Lake Placid grieves Reginald F. Clark pg. 4
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August 11, 2018
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• EDITION •
Elizabethtown mourns loss of community icon Denny Egglefield remembered for love of cars, charitable efforts By Kim Dedam and Pete DeMola STA FF W RITER /EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | The streets of Elizabethtown awoke last Friday with markedly less roar. The community is mourning the passing of lifelong resident, an icon of his estimable family and well-respected businessman Dennis “Denny” K. Egglefield. Egglefield passed away last Thursday surrounded by friends and family following a battle with liver cancer, according to Denny’s daughter, Shelby Egglefield. He was 70. “This community is something my dad has so much pride in,” Shelby wrote on Facebook. “And today, as he passed, was almost as it should be.” Shelby noted the 108th anniversary of the
family’s Egglefield Brothers Ford Dealership on Aug. 1, “which has been a pillar of this community since 1910, and so has my father.” She thanked family, friends, new friends and an entire community who have rallied to support the family in their time of grief. “My brother Cory, Kent, myself and my mother thank you all. We will keep you all posted on future plans for his services.” The loss closes a fourth generation of Egglefield Ford owners in Elizabethtown, handing the oldest Ford sales and service organization in New York state to a fifth generation, Denny’s sons Kent and Cory with guidance from Denny’s uncle Lew Egglefield, a third generation Egglefield Ford owner. Egglefield led the dealership through an era that earned numerous awards while making innumerable contributions for sponsorship and at fundraising events for area civic groups, schools and other causes. “Denny Egglefield was a well-respected dealer here in the region,” said Ford spokeswoman Sherrice Gilsbach. “The Egglefields have been Ford dealers for over 100 years. Denny served many years on the New England FDAF board.” » Egglefield Cont. on pg. 17
The community is mourning the passing of lifelong resident and well-respected businessman Dennis “Denny” K. Egglefield. Photo provided
Essex County-wide EMS nets $6.5 million start Funds will go towards proposed shared district By Kim Dedam STAFF WRITER
With Charter ordered to leave the state, local stakeholders wonder what’s next.
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LOCAL NERVES FRAY OVER CHARTER EVICTION
Provider was poised to expand local service By Pete DeMola EDITOR
lators to revoke Charter Communications’ merger approval with Time Warner has cast North Country broadband expansion efforts into uncertainty. Charter, which does business as Spectrum in New York, was required to expand high-speed internet to 145,000 rural locations throughout the state within four years as part of the 2016 deal.
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TICONDEROGA | It appears New York State is prepared to fund a proposed $6.5 million county-wide shared emergency medical services (EMS) program in Essex County. Chairman of the Essex County Board of Supervisors Randy Preston announced Monday he received word of grant approval from the governor’s office. “We’ve been awarded $6.5 million for the EMS program,” Preston told lawmakers. Grant funding for a five-year term would come from the state’s Municipal Restructuring Fund in increments.
It would build a shared service aimed at hastening EMS response times in Essex County, fi lling significant gaps in a dispersed, widespread population that expands to twice or three times its size in summer. The challenge, it appears, is how to sustain this over the cycle of increasing and decreasing need across mountains as people come and go.
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Based on research study and planning over two years, the program would first bolster emergency medical services in areas where gaps exist in ambulance or emergency medical response, sectors where calls are dropped, triggering mutual aid and elongated wait time. » EMS Cont. on pg. 16
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2 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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Proposed Augur Lake boat launch questioned State has spotty track record maintaining launches, say lawmakers By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | Chesterfield Supervisor Gerry Morrow is pushing back against a plan to put a public boat launch on Augur Lake. Privately owned, the lake is encircled by about 85 shoreline property owners. In an Essex County Board of Supervisors committee meeting last week, Morrow told fellow lawmakers that the state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) is looking to purchase a piece of private land with shoreline on Augur Lake. The property is a parcel on a northwestern cove. Morrow said the Chesterfield Town Council is going to discuss it, but feels that DEC cannot maintain public boat launch areas they already own throughout the Adirondacks and in towns along Lake Champlain. “We are not in favor of DEC opening a public boat launch site (on Augur Lake),” Morrow said.
