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APA Chairman Sherman Craig retires pg. 13

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HOMES EVERY WEEK! Valley News

July 21, 2018

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• EDITION •

State races HELLO come into DOLLY! focus, but third-party presents wild card

Heavenly vibrations

» pg. 2

Working Families Party yet to reveal candidates

Organ centerpiece of weekend open house

By Pete DeMola EDITOR

ELIZABETHTOWN | State-level races are coming into focus following last week’s filing deadline for petition signatures to get on the ballot. State Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury) is a seeking a ninth term to represent Senate District 45 and is poised to defend her seat in a four-way contest. Emily Martz, a former Democratic congressional candidate for New York’s 21st Congressional District, filed petitions to run on the Democratic Party line; Mark Schneider, the Working Families Party line, and Steve Ruzbacki filed to run as the Green Party candidate.

By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

ELIZABETHTOWN | Sounds of the pipe organ at the Church of the Good Shepherd sometimes slip through the vestibule onto Williams Street on Sundays. Other times, large and breathy refrains drift past the stained glass windows on holidays or on special occasions. » Open house Cont. on pg. 12

Helping Little Michael’s heart

Mountain Riders ready to roll for tot, Michael Hart III, and family By Kim Dedam STAFF WRITER

AU SABLE FORKS | Community is standing and also riding to get behind a tot with a serious medical condition. Th ree-year-old Michael Hart III is the son of Au Sable Forks firefighter Michael II and Jessie Hart. Little Michael’s grandfather, Michael Hart Sr., is also a firefighter with the AuSable Forks company.

The little boy has a congenital condition called Noonan Syndrome, a disorder that presents with heart defects, hearing impairment, sometimes skeletal growth problems and often bleeding disorders, among other symptoms. In Michael’s case, the family just went through one successful heart repair surgery in June with their little boy. The medical procedure was done at Boston Children’s Hospital. Continued travel to appointments at UVM Medical Center and to Boston present financial difficulty. To help, Art Buesser and the Mountain Riders motorcycle club is honoring Michael III and his family with their annual Fallen Angel ride this weekend.

» State races Cont. on pg. 5

The benefit ride began 12 years ago as a way to provide support for Buesser’s grandson. “We expanded my grandsons ride and changed it to the Fallen Angels Ride to help any child in our area in need of medical care,” Buesser explained of their benefit. » Michael Cont. on pg. 4

Three-year-old Michael Hart III has a congenital condition called Noonan Syndrome, which requires heart surgery for the tot and correction for hearing impairment. After one round of successful heart surgery at Boston Children’s Hospital in June, the Hart family, of AuSable Forks, has several major hurdles ahead. Photo provided

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2 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

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The Champlain chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR) inducted Donalda Brant Crowningshield at a meeting of the club on May 18 in Lewis. Crowningshield’s lineage dates back to Revolutionary patriot Private Elihu Higbee. Pictured from left: Ruth Barber, chaplain; Jean Dickerson, regent; Helen Eagle, registrar and Donalda Crowningshield. The NSDAR is open to all women 18 and older who are related to a soldier in the American Revolution. Photo provided

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SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED: Champlain National Bank gave $5,000 in scholarship money to graduating seniors throughout Essex and Clinton counties at graduation ceremonies last month. Recipients of the Champlain National Bank Scholarship receive $500 towards college expenses and were treated to a special luncheon at the Bank’s headquarters in Willsboro, where they were able to meet and chat with President and CEO Steven Cacchio. Pictured above: Emmalee Turner, Bailey Skinner, Steven Cacchio and Thomas Palen. Photo provided

Family musical ‘Hello, Dolly!’ marches in Performances slated at AuSable Valley Central this weekend

“The ACT Board wanted to make a statement with our first big musical production and this show is going to be sensational. The story is light, fun, and with one of the best scores in American musical theatre. This makes for the perfect evening out for all. All the pieces are in place for a dynamic musical debut for our company.” “The best part about a show like ‘Hello Dolly!’ is that everyone knows it, it is such a classic that many have grown up listening too and have such a positive memory of,” said technical director Michael Rafferty. “The production has such a powerhouse team of cast, directors, and designers behind it, and I think that audiences are going to be amazed by all the handwork and talent that this group has put into this show.” “Hello Dolly!” was first produced on Broadway in 1964, winning a record-tying 10 Tony Awards, including Best Musical, a record held for 37 years. Tickets are $15 for general admission. To reserve a ticket, patrons can call 518-802-0400 or email info@artistrytheatre.org. Learn more at artistrytheatre.org. ■

KEESEVILLE | A hit Broadway musical lands in the North Country this weekend. Artistry Community Theatre (ACT) will bring the Tony Award-winning “Hello Dolly!” musical, with a full orchestra, to the AuSable Valley Middle-High School Auditorium on July 21 at 7:30 p.m. and July 22 at 5 p.m. The production follows the romantic and comic exploits of Dolly Gallagher-Levi, turn-of- the-century matchmaker and “woman who arranges things.” The show’s memorable songs include “Put On Your Sunday Clothes,” “Ribbons Down My Back,” “Before the Parade Passes By,” “Hello, Dolly!,” “Elegance,” and “It Only Takes a Moment.” “We’re gonna raise the roof! We’re gonna carry on!” said director Derrick A. Hopkins. “‘Hello, Dolly!’ is the must see show of the year! We have it all: amazing talent, a professional orchestra, a huge ensemble.”

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The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 3

Big changes for High Peaks

APA approves High Peaks, Vanderwhacker plans By Pete DeMola EDITOR

RAY BROOK | The Adirondack Park Agency (APA) has formally approved the state Department of Environmental Conversation-offered Unit Management Plan amendments for the High Peaks Wilderness Complex and the neighboring Vanderwhacker Mountain Wild Forest. The plans will govern recreational access on the state’s most recent land acquisitions, including Boreas Ponds, which is now part of the newly-minted High Peaks Wilderness Area. DEC now also has the green light to create new trails in the High Peaks in an effort to curb overuse, including relocating the trail up Cascade Mountain — widely considered a popular “starter mountain” for newcomers — and moving the trailhead to Mt. Van Hoevenberg, as well as building a separate

trail up that same mountain. The relocation will add four miles to the trek. “With this relocation,” wrote the DEC in their official response to public comment, “DEC has a direct way to provide education and outreach to those people at the start of their hike, and with the Mt. Van Hoevenberg East Trail, we have a built in shorter option that can help better set inexperienced hikers up for success.” Since April, the state agencies have held a joint public comment period on the UMPs, garnering 133 pages of public comments.

TIMEFRAME REASONABLE

Several green groups said the public hearing process was rushed and didn’t consider overuse, including efforts to combat parking issues and the carrying capacity of Boreas Ponds. “The duration of 45 days was determined to be a reasonable timeframe for the public review and provide comments,” contended the agencies. “Every single comment was read, and considered, and responded to,” said APA Chairman Sherman Craig on Friday. “Whether the response was hoped for, I don’t know.” Adirondack Council argued the UMP process failed to provide ample assessment

of planned snowmobile routes as part of the community connector trail project, nor did planners “accurately convey the amount of tree cutting” needed to link the Boreas Ponds Road to Blue Ridge Road. The APA and DEC responded that an analysis of need for all community connector trails was conducted in 2006, and additional “sitespecific analysis” and intended uses of the trail was conducted in the 2015 Community Connector Trail Plan for the Towns of Newcomb, North Hudson and Minerva. To address overuse, DEC has been in the process of “striping” parking spaces in some of High Peaks’ busiest areas, and also aims to develop a plan to pilot a shuttle bus at the Mt. Van Hoevenberg Olympic Sports Complex. The agency also will also conduct a study to assess traffic patterns and usage of major travel corridors. Both agencies said the proposals included in the UMP amendments represent “only a

DEC has a direct way to provide education and outreach to those people at the start of their hike.”

The Adirondack Park Agency last week approved new Unit Management Plans last week for the High Peaks Wilderness and Vanderwhacker Mountain Wild Forest. File photo

RECREATIONAL & SPORT Vehicle 1,.oAN PR0MoT10N

small part of the solution” to overuse along the Route 73 corridor and will consider “a broad suite of both short-term and long-term solutions” as discussions stakeholders progress. The plans conform with the state’s Adirondack Park State Land Use Master Plan, the APA determined, despite the Adirondack Council ’s argument otherwise. “These flaws will have significant and long term impacts on the health and wildness of the High Peaks Wilderness Area, the Vanderwhacker Mountain Wild Forest, and our communities,” said Adirondack Council Executive Director William C. Janeway in a statement. Permitted parking at Boreas Ponds will be available access to within one-tenth of mile of the dam for day use only, including for two CP-3 motorized access permit holders and four general permit holders at a time. Visitors seeking longer stays will be required to park at the Four Corners or Fly Pond Parking Areas, which were constructed in 2016 as part of the interim access plan and will be improved if the UMP is approved. Those lots are located about one mile and 3.6 miles from the ponds, respectively. While not included in the proposed UMP amendments, some environmental groups have also called for permit system for some popular hiking areas, as well for the DEC to increase the number of Forest Rangers patrolling the areas. “Requesting additional DEC staffing is outside the scope of the UMP Amendments,” wrote the agencies in their official response. ■

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4 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

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» Michael Cont. from pg. 1 “The Harts are facing a lot of travel to doctor visits, crossing on the ferry and going to Boston. It is a big expense on a family, whether they

FIND OUT MORE

The Hart family provides updates on little Michael’s condition and next steps in his medical care with a blog on Facebook. Find them on Facebook at: “Michael’s Medical Journey” To make a donation or find out more about this year’s Fallen Angels ride, contact Buesser at 518-834-5716. ■

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have good insurance or not. This is just our way to help the family out with costs and medical expenses.” Buesser, of Port Kent, is known in the club as “Little Art” and he said they usually have between 60 and 80 motorcycles taking the trip for Fallen Angels. “It depends on the year, weather and all kinds of stuff. We start at Mad River Pizza in AuSable Forks, registration is from 10 to 11 a.m. It ends at the Mountain Riders Motorcycle Club clubhouse in Wilmington across from Candy Man chocolates.” The event is set for July 21 this year. The Mountain Riders’ barbecue continues in Wilmington through the afternoon with a Poker Run, Silent Auction and 50-50 raffles. The barbecue is $10 a plate with $5 for bike passengers. Even people not on a motorcycle can join in to help. ■

Supervisors discuss zoning enforcement procedure Prosecution is left to town attorneys, zoning enforcement and town courts By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

ELIZABETHTOWN | The Essex County District Attorney’s office does not prosecute code enforcement cases primarily because they are misdemeanor violations. The question came up recently as Essex County District Attorney Kristy Sprague reported to supervisors during a county committee meeting.

St. Armand Supervisor Dean Montroy raised the query, wondering why the county’s chief prosecutor does not have jurisdiction over code enforcement laws. “A lot of the cases are civil,” Sprague said, “many are based on town law.” Sprague said occasionally the DA’s office does see a felony-level case alleging dangerous code violation. Town of Lewis Supervisor Jim Monty said violations often repeat without resolve. “Citations give 30 days to remedy and then 30 days later (the situation) is worse,” he said. Sprague said prosecution, enforcement cases and sentencing falls to the town attorney and justice. Westport Supervisor Michael “Ike” Tyler

said each town might approach code violation enforcement differently, but that citations are heard before the town court. In North Elba, Supervisor Roby Politi said violations are tied to zoning laws. “It should be enforced if it is the law,” he suggested. But some towns, such as Lewis, don’t have a codified body of zoning law. “That would be a problem,” Politi said. And a case can be dismissed if not handled properly, Sprague said. In Crown Point, Supervisor Charles Harrington said, even without zoning, they have successfully won enforcement cases in town court. According to documents produced by the state Department of State, “district attorneys

do not commonly become involved in local zoning code prosecutions. Accordingly, district attorneys will delegate that responsibility to village and town attorneys.” The DA issues authorization in writing allowing town attorney or attorneys for a town to prosecute town or village code violation. “Once authorized by the district attorney to prosecute the zoning violation(s), the village or town attorney becomes an assistant district attorney for that specific purpose,” DOS guidance says, “and (the town attorney) should immediately file an oath of office as such with the county clerk.” According to the DOS, local courts can, “under specific guidelines set by state law (or by a superseding local law), impose fines or imprisonment” for zoning violations. ■

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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 Church - 4 Church Street, Essex, NY 518-963-7775 Holy Communion Sunday 9:15am; Morning Prayer- M, Th, Fri at 8:30am; Silent Prayer-Tues. 8:15; Contemporary Bible Study – Tues. 9:30; Community Pot Luck – Tues. 6pm; Holy Eucharist Wed. 8:30am; Meditation – Wed. 5pm; Historical New Testament Study - Thurs. 10am. 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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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 Chad Carr. 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.; 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 Email: rccowe@gmail.com

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» State races Cont. from pg. 1 Little has submitted petitions for the Republican, Independence, Conservative and Reform lines. State Assemblyman D. Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay) has submitted signatures for the Democratic, Working Families and Independence Party lines, and is running opposed for a second two-year term for Assembly District 115, which encompasses Clinton and Franklin counties. State Assemblyman Dan Stec (R-Queensbury) is also seeking re-election, and has submitted signatures for the Republican, Conservative and Reform lines for Assembly District 114, which covers all of Essex and Warren counties and portions of Washington and Saratoga counties. Ronald Kim, also a former Democratic candidate for New York’s 21st Congressional District, has submitted signatures to run on the Working Families Party line. A third ex-congressional Democratic candidate, Don Boyajian, is running for a Capital Region state Assembly seat.

