Essex County seeks DEC help with boat launches pg. 3
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March 24, 2018
Valley News
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• EDITION •
Controversial tax reform proposal stripped from budget bills
LAKE PLACID STUDENTS EYE QUEBEC CITY CONNECTION
Students near end of three-year fundraising effort for French language summer camp
Fate of executive budget proposal will now be decided by governor
By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
LAKE PLACID | A group of local students want to say au revoir to Lake Placid this summer. But first they need your help. Using everything from bake sales to fun runs to reach their $19,500 fundraising goal, 15 Lake Placid High School students — with help from French teacher Cara Atkinson — have been raising money for three years to help pay for an immersive language camp in Quebec City, Canada. They’ve raised $4,676 so far, and students have ongoing fundraisers planned for the next few weeks to raise the rest toward a week-long program at Edu-Inter. » French students Cont. on pg. 5
By Pete DeMola EDITOR
Students at Lake Placid High School are raising money toward a French immersion experience in Quebec City, Canada.
ALBANY | A controversial executive budget proposal that would change how state-owned land is taxed in the Adirondack Park has been stripped from the state Assembly and Senate one-house budget bills released last week. “This is a top priority for our region, something that everyone I have heard from adamantly opposes,” said state Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury). “The push needs to continue through budget negotiations, but today’s formal rejection is an important step for us all.” » Tax reform Cont. on pg. 3
Photo provided
Building resilience in the Adirondack food supply Farm prices, distribution, wages and sustainable futures discussed at Food Justice seminar By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
A group of farmers, food buyers and educators gathered at the Wild Center during the Food Justice seminar to discuss Farmshare Funding. Photo by Kim Dedam
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TUPPER LAKE | Access to local farm products, distribution and fair pricing are critical to maintaining Adirondack food supply lines. These issues directly influence local wages, business growth, regional economics and the sustainable farming future in rural northern New York. The fi rst Food Justice Summit held at the Wild Center earlier this month took a hard look at strengths and weaknesses of local food supply systems: » Food supply Cont. on pg. 2
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2 • March 24, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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» Food supply Cont. from pg. 1 How is food distributed? What regulations impact distribution? How do farmers earn a sustainable wage? How are farm workers paid? How could local foods reach everyone? Who gets left out? The goal to improve connections between institutions and farms, wages and markets, harvest and waste, farm supply and demand is a goal central to the Food Justice Working Group, a coalition of both non-profit and forprofit groups, educational groups and farmers. The summit’s summary task mapped strategy for priority action to address prominent concerns.
FOOD JUSTICE
Founded among farmers and buyers last summer, Food Justice is more than a union of producers and educators. The Essex Farm Institute, Craigardan in Keene and the Adirondack North Country Association are among the stakeholders in a coalition looking to expand area food systems beyond economic boundaries into larger institutions and across rural mountains in the park. They are seeking ways to work greener, cleaner and with less waste. “Distribution, farmer pay, wages for workers and food access are among issues we are taking on,” said Michele Drozd, founder of Craigardan, a local artisan and working farm institute tucked under Hurricane Mountain in Keene. “Some of these problems are cropping up as our farm communities grow, as we become a more complex food system. We are looking at these problems head on,” she said. Food Justice organized their first summit as winter began. By all accounts, the day-long ebb and flow of discussion drew immense interest.
FRESH FOOD SUPPLY
A group of high school students from Lake Placid Central School contributed their voices to the Food Justice discussion at the Wild Center in Tupper Lake. They attended the Food Justice Summit as part of the Environmental Club program led by teacher Tammy Morgan. “They are all working on their senior projects, looking at impacts of climate change on food supply,” Morgan said. Morin Bissonette, a senior, picked her project goals from a farm field last fall. “She gleaned over 150 pounds of tomatoes from North Branch Farm in Saranac,” Morgan said of Morin’s days spent harvesting drops and blemished produce. Then she made tomato sauce with herbs from the school’s garden in the school’s kitchen and canned it for Lake Placid’s Backpack Program. “I was surprised to find that 48 percent of my school population is food insecure,” Morin said of data that sparked her idea. “For a lot of kids, having fresh or locally made food is not possible, and I wanted to help get good farm-fresh food to everyone.” Produce grown locally and made fresh not only tastes better, she said, it supports the local economy and environment. “Solving the problem involves finding ways to bring local farm products to everyone,” Morin said. — Kim Dedam ■ Over 150 people from over 25 organizations pre-registered.
FINDING CHAMPIONS
At right, Morin Bissonette, a senior at Lake Placid High School, shares her thoughts about food insecurity, a problem at many local schools. With Morin is longtime friend Camille Craig. Both students are members of Lake Placid’s Environmental Club. Photo by Kim Dedam
In weighing local food production against distribution and cost, several patterns emerged. Some barriers to local food access involve dropped connections. Others involve misfit purchasing; some buys happen in small batches. Adirondack Farm-to-School Initiative Director Ruth Pino spelled out challenges the group has encountered in the past six years as they’ve connected cafeteria planning to local growers, including finding key decision-makers in a school or college who can plug their buying demand into the local growing system. That involves food processing time, bulk pricing and supply are mutable forces in the equation. P L AT T S B U R G H ’ S
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A breakout discussion group at the Food Justice seminar held at the Wild Center looked to improve connections between farmers, food security and college students, who are among the most food-insecure age groups in the U.S. Colleges with students attending Food Justice discussion included Hamilton College, Paul Smith’s College, Plattsburgh State, St. Lawrence University, University of Vermont and SUNY Potsdam. Photo by Kim Dedam
Organizations and contributors started food justice mapping by marking their location on a big map of the Adirondack Park. Photo by Kim Dedam Local provision is best addressed with a specific farm-to-school coordinator, she said. Not all schools or organizations have one, she said. But they all have someone who might be a good one. “Find the champions,” Pino said.
“And we added a policy that no seconds are available until all first-choice foods are gone from the tray. That eventually creates very little waste.” Striking that balance to peak interest in school meals can support the local farm economy while it improves nutrition, Pino explained. There is a lot of food insecurity in rural Adirondack communities, she said, referring to access. “And with that sometimes comes poor choices.” Presenters suggest that eliminating food insecurity also builds resiliency in local food systems.
WASTE NOT, WANT NOT
Julie Holbrook, food service director for Champlain Valley Educational Services, explained that another roadblock is time: schedules for lunchtimes, cooking time and time to sit and eat. Prepackaged food is seen as a timesaver unless cafeteria schedules adapt. It is rare for schools or food distribution centers to actually process raw foods, she said. But the drive to use locally sourced food at Keene Central School became a recalibrated focus in the kitchen. The surprising cost savings was reduced waste. Waste, she and other speakers said, not only literally throws thousands of taxpayer dollars in the landfill every year, it also inflates cost for disposal. Holbrook explained how Keene’s school shifted the balance: as children were given nutritious choices, the amount of wasted food dropped. “We have a rainbow on our salad bar,” she said.
RESILIENCE
Ten small discussion groups focused throughout the Food Justice day on diverse topics: Farm-to-Prison programs; fighting chronic disease with a local diet; land access for farmers; the plight of migrant workers; ending racism in the food system; and farmworker pay structures. In looking to improved resilience in Adirondack food systems, the Food Justice coalition ended their conference with a mapping exercise: connecting dots literally marked on a big map of the Adirondack Park. Bonds formed as goals emerged. Drozd doesn’t suggest solutions will come fast or all at once. But fields are cleared, rows are hoed. “This has been an incredible turnout,” Drozd said. “The response is so positive.” ■
Essex County is HIRING A Registered Nurse
Minimum requirement: Associates Degree in Nursing with valid NYS Licensure Salary Range: $26.55 – 29.51/hour Excellent Benefits Package
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Families First, a small, unique, not for profit agency, that works with children (who have emotional and/or behavioral challenges with a mental health diagnosis) and their families, seeks a creative individual wanted for a full time Family Peer Advocate position in Essex County. A flexible and strengths based perspective towards families is essential for a good fit with this dynamic, supportive agency. Candidate must have at least a High School diploma (or GED), Associates Degree preferred, with one year’s worth of experience working in the field with children and families. Candidate must be able to demonstrate “lived experience” as the parent or primary caregiver who has navigated multiple child serving systems on behalf of their child with social, emotional, developmental, health and/or behavioral healthcare needs. Candidate must be able to complete the Parent Empowerment Program (PEP), part of which can be completed online, followed by in person training in Albany, plus six months of group coaching phone calls. Reliable transportation and flexible hours required. Applicant must have excellent organizational, communication and time management skills. Candidate must be a self starter and have documentation and computer skills. Experience running support groups, doing presentations and working in a team setting is preferred. Benefits include an excellent time off package, assistance with health insurance, a flexible spending account and a retirement plan. Salary commensurate with experience and comparable for this area.
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Injury Prevention – lead poisoning prevention, testing, and case management; car passenger safety Immunizations & Communicable Disease Prevention and Management Emergency Preparedness & Response Go to http://www.co.essex.ny.us/jobs.asp for a full job description or to apply online!
HEALTH DEPARTMENT Pub lic Health Unit
Essex County Health Department 518.873.3500
132 Water Street | Elizabethtown, NY 12932 www.co.essex.ny.us/Health www.facebook.com/EssexCountyPublicHealth
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If interested please send a resume to JoAnne Caswell, Families First, P.O. Box 565, Elizabethtown, NY 12932, or call 873-9544 for further information. Deadline for applications, 4.4.18.
Family Health – Case management, assessment, education & referral
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The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 3
» Tax reform Cont. from pg. 1 Localities within the Adirondacks receive at least $70 million annually from New York state in property tax payments. For towns with vast tracts of land holdings like Minerva, Long Lake, North Hudson and Newcomb, the state share constitutes a significant chunk of their annual budgets — including about $3 million for the latter. The state Division of the Budget has proposed using paymentin-lieu-of-taxes agreements instead of market value to calculate taxes on land in the Adirondack Park and the Catskills. Increases would be limited to 2 percent or the change in level of assessment, whichever is lower. The swap would open up efficiencies and relieve regular assessments by local officials, said the state agency, and payments on the state-owned land would likely increase under the new system. But local governments and green groups bitterly oppose the measure, citing concerns over reduced payments to their localities and school districts, a lack of comprehensive study and how the program might change under future administrations — all of which would lead to a larger tax burden for local taxpayers. “This is a big victory for North Country communities,” said state Assemblyman Dan Stec (R-Queensbury). Assemblyman Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay) also praised the proposal’s removal. “The Assembly budget proposal is doing right by the North Country by rejecting this measure,” Jones said. Environmental groups warned the simmering threat of diminished revenue may erode the shaky alliance they have forged with local governments over the past decade, allowing them to find common ground on issues like clean water infrastructure and economic development initiatives.
An executive budget proposal that would change how state-owned land is taxed in the Adirondack Park and Catskills has been stripped from both the state Assembly and Senate one-house budget bills. “This is a big victory for North Country communities,” said state Assemblyman Dan Stec (R-Queensbury). Photo provided “Our local governments and environmental groups are strongly united in their opposition and have done a tremendous job in Albany explaining why the proposed change would be so detrimental to our North Country economy,” Little said. The Adirondack Council is buoyed by the news, but noted the proposal’s final fate ultimately lies in the hands of Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
“Now we need the governor to agree and reject,” said Willie Janeway, executive director of the Adirondack Council. “Given his commitment to the Adirondacks, it seems like he should do that.” The state budget deadline is March 31. “Budget negotiations are ongoing,” said Morris Peters, a spokesman for the Division of the Budget. ■
Essex County seeks DEC help with boat launches Sites need repairs, upgrades By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | The Essex County Board of Supervisors is asking the regional office of the state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) for help in upgrading and maintaining several state-owned boat launches throughout the county. “I have been working very hard with DEC to get them to increase their attention toward our boat launches on Lake Champlain,” Willsboro Supervisor Shaun Gillilland said last Monday. The lack of maintenance is presenting numerous issues at sites across the region, including those in Crown Point, Westport,
Chesterfield, Ticonderoga and Willsboro. “Westport can’t get boats up, ours are damaging trailers and boats because of the lack of maintenance on it,” Gillilland said. “I know Chesterfield has problems with the road approaching it. Ticonderoga needs maintenance on the road, outhouses and stuff. I know in Willsboro, they removed our outhouses, the garbage pickup and things like that. They just keep removing all these things.” The boat launches are an important recreational and economic component of the county, lawmakers said. Moriah Supervisor Tom Scozzafava said he was concerned the launches were no longer priorities for the DEC, and that amenities had been “stripped down to the bone.” “They just don’t have the staffing that they once had,” Scozzafava said. “I had a meeting with DEC on our boat launch facility and all we have there is tanks for
toilets and it is a very, very busy boat launch.” Scozzafava cited a recent meeting in which the town hashed out a shared services agreement with the state agency. “We agreed to and we are going to do a shared service agreement where the town, now that the village is dissolved, we’ll provide them with water and onsite municipal sewage and they’ve agreed to come in to replace the stations to retrofit that facility so that we’ll now have flush toilets and running water there,” Scozzafava said. Schroon Supervisor Michael Marnell said the boat launch on Paradox Lake could also use improvements. “There’s only one launch site on the lake. Three years ago the state built a new road to the launch site but the launch is impossible,” Marnell said. “There’s no private launch sites and if you don’t own property there, you can’t enter the lake. Brand new road, but
the launch is in terrible shape.” With a resolution from the board, Gillilland said he was hoping to keep this issue on the front burner for the DEC. “I’ve had two or three personal discussions with (DEC regional director) Bob Stegemann and I’ve written a letter and I’m just trying to back this up,” he said. “Stegemann did call me on Friday and responded to the letter saying he is working on doing that but I believe this is an area that’s been neglected and it’s causing economic impact to lake towns and we’re watching.” Gillilland asked for a resolution appealing to the DEC Commissioner to place maintenance and upgrades of the boat launches on Lake Champlain and Essex County to the top of the priority.” North Hudson Supervisor Ron Moore said he would also bring the matter up before the Adirondack Association of Towns and Villages. ■
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North Country SPCA We at the North Country SPCA are continually blessed by the generosity of those in our community. Without your support, By Kathy Wilcox we wouldn’t be able to • COLUMNIST • provide the care, safety, and loving attention our furry friends so desperately need while they are waiting to go to their forever homes. Today, we would like to thank Zoey St. Gelais of Moriah, who recently requested donations to the NCSPCA in lieu of birthday gifts! People like Zoey make a huge difference in the lives of our adoptable animals — your kindness and compassion are so appreciated! If you have an upcoming birthday or celebration and would like to sponsor our animals, please let us know and we would be happy to help you with ideas of how to make your special day memorable for all.
