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• EDITION •
Mayor urges further cuts in proposed budget No staff cutbacks in early spending plan By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
PLATTSBURGH | City of Plattsburgh Mayor Colin Read has released his budget proposal for the 2019 fiscal year. As part of the $59.4 million spending plan — over $3.7 million more than this year’s $55.7 million budget, due in part to state mandates — Read said that there would be no more staff layoffs, though several police and fire department positions are expected to remain vacant, and all departments were directed to cut at least 3 percent of their expenses next year. “I am pleased that, in combination, we were able to meet that pretty difficult goal,” Read told The Sun after a press conference last Friday, noting the work of each department to look at systemic changes in how they can provide the same services, like the Department of Public Works’ inhouse approach to road-paving this season. The end result of expense cuts this year and department abolishments last year, he hopes, will be a $1 million fund balance surplus by the end of 2019, paired with a tax increase below the state cap, at 1.9 percent. That would bring the tax rate from $11.99 per $1,000 in assessed value this year to $12.16 next year. For the average home in the city assessed at $146,600, this means a tax in-
Mayor Colin Read announced his proposed budget for 2019 at a press conference on the city hall steps last Friday.
Photo by Elizabeth Izzo
crease of around $25.
HEADED TO COUNCIL
The mayor’s budget proposal will now be put in the hands of the Plattsburgh Common Council, who will make their
adjustments and are expected to vote on the final budget in the next few weeks. A separate five-year budget outlook, which the mayor used when constructing his plan, was passed by the council in May. » Budget Cont. on pg. 2
County includes Airbnb in updated occupancy tax law
Clinton County will now require a 3 percent tax on short-term vacation rentals By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
Another crop of veterans visited the nation’s capital aboard SkyWest Airlines during the latest North Country Honor Flight last weekend. The North Country Honor Flight aims to honor the service of veterans by transporting them to see war memorials in Washington, D.C. Crowds of supporters convened at both Plattsburgh International and Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C. last Saturday to honor the veterans’ service. This flight was the first to fly without a veteran of World War II. Organizers have said that they’re nearing the end of their list of Korean War veterans and will soon be taking Vietnam War veterans to Washington. Photo courtesy of North Country Honor Flight
PLATTSBURGH | The Clinton County Legislature last month approved a revised occupancy tax law designed to collect revenue from online travel agencies like Airbnb, and direct some of the revenue to continued development of Plattsburgh International Airport. The local occupancy tax law, which allows the county to collect a 3 percent tax on the rate of each room rented here, is renewed every three years. The revenue from the tax directs funds in part to the North Country Chamber of Commerce for marketing
to boost tourism. The county also keeps a portion, 15 percent of which is used to incentivize new airlines to establish service at Plattsburgh International. “It’s working, it’s doing good stuff,” North Country Chamber of Commerce President Garry Douglas said about the occupancy tax, just a few hours after the first United flight from Washington, D.C. landed at the airport. Douglas said there’s a “very real connection” between development at the airport and tourism, and by adding online travel agencies to the law, it will effectively expand revenue for both the county and the local chamber. » Occupancy tax Cont. on pg. 4
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» Budget Cont. from pg. 1 A public hearing on the mayor’s proposed budget is slated for Sept. 13 at 5 p.m. at Plattsburgh City Hall. The budget document can be viewed on the city’s website.
EYE ON REVENUE
Total revenue and resources next year are projected at over $46.8 million, an increase of $3,043,276 over this year. That’s due to a number of things — a slight increase in state aid, new revenue through the fire department’s ambulance service, and the increase in property taxes, paired with a
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projected 0.5 percent increase in the city’s property tax base. But Read noted that with the cost of living increasing, city taxpayers couldn’t afford to shoulder more tax increases. “We can’t afford to tax our way out of these problems,” he said. Read has made it his mission to increase the city’s taxable property base, which hasn’t seen an increase over 2 percent since 2013, when Mayor Donald Kasprzak was in office. His push toward annexation of a city-owned Rugar Street property from the Town of Plattsburgh — which sparked public outcry from multiple current and former local officials when proposed last month, including Plattsburgh Town
Supervisor Michael Cashman — continues. He hopes the annexation, paired with the sale of two Municipal Lighting Department (MLD) properties and relocation of the department, will further expand the city’s tax base by opening up more land that can be developed. “I’m still hopeful this can be a highly collaborative process,” Read said, noting the positive effect he believes it would have on job creation in that area, and by extension increase in sales tax for both the city and the town. ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read the article in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
In a victory for newspapers, ITC rejects newsprint tariffs Hikes jeopardized industry already contending with massive shifts By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | The U.S. International Trade Commission has nixed tariffs implemented by the Trump administration on imported newsprint, delivering a victory for the newspaper industry. “Today is a great day for American journalism,” said David Chavern, president and CEO of News Media Alliance, which represents
about 2,000 newspapers in North America. The ITC ruled Wednesday U.S. newsprint manufacturers weren’t harmed by Canadian imports, dismissing a chief criticism of a hedge fund-owned paper mill in Washington state who argued the low prices put American mills at a disadvantage. The tariffs caused prices of newsprint to increase by as much as 22 percent before the U.S. Commerce Department slightly reduced the tariffs earlier this month to about 17 percent. Newspapers across the U.S. have been contending with seismic shifts in subscription and advertising models over the past decades, and many publishers said the tariffs had the potential to be devastating to their survival. The hikes have led to increased newsstand prices across the country. Other newspapers have chopped sections, reduced page
counts and cut down on the frequency of publication, including the Pittsburgh PostGazette, which said it would stop printing papers Tuesdays and Saturdays this week. “The ITC’s decision will help to preserve the vitality of local newspapers and prevent additional job losses in the printing and publishing sectors,” said Chavern. “The end of these unwarranted tariffs means local newspapers can focus once again on playing a vital role in our democracy by keeping citizens informed and connected to the daily life of their communities.” Lawmakers have urged the ITC to reconsider the rules following their implementation in January, appealing to Trump administration officials and co-sponsoring legislation to suspend the duties and further study the issue. “This is tremendous news and I applaud the ITC for this important decision,” said Rep.
Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) in a statement. “Our district is home to a thriving local press corps that would be unfairly burdened by these costs, harming local journalism and the families across our district that rely on these important organizations. I was pleased to lead the effort in Congress to push back against these tariffs and will continue to support our local press corps.” U.S. Sen. Minority Leader Charles Schumer, who railed against the tariffs in a visit to Quad Graphics in Saratoga Springs earlier this summer, also welcomed the decision. “These tariffs were extremely harmful to our regional newspapers — the lifeblood of our local communities — and I worked hard to remove them,” Schumer said in a statement. “The International Trade Commission made the exactly right decision today to completely eliminate them. I will remain vigilant to make sure that they never return.” ■
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» Occupancy tax Cont. from pg. 1 “(The updates will) only let us do even more in terms of developing the tourism of Clinton County, creating jobs, sustaining business and bringing in more sales tax for the county,” he said. “We support the adoption of the law as proposed.” As part of the law, the first $440,000 in occupancy tax revenue will be split between
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the North Country Chamber of Commerce (who gets 95 percent of the funds) and the county (5 percent of the funds). Any revenue above that first $440,000 will still be split between the two, but with 85 percent going to the chamber at 15 percent to the county for the airport. An additional $15,000 will be reserved by the county for air service development incentives, according to the Clinton County Treasurer’s Office, and in their marketing
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plan, the North Country Chamber of Commerce will commit 5 percent of the projected revenue to marketing of United Express and other carriers at the airport. The new United Express service to Washington, D.C. marked a milestone for the area, Douglass said, the fruit of years of collaboration between local officials and stakeholders. The implementation of the county’s occupancy tax law in 2008 was also a milestone, according to Douglas.
“This is the only real investment counties make in generating sales taxes,” he said. Last year, the county garnered $594,411 in revenue through occupancy taxes. So far this year, the occupancy tax law has generated $259,958 in revenue, with the county receiving $12,997 and the chamber, $246,960. According to the Treasurer’s Office, that’s up from last year. By this time last year, the tax had generated $4,270 less, $242,240. ■
Voters torpedo $4.6 million Keeseville Civic Center rehab Supervisor: Town board plans to regroup, demolition not yet on the table By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
AUSABLE | Voters in the Town of Ausable sunk a proposal to bond $4.6 million for the rehabilitation of the old Keeseville Civic Center. Of the town’s 1,920 registered voters, 403 showed up to the polls last week to weigh in on the referendum — 318 voted no, 85 voted yes. So what happens now? “The town board is going to have to work a little harder to figure out where we go with this building, and come up with a plan that the community will embrace,” said Ausable Town Supervisor Sandra Senecal, who went on to thank the workers who manned the polls in the un-airconditioned civic center in the sweltering heat on Aug. 28. The town had planned to issue the $4.6 million bond to fund a major infrastructure overhaul of the 82-year-old building. The money would’ve brought the building back into code compliance, replacing the electrical and plumbing systems.
explored the cost of demolishing the building, and though the Village of Keeseville had explored the cost in 2009 and estimated the demolition at around $800,000, they “didn’t pay a whole lot of attention to it.” The village also attempted to market off the building to a private buyer in the past, she said, to no avail. Since absorbing the building in 2015 after the Village of Keeseville dissolved, the town has spent a $49,000 state community block grant on services and studies designed to test the waters on the feasibility of rehabbing the building. They’ve also budgeted approximately $20-25,000 per year on maintenance and utilities since acquiring the property, according to Senecal.
Future tenants would’ve been responsible for aesthetic upgrades. The town hoped to ultimately rent out sections of the building, and explore the idea of moving the town’s offices there. The Village of Keeseville’s offices were also once housed there. By issuing the bond, taxpayers would’ve seen a tax increase of $1 per $1,000 in assessed value for the first few years until the principle was paid off, then $1.60 per $1,000 in assessed value for the next 25 years. A total of $700,000 in grants from state and local agencies was awarded to help offset taxpayer costs; $500,000 from Restore NY, $100,000 from the Dormitory Authority of New York through state Sen. Betty Little’s office and $100,000 from the Moore Foundation. The town also applied for a $300,000 community block grant. Town Councilman Steven Sucharski told residents at a forum last month that if voters turned down the bond issue, the town would return all grant monies.
HISTORY
The 55,000 square-foot building at the heart of the old village was formerly the Keeseville High School, before it was consolidated in the early 1970s with schools in Au Sable Forks to form the AuSable Valley Central School District. It was originally built in the late 1930s. After that, it was used by the village as a civic center, before closing in 2010. A number of agencies and non-profits have used the space for short periods in the past — including the New York State Police — but as of this year, the building’s sole occupant is the Development Authority of the North Country, a telecommunications and broadband company. The town also uses it as a polling station. ■
DEMOLITION?
Asked if demolition of the building was now on the table — a suggestion that multiple residents voiced during a public meeting on the project last month — Senecal said that demolition wasn’t yet being considered. “Not at this point, no,” she said. “We will continue to investigate all avenues and come up with something that everyone will embrace.” Senecal told The Sun last month that the town hadn’t
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The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 5
Underground Railroad tour highlights hidden history Tours through Ausable, Peru continue through October
Don Papson, cofounder and curator of the North Star Underground Railroad Museum, leads a tour of historic sites around Ausable, Keeseville and Peru.
By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
Photo by Elizabeth Izzo
The reverend was eloquent and cleared his name, Papson said, but continued on to defend his anti-slavery stance to the audience, and for the rest of his life would defend his beliefs. Small hordes of Abolitionists and anti-slavers throughout the North Country — including Wendell Lansing, the publisher of the weekly newspaper “Essex County Republican,” Stephen Keese Smith, Samuel Keese, Gerrit Smith and John Brown — made progress bit by bit, survived beatings by angry neighbors and continued forward until their message was heard. “It’s not just about anti-slavery,” Papson told the group of tourists as they rounded a corner and sped through the old Village of Keeseville. “It’s about the people that lived in this village.” The bus slowed as it crept through Evergreen Cemetery, shocks squeaking as the tires rolled over narrow dirt pathways. The driver took the group past rows of tombstones — some for children whose lives spanned just months, others marked simply with initials or not at all — and stopped before the headstone of Lansing, the area’s late newspaperman. On its face, a simple, subtle description to a man whose dedication was resolute: “Fearless, Faithful and True.” Those three words encompass so many who have lived here, Papson said, their courage and strength not to be forgotten. In front of the old Green Apple Inn, now an apartment building, Papson pointed to a New York State Historic Marker proclaiming the site a stop on the Underground Railroad, and shared photos of an underground tunnel between the inn and a neighboring church where he believes slaves
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might have been hidden and sheltered. The tour continued through Keeseville, Ausable, until reaching its final stop at a home on the outskirts of Peru. What looked at first glance like a modest farmhouse had a secret tucked behind it — a root cellar, beneath a crumbling barn, with a story Papson believes is worth preserving. Want to know what that story is? Papson and his crew at the North Star Underground Railroad Museum will offer four more tours this year. Sept. 15 and Oct. 6, all at 9 a.m. Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for children 6-18 and free for children under 6 years old. Reserve your spot by calling 518-834-5180 or email ugr. frontier.com. Learn more about the tour and the North Star Underground Railroad Museum at northcountryundergroundrailroad.com. ■
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AUSABLE | It was just after 9:30 a.m. when a small group boarded a white bus behind Ausable Chasm, blue folders full of historic snapshots in hand, and puttered off past vast swaths of farmland. The group toed the line between Clinton and Essex counties, strode through cemeteries, eyed historic churches with peeling paint and boarded-up windows. Though dark blue historic markers are scattered through the area, history left here is sometimes hidden. That’s where Don Papson steps in. Papson is a researcher and curator by trade, and runs a small museum with his wife and a board of trustees dedicated to highlighting the North Country’s role in ushering slaves to freedom on the Underground Railroad. In cemeteries, root cellars, and on land long left vacant after buildings there fell away, Papson brings visitors along on a tour of them all, telling stories of the people that fought passionately in a time when our country was deeply divided. “Slavery divided even the churches,” Papson said, pointing to one side of a narrow street, where the Keeseville United Methodist Church stands, and the other side, where another church once was. “Dueling beliefs on opposite street corners.” In 1836, a group of southern ministers said at a conference that it was “both right and necessary” to elect slave-owning bishops —meanwhile, in the north, many Methodists were slow to adopt a position on slavery. The delay lead one Peru reverend, Andrew Witherspoon, to speak up. Witherspoon argued that Methodists’ inaction in opposing slavery was an embarrassment to the church and effectively promoted evil. In response, his ordination was delayed — until he stood trial for allegedly sewing doubt and acting disrespectfully toward the church’s government. Witherspoon was later accused of anonymously writing about his story in a local newspaper, and it was in Keeseville’s Methodist Church that he stood trial, observers overflowing out the church’s front doors.
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Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
Survey says…but can it be trusted?