WILL WILSON RUN?

While Tedra Cobb scored a decisive win for the Democratic nomination to challenge Rep. Elise Stefanik (RWillsboro) this fall, Katie Wilson remains on the ballot as a Working Families Party candidate, joining Green Party candidate Lynn Kahn. Due to state election law, Wilson will remain on the ballot unless she dies, moves out of state, gets convicted of a crime or is nominated for another electoral position elsewhere. Wilson has repeatedly pledged not to be a spoiler in the

The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 5

congressional contest, and endorsed Cobb immediately following last month’s primary win. But she has played coy on a possible run for state office. While she ruled out running against Little in a statement issued on July 2, she has teased an announcement may be imminent. “I look forward to revealing my next move in the coming weeks,” Wilson said in the statement. “And expect to see me back on the ballot sooner than you may think possible.” Working Families Party state director Bill Lipton told the New York Times last week the party wants to back Cobb and is in talks with Wilson to put her name in contention for state legislative office, “a process that involves moving an existing W.F.P. candidate — who happens to be a lawyer — to instead run for State Supreme Court.” “This is the bizarre mechanism we have to go through in order to change our endorsement,” Lipton was quoted as saying. “The primary is over and the world is changed.” Kim, a bankruptcy lawyer who lives in Saratoga Springs, admitted he’s just a placeholder. “WFP approached me and basically asked me to be a placeholder for another candidate, and I agreed,” Kim told The Sun. “I’m not an official candidate.” Kim said he didn’t have any additional details on the party’s plans. Joe Seeman, a spokesman for the Working Families Party, told The Sun an announcement will be made in the coming week. “We will announce all of our candidates, our far-out, ‘far-

State Assemblyman Dan Stec (R-Queensbury) is running for re-election. File photo left’ and far-flung plans,” Seeman said. Stec said he wouldn’t want to react to a hypothetical race. “I’m transparent, accessible and approachable, and think I earned that reputation,” Stec told The Sun. “If I have an opponent, great — I’m ready.” Wilson didn’t respond for comment for this story. ■

‘Road to Dannemora’ lands in Keene Book & Blanket Players revive musical comedy next weekend By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

KEENE VALLEY | By its title, you may think that the upcoming production by the Book & Blanket Players has something to do with the infamous Dannemora prison break in 2015. But “Road to Dannemora,” a musical written in 2011 by then-16 year old Sam Balzac, predated the escape of inmates Richard Matt and David Sweat and the subsequent manhunt that captivated the North Country for nearly a month. “There is an escape, but the escapees are fictional characters drawn from the author’s imagination,” said Kathleen Recchia, the musical’s producer and co-creator, in a statement.

Cast members Anya Kazmierczak and Adeline Blue from the upcoming production “Road to Dannemora” pose in inmate costumes. Photo provided The Book & Blanket Players Youth Theatre will bring the comedy back into the spotlight on July 28 at Keene Valley Central School. Their one-night-only performance is slated for 7 p.m., and admission is free.

Lewis Farmers Market

The musical pays homage to the old-fashioned entertainment of Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, Abbott and Costello and the Marx Brothers, with special tributes to local artists and icons like Arto Monaco, the creator of

- THANK YOU! -

Every Saturday 9am-1pm

to all the participants and parade revelers who turned out in high spirits for the 7th of July Parade sponsored by the Westport Chamber of Commerce New York.

Open through Sept. 1

Carolyn Vanderhoof of Ledge Hill Studios and Joelle Bombard of K & D Deli were the organizers.

Rain or shine

423 Stowersville Road, Lewis, NY

This year’s trophies were awarded in nine categories.

We are an old fashioned Country Farmers Market with local grown farm goods, and local made artisan crafts.

A) Most Creative “There’s No Place Like K & D Deli” created by Joelle Bombard and included a whooping 21 characters from Wizard of Oz.

Enjoy lunch under our umbrella picnic area. Saturday Reading Club for kids at the ‘Little Lewis Library’!

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C) Best of Show 1st “Decker-hoofs Viking Tribe Raiding the North East Bay” created by Decker Family.

E) Best In Theme “Float Your Boat” The Jason Keech and Amanda Demare family in a boat pulled by their 1946 Farmall Tractor.

PELLA INSULATED SINGLE HUNG WINDOWS

F) Oldest Car - must be running 1930 Chevrolet 4-door Owned and driven by Derinda and Sam Sherman

with Half Screens

H

W

7425 $ 8095 $ 8435 $ 8770 $ 9445 $

H

23.5 x 41.5 27.5 x 41.5 29.5 x 41.5 31.5 x 41.5 35.5 x 41.5

8435 $ 9110 $ 9445 $ 9785 $ 10455 $

G) Oldest Tractor - must be running 1944 Farmall driven by Walter Stoker and Vincent Duso of Willsboro, NY 191257

23.5 x 35.5 27.5 x 35.5 29.5 x 35.5 31.5 x 35.5 35.5 x 35.5

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www.adirondackfarmersmarket.com

D) Best in Show 2nd “Champ” driven by Dick Fritz and owned by George Maffey

W

The Dudley Road in Westport will be closed at both access points to Camp Dudley on Saturday, July 21, 2018 from 12:00 noon until 9:30 pm. No residences on the Dudley Road will be affected. Please call Fred Guffey at 962-4720 with questions or concerns.

B) Most Patriotic “Red, White & Blue 1953 CJ3B, 1953 CJ3 White, 1956 CJ5 Blue Willy’s Jeeps”. Riding in the Jeeps - Neal Fee - WWII, Dale Moss - Korean Conflict and Alfred Kurtz - WWII represented Honor Flight.

New Vendors Always Welcome 518-637-5395 Like us on Facebook and see our “THIS WEEK AT THE MARKET” news!

the old Upper Jay Land of Make Believe theme park. The show has many featured parts and lots of opportunities to “make ‘em laugh,” Recchia said in a statement. The performance next weekend will come after a week-long, rigorous musical theater workshop, where a directorial team will whip the cast of kids ages 8-18 into shape. A new member of the team this year is vocal coach Alisa Endsley, a renown Broadway actress who has worked with some of the biggest names in the business, including composer Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber, director Trevor Nunn and Tony Award-winning actors Patti Lupone, George Hearn and Betty Buckley. The troupe will also welcome choreographer Maddy Runyon into the mix this year. The upcoming revival of “Road to Dannemora” will mark the group’s eighth year of musical-in-a-week programs. Learn more by calling 518-708-3606, or via email at bookinnjay@aol.com. ■

I) Oldest Fire Truck Red 1954 Willy’s Jeep purchased in Hartwick, NY and driven by a Westport resident.

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Czech’s Wagon Hot Dog ............................................................. $2.25 Michigan............................................................$2.75 Burger ................................................................$4.00 Cheeseburger .................................................. $4.25 Michigan Burger ............................................ $4.25 Philly Steak ....................................................... $5.00 Sausage, Pepper, Onions............................. $5.00 Mozzarella Sticks ............................................ $5.00 Fries .................................................................... $3.00 Onion Rings .....................................................$3.75 Soda .....................................................................$1.25 Water .................................................................. $1.00

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3004 BROAD ST., PORT HENRY, NY PHONE: 518-546-7433•FAX: 518-546-7474

H) Farthest Travel - fire department Chilson Fire Department - 40 miles

Adirondack Farmers’ Market Now has a Food Vendor Truck. Come down and take a look around and get some lunch. EVERY Friday 9:30 am to 1:00 pm. In back of the Adirondack Center Museum, come check us out.


6 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

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Guest Column

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Opinion

Through the eyes of an ALS sufferer The SCOTUS Wars Part II By Dan Alexander

Someone recently was talking about a personal problem and By Darlene Long explaining that • GUEST COLUMNIST • others just don’t understand. They were probably right. It is so difficult to understand what others go through unless you have been through it yourself. I write with the hope that I might give others a true glimpse of what ALS patients and their families experience, so others can understand. When a person hears the dreaded diagnosis of cancer, it can strike great fear in their heart. Being faced with the concept of our own imminent death is numbing. But as soon as the initial shock passes, the response is to ask the doctor about all possible treatments available. We face those doctors with hope that they have answers and we are going to survive. ALS is a diagnosis that comes with no offers of treatments or a cure. There will be no ALS Survivor Walks for these patients. My husband, Roger, felt his first symptoms in the summer of 2008 but he figured those tell tale weaknesses were due to aging. ALS presents itself differently in all of those who have it and is easily overlooked. The symptoms mimic those of many diseases and are easily attributed to ‘anything’ but a terminal illness. Roger didn’t worry about his early symptoms. In fact, as they progressed, he made a point to hide them from me, knowing I would push him to see a doctor. He was a typical “ignore it and it will go away with time” kind of person. But then in January 2009, during an afternoon rabbit hunting outing, he fell down eight times and couldn’t get back up without the help of his friends. A trip to the doctor’s to find out what was happening brought about a diagnosis of asthma. But as time went by and he began losing weight, and he struggled to do tasks he normally did as he continued to weaken. A

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number of discussions and a series of tests culminated in a doctor reaching out to shake Roger’s hand. “I don’t believe in beating around the bush, you have ALS,” the doctor told him. “You need to go home, get your life in order and then do whatever you have always wanted to do while you can.” We left in stunned silence. It was a long ride home. The difference with ALS is that many questions have no answers. The doctors assure you that they will make you comfortable and you will have access to support systems. You will have occupational therapists and physical therapists to show you how to walk and move safely as your mobility declines. They will work with you to find medical supply companies to get equipment to keep you mobile. You will see speech therapists to help you communicate as you lose your ability to talk. Writing, alphabet cards, and even computers that respond to eye gazing will work for a period of time. Eventually, some patients live long enough to reach the “locked-in” phase, where even eye movement is difficult. Roger reached the point where I would have to carefully look under his left eye to see a tiny muscle twitch in response to yes or no questions. Doctors, nutritionists and therapists can help in many ways. But nothing will change the course of the disease. There will be no treatments. Nothing will cure you. Someday soon we hope that will change for those with ALS. Until that time, we all need to live our lives as fully as possible and to do all we can to spread awareness for support for research. Thank you to everyone who has joined in this mission. Please know that your kindness and generosity has given hope to our area ALS patients and their loved ones. ■ — Darlene Long was a caregiver for her husband Roger Long, who passed away in 2017 after an almost nine-year battle with ALS. She lives in Peru.

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.