Map sent by the state Department of Environmental Conservation to the Town of Chesterfield indicates the area the state is looking to purchase on Augur Lake and use for a public boat launch. Town Supervisor Gerry Morrow suggests DEC might do better to take care of the boat launches they currently own before building more. Photo/NYSDEC
Lawmakers on Monday voted unanimously to oppose any new DEC purchase for a launch. Supervisors from Willsboro, Schroon and North Elba agreed last week in public discussion that DEC’s track record of state-owned boat launch upkeep is a problem in their towns, too. North Elba Supervisor Roby Politi said barges aren’t able to get into Lake Placid Lake to build or work on properties. “DEC won’t repair the caisson,” he said, “they (told North Elba) don’t have any money.”
“I wouldn’t buy any more until we have (existing) ones fixed,” Schroon Supervisor Michael Marnell said of state-owned boat launch sites. The DEC proposal was sent to Chesterfield in early July, according to a letter shared online by the Augur Lake Association. The letter dated July 10 from DEC Region 5 Director Robert Stegemann says Chesterfield “has a 90-day time period from the date on this letter to review this proposed acquisition and respond to (DEC) with a deter-
mination of their support or opposition to the use of Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) monies for this proposed project.” Morrow said the town would interject. Essex County supervisors told Morrow they supported his position. Shaped like a high-heeled boot directly north of Poke-o-Moonshine Mountain, Augur Lake is privately owned by 85 property owners with either waterfront camps or rights-of-way to the lake. A summer camp, the North Country Camp for boys and girls, covers a large stretch of the eastern side of the lake, as it has since 1926, according to the Augur Lake Management plan. Lake conditions and water-quality concerns are monitored by the Lake Association, incorporated in 1980. Property owners began using triploid grasseating carp placed in 1998 to control Eurasian milfoil. The water body is known for bass and northern pike fishing. There are no public docks on the lake. A concrete dam at the outlet was recently repaired with town assistance. Outlets of four ponds feed into Augur Lake: Butternut, Mud, Keenan and Clark. A class A, 327-acre water body, Augur waters flow into the AuSable River and then into Lake Champlain. ■
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The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 3
Farm-to-school, local producers highlighted Outreach brings farming to county seat By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | Farm goods and local agricultural businesses set up stalls on the Essex County courtyard last week for annual Agriculture Day outreach. Cornell Cooperative Extension Agriculture Resource Educator Dr. Carly Summers invited town supervisors to meet some local producers, who she said represent the diversity and strength of the local farming in Essex County. Three area farms now deliver to the county buildings weekly, and fresh products are brought to the University of
dack farm-to-school coordinators are working now with 15 schools with purchasing contracts in seven school districts. Under the red-striped tent, coordinator Zohar Gitlis, from Saranac Lake, said schools with contracts also include Clinton County area districts at Peru Central and Plattsburgh Central and Tupper Lake in Franklin County. Other participating districts include Elizabethtown-Lewis, Westport, Saranac Central, CVES-Mineville, Willsboro, Schroon Lake, Ticonderoga, Wells, Long Lake, Indian Lake and Old Forge, while many other school lunch coordinators have contacted Gitlis for garden and curriculum support. School interaction with local farmers is a growing part of local business, Gitlis said. “The Adirondack schools are leading the way to changes in purchasing habits at school cafeterias,” Gitlis said, pointing to an Agriculture Day table nearby, where Newcomb Central School Chef David Hughes was answering questions.
MEET CHEF DAVE
He displayed photos of his school menu, showing some Newcomb kids’ favorites: quesadillas and the salad bar, brimming with choices and veggies of all colors. Hughes, called “Chef Dave” by school students, was candid about changes in their menu, food quality and how kids have responded to the farm fresh produce they get from farmers in the Champlain Valley. The food gets delivered weekly, he said, even on snowy, stormy days with slick or icy roadways. “It hasn’t been a problem,” Hughes said. “We’re pretty tough in Newcomb.” ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read this story in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
Adirondack Farm-to-School coordinator Zohar Gitlis was ready with information and details about the growing number of area schools who are purchasing local farm products and working with small farm teaching materials. Vermont, Elizabethtown Community Hospital as part of the farm-share program. Hub on the Hill in Essex, Summers said, is now working with 66 local farmers and producers to process and supply locally grown and prepared fresh food. Summers encouraged town supervisors to meet with Adirondack farm-to-school organizers in the tent on the lawn. Adiron-
Keene Supervisor Joe Pete Wilson Jr. and Schroon Supervisor Michael Marnell stop and visit Beebe’s Farm stand during Ag Day at the Essex County courtyard last week. Photos by Kim Dedam
Thank You
We want to extend an enormous thank you to our friends, family and the surrounding communities for the support over the last several months. Your time, donations, encouragement, cards and prayers allowed us to make it through the most challenging moments of our lives. With my new heart beating in my chest, I have a second shot at life!
