

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Place a classified ad! It’s easy and will make you money!

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ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES ANTIQUE FAIR AND FLEA MARKET May 2nd & 3rd at the Washington County Fairgrounds, Rte. 29, Greenwich NY. $3 admission. (Sat. 8a-5p, Sun 9a-4p) Featuring over 200 dealers. GREAT FOOD. Early-Bird Friday (5/1 - 7a-4p - $10). RAIN or SHINE. Call (518) 331-5004

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FOR SALE 2-55 Gallon Fresh Water Aquariums, Best Equipment, $200 Each. 518-708-0678 Anderson Sliding Glass Patio Door, 6' wide still in carton, originally $1600 Asking $1200 OBO. 518-576-4678 For Sale Sole 25 Elliptical Machine, original price $1699, selling for $499.00, used about 2 hours. 518-293-8176 Hand Gun Ruger Vaquero 44 Magnum Stainless Steel, Single Action, Wood Grips, Fires 44 Mag. And 44 Special, Like New fire only once $499 OBO. 518-354-8654

NORTH COUNTRY LIVING MAGAZINE ASK YOUR SALES REPRESENTATIVE FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION OR CONTACT ASHLEY ALEXANDER 518-873-6368 EXT 105 OR EMAIL ASHLEY@DENPUBS.COM A DENTON PUBLICATION

JACK NICKLAUS IRONS, plus a complete set of Woods, Driver & 7 Wood with bag. $100 Firm. 518946-8335 Load Star Pivoting/Tilting car dolley with spare tire, ratcheting hold down, straps and trailering lights. $795.00. 518-643-9484

YOU ARE READING ONE OF DENTON PUBLICATION'S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS. MAIL YOUR MESSAGE TO 57,832 HOMES IN NEW YORK AND VERMONT FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION CALL 518-873-6368 EXT 105 OR EMAIL TO ASHLEY@DENPUBS.COM

Stihl Powersweep Model KM55R Dombi System Sweeper, new condition, $475.00. 518-643-9484 WINTER BOOTS Creekside, size 7M width, Tan, Suede/Rubber, rated -20 below, brand new in box, never worn. $100 new first $29. Call 518-354-8654 GENERAL ANTIQUE FAIR & FLEA MARKET May 2nd & 3rd at the Washington County Fairgrounds, Rte. 29, Greenwich NY. $3 admission. (Sat. 8a-5p, Sun 9a-4p). Featuring over 200 dealers. GREAT FOOD. EarlyBird Friday (8/1 – 7a-4p - $10) RAIN OR SHINE. Call 518-3315004.

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18 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh

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GENERAL

GENERAL

DOGS AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES Parents on premises, vet checked, first shots, dewormed Ready 5/17. Reserve now $700.00 518-7912658 OTHER PETS

DENPUBS.COM FOR ALL YOUR COMMUNITY NEWS, SPORTS, EVENTS AND INFORMATION

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Fishing For A Good Deal? Catch The Greatest Bargains In The Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

HOMES

OTHER PETS House for Sale Essex, NY 3 bdrm, 1 bath Farm House, 1.4 acre lot includes detached one car garage, barn. For more info please call 518-962-8624 or www.venturenorth.com MLS#147141 $89,950 LAND

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FREE PRINTING ESTIMATES @ EZPRINTSUPERSTORE.COM

LOGGING

LAVALLEE LOGGING

is looking to harvest and purchase standing timber, All Species. Willing to pay New York State stumpage prices on all species. $ or % paid. References available. Matt Lavallee 518-645-6351 A CUT ABOVE THE REST!

APARTMENT RENTALS 3 BEDROOM DUPLEX Bridge Street in Port Henry, NY. $600/mo. + utilities. Refrences & Security Required. Call 518-962-4970.

ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information.