We have so much information at our fingertips today, it’s no wonder people are beginning to realize the difference By Dan Alexander between the news they • PUBLISHER • can trust to be accurate and the information that appears to be realistic on the surface, but upon closer review may not stand up. Over the weekend, I caught a portion of a news segment regarding a Harris Poll on job satisfaction produced by an Oklahoma City-based firm called Express Employment Professionals. The numbers sounded pretty good, especially for blue-collar workers and the segment featured Bob Massi, a legal analyst, who touted the report and stressed how the results reflected on the strength of the U.S. growing economy. I wanted to follow up on the report and use it for my column this week. Unfortunately, when I tried to find the actual report on the poll, all I could locate were other reports on the poll results. After further searches, I found the details with same lead information and same infographic — but for Canadian blue collar workers. It got me thinking about how could a major news network make such an error? Then I thought about it being a holiday weekend with fill-ins, likely interns, assuming they didn’t invest the time to notice the results were based not on the United States workforce, but instead on Canadian workers. So before scrapping the column idea, I continued looking further, only to discover two separate reports. One for each country. The U.S. results are as follows: • 91 percent are proud of the work they perform; • 86 percent are satisfied with their jobs; • 85 percent believe their lives are headed in the right direction; • 80 percent say their jobs provide a good living; • 74 percent see a good career path in their chosen line of work; • 68 percent report a wage increase of 5 percent or more in the past year. In the end, while I was skeptical that the news station had misrepresented the poll as an American one when it appeared it was a Canadian poll, further efforts to find more information found the details reported were based on U.S. respondents. This exercise only serves to underscore the problem we have today believing what we read, see and hear, without following through further. None of us can depend on the information we choose to believe unless we take the time to verify the source from various perspectives to determine its veracity. ■
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The Sun Editorial
Upstate voters unserved by debate Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Cynthia Nixon squared off in their first and only debate last week ahead of the Democratic primary contest on Sept. 13. As expected, upstate concerns were ignored. Following a prelude in which the campaigns reportedly squabbled over the temperature of the venue, Cuomo and Nixon instead boasted over who could pose a more formidable challenge to President Trump — “He tweets at me weekly,” crowed Cuomo. “I welcome it” — as well as bickered over their tax returns. At one point, Cuomo repeatedly called Nixon a “corporation.” “I’m a person,” she shot back. New York City-centric issues dominated the hour-long event at Hofstra University, including who controls the Metropolitan Transit Authority, the Tappan Zee Bridge and if state troopers should patrol the Big Apple. The Adirondacks and its unique challenges were ignored completely. Also not discussed:
Rural transportation challenges, mandate relief for local governments, environmental policy, clean water drinking infrastructure, property tax reduction, the effectiveness of the state’s economic development initiatives and the brain drain sapping rural areas. New York is a big, diverse state and it’s tough to pack its myriad issues into just one hour. But Cuomo has done a lot for upstate, something even his most staunch critics begrudgingly acknowledge. Th e two percent property tax cap is broadly popular. So is the broadband program, despite its hiccups. The governor also has a strong record when it comes to balancing economic and preservationist concerns in the Adirondacks. And while the jury is still out on the effectiveness of economic programs and downtown revitalization efforts, other initiatives appear to be working — including relaxations to the craft beer industry and campaigns to promote upstate tourism. Obviously many of the issues discussed at
the event have statewide implications, including single-payer health care and marijuana legalization — which could be a boon for upstate farmers tasked with growing the product — but we can’t help but feel as upstate voters were left lacking. Perhaps cognizant to the criticisms, Nixon embarked on a whirlwind upstate tour following the debate, including a stop in Saratoga Springs on Sunday. But we can still drive a truck through the holes left by her lack of familiarity with upstate issues. She also challenged Cuomo to another debate. But with just days until next week’s contest, we don’t see that happening. Both Cuomo and Nixon will both on the ballot in November regardless of next week’s results. The now-settled pack of gubernatorial hopefuls — including Republican Marc Molinaro, Green Howie Hawkins, Libertarian Larry Sharpe and independent candidate Stephanie Miner — should hold regional forums across the state to ensure no New Yorker feels left behind. ■
Trump to blame for uninsured costs
Outraged over armed guards
intellectually narrow as it was shallow, is embarrassment enough. “Mr. Altona” cheekily suggested that his political tribe prefers settling issues through “secret ballot” rather than “demonstration and mob violence.” He conveniently ignores Republican selfserving, racially-driven voter suppression tactics and hyper-partisan gerrymandering which corrupts processes at the very heart of democracy. He’s also seemingly oblivious to the Isislike terrorism of Charlottesville’s Unite the Right rally and its shielded phalanxes of armed Neo-Nazis and Klansmen, both welcome in the Republican tent. Flat rock man thinks that oxymoronic conservative compassion is the panacea for immigration ills and “border anarchy.” I offer that blocking immigration reform, denying refugee families asylum, deporting the parents, kenneling their children in cages with no re-unification plans is the ultimate in border anarchy. “Mr. Altona” believes that adding to the national debt is cruel and inhumane. Fair enough. But Republicans’ recent strong-arm taxation exercise in greed and economic malfeasance will add another $1.9 trillion to that debt, give 83 percent of the benefits to corporations and the top one percent, while ravaging working Americans and our most vulnerable and trigger efforts to pay for their thievery by cutting funding for our social safety nets. The coda to his pettiness is calling liberals self-loathing and guilt ridden.
Letters
To the Editor: Editor’s note: Th is letter is in response to Bert Windle’s letter, “Displeased with attacks on Trump,” which appeared in the Sept. 1 edition of The Sun. Mr. Windle asks me to “get your facts in order.” Before giving such advice, Mr. Windle needs to more carefully read what I wrote. Specifically, I reacted to the previous letter-writer on the subject of “welfare benefits,” including the laundry list of programs I cited for which illegal aliens are not eligible. I made no reference to emergency room costs. While I would wholeheartedly agree with Mr. Windle on the subject of uninsured emergency room costs, he fails to get his own facts in order. While illegal immigrants account for a fraction of those uninsured costs, the substantial majority are caused by fully legal American citizens. That was one of problems which the Affordable Care Act was designed to address through its individual mandate. Until Mr. Trump, with the able assistance of Elise Stefanik, decided to repeal that mandate. It forced every taxpayer, legal or otherwise, to carry insurance which would address those very expenses which Mr. Windle rightly deplores. If Mr. Windle shares my concern with those expenses which he and I have to support through our own insurance premiums, not our tax payments, I hope he will plead with Ms. Stefanik to join her Democratic colleagues in an effort to reinstate the individual mandate. - Richard Barney, Ticonderoga ■
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To the Editor: It outrages me that the City of Plattsburgh School District has decided to bring guns into school instead of caring about their students getting to school. They have decided not to help the poorer families by paying for public transportation to and from school. This was inadequate because the children arrived 55 minutes early and weren’t allowed on school property or 22 minutes late, but allowed poorer families to pay bills instead of being in debt. The district promised more meetings with parents and residents on these subjects and never provided them. Instead, they chose armed guards in body armor like the NRA suggested and decided poor children in the district will be left behind. Thank you Jay LeBrun and David Baroody for showing me you think inside the gun box. - Patricia Blanchard, Plattsburgh ■
Reader gets it wrong on ‘compassionate conservatism’
To the Editor: Editor’s note: This letter is in response to Kenneth G. Barcomb’s letter, “Conservatives governed by ‘cold logic’ — not emotions” which appeared in the Aug. 18 edition of The Sun. This space recently shared a local man’s smug, self-congratulatory paean to conservativism. I’ll not identify the parroter of such hackneyed, spurious inanities. One’s name at the bottom of screed, that was as
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BRIEFS
CVPH to recognize Suicide Prevention Day
PLATTSBURGH | Sept. 10 is World Suicide Prevention Day. To recognize the day, employees of Champlain Valley
» Letters Cont. from pg. 6 Well, I’m quite comfortable in supporting universal, affordable health, equal rights for all, a healthy planet, addressing climate change, protection for the indigent, children and elderly, a living wage and an increased emphasis on education, infrastructure, cyber-security and the truth. All things ignored by the “compassionate conservatives.” - Kevin Breyette, Rouses Point ■
McCain should have been mentioned
To the Editor: President Trump recently came to Fort Drum at the request of Rep. Elise Stefanik for a highly publicized event where together they gloried in having authorized the new defense budget bill which gives our troops a well-deserved pay raise. Not once did Elise Stefanik or President Trump mention that this bill is named the “John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act” in honor of a man who has served this country valiantly. More recently, Rep. Stefanik, in her weekly newsletter, touted this bill and celebrated her appearance onstage with President Trump. Again she avoided mentioning the name John McCain. This behavior is typical of these two individuals who are greedy for the limelight but shameful in acknowledging when credit is due elsewhere. In this same newsletter, representative Stefanik proudly reported on her activity in promoting health care programs. But it was she who voted to end the Affordable Care Act, while in the Senate, John McCain cast the deciding vote that canceled that effort and temporarily at least saved the act from recall. McCain said there should be no recall until the Republican-controlled Congress presented a viable replacement plan, and they offered none. They still have not done so. - Robin Brown, Plattsburgh ■
Russia collusion investigation designed to discredit Trump victory
To the Editor: Day after day, year after year, we suffer through the Russian collusion ghost story as if it actually happened and isn’t costing tens of millions of tax dollars. Yes Russia was doing their best to disrupt our affairs, elections included, as they have done for many years, but fixing that is not the objective of the Democrats, nor was it ever. Undoing a Republican presidential victory is the real objective. When Obama mockingly announced just prior to the 2016 election that the Russians couldn’t possibly rig our elections and that no reasonable person should believe they could he was anticipating a Clinton win. When he reversed that opinion immediately after the election it became clear that it didn’t matter which Republican won. It happened to be President Trump, but the same attack would have been used against Cruz, Rubio, Bush or any other Republican winner. The Russian collusion story was going to be the vehicle used by the mainstream media, the Justice Department, FBI officials, and the Democrats to discredit a Republican victory. There is still nothing to substantiate Trump/ Russia collusion, but there doesn’t need to be. All that’s needed is to convince you voters
Physicians Hospital (CVPH) will be sponsoring a bake sale outside of the cafeteria from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. All proceeds will be used towards suicide prevention efforts. The Clinton County Coalition to Prevent Suicide will join
that it happened. The media and the Democrats do not care how much tax money is spent chasing that objective. Hate Trump if you wish, but to base it on him being a Russian puppet is ridiculous. It may not have been obvious initially, but it’s become clear that the investigation by Special Investigator Robert Mueller is part of the same scam since he has zero interest in the Clinton or Obama connections to Russia, nor the Mitch McConnell or Joe Biden family financial connections with China, even though those collusions are known to exist. - Ken Fenimore, Elizabethtown ■
Walks back health care criticism
To the Editor: This is a reply concerning my own letter “Boos” in the Aug. 25 edition of The Sun. My first comment is an embarrassed, very sincere apology to the “top echelon” and everyone who has MVP insurance who may have felt compelled to contact their insurance company due to my letter. I received a telephone call on Aug. 28 from the offices at Elizabethtown Community Hospital concerned about the letter I had written to The Sun. I was informed in a very kind and polite conversation that MVP was still a viable insurance with them and would cover services acquired at Moses Ludington. I then contacted MVP again on Aug. 28 and the customer care person I talked to explained the mix up to me in a different way than the person I had spoken to on Aug. 9. On Aug. 9, stated to me was the fact that since Moses Ludington is no longer considered a “hospital,” services obtained there would no longer be covered by MVP. And that the Elizabethtown Community Hospital was not on the list for MVP coverage. The MVP employee I spoke to on Aug. 28 explained that the MVP contract with Moses Ludington was eliminated when the UVM-E-Town-Moses Ludington merge happened in April. Since MVP has a contract with the Elizabethtown Community Hospital, any services obtained at the Moses Ludington site that are billed via E-Town CH will be honored. I was misled by MVP on Aug. 9 and will never again put my faith in the word of just one person in a search for answers. Aug. 29, at 10:31 a.m.,I received a telephone call with an apology from MVP. If anyone suffered or felt indignation from my written words, I again apologize. I wish the best of health to all. - Michele Gautreau, Hague ■
MVP health care still accepted at ECH
To the Editor: Providing high quality health care close to home is our number one priority at the University of Vermont Health Network - Elizabethtown Community Hospital (UVM-ECH). That’s why we were concerned by the recent letter to the editor, “Moses Ludington leaves locals out of the loop” (Aug.25 edition). You can be assured that the former Moses Ludington Hospital, now our Ticonderoga campus, continues to participate in a wide range of commercial and government health insurance plans and accepts all major insurers in our region, including MVP Health Care. We recognize that name changes can be confusing – for both our patients and our partners in health care. Patients with questions about their individual health plans can
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 7
employees of CVPH at 3:30 p.m. at the Circle of Healing and Hope for a Moments of Reflection Ceremony, featuring a story of hope from a suicide loss survivor. The event is open to the community. ■
call our business office at 518-585-3700. There are many exciting changes taking place at our Ticonderoga campus beyond our name change. Over the past few months, we’ve opened a new state-of the-art emergency department, along with an updated and renovated laboratory services area, hired a full-time emergency department medical director, expanded our specialty clinics so patients no longer have to travel as far or as often for specialty services and we’re close to completing the facility’s $9.1 million physical transformation and modernization project so our patients can receive the best care in the most efficient, well-designed space. If you haven’t been on campus recently, we invite you to come see how we’re transforming health care in the community. - John Remillard, president UVM-ECH ■
Disagrees with merger proposal
To the Editor: I have worked in Vermont for the last four years as well as over four years in the 1990’s. I have watched as their merger school experiment has killed the small communities that were unlucky enough to get just an elementary school. Now, Vermont scrambles to close down these elementary schools with dwindling enrollments. It turns out families prefer to move to a community that can educate their children K-12. What happened to the elementary school in Lewis after the Elizabethtown Central School and Lewis Central School merger? So that brings us to Westport. How long do you seriously think an old monstrosity of a building will remain open when Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School (ELCS) enrollment is projected to continue to drop and their building can handle all the students from both districts. Which brings us to the tax savings: $0 for ELCS. So why the interest? Building aid. By merging, ELCS can get bags of free money in aid from the state. Yes ELCS, suck the life out of Westport Central School and you get the jackpot! And how about WCS $1.31 savings per $1,000. A $150,000 home saves less than $200 a year. Close your school, watch the families leave, destroy the community for a couple hundred dollars. Part of a community’s duty is the responsibility to educate our posterity. Are we the generation that will throw that duty to our neighbors? ELCS, if the tables were turned and Westport was to keep K-12 and ELCS was to loose their high school, would you vote to merge? The “plan” is not what is being voted on, just a merger. With large expanses of flat valley land, a new construction building could end up in Westport. Are you ready for that possibility? Please vote no on this merger proposal and tell the school boards to give us a merger plan to vote on. - Tim Sherman, Westport ■
Logical conservatism has been abandoned
To the Editor: Editor’s note: This letter is in response to Kenneth G. Barcomb’s letter, “Conservatives governed by ‘cold logic’ — not emotions” which appeared in the Aug. 18 edition of The Sun. If conservatives are indeed governed by
“cold logic” and not emotions, as Mr. Barcomb claims, then the Republican Party has abandoned conservatism. Republicans from Teddy Roosevelt to Richard Nixon were the leaders of governmental adherence to conservation and environmentalism with the creation of the National Forest System and the Environmental Protection Agency, among other initiatives to conserve and protect the natural environment which sustains all life on Earth. That is logical conservatism. The Republicans are now taking a wrecking ball to environmental measures nationwide. Conservatives want lower governmental spending and deficits. The Congressional Budget Office forecasts that the 2017 Republican-created tax cut bill will rocket the national deficit to over $20 trillion. This is not logical conservatism. “Competing civilly with quiet discourse in the marketplace of ideas” is neither a conservative nor liberal principle, but it is a far, far cry from what the Republican Party now endorses, with its complete surrender to the loud-mouthed snake oil salesman at its helm. There is no “self-loathing” in pointing out errors that one or one’s country has made. Learning from one’s mistakes and correcting them is honorably conservative. - David Thomas-Train, Keene Valley ■
Correcting the record on airport changes
To the Editor: Editor’s note: This letter is in response to Elizabeth Izzo’s article, “First flight from Washington lands at Plattsburgh International Airport,” which appeared in the Sept. 1 edition of The Sun. I find the “First flight” article on Sept. 1 requiring corrective input. The airport manager indicates that us taxpayers can expect an increase of 120,000 enplanements (250,000 projected — 130,000 current). However, our net increase with SkyWest regional airline painted in United colors is only 12,480 for the year, 20 more seats over PenAir. The politicians are thus indicating we are to expect 107,510 more unaccounted for airline enplanements per year. What a feat to make good on! Additionally, the 50 seat regional jet is the entry level jet and under Essential Air Services (EAS) rules we cannot ever get more than 12 flights per week or any aircraft with more than 50 seats or have a second airline to a “hub” here. If we do, then the airline will lose the $3.3 million subsidy and have to compete on a level playing field here with the other airlines and Burlington International Airport. Current EAS funds legitimately go to Saranac Lake, Ogdensburg and Watertown who need basic airline service. Furthermore, low cost carriers, Spirit and Allegiant, have “hubs” out of Orlando International Airport and Fort LauderdaleHollywood International Airport/Miami International Airport. My understanding is that Volo aviation is not the “new fixed base operator (FBO)” but lost out to an upstart local bid entry that was given under-the-table bid finance information. Spirit and Allegiant airlines said they wanted Volo back for serious airline handling and so we now have two FBOs on site, but why worry — our general fund has plenty of taxpayer money for our politician’s airport projects. Look at all the uncontrolled commercial growth and four huge apartment-type buildings, for example, at the airbase traffic circle, and tell me when our taxes are going down. With use of taxpayer monies to build and maintain this huge airport expanse, without guaranteed users, I cannot cheer. - Geoffrey B. Barker, Plattsburgh ■
8 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
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Birth Announcements
suncommunitynews.com/public-notices/birth-announcements
Bentleigh Allen Labombard
Luke Russell Ray Crowningshield
Ellie Lynn Christian
Zane Justice Goodrich
Makenzie Lee Patterson
Julia Marie Currier
PLATTSBURGH | A son, Bentleigh Allen Labombard, was born to Cassandra and Joshua Labombard on Aug. 13, 2018. PLATTSBURGH | Baby girl Ellie Lynn Christian was born on Aug. 13, 2018 to Nichole and Joel Christian. PLATTSBURGH | Mandie and Arron Patterson welcomed their daughter, Makenzie Lee Patterson, to the world on Aug. 13, 2018.