PUBLISHER

Given the upcoming battle over the recent nomination of Brent Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, I thought it might be worthwhile to look at the oath each member has sworn to uphold. At the start of each new Congress, in January of every odd-numbered year, the entire House of Representatives and one-third of the Senate performs a solemn and festive constitutional rite that is as old as the Republic. While the oath-taking dates back to the first Congress in 1789, the current oath is a product of the 1860s, drafted by Civil War-era members of Congress intent on ensnaring traitors. The outbreak of the Civil War quickly transformed the routine act of oath-taking into one of enormous significance. In April of 1861, a time of uncertain and shifting loyalties, President Abraham Lincoln ordered all federal civilian employees within the executive branch to take an expanded oath. When Congress convened for a brief emergency session in July, members echoed the president’s action by enacting legislation requiring employees to take the expanded oath in support of the Union. When Congress returned for its regular session

Letters

Criticism of parade unwarranted

To the Editor: This is in response to the letter from Art Summers in the July 14 paper. He was questioning the racist views of the parade organizers in Ticonderoga because a truck was in the parade flying a large confederate flag. Do you have any idea how hard it is to organize an event like the “Best 4th in the North” in Ticonderoga? Instead of criticizing all the wonderful people who organize this event every year, you and everyone in the surrounding communities should say “thank you” for a job well done! How do you know that the truck was even part of the parade plan? You don’t. Could it be possible that the truck slipped into the parade without any of the organizers even knowing about it? Quite and most likely possible. It’s possible that the owner of the truck was invited to participate, but the organizers wouldn’t necessarily be aware that the truck would have a confederate flag flying on it. To question the racial views of the organizers because this truck was in the parade is ridiculous. Mr. Summers mentioned in closing as a longtime summer resident that he was giving serious thought to taking the money he spends on restaurants, rentals, and other activities in Ticonderoga and heading to another town. A paid advertisement will be based on standard advertising rates taking into consideration size and frequency according to the current rate card at the open advertising rate. For rates, call Ashley at (518) 873-6368 x105 or email ashley@suncommunitynews.com Calendar of event entries are reserved for local charitable organizations, and events are restricted to name, time, place, price and contact information. For-profit organization events will be run with a paid advertisement. Bulletin board For-profit for 4 lines (75¢ additional lines) 1 week $9 , 3 weeks $15, 52 weeks $20/month. Not-for-profit for 4 lines (.50¢ additorial lines) 1 week $5, 3 weeks $10, 52 weeks $15/month. Advertising policies: Sun Community News & Printing, published by Denton Publications, Inc. disclaims all legal responsibility for errors

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in December 1861, members who believed that the Union had as much to fear from northern traitors as southern soldiers again revised the oath, adding a new first section known as the “Ironclad Test Oath.” The war-inspired Test Oath, signed into law on July 2, 1862, required “every person elected or appointed to any office ... under the Government of the United States ... excepting the President of the United States” to swear or affirm that they had never previously engaged in criminal or disloyal conduct. Those government employees who failed to take the 1862 Test Oath would not receive a salary; those who swore falsely would be prosecuted for perjury and forever denied federal employment. The Senate then revised its rules to require that members not only take the Test Oath orally but also that they “subscribe” to it by signing a printed copy: I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter: So help me God. Sometimes when things get too complicated and heated, it’s best to get back to basics. All elected and appointed officials would be wise to remember their primary job is to support the Constitution and the country. ■

I love it when a summer resident or tourist says something to this effect. All I can say to that is go ahead Mr. Summers take your business elsewhere. We don’t need you or want you here anyway. The Adirondacks have turned into this big playground for tourists and summer residents at the expense of the local people. I’m telling you right now, pack your bags and don’t let the door to the Adirondacks hit you in the derriere on the way out. Glen Buell, Ticonderoga ■

state. passed with bipartisan votes. No tax increases were ever enacted. Two similar resolutions for mortgage filing taxes were approved unanimously, again bipartisan but no enactment. Stefanik misleads by conflating increased assessments with increased tax rates, the only true measure of tax increase or decrease. New, renovated and previously tax exempt properties all raise the county’s assessed value. Between 2008-2012, Tedra voted with the large bipartisan majority to raise taxes twice (by 0.13 percent and 2.4 percent), lower them once by 1.58 percent and to keep them the same once. Two resolutions put exempt property back on the tax rolls, including 8760 acres owned by the NY Power Authority. There were three “fee” — not tax — increases. One passed on 50 cents of the $2.50 per ton for contaminated soil imposed on the county by Development Authority of the North Country. Hotel or motel resolution simply deleted “having less then 6 rental units” as an exemption of the bed tax. This passed the burden to the visitor, not the tax payer. Finally, a vote that actually increased, fees, not taxes for recording documents in the County Clerk’s Office which passed with both parties voting unanimously. In fact, all these resolutions passed with bipartisan support. Carol Simpson, Winthrop ■

Stefanik misleads with “Taxin’ Tedra” attack

To the Editor: Immediately after the primary, Rep. Elise Stefanik declined to answer a question about who made up the nickname “Taxin’ Tedra” but went on to say “she voted for tax increases and it’s sticking,” indicating the only goal here is to label and mislead. In sharp contrast to such misleading name calling, Tedra Cobb fought for an ethics bill as a legislator. Actions speak louder then words. Honest Tedra did not vote to raise taxes 20 times. A resolution for “home rule” providing greater efficiency and freedom for counties to increase sales taxes for emergencies by eliminating the lengthy approval process by the

or omissions or typographic errors. All reasonable care is taken to prevent such errors. We will gladly correct any errors if notification is received within 48 hours of any such error. We are not responsible for photos, which will only be returned if you enclose a self-addressed envelope. Subscription rates: Local Zone $29.00 annual subscription mailed to zip codes beginning in 128 or 129. Annual Standard Mail delivery $47 annual mailed outside the 128 or 129 Local Zone. First Class Mail Subscription (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months/$85 for 6 months/$150 for an annual. $47 Annual, First Class Mail (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months / $85 for 6 months / $150 for an annual. Address corrections: Send address changes in care of this paper to P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, New York 12932.

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BRIEFS

Linc Barton Memorial Tourney slated

ELIZABETHTOWN | The 2018 Linc Barton Memorial Tourney is scheduled for Sept. 8-9. Th is annual event is a two-person scramble/best-ball, flighted tournament, with the number of flights based on number of entries. There will be 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. shotgun starts on both days. Flights will be established following play on Saturday. All paid entries are invited to a free practice round up until the date of the tournament. The entry fee is $100 per player, and includes golf, prizes, three closest-to-the-pin contests, lunch and beverages each day. Carts are extra. There will be an optional skins competition ($20 per team each day). The field is limited to 32 teams, and the registration deadline is Friday, Sept. 7.

Register by calling Don Ratliff at 518-729-9521; Kevin McKee, 519-912-1300 or Cobble Hill Golf Course at 518-873-2664. Email: drlion2000@gmail.com or mckeek_1999@yahoo.com. Mail: K McKee, PO Box 425, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 ■

Meadowmount concert offered

KEENE VALLEY | East Branch Friends of the Arts (EBFA) is pleased to present Meadowmount in the Valley, a concert by a chamber ensemble of talented young string musicians, on Tuesday, July 31, 2018 at 8 p.m. at the Keene Valley Congregational Church. Since 1944, the Meadowmount School of Music has been known for training young musicians for a professional career in music. Over the years, they have been the summer home of the very best international soloists, chamber musicians, orchestral musicians and artist-teachers. Each summer,

The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 7

Meadowmount hosts over 200 students from around the world for expert training, musicianship development, and the opportunity to share their music here in the Adirondacks. Suggested donation is $10 per person; students are free. For more information, call Linda Bogardus at 576-9739 or e-mail eastbranchfriendsofthearts@gmail.com. ■

Essex Theatre to present ‘Painting Churches’

ESSEX | Essex Theatre Company will present Tina Howe’s comic drama “Painting Churches” in staged reading at the air-conditioned Masonic Lodge, Essex, NY, July 13, 14, 19, 21, 26, 27, 28 at 7:30 p.m., and July 22 at 5:00 p.m. Tickets are $12 general admission, $10 seniors/students and may be purchased online at essextheatre.org, tickets@essextheatre. org, or call (518) 526-4520. ■

County deploys new portable drug testing devices North Country SPCA

Units aim to curb driving while impaired By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

ELIZABETHTOWN | Essex County law enforcement personnel have a new roadside device to test for suspected drugged driving. The test uses saliva placed into a portable drug detection module that produces results within minutes. The device has been available for several years and is recognized as an accurate option to blood testing, which often requires a wait of days or even weeks for results. The county’s DWI Advisory Board approved purchase of three Drager DrugTest (R) 5000 portable testing systems using a one-time funding boost of $22,500 from New York state’s drunk and drugged driving program. Department of Social Services Commissioner Michael Mascarenas told supervisors at the Human Services Committee Meeting on Monday that one each of the devices was delivered to the Ticonderoga Police Department in the southern part of Essex County, to the Lake Placid Police Department in the northern area and to the Essex County

Sheriff ’s Office in Lewis. “All units have been distributed and our officers have just received training on its implementation and operation,” Mascarenas said. The Drager DrugTest (R) 5000, he said, is like a breathalyzer. It tests for drugs on a roadside stop using a saliva swipe. The law enforcement officer collects a sample on a sterile cartridge that looks somewhat like a plastic test tube and plugs it into the drug test module. Developed in Germany, the Drager DrugTest (R) 5000 tests for amphetamines, designer amphetamines, opiates, cocaine and metabolites, benzodiazepines, cannabiniods and methadone. The results are printed out on paper strips. “It could be potentially admissible in court,” Mascarenas said of the test results. The Drager DrugTest (R) 5000 can also be used to evaluate an unknown substance, according to the product developer’s website. Law enforcement personnel can collect a sample of the unknown substance with a Surface Sampling Kit and place it on the test cassette. The analysis is done by placing the cassette into the portable test module. ■

‘Happy Tail’ raffle

The North Country SPCA is excited to announce our “Happy Tail” raffle. Tickets are $20 By Kathy Wilcox each with a guaran• COLUMNIST • teed prize winner. The prize for this fundraising raffle is $5,000 and there is a one in 500 chance of winning. The drawing will be held on Dec. 1. All proceeds benefit the Snip & Friends For Life Medical Crisis Fund. For more information, please call the shelter at 518-873-5000. We currently have more than 20 adolescent cats and kittens available for adoption. Kitten season is definitely here, and these cute little bundles of fur are really hoping to find their forever homes before the end of the summer season. If you are looking for some kitty love and enjoy the playfulness of kittens, please stop by the shelter and check these cuties out! Our featured pet this week is TEQUILA , one of our older

Convenient oarryln9 handle can easily be carried with one hand-even

without bag

Backlit coJor disp lay

clear menu navigationand results dispiay-even in low light conditions

Three •button operation

Robust housing

also suitable for harsh outdoor environments large analysis chamber opening

automaticlest run without manual intervention

A photograph of the Drager DrugTest (R) 5000, which is a device that can accurately test for drugged driving. Three of the units are in use throughout Essex County, purchased through the Stop DWI program. Photo provided

Tupper Lake man accused of abuse

TUPPER LAKE | A Tupper Lake man was arrested last week following a report of alleged abuse

at the Office for People with Developmental Disabilities Sunmount in the Town of Tupper Lake. New York State Police arrested Nicholas A. Mellon, 21, on one count of endangering the welfare of an incompetent person in the second degree, a class A misdemeanor. The victim, a 33 year old male consumer, sustained bruising on his left arm as well as scratches on his neck. The victim declined medical assistance. Mellon was charged and released on an appearance ticket for the Tupper Lake Town Court. ■

kittens who was found outside the Best Western Hotel with her mom and siblings. Tequila is a beautiful Domestic Shorthair-mix with a glossy ebony coat, with huge ears and big round golden-green eyes that give her a perpetual look of being surprised. This pretty young lady is friendly and playful; we know she would make a great addition to almost any home. ■ — Kat Wilcox’s weekly column works to publicize the shelter’s adoptable pets. Find out more at ncspca.org

Elizabethtown Social Center

Don’t miss ‘On the Center Lawn’

James Bruchac and the Adirondack Jazz Orchestra join us “On the Center Lawn” this week! At 6 p.m. on By Arin Burdo • COLUMNIST • Tuesday, July 24, James Bruchac presents “Native American Legends.” During this program, audiences will be treated to some of his favorite stories, including various native legends, Adirondack tall tales, animal interactions and some of his own, often-comical, life experiences. Story-lovers of all ages will be taken on a journey of discovery and laughter. James has conducted tracking and wilderness survival-based research in all corners of the United States. His wilderness prowess has been featured on such television shows as Wild TV on PBS, Ray Mears Ultimate Survival Guide, and the Versus 25 Hardest Animals to Hunt. He has also appeared as a survival consultant for numerous local and national news stations including the Fox and Friends Morning Show. At 7 p.m., we are thrilled to bring the Adirondack Jazz Orchestra! The Adirondack Jazz Orchestra (AJO) was founded in 2003 under the musical direction of Matthew Pray. Its sole purpose was to bring together some of the Adirondacks’ finest musicians in a big band setting. It showcases the traditional big band sound of five trumpets, four trombones, and five saxophones with the added flavor of the tuba. The AJO plays a wide variety of the Big Band genre. They play standard big band arrangements as well as original compositions, including a lineup of hits from Glenn Miller, Buddy Rich, Charles Mingus, Thad Jones, Maynard Ferguson and arrangements written by some of the group’s members. Eight years ago, the AJO opened for “The World Famous Glenn Miller Orchestra!” Do not miss some of the best musical talent in our area. From 6:30-7 p.m. on Tuesdays, prior to concert, the writers’ group that meets at the social center will hold a series of readings of their works. They will present original poems, short stories, personal essays and excerpts of longer works. Come meet these local writers, listen to their creative voices and learn about their published works and their works-in-progress. You can find more information on our website, elizabethtownsocialcenter.org, or by calling 518873-6408. ■ — Arin Burdo is the Executive Director of the Elizabethtown Social Center.