Our featured pet this weeks is SMOKE, a Domestic Shorthair-mix who was brought to the shelter when his family was unable to take him with them during a move. Poor Smoke is used to living the good life; he’s a bit baffled as to why he is surrounded by other cats and lots of noise! Smoke has a gorgeous, silky gray coat and just loves to cuddle and shower his people with affection. He gets along with other cats and has a really laid-back purr-sonality. He’s about 5 years old and still has many good years ahead of him. Please consider stopping by and meeting this big guy – he is sure to win you over! ■
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State approves National Grid rate increase Utility rates for local customers to increase over next three years By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ALBANY | Local National Grid customers will see an 11 percent increase in their electricity and gas rates over the next three years. The agreement announced Thursday by the state Public Service Commission (PSC) totals 10.5 percent for electricity and 11.5 percent for gas usage phased in over three years. For the first year, that equates to about 3 percent per month. Under the new rate plan, a typical residential customer will see a total monthly bill increase of $2.22 or 2.9 percent in the first year starting in April 2018, $3.03 or 3.8 percent in the second beginning in April 2019, and $3.25 or 3.9 percent in the third year starting in April 2020. The gas bill for the typical residential customer using 77 therms a month will increase by 1.7, 4.5 and 4.4 percent during the same period, or $1.20, $3.10 and $3.18 respectively. National Grid has agreed to a smaller rate increase than it was initially seeking: 13.9 percent per month for electricity bills, and gas by 14.9 percent. The provider’s initial $407 million proposal was reduced by $351 million, or 86 percent. “We are pleased to adopt a progressive rate plan that is much improved over what the company initially proposed,” said PSC Chair John B. Rhodes in a statement. The plan has broad stakeholder support from environmental groups, labor, large business customers and the three largest cities in the company’s service territory, said Rhodes. “This decision is a win for the company’s customers and for the future of cleaner and more resilient energy,” he said. The deal will also lower monthly bills for
National Grid customers will see an 11 percent increase in their electricity and gas rates over the next three years.
Photo by Pete DeMola
220,000 low-income electric and gas customers, and includes measures to provide energy efficiency upgrades for streetlights, strengthen gas safety efforts and replace 150 miles of leak-prone pipe. National Grid will also modernize its electric transmission and distribution system, including investments to address the increased frequency and severity of storms. “This plan allows us to invest $2.5 billion over the next three years in our energy infrastructure while reducing the short-term impact on bills and providing customers a level of delivery price assurance,” said Virginia Limmiatis, a spokesperson for National Grid. When adjusted for inflation, gas prices have been static since 2007, said the provider, and electricity delivery prices are lower than they were in 2004. But during that same period, the provider has invested $6 billion in infrastructure upgrades. National Grid held a public hearing in Lake Placid last summer to detail their proposal.
The effort was supported by Clarkson and Paul Smith’s College, both of whom said upgrades to the provider’s microgrids will aid in ongoing renewable energy projects. National Grid serves approximately 3.2 million customers in 37 counties statewide, including portions of Franklin, Clinton, Essex and Hamilton counties. Lake Placid and Tupper Lake will not be impacted because those localities have wholesale agreements with National Grid that see municipal utilities distribute the service to local customers. AARP, who lobbied against the increase, said they were appreciative of the reduction, and praised regulators for incorporating low-income energy programs that have been a part of other recent utility rate cases into the decision. But the organization continues to harbor concerns on the impacts of low-income residents. “A double-digit rate increase is simply too much for the overburdened New York consumers who rely on National Grid for their energy,” said New York State Director Beth Finkel. AARP is also disappointed regulators did not lower fixed customer charges, which the organization contends “hurt low-energy users while failing to encourage conservation.” The group renewed calls for New York to join 40 other states by establishing an independent utility consumer advocate with the power to challenge unfair rate increases in court. “We’re glad the state Assembly included creation of such a consumer advocate in its state budget proposal this week,” Finkel said. Adirondack Community Action Programs CEO Alan Jones also said he is mindful of the increases on low-income populations who are on a fixed income, including senior citizens. “Any client we serve will face an additional burden on their expenses,” Jones said. “We have a rising number of senior citizens in our communities. It would impact them the worst.” ■
WORSHIP IN YOUR COMMUNITY AU SABLE FORKS Holy Name Catholic Church - 14203 Rt. 9N, Au Sable Forks, 647-8225, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John J. Ryan; Mass: Sunday 9:30 a.m. Confessions: Sunday 9-9:15 a.m. St. James’ Church - Episcopal. Rev. Patti Johnson, Deacon Vicarcon. Holy Eucharist Sundays at 10 a.m. Phone: (518) 593-1838. United Methodist Church - Main Street. 647-8147. Sunday 11 a.m. Worship Service. Email: afumc1@frontiernet.net BLACK BROOK St. Matthew’s Catholic Church - 781 Silver Lake Rd., Black Brook, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John J. Ryan; Closed. BLOOMINGDALE Pilgrim Holiness Church - 14 Oregon Plains Rd., 891-3178, Rev. Daniel Shumway - Sunday: Morning Worship 11a.m., Sunday School 10 a.m., Evening Service 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday: Prayer Service 7 p.m. CLINTONVILLE United Methodist - Rt. 9N. 834-5083. Sunday, 11 a.m. Worship Service. Pastor Rev. Joyce Bruce. ELIZABETHTOWN Church of the Good Shepherd (Episcopal) - 10 Williams Street Elizabethtown, NY 12932. (518)873-2509 goodshepherdetown@gmail. com, Sunday Holy Communion: 8 & 10:15am; Healing Prayer Service: Every Wed at Noon; Men’s Group: Every Friday 7:30am-8:45am Rev. David Sullivan. All are Welcome. LIFE Church Elizabethtown - A holistic biblical approach where healthy relationships and community come before religious ideals. Connect to Jesus and others, Engage your local community, Involve yourself in ministry. LIFE Church service Sunday 10:30 am. LIFE Groups (see webpage for local groups) . AO Cafe open Monday-Thursday 8:30am-12pm. www.adklife.church - 209 Water Street Elizabethtown - lifechurchetown@gmail.com - (518)-412-2305 St. Elizabeth’s Catholic Church - Court Street. 873-6760. Father Francis Flynn, Mass Schedule: Saturday 4:30 p.m., Weekdays: Consult Bulletin. Thursday 10:15 a.m. Horace Nye Home. Sacrament of Reconciliation: Saturday 3:30 p.m. - 4:10 p.m. Website: wewe4.org Email: rccowe@gmail.com United Church of Christ (Congregational) - Court Street. 873-6822. Rev. Frederick C. Shaw. Worship Service: Sun. 11 a.m.; Sunday School ages 4 - grade 6. Nursery service Email: FShaw@westelcom.com ESSEX Essex Community United Methodist Church - Corner of Rt. 22 and Main St. 963-7766. Peggy Staats Pastor, Sunday Worship - 10:15 AM, Sunday School - 10:15 AM. web page: https://essexcommunitychurchny. org Foothills Baptist Church at Boquet - 2172, NY Rt. 22 in Essex. Formerly Church of the Nazarene. Wednesday Night Service at 6 p.m. Worship services are Sunday 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Family Christian movies on the second Sunday of each month at 6:30 p.m., and Hymn sing on the 4th Sunday of each month at 6 p.m. Email: foothillsbapt@ netzero.net St. John’s Episcopal Church - 4 Church Street. 518-963-7775. Holy Communion, Sunday 10 a.m.; Community Potluck Supper, Tuesday 6 p.m.; Contemporary Bible Study, Tuesdays 9:30 a.m.; Meditation, Wednesdays 5 p.m.; Historical New Testament Study, Thursdays 10 a.m.; Morning: Mon., Wed., Thurs., Fri. at 8:30 a.m. Father Craig Hacker. Email: stjohnsessex@gmail.com St. Joseph’s Catholic Church - Rt. 22. 963-4524. Closed for the
Winter. HARKNESS Harkness United Methodist Church - Corner Harkness & Hollock Hill Rds., Harkness, NY. 834-7577. Rev. Edith Poland. Worship 9:30 a.m. ediepoland@aol.com JAY First Baptist Church of Jay - Rev. Joyce Bruce, Pastor. Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. KEENE Keene Valley Congregational Church - Main Street. 576-4711. Sunday Worship Services 10 a.m.; Sunday School 10 a.m. Choir Wednesday evening 7 p.m. and Sunday 9:15 a.m. St. Brendan’s Catholic Church - Mass Saturday at 4 p.m. & Sunday at 11:15 a.m. from first Sunday in July to Labor Day. Saturday at 4 p.m. the rest of the year. Pastor: Rev. John R. Yonkovig; Pastor. Rectory Phone 523-2200. Email: stagnesch@roadrunner.com St. Hubert’s All Souls Episcopal Church - Sunday Holy Eucharist 9 a.m. (on some Sundays, Morning Prayer), July 3 through September 4. Varying roster of priests celebrate communion each week. KEESEVILLE Front Street Fellowship - Front Street Fellowship - 1724 Front Street, Keeseville, 645-4673. Pastors Rick & Kathy Santor. Sunday: Worship Service 10 a.m. Tuesday: Ladies Coffee 9:30 a.m. Wednesday: Prayer Fellowship 6 p.m. Website: www.frontstreetfellowship.org Email: kathy@frontstreetfellowship.org Immaculate Conception Church - Rt. 9, Keeseville, 834-7100. Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John Lucero; Mass: Sunday 11:15 a.m. Confessions: Sunday after Mass.
Independent Baptist Church - Rte. 22 & Interstate 87, P.O. Box 506, Keeseville, NY. 834-9620. Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Sunday Morning Worship 11 a.m., Sunday Evening Worship 6 p.m., Prayer Meeting & Bible Study - Wednesday 7 p.m.; Youth Group Sunday 6 p.m. Website: ibck.org Email: oneillr@ibck.org Keeseville United Methodist Church - Front Street, Keeseville. 834-7577. Rev. Edith Poland. Sunday School 11:00 a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. 834-7577. Email: ediepoland@aol.com St. John the Baptist Catholic Church - Rt. 22, Keeseville, 8347100. Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John Lucero; Mass: Saturday 4:30 p.m. Confessions: Saturday 3:45-4:15 p.m. St. Paul’s Church, Episcopal/Anglican - 103 Clinton Street, Keeseville. 518-563-6836. Sunday Sung Service 9 a.m. Email: bcbiddle@aol.com, Rev. Blair C. Biddle, Deacon Vicar. The Good Shepherd Church of the Nazarene - 124 Hill Street, Keeseville, NY. 834-9408. Pastor Richard Reese. Sunday Service 10:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Tuesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 7 p.m. LEWIS First Congregational Church - Lewis, 873-6822. Rev. Frederick C. Shaw. Sunday Services 9:30 a.m.; Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Email: Fshaw@westelcom.com www.firstcongregationalchurchoflewis.com MIDDLEBURY Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Middlebury Ward) - Sacrament Worship Service: Sunday 9:00am. Meetinghouse-133 Valley View, Middlebury, VT 05753. REBER Reber Methodist Church - Reber Rd., Reber. 11 a.m. Sunday
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Email: rccowe@gmail.com United Methodist Church - 3731 Main Street. 963-7931. Sunday Worship Services 9 a.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Pastor Ric Feeney. After school religous education program 2:30 p.m. - 5 p.m. on Thursdays (Only when school is in session) WILMINGTON Calvary Baptist Church - Rt. 86. 518-946-2482. Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m.; Sunday Morning Service 11 a.m. www.wilmingtoncbc.com St. Margaret’s Roman Catholic Church - 5789 NYS Rt. 86, Wilmington, 647-8225, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor, Deacon John J. Ryan & Pastor, Deacon John Lucero, Mass: Sunday 7:30 a.m. Confessions: Sunday 7-7:15 a.m. Whiteface Community United Methodist Church - Located at the intersection of Route 86 and Haselton Road. The Rev. Helen Beck is Pastor. The office phone is 946-7757. Sunday Worship is at 10:30 a.m. with Sunday School for children held during the morning worship. Communion is the first Sunday of each month. A coffee hour with refreshments and fellowship follows the morning service. The Riverside Thrift Shop is open Wed. & Sat. from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. The Jay/Wilmington Ecumenical Food Shelf is open each Thurs. from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. In an emergency call 946-7192. Wilmington Church of the Nazarene - Wilmington Church of the Nazarene is located at 5734 Route 86. Contact Pastor Grace Govenettio at the office (518) 946-7708 or cell at (315) 408-2179, or email at graceforus@gmail.com. Sunday School is at 9:45 am, Sunday Worship and Children’s Church at 11 am. 1-27-18 • 57581
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mornings. Pastor Ric Feeney. PORT HENRY Lake Champlain Bible Fellowship - 6 Church Street, Port Henry, NY (518) 546-1176. Service 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Office hours - 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Other hours by appointment only. Pastor Ric Lewis. WESTPORT Federated Church - Our worship service is at 9:00 a.m. We offer a blended contemporary and Christian service, along with Children’s Church. A nursery area is provided downstairs with a speaker to hear the Worship Service. For current church events you can check the church website at : www.westportfederatedchurch.org or call Pastor Tom at (518) 962-8293 and leave a message. St. Philip Neri Catholic Church - 6603 Main St., Father Francis Flynn, Pastor. Residence, 873-6760. Mass schedule: Sun., 8:30 a.m. Weekdays: consult bulletin. Email: rccowe@gmail.com Westport Bible Church - 24 Youngs Road. 962-8247. Pastor David Colwell. Sunday School for every age 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.; Sunday Evening Service 5:30 p.m.; Wednesday Night Prayer 7 p.m.; Email: westportbiblechurch@westelcom.com www.westportbiblechurch.org WILLSBORO Congregational United Church of Christ - 3799 Main Street, P.O. Box 714. Pastor Jonathan Lange. Worship and Sunday School at 9:15 a.m. Church phone number 518-963-4048. St. Philip of Jesus Catholic Church - 3746 Main Street. 963-4524. Father Francis Flynn, Sunday Mass at 10:30 a.m. Website: wewe4.org
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Essex County improves health ranking in statewide report “We have a lot to be proud of,” says county health chief By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | Work to improve public health has paid off in Essex County. But local residents still need to kick their smokes, booze and snacky cakes to the curb. The release of the 2018 County Health Rankings & Roadmaps last week by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation places Essex County at No. 15 out of 62 counties for health outcomes, including length and quality of life. Essex County scored No. 37 last year. “We have a lot to be proud of in terms of health gains made over the last few years,” said Linda Beers, director of public health at the Essex County Health Department, in a statement. The report, a collaborative project with the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute, utilizes several metrics to gauge community health, including obesity, access to healthy food and high school graduation rates. Influencing these outcomes are factors like poverty, education, access to care and opportunities to be physically active, Beers said. Twenty-seven percent of Essex County residents are obese, slightly over the state average of 25 percent. The average was 20 percent in 2004 and reached a high of 28 percent in 2012 before sloping back downward.