Timothy Robert Schoonmaker
PLATTSBURGH | Rachel and Robert Schoonmaker welcomed baby boy Timothy Robert Schoonmaker on Aug. 13, 2018.
Jelina Marie Moody
PLATTSBURGH | A daughter, Jelina Marie Moody, was born to Jennifer Moody and Shawn Lafountain on Aug. 13, 2018.
Hannah Grace Korb
PLATTSBURGH | Baby girl Hannah Grace Korb was born on Aug. 13, 2018 to Michelle and Timothy Korb.
Grey Wallace Dumont
PLATTSBURGH | Tiarra and Jerrad Dumont welcomed their son, Grey Wallace Dumont, to the world on Aug. 14, 2018.
Kelsey Marie Bushey
PLATTSBURGH | Renee Lashway and Joseph Bushey welcomed baby girl Kelsey Marie Bushey on Aug. 14, 2018.
Victoria Elizabeth Brunelle
PLATTSBURGH | A daughter, Victoria Elizabeth Brunelle, was born to Heather and Jason Brunelle on Aug. 14, 2018.
Anastasia Lucia Labatore
PLATTSBURGH | Baby girl Anastasia Lucia Labatore was born on Aug. 15, 2018 to Talyah and Caleb Labatore.
PLATTSBURGH | Brianna Baker and Tanner Crowningshield welcomed their son, Luke Russell Ray Crowningshield, to the world on Aug. 16, 2018. PLATTSBURGH | Stephanie Goodrich welcomed baby boy Zane Justice Goodrich on Aug. 16, 2018.
Jeremy Francis Sansone
PLATTSBURGH | A son, Jeremy Francis Sansone, was born to Deborah and John Sansone on Aug. 17, 2018.
Elijah Gabriel Walker
PLATTSBURGH | Baby boy Elijah Gabriel Walker was born on Aug. 17, 2018 to Morgan Hill and Travis Walker.
Kendrick Rhys Gordon
PLATTSBURGH | A daughter, Julia Marie Currier, was born to Kristen Brock and Tanner Currier on Aug. 16, 2018.
PLATTSBURGH | Amanda and Kodi Gordon welcomed their son, Kendrick Rhys Gordon, to the world on Aug. 18, 2018.
Mia Lorraine Crowningshield
Castiel Charles Shultz
PLATTSBURGH | Baby girl Mia Lorraine Crowningshield was born on Aug. 16, 2018 to Lea and Devon Crowningshield.
Treyson Ellsworth Chambers
PLATTSBURGH | Barbara Devins and Patrick Chambers welcomed their son, Treyson Ellsworth Chambers, to the world on Aug. 16, 2018.
Mackenzie Elizabeth Fewster
PLATTSBURGH | Melinda and Mark Fewster welcomed baby girl Mackenzie Elizabeth Fewster on Aug. 16, 2018.
Mia Claire Thornton
PLATTSBURGH | A girl, Mia Claire Thornton, was born to Lora and Kevin Thornton on Aug. 17, 2018.
Gideon Xavier Owen
PLATTSBURGH | Baby boy Gideon Xavier Owen was born on Aug. 17, 2018 to Rachel Thompson and Robert Owen.
Jacob David Babbie
PLATTSBURGH | Marlaynah Lincoln and Joshua Shultz welcomed baby boy Castiel Charles Shultz on Aug. 18, 2018.
Harvey Allen Hart
PLATTSBURGH | A son, Harvey Allen Hart, was born to Debra and Stephen Hart on Aug. 19, 2018.
Scarlett Renee Chaffee
PLATTSBURGH | Baby girl Scarlett Renee Chaffee was born on Aug. 19, 2018 to Kathleen Wrye and Dylan Chaffee.
Kayden Christopher Sharrow
PLATTSBURGH | Erin Gonyea and Christopher Sharrow welcomed their son, Kayden Christopher Sharrow, to the world on Aug. 20, 2018.
Rory Anthony Guck
PLATTSBURGH | Kaitlyn McCarty and Joseph Guck welcomed baby boy Rory Anthony Guck on Aug. 21, 2018.
Aubrey Aliviah Vesneske
PLATTSBURGH | Kelly and Jordon Babbie welcomed their son, Jacob David Babbie, to the world on Aug. 17, 2018.
PLATTSBURGH | A daughter, Aubrey Aliviah Vesneske, was born to Jennifer Yando and William Vesneske on Aug. 22, 2018.
Eden Laura Porter
Jackson Russell-Dowe Clark
PLATTSBURGH | Ashley and Michael Porter welcomed baby girl Eden Laura Porter on Aug. 17, 2018.
PLATTSBURGH | Baby boy Jackson Russell-Dowe Clark was born on Aug. 22, 2018 to Suezanne Chrisman and Ronald Clark. ■
• Worship in The norThern Tier •
ALTONA Holy Angels Church - Main Street, Altona. Mass - 10 a.m. Sunday ALBURGH VT Union Bible Church - 102 S. Main St., Alburgh, VT. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship Service at 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Bible Study and Bible Club for Kids at 7:00 p.m. Pastor John Kehoe, 802-796-3055. CADYVILLE St. James Church - 26 Church Rd., Cadyville. 293-7026. Sunday Mass: 9 a.m. CHAMPLAIN Christ & St. John’s Episcopal/ Anglican Church - 18 Butternut Street, Champlain. (518) 298-8543. Sunday Mass at 9:30 a.m. Patricia A. Beauharnois, Priest in Charge Living Water Baptist Church - 9 Locust St., corner of Main and Locust, Champlain. Sunday School at 9 a.m. Service at 10 a.m. Thursday Bible Study at 7 p.m. includes activities for children. Phone: 298-4358 St. Mary’s Catholic Church - Church Street, Champlain. Anticipated Mass: Saturday 5:30 p.m., Sunday Mass: 8 a.m. Weekday Masses: Thursday and Friday 9 a.m. Three Steeples United Methodist
Church - 491 Route 11, Champlain. 298-8655. Sunday morning worship 9:30 a.m. steeples3@primelink1.net CHAZY Chazy Presbyterian Church - 620 Miner Farm Rd., Chazy. 846-7349 Worship and Sunday School will begin at 10 a.m. Rev. Robert Svenson. Email: chazypres@westelcom.com Sacred Heart Church - Box 549, Chazy 12921. (518) 846-7650. Sunday Mass (Ant) 6 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m. DANNEMORA Dannemore United Methodist Church - 86 Clark Street, PO Box 488, Dannemora, NY. Pastors Wendy and Gary Rhodehamel. Phone: 518-891-9287. Worship and Sunday School - Sunday 11:00 a.m., tedtrevail@gmail.com ELLENBURG St. Edmund’s Roman Catholic Church - Route 11, Ellenburg. Saturday Anticipated Mass, 4 p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. ELLENBURG CENTER United Methodist Church of Ellenburg - 5 Church St., PO 142, Ellenburg Center, NY 12934 Pastor: Gary Rhodenhamel Phone: 518-891-9287 Hours: 9am Service, Sunday Worship & Sunday School
ELLENBURG DEPOT Ellenburg Depot Wesleyan Church - 2179 Plank Rd., PO Box 177 Ellenburg Depot, NY 12935. Pastor: Robert R. Phillips. Phone: 594-3902. Sunday Family Bible Hour: 9:50 a.m. Sunday Worship Time: 10:50 a.m. Children’s Youth Ministries: Call for schedule. MOOERS Mooers United Methodist Church - 14 East St., Located adjacent to old Post Office. Sunday service, 9:30 a.m. Contemporary & traditional music, activities for children, youth and families, 236-7129, pastoral@ twcny.rr.com, www.gbgm-umc.org/ mooersumc Mooers Wesleyan Church - Maple Street, Mooers. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Sunday Night Service 7 p.m. Wednesday Night 7 p.m. (518) 236-5330. MOOERS FORKS St. Ann’s Catholic Church - Route 11, Mooers Forks. Anticipated mass Saturday 4:00 p.m. Reconciliation before mass. Sunday 8:00 a.m. mass. PERU Peru Community Church - intersection of Routes 22 and 22B in Peru. Summer worship schedule begins Sunday, May 20 and continues through Labor Day. One worship
service held on sundays at 9am. Coffee and converstion hour in the Fellowship Center at 13 Elm Street follows the service. We welcome all worship and participate in the programs and ministries of the church. Rev. Peggi Eller, 518-643-8641. Website: www.perucommunitychurch.com. PLATTSBURGH First Baptist Church Plattsburgh - Invitational Pastor “Wade” of First Baptist Church Plattsburgh is prior military with a Master of Divinity in Pastoral Counseling. Bible teaching/services in conservative format with singing & prayer. We have a friendly and encouraging atmosphere that seeks for each of us to learn who we are in Christ Jesus whom loved us first. Prior military please ask about Veteran/family study groups. Also invited are our area students and those visiting for college to make FBC Plattsburgh their Church away from Home! Please stop in and meet us, Sunday service at 10AM or Tuesday 6:30PM (Prayer Service) 38 Oak Street (Corner of Oak and Court Streets) (518) 563-2793 www.firstbaptistplattsburgh.webs.com Plattsburgh House of Prayer - 63 Broad St, Plattsburgh , NY, plattsburghhop.com, (518)314-1333. Sunday’s Experience Starts at
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561-5255. The Rev. Gregory R Huth, Pastor. Sunday worship summer hours 9:30 a.m. followed by coffee/fellowship hour ROUSES POINT St. Patrick’s Catholic Church - Lake Street, Rouses Point. Anticipated Mass: Saturday 4 p.m.; Sunday Mass: 10 a.m.; Weekday Masses: Monday & Tuesday 9 a.m., Communion Service: Wednesday 9 a.m. First Presbyterian Church - 50 Washington Ave., Rouses Point, New York 12979. Telephone 518-297-6529. Sunday service at 9:00 am. Sciota United Methodist Church - Sunday service 9 a.m. Route 19, Sciota. WEST CHAZY St. Joseph’s Catholic Church - West Church Street, West Chazy. Saturday Vigil Mass, 4 p.m. Sunday Mass 10 a.m. Weekday Masses: Monday through Friday at 9 a.m. Confessions: Saturday, 3-3:30 p.m. West Chazy Community Church - Pastor Marty Martin. 17 East Church St. Fiske Road, West Chazy, NY. Ph. 493-4585. Sunday: Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. Tuesday; Youth Group 6:30 p.m.
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10:30 AM. Plattsburgh United Methodist Church - 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh, NY 12901. 563-2992. Pastor Phil Richards. Service Sunday 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Nursery available at 10 a.m. First Presbyterian Church - 34 Brinkerhoff Street, Plattsburgh, NY 12901. Phone 518-561-3140. Pastor Timothy Luoma. Fall/Winter Church School for Children and Adults 9:00 a.m., Worship 10:00 a.m., Fellowship 11:00 a.m. Please visit our website at www.presbyplatt.org or our Facebook page, to see church events. All are welcome! Seventh Day Adventist - 4003 Rt. 22, Plattsburgh, 561-3491 - Pastor Livergood Worship Saturday at 11:30 a.m., Pot Luck Dinner after service Trinity Episcopal Church - 18 Trinity Place, Plattsburgh, NY 12901. 518-561-2244. Services: Saturday 5:00 pm, Eucharist with dialog sermon. Sunday 8:00 am, Eucharist. Sunday 10:00 am, Eucharist (with music, followed by refreshments/coffee hour). Wednesday 5:00 pm Community Meal. Lutheran Church of the Redeemer 10 Adirondack Lane, Plattsburgh, NY 12901 (Across from Plattsburgh High School), (518)
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The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 9
The Champlain Children’s Learning Center in Rouses Point celebrated their 20th anniversary on last Monday. The operation started in 1998 with “four terrified staff members,” school director Becky Filon said at a ceremony at the preschool highlighting the milestone. Over the years, the center has continued to grow, in part through community support and state funding. The facility was awarded $4,000 from the Adirondack Foundation earlier this year for the expansion of their program. As Filon spoke to a group of parents, friends, neighbors and employees, a group of kids squealed with laughter, ducked under tables and weaved in and out of their parents’ legs. “There’s never a day you don’t hear laughter in this building, and that makes this worth it,” she said. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo
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10 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
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Guest column
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Card skimming a recurring issue We often question whether the innovative nature of technology is a good or bad thing. On one hand, advanceBy Assemblyman ments in technology have D. Billy Jones made our everyday lives • GUEST COLUMNIST • easier, safer and, in many ways, more efficient. On the other, much of our private information can and often does become public knowledge. It can be as simple as finding someone on yellowpages. com or more complex such as the ads on Facebook being tailored to our internet search history. With our information just a click away, this can make it hard to protect ourselves from exposure or worse; exploitation. Throughout the year, several news outlets have reported that gas stations across the state have unknowingly been used as a proxy for swindlers to steal credit card information from their customers. Those using a credit card for the transaction would slide their card for payment, pump their gas and leave, as usual.