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8 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

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County to set task force for fairground marketing

Plans moving ahead for restoration of 4-H building By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

WESTPORT | Essex County leaders are looking to develop marketing tools to expand use of the Essex County Fairgrounds. Volunteer efforts installed several widely attended events to the historic county public arena in recent years, including the Adirondack Harvest Festival and the Essex County Arts & Crafts Festival. But the county is looking for a sustained marketing effort. Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism (ROOST) President and CEO Jim McKenna told supervisors last week he is going to form a task force that would meet in the fall, likely September and October for six to eight weeks. The marketing plan would be developed and presented to supervisors in November for implementation next year. The push to develop use at the fairground evolved through discussion in recent months at

Fairgrounds Subcommittee meetings chaired by Essex County Board of Supervisors Vice Chairman Shaun Gillilland. “The goal is to develop a strategic business and marketing plan for the fairgrounds,” Gillilland told The Sun. “It is a tremendous facility. It’s a real gem, and it is underutilized. There is potential for a lot of events for the Essex County community.” Town supervisors are looking for 10 to 12 volunteers with a wide variety of expertise, he said. They would form the task force designed to come up with a plan. McKenna asked supervisors to recommend people who might take part in the process.

UPCOMING PROJECTS

The fairground property has seen major improvements over the past several years, including upgrades to the camping areas and to some of the outbuildings. The county Department of Public Works is also looking at options to move the fairground entrance away from the constricted space at the corner of Sisco St. and Route 9N. Gillilland said no work is planned at least until after Essex County Fair, which is Aug. 15 to 19 this year, the 170th anniversary. “During large events the parking ingress

The goal is to develop a strategic business and marketing plan for the fairgrounds.”

and egress can get really backed up,” Gillilland explained of the fairground gate. “DPW is looking to put an entrance kind of the middle, almost across from the grandstand. The site distance there is much better and the inflow and the outflow would improve.” The fair gate on 9N/Main Street would only open only for large events, he said. “We have not looked as to whether we would close the entrance by (Cornell Cooperative Extension/4-H) building.” That building is also due for major renovations. The county bid to buy a shuttered Jehovah Witness meeting house in Lewis to use as temporary quarters for the county 4-H, Cooperative Extension and other agricultural offices currently occupying the fairground building. “The state Supreme Court system has approved the sale of Jehovah Witness building,” Gillilland said last Wednesday. The sale had to be cleared by the court because the church organization is non-profit. As for the CCE/4-H building, Gillilland said the next step is to stabilize it. “I think the board of supervisors is committed to proceed with renovation of that building. DPW is building the plan for the (restoration) requirements. Human Resourc-

es is working on securing funding for restoration. The Fairground Committee is also working to secure funding. We have applied for a (State Historic Preservation Office) grant. State Senator (Betty) Little’s office has indicated their willingness to help. Assemblyman Dan Stec has earmarked $30,000 to complete a hazardous materials and asbestos survey and abatement, if needed.” With the nutrition site built, the county is looking to improve safety at the driveway on the western end of the fairground property, too. Westport Supervisor Michael “Ike” Tyler has said in county meetings that the narrow driveway junction at the railroad bridge is an “accident waiting to happen.” DPW Deputy Superintendent Dougan told supervisors that after the fair, working with the state Department of Transportation, they may “try to pull a little bit more of that material off of that bank to make sight lines, as you come through there, just a little bit better right out front.” “It’s not just nutrition and trucks that are (coming) in and out for that, but it’s also the business that’s right next door,” Dougan said. Supervisors agreed without qualm that reducing the bank height would improve public safety at the intersection. ■

Check out suncommunitynews.com/events for more events like these.

Calendar of Events .......................................... l............. J 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.

- Not all listings that appear in print will appear on our website -

JUL. 21

Elizabethtown » Elizabethtown

Day held at Cobble Hill Golf Course; 10:00 a.m. Come join us for a day of celebrations. Check out the town wide yard sale, watch the parade, and then head to the golf course for activities, food and music. Fireworks at dusk.

JUL. 21

Plattsburgh » Free Screening of

the ‘Peanuts’ classic that started it all! held at The Newman Center; 7:00 p.m. The 50th-anniversary screening of 1969’s “A Boy Named Charlie Brown” that we couldn’t quite wait 50 years to have!....an awesome reel-to-reel Technicolor film!

JUL. 22

Tupper Lake » Beachfest held at

Little Wolf Beach; all day. The event boasts games, races, prizes and much more! Join us this summer for a family friendly, fun event! IUI O 1a11111y 111\::::11u1y, IUI I t::Vt::I IL! Free ,let:: Admission. 518-359-8370. Admission. 518-359-8370.

Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament will take place at 3PM. For more info call Peter 518-6439241 or John 518-643-9386.

JUL. 24

Wilmington » Falconer Science/ Natural History Lecture held at ASRC Whiteface MT Field Station; 7:00 p.m. Adirondack Lakes Survey Corporation Update, presented by James Dukett. ALSC is working with the NYSDEC with Brook Trout restoration efforts.

JUL. 25

Plattsburgh » Caregiver Support

Group held at Emmaus Room, St. Peter’s Church; 6:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. This group is open to anyone providing unpaid care to an aging family member 60 or older. This group is usually small and always confidential. For more info call 518324-3881.

JUL. 25

Lake Placid »» Lake Lalie.Ytacia LaKe Placid f-'lacIa Sinfonietta Sinfonietta Park Park Concerts Con .j ········ ~·································· ······························ ····· held held at at Mid’s Mid's Park; Par 7:00 JUL. 22 p.m. Bring your own p.m. Bring your Isle LaMotte »» 70th 70th annual annual lsleLaMotte seating to to enjoy seating enj< these pilgrimage held held at at St. St. Anne's Anne’s pilgrimage “concerts-with-a"concerts-wit! Shrine; 12:15 12:15 p.m. Shrine; p.m. Knights Knights view” in view" in a a relaxed, rela of Columbus, Columbus, their their families families of family-friendly family-friendl") and friends friends from from the the and atmosphere. C atmosphere. Children’s Diocese of Ogdensburg Ogdensburg Diocese of dancing is dancing is encouraged! encc will participate participate in the will in the IfIf itit is is below below 65 65 or pilgrimage, beginning beginning with with pilgrimage, raining, the concert raining, the con the celebration celebration of of aa 12:15 12:15 the moves to St. Agnes moves to St. Agr PM PM Mass. Mass. Following Following Church, aa nearby venue Church, nearby, Mass, a picnic picnic lunch lunch on on Mass, a with ample with ample parking parkir and the shrine’s beautiful the shrine's beautiful terrific acoustics. terrific acoustics. Free grounds. grounds. Admission. Admission.

Ju····· ··· 2,r· JUL.~ 26

JUL. 28-29

RIceBurgh Creamery 1 Year Anniversary held at 336 Tom Miller Road, Plattsburgh

Saranac » Meadowmount Saranac» Meadowr School School of of Music Music held held at a- Saranac Methodist Methodist Church; Church; 7:00 7:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. Advanced students -- 9:30 p.m. Advanced st1 strings with strings with piano. piano. Free Free Concert. Visit: hillandhollowmusic.org. Visit: hillandhollowmusic. 1

]ll ····· . 27 7 JUL.

Lake placid» placid » Lake Lake Lake Placid Placid Sinfonietta Sinfonietta Free Free Children’s Children's Concert Agnes School; Concert held held at at St. St. Agnes~

10:30 a.m. All ages are welcome to attend this lively hour-long, interactive introduction to the orchestra which will include works by many composers and an interactive approach to learning about the orchestra. For complete info 518.523.2051 or www. LakePlacidSinfonietta.org.

JUL. 28

summitlacrosseventures.com.

NOW - AUG. 21

Plattsburgh » Marty’s Summer

Kids Club held at Champlain Centre; 1:00 p.m. Join us every Tues. In front of JCPenney, Gander & Dicks. Kids & their parents are invited to enjoy great events. They last from 1 hr to 1-1/2 hr. Ages 3-12 years. Free.

NOW - AUG. 14

Chazy » Annual Indoor Yard Sale held at Sacred Heart Parish Center; 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Running in conjunction with Chazy Town Wide Yard Sale. Something for Everyone!! Furniture, Appliances, Household Items, Electronics, Toys, Books, Games, Knick knacks, and More.

Lake Placid » Libraries Rock! Rock Art held at Public Library; all day Join us on Tuesdays to view rocks through artistic glasses and create your own rock art! For families with children in Pre-K through grade 5. Free and open to the public.

Jay » 2018 JCN Community Yard

Keeseville » Keeseville Riverfront

JUL. 28 - JUL. 29

NOW - AUG. 31

Sale held around town; 9:00 a.m. Participants will choose whether their sale will be Saturday only or Saturday & Sunday. We will have a map available for shoppers online and we will advertise the sale in the local papers.

Summer Music series held at Riverside Park; 6:00 p.m. -8:00 p.m. Held every Friday evening during July and August. Different local entertainment will provide live performances every week. Free to the public.

Plattsburgh » IceBurgh Creamery

Plattsburgh » Tours of the Bluff

JUL. 28 - JUL. 29

NOW - AUG. 26

1 Year Anniversary held at 336 Tom Miller Road; 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Ice cream, hand/arm painting by Suzette Pavone from NBT Bank, and fun and games for all.

Point Lighthouse held at Valcour Island; 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Paddle or boat over to Valcour Island and catch a free tour of the Bluff Point Lighthouse every Sunday from July to August. Details: www. clintoncountyhistorical.com.

JUL. 29

Chazy » Old Home Day Collector Car Cruise-in held at Rec Park; 10:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Join us for a no stress day. No Entry Fee. No judging.

JUL. 30 - AUG. 5

Lake placid » 28th Annual

Summit Lacrosse Tournament held at North Elba Athletic Field; 8:00 a.m. Teams from all over the continent participate in this international tournament. The public is encouraged to get out and see some of the action, admission and parking are totally free and food and beverages are available. For more info www.

NOW - JUL. 31

Elizabethtown » On the Center Lawn held at Elizabethtown Social Center; 6:00 p.m. Tuesdays in July ,Free Summer Performances! A children’s performance at 6 pm and a lawn concert at 7 pm “rain or shine.” Bring a lawn chair! Performances will be moved indoors if necessary.

20 JULY

F R I DAY

A NEW YORK SUMMER STATE OF MIND held at

Essex Community Church, Essex, NY Friday: 7:00 pm After thrilling audiences in New York and New Jersey, Mingo Long, Dorothy Dobkowski, and Jalmari Vanamo will rock you with Broadway standards, gospel favorites, and a classic Bach organ prelude. This event launches a fundraiser to restore the “voice” to the chimes at Essex Community Church. $10 suggested donation. Proceeds to benefit Church Bell Chime Restoration Project 190172

S AT U R DAY

21 JUL.

TEA AND POUND AUCTION held at

T H U R S DAY

26 JUL.

WWI LECTURE “WAR AND SOCIAL CHANGE”

Reber United Methodist Church Saturday: 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

held at

Adirondack History Museum, Elizabethtown. Thursday: 7:00 pm Presenting the WWI Lecture “War and Social Change.” Details: 518-873-6466 or email echs@adkhistorymuseum.org 184134

Join us for fun and refreshments. Please bring a wrapped gift weighing at least 1 pound to be auctioned. Gift may be 1 pound of anything that catches your eye. Hope to see you there!