From the bottom of my heart, Love, Darlene & Denny Mitchell
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FOR ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL BOOK SALE TO SUPPORT THE ELIZABETHTOWN LIBRARY! From left: Chris Shaw, a storyteller now a culinary arts student from Lake George and Jay Larkin, from Schenectady Community College, discuss fresh food initiatives in schools with Newcomb School Chef Dave Hughes and Newcomb Supervisor Robin DeLoria.
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Special thanks once more to Pastor Fred Shaw and the United Church of Christ who allowed us use of their parish hall, to those who donated wonderful and diverse books, to the Native American Travelling College Troupe for sharing their wonderful talents and time, and most especially to the volunteers and patrons who made it all possible. Without special funds such as this our operation costs and many educational, enriching and free programs and services would not be available to the community. Thank you for your generosity!
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The Dudley Road in Westport will be closed at both access points to Camp Dudley on Saturday, August 18, 2018 from 12:00 noon until 9:30 pm. No residences on the Dudley Road will be affected. Please call Fred Guffey at 518-962-4720 with questions or concerns.
The Elizabethtown Library Board of Trustees, Director and Staff again extend our heartfelt thanks to the many friends and neighbors who made our 2018 Book Sale a Success!
Angela Heroux Library Director
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Lake Placid grieves Reginald F. Clark Palace Theatre owner remembered for love of family, dedication to community By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
LAKE PLACID| Many in this village and extended community will pay final respect this weekend to Reginald F. Clark, a dedicated family man, lifelong area businessman, and social anchor. His legacy will endure at the Palace Theatre and at M.B. Clark Funeral home, both of which he owned, and at the numerous civic organizations he served. His presence as both ticket-taker and host in the ornate Palace Theatre lobby had a long run on Main Street. He died peacefully at home in Lake Placid on July 30 surrounded by his family. He was 89. Clark was born in 1929, three years after the Palace Theatre was built on Main Street here in 1926. While in high school at Lake Placid, he worked as an usher in the movie house through the mid1940s then owned by E.G. Dodds. He also worked for his father Matthew B. Clark at the funeral home and attended college, where he obtained his license as an undertaker and continued the family’s profession at the funeral home. The Clarks through much of that time provided ambulance service to Lake Placid, until 1980, when the volunteer ambulance squad was established. The story of his purchase of the historic
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Home offered a sense of the breadth of theatre property in 1961 is legend. In 2012, Mr. Clark and his wife Barbara Mr. Clark’s service. He was a member of the Adirondack Com(Fadden) Clark were featured in Smithsonian Magazine online for their work as stew- munity Church, Lake Placid Masonic Lodge, Saranac Lake Elks Club, Lake Placid Hisards of the historic Palace Theatre. “It was a wedding present,” Mr. Clark told torical Society and board members to the Lake Placid Chamber of Commerce and the Smithsonian writer Dan Eagan. Lake Placid North Elba “We got married in Historical Society. 1960 and I bought the “His most loved philtheater in 1961. I went anthropic groups were to her and said, ‘Barbara, the Kiwanis Club of I just bought the Palace Lake Placid and the Theater.’ Almost had a Lake Placid High School divorce on my hands,” Alumni Association,” Mr. Clark told the writer. the obituary ref lects. Mrs. Clark filled in the ‘ALWAYS rest: “He said, ‘How much money do you have? I need GRACIOUS’ to borrow some,’ And he Amy Quinn, of Lake said right off this would be Placid, serves on the Ada family project. We have irondack Film Society five children, and they all Board of Directors, and have helped here. Right recalled one of the first now one daughter does all times she met Reg Clark. the advertising, the other “Mr. Clark was always Clark works in the box office, Reginald Francis Photo/M.B. Clark Funeral Home a gracious, class act and one son gives out passes, a welcoming host to the and the other does a lot Lake Placid Film Forum (the Lake Placid of the little things that always need doing.” Film Festival), which has always been inTheir restoration and renovations at the volved the Palace Theatre. Palace over decades sustained both the el“He always took time to attend our opening egance of the 1920s era while achieving reception. It’s been great to serve on the board modern digital access. with his granddaughter, Heather Clark, who has It was the Clarks who found the original clearly grown up with a fondness and devotion mirrors with sconces, according to interviews to film through her bond with her grandfather. done by Barbara Kelly for the Lake Placid News “I must admit that I still giggle about my in 2009. The historic items had been stowed first interactions with Mr. Clark in 1995 when in the Town Hall and Mr. and Mrs. Clark Andrew (Quinn) and I had been dating only a put them back into place on the theatre walls. few months. I attended a wake with Andrew Memorial tribute at M.B. Clark Funeral