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BUYING WANTED TO BUY buying antiques, pack baskets, snowshoes, old hunting fishing items such as fishing lures, tackle, hunting knives, old trapping items, anything related to these items and categories. Cash paid. call 518-813-1601

Ogunquit, Maine Condo: 2 mins to beaches, ocean and pool views, sleeps 5, two bath. Avail. Weekly June and August to October. Call 518-482-1210.

CASH for Coins! Buying ALL Gold & Silver Coins. Stamps & Paper Money, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419

Commercial space....2 room first floor office space located in downtown Ticonderoga. Off street parking. $375 per month. Includes heat and electricity 518.585.9173 and ask for Scarlette or 518.547.8730

DENTON PUBLICATIONS 68 YEARS OF SERVING NORTH COUNTRY COMMUNITIES

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RENTALS

CASH PAID- up to $25/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAYPAYMENT.1-800371-1136 WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

REAL ESTATE SALES

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

REAL ESTATE WILLSBORO, NY 1.06 acre lot w/water/sewer/power ($26,000) or Above lot with 1998 2bd/2bath mobile home ($49,000) 518-963-7320

LOGGING Sebastian, Florida Beautiful 55+ manufactured home community. 4.4 miles to the beach, Close to riverfront district. New models from $85,000. 772-581-0080, www.beach-cove.com

VISIT THE REGION'S PREMIER LIFESTYLE PUBLICATION NORTH COUNTRY LIVING MAGAZINE NCLMAGAZINE.COM PUBLISHED BY: DENTON PUBLICATIONS

PROPERTY FOR SALE: Rand Hill Road, Beekmantown, NY. 11.67 Wooded Acres, Borders State Land. Private Sale. 518-492-7178.

Donʼt throw it away those unwanted items. Promote them in the “For Sale” section in the Classifieds. Youʼll turn your trash into cash! Our operators are standing by! Call...

RUSHING STREAM- CHRISTMAS TREE FARM- 6 acres$26,900 BUY BEFORE MAY 1ST AND TAKE $5,000 OFF! Gated drive, views, stunning upstate NY setting! Town rd, utils, terms! 888-701-7509

Call 518-873-6368

“We’re more than a newspaper, We’re a community service.” www.denpubs.com

4/13/15 4/13/15 4/13/15 4/13/15 4/13/15 4/14/15 4/14/15 4/14/15 4/14/15 4/15/15 4/15/15 4/15/15 4/15/15 4/15/15

GRANTOR Terry and Deborah Sears Susan Tusa et al Randall and Michelle Senecal Melissa McCarthy Matthew Mello and Doris Bashaw Allburgh Inc Allburgh Inc Myers Properties Holdings LLC 21 Lawrence Paquette Industrial Drive LLC Gerald Menard Plattsburgh Airbase Redevelopment Corp Industrial Management LLC and Needmore Road LLC Neil Parent Kimberley Bell & Kimberley Seymour Susan Bohley Mark, Gregory & Mildred Bombard Louise Lagoy Randy and Tammy Spoor Joseph Lavorando et al John and Jean Gokey Ellen Bowman John and Rhonda OÕ Hagan Donald & Rebecca Tourville & Matthew Douthat Scott and Nancy McQueen

CLINTON

GRANTEE Jame and Jeffrey Corp Jimmy Duvall William and Tara Studley Dr North Group LLC Brian and Barbara Trombley Andy Miller Dodd Davison LLC Joel and Jessica Wood

LOCATION City of Plattsburgh City of Plattsburgh Black Brook Peru Clinton Clinton Schuyler Falls

PRICE $46,000 $153,700 $231,000 $15,000 $45,000 $50,000 $2,000 $1

One8eight LLC Michelle Stone

Champlain Chazy

$1,750,000 $40,900

Roger and Kimberley Seymour Jessica and Shannon Mackellar Susan Stowe William and Donna Belanger Harry and Patsy Martin David Cherrier JPMorgan Chase Bank Benny Aversa Melissa Alexander GirouxÕ s Poultry Farm Inc

Town of Plattsburgh Plattsburgh Plattsburgh City of Plattsburgh City of Plattsburgh Altona Beekmantown Peru Ellenburg Dannemora Chazy