.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

190538

''........ .


www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 9

Sun Community News upgrades printing press Giant reels of paper are fed through a printing press and the four colors are printed onto

ELIZABETHTOWN | Sun Community News and Printing has upgraded its printing press by automating the system that delivers ink onto the newsprint as the papers are printed. New color keys have been electronically configured with numeric codes that press op- Sun Community News and Printing has upgraded its printerators match to the codes ing press, a project that will result in improved quality and on the digital version of the consistency of its newspaper products. Photos by DJ Alexander newspapers developed by the team of graphic designers. the paper, one on top of the other, resulting The press operators simply enter the numeric in the complete full color image. codes on the printing press and the perfect “Before this upgrade, it was necessary for amount of ink will be distributed. our press operators to adjust the amount of According to Publisher Dan Alexan- ink manually by literally turning knobs on the der, the change was completed to enhance printing press so that the right mix of color color consistency, improve efficiency and was achieved; and then make additional adreduce waste. “Sun Community News readers will notice improvements to photo quality, color of the newspaper’s graphic elements, skin tone of those in photos, local schools’ colors and images in the advertisements,” he said. “Overall, the quality and consistency of the newspapers will be better.”

amount of wasted paper, according to Alexander. “It was not unusual for us to waste 15 percent of all papers printed,” he said. “We receive 4-5 truckloads of

“There’s no way our press could be out of commission for 10 days in a row, since the papers have strict deadlines,” Coats said. “As with everything, we worked very hard

newsprint each month. So, that’s equivalent to over half of a truckload of newsprint that may be wasted as we attempted to get the color right.” Alexander continued: “Until now, we would simply consider this part of the cost of doing business. In the future, this will represent a cost savings that we can put back into equipment upgrades and other positive changes.”

to complete this as efficiently as possible. We were able to stay ahead of schedule with virtually no downtime.” This press expansion was undertaken with the support of Champlain National Bank. It represents a significant investment, expected to be offset by improved efficiency and reduced newsprint waste in a matter of months. Sun Community News and Printing is a family-owned business that publishes and distributes four community-based newspapers throughout Essex, Clinton, Franklin, Warren and Hamilton counties, with a combined circulation of over 75,000. It also publishes and distributes papers in Addison County, Vermont. Sun Community News and Printing provides printing services for other newspapers throughout the region, publishes a local lifestyle magazine, North Country Living, and offers graphic design, and all manner of printing and distribution services to local businesses throughout upstate New York. The organization also offers graphic design and printing services to local consumers. ■

Sun Community News readers will notice improvements to photo quality, color of the newspaper’s graphic elements, skin tone of those in photos, local schools’ colors and images in the advertisements.”

FRESH LOOK

Newspapers, along with many other printed items, are created through a process known as four-color process printing. Essentially, all colors are made from a combination of cyan (blue), magenta (red), yellow and black. Each of these colors, in varying amounts, make up all other colors – blue and yellow make green, for example.

NO DOWNTIME

The current tariff-induced rise in the cost of newsprint has also made this upgrade timely. Northeast newspapers rely on Canadian newsprint, as shipping from U.S. suppliers in the northwest would prove even more costly. A 32 percent tariff has recently been imposed on Canadian newsprint. The upgrade, which is expected to be completed by July 23, will be suspended while the papers are being printed.

justments for the correct lightness and darkness of the final colors,” said Press Foreman Bill Coats. “We’d print some papers, make adjustments and try to get the color as accurate as possible. It would often take a few attempts because we needed to look at the printed copies and make the additional adjustments by hand — all while the press was running.” This manual process of adjusting, based on visual appearance, accounted for an incredible

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Upgrades will improve color quality, reduce waste


10 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Willsboro broadband efforts to be completed by end of 2019: officials Much of Essex County to receive satellite service

The Nicholville-based provider plans to begin the engineering and design process before the end of the summer. “Spring of next year is when we anticipate being able to start doing some of the construction work,” said Slic CEO Brad Pattelli. “The end of the next year is when the money is committed.” Cable Communications of Willsboro is poised to complete installation efforts by the end of this year, said founder Herb Longware.

By Pete DeMola EDITOR

WILLSBORO | All locations awaiting high-speed broadband in Willsboro are poised to be wired by the end of next year, according to providers. Slic Network Solutions received $541,550 in state subsidies last January to provide fiber to 135 locations in the community, the lion’s share of $704,000 in incentives for the community.

SATELLITE UPDATE

Approximately 50 people attended the session, and audience members largely focused their questions on the quality of service provided by HughesNet, which received $4.6 million in state subsidies for four projects in a 16-county stretch of upstate New York, or about half of the remaining unserved locations statewide. The BPO will subsidize installation costs for satellite dishes, and Hughes will hold costs to $49 per unit. Providers are required under New NY Broadband Program guidelines to set a monthly price ceiling of $60 for service for the next five years.

DEADLINE EXTENDED

Three providers have been tapped to provide service to Willsboro through the state program, which allocated nearly $105 million to the North Country in January in the third and Jeffrey Nordhaus, the state official overseeing the state’s broadband initiative, briefed final round of grant funding. stakeholders at Willsboro Central School on Thursday, July 12, 2018. Photo by Pete DeMola Gov. Andrew Cuomo has set the end of the year as the deadline for the ambitious universal broadband project, but companies who received funding in January can apply for a waiver for Service should be available from The BPO was unsuccessful in for those games,” Stokes said. an additional year. HughesNet by the end of this year, negotiating a higher cap with Hughes has, however, been Slic received funds to provide fiber said Nordhaus, noting the provider HughesNet, Nordhaus said. ranked by the Federal Communito 135 locations in Willsboro, primarlaunched a new satellite into orbit “No, I cannot commit to that,” cations Commission first among ily in the southwest corner of town; in 2016 and the resultant technol- HughesNet East Coast Manager all major U.S. internet service pronearby the Willsboro Golf Course, ogy provides faster service, which Lanny Stokes told Nordhaus at the viders for delivering on advertised and the northwest side of town along has historically been much-maligned. forum when asked. performance promises, according the border with Chesterfield. While the service meets the 25 Stokes also conceded the service to a 2016 report. Cable Communications of Willsmegabytes per second program re- might not be optimal for first-person “We always try to do more than boro will serve 394 locations, and quirements, the service is data-capped. gaming due to latency issues, or the what we advertise, but we do deliver HughesNet, 15 locations via satellite. Nordhaus referred to it as a “soft time it takes for data packets to be on promises of speed,” Stokes said. cap” because service is not termi- transferred from one point to another. Another large-scale grant recipinated for users who reach the limit, “Those types of games where you’re ent, Frontier Communications, has but is rather throttled at 3 mbps, a interacting in a very split second reac- also pledged to meet the program measure that will result in buffer tion time, satellite internet in general requirement of 25 mbps for the times when streaming video. like HughesNet — it’s not optimized state’s most rural locations. ■

Bulletin Board

» Broadband Cont. on pg. 11

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

PLEASE CALL SHANNON AT 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 TO ADVERTISE IN THE SUN COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD! Not for Profit 4 lines 1 week $9, 3 weeks $15, 52 weeks $20/mo. (.50 for additional lines) For Profit 4 lines 1 week $5, 3 weeks $10, 52 weeks $15/mo. (.75 for additional lines) EMAIL: shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

DINNERS & SUCH

PUBLIC MEETINGS

PUBLIC MEETINGS

ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 4:30 pm-6pm.

CLINTON, ESSEX & FRANKLIN COUNTIES - Do you really want to stop drinking?Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) can help. AA Hot Line 518-561-8444. AA meetings and information at district10.aahmbny.org.

WESTPORT - 67th Annual Chicken BBQ. Thursday, July 19, 2018 at the Westport Federated Church, 6486 Main St., Westport, NY. Serving starts 4:30pm with takeouts available. $10.00 Adults, $5.00 Children 10 & under, Preschool free. Along with the BBQ there will be a Chinese Auction for the benefit of the Medical Assistance Program (MAP) Gas Card & Ferry Pass Project.

CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Call 1-888-425-2666 or 518561-0838.

PLATTSBURGH - Celebrate Recovery Meeting every Monday, 6:00 pm, Turnpike Wesleyan Church. call 518-566-8764.

PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm Marie Marvull 518743-1672 SARANAC LAKE – Grief Support Group First Tuesday of Each Month Saranac Lake, St. Luke's Church, 12:30-1:30pm. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672

Fishing ForA GoodDeal? Catch TheGreatest Bargains InThe Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201

BUY-SELL-TRADE WithTheClassifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201

ELIZABETHTOWN – Al-Anon Family Group meetings every Sunday 4:00pm-5pm, Board Room in Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838 PLATTSBURGH - Adult Children of Alcoholics meeting Wednesdays at 8:00 pm at Auditorium B at CVPH. More information can be found at www.adultchildren.or or by emailing adkacoa@mail.com

PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Adult Chidlren meeting every Monday 7pm-8pm & Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Thursday 7:30pm8:30pm at United Methodist Church. Call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street. 7:30pm-8:30pm. Call 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

DINNERS • MEETINGS • BINGO • EXERCISE CLASSES • CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS • SENIOR ACTIVITES • BOOK SIGNINGS • BLOOD DONATION • ARTS & CRAFTS & MORE

36th Annual

Willsboro Library Craft Fair SATURDAY, JULY 28TH • 10AM - 4PM

Over 40 Crafters Food throughout the day provided by Papa Dukes & Reber Valley Snack Shack Tables and chairs set out in the shade make a pleasant place to eat lunch and listen to music Crafters and visitors alike appreciate the spacious layout of the Fair which makes for an enjoyable day of browsing, buying, and visiting with friends. The Event is a Fundraiser for Paine Memorial Library with a Good Will Donation Suggested at the Entrance Gate

We Look Forward to Seeing You Rain or Shine

190006


www.suncommunitynews.com

DETAILS FORTHCOMING

Exact town-level data for beneficiaries across Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties remains in raw data format, but wide swatches will be covered by satellite, including the entirety of eligible locations in Crown Point, Moriah, Port Henry, Newcomb, North Elba, St. Armand and Westport, and portions in every other locality. Clinton County contains nearly 12,000 locations slated to addressed in the final $44 million funding package for the county. Virtually every unserved locality in the county except from Peru, the City of Plattsburgh and Schuyler Falls — each of which will be covered by Verizon — are also poised to be served by HughesNet, with the highest concentrations in Black Brook, the Town of Champlain, Dannemora, Mooers and Saranac. In all, 2,800 miles of fiber will be deployed in 31 projects, according to the state Broadband Program Office (BPO). The briefing by Nordhaus marked somewhat of an olive branch to local

Amertca's MATTRESS " 518-566-9950

By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

ELIZABETHTOWN | Supervisors gave the Essex County Mental Health agency approval to add two more satellite clinics in area schools. Clinics will be open this fall in Crown Point and Willsboro Central Schools. The county’s mental health agency already has counseling clinics open in Moriah, Ticonderoga, Keene and Schroon Central Schools with Lake Placid schools served by a clinic in the Adirondack Medical Center at Lake Placid. County Mental Health Services Director Terri Morse said the satellite clinics are established to serve area children. “There will be a therapist at the school providing mental health services at least one day a week, mostly during the school year. It could extend into the summer,” she said in an interview with The Sun after meeting with supervisors on the Human Services Committee. The supervisors approved the agency’s request to expand.

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Thank You

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We would like to thank friends, students, schools, business, and everyone for their support and love during the time of our great loss. The support from the North Country and surrounding areas has touched our hearts and is greatly appreciated. The Gary Finney Family

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FREE College education program

• We have collector’s and vintage items that we have been saving for this day.

E’TOWN DAY AT OUR THRIFT SHOP

Opportunities for advancement

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WHAT ARE PUBLIC NOTICES? Public Notices are advertisements placed in newspapers by the government, businesses, and individuals. They include: government contracts, foreclosures, unclaimed property, community information and more!

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“We are in five other schools in Essex County, this will be our sixth and seventh satellite clinic,” Morse said. Having clinic hours in area schools, she explained, helps keep children at schools instead of spending time to come to travel to and from Elizabethtown where their offices are located. “We provide mental health counseling for family issues and to help students learn how to cope with life challenges.” Health insurance generally provides coverage for the counseling service. “It is available to all the students,” Morse said. The Crown Point and Willsboro school clinics will start in September. There is an expense for getting services to the school, she explained. But Essex County provides funding to operate and staff the clinics. “We’re trying to think of creative ways to reach communities further from Elizabethtown. We work to improve the health in mind, body and spirit of all Essex County residents, and we feel this is one way to help the children have more tools for a healthier lifestyle.” Essex County Mental Health clinic contact phone number is: (518) 873-3670 Open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Toll-free emergency service is available at 1-888-854-3773 for outreach after hours, on weekends and on holidays. ■

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Those who live on service area boundaries are welcome to reach out to providers in an attempt to utilize their service. Providers briefed stakeholders at Willsboro Central School last Thursday alongside Empire State Development Executive Vice President of Innovation and Broadband Jeffrey Nordhaus, the state official overseeing the program. CV Wireless will benefit from a separate investment by Microsoft to provide “white space” service to area customers, said owner Beth Schiller.

officials who have sparred with the agency for years over transparency and mapping concerns. But the animosity appeared to be in the rearview last week. “I think right now we’ve come to the point where we have a good news story,” said Willsboro Supervisor Shaun Gillilland, a chief critic of the program. Nordhaus was similarly effusive. “I think we’ve had a great collaborative relationship, and we thank (Gillilland) for his support,” he said. “We’re here as friends because I think this is a good news story for everybody to hear.” Nordhaus said the state will be keeping an eye on its investment, which was funded by bank settlements. “There’s a whole series of checks and balances that occur,” Nordhaus said. “It’s a very critical part of our job.” Providers are required to sign a security agreement with the BPO in order to accept the grant funds. “They have a lien on everything we build,” Patelli said. “They don’t release that lien unless they’re satisfied.” For more info on addresslevel data, visit nysbroadband.ny.gov. ■

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» Broadband Cont. from pg. 10

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» Open house Cont. from pg. 1 The pipe organ has graced many a high school graduation Baccalaureate here, in turns, for generations. The church’s unique history and resonance of this historic pipe organ are centerpieces of the Church of the Good Shepherd Open House on Elizabethtown Day this Saturday, July 21 from noon until 2:30 p.m.