However, during this transaction process, unbeknownst to the consumer, the skimmer copies your card information, and sends it to the fraudsters who then use this data to replicate your card for future purchases. Before you think to yourself, “this could never happen in the North Country,” think again, because it already has. Earlier this year, an Essex County worker tasked with reviewing pump transactions discovered a cellular-based card skimmer at a Mobil station in Keeseville. Although Bluetooth skimmers are well known by the proper authorities, the skimmer used at the Essex County-based station was the first of its kind found in the state. This revelation led to a statewide investigation sanctioned by the FBI, which found several other gas pump scam operations throughout the state. According to the United States Secret Service, millions of dollars are garnered each year from pump skimmers throughout the country. In fact, in one weekend of looking for
these devices, agents recovered nearly 60 skimmers nationwide. As criminals continue to manipulate and steal financial information from the everyday consumer, my colleagues and I continue to explore legislation that will hold them accountable for their actions. Assembly Bill A3344 would require a password or personal identification number to be provided when attempting to use a credit card for a purchase. This safeguard would make it harder for criminals to access your credit card information. There are also several pieces of legislation that aim to better protect the personal information of each card holder. Assembly Bill A5242, which relates to identify theft protection services, seeks to “protect, indemnify or reimburse card-holders that have been victimized by credit fraud. Bill A5243 attempts to reduce the amount of personal information required to own and operate a credit card. We are optimistic that these pieces of legislation will go further to protect the consumers from having their financial accounts compromised. As local, state and federal law enforce-
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ment agencies continue to work toward solutions, there are also ways in which you can help combat this form of fraud. Although inconvenient, the easiest way to avoid the possibility of being financially taken advantage of at the pump is to pay inside; either by card or in cash. Another option is to check the pump’s card reader for anything that looks suspicious and if so, report it. Finally, when you can help it, use a credit card rather than a debit card, so that your hard-earned money is not at risk of being stolen. In the past, I have stressed the need to protect our older adults from financial exploitation, however, this is an area of concern that can affect anyone. If something looks off or causes you to feel that there could be an unlawful operation going on, notify the authorities right away. I encourage you to be on alert so that together, we can snuff out this underhanded theft that has financially burdened so many Americans without their knowledge or consent. ■ — D. Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay) represents the 115th Assembly District.
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 11
CHAZY RURAL CENTRAL SCHOOL
EAGLES
Chazy Sports Schedule
BOYS SOCCER
Friday, Sept. 7 — at Willsboro Monday, Sept. 10 — at Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport (EL/W) Friday, Sept. 14 — v. Northern Adirondack Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Seton Catholic Thursday, Sept. 20 — at Lake Placid Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Willsboro Monday, Oct. 1 — v. EL/W Friday, Oct. 5 — at Northern Adirondack Wednesday, Oct. 10 — at Seton Catholic Friday, Oct. 12 — v. Lake Placid ■
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GIRLS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — v. Moriah Thursday, Sept. 6 — at Ticonderoga Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. EL/W Monday, Sept. 17 — at Northern Adirondack Wednesday, Sept. 19 — at Seton Catholic Friday, Sept. 21 — v. Lake Placid Monday, Sept. 24 — at Moriah Wednesday, Sept. 26 — v. Ticonderoga Friday, Sept. 28 — at EL/W Thursday, Oct. 4 — v. Northern Adirondack Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Seton Catholic Thursday, Oct. 11 — at Lake Placid ■
St. Joseph’s Church 60 West Church Street, West Chazy, NY 12992 Phone: (518) 493-4521 • Fax: 518-493-5880 Pastor: Theodore Cosby Masses: Saturday Vigil Mass 4pm Sunday: Masses 8am & 10am Weekday: 9am Confession: Saturday 3-3:30pm & by appt.
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195201
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195406
12 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
NORTHEASTERN CLINTON CENTRAL SCHOOL
COUGARS
195202
Northeastern Clinton Sports Schedule
Friday, Oct. 12 — v. Beekmantown ■
Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Saranac Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. Plattsburgh High Monday, Oct. 15 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. Saranac Lake Thursday, Oct. 18 — at Peru Tuesday, Oct. 23 — v. Lake Placid Thursday, Oct. 25 — at Northern Adirondack ■
GIRLS SOCCER
Wednesday, Sept. 5 — at Peru Friday, Sept. 7 — at Saranac Lake Monday, Sept. 10 — v. Plattsburgh High Friday, Sept. 14 — v. Saranac Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at AuSable Valley Thursday, Sept. 20 — at Beekmantown Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Peru Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Saranac Lake Monday, Oct. 1 — at Plattsburgh High Friday, Oct. 5 — at Saranac Wednesday, Oct. 10 — v. AuSable Valley
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VOLLEYBALL
CROSS COUNTRY
Thursday Sept. 6 — at Beekmantown Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Saranac Thursday, Sept. 13 — at Plattsburgh High Monday, Sept. 17 — at Lake Placid Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. AuSable Valley Thursday, Sept. 20 — at Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Peru Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Northern Adirondack Thursday, Oct. 4 — v. Beekmantown
ER ORD Y! A TOD
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Lake Placid, Elizabethtown Keene Moriah Westport combined and Plattsburgh High Saturday, Sept. 15 — Champlain Valley Athletic Conference (CVAC) invitational at PSUC Field House Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at Beekmantown Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Seton Catholic Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 23 — v. Beekmantown, Schroon Lake and Ticonderoga Saturday, Oct. 27 — CVAC meet at Cadyville Recreation Park Friday, Nov. 2 — sectionals at PSUC Field House ■
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BOYS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — v Peru Thursday, Sept. 6 — v. Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at Plattsburgh High Monday, Sept. 17 — at Saranac Wednesday, Sept. 19 — v. AuSable Valley Friday, Sept. 21 — v. Beekmantown Monday, Sept. 24 — at Peru Wednesday, Sept. 26 — at Saranac Lake Friday, Sept. 28 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Oct. 4 — v. Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at AuSable Valley Thursday, Oct. 11 — at Beekmantown ■
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 13
BEEKMANTOWN CENTRAL SCHOOL
EAGLES
Beekmantown Sports Schedule
FOOTBALL
Friday, Aug. 31 — at AuSable Valley Friday, Sept. 7 — at Ticonderoga Saturday, Sept. 15 — v. Saranac Saturday, Sept. 22 — v. Peru Friday, Sept. 28 — at Plattsburgh High Saturday, Oct. 6 — v. Saranac Lake Saturday, Oct. 13 — v. Saranac Lake ■
BOYS SOCCER
Wednesday, Sept. 5 — v. AuSable Valley Friday, Sept. 7 — at Saranac Wednesday, Sept. 12 — v. Plattsburgh High Friday, Sept. 14 — at Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Peru Thursday, Sept. 20 — v. Northeastern Clinton Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at AuSable Valley Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Saranac Wednesday, Oct. 3 — at Plattsburgh High Friday, Oct. 5 — v. Saranac Lake Wednesday, Oct. 10 — at Peru Friday, Oct. 12 — at Northeastern Clinton ■
GIRLS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at AuSable Valley Thursday, Sept. 6 — v. Saranac Thursday, Sept. 13 — at Plattsburgh High Monday, Sept. 17 — v. Saranac Lake Wednesday, Sept. 19 — at Peru Friday, Sept. 21 — at Northeastern Clinton Monday, Sept. 24 — v. AuSable Valley Wednesday, Sept. 26 — v. Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Oct. 4 — at Saranac Lake Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Peru Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. Northeastern Clinton ■
VOLLEYBALL
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Northern Adirondack
Thursday, Sept. 6 — v. Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Sept. 13 — at Saranac Monday, Sept. 17 — at Peru Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 20 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Saranac Lake Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Lake Placid Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Northern Adirondack Thursday, Oct. 4 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. Saranac Monday, Oct. 15 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. AuSable Valley Thursday, Oct. 18 — at Saranac Lake Monday, Oct. 22 — v. Peru Thursday, Oct. 25 — at Lake Placid ■
CROSS COUNTRY
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at Seton Catholic Saturday, Sept. 15 — Champlain Valley Athletic Conference (CVAC) invitational at PSUC Field House Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Elizabethtown Keene Moriah Westport combined, to be determined Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Northeastern Clinton, Schroon Lake and Ticonderoga Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Peru Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Saranac Lake and Seton Catholic Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Lake Placid Tuesday, Oct. 23 — at Northeastern Clinton Saturday, Oct. 27 — CVAC meet at Cadyville Recreation Park Friday, Nov. 2 — sectionals at PSUC Field House ■
GYMNASTICS
Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Peru Friday, Sept. 14 — at Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Plattsburgh High Friday, Oct. 5 — at Peru Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Plattsburgh High Saturday, Oct. 27 — sectionals ■
195207
14 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
NORTHERN ADIRONDACK CENTRAL SCHOOL
BOBCATS
195203
Northern Adirondack Sports Schedule BOYS SOCCER
Wednesday, Sept. 5 — v. Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport (EL/W) Wednesday, Sept. 12 — v. Willsboro Friday, Sept. 14 — at Chazy Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Lake Placid Thursday, Sept. 20 — at Seton Catholic Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at EL/W Wednesday, Oct. 3 — at Willsboro Friday, Oct. 5 — v. Chazy Wednesday, Oct. 10 — at Lake Placid Friday, Oct. 12 — v. Seton Catholic ■
GIRLS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at EL/W Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Moriah Thursday, Sept. 13 — at Ticonderoga Monday, Sept. 17 — v. Chazy Wednesday, Sept. 19 — at Lake Placid Friday, Sept. 21 — v. Seton Catholic
Monday, Sept. 24 — v. EL/W Friday, Sept. 28 — at Moriah Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Ticonderoga Thursday, Oct. 4 — at Chazy Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Lake Placid Thursday, Oct. 11 — at Seton Catholic ■
VOLLEYBALL
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — v. Beekmantown Thursday, Sept. 6 — at Saranac Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 13 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Saranac Lake Thursday, Sept. 20 — at Peru Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Lake Placid Thursday, Sept. 27 — at Northeastern Clinton Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Beekmantown Thursday, Oct. 4 — v. Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Plattsburgh High Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. AuSable Valley Monday, Oct. 15 — at Saranac Lake Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. Peru Thursday, Oct. 18 — at Lake Placid Thursday, Oct. 25 — v. Northeastern Clinton ■
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 15
SETON CATHOLIC CENTRAL SCHOOL
KNIGHTS
Seton Catholic Sports Schedule BOYS SOCCER
Friday, Oct. 12 — at Northern Adirondack ■
Friday, Sept. 7 — v. Elizabethtown-Lewis/ Westport (EL/W) Monday, Sept. 10 — at Willsboro Friday, Sept. 14 — v. Lake Placid Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Chazy Thursday, Sept. 20 — v. Northern Adirondack Thursday, Sept. 27 — at EL/W Monday, Oct. 1 — v. Willsboro Friday, Oct. 5 — at Lake Placid Wednesday, Oct. 10 — v. Chazy
GIRLS SOCCER
Thursday, Sept. 6 — at EL/W Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Ticonderoga Thursday, Sept. 13 — at Moriah Monday, Sept. 17 — at Lake Placid Wednesday, Sept. 19 — v. Chazy Friday, Sept. 21 — at Northern Adirondack Wednesday, Sept. 26 — v. EL/W Friday, Sept. 28 — at Ticonderoga Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Moriah
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Beekmantown and Saranac Lake Saturday, Sept. 15 — Champlain Valley Athletic Conference (CVAC) invitational at PSUC Field House Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Ticonderoga
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Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. AuSable Valley, Northeastern Clinton Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Beekmantown Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Oct. 23 — at Elizabethtown Keene Moriah Westport combined, to be determined Saturday, Oct. 27 — CVAC meet at Cadyville Recreation Park Friday, Nov. 2 — sectionals at PSUC Field House ■
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Thursday, Oct. 4 — v. Lake Placid Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Chazy Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. Northern Adirondack ■
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195402
16 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
PLATTSBURGH HIGH SCHOOL
HORNETS
195205
Plattsburgh High School Sports Schedule
FOOTBALL
Thursday, Sept. 13 — v. Beekmantown Monday, Sept. 17 — v. AuSable Valley Wednesday, Sept. 19 — at Saranac Lake Monday, Sept. 24 — v. Saranac Wednesday, Sept. 26 — v. Peru Friday, Sept. 28 — at Northeastern Clinton Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Beekmantown Thursday, Oct. 4 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Saranac Lake ■
Friday, Aug. 31 — v. Saranac Lake Friday, Sept. 7 — at AuSable Valley Friday, Sept. 14 — v. Peru Friday, Sept. 21 — at Moriah Friday, Sept. 28 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Oct. 5 — at Ticonderoga Saturday, Oct. 13 — v. Saranac ■
BOYS SOCCER
VOLLEYBALL
Wednesday, Sept. 5 — v. Saranac Friday, Sept. 7 — v. Peru Monday, Sept. 10 — at Northeastern Clinton Wednesday, Sept. 12 — at Beekmantown Friday, Sept. 14 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at Saranac Thursday, Sept. 27 — at Peru Monday, Oct. 1 — v. Northeastern Clinton Wednesday, Oct. 3 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Oct. 5 — v. AuSable Valley Wednesday, Oct. 10— at Saranac Lake ■
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Peru Thursday, Sept. 6 — v. Lake Placid Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at Northern Adirondack Thursday, Sept. 13 — v. Northeastern Clinton Monday, Sept. 17 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Beekmantown Thursday, Sept. 20 — v. Saranac Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Saranac Lake Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Peru Thursday, Oct. 4 — at Lake Placid Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Northern Adirondack Thursday, Oct. 11 — at Northeastern Clinton Monday, Oct. 15 — v. Beekmantown Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 23 — v. AuSable Valley Thursday, Oct. 25 — at Saranac Lake ■
GIRLS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Saranac Thursday, Sept. 6 — at Peru Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Northeastern Clinton
CROSS COUNTRY
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — v. Beekmantown, Peru and Saranac Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at Northeastern Clinton Saturday, Sept. 15 — Champlain Valley Athletic Conference (CVAC) invitational at PSUC Field House Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Ticonderoga Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Peru Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Lake Placid,Elizabethtown Keene Moriah Westport (EKMW) combined and Northeastern Clinton Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. Schroon Lake, Ticonderoga and Seton Catholic Tuesday, Oct. 23 — at Saranac Lake Saturday, Oct. 27 — CVAC meet at Cadyville Recreation Park Friday, Nov. 2 — sectionals at PSUC Field House ■