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and was shocked that the same man who took my ticket at the movies also greeted us at the funeral home. Andrew who had lived in the area for most of this life got a good chuckle. It’s a wonderful example of what it’s like to move to a small town,” Quinn shared. “Mr. Clark brought the same level of professionalism to the Friday night movie that he did to the solemn ceremonial duties of being a funeral director. I wish much peace to Mrs. Clark and the rest of the family.” Lake Placid Mayor Craig Randall and his wife Cheryl Breen Randall were away this week, attending the International Children’s Games in Jerusalem representing Lake Placid. Loss reached them half a world away. “Cheryl and I were sorry to hear of the passing of Reg Clark who has been an outstanding and dedicated community member, business man and loving family man,” said Randall. “Reg will be remembered by our community for his lifelong unwavering support of community organizations and the many individuals and families he touched. Reg will be missed, but his legacy will not be forgotten. On behalf of Lake Placid I extend our deepest sympathy to his wife, Barbara, and family.” Mrs. Clark survives her husband alongside their children: Kim, Mark, Cheryl, Brian, Keith, their spouses Jim, Laura, Aaron, Deanna and Tricia. The children’s family include Heather, Warren and Samantha; Alexis, Paige and Melanie; Miranda, Sora, Ashley and Courtney; Connor and Chelsea. Donations in tribute to Mr. Clark may be made to the Adirondack Trust for a scholarship program that celebrates a Lake Placid High School senior who will seek further vocational education or serve in the U.S. military. ■
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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 – frcraigstjohns@gmail.com and stjohnsessexny@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
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Email: rccowe@gmail.com United Methodist Church - 3731 Main Street. 963-7931. Sunday Worship Services 9 a.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Pastor Ric Feeney. After school religous education program 2:30 p.m. - 5 p.m. on Thursdays (Only when school is in session) WILMINGTON Calvary Baptist Church - Rt. 86. 518-946-2482. Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m.; Sunday Morning Service 11 a.m. www.wilmingtoncbc.com St. Margaret’s Roman Catholic Church - 5789 NYS Rt. 86, Wilmington, 647-8225, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor, Deacon John J. Ryan & Pastor, Deacon John Lucero, Mass: Sunday 7:30 a.m. Confessions: Sunday 7-7:15 a.m. Whiteface Community United Methodist Church - Located at the intersection of Route 86 and Haselton Road. The Rev. Helen Beck is Pastor. The office phone is 946-7757. Sunday Worship is at 10:30 a.m. with Sunday School for children held during the morning worship. Communion is the first Sunday of each month. A coffee hour with refreshments and fellowship follows the morning service. The Riverside Thrift Shop is open Wed. & Sat. from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. The Jay/Wilmington Ecumenical Food Shelf is open each Thurs. from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. In an emergency call 946-7192. Wilmington Church of the Nazarene - Wilmington Church of the Nazarene is located at 5734 Route 86. Contact Pastor Grace Govenettio at the office (518) 946-7708 or cell at (315) 408-2179, or email at graceforus@gmail.com. Sunday School is at 9:45 am, Sunday Worship and Children’s Church at 11 am.
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Reber Methodist Church - Reber Rd., Reber. 11 a.m. Sunday 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
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The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 5
Trump administration rolls out ‘skimpy’ health care plans; candidates react New rules circumvent Obamacare coverage requirements By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | The Trump administration last week issued new insurance rules that will allow patients to purchase health care plans originally designed for short-term use. The so-called “skimpy” health care plans are not required to comply with the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare, and are not required to cover prescription drugs, maternity care or pre-existing conditions. The plans will be available for 12 months at a time, up from the current 90 days, and follow an executive order signed by President Trump last October that directed agencies to broaden access to health care while reducing costs.