“After seeing a fairly steady upward trend in the adult obesity rate, we are starting to bend that curve in the right direction,” Beers said. “I think this speaks to the work we’ve done in schools and communities to increase healthy food offerings and improve environments by creating or enhancing gardens, parks, playgrounds and trails.” Essex County has also reduced preventable hospital stays, increased high school graduation rates, has fewer children living in poverty than the average county and can boast a high number of places to be active. But there are several areas county health officials have flagged for improvement. The county ranked in the middle of the pack when it comes to clinical care (No. 31) and social and economic factors, where it scored No. 28. And sexually transmitted disease rates are trending upward, much like the rest of the state. Essex County’s rate of chlamydia cases is 108.6 per 100,000 people. While that’s nearly five times lower than the state average of 524.7, the figure is still within the top 10th percentile of cases nationwide. “We need to promote sexual health, education and screening for our young adults, as they are disproportionately impacted by STDs,” Beers said. Essex County also ranks higher than the state and national average when it comes to alcohol-impaired driving deaths, with more than twice as many county residents dying by that cause than the national average. Adult smoking rates are also slightly higher than the state and national averages despite an aggressive local
» French students Cont. from pg. 1 Edu-Inter, a Quebec City-based French school located about three hours northeast of Montreal, allows students to take language classes during the day and specialized classes in the afternoon, where kids can practice anything from cooking to acrobatics. All the while, they’ll stay with local French-speaking families and communicate only in French. “For me, as a teacher of French in the North Country, I feel that travel to Quebec with an immersion homestay is an integral component to my language curriculum,” Atkinson said. “Real-world experience in the language is essential in order for students to stay engaged, motivated, and gain first hand knowledge of the value of a second language.” Students will also tour the riverfront city and sightsee, live life, amble down the stone streets and narrow walkways and experience Quebec as a local. Not a bad way to spend a summer. “They’re pretty excited about it,” Atkinson said.
THE FINISH LINE
Each student needs to raise an average of $1,300 to participate. But they aren’t chipping away at that price alone. With help from a $5,000 online fundraiser launched this month — and a number of other fundraisers upcoming, including a greeting card sale — the students are hoping to make a sprint toward the finish line together. Students helped produce and release an advertisement on YouTube on Feb. 23 in an effort to inspire people to donate. “Qu’est on veut? (What do we want?)” One student asks over an upbeat soundtrack in the video, footage panning over a classroom full of happy teens. “On veut apprendre la langue d’Alaine Chartand (We want to learn Alaine Chartand’s language),” a young girl says as the
campaign to raise the purchase age of tobacco from 18 to 21. “We are optimistic about adopting Tobacco 21 legislation, which would further limit youth access to tobacco products,” Beers said. “We want this next generation of young people to be the first generation that doesn’t suffer the health consequences of tobacco use.” Beers is also mindful that Essex County must also continue to maintain access to care for the county’s most vulnerable populations, including senior citizens and low-income residents. “The disparities that do exist here — our rural setting, an aging population and health care provider shortages — make it vitally important for the Essex County Health Department to be flexible and responsive to the communities we serve,” Beers said. “We value our partnerships with our local hospitals, health centers and community-based organizations that help us collectively advance the level of care our residents receive.” Elsewhere in the region, Hamilton County moved up 30 spaces over last year to No. 29. Saratoga County clocked in at No. 2, dropping one position from the top slot in 2017. Warren County remains ranked at No. 10; Clinton fell five spots to No. 34; Washington saw a four point uptick to No. 27, and Franklin County also moved up four places to rank at No. 42. Bronx was the least fit. To access the full 2018 report, visit countyhealthrankings.org. To view additional Essex County data, visit www. co.essex.ny.us/Health. ■
video cuts away to an image of the Canadian figure skater, before referencing a number of other prominent figures. “Nous veux apprendre votre langue! (We want to learn your language!)” a group of students exclaim. Those interested in helping them achieve that goal can visit gofundme.com/immersion-experience-in-quebec to contribute. ■
The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 5
Elizabethtown Social Center The Elizabethtown Social Center is pleased to announce the winner of the 2018 Dr. Mel Amsel Memorial Chess Tournament: Brandon Tromblee of Lewis. Brandon went undefeated in a round By Arin Burdo • COLUMNIST • robin match on March 11. Cameron Drake took second place in the chess tournament with three wins and one loss. Ben Burdo came in third with a two and two record.
Many thanks to the Amsel-Prime family for sponsoring the tournament in memory of Dr. Melvyn B. Amsel. The center’s teen rec program will hold the annual Pool Tournament of Champions on Friday, March 23 at 6 p.m. Winners from each of the winter Friday night pool tournaments will compete for the honor of 2018 Social Center Pool Champion. Writers group has begun meeting weekly. Led by local author Sandra Weber, the group now meets every Thursday at 1 p.m. The group has grown and still welcomes new members. The writers group is open to all skill levels, ages and interests, and a wide variety of genre, or simply recording your memories for your family. You do not have to write anything or share your writing with the group; you just need to enjoy learning about writing and offering encouragement to writers. For those who are (or want to be) writers, it is an opportunity to get feedback, meet other writers, improve your skills and learn more about publishing. Langlois Racine Dance School offers dance and guitar lessons for all ages on Saturday afternoons. Please contact Director Kaela Homburger at khomburgermusic@gmail.com or 518-420-9253 with any questions. Mark your calendar for the next concert in our winter coffeehouse program — Discover North Country Salsa with the Rick Davies Thugtet — on Sunday, April 15 at 3 p.m. Desserts and hot beverages will be available. Details can be found at elizabethtownsocialcenter.org and on Facebook. Contact us at elizabethtownsocialcenter.org or 518-873-6408. ■
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6 • March 24, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
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Service From the Editorial Board above self Winter sports delivers yet again Is it a phrase that just sounds good or is it a life we all try to live? For many, it’s a code deeply rooted in who By Dan Alexander they are and how they • PUBLISHER • conduct their lives. For others, it’s nothing more than a pickup line for creating an opportunity that allows them to take advantage of those who place their faith and trust in what is being promised. Americans have always been incredibly generous with their time and money. We do our best to recognize the right intentions in all we meet, but more and more, we see serious cracks in the overall moral structure that was at one time the hallmark of our national personality. Stories come to light all too frequently these days. Over the weekend, we heard about four individuals in Indiana collecting funds for the Wounded Warrior Foundation — not the Project. The Secret Service discovered their good intentions were nothing more than a scam to put over $125,000 at their disposal instead of sending the funds to wounded military personnel. Last week, we reported on the dealings of a man in Ticonderoga whose ambition outweighed his good intentions when he sought investors and took advantage of employees who were sent out to do his bidding. Sadly, there will always be those who see opportunity in the disguise of service. Perhaps even sadder is the number of service clubs and organizations that once carpeted the nation made up of energetic local community members whose sole purpose was to support their community through good deeds. Around the country and even here locally, their memberships are in decline — not because the need is no longer there, but because these upstanding men and women are growing old and passing away. The next generations, especially in smaller communities, have not stepped up to fill the voids. These devoted community clubs work tirelessly to raise funds by hosting events and projects only to return the funds to the community where the needs were the greatest. There are so many good causes and valuable local organizations that need our support, not just in funding but in member volunteers to keep these pillars of service fully staffed and actively serving the needs of our communities. These organizations defined what a community is all about, reminding us of the importance of giving back, but they’ll fade into history if we don’t take steps to reverse these trends soon. ■
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As we get ready to shift gears out of winter and into spring — maybe — we can now look back at what has been a very successful winter sports season. In our region, we can now boast three state championships. First off the bat, the Lake Placid Blue Bombers boy’s Nordic ski team won their third straight NYSPHSAA championship at Gore Mountain in North Creek. Three straight state titles is unprecedented in Section VII. The Chazy Eagles have won three state titles in four years twice, but no one has won three straight until the skiers of Lake Placid. These are skiers who you may see again after high school on an Olympic ski trail near you. The next state title came in perhaps the most unexpected of places: the bowling alley. Along with a new bowling center in Syracuse hosting the state championship came a new state champion as the AuSable Valley boy’s team became the first male squad from Section VII to win a bowling state title. The championship was also the first ever for the school, which recently has had chances to win in both boy’s and girl’s basketball. Then comes Lake George. They just won
Letters
Executive budget proposal could harm rural health programs
To the Editor: Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed budget again this year seeks to undermine important rural health initiatives which have prevented disease, enrolled residents in health insurance, trained health care professionals to serve in rural communities and leveraged millions of federal and foundation dollars that have been invested here in the North Country. The governor again this year has put at risk the Rural Health Network (RHN) program. Thankfully we now know that the state Assembly and Senate have rejected this year’s cuts in their budget bills, but unfortunately have left in place the 21 percent cut levied in the 2017-18 budget. As one of New York state’s 35 rural health networks, the North Country Behavioral Healthcare Network (NCBHN) vigorously opposes the proposed cuts to the rural health network program which
Submit letters by email to feedback@suncommunitynews.com Letters can also be sent to our offices: 14 Hand Avenue: P.O. Box 338. Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Letters and guest commentaries do not reflect the editorial opinion of the newspaper and its owners. We’re always looking for guest columnists to offer extended commentaries. Contact pete@suncommunitynews.com to learn more. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid endorsements. The paid endorsement notice can be purchased in three sizes — a quick 50 words or less for $15; a 51-175 word endorsement for $ 50 or a 176-300 word endorsement for $75.
their third state title in six years, defeating Northstar Christian Academy, the team they lost to last year. The Warriors had to work hard to get the win, almost joining Panama from two years ago as giving up a 17-point lead, but Caleb Scrime’s layup in the last five seconds gave them a guaranteed win. As we reference in the story, the top moment after the game was father and son, coach Dave and point guard Alex Jones, got a chance to embrace between the interviews that come with winning a state title. It was not just a year for the victors, but those who had great seasons. For the second straight year, Moriah sent both their boy’s and girl’s basketball teams to the final four, with the girl’s team falling and the boy’s team returning for the third straight year to the state title game, this time falling to Buffalo East. What many people have commented on is the horde of fans that follow the Vikings to Binghamton and Troy, with some even driving back and forth between the two towns which are almost exactly two hours apart. They brought the home court with them to both places. Then there is the Northeastern Clinton
is critical to our rural communities. We urge the governor and state legislature to return the RHN program to its own budget line and restore it to the 2016-17 $6.4 million budget and appropriation amounts. Barry Brogan, Executive Director , NCBHN ■
Bitcoin is a waste of Plattsburgh’s resources
To the Editor: As the city mulls a moratorium on bitcoin, so should government and the financial community. If a person came to you and said, “Here is an equation, solve it with your gaming computer and I will give you a coin.” You can’t see, touch or feel this coin, but you can store it in a virtual wallet and it’s worth money. Plus if you decide to solve the next equation, that’s just a little more difficult, you get another coin. Eventually you can convert these coins or trade them, but not at a bank. They are tendered by an almost anonymous institution with the use of your wallet.
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girl’s hoops team, who made the state final four with a roster of young talent before falling to perennial powerhouse Irvington in the semifinal round, a run that should make other teams in Section VII nervous, Also, we feel a shoutout to the Ticonderoga boy’s team is in order. Over the past two years, the Sentinels have a combined record of 35-12, with all 12 of those losses coming against either Moriah (state champ and state finalist) or Lake George (state finalist and state champ) over those two years. Led by Evan Graney, they have had a great two years, showing themselves to be one of the best teams in the state. Unfortunately, they’ve had two more immediately in their path. And for the most part, fans were better this season. After what was an iff y fall season, basketball season seemed more civil then any season in recent history. There was the occasional mishap, but for the most part, we are hopeful the annual “it’s just a game” mindset is seeping into some brains. Now we’re off to spring. Good luck to all the teams and thank you, winter teams, for making this a memorable season in Section VII and II sports. — The Sun Editorial Board ■
of Plattsburgh’s electric power on companies that could leave the city holding the bag, try attracting businesses that produce real products and services. Michael Calitri, Peru ■
Oh — one little point. If you lose them or they are stolen from your wallet, they are not insured. Don’t worry though, just solve more equations and tell your friends so we can all get rich. Want more, faster, mine with a bunch of computers and we’ll call it a farm. Hell of a sales pitch, isn’t it? The reality is that there is no commodity, no currency, no bank or government that backs this intangible coin! Remember the pet rock? Well, at least you could hold it! Bitcoin is pure gambling on steroids and a waste of resources. This financial scheme can topple investors, banks and governments in seconds leaving total ruin. Bitcoin is not stable! It has huge swings in value, which is why futures markets considered trading it. Like a drug pusher, it gets people hooked and then drives up the price. The more you mine the tougher it gets. Bitcoin farms don’t create jobs — just more computers. Instead of burning up 16 percent
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Stefanik delays on taking a stand on issues
To the Editor: My friend Jeff, a man of science, has a passion for guns. He called me a “gun hater.” That surprised me. We had just agreed that “something has to change” and that we can not go on having our children shot at with assault rifles. We wanted to talk with one another but were mired in arguments that we had never had, with words that other people put into our mouths. I realized that my friend feels a sense of loss, as do the 90 percent of Americans that support gun change. People are arguing that “my loss is greater than yours, more justifiable than yours.”