CAREFULLY MAINTAINED

Electro-pneumatics control of this unique instrument, which was placed in a recessed section beside the church chancel almost 100 years ago. The pipe organ was the gift of Mrs. Susan Train (Augustus Noble) Hand after the church was severely damaged by fire in 1926. It is carefully tuned and maintained twice a year by Dave Raville, of Watertown, who has come to know the intricacies of its ranks. Each row of pipes is called a rank. Each rank provides the timbre; each pipe provides a single pitch. Church of the Good Shepherd organist Mary Lou Morgan sat at the keys and called the winds through its pipes as he checked the mechanisms last week. It is like operating heavy machinery she said of playing with both hands and both feet, shifting pedals and keyboards. “And if you make a mistake it can be very loud,” Morgan said. “This pipe organ is really a collection of organs, with one for each keyboard top,” Mr. Raville said. “They are aligned by “division.” The Swell Division is played by the top keyboard, the Great Division by the bottom keyboard and the pedals play the Pedal Division.” Signals from the keyboards (or manuals), Mr. Raville

ABOVE: Mary Lou Morgan sits in the recessed organ chamber built to accommodate the historic instrument when the Church of the Good Shepherd was repaired after a fire in 1926. Photos by Kim Dedam

LEFT: The pipe organ at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Elizabethtown was the give of Mrs. Susan Train Hand, wife of Augustus N. Hand, 91 years ago.

ORIGINS

Dave Raville provides maintenance and tuning for the Church of the Good Shepherd’s pipe organ twice a year. He is a journeyman tuner and maintains about 60 pipe organs throughout the North Country. The electro-pneumatic mechanism of the instrument in Elizabethtown uses magnets to change the air pressure, activating a small reed in each pipe. explained, open and close valves, moving air through interior “reservoirs,” which are receptacles set below the pipes. The reservoirs are wooden boxes with tops given lift and swell on leather bands. “It breathes, though not on its own,” explained Linda Raville, who accompanied her husband to the church last week. Behind the vaulted rows of pipes visible through the organ’s

Marilyn Jordan helps curate records kept of the Church of the Good Shepherd’s 136-year history here, some chronicle the organ’s origins, its donor and its trip from Longwood, the Lawrence estate built in the mid-19th century at Brookline, Massachusetts. Longwood, now a section of Brookline and on the National Register of Historic Places, was familial home of William Lawrence, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts from 1893 to 1927.

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ornate front panel are rows of many more, accessed from a cabinet in back, near the sacristy. “Pressing the organ key opens a small magnet under each pipe,” Mr. Raville explained of the instrument’s electro-pneumatic mechanics. The magnet creates a change of air pressure and activates a pneumatic device for each pipe. He reached carefully to one of the ranks and lifted a tin pipe, removing its cap. Each really functions something like a clarinet, he explained, revealing the pipe’s secret: a small hook — like a shepherd’s crook — with thin reed beneath it. There are scores of them. The pipes were forged of various metals — different densities of tin and lead affect the Tuner Dave Raville shows where the reed is pitch — and others of wood; each piece was located on one of the pipes in the historic pipe crafted and connected together by the Hook and organ at the Church of the Good Shepherd. Hastings Company, at Kendal Green, Mass. ■

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J.P. Morgan served as treasurer of the church pension fund founded by Bishop Lawrence during that era. The pipe organ was sent north by train on April 8, 1927, via Boston & Maine Railroad to the Delaware & Hudson Railway, Westport Depot, and brought by truck to the rebuilt church some five months after the fire. A total 27 packages containing all pieces and pipes of the organ weighed 6,105 pounds, according to the Bill of Lading. ■

190137

190943


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The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 13

APA Chairman Sherman Craig retires Karen Feldman named interim APA chief

By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

challenging mission.” Sherman’s legacy marked statewide approval of Proposition 3 last November, establishing the Health and Safety Land Account. The amendment created a 250-acre state forest land bank for Adirondack municipalities to use in exchange for public safety and utility access on Forest Preserve. With some towns formed with 80 percent or more state-owned land, expansion of roads, water systems or broadband infrastructure, for example, has been hamstrung at times by lack of town or private property to swap as required by Adirondack land-use regulation. APA Executive Director Terry Martino said Craig’s leadership was also critical to the complex Boreas Ponds Tract land-use classification process. “His efforts to revise our review processes identified opportunities to eliminate redundancy and effectively incorporate best management practices,” Martino said. “Our ability to work together bodes well

She would be the first non-resident of the Adirondack Park to serve as APA chair since the agency was created more than 45 years ago.”

RAY BROOK | Adirondack Park Agency Chairman Sherman Craig announced his retirement at the July meeting last Thursday. He was appointed to the chair as Leilani Ulrich retired in 2016. A former teacher from St. Lawrence County, Craig was an organizational member of the Adirondack Common Ground Alliance. “When I accepted my appointment, it was my goal to build upon the work of my predecessors,” said Craig. “I committed to working to leave this magnificent place wilder at its core and with more vibrant communities tightly connected to the Forest Preserve. Today, with the help of so many, I believe we continue to advance this

Sherman Craig

Karen Feldman

for the future of the Adirondack Park,” Craig said. “We are forever united in this grand endeavor to bestow the Adirondack Park to future generations unspoiled and with opportunity for growth.” APA Commissioner Karen Feldman will serve as acting chairwoman. Currently chair of the State Lands Committee, Feldman was appointed to the APA board by Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2013. At Adirondack Council headquarters, Ex-

ecutive Director William C. Janeway thanked Craig for his service. “Sherm will be remembered for his faithful efforts on behalf of the communities of the park.” Janeway said the council looks forward to working with Feldman. “She would be the first non-resident of the Adirondack Park to serve as APA chair since the agency was created more than 45 years ago,” Janeway said. ■

Photo Provided/Adirondack Park Agency

Benefit slated for Willsboro’s ‘Hometown Heroes’ program Indian Bay Marina to host benefit this Saturday By Pete DeMola EDITOR

Robin Belzile, organizer of Willsboro’s “Hometown Heroes” program, poses in front of a wooden American flag that will be auctioned off at the program’s annual fundraiser this Saturday at the Indian Bay Marina in Willsboro. Photo by Pete DeMola

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WILLSBORO | Willsboro’s “Hometown Heroes” banner organizers will host a fundraiser Saturday, July 28 at Indian Bay Marina in Willsboro from noon to 8 p.m. The program honors local veterans by hanging banners featuring their photo and service details on utility poles throughout the community. Funds generated at the event will be used to replace banners that are no longer serviceable. Events include a Chinese auction and 50-50 raffle featuring artwork by local artists, including a wooden flag designed by Kasey McKenna. Live music is also on tap. The program proven to be wildly popular since its inception in Willsboro, with programs now being implemented in Keeseville and Moriah. Interest

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for potential programs is also surging elsewhere, including Ticonderoga, Lewis and Westport. Willsboro currently hosts 134 banners, according Robin Belzile, the program’s founder. It’s a large enough number that the program may run out of poles. If so, organizers will take down the first 10 banners that were installed, and will cycle through them. Willsboro is home to 100 Vietnam veterans alone, Belzile said, but many are reluctant to step forward to be recognized. “Once they realize so many (banners) are up, maybe they will decide it’s not such a bad idea after all,” said Belzile, whose son, Joseph Belzile, enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corp in 2001 and served in Iraq. It was his trip through a Pennsylvania community that brought the concept back to Willsboro. Banners cost $200. Honorees must have received an honorable discharge and be a Willsboro resident or a family member of a resident. For more information on banners or the upcoming fundraiser, call Belzile at 518- 572-7973 or email rmbelzile@yahoo.com. ■

CUM BERLANC,12


14 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

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Upcoming season at Adirondack History Museum to feature WWI exhibits Special reception and screening July 20 part of centennial celebrations

ELIZABETHTOWN | The Adirondack History Museum’s 2018 season will reflect on the event that marked the dawn of the modern era: World War I. This year marks the centennial of the end of WWI. “Although America became involved late in the conflict, the impact of ‘The Great War’ shaped the century to come, both nationally and locally. We’re focusing on bringing an Adirondack perspective of WWI through three different exhibits, our film series and several lectures,” said Museum Director Aurora McCaffrey. The museum’s seasonal exhibit, “Over There:

Local Boys Go to War,” examines the impact of WWI on the men of the Adirondacks. This exhibit will feature local stories and experiences presented through photographs, artifacts and ephemera. “The highlight is an amazing collection of scrapbooks from local photographer Clyde Cheesman, who served overseas in Europe. Many of his very striking images have never been displayed before so they’re new to everyone,” said McCaffrey. The Rosenberg Gallery show, “Artists of War: Posters as Propaganda in World War I,” features original WWI posters by a variety of artists. The Great War era is frequently referred to as the golden age of poster illustration. The posters present many aspects of the war effort — including war bonds, food preservation, women’s aid and enlistment — and were utilized to shape public opinion and unify the nation behind the war effort. The show, featuring original posters from

the Gretna Longware collection, will be curated by Aaron Noble, New York state archivist and co-author of “A Spirit of Sacrifice: New York State in the First World War.” “The images are power, and the story they tell about how public opinions can be influenced by media is very relevant in today’s world,” said McCaffrey. The “Adirondack Suffragists” exhibit will remain for another season and will expand to highlight the contributions of women to the war effort. The war greatly altered women’s roles in society and gave new force to the cause of women’s suffrage. Lauded by Gov. Cuomo as a valuable destination on the New York state Path Through History, the exhibit was visited by U. S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and NY State Senator Betty Little in 2017. In addition to its three WWI exhibits, the museum will mark a milestone by hosting the grand opening of a new permanent exhibit, “Hiking in the Adirondack High Peaks.”

This interactive exhibit explores the history of High Peaks hiking, significant figures and groups and the mountains themselves. To celebrate, the museum will host a special reception on July 20, featuring a screening of the film “The 46ers.” Director Blake Cortright will introduce the film. The museum’s Thursday evening film/lecture series will begin on June 21 and run through September. The series explores WWI history, the Great Influenza of 1918 and High Peaks hiking. The Adirondack History Museum seeks to serve as Essex County’s center for the stories that reveal the roots and values of its people. The museum is open Tuesday-Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday from noon-4 p.m. Admission is $5 for adults, $4 for seniors and $2 for students. For more information, contact the museum at (518) 873-6466, echs@adkhistorymuseum. org, or visit the museum’s website at adkhistorymuseum.org. ■

PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • COLORFUL TONES

71. Steel joists 6. Taxi feature 58. Long-snouted 72. ___ acid 7. “Plus” terminal endangered animal of 73. Kimono belt 8. Footwear South America Across 74. Newsstand title 9. Prefix for copter 59. St. Paddy’s land 1. Lit 76. National broadcaster 10. ___ and terminer 60. Nut pine 6. Wimpy’s antithesis 77. ___ system (car (criminal court) 61. ___ Schwarz 11. Calendar pages: Abbr. option), for short 11. Applelike fruit 62. A.B.A. member: Abbr. 14. Merry in disposition 79. Software program, 12. How most rumors 63. The utmost (degree) 16. English regatta town briefly spread 64. West Canadian 17. Aboveboard 82. California home of 13. Flash province 19. Straw hat Jelly Belly 15. “East” or “west” trailer 65. “__ the Man” St.Louis 20. Peter of “Lawrence of 88. Simple shack 16. Georgetown U. athlete Cardinal Arabia” 17. Renowned ancient 66. Certain port 21. Technology being used 90. Grammar related 91. Omar of “Scream 2” Greek city 67. Flexible in auto-steering cars 95. Set up for use (var.) 18. Try 68. Having two lines 22. Van Morrison sang 96. With comfort 23. Fabricating 73. Cake birthplaces about one 97. Frobe who played 24. One of the Simpsons 74. Failing grades 25. Color in a Beatles Goldfinger 26. Embodied 75. Ballad song 98. Burro 29. Hotel offering 78. Jones and Smith, 27. Very unusual 99. Mrs. Dithers 31. Drug tsars maybe 28. Credo 102. Lime and pine 32. Sales caller 80. Bake sale org. 30. “Sin City” actress, 104. Alice Walker book 33. Internet provider 81. Neighbor of Ger. Jessica 114. Feel without touching (abbr.) 83. Scale notes 31. Warship 115. Certain sultan’s 34. Earth, prefix 84. Diamonds, slangily 37. Even chance subjects 35. “The greatest” 85. Spider is one 40. Popular bread grains 116. Amount reducer 36. Hamstrings 86. Lucy of “Shanghai 41. Taking back choices 117. Pizarro’s conquest 37. Albeit, briefly Noon” 44. Pro Bowl locale 118. Restore to life 38. Dinghy propeller 87. Mid-seventh-century 45. Chosen one 119. Texas trees 39. Cloth sample date 46. “ . . . man ___ 120. Mountain or prickly 42. Top rating 89. Aide: Abbr. mouse?” 91. Goes with head 47. Figure skater Babilonia 121. “It’s ___ against time” 43. Collector’s goal 122. Often required on 48. Progeny 92. Darius’ kingdom 49. A.M.A. members Feb 29th.... 49. Belief in God based 93. Acts like a peacock 52. Effort on rational evidence 94. Fetor 53. Dactyl Down 50. Stinks 99. Pointed at the top 55. Going up sharply 1. “Money, money, money” 51. Active 100. Shade of green 57. Trample singers 54. “___ Como Va” (1971 101. Red wine 61. Extravagant 2. Bitby Myles Mellor and Santana hit) Flanagan103. Code crackers: Abbr. Susan 64. More washed SUDOKU out 3. Fabulist 56. Duke Ellington’s “Take 105. Romanian dance 65. Enjoying a colorful 4. One of four Holy Roman ___ Train” 106. Like a 911 call: Abbr. natural view Substance, lacking Emperors get a licking ___subdivided108. puzzle consists57.ofIt may a 9X9 grid that 107. hasVena been into nine smaller 69. Gimme putts Each Sudoku idea 5. “That was close!” 70. Indolence by Myles Mellor

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.

109. Big name in rides 110. Running contest

111. They have mtgs. in schools

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Level: Medium

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by Myles Mellor Locate the words listed by the puzzle. They may be horizontal, vertical or diagonal in any direction. Circle each word as you find it.

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Saving Scarf Share Sharks Sketch Smoking Snails Solid Space Stamping Starve Suited They’d Tickly Title Tomato Tower Tuesdays Unseen Weigh Whisker Wreck


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The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 15

Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@suncommunitynews.com to place a classified. UNDER $1,000 HORSES FOR SALE Buckskin mare, reg Beautiful 9yr. horse Pretty 8yr. daristered Quarterk bro wnICK mare, YOU FF0ea QU halter RtraSTU ined. $50 . OBO Call 518-846-7751

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211 Water Street, Suite 3• PO Box 578 • Elizabethtown, NY 12932 • 518-873-6400 • friedmanrealty.net

THESUN NEWS

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T IN B

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16 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

FOR SALE WESTERN SHOW SADDLE & BRIDLE, Headstall & Breastplate Set. Circle Y Equitation Western show saddle, 15 1/2" suede seat, Full QH Bars, Lots of silver. $825.00 for saddle. Dark oil headstall with silver, matching breast plate and reins. $150.00 for set. $975.00 for both or make reasonable offers. 518-354-5101, ask for Sue.

LOGGING

WANTED TO BUY

PRECISION TREE SERVICE

BUYING USED MOBILE HOMES 2-3 Bedrooms 14x70 or larger call 518-569-0890 Ask for Jerrry

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

APARTMENT RENTALS

518-942-6545 WANTED TO BUY WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

BUY-SELL-TRADE WithTheClassifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201

Elizabethtown, NY 1 & 2 bdrm apt. near post office & stores. HUD approved, no smoking, no pets, no exceptions. Off road parking, references required. Call 518-873-2625 Judy, 518962-4467 Wayne, 518-8731056 or 518-637-5620 Gordon.

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-

DATE

Clinton County Transactions GRANTOR

GRANTEE

-LOCATION

REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY & REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIED RATES PRICE

05/17/18

Nicole M. Durocher

Adam Friel

05/17/18

Graymont Materials (NY) Inc

Military Turnpike LLC

05/18/18

Debra A. Dahler

Joseph P. Akey

Schuyler Falls

$170,000

05/18/18

Simona Sharoni

Ian E. Christensen

Beekmantown

$250,000

05/18/18

Ellen Coates, Indiv. & As Coagt For Nora Pi

Jephrey Doorey

Plattsburgh

$112,000

05/18/18

Kelly E. Labombard

Dale C. Grigorenko

Beekmantown

$335,000

05/18/18

Michael A. Settevendemio

Jacob Duquette

Peru

$120,000

05/18/18

Matthew A. Cartier

Shawn P. Reid

Plattsburgh

$121,500

Plattsburgh

$95,000

Schuyler Falls

$377,000

05/18/18

Justin G. Fleming

Turner Sperle

Chazy

05/18/18

Jon Oropallo

Rob Trim

Ellenburg

$112,000

05/18/18

Jay St Hilaire

Jon Oropallo

Ellenburg

$169,900

05/18/18

Daniel Miller

Brandon Matthews

Clinton

05/21/18

George J. Head

James E. Snook

Beekmantown

$250,017

05/21/18

Kimberly Chilton

Lynelle Rivette

Peru

$185,000

05/21/18

Klm Development LLC

Ian C. Passino

Plattsburgh

$236,900

-

Essex County Transactions

DATE

GRANTOR

GRANTEE

04/23/18

Fred Hooper

Stuart Hutchins

04/26/18

Daniel Obrien

John Hayes

04/27/18

Brandon Mccormick

Michael Hendry

-LOCATION

Elizabethtown Moriah

North Elba

REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY $25 PER WEEK INCLUDES B&W PHOTO, HEADING, PRICE, LOCATION, MLS#, 3 LINE DESCRIPTION, CONTACT INFO (2 LINES) ADD'L LINES: $2 EA. FEATURED PROPERTY BLOCK (in weekly rotation w/participants) REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS $25 PER MONTH INCLUDES HEADING, LOGO, CONTACT INFO (2 LINES) (Real Estate Classifieds will appear on the same page beneath the directory.)

$81,500

CONTACT SHANNON CHRISTIAN 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS WILL BE 4PM ON THURSDAYS!