GIRLS SWIMMING
Friday, Sept. 14 — at Peru quad meet Tuesday, Sept. 18 — v. Peru Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at AuSable Valley Friday, Sept. 28 — v. AuSable Valley Friday, Oct. 5 — quad meet at Plattsburgh High School Friday, Oct. 12 — v. Moriah Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Moriah Thursday, Oct. 18 — quad meet at AuSable Valley Thursday, Oct. 25 — sectionals at AuSable Valley ■
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Friday, Sept. 7 — at Peru Friday, Sept. 14 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Sept. 21 — at Peru Thursday, Sept. 27 — at Beekmantown Friday, Oct. 12 — v. Peru Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. Beekmantown Saturday, Oct. 27 — sectionals ■
195277
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195272
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 17
PERU CENTRAL SCHOOL
INDIANS
Peru Sports Schedule
195206
Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Beekmantown, Plattsburgh High and Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Ticonderoga Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 23 — at Elizabethtown Keene Moriah Westport combined, to be determined Saturday, Oct. 27 — CVAC meet at Cadyville Recreation Park Friday, Nov. 2 — sectionals at PSUC Field House ■
SWIMMING
Friday, Sept. 14 — quad meet at SUNY Plattsburgh Memorial Hall Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Moriah Friday, Sept. 28 — at Moriah Friday, Oct. 5 — quad meet at Stafford Middle School Friday, Oct. 12 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. AuSable Valley Thursday, Oct. 18 — quad meet at AuSable Valley High School Thursday, Oct. 25 — sectionals at AuSable Valley High School ■
GYMNASTICS
Friday, Sept. 7 — v. Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at Beekmantown Friday, Sept. 21 — v. Plattsburgh High Friday, Oct. 5 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Oct. 12 — at Plattsburgh High Friday, Oct. 19 — at Beekmantown Saturday, Oct. 27 — sectionals, to be determined ■
FOOTBALL
Saturday, Sept. 1 — v. Ticonderoga Saturday, Sept. 8 — v. Moriah Friday, Sept. 14 — at Plattsburgh High Saturday, Sept. 22 — at Beekmantown Saturday, Sept. 29 — v. AuSable Valley Saturday, Oct. 6 — at Saranac Saturday, Oct. 13 — at Saranac Lake ■
BOYS SOCCER
Wednesday, Sept. 5 — v. Northeastern Clinton Friday, Sept. 7 — at Plattsburgh High Monday, Sept. 10 — v. Saranac Lake Wednesday, Sept. 12 — v. Saranac Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Beekmantown Thursday, Sept. 20 — v. AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Plattsburgh High Monday, Oct. 1 — at Saranac Lake Wednesday, Oct. 3 — at Saranac Wednesday, Oct. 10 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Oct. 12 — at AuSable Valley ■
GIRLS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 6 — at AuSable Valley Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Saranac Lake Monday, Sept. 17 — v. Beekmantown Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Lake Placid Thursday, Sept. 20 — v. Northern Adirondack Tuesday, Sept. 25 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Sept. 27 — at Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Plattsburgh High Thursday, Oct. 4 — v. AuSable Valley Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Saranac Lake Monday, Oct. 15 — v. Lake Placid Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Northern Adirondack Thursday, Oct. 18 — v. Northeastern Clinton Monday, Oct. 22 — at Beekmantown Thursday, Oct. 25 — v. Saranac ■
CROSS COUNTRY
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. AuSable Valley, Saranac, Schroon Lake and Ticonderoga Saturday, Sept. 15 — Champlain Valley Athletic Conference (CVAC) invitational at PSUC Field House Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Saranac Lake
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Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Sept. 6 — v. Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at SAranac Lake Thursday, Sept. 13 — at Saranac Wednesday, Sept. 19 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Sept. 21 — at AuSable Valley Monday, Sept. 24 — v. Northeastern Clinton Wednesday, Sept. 26 — at Plattsburgh High Friday, Sept. 28 — v. Saranac Lake Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Saranac Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Beekmantown Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. AuSable Valley ■
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SARANAC CENTRAL SCHOOL
CHIEFS
195204
Saranac Sports Schedule FOOTBALL
Friday, Aug. 31 — at Moriah Saturday, Sept. 8 — v. Saranac Lake Friday, Sept. 15 — at Beekmantown Friday, Sept. 21 — at Ticonderoga Saturday, Sept. 29 — v. Ticonderoga Saturday, Oct. 6 — v. Peru Saturday, Oct. 13 — at Plattsburgh High ■
GIRLS SOCCER
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 6 — at Beekmantown Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at AuSable Valley Thursday, Sept. 13 — v. Peru Monday, Sept. 17 — v. Northeastern Clinton Friday, Sept. 21 — at Saranac Lake Monday, Sept. 24 — at Plattsburgh High Wednesday, Sept. 26 — v. Beekmantown Friday, Sept. 28 — v. AuSable Valley Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Peru Thursday, Oct. 4 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Oct. 11 — v. Saranac Lake ■
VOLLEYBALL
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Lake Placid Thursday Sept. 6 — v. Northern Adirondack Tuesday, Sept. 11 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Sept. 13 — v. Beekmantown Monday, Sept. 17 — at Saranac Lake Thursday, Sept. 20 — at Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. AuSable Valley Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Peru Tuesday, Oct. 2 — v. Lake Placid Thursday, Oct. 4 — at Northern Adirondack Tuesday, Oct. 9 — v. Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Oct. 11 — at Beekmantown ■ Tuesday Sept. 11 — at Peru Saturday, Sept. 15 — Champlain Valley Athletic Conference (CVAC) invitational at SUNY Plattsburgh Field House Tuesday, Sept. 18 — at Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Lake Placid, Elizabethtown Keene Moriah Westport (EKMW), Peru and Seton Catholic Tuesday, Oct. 2 — at Peru Tuesday, Oct. 9 — at Ticonderoga Tuesday, Oct. 16 — v. Northeastern Clinton, Peru and Saranac Lake Tuesday, Oct. 23 — at EKMW, to be determined Saturday, Oct. 27 — CVAC meet at Cadyville Recreation Park Friday, Nov. 2 — sectionals at SUNY Plattsburgh Field House ■
BOYS SOCCER
Wednesday, Sept. 5 — at Plattsburgh High Friday, Sept. 7 — v. Beekmantown Monday, Sept. 10 — v. AuSable Valley Wednesday, Sept. 12 — at Peru Friday, Sept. 14 — at Northeastern Clinton Thursday, Sept. 20 — v. Saranac Lake Tuesday, Sept. 25 — v. Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 27 — at Beekmantown Monday, Oct. 1 — at AuSable Valley Wednesday, Oct. 3 — v. Peru Friday, Oct. 5 — v. Northeastern Clinton Friday, Oct. 12 — at Saranac Lake ■
GYMNASTICS
Tuesday, Sept. 11 — v. Peru Friday, Sept. 14 — at Plattsburgh High Thursday, Sept. 27 — v. Plattsburgh High Friday, Oct. 5 — at Peru Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Plattsburgh High Saturday, Oct. 27 — sectional ■
Tuesday, Oct. 16 — at Plattsburgh High Thursday, Oct. 18 — v. Plattsburgh High Tuesday, Oct. 23 — v. Saranac Lake Thursday, Oct. 25 — at Peru ■
CROSS COUNTRY
Tuesday, Sept. 4 — at Plattsburgh High
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Sports
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 19
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Sports season gets into full swing By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | The Section VII fall sports season begins in earnest this week as the regular season starts for almost every sport while the football season heads into week two. While the CVAC volleyball season starts with games Tuesday and Thursday, the Saranac varsity team will host their annual tournament
Saturday, Sept. 8, starting in the morning. Last year, Peru came away with the tournament win over Beekmantown. In soccer, the Crown Point and Schroon Lake Division III rivalry helps to kick off the season, with Schroon Lake hosting the Panthers Sept. 6 and Crown Point hosting the Wildcats Sept. 7. Other matchups include the youthful Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport Lady Griffins hosting Seton Catholic; the Saranac Lady
Plattsburgh High goalie Delaney McCormick makes a save in the shootout between the Lady Hornets and Beekmantown Lady Eagles in the opening round of the Chazy girl’s tournament Aug. 29. The Hornets won the tournament with penalty shot win over Beekmantown and a 3-1 win in the championship game over host Chazy. Photo by Keith Lobdell
Catherine Langlois of Chazy splits a pair of defenders during the opening round of the Chazy girl’s soccer tournament Aug. 29. Photo by Keith Lobdell
Beekmantown’s Alexis Provost traps the ball while trying to shield Plattsburgh High’s Brina Micheels away during the opening game of the Chazy girl’s soccer tournament Aug. 29. Photo by Keith Lobdell
Chiefs playing at Beekmantown; and the Lake Placid Lady Blue Bombers traveling to Class D defending champion Moriah Lady Vikings Sept. 6; while Beekmantown will travel to Saranac and Peru will travel to Plattsburgh High in boy’s soccer under the lights Sept. 7. The Section VII gymnastics season gets underway with defending champion Peru hosting Plattsburgh High Sept. 7. The swimming season also gets underway with a quad scrimmage hosted by Moriah with the AuSable Valley, Peru and Plattsburgh High swim teams. The cross country season started earlier
in the week, but will continue Sept. 11 with Lake Placid, EKMW and Plattsburgh High traveling to Northeastern Clinton; Beekmantown and Saranac Lake running against host Seton Catholic at the Cadyville Recreation Park; and AuSable Valley, Saranac, Schroon Lake and Ticonderoga traveling to host Peru at McComb State Park. Week two of the football season opens Sept. 7 as Ticonderoga (0-1) will host Beekmantown (1-0) and AuSable Valley (0-1) will host Plattsburgh High (1-0) at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8 games will include Peru (1-0) hosting Moriah (0-1) while Saranac (1-0) hosts Saranac Lake (0-1) at 1:30 p.m. ■
Garrow tournament breeds state success By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
CHAZY | The Frankie Garrow Memorial Tournament started in 2006, when no Section VII team made the NYSPHSAA state tournament. Since then, at least one team has made it to the state semifinals, finals, or won the whole thing from 2017 through last season. In all, the Garrow tournament has been represented in a state semifinal game 12 times, a state title game 10 times and has produced 7 state titles over the past 11 years by the combination of Section VII tournament participants Chazy, Plattsburgh High and Beekmantown. And yes, most of those have come from the host, as the Chazy Eagles have made 10 of 11 final fours, eight title games and winning six of their eight state titles over those 11 years.
petitive way to start each year by playing bigger schools and every year, it’s different,” said Justin Collins. Last season, it was the Hornets who scored a late second half goal to win the tournament. “This tournament always a great litmus test to show us what we need to improve upon within the first two games of the season,” said LaRose. For both LaRose and McAuliffe, the goal was to see how a new set of defensive players would respond against toplevel competition. “IT showed me what my new defense looks like,” LaRose said. “In the finals, Chazy took advantage of the few mistakes we made so we just need to tighten those up. We will take a loss here if it makes us better and puts us in position to win the Class B title.”
“We always look forward to soccer season and this year is no different,” said Chazy coach Rob McAuliffe. “We feel we have a good group of players and the goal is always to get to the state championship, but we know we have a lot of good teams in front of us.” That started with the Labor Day weekend tournament, as the Eagles scored a 4-0 win over Canton in the opening round Aug. 30 and scoring another win over Plattsburgh High, 3-0, in the 2018 title game Sept. 1. “It’s a very important tournament each season to get these two games in and see what we can do against other good teams,” said Hayden King. “We give each other a run for our money every year and it’s a measuring stick to see where you are early in the year.” “I love this tournament and have always looked forward to this weekend,” said Tristan Conners. “I think to win this tournament is a big thing and a com-
» Garrow Cont. on pg. 21
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Powerful Peru blanks Ticonderoga 48-0 By Steve Criss
SPORTS REPORTER
PERU | A year ago in the Champlain Valley Athletic Conference, quarterback Ryley O’Connell and receiver Austin Carpenter led the league as they hooked up 45 times for 737 yards and 9 touchdowns during the season. On Saturday, Peru’s dynamic duo rekindled their connection just over two minutes into the game for a 71-yard touchdown play as the defending Class B champions defeated the Ticonderoga Sentinels 48-0 at the Apple Bowl in Peru. “Starting quick and starting fast was really good for the kids, energy-wise,” said Peru coach Ryon O’Connell. “Having a third-year QB benefits any team, but Ryley has really matured this year. At halftime, he actually came up to the coaches and told us what he is seeing, and what would work better offensively vs. our opponent. I was really impressed with that leadership. It’s certainly nice having him and Austin working so well together this early in the season.” The Sentinels, who went undefeated during the regular season last year, fumbled the football on their first play from scrimmage as standout Russell Gallo III was tackled for a loss. Peru all-star Matt Latinville pounced on the fumble and the Indians had the ball on the Ticonderoga 9-yard line as a result of the turnover. To make matters worse, Gallo was injured on the play and did not return.
Peru receiver Austin Carpenter lays out to make a reception against Ticonderoga at the Apple Bowl in week one of CVAC football action. The Indians scored a 48-0 win over the defending CVAC champion Sentinels. Photo by Keith Lobdell Ticonderoga’s defense held Peru after the turnover as Kyler teRiele recovered a Peru fumble on a botched handoff, but the Sentinels just couldn’t muster any offense whatsoever against an aggressive Indian defense. “We challenged our defense this week, and told them they have to stop the run,” O’Connell said. “Matt Latinville, Xavier LaFountain, Dalton Criss, Derek Fagan and Carson Cunningham, in particular. They really responded well.”
Peru’s Robert Reynolds blocked a Sentinels punt and the ball went through the end zone to give the Indians a 9-0 lead in the first quarter. Kasen Brennan then rushed for a 2-yard touchdown with 4:19 left in the opening quarter which capped off a 10 play/45-yard scoring drive and gave Peru a 15-0 lead. The run was set up by a spectacular diving catch by carpenter on fourth down to move the chains. The Indians would tack on two more scores
in the second quarter as Ryley O’Connell threw touchdown passes to Carpenter (22yards) and Brennan (16-yards). Peru headed to the intermission with a commanding 28-0 lead over the Sentinels. The second half was much of the same for Ticonderoga as they couldn’t get much going against the stout Peru defense. O’Connell fired his fourth touchdown pass of the game to Devin Blake with 9:16 left in the third quarter. Halfback Alex Palmer then closed out the scoring for the Indians with two touchdown runs of 68 and 53 yards, respectively. Carpenter, who is also one of the league’s top place-kickers, booted four extra-points for the Indians. O’Connell finished 16-for-26 passing with 4 touchdowns and 228 yards. Alex Palmer led Peru’s rushing attack with 136 yards on the day. Carpenter hauled in 7 passes, good for 163 yards for the winners. Reynolds and Carpenter chipped in with interceptions on defense for Peru, who will host the Moriah Vikings (0-1) on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. “We have to be a little more crisp on offense,” O’Connell said. “There were a few times that we did actually sputter-out. We need to stay out of long yardage situations against a good Moriah football team. Defensively, we have to continue to fly to the ball like we did against Ticonderoga.” The Sentinels will regroup and host the Beekmantown Eagles (1-0) on Friday night at 7:30 p.m. from Sentinel Field. ■
Beekmantown, PHS post season opening shutouts LEFT: Beekmantown’s Ryan Bone drops into pass protection on the offensive line against AuSable Valley linebacker Trent Gravelle in the opening week of CVAC football. Photo by Keith Lobdell
RIGHT: Plattsburgh High running back Lestyn Williams ran for two touchdowns as the Hornets defeated Saranac Lake.