» Letters Cont. on pg. 7
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The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 7
Congress must renew funding for vital environmental programs Guest column
By Rep. Elise Stefanik and Ana Paula GUEST COLUMNISTS
Despite snow blanketing the North Country in March, spring is near and many of us here in New York are preparing for the return of migratory birds, such as Black Terns, Hooded Mergansers and Sanderlings, who visit us briefly at Lake Ontario during their long and treacherous migration north from their wintering grounds in warmer climates. While our region won’t be their final destination, our wetlands — designated Important Bird Areas — are vital resting and mating grounds for migratory waterfowl and shorebirds, and breeding marsh birds. As Dr. Thomas Lovejoy once noted, “If you take care of the birds, you take care of most of the big problems in the world.” The same is true of the conservation challenges we face in our backyard. Programs like the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI), the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), and the Lake Champlain Basin Program are important tools to protect the Great Lakes, Lake Champlain, and the surrounding water systems and natural habitat, so that human and natural communities can continue to thrive together. The GLRI is an incredibly effective federal program that provides key funding to remedy the most pressing ecological problems in the Great Lakes Basin. » Letters Cont. from pg. 6 I yearn for leaders to bring us to solutions bridging the gap between gun owners’ fear of loss and children at risk. I desire leaders to move the conversation forward. Rep. Elise Stefanik has not been a leader moving the conversation forward based on her recent actions. She deflects, delays and divides. She co-sponsored deflecting bills HR4909, the STOP School Violence Act, and HR 4811, Securing Our Schools. These bills deflect from the issue of so-called assault rifles, like the semi-automatic rifles AR-15, and their woeful results of death of American children and adults. Stefanik delays. Consider her stance on various Republican led issues. She delays until her vote will not matter before voting “no.” When she votes “yes” at the last minute, she issues statements to her constituents with various excuses. Stefanik divides. She does not work to bring together the people of the North Country. She barely comes to the North Country. She “calls in.” Elise Stefanik is looking out for her own political career. We need better than that. We need a representative that can bring different views to the table and identify solutions that work. Stefanik is not that person. Lindy Ellis, Saranac Lake ■
These projects address a wide range of problems such as habitat loss, toxic pollution and runoff, invasive species, and wetland and beach degradation. Without the GLRI, we would not be able to support these critical projects, which would mean trouble for the important bird species and other wildlife that depend on our natural resources. It would also have a grave impact on local economies throughout the North Country, too. Some lawmakers in Washington are proposing a 90 percent cut in the funding that protects and restores the lakes. This would be problematic for the Great Lakes, for Lake Ontario, and for our district. In New York, the Great Lakes provide fresh drinking water and support outdoor recreation. Together, the lakes have a $2.27 billion impact on the economy and bolster almost 12,000 jobs. It’s also the foundation of our multi-million tourism industry in the New York Seaway Trail region, provides critical hydropower generation, and so much more. This area — equally vital to birds — is already experiencing degradation and loss of habitat, so an interruption in the funding that seeks to reverse and restore those places would force birds to seek refuge and breeding ground elsewhere. Similarly, the Lake Champlain Basin Program and the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) allow Congress to protect and restore our natural ecosystems and habitat, and the vitality of water in the region. Unfortunately, these programs also need our out-
Opting out of voting is a valid choice
To the Editor: In response to Mr O’Neill’s letter (“Declining to vote is irresponsible,” March 10 edition of The Sun), I take it I’m supposed to vote for someone who I don’t want in the office they are running for? I’m giving them the wrong message. Candidates study polls all the time. I like to think that with my not voting in past presidential elections, it sent a message to our current president that we wanted another option. Paul Manning, Schroon Lake ■
Inspiring to see students protest NRA
To the Editor: I want to congratulate the throng of Saranac Lake High School students who braved the storm for the March 14 National School Walkout. It was so inspiring to see these kids refuse to let this massacre be forgotten. They led a sobering minute of silence for each of the 17 named victims in Parkland. And thanks to our school administration for supporting this. Not all communities were so lucky.
spoken advocacy. Last year, Congress adopted the Stefanik-Welch bipartisan amendment to restore $4.4 million in federal funding for the Lake Champlain Basin Program. Audubon joins in supporting the continued flow of critical resources to help protect the lake and its watershed’s biodiversity because that’s good for birds, other wildlife, and the people who live, work, and play in this region. For these same reasons, it is also crucial to ensure the renewal of LWCF this year. LWCF enjoys broad, bipartisan support in Congress because it has protected special water and land across our state, including places like the Saratoga National Historical Park. The program has also provided grants to improve state and local parks in every county in New York, including state beaches along the shores of Lake Ontario, Plattsburgh Parks, White Face and Gore Mountains, as well as Lake George. The health of our natural resources is of vital importance to our region’s outstanding quality of life and the livelihoods of families across the North Country and all of New York. These programs help protect those resources, and do so in a fiscally-responsible way that’s good for the people of New York and good for birds. After all, where birds thrive, people prosper. ■ — Rep. Stefanik represents New York’s 21st Congressional District. Ana Paula Tavares serves as the Executive Director and Vice President of Audubon New York.
There were also a respectable number of community members present in support. If these students don’t persist, who will? We older adults can’t seem to get anything done; maybe these young adults can, if they stick together and don’t give up. The NRA has more money and propaganda than our nation’s high schoolers will ever have, but they have something the NRA doesn’t. First, the actuality of having to live in fear for their lives simply by being students in a public school in America in 2018. Second, too many American high schoolers have the passion that comes from seeing classmates shot to death, or hearing actual gunfire in their school, or smelling gunpowder, or slipping in a friend’s blood while being rushed out by a SWAT team, of having to imagine it actually happening in their school, to their friends, to themselves, of having practice shooter survival skills… in school, of all places! And of course it will happen again somewhere, because there aren’t enough politicians with enough integrity to stand up to the hyperbolic fear-mongering by the NRA. I pray that these youngsters across the nation will persevere even though the NRA politicians will do everything to discourage, obstruct, intimidate and ignore them. Please, students, the rest of us need you to bring some sanity to our out-of-control gun culture!
John O’Neill, Saranac Lake ■
Satellite isn’t the answer for universal broadband
To the Editor: Do not be fooled by promises of high speed internet connections by HughesNet. Out of desperation, I have been using them for a number of years. Their service is nowhere near the high speed that is necessary for reasonable access to the internet. Something as simple as a five-minute YouTube video will start and stop as it downloads. In addition, the limited access and usage based billing makes the service expensive. I find it necessary to monitor my usage and curtail essential activity at the end of each billing cycle when the monthly allotment renews. During the TARP investments after the 2008 financial crisis, Hughes was given large subsides to connect rural areas. They were unable to see that my home qualified. They noted my Westport mailing address but were totally incapable of realizing that in spite of the Westport address, I lived in the Town of Moriah. HughesNet satellite is not the solution we need. We need true high speed internet access. At this point, that must be cable or fiber optic lines. Paul Reese, Moriah ■
BRIEFS
School, community garden funding available
PLATTSBURGH | Grant funding is now available from North Country Region Eat Smart New York to support school and community gardens for the 2018 growing season. New and existing community and school gardens within Oneida, Herkimer, Hamilton, Essex, Clinton, Franklin, St. Lawrence, Jefferson, Lewis, and Oswego counties are encouraged to apply and may qualify to receive up to $500 in garden supplies and materials. Interested groups should complete an application at northcountryeatsmartny.org/pre-gardenfundingsurvey by Wednesday, April 18. Grant funding is limited. ■
Free parenting workshop slated
ELIZABETHTOWN | “Parenting Children With Attachment Issues,” a free parenting workshop hosted by Family Forever, is set for March 22 at 5:30 p.m. at 196 Water St. Therapist Deb Dube, an expert in treating reactive attachment disorders in children, will lead the program. For more information, call Katie at 518-561-4999. ■
The Essex Center in Elizabethtown on March 14 unveiled two newly-renovated rooms that will serve as part of the facility’s locked dementia unit upon their completion. All in all, there will be 12 rooms with a total of 30 beds. Pictured above: Activities Director Candy Goff, nurse Lindsey Scrodin, Director of Nursing Lisa Clark, Administrator Joseph Kandelman, Jay Goulet, Ben Muroff, Thomas Blanchard and Josiah McKiernan share a moment at the ribbon cutting ceremony. Photo provided
8 • March 24, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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Conservation conversations
Cobwebs will be all that remains if dairy business doesn’t see relief It was -10 below this morning. For the third week in March, that is cold. Too cold. But last night’s news was even colder. A talk show hosting a panel of local By Rich Redman farmers discussed the low prices • COLUMNIST • dairies are getting for 100 pounds of milk, or roughly 11.5 gallons. Dairy farmers are getting paid today what their fathers or grandfathers were paid 40 years ago. Milk prices have fallen and stayed down for a few years now. Normally, there are the cyclic up and down years. The good years pay for the bad years. But lately there have been no good years. We are losing family run dairy farms! Forty years ago, a wage of $2 per hour would have been normal, and if you got $5 per hour, you hit it big time. It was a better time for farms. The milk price was up and costs were in line with what a farm was paid. But today the ends cannot be met. Like cars, tractors now have a mortgage payment plan now attached to them, and the fuel to run them is expensive. Taxes, labor costs, fuel, clothing, grain, lubricants, and farm equipment have all gone sky high, while income has decreased. Environmental concerns also cost dollars, but come in last when ranked with other farm priorities.
The small family farm will die unless there is a change in both state and federal policies. So what can we do? Write letters to our local, state and federal government elected officials. If you can’t write, call. Voice your concern, and demand a new dairy policy that works and supports our dairy farmers. Gov. Andrew Cuomo: 518-474-8390 Sen. Charles Schumer: 202- 224-6542 Rep. Elise Stefanik: 202-225-4611 Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand: 202-224-4451 State Sen. Betty Little: 518-743-0968 Assemblyman Billy Jones: 518-562-1986 Request that they promote and correct the dairy pricing system so our farmers have a better quality of life. No one should lose a farm that has been in their family for eons because of an outdated and dysfunctional pricing system. Fix the problem before the farms are just memories. And secondly: Drink more milk. Part of the milk pricing system is supply and demand. Demand is down because people are drinking cokes and other soft drinks along with all the vitamin water, flavored water, colored water and just plain old bottled water water. If a multinational company can afford to buy a half
minute of advertising during the Super Bowl for millions of dollars, they are not hurting. Dairy promotion can’t afford that kind of time slot or cost, and should not need too. It’s time to be a wise consumer and support the dairy industry even more than normal. Instead of buying a bottle of water or pop to ease your thirst, try some milk. Milk is hydration power food. It’s loaded with calcium and protein to replenish your body and if you buy chocolate milk, you get a flavored energy boost. Top exercise trainers are now encouraging the use of chocolate milk, replacing the commercialized sports drinks. So replace those empty calorie, sugar-laden, donothing-for-you, weight-gaining, diabetes-causing soft drinks, and power up with whole milk — the original power drink. Put your money to work for the local dairy farmer. Drink milk, buy some ice cream, have a cheese sandwich or macaroni and cheese for lunch. With the morning cereal, have some yogurt and toast with real butter and feel good about what you are doing to your body and for the local dairy farmers. We are all in this together. The earth supplies us food and housing. Farmers grow food, and forests supply us with wood to build. We need both to be economically sound for the owners. If we as a society don’t act on both the political and consumer front lines, the only thing left in the wooden dairy barn will be cobwebs. ■
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Calendar of Events I
To list your event call (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 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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MAR. 22
Peru » Just Jammin held at Peru
restaurant or backcountry lodge, and retire for the night to a warm bed before beginning another day’s exploration of the vast and wild Adirondacks. Free and open to the public. Bring lunch if you like, and desserts and beverages will be served, courtesy of the Hospitality Committee. Details: 518-891-4190.
Memorial VFW; 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. A group of local musicians get together to “jam.” They are always looking for others to join them. Come join them, listen, dance and/or add your voice to their instruments Items for a light supper available for purchase. Kitchen and MAR. 23 bar open at 5 p.m. For more info Willsboro » Live Music held biljud@aol.com or 518-563-7558, at Champlain Valley Senior 518-593-5628. Community Assisted Living & Memory Care; 2:30 p.m. Bugsy Plattsburgh » Baby -N- Me Expo will perform - We serve drinks and held in front of Dicks Sporting snacks during music. The music Goods; 3:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. is mostly old country, bluegrass Expectant parents, New parents, and rock ’n roll from the 50s and grandparents and those who 60s. For more info Contact Torunn love babies join the Child Care Lyngroth Aberle Activities Director Coordinating Council for their 518-817-9108 ext. 407. www. annual Baby-N-Me Expo. The champlainassistedliving.com expo will cover topics like safety, nutrition, and baby care. Learn MAR. 24 about making homemade baby West Chazy » Nina’s Brew toys and much more! Giovanina Bucci, Mike Brewster, Saranac Lake » Adirondack and Isaac French to perform held Hamlets to Huts held at Cantwell at Vesco Ridge Vineyards; 4:00 Room of the Saranac Lake Free p.m. - 6:00 p.m. A musical blend Library; Noon. Executive Director of three uniquely powerful voices Joe Dadey, and Jack Drury will talk dynamically layered over guitars, about the Adirondack Communitypiano and percussion.. Details: 518based Trails and Lodging System 846-8544, www.vescoridge.com. project which is funded by New Plattsburgh » 8th Annual York State. The idea behind Adirondack District Boy Scouts the Hamlets to Huts initiative Pinewood Derby held at Champlain is simple. The well designed Centre Mall; Check-in 9 a.m., Race trails allow hikers, paddlers, begins around 10:00 a.m. The event bikers, snowshoers, or skiers to is anticipated to be wrapped up experience the most stunning, before noon. Come support the remote Adirondack landscapes Cub Scouts in their race of the year! imaginable by day. And when the day ends, they can MAR. 24 - MAR. 25 come off the trail to eat Across the State » Maple MAR. a hot meal in a local Weekend held in Clinton,
25-29
Miracle on Ice Fantasy Camp held at Lake Placid Olympic Center.
Essex & Franklin Counties; During Maple Weekend, producers from across the state welcome families to their farms to experience firsthand how real, mouthwatering maple syrup and other related products are made. You’ll also have the opportunity to enjoy the fun, family-friendly activities, taste New York’s freshest maple syrup and purchase your favorite maple products. For more info & location go to MapleWeekend.com
MAR. 25
Peru » Sunday Breakfast held at
Peru Memorial VFW; 9:00 a.m. Noon. Bacon, scrambled eggs, sausage gravy & biscuits, corned beef hash, pancakes or French toast with real maple syrup, juice and coffee. ONLY $10. Seconds are No Charge. Peru » No Greater Love held at Community Church; 10:30 a.m. by John Perterson will be performed by the choir, soloists, with speakers from the Confirmation Class retelling the story of Jesus entry into Jerusalem, Church Brunch will be served in the Fellowship Center. Enjoy a delicious hot breakfast with family and friends, all-you-can eat and at a modest cost, served between 9am & 1pm. Proceeds benefit church missions. For more info Rev. Peggi Eller 518-643-8641, www.perucommunitychurch.com
MAR. 25 - MAR. 29
Lake Placid » Miracle on Ice Fantasy Camp held at Olympic Center; 8:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. Join players from the gold medal winner 1980 USA Hockey Team and participate in the fourth annual Miracle on Ice Fantasy Camp in rv Lake L, Placid. For more info visit : whiteface.com w
MAR. 26 .......................