$3,500

HOMES FOR RENT

PRICE $150,000 $100 $315,000

04/27/18

Barbara Stowe

Brandon Mccormick

North Elba

$500,000

04/27/18

Philip Lalande

Steven Hilbert

Saranac Lake

$342,500

04/23/18

Rickey Dygert

Darlene Duffy

Minerva

$18,500

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H A I U A I , ---Locally Owned 7 8 or 6 1 "Val2 4 3 5 9 • I "o portation and Title 23 Lifts ley Road" which point is responsible for ensuring New r:------------ ...~ , and Reconditioned - - -"o I N r -"r "'o e• s "'r e e P • SameDay Code of Federal Regula190 feet Northeast of the that all Amendments are• Sales • "'s "'r "e '°p O N- - F u,. N C v• ..... s H I E R Installation • Rentals • Service • Buybacks "s u t:lp u s y Northwest corner of the incorporated into its bid. tions, Part 200, Title IV · r A P I N s • S L O T H- - " , B E A M S • Display Center at 836 Troy-Schenectady Road. Latham, NY, 1211O and Related premises conveyed by To receive notificationVisit of OurProgram o • "o e ••• e ''L ,.N P RI N " A v • "A '°P " PI " FA R .,F .. 1 " e • L " o deed dated October 28, Amendments via e-mail Statutes, as amended, •• • L e •,. N r o I •s v N r A c r I c 1978 and recorded in you must submit a re- issued pursuant to such " E Hp " p ,. $ • " 1 N $ T A L - "E A S E F U L "o ER r • "As s --"c i R A the Essex County Clerk's quest to be placed on Act, hereby notifies all ''/; RE • "• ''t' 'f<''l"c: 0 LO • '~''1,"k" /, "[ "! Washington County the Planholders List at who Office on November 8, respond to Insurance a writ- Company • "S E N s E 'O M A N I s • "1 B A T O R Physicians Mutual FREE ten Department solicita• N C A S 'k E V I V E • P E C A N S www.dot.ny.gov/doing11 Information Kit1978 in Book 672 of • '11 s HA R A c E1Z A E s E r A less expensive to help Deeds at page 102, and tion, request for way proposbusiness/opportunities/c get the dental care you deserve! Registration: 8:00 AM • Auction Start: 10:00 AM al or invitation for bid which point makes the onst-planholder. 115+ Commercial, Residential and Vacant Amendments Properties may have general Northwest corCALL that it will affirmatively Sale Location: Kingsbury Volunteer Hose Co. ner of the premises been#1 issued prior NOW! to insure that in any con3715 Burgoyne Ave., Hudson Falls, NY 12839 your placement on theGet helptract into pur-money in herein conveyed; RUNpaying entered dental bills and keep more your pocket suant to this advertiseNING THENCE in a genPlanholders list. Property Catalogues Available at: real dental insurance — NOT just a discount plan disadvantaged eral Northeasterly direcNYS Finance Law re-This is ment, County Offices, 383 Broadway, Ext. 201 1-855-225-1434 get coverageenterprises before your next will checkup Fort Edward, NY 12828 tion along the centerline stricts communicationYou canbusiness Visit us online at “We’re more than a newspaper, or may be downloaded at: wait!afforded Call now and we’llopporturush you a FREE LINCOLN CONSULTING, full of the Plains Road to a Green.Light.House LLC with NYSDOT on pro-Don’t be www.dental50plus.com/nypress Information Kit with all the details. www.AuctionsInternational.com • 1-800-536-1401 nity to submit bids in re- SUPREME COURT MB17-NM003Ec LLC. Arts. of Org. filed - point marking the gener- we’re Articles of Organization service.” curements and contact Insurance Policy P150NY a community Selling government surplus daily at: auctionsinternational.com COUNTY OF ESSEX 190941 al Northwest corner of filed with the Secretary can only be made 6129 with sponse to this invitation with the SSNY on designated persons. and will not be discrimi- WILMINGTON SAVINGS the premises conveyed of State of NY ( SSNY) 05/14/18. Office: Essex County. LEGALS SSNY designatFUND SOCIETY, FSB, by deed LEGALS dated March 5, on June LEGALS 14, 2018. Office Contact LEGALS with non-desig- nated against LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS on the LEGALS ed as agent of the LLC CHRISTIANA 1979 and recorded in is located in Essex nated persons or other grounds of race, color, DBA ABBK, LLC Articles of SEALED BIDS will be re- involved Agencies will national origin, sex, age, TRUST, NOT INDIVIDU- the Essex County Clerk's County. SSNY is desig- upon whom process Org. filed NY Sec. of ceived as set forth in in- be considered a serious disability/handicap and ALLY BUT AS TRUSTEE against it may be served. Office on March 27, nated as Agent of the State (SSNY) 6/15/2018. structions to bidders un- matter and may result in income status in consid- FOR PRETIUM MORT- 1979 in Book 680 at LLC upon whom pro- SSNY shall mail copy of Office in Essex Co. til 10:30 on Thursday, process to the LLC, c/o GAGE ACQUISITION Page 271; RUNNING disqualification. Contact eration for an award. cess against it may be SSNY desig. agent of August 09, 2018 at the Plaintiff THENCE in a general served. SSNY shall mail Lincoln F. Kilbourne, 51 Robert Kitchen (518) Please call (518)457- TRUST, LLC whom process may NYSDOT, Contract Man- 457-2124. 2124 if a reasonable ac- -against- DONALD E. Southeasterly direction a copy of any process to Spring Street, Keeseville, be served. SSNY shall agement Bureau, 50 Contracts with 0% Goals NY 12944. Purpose: Any WHALLEY, et al Defen- 555 feet to a point; commodation is needed the LLC at: 105 Albee mail process to 12 Holly Wolf Rd, 1st Floor, Suite lawful purpose. are generally single op- to participate in the let- dant(s). Pursuant to a RUNNING THENCE in a Lane, Essex, NY 12936. Hill Ln., Lake Placid, NY 1CM, Albany, NY 12232 VN-06/16-07/21/2018ting. Judgment of Foreclo- general Southwesterly eration contracts, where VN-06/30-08/04/1812946, which is also the and will be publicly direction 125 feet to a 6TC-186133 subcontracting is not ex- Region 01: New York sure and Sale entered 6TC-189521 principal business loca- opened and read. Bids RUNNING NOTICE OF FORMATION point; pected, and may present State Department of herein and dated July tion. Purpose: Any law- may also be submitted 26, 2017, I, the under- THENCE in a general direct bidding opportu- Transportation OF LIMITED LIABILITY ful purpose. via the internet using 50 Wolf Rd, Albany, NY, signed Referee will sell Northwesterly direction nities for Small Business COMPANY VN-06/30-08/04/2018www.bidx.com. A certi- Firms, including, but not 12232 at public auction at the to the point or place of (1) The name of the Rent Lake Placid, LLC, 6TC-189377 fied cashier's check Main Lobby of the Essex limited to D/W/MBEs. D263765, PIN 180966, BEGINNING. Limited Liability Compa- Arts of Org. filed with payable to the NYSDOT Courthouse, Said premises known as The New York State De- Albany, Essex, Greene, County ny is GREGORYS PAVE- Sec. of State of NY for the sum specified in partment of Transporta- Rensselaer, Saratoga, 7559 Court St., Eliza- 140 VALLEY ROAD, JAY, MENT MARKETING, LLC (SSNY) 6/18/2018. Cty: the proposal or a bid NY Approximate amount (2) The date of filing of Essex. SSNY desig. as tion, in accordance with Schenectady, Warren, bethtown, NY on August AROUND THE LAKE, bond, form CONR 391, the Title VI of the Civil Washington Cos., Gen- 14, 2018 at 10:00 a.m. of lien $163,445.13 plus the Articles of Organiza- agent upon whom proLLC Articles of Org. filed representing 25% of the eral and Demand Re- premises situate in Lot interest & costs. Rights Act of 1964, 78 tion with the Secretary cess against may be NY Sec. of State (SSNY) bid total, must accom- Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. sponse Highway Repair 7, Platt & Rogers 3100 Premises will be sold of State was June 19, served & shall mail pro6/8/2018. Office in Es- pany each bid. NYSDOT 2000d to 2000d-4 and Contract, Bid Deposit: Acre Patent, Town of subject to provisions of 2018 cess to 62 Hillcrest Ave., sex Co. SSNY desig. reserves the right to re- Title 49, Code of Federal $400,000.00, Goals: Jay, Essex County, New filed Judgment and (3) The County in New Lake Placid, NY 12946. agent of LLC whom pro- ject any or all bids. 12.00%, WBE: York, more particularly Regulations, Department MBE: Terms of Sale. York in which the office General Purpose. cess may be served. Electronic documents described as follows: If the sale is set aside of Transportation, Subti- 18.00% of the Company is locat- VN-7/07-08/11/2018SSNY shall mail pro- and Amendments are tle A, Office the Secre- VN-7/21-7/28/2018BEGINNING at a point in for any reason, the Pur- ed is Essex County. 6TC-190077 cess to 2517 Main St., posted to www.dot.ny.- tary, Part 21, Nondis2TC-191095 the center of the County chaser at the sale shall (4) The Secretary of Lake Placid, NY 12946, gov/doing-business/opbe entitled only to a re- State has been designatcrimination in Federally- NOTICE OF FORMATION Highway of the County which is also the princi- portunities/const-noassisted programs of the OF LIMITED LIABILITY of Essex locally known turn of the deposit paid. ed as agent of the Compal business location. tices. The Contractor is Department of Trans- COMPANY (LLC) DG as "Plains Road" or "Val- The Purchaser shall pany upon which proPurpose: Any lawful pur- responsible for ensuring NOTICE OF FORMATION portation and Title 23 have no further recourse Builders, LLC. Articles of ley Road" which point is cess may be served, and pose. that all Amendments are OF SCN Properties, LLC. 190 feet Northeast of the Code of Federal Regula- Organization filed with against the Mortgagor, the Secretary of State VN-06/23-07/28/2018incorporated into its bid. tions, Part 200, Title IV the Secretary of State of Northwest corner of the the Mortgagee or the shall mail a copy of any Articles of Organization 6TC-188911 To receive notification of Program and Related were filed with the Secprocess against the New York (SSNY) on premises conveyed by Mortgagees attorney. Amendments via e-mail Statutes, as amended, Number Company served upon it retary of State on June June 5, 2018 for busi- deed dated October 28, Index you must submit a re- issued pursuant to such to 261 Elk Inn Road, 22, 2018. The office of ness conducted from an 1978 and recorded in 575/2011. quest to be placed on Act, hereby notifies all office located in Essex the Company is to be loREGINALD H. BEDELL, the Essex County Clerk's Port Henry, NY 12974. CAMP SUNRISE LLC Ar- the Planholders List at who respond to a writ- County, NY. The SSNY is cated in Essex County. Office on November 8, ESQ., Referee (5) The Limited Liability ticles of Org. filed NY www.dot.ny.gov/doingten Department solicita- designated as the agent 1978 in Book 672 of David A. Gallo & Asso- Company is formed for The Secretary of State is Sec. of State (SSNY) business/opportunities/c Deeds at page 102, and ciates LLP tion, request for propos- of the LLC upon whom any lawful business pur- designated as agent of 6/11/2018. Office in Es- onst-planholder. the Company upon Attorney(s) for Plaintiff al or invitation for bid process against it may which point makes the pose or purposes. sex Co. SSNY desig. whom process against it Amendments may have that it will affirmatively be served. SSNY shall general Northwest cor- 99 Powerhouse Road, Dennis J. Tarantino, agent of LLC whom pro- been issued prior to insure that in any con- mail a copy of any pro- ner of the premises may be served. The adFirst Floor, Roslyn Esq. cess may be served. your placement on the dress to which the Sectract entered into pur- cess to the LLC at 369 herein conveyed; RUN- Heights, NY 11577 Kenneally & Tarantino Planholders list. SSNY shall mail process retary of State shall mail suant to this advertise- Coonrod Road, Wills- NING THENCE in a gen- File# 7254.7597 (518) 792-6516 NYS Finance Law re- ment, to 72 Olympic Dr., Lake a copy of any process to eral Northeasterly direc- VN-07/14-08/04/2018disadvantaged VN-07/14-08/18/2018boro, NY 12996. the LLC is P.O. Box 338, Placid, NY 12946. Pur- stricts communication tion along the centerline 4TC-190716 business enterprises will VN-06/16-07/21/20186TC-190720 pose: Any lawful pur- with NYSDOT on pro- be afforded full opportu- 6TC-187996 14 Hand Avenue, Elizaof the Plains Road to a curements and contact pose. Principal business nity to submit bids in repoint marking the gener- Green.Light.House LLC LINCOLN CONSULTING, bethtown, New York. SUPREME COURT - al Northwest corner of Articles of Organization LLC. Arts. of Org. filed can only be made with The purpose of the busilocation: 11 Orchard sponse to this invitation filed with the Secretary with the SSNY on persons. and will not be discrimi- COUNTY OF ESSEX the premises conveyed Terrace, Westport, NY designated ness of the Company is WILMINGTON SAVINGS by deed dated March 5, of State of NY ( SSNY) 05/14/18. Office: Essex Contact with non-desig- nated against on the 12993. any lawful business. County. SSNY designat- VN-07/21-08/25/2018nated persons or other grounds of race, color, FUND SOCIETY, FSB, 1979 and recorded in on June 14, 2018. Office VN-06/23-07/28/2018CHRISTIANA the Essex County Clerk's is located in Essex ed as agent of the LLC involved Agencies will national origin, sex, age, DBA 6TC-188767 6TC-190816 be considered a serious disability/handicap and TRUST, NOT INDIVIDU- Office on March 27, County. SSNY is desig- upon whom process against it may be served. matter and may result in income status in consid- ALLY BUT AS TRUSTEE 1979 in Book 680 at nated as Agent of the FOR PRETIUM MORT- Page 271; RUNNING LLC upon whom pro- SSNY shall mail copy of disqualification. Contact eration for an award. process to the LLC, c/o ACQUISITION THENCE in a general cess against it may be Robert Kitchen (518) Please call (518)457- GAGE

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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The Valley News Sun | July 21, 2018 • 19

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296

$

Stock #EV385 - 4X4, X4,EcoBoost, EcoBoost, Power Seat, Power Windows/Locks, Nindows/Locks, Sirius XM, Rear Camera, SYNC 1era, SYNC System. Offer ends 10/1/18. 8.

A MONTH

MONTH LEASE I _I 36 ___

SEE ALL OF OUR GREAT BUYS AT WWW.EGGLEFIELDBROS.COM

Ford incentives include 1st Responder or Military Appreciation Bonus Cash which have specific job requirements to qualify. All leases require Ford Motor Credit approval and all customers may not qualify. Not responsible for typographical errors. Photos are used for illustration purposes only.

7618 US Route 9, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 518-873-6551 • 800-559-6551

igli Peaks Ford DLR#7095376

DLR#3160003

Home for your Ford Since 1910

EGGLEFIELD

BROS.

1190 NYS Route 86, Ray Brook, NY 12977 518-891-5560

INC .

www.eggletieldbros.com

Sales • Service Rentals • Parts 191218


20 • July 21, 2018 | The Valley News Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

2018 CHEVY EQUINOX LT

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

2018 BUICK ENCORE

* SUPER *

MSRP$31,440J Stk #187138 J VIN:332696

1

$6,219

$3,500

OFFMSRP(1l

OFFMSRP(1l

YOURPRICE

s3&9

2018 CHEVY COLORADO

CREW CAB LT

$3,065

2017 CHEVY CRUZE

SEDAN LT MSRP$24,565 J Stk #171021J VIN#192403

PER MONTHC2>

MONTH $19 LEASE I,

500

DOWN PAYMENT

cz:;;;::a ......-

~~

2018 BUICK ENVISION

OFFMSRP(1l

$21500<1>

YOURPRICE , ........;..;..;....,.;.,,,;,,;~ -:=..:..;

@ BUICK

;......,;;......,,;;........1

HUGESELECTIONOF PRE-OWNEDVEHICLESALLMAKESlk MODELS 2011KiaSportage EX

2014BuickLacrosse 45,008 Miles, 36 MPG,Dual Zone N C, One Owner,VIN 202737

119,190 Mi les, Sat. Radio, Keyless Entry, AWD, VIN 081662

2015Chevy Equinox 43,901 Miles,AWD, KeylessEntry, CD/MP3., VIN 198217

2016JeepCompass 17,549 Miles, Heated Seats, CD Player, Sunroof, VIN 772492

2015Chevy Silvera do3500HD

2011Chevy Silverado 1500 75,482 Mi les, 4.8L VS,4WD, Trailering Pkg., VIN 219651

2014ChevyTraverse LTZ 64,053 Mi les, AWD, Leather, DVD, Nav., VIN 184216

116,208 Mi les, 6.0L VS, 4WD, Bedliner, Tow Hitch, VIN 656041

2014Chevy Malibu 22,494 Miles, Leather, Remote Start, Sat.Radio,VIN 293011

2016JeepPatriotHighAltitude 22,388 Mi les, Leather, Sunroof, Remote Start, VIN 651091

2017Chevy Traverse 1LT 29,153 Miles, AWD, Backup Cam., Remote Start, VIN 130818

1111 Wicker

Street•

2016Chevy TraxLT 46,362 Mi les, AWD, 31 MPG, 5-Star Safety, VIN 16147 1

2017FordEscape 22,219 Miles, Sat. Radio, Backup Cam., 4x4, VIN C03431

2015Chevy Silverado 1500 74,889 Miles, Leather, Backup Cam., Bed lin er, VIN 211684

Ticonderoga

(518) 585-2842 CHRISTOPHERCHEVY.COM

[]]~ ~ Iii

FIND

190204

Member of the DELLA Auto Group

SALES HOURS: MON-THURS:9:00AM-7:00PM • FRI:9:00AM-6:00PM SAT:9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED

ROADS

All offers are separate , cannot be comb in ed , and subject to change. A ll pr ices/ offers are plus tax , tag, title , and DMV. Sorry , pr ior sales exclud ed. Dea lership not respons ibl e fo r typographical

errors.

Phot o for illustrative purposes on ly. See dea ler for deta ils. Offers end 7/ 3 1/ 18. Must qualify and finance through GM Financial for all offers. Some customers may not qualify. ( 1) On select in st ock models, wh ile stock lasts. Not avai lab le w ith specia l financing,

lease and some other offers. (2) No secur it y deposit required. 10,000 mil es per year, $0.2 5/ mile for ove rage. Payments includ e all

avai lab le in cent ives, rebates and coupons. Lessee pays for excess w ear and tear charges. Must qualify and lease through GM Financial. Not avai lab le w ith some oth e r off ers. (3) Excludes 1SV model. Month ly payment is $16.67 for every $1,000 financed. Average examp le down payment is 8.7%. Not ava ilabl e with leases and som e other offers.* Pre-owned prices are p lus tax, tag , tit le, and DMV.


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