Photo by DJ Alexander
By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
CLINTONVILLE | The first-week jitters were noticeable as the Beekmantown Eagles and AuSable Valley Patriots opened the CVAC regular season Aug. 31 at AuSable Valley High School. It was Beekmantown who was able to overcome them first, as Brandon Belrose sparked his team with a long kickoff return and Connor McGinnis ran the ball in from 23 yards out to plays later as the Eagles would go on to defeat the Patriots, 41-0. “I feel the team did extremely well but there are always things you can work on,” said Belrose, who finished the game with 95 passing yards and a touchdown while running for an effective 14 yards with two scores. “We started off with plenty of mistakes, but I think our first touchdown calmed us all down,” said Alex Trudeau, who had 24 receiving yards and an interception on defense. “This was a great way to start,” said McGinnis, who also
caught a touchdown pass to go with his rushing score in the win. “We want to build off everything we were able to do in this game.” Belrose’s first touchdown came on a seven yard quarterback sneak after connecting with Trudeau on a 24 yard pass play to give the Eagles a 14-0 lead to start the second quarter. Trudeau’s interception later in the quarter set up Belrose on his second scoring run, this time from 4 yards out. Cade Preston connected with Trudeau on a 10 yards scoring strike to open scoring in the second half, while McGinnis caught a 12 yard pass from Belrose and Garrett Stevens scored on a 68 yard run play to close out the scoring. “Our staff has been coaching long enough to know how to use the numbers we have to our advantage,” Beekmantown coach Jamie Lozier said. “On defense, we had a lot of new kids with little varsity experience and they played well. We are excited for this year and we have some high hopes. If we can stay healthy and clean up the mental mistakes, we will have a good season.” Stevens’ one carry led all Beekmantown rushers, as eight
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backs carried the ball to total 190 yards with four touchdowns. Belrose (95) and Preston (27) combined for 122 passing yards with each throwing a scoring pass. For the Patriots, their best drive came in the third quarter, when they were able to move the ball 25 yards in nine plays. On the fourth down play, the punt snap went over the punters head, and the Eagles recovered the ball at the Patriot 16, using the turnover to score points. “The one thing is these kids did not give up,” AuSable coach Ed McAllister said. “They played hard and through the end of the game.” The Eagles travel to Ticonderoga Friday for a matchup with the Sentinels at 7:30 p.m., while the Patriots start the season with a homestand, hosting the Plattsburgh High Hornets Friday at 7:30 p.m.
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The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 21
Fourth quarter score lifts Chiefs over Vikings By Steve Criss
SPORTS REPORTER
MINEVILLE | Luke Maye lofted a 15-yard touchdown pass over-the-middle to Isaac Garman with 8:54 remaining in the fourth quarter as the visiting Saranac Chiefs defeated the Moriah Vikings 15-8 on Friday night at Linney Field. The matchup featured last year’s Class C champions in Saranac against the defending Class D champion in Moriah. The battle between the Chiefs and the Vikings did not disappoint as the game was a good old-fashioned, hard-hitting affair. “It was a good first game for sure,” Saranac first-year coach Dylan Everleth said. “Anytime you can go into Moriah and pull out a week one victory against a team like that, it says a lot about our upcoming season for Saranac. Moriah may have been hit hard by graduation but they still have good athletes and they play hard-nosed, physical football.” The Vikings controlled play throughout the first quarter and drew first blood as Braden Swan scored on a six-yard touchdown run with 2:16 remaining. Quarterback Jerin Sargent ran in the conversion to give Moriah an 8-0 lead over the Chiefs. Saranac regrouped in the second stanza and narrowed the gap to 8-7 as Jacob Nolan snared a 14-yard touchdown pass from Maye with 7:46 to go in the first half. Garrett Adolfo booted the point-after for the Chiefs. The third quarter continued to be a back-and-forth game between the two teams until Saranac mounted a long drive towards the end of the third quarter, but a fumble was recovered by the Vikings on their own 1-yard line. The Chiefs defense, led on the line by junior Connor Kiroy and senior Nick LeBeau, started to wear down the Moriah offense as the teams entered the fourth quarter. Maye used his arm and his legs to drive to Chiefs to their winning touchdown. “Luke is such a good athlete and he can hurt our opponents in a lot of ways,” said Everleth. After Garman caught the game-winner from Maye, he also made a nice, tip-toe grab of the two-point conversion pass to make the score 15-8. Saranac’s defense had to stop Moriah on three drives late
Saranac’s Jacob Nolan runs away form the pack as the Chiefs scored a 15-8 win over the Moriah Vikings to open the 2018 CVAC football season. in the contest and finally sealed the victory with less than a minute to go when Andy LeBeau swiped a pass from Sargent. The ball went right through the hands of a Moriah receiver and into LeBeau’s hands around midfield. \The Chiefs took a knee to end the contest. Maye completed 15 of 18 pass attempts for 190 yards, and ran for 43 more. Nolan totaled a game-high 108 receiving yards, while Garman had 72.
» Garrow Cont. from pg. 19
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“We lost all four of our players who were in the back last season so we want to see how our defense works as a unit at the beginning of the year,” McAuliffe said. “Having a good defense early in the year will be a good sign for us.” PHS has been the team that has benefited the most other than the host team in the tournament, making the Class B final four in 2008 and then winning the Class B title in 2015, the only season since 2007 Chazy did not make the final four. Beekmantown also made the state championship game in 2014. With the tournament over, the teams will now focus on the regular season schedule, all having high hopes that success at the Garrow can lead to a trip to Middletown and a chance to return with hardware. ■
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Chazy’s Tanner Conners goes up against Plattsburgh High goalie Adam Darrah during the championship game of the Frankie Garrow Memorial Tournament Sept. 1. The Garrow tournament has been an early season proving ground not only for the host Eagles, but for Plattsburgh High and Beekmantown, who have also made state tournament appearances over the past 11 years.
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Sargent led the Moriah offense, completing three passes for 78 yards. Maddox Blaise had a 58-yard reception for Moriah. Swan led the Vikes with 14 carries and 86 yards on the ground while Dyllon Bougor pitched in with another 38 yards on the ground. Both teams will be back in action on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. as Moriah travels to take on Peru (1-0) and Saranac welcomes Saranac Lake (0-1). ■
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Cuomo foe Nixon brings insurgent message to Saratoga Springs “Sex and the City” actor faces Cuomo in Sept. 13 primary By Pete DeMola EDITOR
SARATOGA SPRINGS | Democratic gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon stumped in Saratoga Springs on Sunday. The brief stop at the Saratoga Arts Center was the furthest north she has steered her insurgent primary campaign since announcing a challenge to Gov. Andrew Cuomo in March. The “Sex and the City” actor delivered comments to an energetic, sign-waving crowd of about 120 people who were shuttled from a narrow hallway to a larger room shortly before the event. Nixon sailed through a progressive wish list, including full funding for public education, single-payer health care, voting reform, giving driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants, universal rent control and criminal justice reforms. The self-described democratic socialist repeatedly excoriated the governor for not being suitably progressive, accusing him of “governing like a Republican.” She repeatedly highlighted his governing partnership with the now-dissolved IDC, a group of breakaway Senate Democrats who caucused with the GOP until their return to the Democratic fold earlier this year. “Andrew Cuomo handed over to the Republican Party of New York the ability to block almost every progressive piece of legislation we have had in this state,” Nixon said, citing campaign finance reform, public education funding and the Dream Act as examples. The state Assembly has passed the New York Health Act numerous times and is just one co-sponsor away in the Senate of having a majority. Nixon repeatedly stressed the need to flesh out Democratic ranks, and as governor, she pledged to sign the bill. She also criticized Cuomo as a “corporate Democrat,” citing his lack of small
dollar donations.
UPSTATE AGAIN OVERLOOKED
Last week’s debate between Cuomo and Nixon was widely criticized for a lack of emphasis on upstate issues. (Nixon has since challenged the governor to a second, upstate-only event.) But despite the upstate swing which also took Nixon to Syracuse, Albany, Rochester, Ithaca and Schenectady, those issues again largely took a backseat during her half-hour stemwider. Nixon did not mention economic development, rural transportation, shared services and local government in her remarks, and largely glossed over upstate infrastructure needs and environmental programming. The first-time candidate did, however, criticize the governor’s two percent tax cap, referring to it as an “austerity budget” balanced on the backs of the state’s most economically disadvantaged residents. “He has starved our cities and our towns and our rural areas of the most basic services,” Nixon said. On environmental issues, the candidate called for a “polluter’s tax” she said would generate $7 billion in one year and subsequently “turbo-change” a shift to renewable energy that would create 100,000 jobs statewide. Following the event, Nixon cited broadband, marijuana legalization and low milk prices crippling the state’s dairy industry issues important for rural voters. “We need to do a much better job supporting our farmers,” said Nixon. “Certainly our dairy farmers are in a real crisis right now with the falling prices of milk. I think we need to do a better job supporting them; for local banks, to have more pressure put on them to fund local farmers, and I think we should really consider when you’re talking about the multi-state dairy co-ops that are hogging the lion’s share of the industry, I think we need to think about putting caps on milk production so that we’re not just driving the price of milk down and driving our dairy farmers out of business.”
WAVE PREDICTED
Unlike Cuomo, who has made attacking President Trump the centerpiece of his bid
Cynthia Nixon, who is challenging Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary on Sept. 13, stumped in Saratoga Springs on Sunday. Photo by Pete DeMola for a third term, Nixon gave the president scant mention. Electing progressive Democrats in November is an opportunity for “real foundational change,” she said. “I am tired of California getting all the glory,” Nixon said. “New York is the rightful seat of the Resistance.” A Quinnipiac University poll released in July revealed Cuomo leading Nixon 59 to 23 percent. Nixon acknowledged she faces a “David and Goliath” moment in her effort to dislodge Cuomo in the Sept. 13 primary. But she cited what she said was surging Democratic voter registration alongside comefrom-behind victories like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez over Rep. Joe Crowley earlier this summer as evidence that a progressive moment is brewing, and that her support
may be underestimated. “This is why they didn’t see us coming,” she said. “This is a real moment.” The Cuomo campaign batted away Nixon’s criticisms. “No matter how many times Cynthia Nixon reads the same scripted lines, she cannot turn fiction into fact,” said Abbey Collins, campaign spokesman. “Governor Cuomo has the most progressive record of any governor in the nation — passing marriage equality, toughest gun safety laws, comprehensive paid family leave, a $15 minimum wage and banning fracking. The governor is focused on results. We’ll leave the baseless election year rhetoric to others.” ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read this story in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
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The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 23
Armed officers for city school district gets council approval Plattsburgh Common Council votes 4-2 for two school resource officers By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
PLATTSBURGH | The Plattsburgh Common Council has approved a resolution allowing Mayor Colin Read to sign a contract with the Plattsburgh City School District for two armed school resource officers (SRO). The vote on Thursday was the final administrative step in the district’s plan to hire two retired law enforcement officers through the Plattsburgh City Police Department to serve the school. The Plattsburgh City School Board of Education unanimously approved the contract on Aug. 23. Plattsburgh City Police Chief Levi Ritter has been tasked with hiring the two peace officers that will serve as the district’s SROs. They’re expected to receive an annual salary of $30,000 each, and according to Superintendent Jay Lebrun, the district is planning to have them start in late September.
WHAT WILL THE OFFICERS BE TASKED WITH?
Plattsburgh City Police Chief Levi Ritter read a laundry list of tasks that each school resource officer will be responsible for, beyond student safety and surveillance. According to Ritter, the officers will: • Patrol and observe all areas of the school buildings and grounds • Be visible and available to students, faculty and administration • Keep the peace and help maintain a safe and orderly school community • Develop and maintain positive and open relationships with students, faculty and parents • Present educational programs to students on confl ict resolution, restorative justice, crime awareness and anger management • Present educational programs to school employees, parents and school board members • Build relationships by being a liaison between the Plattsburgh City Police Department and the school district • Survey the needs of schools and address crimes and disorder problems, gang and drug activities effecting or occurring in or around the school district’s schools • Assist schools with security concerns and identify physical changes in environment that may reduce crime in or around the school • Develop or expand crime prevention efforts for students • Educate potential school-age victims in crime prevention and safety • Develop or expand community justice initiatives for students • Assist in developing school policy that addresses crime with recommended procedural change where appropriate • Assist schools in meeting requirements mandated by New York State law • Take appropriate law enforcement action with regard to any criminal activities he/she observes or that are reported directly to him/her • Investigate other emergency situations and summon aid and assistance as needed • District camera monitoring, review and proper placement for coverage • Participate in district safety meetings • Provide security suggestions and training for transportation department bus drivers • Conduct a threat assessment for students prone to violence • Assist school social worker and psychologist with distraught students • Respond to active shooter events in accordance with Plattsburgh City Police Department active shooter response policy ■
The Plattsburgh Common Council approved a resolution allowing Mayor Colin Read to sign a contract with the Plattsburgh City School District for two armed resource officers. Pictured is city resident Ira Barbell talking to the council about the proposal. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo
POLICIES SHOULD BE ‘DRIVEN BY SOUND DATA, NOT COLLECTIVE FEARS’
Resident and early member of the city’s Citizen’s Finance Advisory Committee, Ira Barbell, told the council that understood why the school board of education chose to look at armed officers — they want to demonstrate to the community that they’re making the school safer. But most schools don’t face any serious threats of violence, he said. “I recognize that the recent school shootings in the past couple of years are incredibly traumatic,” said Barbell. He went on to say that every fear and concern from parents with children in school is being “amplified by around the clock reporting that continues in our news coverage.” “But is the hiring of school resource officers the best strategy to improve school safety? That should be the top question that we’re asking ourselves,” he said. “Good public policy should be driven by sound data, not the collective fears of a community.” Barbell said research shows that little violent crime happens in schools, and the jury’s still out on whether or not SROs have a concrete effect on school safety, citing recent shootings that occurred at schools despite them having SROs on staff. “If we can save one child’s life by having an officer there, it’s well worth it,” Councilman Peter Ensel (Ward 4), a professor at SUNY Plattsburgh and husband of a teacher, said in response to Barbell’s comments.
Since the deadly shooting at Columbine High School in 1999, more than 215,000 students in 217 schools have experienced gun violence while at school, the Washington Post reported. At least 141 children, educators and others have been killed and another 287 injured during those assaults. This year alone, there have been 17 mass shootings at schools, according to the Washington Post. At least three incidents have occurred in New York state schools, where gun laws are some of the most strict in the country. The most recent was an incident at Mattituck JuniorSenior High School, Suffolk County, where a 28 year old man with a .22-caliber rifle shot a round through a school window in 2009, injuring one student. Councilor Rachelle Armstrong (Ward 1), a retired Beekmantown Central School District teacher, told The Sun that her experience working with an SRO was positive. “He was a presence, and a positive one,” Armstrong said of the school’s former SRO. “He saw students as kids, not as clients. He had the same disposition toward kids that anyone in the educational field would have. He understood them in a passionate way. “He wasn’t there on the lookout for problems, he was there to help build a positive environment for the kids.” ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read the full article, visit suncommunitynews.com.