"
pPlattsburgh » Swing, Latin & Ballroom Social Dancing held at B Recreation Center; 6:30 p.m - 8:30 R
p.m. Dances are Open to the Public and FREE OF CHARGE. There are no dance lessons at our Monday dances. We will review and practice dances taught at our Second Saturday Monthly Dances. Come dance, practice and socialize with our friendly, supportive dance community, which includes dancers of all ages and abilities. Come join the fun! Dance Plattsburgh is USA Dance, Inc., Chapter #3033. Please visit www.DancePlattsburgh.org for more information.
MAR. 28
Peru » Sunday Breakfast held at
Peru Memorial VFW; 9:00 a.m. - Noon Bacon, scrambled eggs, sausage gravy & biscuits, corned beef hash, pancakes or French toast with real maple syrup, juice and coffee. ONLY $10. Seconds are No Charge.
MAR. 29
Peru » Just Jammin held at Peru
Memorial VFW; 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. A group of local musicians get together to “jam.” They are always looking for others to join them. Come join them, listen, dance and/or add your voice to their instruments Items for a light supper available for purchase. Kitchen and bar open at 5 p.m. Details: biljud@ aol.com or 518-563-7558, 518-5935628. Peru » Maundy held at Community Church; 6:00 p.m. A special Foot & Hand-washing service will be offered in the Chapel located in our Fellowship Center. Recalling Jesus last night before his arrest and betrayal, and his giving of the commandment to love one another as he has loved us, Communion will be served. For more info 518-6438641.
MAR. 30
West Chazy » Bruce Patenaude and Bill Jock to perform held at Vesco Ridge Vineyards; 6:00 p.m. -
8:00 p.m. Familiar favorites from the 70’s, 80’s, and more. Details: 518846-8544, www.vescoridge.com.
MAR. 30 - MAR 31
Tupper Lake » Family Weekend
held at Wild Center; 10:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. Get your family out of the house for Family Weekends at The Wild Center. Grab a pair of snowshoes and hit the trails to explore on your own or on a guided naturalist walk. Relax inside with The Wild Center’s river otters, a featured film and a warm beverage while you explore the exhibits and see an Adirondack animal up close. Family Weekends are free for members or with paid admission, and include free use of snowshoes. wildcenter.org
MAR. 31
Essex » Easter Egg Hunt held at Essex Community Church; 11:00 a.m. We will meet at the Essex Community Church steps at 11AM. Plattsburgh » CVPH Easter Egg Hunt 2018 held at CVPH Front Lawn; 10:00 a.m. Sharp Bring your baskets, there’s 10,000 eggs to be found! Come and meet the Easter bunny while filling up your basket with as many eggs as you can. Convenient parking in the Medical Office building lots (Cornelia Street Entrance) FREE & OPEN TO ALL “HUNTERS” UP TO SECOND GRADE! SEPARATE HUNTING GROUND FOR AGES 3 AND YOUNGER. For more information, contact Michelle Senecal at 518314-3359.
NOW - MAY 26
Saranac Lake » Winter Bread
Market held at First United Methodist Church; 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Fresh Baked, Hand-made, Organic. Pre-Orders welcomed & appreciated. Text or Call 518-3021828.
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Join the moonrise hike near Keeseville, Saturday, Mar. 31st It’s our first CATS trail in Chesterfield and we’re celebrating with the rise of the blue moon on Trembleau Mountain. Enjoy a fabulous view over Lake Champlain. Starting time is 6:30 pm. Details at: ChamplainAreaTrails.com or call 518.962.2287
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The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 9
Green Party candidate Kahn enters race for Congress Lynn Kahn is positioning herself as a government reformer in bid to unseat Stefanik By Pete DeMola EDITOR
SCHROON LAKE | Just call her the “Government Mechanic.” After spending four decades working to untangle the federal bureaucracy as an organizational psychologist, Dr. Lynn S. Kahn is pivoting to a run for Congress. Kahn, 71, announced her campaign last week for New York’s 21st Congressional District as a Green Party candidate. “When I talk to people, I see a lot of pain under the anger, a lot of struggle, and quite a bit of despair,” Kahn told The Sun. Kahn, who has resided in Schroon Lake since 2016, will also circulate petitions as an independent. The candidate ran as an independent in the 2016 presidential campaign, putting 70,000 miles on her car in 20 months and talking to countless people in the process, experience she said provided an intimate look at the problems facing everyday Americans. “I listened a lot, and I understand how much struggle and pain there is in the country,” Kahn said. Kahn ultimately came in 15th nationally.
EXPERIENCE TOUTED
Kahn’s entry to the race makes her the ninth candidate seeking to deny Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) a third term, joining seven Democratic candidates and one Republican. Throughout her career in Washington, the candidate was brought in to reform federal agencies, including the Internal Revenue
Lynn S. Kahn is running for New York’s 21st Congressional District as an independent and as a Green Party candidate.
Photo provided
Service and Federal Aviation Administration, where her efforts resulted in what many in the industry have called the “gold standard of strategic planning,” said the candidate. She has also served on the National Partnership for Reinventing Government, a President Clinton-era initiative to make government more efficient. As a psychologist, Kahn was tasked with organizational management and helping agencies streamline operations and find common ground. “How do you make a plan to deliver lofty goals in a complicated environment where people from different points of view have to agree on clear actions?” Kahn said. Culling government waste was a keystone of those efforts, and Kahn argues she is the only candidate with such an intimate look at how the executive branch operates. “I know how to look under the hood,” Kahn
said. “I’m the candidate who knows how to implement changes that need to happen.” Kahn later offered consulting to several New York City departments, including the city’s Department of Juvenile Justice and Department of Probation. Additional campaign planks in the candidate’s platform include expanding health care, growing green jobs, solving veterans’ complaints, transforming family law and protecting and repairing the environment. Kahn, who is also an author and columnist, is particularly interested in veterans issues. During her presidential campaign, she participated in 12 presidential debates and forums. In doing so, she got to know Veterans Party of America candidate Chris Keniston, who offered a keen insight into issues from a veteran’s perspective. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs needs a complete overhaul, Kahn said, and its mission statement should be rewritten to focus on providing “world-class benefits” to veterans and their families. “There’s 100 VA facilities under internal investigation, from negligence to prescriptions of opioids,” Kahn said. “You need to send in really tough consulting teams. You need 100 consulting teams.”
LOOKING TOWARDS PETITIONS
The candidate’s platform and persona appear to be wildly divergent from that of Matt Funiciello, the Green Party’s candidate in 2014 and 2016. Funiciello, a baker and political activist, based his freewheeling populist bids around single-payer health care and attacking the two major parties as equally-unpalatable vessels controlled by corporate interests. Funiciello also delighted in needling his Democratic opponents and offering a steady stream of commentary on social media. Kahn joins the race when Democrats are hustling to circulate petitions for ballot
access before the April 12 deadline — just three weeks away. The field is sure to winnow if candidates cannot meet the 1,250 signature threshold: All but one, Katie Wilson, have promised to support the eventual nominee if they fall short in making the ballot. Democratic hopefuls occupy a wide swatch of the political spectrum, from moderates like Tedra Cobb to more progressive candidates like Patrick Nelson, a Stillwater-based activist and former legislative aide who has largely adopted many of the campaign platforms highlighted by Funiciello, including sharply deriding the role of money in politics and calling for a less interventionist U.S. foreign policy. Does Kahn see an opening for her candidacy in the race? “I think there’s a huge opening,” she said. “I don’t like labels. In some ways, I’m a fiscal conservative because I don’t like waste. “Neither party has solved problems for decades.” But government also has a role in ensuring everyone has the resources to prosper, she said. Kahn is now circulating petitions for both the Green Party and as an independent candidate. She held her first public event last week in Glens Falls, a meeting with the Warren County Green Party. The candidate envisions a wide-ranging retail campaign, knocking on doors, talking to voters across the district and most importantly, listening. Stefanik won re-election in 2016 by 35 points, the largest point spread by any federal Republican lawmaker in the state. Funiciello garnered 10.6 and 4.6 percent of the vote in 2014 and 2016, respectively. Kahn said she isn’t dissuaded by the numbers. “I think every incumbent is vulnerable,” she said, “and I think the Republican Party is particularly vulnerable.” ■
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Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@ suncommunitynews.com to place a listing.
REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNITY LOOKING FOR YOUR ACTIVITIES & SERVICES
BINGO
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
LECTURES & SEMINARS
PUBLIC MEETINGS
PUBLIC MEETINGS
PERU - K of C or Knights of Columbus Bingo, Tuesdays @ 7:10 p.m. St. Augustines Parish Center, 3030 Main St. All welcome!
ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, in the boardroom,4:30 PM - 6:00 PM. The meeting is open to anyone those with diabetes, their caregivers, family members and friends.
PLATTSBURGH - Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Plattsburgh Every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Search for Meaning. A study and discussion group that is now exploring Eckhart Tolles A New Earth: Awakening to Your Lifes PurposeAll are open to the public, free and at 4 Palmer St. unless otherwise noted.
LAKE PLACID – Al-Anon Family Group meeting every Monday 8pm-9pm, St. Agnes Church Basement 169 Hillcrest Avenue, Lake Placid. For more info call 1-888425-2666 or 518-561-0838
PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Street, Plattsburgh Beekman 7:30pm-8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.
LAKE PLACID - Lake Placid Winter Community Hike,This winter ADK is teaming up with the Uihlein Foundation to offer free naturalist walks once a month at the Heaven Hill Trails just outside of the village of Lake Placid on Bear Cub Lane. Participants should meet at the Heaven Hill trailhead and be prepared for a 1-2 mile walk in winter conditions. Snowshoes or microspikes will be provided if needed. Community hikes are on the last Saturday of every month, start at 2pm, and are on the following dates: January 27, February 24, and March 24.
PLATTSBURGH - Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Plattsburgh Sundays, 7:30 p.m. Sunday Serenity. 12-Step Meeting of Adult Children of Alcoholics.. For more information about the organization, visit www.adultchildren.org. All are open to the public, free and at 4 Palmer St. unless otherwise noted.
LAKE PLACID - Saturday, March 24th Moose, Winter Ticks, and Climate Change: Steve Hall of Adirondack Wildlife and Refuge Rehabilitation Center presents on the natural history of the modern moose, its place in the environment and challenges facing this animal. Presentation includes his own photographs of moose from every Canadian province, as well as Alaska and the Lower 48. Lectures start are 8pm and are open to everyone. For more information on daily programming, ADK membership or lodging, please visit the Adirondak Loj, call (518)523-3441 or visit our website at www.adk.org.
PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday CLASSES & WORKSHOPS GLENS FALLS – Friday-Monday, March 23th-26th Build the Sagamore Chair with Larry Benjamin. #1151-0323. 4 days. 9am-4pm at 18 Curran Street. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. GLENS FALLS – Saturday March 24th Intermediate Rustic FurnitureCreating a Small Rustic Table with Jon Little. #1313-0324. 1 day. 9am-4pm at 18 Curran Street. For pricing & more info call 518-696or www.adirondack2400 folkschool.org. LAKE LUZERNE – Saturday & Sunday, March 24th-25th Shades of Nature with Teresa Breuer. #11590324. 2 half days. 9am-12pm at Adirondack Folk School 51 Main Street. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. LAKE LUZERNE – Saturday & Sunday, March 24th-25th Greenwood Spoon Carving with Emmet Van Driesche . #1256-0324. 2 days. 9am-4pm. at Adirondack Folk School 51 Main Street. For pricing & more info call 518-6962400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. COMMUNITY OUTREACH ESSEX - The Essex Yoga Club meets every Monday at 5:30 pm at St. Johns Church. Free, open to all.
PERU - St. Augustines Soup Kitchen, Free Delicious Meal Every Wednesday, 3030 Main St., 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. PLATTSBURGH - Sundays, 7:30 p.m. Sunday Serenity. 12-Step Meeting of Adult Children of Alcoholics. For more information about the organization, visit www.adultchildren.org. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 4 Palmer St. PLATTSBURGH - Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. Search for Meaning. A study and discussion group that is now exploring Eckhart Tolles A New Earth: Awakening to Your Lifes Purpose. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 4 Palmer St., for info 518-561-6920.
PUBLIC MEETINGS PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month Port Henry, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org SARANAC LAKE – Grief Support Group First Tuesday of Each Month Saranac Lake, St. Luke's Church in the Baldwin House 12:30-1:30pm. For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org LECTURES & SEMINARS ESSEX - A History of the World in Six Weeks. 7:30 p.m. Whallonsburg Grange Hall, 1610 Route 22, Essex. Class presented by Andy Buchanan, University of Vermont lecturer in global history. For more info & prices call 518-963-7777 or admin@thegrangehall.info. Tuesdays until March 27. Part of the Lyceum Series.
AU SABLE FORKS - Please take note that the regular monthly meetings of the Au Sable Forks Fire District for the year 2017, will be held on the second Tuesday of each month at 6:30 PM at the Au Sable Forks Fire Station located at 29 School Lane, Au Sable Forks, N. Y. 12912. The meetings are open to the public. CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Cadyville, NY. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. CHAZY – Al-Anon Family Group meeting every Friday 7:30pm8:30pm, Sacred Heart Church 8 Hall Street, Chazy. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838 ELIZABETHTOWN – Al-Anon Family Group meetins every Sunday 4:00pm-5pm, Board Room in Elizabethtown Community Hospital 75 Park St., Elizabethtown. For more info call 1-888-425-2666 or 518561-0838
LEWIS – Please join us for the next Local Early Intervention Coordinating Coucnil Meeting on Tuesday March 27, 2018 10:00a.m. - 12:00 Noon @ Public Safety Building in Lewis. For more info 518-8733522 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, 2224 Military Tpke., Plattsburgh. Open to the public. N0o charge or commitment required. For more information call 518-566-8764. PLATTSBURGH - The next meeting of Champlain Valley Toastmasters Club will be on Tuesday, April 3rd,from 6 to 7 pm. at the United Way, 45 Tom Miller Road, Plattsburgh,NY. For all inquiries, please contact Joseph Sohmer, at joseph_sohmer@hotmail.com, or Chris Ransom, at ransom@northnet.org or 518-578-7374 PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Adult Children Meeting every Monday at 7pm-8pm, United Methodist Church, 127 Beekmantown Street, Plattsbugh. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-5610838. PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh 7:30pm8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.