$59,000 $185,000 $142,500 $82,500 $170,000 $155,000 $5,000 $121,262.03 $215,000 $20,000 $150,000

US Bank Trust Sue Oliver

Plattsburgh Schuyler Falls

$152,202.47 $32,000

BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE in the town of Moriah. Lake view, great hunting, and privacy what more could you ask for. Call Ashley at 578-2501 for more information. LEWIS/ELIZABETHTOWN, NY Mobile Lot for Rent, Country Setting. Call 518-873-2625 Judy; 518-9624467 Wayne; 518-962-2064 or 518-637-5620 Gordon.

CLEAN HOUSE

Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

LAND ABANDONED FARM! 34 acres$169,900 Upstate NY farmhouse, barn, apple orchard, woods, long gated drive, incredible setting! Terms avail! 1-888-701-1864 NewYorkLandandLakes.com

When it’s time to

WANTED TO BUY

Spectacular 3 to 22 acre lots with deepwater access- Located in an exclusive development on Virginia's Eastern Shore. Amenities include community pier, boat ramp, paved roads and private sandy beach. May remind you of the Jersey Shore from days long past. Great climate, boating, fishing, clamming and National Seashore beaches nearby. Absolute buy of a lifetime, recent FDIC bank failure makes these 25 lots available at a fraction of their original price. Priced at only $55,000 to $124,000. For info call (757) 442-2171, e-mail: oceanlandtrust@yahoo.com, pictures on website: http://Wibiti.com/5KQN

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE 14x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath completely redone mobile home in the City of Plattsburgh, low utilities, very affordable, Pricing 518-293-8801. VACATION PROPERTY

VACATION PROPERTY RENTALS

PRECISION TREE SERVICE 518-942-6545

DATE 4/09/15 4/10/15 4/10/15 4/10/15 4/10/15 4/10/15 4/13/15 4/13/15 4/13/15

REAL ESTATE SALES

WANTED TO BUY

LOGGING

GRIMSHAW LOGGING is looking to purchase and harvest standing timber of all species. New York state stumpage price on all species. References available call Erick 518-534-9739

REAL ESTATE SALES

ABANDONED FARM! 34 acres -$169,900 Upstate NY farmhouse, barn, apple orchard, woods, long gated drive, incredible setting! Terms avail! 888-905-8847 newyorklandandlakes.com

LAND

HOMES

RUSHING STREAM-CHRISTMAS TREE FARM- 6 acres-$26,900. BUY BEFORE MAY 1st AND TAKE $5,000 OFF! Gated drive, views, stunning upstate NY setting. Twn rd, utils, terms! 1-888-775-8114 UPSTATE NY WATERFRONT! 7 acres- $59,900. 400 feet of pristine frontage on bass lake! All woods, ten rd, utils, gorgeous setting! EZ terms. 1-888-650-8166 or NewYorkLandandLakes.com

4 BEDROOM HOME for sale in Lewis, NY Master bedroom on 1st floor large fenced in back yard Priced to sell at only $79,000 (518) 873-2362

UPSTATE NY WATERFRONT! 7 acres- $59,900 400 feet of pristine frontage on bass lake! All woods, town rd, utils, gorgeous setting! EZ terms. 888-479-3394 NewYorkLandandLakes.com

DO YOU HAVE VACATION PROPERTY FOR SALE OR RENT? With promotion to nearly 3.4 million households and over 4.6 million potential buyers, a statewide classified ad can't be beat! Promote your property for just $489 for a 25word ad. Place your ad online at AdNetworkNY.com or call 1-315-437-6173 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements. Custody and support petitions.- 518-274-0380. Reach as many as 2 MILLION POTENTIAL BUYERS in central and western New York with your classified ad for just $349 for a 25word ad. Call 1-315-437-6173 for details or visit AdNetworkNY.com


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The Burgh • April 25, 2015 | 19


20 | April 25, 2015 • The Burgh

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