Bulletin Board
Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@ suncommunitynews.com to place a listing.
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BENEFITS
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
PUBLIC MEETINGS
WESTPORT - Motorcycle Ride, Saturday, September 15, 2018. Registration 11:00 AM at the Westport Heritage House, Main St. Westport, NY Kickstands up 12:00 PM. $20.00 Bike, $25.00 W/Passenger. Cookout following ride at the Westport Federated Church, 6486 Main St., (Stone Church), Westport, NY. Fee includes cookout. Registration form is available at westportfederatedonline church.org. For information call 518-524-8826. Ride sponsored by Westport Federated Church for the benefit of the Medical Assistance Program (MAP) Gas Card/Ferry Pass Project. Cookout is open to the public $10.00 adults, $5.00 children 12 & under, pre-school free. In case of rain both the motorcycle ride and the cookout will be delayed until Saturday, Sept. 22.
PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm Marie Marvull 518743-1672
PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Adult Chidlren meeting every Monday 7pm-8pm & Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Thursday 7:30pm8:30pm at United Methodist Church. Call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.
COMMUNITY OUTREACH ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 4:30 pm-6pm.
PUBLIC MEETINGS CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Call 1-888-425-2666 or 518561-0838. ELIZABETHTOWN – Al-Anon Family Group meetings every Sunday 4:00pm-5pm, Board Room in Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838 PLATTSBURGH - Adult Children of Alcoholics meeting Wednesdays at 8:00 pm at Auditorium B at CVPH. More information can be found at www.adultchildren.or or by emailing adkacoa@mail.com PLATTSBURGH - Celebrate Recovery Meeting every Monday, 6:00 pm, Turnpike Wesleyan Church. call 518-566-8764.
PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street. 7:30pm-8:30pm. Call 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. WESTPORT - The Westport Central School District Board of Education will hold its regular monthly meeting on Thursday, September 13, 2018 at 6 PM in the library. Agenda items will include a preliminary K-12 student enrollment report, introduction of new employees with a brief meet and greet reception, a preview of monthly snapshot reports on instructional programs and support operations, a status report on the voting process associated with the prospective merger and any other business that may come before the Board. Community members and interested others are welcome to attend.
DINNERS • MEETINGS • BINGO • EXERCISE CLASSES • CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS • SENIOR ACTIVITES • BOOK SIGNINGS • BLOOD DONATION • ARTS & CRAFTS & MORE
24 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
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Chazy Lake receives state designation Inland waterway designation opens doors for grant opportunities By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
DANNEMORA | Chazy Lake, a popular fishing spot in the western side of the county, has received official designation from the
state as an inland waterway. The new designation will allow the Town of Dannemora to apply for economic and environmental planning grants through the state Department of State’s Local Waterfront Revitalization Program (LWRP). State Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury) sponsored legislation supporting the designation in the Senate, and in the Assembly, Assemblyman Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay) backed the proposal. The legislation passed the state Senate in June, and Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed it into law last month. Town of Dannemora Super-
visor William Chase requested the state lawmakers move forward the proposal last August. “Home to some of the most beautiful natural scenery in New York State, Chazy Lake plays a vital role in tourism and the overall well-being of the North Country economy,” Jones said in a statement. “The addition of Chazy Lake as an inland waterway allows the surrounding communities to better maintain, protect and even revitalize this serene natural resource.” According to Little’s office, access to the LWRP can significantly increase a community’s ability to attract private and public re-
Saranac Lake man arrested for assault
PLATTSBURGH | Clinton County Sheriff’s Deputies arrested a Saranac Lake man last weekend for an alleged assault. Roger L. Dewey, 61, was arrested on Aug. 25 after sheriff’s deputies responded to a domestic incident in the Town of Platts-
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PLATTSBURGH | A Pennsylvania man was arrested in Plattsburgh by Clinton County Sheriff’s Deputies earlier this week for allegedly driving while intoxicated (DWI). Sheriff’s deputies arrested Andrew P. Steck, 21, after he was stopped for speeding in the Plattsburgh area. It is alleged that Steck was in an intoxicated condition at the time of the stop. Steck was charged with aggravated DWI: per se-BAC .18 percent or more-no prior, a misdemeanor; driving while intoxicated, first offense, a misdemeanor; and speed violation exceeding 55 mph, a traffic infraction. Steck was transported to the sheriff’s office for processing and released on appearance tickets requiring him to appear in the Town of Plattsburgh Court on a future date. ■
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burgh. It’s alleged that Dewey assaulted a female victim resulting in injury and violated an active order of protection. Dewey was charged with assault in the second degree, a class D felony; criminal contempt in the first degree, a class E felony; and aggravated family offense, a class E felony. Dewey was also charged with aggravated family offense due to him having a previous conviction for aggravated harassment in the second degree in 2016. Dewey was transported to the sheriff’s office for processing and arraigned in the Town of Plattsburgh Court. He was remanded to the Clinton County Correctional Facility in lieu of $10,000 cash or $20,000 fully secured bond and is set to appear in court again on a future date. ■
Pennsylvania man arrested for DWI in Plattsburgh
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sources to advance a community’s vision and respect the unique cultural and natural characteristics of its waterfront. Benefits to a community preparing an LWRP include clear direction, technical assistance, state and federal consistency, and financial assistance, including state and federal grants, according to the New York Department of State. “Protecting the lake while improving recreational opportunities has many benefits,” said Little in a statement. “This designation creates an opportunity for the community to access resources to help them plan the lake’s future.” ■
Check out suncommunitynews.com/events for more events like these.
Calendar of Events I
To list your event call (518) 873-6368 ext. 133 or email calendar@suncommunitynews.com. Please submit events at least two weeks prior to the event day. Some print fees may apply.
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SEPT. 8
Wilmington » Festival Of
Colors held at the tee-ball field on Springfield Road; 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. The event features local artists, produce growers, bakers, homemade crafters, and a Battle of the Cupcakes, a live children’s comedy, live music, arts demonstrations, food vendors, and many children’s activities. Free Admission
SEPT. 8
Plattsburgh » “Fire Maidens of
Outer Space” Film Screening held at Newman Center; 7:00 p.m. See a rare 16mm print projected on the big screen, famous for the line: “Mirror mirror on the wall, who’s the firiest maiden of them all?” Free Admission (including food and soda), donations welcome.
SEPT. 8
Plattsburgh » Free Dance
Lessons Lessons held at at held
Plattsburgh’s Recreation Center; 6:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Hosted by the Plattsburgh’s USA Dance chapter. No dance experience or dance partner necessary. Both singles and couples are welcome. Attire is “dressy casual”, and clean, dry shoes are required on the dance floor. Free and open to the public.
SEPT. 10
Plattsburgh » Clinton County
Historical Association Presentation held at Lake Forest Senior Living Center; 4:00 p.m. Please join the CCHA for “Not Just a Sunday Man: The Civil War Story of Reverend Charles Luther Hagar, Chaplain of the 118th New York Volunteers”, presented by Helen Nerska’s. Free and open to the public.
SEPT. 12
Plattsburgh » Free Square
Dance Lesson held at North Country Squares,; 7:00 p.m. -9:00 p.m. join us for a -9:00 p.m. Come Come j< free squared, square dancing lesson. free No needed. No experience experiE Partners Partners and Singles welcome. For more welco info info!518-561-7617.
music, local breweries, lots of local farms and live demonstrations! Free Admission.
SEPT. 16
SEPT. 8TH
Colony Fall Revue held at Keene Valley Congregational Church; 4:00 p.m. Featuring four talented post-season young singers and a pianist in a show titled “Hey Big Spenders”. It features the music of Broadway composer Cy Coleman, including tunes from shows like Barnum, Sweet Charity and many others. Suggested donation $10, students free. Sponsored by East Branch Friends of the Arts. Details: 518-576-9739 or eastbranchfriendsofthearts@gmail. com.
F R I DAY
W E D N E S DAY
NOW - SEPT.
Plattsburgh » CVPH Summer
Concert Series held at CVPH Front Lawn; 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. The open air concerts will be held the
T U E S DAY
21 SEPT.
held at
Malone Adult Center 14906 NY-30, Malone
26 SEPT.
held at
SCENIC BOAT RIDE DEMENTIA MEMORY CAFÉ held at
11 School Lane, Au Sable Forks, NY
Lake George Steamboat Co., 57 Beach Rd., Lake George
Friday: 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Wednesday: 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or other form of dementia can be challenging and often overwhelming. We invite you to attend our Support Group. This program is supported by a grant from The New York State Department of Health. Free event. Details: 518-873-3810 or www.wehelpcaregivers.com 194452
Caregiver support initiative’s memory café provides a gathering place for friends with Alzheimer’s disease or other dementias and their caregivers and families to relax and enjoy social events, refreshments, and entertainment. This program is supported by a grant from the New York State Department of Health. Free and open to the public. Details: (518) 564-4322 or www. wehelpcaregivers.com 192795
W E D N E S DAY
W E D N E S DAY
FRANKLIN COUNTY 21 26 DEMENTIA AUG. SEPT. CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP
DEMENTIA CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP
DEMENTIA CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP held at
Ethan Allen Library at Elderwood, Ticonderoga Wednesday: 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Tuesday: 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
26 SEPT.
DEMENTIA MEMORY CAFÉ FEATURING MUSICAL ENTERTAINER MITCHELL WILLETTE held at
Turnpike Wesleyan Church 2224 Military Tnpk., Plattsburgh Wednesday: 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or other form of dementia can be challenging and often overwhelming. We invite you to attend our Support Group. This program is supported by a grant from The New York State Department of Health. Free event. Details: (518) 481-1534 or www.wehelpcaregivers.com 192794
Caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or other form of dementia can be challenging and often overwhelming. We invite you to attend our Support Group. This program is supported by a grant from The New York State Department of Health. Free event. Details: 518-873-3810 or www.wehelpcaregivers.com 194450
Clinton County’s Memory Café with the Caregiver Support Initiative provides a gathering place for friends with Alzheimer’s disease or other dementias and their caregivers and families to relax and enjoy social events, refreshments, and entertainment. Free and open to the public. For details: (518) 564-4322 or www.wehelpcaregivers.com
192793
Fire Maidens of Outer Space” Film Screening held at Newman Center, Plattsburgh
smoking or glass containers are permitted. For details visit cvph.org/ About-CVPH/Summer-ConcertSeries.
Keene Valley » Seagle Music
.... s········· ..·················· SEPT. 15
Westport » l1 Adirondack A Harvest fFestival held at F Essex County E Fairgrounds; F 12:00 p.m. - 6:00 ti p.m. Come spend p.l the afternoon with the your family and your friends and celebrate friend the ver'} very best harvest the the Champlain Ornmpluir Valley Region has to offer, offer, f,featuring live has to
second Thursday of each month. The concerts are free of charge and open to all. Lawn chairs and picnic blankets are welcome. No alcohol,
Classifieds www.suncommunitynews.com
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Conservation District Manager Position- Essex County Soil and Water Conservation District is accepting applications for District Manager until September 13th. Information can be requested at essexswcd@westelcom.com or call 518-962-8225.
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7094
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Cleaners Needed $500/ Weekly. Two Days Weekly: Monday and Friday Time Schedule: 10 AM -12PM Email: job881@outlook.com
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DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements. Custody and support petitions. - 518-2740380
SAFE BATHROOM Renovations in just one day! Update to safety now. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free inhome consultation: 844-782-7096
Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 518-650-1110 Today!
SAWMILLS from only $4397.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. InVstock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 800-567-0404 Ext.300
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DIRECTOR OF FINANCE DIRECTOR OF FINANCE (Controller): The Adirondack Mountain Reserve - Ausable Club, a historic private club located in St. Huberts (Keene Valley), NY, is seeking a Director of Finance (Controller). The Director of Finance will be responsible for directing the financial operations of the club; supervise the accounting functions and directly assist the General Manager on all strategic matters relating to budget management, cost-benefit analysis, forecasting needs and internal controls. Position is open due to a pending retirement and has not been open in over 30 years. This is a full-time annual salaried position with excellent benefits. Very competitive salary commensurate with experience. Job preview at https://tinyurl.com/AusableClub. Interested candidates may send a resume and letter of interest, including salary requirements, via email to employment@ausableclub.org. No phone calls please. The Ausable Club is an EOE.
MORIAH CENTER, NY In Home Health Care needed, CNA/Nurse preferred on site training provided. All shifts available, Rate based on experience. Contact Dave or Gina 518-419-0150 Leave Message. Possible Drug Test. HELP WANTED LOCAL COMMON WEALTH HOME FASHIONS is looking for a full time employee to work in office and warehouse environments as needed. Hrs. 7am – 3:30pm Monday-Friday. Call Sue Trombly for Interview 518-963-8145.
NeedA Dependable Car? CheckOutTheClassifieds. Call1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
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52 Champlain Ave.
195404
Handsome Westport Village Victorian w/80’ of frontage on Lake Champlain!!! 3 BRS/2BA. Large front parlor w/hardwood floors. Roomy kitchen w/original pressed tin ceiling and walk-in pantry. Family room w/glass doors opening out onto a deck facing the open lake. Period staircase w/ turned balusters opening onto a large upstairs hall w/built-in clothes closets. Second floor master bedroom w/lake view. 2 smaller upstairs bedrooms.
Full bath w/shower on each floor. Roomy 7’ wide wrap around porch on west & south sides! New Roof, two-car garage (22’ x 24’). Spacious .73 acre lot. Village water/ sewer. Central location, walking or biking distance to village shops, library, park, school & marina.
$239,000
Lauren Murphy, Real Estate Broker/Owner
MLS #160369A
P.O. Box 351 • 7 School St. • Essex, NY 12936 • 518-963-7876 • essexrealestate@westelcom.com
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HORSES FOR SALE Buckskin mare, reg Beautiful 9yr. horse Pretty 8yr. daistered Quarterrk brown mare, YOUR halter traSTUFF ined. $500ea.QUICK OBO Call 518-846-7751 CADNET
WESTPORT, NY
Positions available in Schroon Lake. Responsibilities include: assessing individual medical needs; coordinating medical services; providing staff training on health related issues; and ensuring compliance with medication policies. RN/LPN license to practice in NY required. Experience with people with intellectual and developmental disabilities preferred. Flexible Monday through Friday work schedule. Competitive salary and exceptional benefits package.
COMMUNITY
Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@suncommunitynews.com to place a classified. UNDER $1,000
FEATURED PROPERTY
RN/LPNS NEEDED
Send resume and cover letter to: Human Resource Office Mountain Lake Services 10 St. Patrick’s Place Port Henry, NY 12974 (518) 546-7721 • www.mountainlakeservices.org EOE
HELP WANTED LOCAL
The BG/NC Sun | September 8, 2018 • 25
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Heritage Properties of the Adirondacks, LLC
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Local Job Openings Near You WITHERBEE, NY • $59,900 • MLS #R163679A 16 LAMOS LANE: Affordable, well maintained home, move in condition, 3BR/1BA, updated kitchen, enclosed porch, newer oversized garage, town water & sewer.
70 PRESBURY POINT: Vintage 1920s Lakeside Cottage, 181’ on Lake Champlain, 86 ac., 4BR/1.5BA, detached 2-car garage, much more. Private association, by appointment.