SARANAC LAKE - Al-Anon Family Group meeting every Wednesday 7pm-8pm, Baldwin House 94 Church Street, Saranac Lake. For more information call 1-888-4252666 or 518-561-0838
SCHROON LAKE - The Southern Adirondack Softball Umpires and Westport Chapter Baseball Umpires will be holding their 2018 meetings on February 27, March 6, 13, 20, and 27th at 6pm in the Library at Schroon Lake Central School. All members past, present and new are encouraged to attend
WESTPORT - The Westport Central School District Board of Education will hold their regular monthly meeting on Thursday, March 22, 2018 at 5:45 PM in the Library. This meeting was rescheduled from March 8, 2018 due to inclement weather. The meeting will open with budget workshop #2. Additional agenda items include a preliminary report on establishing an academic calendar for 2018-19, a report on implementation this school year of code of conduct policies and protocols, a status report on the merger study process currently underway, 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
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Sports
The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 15
suncommunitynews.com/sports
Indian Lake aims to host first U.S. quadrathlon If successful, Indian Lake would be first U.S. locality to host event By Christopher South STA FF W RITER
INDIAN LAKE | Indian Lake wants to become the first venue in the United States to host a “quadrathlon.” The debut installment of the AQA Quadrathlon is scheduled for June 16 in Indian Lake, according to the Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce (ILCC), who briefed the town board last week and asked for their support. The event will be organized under the newly-minted American Quadrathlon Association, said Chamber of Commerce President Bill Murphy and fellow chamber board member Leonard Carbonara.
Board members appeared enthused. “The Iron Man and triathlon competitions are quite popular, so I think this (quadrathlon) has potential,” said Councilwoman Patricia Ryan-Curry, referring to the annual event in Lake Placid. The event’s early slogan? “Do the Q.” The quadrathlon one-ups the triathlon by adding kayaking to swimming, biking and running. Although the quadrathlon started in Europe in 1987, no other quadrathlon has been run in the U.S. since then. Carbonara said early plans for a course in Indian Lake include an approximately half-mile swim, followed by a four-mile paddle. Athletes would then get out of the water and perform a 10k bike ride followed by a 10k run. ILCC aimed to sign up at least 50 people at the Adirondack Summer Sports & Fitness Expo held last week in Saratoga Springs. Carbonara said he is optimistic the event will see liftoff because
there are other triathlon or “Iron Man” events held in the region. He said there are over 550,000 members of the national triathlon association, and triathletes are always looking for something different to do. According to the World Quadrathlon Federation (WQF), the event always begins with the swim and finishes with the run, but the kayaking and biking events can be switched. And while the WQF lists middle and long distance events, Murphy said they are proposing Indian Lake host a sprint distance quadrathlon, which includes a three-quarters of a kilometer swim, 20km bike, 4km kayak, and a 5km run. The newly formed AQA has copyrighted the name “quadrathlon” under Carbonara’s name, and ILCC would be entitled to license fees for others’ use of the name. ■ The Indian Lakes Chamber of Commerce is spearheading an effort to bring a “quadrathlon” to the Town of Indian Lake - the first ever such event in the United States. The event is tentatively scheduled for June 16, and organizers are hoping to get at least 50 entrants for the inaugural event.
Willsboro shooters improve in second season By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
WILLSBORO | For the second year, student athletes from Willsboro Central School ended their season at the United States Military Academy, where they participated in the NYSPHSAA state rifle championships. The Willsboro shooting team finished its second season with a fifth place finish out of eight teams at the event, but coaches John Oliver and Charmaine Flynn said it was an
extremely successful season. “Our rank may not have improved, but the quality of our shooting and our scores improved a lot,” Oliver said. “The improvement on their mechanics coming into this season was a key,” Flynn said. “They had learned all of the basics last year so we were able to do more this season.” The coaches said they were fortunate to work with the SUNY Plattsburgh Shooting Club with coach Peter Visconti. “They brought a couple of their shooters in
The roster of the Willsboro Central School varsity rifle team are, back from left, coach John Oliver, Sierra Bronson, Robert Drollette, Margaret Frechette, Caleb King, Baliee Pulsifer, Adam Mero, Savannah Bronson, coach Charmaine Flynn, front from left Lexi Nolette, Kyla C row ningshield , B rad y Sw eatt, K ira C row ningshield and Everett C assavaugh. Photo provided
Members of the Willsboro Central School varsity rifle team, in their second year, competed at the state championship meet at the United States Military Academy in West Point. Photo provided
and helped our kids a lot,” Flynn said. “They also looked at one of our students who will be going there next year as a member of the team.” During the regular season, the team would shoot at the Willsboro Fish and Game Club, exchanging results with other teams throughout the state in order to have a league season. “We were closer in every match this season,” Oliver said. “I think it is amazing what we have been able to accomplish so far because all of these schools are much, much bigger than we are.” “Our team is also still very young,” Flynn said. “A lot of the teams we play have a bunch of juniors and seniors. Next year, we will
be more in their position with experience.” Oliver said he was impressed with how well the teams get along when they come together for their tournament in West Point. “Everyone is so nice and caring,” he said. “It was so nice because we had the big snowstorm as all the teams were driving there and everyone was texting each other to make sure everyone was okay,” Flynn added. Members of the Willsboro Rifle team include Kiara Crowningshield, Brandy Sweatt, Savannah Bronson, Margaret Frechette and Robbie Drollette. ■
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Nicholas Rowe
Alex Kneifel
Nate Boule
By Keith Lobdell
winning the same honor in girl’s hockey. Reidy coaches both teams at PHS. Nicholas Rowe, a forward for the Northeastern Clinton sectional championship team, was named the MVP of the league. The first team all-star team is led in the front by forwards Alex Kneifel and Nate Boule of PHS, along with Rowe. Defenders for the first team were Beekmantown’s Nate Hebert and Northeastern Clinton’s Adam Gallucci. The first team in anchored in net by freshman goalie Riley
Hansen of Beekmantown. The second team has a forward line of Brendan Whalen (PHS), Brett Dawson (Saranac Lake) and Kaden Kowalowski (BCS). Defenders include Casey Halloran (PHS) and Alex Dukette (Saranac Lake), with goalie Kyle Side (PHS). The honorable mention team has Hunter Wimot (LPCS), Rhett Darrah (SLCE), Josh McCauley (BCS), Brady LaFountain (NCCS), Konnor Shea (Saranac) and Steh Atwood (PHS) Lake Placid was the recipient of the Ray Holmes Sportsmanship Award. ■
Adam Gallucci
Riley Hansen
Reidy, Rowe lead all star hockey team SPORTS EDITOR
PLATTSBURGH | The coach of the top seeded team in Section VII and the front line presence of the sectional champion lead the members of the 2017-18 CVAC all star hockey team. Plattsburgh High head coach Jamie Reidy was named the CVAC boy’s hockey coach of the year, a season after
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The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 17
Scholarship to be created in memory of Moriah top fan John Russo was a lifelong fan and community booster By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER
MORIAH | The Moriah high school sports community was recently saddened by the passing of a man who many called their number one fan. John F. Russo could be seen on the sidelines of many Viking conquests — or contests — from the small gyms of the North Country to the bright lights of Troy and Binghamton. Russo passed away Feb. 23, just prior to what has become another Final Four postseason run for both the boy’s an girl’s basketball teams. Now, John’s daughter, Julie DeSimone, has created the John F Russo Memorial Athletic Scholarship to honor his memory. “He always attended all sports events as long I can remem-
ber. He loved sports and the kids just as much. He attended every home and away game, rain, shine or snow, actually.” DeSimone said, in many ways, sports was one of the biggest passions of his later life. “My dad was 84, but that didn’t stop him” she said. “He underwent two major surgeries this last year and pulled through both of them, The whole time he was just concerned about getting home to the Moriah sports world. He actually lived to watch these kids and we want his memory to stay with us for a very long time.” The John F. Russo Memorial Scholarship will be awarded to a pair of senior girls and a pair of senior boys annually. DeSimone said there has been a large interest in donating to the scholarship fund. Those interested in donating can send checks to: John F. Russo Memorial, c/o Julie DeSimone, P.O. Box 31, Moriah, N.Y. 12960. ■ A memorial scholarship has been created in memory of John F. Russo, who has been referred to as a top fan of the Moriah Viking sports teams. Photo provided
PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE “UNDERCOVER”
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grids of 3X3 squares. To solve the puzzle each row, column and box must contain each of the numbers 1 to 9. Puzzles come in three grades: easy, medium and difficult.
SUDOKU
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Complete the grids each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••• WORD SEARCH
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18 • March 24, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Local doctor gifts ECH endowment for ongoing education “It’s my of saying thank you,” says Dr. Herbert Savel
He scored sixth in the state. “It paid for everything in medical school at New York University,” Savel said. “Without the scholarship, I couldn’t have become a doctor.” Savel, who specializes in internal medicine, came to the small community hospital nearly half a century ago from the University of Vermont Medical School where he worked a professor of medicine. He and wife Isabel raised their two sons, Richard and Thomas, both now doctors, in Elizabethtown. Having attended medical school at Mt. Sinai, Dr. Thomas Savel is a medical officer and information scientist at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. With a medical degree from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Savels’ son Dr. Richard Savel is director of Critical Care at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. “Both attended high school here in Elizabethtown, they grew up here,” Savel said. “This was a great place to raise our children, and the hospital has long been a resource and a great benefit to the community. The care and the comfort provided by staff is unsurpassed.”
By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | Dr. Herbert Savel has presented a rare and generous gift to colleagues at the University of Vermont Health Network, Elizabethtown Community Hospital: Education. The Dr. Herbert Savel Educational Fund has been created exclusively for ECH personnel to further their education at any level. “It’s for housekeeping staff, the licensed practical nurse, the registered nurse, the data entry person who might want an advanced degree,” Savel told The Sun. Savel declined to disclose the exact amount. “It’s my way of saying ‘thank you,’ to show my appreciation for all the help received from ECH over these many years,” he said.
DEEP TIES
‘THIS IS GENEROUS’
Dr. Savel has been an attending physician here since Jan. 1, 1971, approaching 50 of his six decades in practice. He obtained his medical degree at New York University School of Medicine in 1958. “Education is what made my life possible,” said Savel, of Elizabethtown. Back in high school, the son of New York City grocers took the exam for the New York State Medical Scholarship.
At ECH, spokeswoman Jane Hooper said the fund was announced to staff last week. It will be available for employees who wish to pursue further work in their profession or for advanced degrees and certification. Hooper said the amount is generous without specifying dollar value. “This is generous, both the gift and Dr. Savel’s kindness in doing this.”
She said the reach to every employee at ECH represents wholly the teamwork required at a small hospital where housekeeping professionals are as important to function as the nursing, pharmacy, medical and IT staff. For ECH Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer Julie Tromblee, the Dr. Savel Educational Fund provides a foundation for continued staff support. “Dr. Savel is acutely aware that every employee within every department contributes to the overall quality and care of patients. Regardless of whether the employee is a clinical staff member, support staff or administration, the educational fund is in place to help support education and career advancement of everyone at Elizabethtown Community Hospital and its health centers.”
REQUIREMENTS GROWN
Looking back over 60 years in medical practice, Dr. Savel said the requirements for certification, licensure and education has grown exponentially with advancements in medicine and in hospital facilities. “It’s incredible, medical science has advanced at an incredible rate,” he said. Small community hospitals mark an important place for both state-of-the-art medicine and local care. “And education is key. I am providing this opportunity for the future. It is in gratitude for the assistance, aid and good care my patients have received over the years.” The fund will be held at ECH, Hooper said, managed as an endowment. Employees at the hospital will apply for scholarships through a process open to all staff.
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This is the second recent legacy Dr. Savel has presented to the small, community hospital. Last December, Dr. Savel gifted 30 of his hand-carved and hand-painted wood-carvings, a selection of approximately 1,400 he has completed in remembrance of children killed in concentration camps during World War II. Based in Elizabethtown, the 25-bed community hospital provides acute and sub-acute care in physical and occupational therapy, emergency medicine, radiology, pharmacy and laboratory testing with both outpatient and inpatient treatment. The hospital’s primary care network is Essex County’s central source for preventative and primary care. ECH has established community health centers in Westport, Wilmington, Willsboro, Crown Point, Au Sable Forks and Elizabethtown. ■
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Dr. Herbert Savel talks about education and the difference it made in his life and career during a recent interview at his office on Court Street in Elizabethtown. Photo by Kim Dedam
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060219
The Nature Conservancy’s Adirondack Chapter is looking for volunteers to help our stewardship team prepare our public nature preserves for visitor access this spring. This would entail coordinating with our stewardship team, traveling to preserves, and cleaning up parking areas, trailheads, and trails. This work may also involve making repairs to kiosks, trail registers or other preserve infrastructure. Volunteers should be prepared to work outside for a good portion of the day at a time and date convenient for all parties. If you have your own hand tools you are welcome to use those. However, we will also provide hand tools as well as snacks, water, sunscreen and bug spray. We hope to begin as soon as the weather starts to cooperate. Once we see the interest coming from volunteers, we will have an orientation that will answer questions such as where these preserves are located and other logistical questions.
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IM ERYS
IM ERYS
Ensure maintenance and production activities are completed in safe, timely and efficient manner for Mill. Takes a lead role in leading production and maintenance crews in completing jobs/tasks. Directs the work of maintenance and production crews. Conducts root cause analysis; Works with a team of engineers, maintenance and operating personnel to improve throughput, reduce cost, increase efficiency and quality, reduce waste or non-productive time. Provides a systematic approach to business improvement. KEY TASKS AND RESPONSIBILITIES Fully supports location health, safety, environmental and quality programs (HSEQ) by participating in their implementation, maintenance and enforcement as well as compliance with corporate programs and policies. Coach and/or hold employees accountable immediately when you see those not meeting requirements. Fully integrate and hold accountable employees commitment and compliance with company and site H&S expectations. Conduct regular and meaningful performance evaluations for direct reports, which focus on the real contributions each person has made to the safety contribution they have made for themselves and their team, and their environmental improvement/compliance. JOB SPECIFICATIONS Preferred Bachelor’s degree in mechanical, chemical, process or other related engineering discipline from four-year college or university, or equivalent combination of education and experience. High School graduate or GED required 3+ years of supervising employees in an industrial plant, preferred. 3+ years’ experience in Manufacturing setting required Knowledge, skills, abilities and other characteristics Organizational skills will be necessary for organizing and prioritizing work. Work requires ability to multi task and sometimes react quickly to ad hoc needs or requests for data and analysis. Analytical and statistical skills are essential to this role. Must be able to access data sources once setup has been defined. Analytical skills include using engineering, physics and technical knowledge of our key process technologies to effectively determine root cause and effect relationships so good decisions can be made. Evaluate opportunities for improvement and assist with resolution of problem areas. Computer skills are required to manage and utilize data management software packages and corporate enterprise systems; maintain equipment databases; and create spreadsheets, reports and memo documents. Imerys is an Equal Opportunity Employer - M/F/D/V To apply go to:
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Maintenance - Class C Willsboro, NY, USA Full Time Compensation: $23.18 Hourly
EOE
Job Description: Imerys NYCO business unit of our North America Performance Additives division is seeking to fill a Maintenance worker position based at Willsboro, NY. The ideal candidate will support the locations health, safety, environmental and quality programs (HSEQ) by participating in their implementation, maintenance, and enforcement as well as compliance with corporate programs and policies. This role requires an adherence to all Safety Policies and practices such as LOTO, HOTWORK Permits, and PPE. Primary duties are maintenance and repair of equipment and facilities at NYCO’s Mine and at the Mill. Accurately complete work orders and timesheets, and correctly sign out parts from Supply. Troubleshoot complex mechanical systems.