Sue Ann Carter, Real Estate Broker/Owner (518) 834-7608 • sueannrealtor@yahoo.com
Bruce Pushee, Associate Real Estate Broker (518) 873-6400 • bruce@friedmanrealty.net
Lauren Murphy, Licensed Real Estate Broker (518) 963-7876 • essexrealestate@westelcom.com
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CALL 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 TO REACH OVER 31,000 HOMES PER WEEK!
WWW.HERITAGEPROPERTIESADK.COM
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!
THIS SPOT AVAILABLE FOR $25 PER WEEK And runs in 4 Editions of The Sun in Clinton County & northern Essex County reaching over 31,000 homes per week
CALL 518-873-6368 EXT. 106
9-8-18 • 195534
Having an Open House?
WESTPORT, NY • $469,000 • MLS #R163600A
195536
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195538
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KEESEVILLE, NY • $229,900 • MLS #163264 AUGUR LAKE SUMMER CAMP: 4bd, 1ba seasonal camp on level lot at Augur Lake. Drilled well, septic and excellent rental history. Dock and most furnishings will stay. 195537
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26 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
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WESTPORT-SINGLE BDRM, GRD. FLOOR Apt., Easy Parking, $475/mo., Available 9/15/18. Security Req., No Smoking/No Pets. 518-962-4538
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REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS $25 PER MONTH INCLUDES HEADING, LOGO, CONTACT INFO (2 LINES) (Real Estate Classifieds will appear on the same page beneath the directory.) CONTACT SHANNON CHRISTIAN 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 shannonc@suncommunitynews.com
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Call now and we’ll rush you a FREE Call: (518) 650-1110 www.dental50plus.com/44 BLACK BROOK 1 Black Pine Harbour, 15 New (VOTE FOR ONE) www.dental50plus.com/nypress Information Kit with all the details. Information Kit with all the details. TFK legacy, MB17-NM003Ec LLC. Filed 18 about N. our programs THE INDEPENDENCE HampshireInsurance St.,PolicyPlatts* Car Donation Foundation Brook d/b/a Wheels Town For Wishes.Hall, To learn more Insurance Policy P150NY MB17-NM003Ec P150NY or financial information, visitwww.wheelsforwishes.org. 6129 195444 6129 195445 195674 Main St., AuSable Forks with SSNY on 5/31/18. PARTY: burgh 2 Black Brook Town (WARD 2) 1 & 2 OLVA 1. TOWN COUNCILPER- Office: Clinton County. SON TOWN OF PERU SSNY LEGALS Garage, 3385 Silver Lake designated as School, LEGALS 4919 South LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS Rd., Saranac agent for process & Catherine St., Platts- (VOTE FOR ONE) 5059 South Catherine FAMILY CARRYOUT, CHAMPLAIN 1, 2 & 3 burgh NOTICE OF FORMATION NOTICE OF FORMATION Mary R. Dyer, Democrat- shall mail to: 27 Seth LLC. Filed with SSNY on OF LIMITED LIABILITY OF Clauss Communica- LLC Articles of Org. filed Champlain Town Offices, (WARD 3) 1 & 2 Platts- ic Commissioner Grego- Square Plattsburgh NY COMPANY (LLC) 7/25/18. Office: Clinton tions LLC. Arts. of Org. NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 729 State Rt. 9, Cham- burgh Field House, 167 ry B. Campbell, Republi- 12901. Purpose: to opCounty. SSNY designat- Name: Beartown Tree 8/23/2018. Office in plain filed with Secy. of State can Commissioner erate a franchised ChickRugar St., Plattsburgh Farm, LLC Articles of Or- of NY (SSNY) on ed as agent for process Clinton Co. SSNY desig. CHAZY 1 & 2 Chazy fil-A, and to exercise all NC-9/1-9/8/18 194177 (WARD 4) 1 & 2 United ganization filed with the & shall mail to: 438 8/20/18. Office location: agent of LLC whom pro- Town Hall, 9631 State other powers necessary Methodist Church, 127 State Route 3 Suite 200 Secretary of State of Clinton County. SSNY cess may be served. Rt. 9, Chazy Beekman St., Platts- NOTICE OF QUALIFICA- to, or reasonably conTION OF ROSS EX- nected with, the operaPlattsburgh NY 12901. New York (SSNY) on designated as agent of SSNY shall mail process CLINTON 1 Clinton burgh PRESS LLC Appl. for tion of the franchised 05/10/2018 Office Loca- LLC upon whom pro- to 57 Smithfield Blvd., Town Hall, 23 Smith St., (WARD 5) 1 & 2 Clinton Purpose: any lawful Auth. filed with Secy. of Chick-fil-A tion: Clinton County. The NC-08/18-09/22/2018Plattsburgh, NY 12901, Churubusco cess against it may be Restaurant County Gov't. Ctr. 1st FL SSNY is designated as served. SSNY shall mail which is also the princi- DANNEMORA 1 & 3 Lobby, 137 Margaret State of NY (SSNY) on 6TC-193684 Business 07/24/18. Office loca- NC-08/18-09/22/2018agent of the LLC upon process to: The LLC, pal business location. QWL Activity Center, St., Plattsburgh tion: Clinton County. 6TC-193692 whom process against it 1889 Lexington Ave., Purpose: Any lawful pur- 1156 State Rt. 374, Dan- (WARD 6) 1 & 2 Clinton LLC formed in Delaware may be served. SSNY Apt. 3, NY, NY 10035. pose. nemora County Gov't. Ctr. 1st FL NOTICE OF FORMATION (DE) on 02/06/18. SSNY shall mail a copy of any Purpose: any lawful ac- NC-9/1-10/6/18-194840 2 Lyon Mountain Fire Mtg. Rm., 137 Margaret OF LIMITED LIABILITY process to the LLC at: tivity. designated as agent of Station, 9 Fire House St., Plattsburgh COMPANY (LLC) 58-60 407 Beartown Road, NC-9/1-10/6/18-194658 JRLPM LLC. Filed with Rd., Lyon Mountain THE CLINTON COUNTY LLC upon whom pro- NOTICE OF FORMATION OLIVETTI PLACE, LLC. West Chazy, NY 12992. BOARD OF ELECTIONS cess against it may be SSNY on 5/31/18. Of- ELLENBURG 1 Ellenburg OF The Blue Store, LLC Articles of Organization served. SSNY shall mail Articles of Organization Purpose: To engage in DAD'S PLUMBING & fice: Clinton County. Town Hall, 13 Brandy ANNOUNCES THAT THE filed with the Secretary process to c/o Corporaany lawful act or activity. Brook Rd., Ellenburg STATE AND LOCAL PRIPROJECT MANAGE- SSNY designated as filed with the Secretary of State of New York NC-08/25-09/29/2018MARY ELECTION WILL tion Service Co., 80 of State of New York MENT, LLC Articles of agent for process & Center (SSNY) on 06/12/2018. State St., Albany, NY 6TC-193974 BE HELD IN CLINTON Org. filed NY Sec. of shall mail to: 1024 Mili- MOOERS 1 & 2 Mooers (SSNY) on 7/19/2018 Office in Clinton County, tary Turnpike Platts- Gov't. Center/Fire Sta- COUNTY ON THURSDAY 12207-2543. DE addr. of Office Location: Clinton State (SSNY) 8/13/2018. NY. The SSNY is desig251 Little Falls Dr., LLC: 13TH, NOTICE OF FORMATION Office in Clinton Co. burgh NY 12901. Pur- tion, 2508 State Rt. 11, SEPTEMBER County. The SSNY is nated as agent of the Wilmington, DE 19808. designated as agent of Mooers 2018 BETWEEN THE OF LIMITED LIABILITY SSNY desig. agent of pose: any lawful LLC upon whom proof Form. filed with Cert. PERU 1, 2, 3 & 4 St. Au- HOURS OF 12 P.M. AND COMPANY (LLC) LLC whom process may NC-08/18-09/22/2018the LLC upon whom cess against it may be gustine's Parish Center, 9 P.M. THE POSITIONS Secy. of State, Div. of process against it may 6TC-193690 Name: By the Brook, be served. SSNY shall served. SSNY shall mail Corps., John G. 3030 Main St., Peru TO BE VOTED ON ARE LLC Articles of Organiza- mail process to 2733 be served. SSNY shall a copy of any process to Townsend Bldg., 401 tion filed with the Sec. of State Route 3, Cadyville, POLLING SITES FOR PLATTSBURGH1, 2, 4, 5 THE FOLLOWING: mail a copy of any prothe LLC at: 203 Harbor THE DEMOCRATIC PAR- Federal St., Ste. 4, cess to the LLC at: 21 THE THURSDAY, & 7 Plattsburgh Town State of NY (SSNY) on NY 12918, which is also View Dr., St. Albans, VT Dover, DE 19901. Pur- Starfish Way, PlattsSEPTEMBER 13TH PRI- Hall, 151 Banker Rd., TY: 11/29/2017. Location: the principal business 05478. Purpose: Any Truckload/less burgh, NY 12901. PurPlattsburgh 1. GOVERNOR - COUN- pose: Clinton County. The des- location. Purpose: Any MARY ELECTION lawful purpose. ignated agent of the LLC lawful purpose. The following polling 3 South Plattsburgh Fire TY WIDE (VOTE FOR than truckload freight pose: To engage in any NC-08/18-09/22/2018delivery/trucking/delivupon whom process sites will be open in Dept., 4105 State Rt. 22, ONE) NC-8/25-9/29/18lawful act or activity. 6TC-193757 Plattsburgh 2. LIEUTENANT GOVER- ery logistics. against it may be served Clinton County from 12 194288 NC-09/1/-10/6/18NC-08/04-09/08/20186 Cumberland Head Fire NOR COUNTY WIDE to engage in any lawful P.M. to 9 P.M. 194874 6TC-192190 (VOTE FOR ONE) act or activity is: Myndi TOWN/CITY DISTRICTS Station, 38 Firehouse NOTICE OF FORMATION Lane, Plattsburgh 3. ATTORNEY GENERAL Almodovar, 603 Bull OF LIMITED LIABILITY LOCATION NOTICE OF FORMATION S & S Professional COUNTY WIDE (VOTE Hood Cleaning Service, ALTONA 1 Altona Hall, SARANAC 1 Saranac Fire OF LIMITED LIABILITY Run Road, Ellenburg De- COMPANY (LLC) State Rt. 3277 Station, FOR ONE) pot, NY, 12935. 3124 Miner Farm Rd., NOTICE OF FORMATION COMPANY (LLC) 78-80 Name: Double A FarmLLC, Arts of Org. filed 3, Saranac THE REFORM PARTY: Troubleshooters COURT STREET, LLC. NC-08/25-09/29/2018stead, LLC Articles of Altona with Sec. of State of NY OF 2 Redford Fire Station, 1. ATTORNEY GENERAL AUSABLE 1 & 2 Kee6TC-193836 Articles of Organization Organization filed with (SSNY) 8/9/2018. Cty: LLC. Articles of OrganiRedford Clinton St., 101 COUNTY WIDE (VOTE filed with the Secretary the Secretary of State of seville Civic Center, Clinton. SSNY desig. as zation were filed with of State of New York CC CITY PROPERTIES New York (SSNY) on 1790 Main St., Kee- 3 Dannemora Village Of- FOR ONE) agent upon whom pro- SSNY on 06/19/2018. 40 Emmons St., fices, THE CONSERVATIVE (SSNY) on 04/05/2018. 8/16/2018 Office Loca- seville LLC. Arts. of Org. filed cess against may be Office location: 18 BarnDannemora PARTY: BEEKMANTOWN 1 & 3 Brook Road, Office in Clinton County, tion: Clinton County. The with the SSNY on served & shall mail pro- ham NY. The SSNY is desig- 08/09/18. Office: Clinton SSNY is designated as Point Au Roche Fire Sta- SCHUYLER FALLS 1, 2 1. TOWN COUNCILPER- cess to David Leon Sny- Saranac, NY 12981, tion, 36 Lake Shore Rd., & 3 St. Alexander's Cen- SON TOWN OF PERU der, 30 Rugar Parkway, County of Clinton. SSNY nated as agent of the County. SSNY designat- agent of the LLC upon ter, 1 Church St., Mor- (VOTE FOR ONE) LLC upon whom pro- ed as agent of the LLC whom process against it Plattsburgh Plattsburgh, NY 12901. designated agent of LLC risonville THE INDEPENDENCE upon whom process cess against it may be may be served. SSNY 2 & 4 Beekmantown Fire upon whom process General Purpose. PARTY: may be served. SSNY served. SSNY shall mail against it may be served. shall mail a copy of any Station, 6973 Rt. 22, CITY (WARD 1) 1, 2 & 3 NC-08/18-09/22/2018Pine Harbour, 15 New 1. TOWN COUNCILPER- 6TC-193648 shall mail a copy of proa copy of any process to SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at: West Chazy Hampshire St., Platts- SON TOWN OF PERU cess to LLC, 18 Barnthe LLC at: 203 Harbor process to the LLC, P.O. 373 Trombley Rd Ellen- BLACK BROOK 1 Black (VOTE FOR ONE) TFK legacy, LLC. Filed Brook Road, ham View Dr., St. Albans, VT Box 2059, Plattsburgh, burg Center, NY 12934. Brook Town Hall, 18 N. burgh (WARD 2) 1 & 2 OLVA Mary R. Dyer, Democrat- with SSNY on 5/31/18. Saranac, NY 12981. PurNY 12901. Purpose: Any Purpose: To engage in Main St., AuSable Forks 05478. Purpose: Any School, 4919 South ic Commissioner Grego- Office: Clinton County. pose: any lawful pur2 Black Brook Town lawful purpose. lawful purpose. any lawful act or activity. Catherine St., Platts- ry B. Campbell, Republi- SSNY designated as Garage, 3385 Silver Lake pose. Pub.: NC-08/18-09/22/2018NE-09/08-10/13/2018NC-09/08-10/13/2018burgh can Commissioner Rd., Saranac agent for process & NC-9/1-10/6/18-194870 6TC-193651 6TC-193756 6TC-195593 CHAMPLAIN 1, 2 & 3 (WARD 3) 1 & 2 Platts- NC-9/1-9/8/18 194177 shall mail to: 27 Seth Champlain Town Offices, burgh Field House, 167 Square Plattsburgh NY 729 State Rt. 9, Cham- Rugar St., Plattsburgh 12901. Purpose: to op(WARD 4) 1 & 2 United plain erate a franchised Chick-
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28 • September 8, 2018 | The BG/NC Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
St. Augustine’s 41st Annual
SEPTEMBER 15TH & 16TH Saturday & Sunday 11am - 4pm
Saturday - Parade begins at 11am Sunday - Chicken BBQ Dinner (no beer before Noon)
Games, Prizes and FUN! Ferris Wheel and More Rides. Food and the Famous CAKE WHEEL Wood carving, Dunking Booth, Refreshments & Beer. St. Augustine’s Parish Center - 3030 Main Street, Peru, NY www.peruparish.org
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(51 8) 6 43 -8 02 5
194873
Bonny Trost owner
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MON-THU 10-6 FRI & SAT 10-8 SUNDAY 12-5
518-643-2740 phone 518-643-0923 fax
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Kathy Santor - Owner
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