550606
WE ARE
HIRING ASSISTANT EDITOR
The work environment is affected by ambient temperatures (cold in winter; hot in summer) and exposure to airborne particles; workspaces are oftentimes confined. This employee must be able and willing to wear dust respirators, hearing protection and other protective clothing.
Looking for a new career opportunity with strong organizational and writing skills?
Minimum Qualifications: Education and Experience: High School diploma or
Sun Community News and Printing is looking to enhance their community publications. We are locally owned, managed, and committed to the continued development of our organization, staff, and the communities we serve. No corporate edicts from private equity owners, hiring freezes, furloughs or decisions made from outside our local management team. We are looking for a new Assistant Editor to help supervise and assist us building this communityoriented, weekly regional newspaper group. Responsibilities include staff coordination of workflow, and maintaining editorial excellence in the papers.
equivalent; 1 to 3 years’ experience in construction or industrial/manufacturing environment.
Must have skills including:
• Welding, plasma cutting, torch cutting • Fabricating, use of metal break, sheet metal roller, pipe threader, etc. • Precision measurements and math calculations • Rigging with chain falls, slings, come-alongs • Read and understand schematics, equipment manuals • Mobile equipment repair • Bearing, seals, gearbox replacement; lubrication; rebuilding • Lift 50 lbs without difficulty • Climb stairs, ladders (fixed and portable), access catwalks and scaffolding • Housekeeping duties for Maintenance shops and job sites • Language Skills – Ability to read and interpret documents such as safety rules, operating and maintenance instructions, and procedure manuals. Ability to write routine reports. • Mathematical Skills – Ability to add, subtract, multiply, and divide in all units of measure, using whole numbers, common fractions, and decimals. • Reasoning Ability – Ability to apply common sense and understanding to carry out instructions furnished in written, oral, or diagram form. Ability to deal with problems involving several concrete variables in standardized situations.
Applicants must have strong communication, organizational and writing skills, be versed in AP Style, social Media page design, and layout, digital photography as well as Apple MacIntosh Computer Systems. Generous wage, health insurance, paid time off, matching retirement program and life insurance.
Send resume to: Pete DeMola Sun Community News & Printing P.O. Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932
or E-mail to: pete@suncommunitynews.com This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year-old independently owned, local company with an excellent business and financial reputation. Our only limits are the extent of the vision of our staff. If you believe you have the qualifications necessary to fill this position, please submit your resume including compensation requirements.
Reports to: Site Manager
Night Shift: https://imerys.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/IMERYS-Careers/job/Willsboro-NewYork/Operations-Supervisor-1_REQ-00486
IMERYS is an Equal Opportunity Employer F/M/Vet/Disabled.
Additional Application Instructions
Please Apply by going to: https://imerys.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/ Imerys_Career2/job/Willsboro-New-York/Maintenance-Class-C_REQ-00574
060180
060179
Rotating Shift: https://imerys.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/IMERYS-Careers/job/WillsboroNew-York/Operations-Supervisor-4_REQ-00488
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550593
Day Shift: https://imerys.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/IMERYS-Careers/job/Willsboro-NewYork/Operations-Supervisor-1_REQ-00501-1
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DRIVER
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Operations Supervisor Willsboro, NY, USA Full Time Attractive benefit package
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D ec Support Suppa Professionals* Profe 1onals • Clinicians Cl me an (All (Al Percentages) P centages) From Sun Community News & Printing. Copies of the complete tentative administrative, • Social Social Work Work Assistant A s tant 3s 3s • DDSCTA* DDSC A capital and program budgets will be •available Physical Phy cal Therapists Therap st • Medical Med cal Specialist Spec I for inspection by the the og t public between • Psychologists* P ycho • Physician Phy 1c1anAssistant* A s1stant hours of 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. in the Administra• Habilitation ~ ab htat on Specialists Spec a s • Nurses Nu es (RN)* (R tive Office of the District Superintendent • Dentists* Nurses • Licensed cen ed Practical Pract I Nurses* Dentofsts Champlain Valley Educational Services, •518 RuLicensed (LMSW) SW cens d Master a t r Social Soc1 I Workers Wo k gar Street, Plattsburgh, commencing on March And And Many any More! Morel 30, 2018. SUMMARY OF TENTANOTICE OF SALE Digital download, prints, TIVE *Some ADMINISTRATIVE SUPREME titles may feature additional compensation, such as Geographic Pay Differentials, IncreasedCOURT Hiring ESBUDGET SEX COUNTY canvas prints and other products Salaries or Shift Pay Differentials. Total Personnel Services U.S. Bank N.A., SuccesMany of positions may also be eligible for Loan Forgiveness via the Public Service Loan Forgiveness are all available… (Salaries all Central sor Trusteeprogram: to Bank of For more Administrative and Su- information on PSLF, please visit www.studentAid.gov/publicservice America, N.A., Succespervisory Personnel) sor to Lasalle Bank, $562,590.00 N.A., as trustee on beFor more information: & PRINTING Total Employee & Rehalf of the holders of the NOTICE COMMUNITY IS HEREBY GIV-NEWS Sunmount tiree Benefits (Benefits NOTICE Washington Mutual OF SALE DDSOO EN that an on premise of Central Administra- SUPREME Mortgage Pass-Through COURT liquor license Serial Office of Human Resources: Did we capture someone youNumber know?2211483 Take ahaslook-see at tive, Certificates, WMalt SeCOUNTY OF ESSEX (518) 359-4150 ries 2006-09, Plaintiff NOTICE OF BOCES AN- Supervisory Personnel U.S. BANK NATIONAL been applied for by the opwdd.sm.sunmount.jobs@opwdd.ny.gov and all Retirees) or ASSOCIATION, against NOT IN undersigned to sell all NUAL MEETING Anne M. Minter a/k/a Please take notice that $4,169,788.00 ITSState INDIVIDUAL CAPACliquor, beer, wine and 2445 Route 30 Tupper Lake, NY 12986 Anne Minter, et al DefentheAll BOARD COOPER- Equipment $0.00 ITY BUT SOLELY AS cider at a restaurant Please note: Not all photos may be available. ©2016 Sun Community News &unPrinting. rights OF reserved. An Affi rmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer Supplies and Materials TRUSTEE FOR THE dants ATIVE EDUCATIONAL the Alcoholic Any illegal copying, downloading or reproductionder of images withoutBeverpurchasing is prohibited. j. 96047 Attorney for Plaintiff(s) RMAC TRUST, SERIES age Law at 44 Old Arse- SERVICES OF THE SOLE $11,203.00 540125 Fein, Such & Crane, LLP nal Road Westport, NY SUPERVISORY DIS- Revenue Note Interest 2016-CTT, 28 EastLEGALS Main Street, Plaintiff, LEGALS 12993 for on premise TRICT OF CLINTON-ES- $0.00 LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS Total Contract Expense Against Suite 1800, Rochester, consumption. SEX-WARREN-WASHBlacksmith House LLC, GREAT NORTH PROP- Thirsty Cats Restaurant INGTON Park Real Estate Enter- NY 14614 Attorney (s) IAN O'BRIEN, COUNTIES $230,900.00 Arts of Org filed with ERTIES, LLC, a domes- Group, Inc. prises LLC, Arts of Org for Plaintiff (s). (Champlain Valley Edu- Net Transfers (other Defendant(s). SSNY on 02/05/18. Off. tic LLC, filed with the filed with SSNY on cational Services) will than dba Westport Yacht Club capital) Index No.: 191/2015 Pursuant to a Judgment Loc.: Essex County, SSNY on 12/20/17. Of- 44 Old Arsenal Road 01/18/18. Off. Loc.: Es- of Foreclosure and Sale $129,389.00 hold the annual meeting Pursuant to a Judgment SSNY designated as fice location: Essex TOTAL ADMINISTRA- of Foreclosure and Sale, sex County, SSNY desig- Entered January 8, 2018 Westport, NY 12993 of the members of the agent of LLC upon County. SSNY is desig- VN-03/24-03/31/2018BUDGET Boards of Education of TIVE duly entered in the Es- nated as agent of LLC I will sell at Public Aucwhom process against it nated as agent upon upon whom process $5,103,870.00 tion to the highest bidits component school sex County Clerk's Office 2TC-179498 may be served. SSNY whom process against der at the 7559 Court St NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- districts on Wednesday, (Compensation of Dis- on 1/26/2018, I, the un- against it may be served. shall mail a copy of pro- the LLC may be served. trict Superintendent of dersigned Referee, will SSNY shall mail a copy in the City of ElizabethEN that a license, num- April 11, 2018, at 7:30 cess to: The LLC, P.O. SSNY shall mail process Schools) sell at public auction at of process to: The LLC, town, in the County of ber PENDING , for Beer, p.m., at the Instructional Box714, Frisco, NC to LLC, PO Box 38, Port Services Center in State Salary $43,499.00 the Essex County Court- 373 Whiteface Inn Lane, Essex, State of New Liquor and Wine has 27936. Purpose: to en- Kent, NY 12997. PurCVES Salary house, 7559 Court Lake Placid, NY 12946. York on April 10, 2018 been applied for by FC Plattsburgh. The Board gage in any lawful act. pose: Any lawful purStreet, Elizabethtown, Purpose: to engage in at 10:30 AM. Premises Houghton, LLC D.B.A.: of Cooperative Educa- $123,263.00 pose. any lawful act. VN-03/24-04/28/2018Security known as 16 Ausable Services will Social NY 12932, on 4/6/2018 Old Dock Restaurant & tional VN-02/24-03/31/20186TC-179494 VN-03/24-04/28/2018Run Lane, Wilmington, at 11:00 am, premises Marina to sell Beer, present its tentative ad- $10,379.00 6TC-177071 6TC-179493 Retirement known as 122 Shepard NY 12997. Sec 16.4 Liquor and Wine at retail ministrative, capital and Teacher $13,103.00 program Block 4 Lot 12.000. budgets for Avenue, Saranac Lake, in a restaurant under the FAMILY COURT FOR GREG WEBER CONHealth Insurance NY 12983, and de- NOTICE IS GIVEN OF THOSE PREMISES in the Alcoholic Beverage Con- 2018-19 to the members FORMATION OF THE THE STATE OF SULTING, LLC. Arts. of of the Boards of Educa- $20,136.00 Town of Wilmington, Esscribed as follows: Org. filed with the SSNY trol Law at 2745 Essex RADIANT EARTH sex County, State of DELAWARE Unemployment Insur- ALL that certain plot, tion of component BOTANICALS, LLC, a NOTICE OF FAMILY on 01/31/18. Office: Es- Road, Essex, New York New York. Approximate school districts in atten- ance $616.00 piece or parcel of land, limited liability compay, COURT PROTECTION sex County. SSNY desig- 12936, for on premises Workers' Compensation dance at such Annual Amount of Judgment is with the buildings and consumption. by the filing of Articles FROM ABUSE ACTION nated as agent of the $770,614.64 plus interMeeting, for their re- $863.00 improvements thereon of Organization with the To Anthony Wood, (Re- LLC upon whom pro- VN-03/17-03/24/2018est and costs. Premises view. The following are Life/Disability Insurance erected, situate, lying 2TC-179074 Secretary of State of the will be sold subject to spondent) Petitioner, cess against it may be summaries of the tenta- $1,200.00 and being in the Village served. SSNY shall mail NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVState of New York on Jennifer Allen has filed a provisions of filed Judgtive administrative, capi- SUMMARY OF TENTA- of Saranac Lake, Town Petition for an Order of copy of process to the EN that a license, num- tal and program bud- TIVE CAPITAL BUDGET of North Elba, County of March 8, 2018. The of- ment Index No 563-08. LLC, 1447 County Rt. fice of the LLC is located Protection From Abuse ber PENDING , for Beer, gets. The amounts stat- Transfer To Capital Fund William E. Russell, Esq., Essex, State of New 10, Westport, NY 12993. in Essex County, New Referee SPSNC414 against you in the Family Liquor and Wine has $295,000.00 ed are based on current York, and designated on Purpose: Any lawful purCourt of the State of been applied for by FC estimates and may be Rental of Facilities the tax maps of the Es- York. The Secretary of VN-03/10-3/31/2018pose. Delaware for New Castle Houghton, LLC D.B.A.: subject sex County Treasurer as State has been designat- 4TC-178293 to change. $253,268.00 VN-02/17-03/24/2018County. Case No. 18Old Dock Restaurant & Copies of the complete TOTAL CAPITAL BUD- Section 32.182 Block 1 ed as agent of the LLC 6TC-175948 upon whom process 01096 Marina to sell Beer, tentative administrative, GET $548,268.00 Lot 28.000 may be served. The A court hearing has Liquor and Wine at retail capital and program SUMMARY OF TENTA- The approximate NOTICE OF FORMATION Secretary of State shall been scheduled for OF JCH Rentals, LLC a in a restaurant under the TIVE PROGRAM BUD- amount of the current budgets will be available Alcoholic Beverage Con- for inspection by the GET 3/28/18 at 10:00 am. domestic limited liabilty Judgment lien is mail a copy of any proThe Family Court is lo- company. Art. of Org. trol Law at 2754 Essex Occupational Instruction public between the $161,561.82 plus inter- cess against the LLC served upon him to RA- NOTICE IS GIVEN OF Road, Essex, New York cated at 500 N. King St., $8,295,807.00 hours of 9 a.m. and 3 est and costs. The filed with Sec'y of State DIANT EARTH BOTANI- THE FORMATION OF 12936, for on premises Wilmington, DE 19801. of NY (SSNY) on p.m. in the Administra- Instruction of Students premises will be sold If you fail to appear, the Disabilities tive Office of the District with subject to provisions of CALS, LLC, 124 Alstead 2/8/2018. Office loca- consumption. THE ELEMENTAL CENhearing may proceed Superintendent of $12,709,060.00 the aforesaid Judgment Hill Lane, Keene, NY TER, LLC, a limited liation: Essex County. VN-03/24-03/31/201812942. The purpose of without you. There is an SSNY is designated as 2TC-179485 Services Champlain Valley Educa- Itinerant of Foreclosure and Sale; bility company, by the the LLC is to engage in Ex-Parte Order in effect. tional Services, 518 Ru- $1,661,654.00 Index # 191/2015. agent of the LLC upon LITTLE FARM HOUSE filing of Articles of Orgaany lawful act or activity. If you wish to obtain the General Instruction gar Street, Plattsburgh, If the sale is set aside whom process against FLOWERS, LLC Articles nization with the Secreinformation on this filing $1,088,043.00 for any reason, the Pur- VN-03/24-04/28/2018the LLC may be served. of Org. filed NY Sec. of commencing on March tary of State of the State 6TC-179303 prior to the hearing, Instructional Support chaser at the sale shall 30, 2018. SSNY shall mail a copy State (SSNY) 1/31/2018. of New York on March 8, please respond to the of such process served Office in Essex Co. SUMMARY OF TENTA- $2,480,230.00 be entitled only to a re2018. The office of the NOTICE OF SALE Family Court location Other Services turn of the deposit paid. upon it to JCH Rentals, LLC is located in Essex SSNY desig. agent of TIVE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPREME COURT ESnoted above. $7,161,152.00 The Purchaser shall LLC P.O. Box 1921 Lake County, New York. The LLC whom process may BUDGET SEX COUNTY VN-03/24/2018-1TCTOTAL PROGRAM BUD- have no further recourse Total Personnel Services Placid NY 12946. Pur- be served. SSNY shall Secretary of State has U.S. Bank N.A., Succes179495 (Salaries of all Central GET $33,395,946.00 against the Mortgagor, pose: To engage in any been designated as mail process to 593 the Mortgagee or the sor Trustee to Bank of agent of the LLC upon lawful activity. Stickney Bridge Rd., Jay, Administrative and Su- TOTAL CVES BUDGET America, N.A., Succespervisory Personnel) $39,048,084.00 Mortgagees attorney. VN-02/17-03/24/2018NY 12941, which is also whom process may be Glen Cottage LLC, Arts VN-03/24, 4/7/2018- JUDITH A PAREIRA, sor to Lasalle Bank, served. The Secretary of $562,590.00 6TC-176523 the principal business N.A., as trustee on beof Org filed with SSNY Total Employee & Re- 2TC-179763 Esq., Referee. location. Purpose: Any State shall mail a copy on 01/26/18. Off. Loc.: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- lawful purpose. tiree Benefits (Benefits Leopold & Associates, half of the holders of the of any process against Washington Mutual that an on premise NOTICE OF SALE EN Essex County, SSNY of Central AdministraPLLC, 80 Business Park VN-03/10-04/14/2018the LLC served upon Mortgage Pass-Through liquor SUPREME license Serial COURT designated as agent of tive, Drive, Suite 110, Ar6TC-178453 Certificates, WMalt Se- him to THE ELEMENTAL LLC upon whom pro- Number 2211483 has Supervisory Personnel COUNTY OF ESSEX monk, NY 10504 ries 2006-09, Plaintiff CENTER, LLC, 124 AlNOTICE OF BOCES ANbeen applied for by the U.S. BANK NATIONAL cess against it may be and all Retirees) Dated: 2/12/2018 stead Hill Lane, Keene, against ASSOCIATION, NOT IN GNS served. SSNY shall mail undersigned to sell all NUAL MEETING $4,169,788.00 NY 12942. The purpose Please take notice that Equipment $0.00 Anne M. Minter a/k/a ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPAC- VN-03/03-03/24/2018a copy of process to: liquor, beer, wine and Anne Minter, et al Defen- of the LLC is to engage ITY BUT SOLELY AS 4TC-177850 cider at a restaurant un- the BOARD OF COOPER- Supplies and Materials The LLC, 233 College in any lawful act or acdants EDUCATIONAL TRUSTEE FOR THE Ave, Oakmont, PA der the Alcoholic Bever- ATIVE $11,203.00 Attorney for Plaintiff(s) tivity. 15139. Purpose: to en- age Law at 44 Old Arse- SERVICES OF THE SOLE Revenue Note Interest RMAC TRUST, SERIES nal Road Westport, NY SUPERVISORY 2016-CTT, Fein, Such & Crane, LLP VN-03/24-04/28/2018DIS- $0.00 gage in any lawful act. 6TC-179302 12993 for on premise 28 East Main Street, TRICT OF CLINTON-ES- Total Contract Expense Plaintiff, VN-03/24-4/28/2018consumption. Suite 1800, Rochester, SEX-WARREN-WASHAgainst 6TC-179488 $230,900.00 Thirsty Cats Restaurant INGTON NY 14614 Attorney (s) COUNTIES Net Transfers (other IAN O'BRIEN, Group, Inc. for Plaintiff (s). (Champlain Valley Edu- than capital) Defendant(s). dba Westport Yacht Club Pursuant to a Judgment cational Services) will $129,389.00 Index No.: 191/2015 44 Old Arsenal Road of Foreclosure and Sale hold the annual meeting TOTAL ADMINISTRA- Pursuant to a Judgment
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22 • March 24, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
CHRYSLER
5 vEAR / 60,000
MILES WARRANTY
POWERTRAIN
Krystal Wins 3 Years in a Row!
TRUCK (@MONTH
CUSTC)MER AWARD
YOUR#1Dealerin
, This
Customer Satisfaction
dealer
I
.
,
has
achieved _.;,_,_0.:_!JPf<>ple~
I I
• •
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•
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NEW 2018 JEEP RENEGADE SPORT 4X4
NOW
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Camera, Uconnect 5" Display, Integrated Voice Command w/Bluetooth and Much More!
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520,999
OR
~
..
'-'
4'
(~
--
q_. l --
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5 32,999
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NEW 2018 DODGE JOURNEY SE ow e
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4 ,-r, ---.,.
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NEW 2018 JEEP COMPASS SPORT 4X4
5239 m4:s. 519,899
NEW 2018 CHRYSLER PACIFICA TOURING L
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NEW 2018 JEEP CHEROKEE LATITUDE 4X4 4 ~ ----.... ~n:m··= ....-ew w
521,999
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creen,
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Parksense Rear Park Assist, Keyless Enter n Go, 17" Aluminum Wheels, Apple Car Play & Google Android Auto Play Capable and Much More!
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their
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NEW 2018 RAM QUAD CAB EXPRESS 4X4
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NEW 2018 FIAT SPIDER LUSSO
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*Prices include allavailable rebates. You may qualify foradditional rebates &incentives. Must finance through Chrysler Capital. **leases Rts. 9&2~, Warrens~ur~, NY 1288~ through Chrysler Capital include allavailable rebates and arebased on10,000 miles ayear with $2999 cash down; 1stpayment, taxes and OMV fees due atinception; security deposit waived forwell-qualified buyers; disposition fee$395; 25c amile overage. lessee isresponsible Just 4miles offExit 23where Rt. 9and Rt. 28Connect formaintenance and repairs. Pictures forillustration purposes only. Pacifica lease isfor5,000 miles ayear. Offer ends 3/30/18.
(518) 623-3405 www.krystalchryslerjeepdodg 102252
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The Valley News Sun | March 24, 2018 • 23
INTRODUCING THE ALL NEW
2018 FORD ECOSPORT SE 4WD
Stk #SEV220 - Moonroof, Power Seat/Windows/Locks, Rear Camera, Auto Temp Air, SYNC 3 System, Reverse Sensing.
23,400
MSRP ............................................... $25,400 Ford Retail Customer Cash.................. $500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash ........................ $500 Ford First Responder & Military 2 ....... $500 Ford SUV Cash Certificates 3 ............... $500
$
or get 0.9% for 60 mos. 1 Offer ends 4/2/18
- FORD’S HOT SELLING SUV -
- AMERICA’S #1 TRUCK -
- LUXURY 4X4 -
NEW 2018
NEW 2018
NEW 2018
FORD ESCAPE SE
FORD F-150 SUPERCAB
FORD EDGE SEL
Stk #EV050 - 4X4, 1.5L EcoBoost, Power Seat/Windows/Locks/ Mirrors, Rear Camera, SYNC System.
Stk #EV163 - 4x4, V6 EcoBoost, 10-Speed Auto, Power Windows/ Locks/Mirrors, Fog Lamps, Sirius.
Stk #EV185 - AWD, V6, Power Driver/Passenger Seats, Reverse Sensing, Sirius, LED Lighting, Rear Camera, SYNC System.
MSRP ............................................................................$27,950 Ford Retail Customer Cash...................................................................-$1,500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash .........................................................................-$1,000 Ford First Responder & Military Cash2 .................................................-$500 Ford Cash Certificates3..........................................................................-$1,000
MSRP ............................................................................$39,825 Ford Retail Customer Cash......................................................................-$500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash ............................................................................-$500 Ford Bonus Customer Cash ..................................................................-$1,500 Ford Special Package Cash ..................................................................-$1,000 Ford EcoBoost Cash...................................................................................-$300 Ford Credit Bonus Cash1 .......................................................................... -$750 Ford First Responder & Military Cash2 .................................................-$500 Dealer Special Discount5..........................................................................-$800
MSRP ............................................................................$36,005 Ford Retail Customer Cash...................................................................-$1,500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash .........................................................................-$1,000 Ford Cash Certificates3..........................................................................-$1,000 Dealer Discount .......................................................................................-$1,010
$
23,950
$
Offer ends 4/2/18. Tax, Registration, Fees Extra
33,975
$
Offer ends 4/2/18. Tax, Registration, Fees Extra
31,495
Offer ends 4/2/18. Tax, Registration, Fees Extra
CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS! - MID-SIZE CAR W/LEGENDARY FULL-SIZE DRIVEABLITY -
- LUXURY IN A 4-WHEEL DRIVE SUV -
- THE BIG BOY TRUCK -
NEW 2017
NEW 2017
NEW 2017
FORD FUSION SE
FORD EDGE SEL
FORD F-350
Stk #ET028 - 1.5L EcoBoost, Power Seats/Windows/Locks/Mirrors, Sirius, Rear Camera, Reverse Sensing.
Stk #HST810 - AWD, EcoBoost, Power Seats, Leather Heated Seats, LED Signature Lighting, SYNC System, Rear Camera, Sirius.
Stk #ET489 - 4x4, 6.2L V8, 3.73 Elec. Lock Rear, Power Windows/Locks/ Mirrors, 18” Alum. Wheels, Elec. SOF, Gate Step, Rear Camera, SYNC System.
MSRP ............................................................................$27,730 Ford Retail Customer Cash.................................................................. -$2,500 Ford EcoBoost Cash............................................................................... -$2,000 Ford RCL Renewal4 .................................................................................-$1,000 Ford First Responder & Military Cash2 .................................................-$500 Dealer Special Discount5.......................................................................-$1,735
MSRP ............................................................................$38,615 Ford Retail Customer Cash.................................................................. -$2,000 Ford Retail Bonus Cash .........................................................................-$1,000 Ford Cash Certificate .............................................................................-$1,000 Ford First Responder & Military Cash2 .................................................-$500 Ford RCL Renewal4 ....................................................................................-$300 Ford Credit Customer Cash ..................................................................-$1,000 Dealer Special Discount5.......................................................................-$1,620
MSRP ............................................................................$43,470 Ford Retail Customer Cash...................................................................-$1,500 Ford Special Package Cash ..................................................................... -$750 Ford First Responder & Military Cash2 .................................................-$500 Dealer Special Discount5...................................................................... -$2,000
$
19,995
$
Offer ends 4/2/18. Tax, Registration, Fees Extra
30,995
$
Offer ends 4/2/18. Tax, Registration, Fees Extra
38,970
Offer ends 4/2/18. Tax, Registration, Fees Extra
SEE ALL OF OUR GREAT BUYS AT WWW.EGGLEFIELDBROS.COM
Requires Ford Credit Financing and all customers may not qualify. 2Military & First Responder have specific job requirements. 3Limited number of certificates. First come, first serve and all customers may not benefit. 4 Special Dealer Discount apply to straight sales and trades must be at ACV. 5Customer must be replacing a completed Ford lease. Not responsible for typographical errors. Photos are used for illustration purposes only 1
~ ~
DLR#3160003
7618 US Route 9, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 518-873-6551 • 800-559-6551
Homefor your Ford Since 1910
igli eaks Ford DLR#7095376
EGGLEFIELD
BROS.
1190 NYS Route 86, Ray Brook, NY 12977 518-891-5560
INC.
Sales • Service www.egglelieldbros.comRentals • Parts 550545
24 • March 24, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
,I.ARGIE SELECTION
OF PRE-OWNED
2006Hyundai Tiburon Coupe
2011JeepPatriotSport
129,903 Miles,Leather, Keyless Entry VIN 203487
93,207Miles,Auto.,CD/MP3 VIN 245355
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
VEHICLES • ALL MAKES & MODELS
2008Toyota RAV4
2013Nissan Juke
106522 Miles,4x4,DualZoneA/C,Keyless Entry 36,285 Miles,AWD, 30MPG, Bluetooth VIN 070478 VIN 231420
1111 Wicker
Street
2015FordFusion SE 46,535Miles,34MPG, 5-StarSafety VIN 101119
• Ticonderoga
(518) 585-2842 SALES HOURS: Member of the DELLA Auto Group
MON-THURS: 9:00AM-7:00PM-FRI: 9:00AM-6:00PM SAT: 9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED
FIND Offers and availability subject to change. Tax,tag, title, and DMVfees due at signing for all offers. Must take delivery from in-stock. Dealership not responsible for typographical errors. Photos for illustrative purpose. Offers expire 4/2/18. See dealer for details. (1) Monthly payment is $13.89 for every $1,000 you finance. Example down payment: 3.4%. Must qualify and finance with GM Financial. Some customers will not qualify. Not available with lease and some other offers. (2) On select models, while supplies last. Not available with special finance, lease, and some other offers. Includes all available rebates, incentives, customer cash, down payment assistance (DPA),conquest and/or loyalty as applicable. Silverado: Must qualify and finance through GM Financial for DPA.*Pre-owned prices are plus tax, tag, title, and DMV. 220034