‘STAGGERING’ COMPETITION
“These plans aren’t for everyone,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Alex M. Azar. “But they can provide a much more affordable option for millions of the forgotten men and women left out by the current system.” About 200,000 people are estimated to purchase the policies next year, according to the agency, a number projected to reach 1.6 million in a half-decade. Trump said the measure will lead to increased health care choices, providing a more inexpensive alternative to those who cannot afford to purchase insurance on the Obamacare exchanges. “The competition will be staggering,” Trump said in televised remarks. “Insurance companies will be fighting to get every person signed up. You’ll get such low prices for such great care.” But Democrats criticized the measures as an end-run around Obamacare, which Republicans have spent the better part of a decade trying to dismantle. “The Republicans’ agenda is to inflict higher costs on sick Americans just to hand tax breaks to big corporations and billionaires,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi in a statement.
CHIPPING AWAY
The new options come one year after Republicans failed at numerous attempts to repeal President Obama’s namesake legislation. Since then, the GOP-led Congress and White House has chipped away at the law by terminating subsidies for insurers and “slashing federal spending on advertising and in-person help to encourage consumers to sign up through insurance marketplaces created by the law,” according to the Washington Post. Last year’s Republican-penned tax bill also eliminated the individual mandate requiring people to purchase insurance.
While applauded by the Trump administration, independent studies by the Urban Institute and Avalere Health contend the White House’s efforts will increase costs for health care purchased on the individual market — including doubledigit rises in premiums that went into effect earlier this year. Doctors and patient advocacy groups also say the shortterm plans could undermine the exchange by leading to an exodus of younger, healthier consumers, a measure echoed by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The new rules go into effect in 60 days.
New rules issued by the Trump administration will allow the sale of “skimpy” health care plans that do not adhere to Obamacare requirements.
Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) voted to repeal Obamacare last year, and has long blasted the legislation as “failing” and driving up costs. Stefanik’s office dismissed the argument that the Trump’s administration’s actions are driving up costs, echoing remarks the lawmaker made at a town hall forum in Moriah last April. “I would say that it’s the ACA that is driving up health care costs on families and businesses in the North Country, and that’s why Congresswoman Stefanik voted to replace it with a plan that would have lowered costs,” said Tom Flanagin, a spokesman. The short-term plans join rules issued by the U.S. Department of Labor in June making it easier for small companies to band together to purchase “association health plans” and sell them to the self-employed. Like the “skimpy” plans, providers would be allowed to bypass certain Obamacare requirements, including plans offering comprehensive coverage. While premiums would be lower, so would the coverage. Stefanik supports both measures, and praised the executive orders as solutions that would ultimately lower costs. “Allowing employers to pool together and purchase insurance across state lines is commonsense and will allow more people to access affordable coverage,” Stefanik said in a statement. The sophomore lawmaker last month also voted to postpone the health insurance tax, which Republicans contend increases costs, and to loosen restrictions on health savings accounts.
many singling out her vote to repeal Obamacare last May as the original sin that galvanized the grassroots progressive movement to deny her a third term. Since year’s vote, the issue has never burned too far from the surface, and protests continue to be common across the district. Tedra Cobb, who is challenging Stefanik in this fall’s midterm elections, criticized the skimpy plans. “Northern New York loses and lobbyists, insurance and drug companies win again,” Cobb told The Sun in an email. Green Party candidate Lynn Kahn also derided the measure as “going in the wrong direction.” “My vision is world-class health services for all,” Kahn said. “I don’t care what it’s called. I’ve called for a roadmap for universal health care.”
OPPONENTS WEIGH IN
Three months from the midterm elections, Stefanik appears to see her health care record as an asset, and is increasingly touting her record on the campaign trail, including legislation she authorized to repeal the 2.3 percent tax on medical devices, which passed the House last month. The measure was cheered by manufacturers in the district who contended the fee kneecapped innovation and job growth, including those in Warren County’s “catheter valley.” Stefanik was also lauded by a statewide health care group in June for her work to avert a funding cliff facing community health centers nationwide. But Democrats have knocked Stefanik’s track record, with
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STATE ACTION
At the state level, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has been positioning New York as a bulwark against federal policies and ordered the state Department of Financial Services to reject efforts by insurers participating in the state exchange to increase premiums in the wake of the repeal of the individual mandate. Proposed rate hikes would result in an increase of $1,500 per policy, Cuomo said last week. “If we allowed that rate increase to go through, it would be hundreds of millions of dollars as a bonanza to the private insurance companies,” Cuomo said. “Insurance premiums must be based on actual cost and not political manipulations.” Despite Republican efforts to chip away at the legislation, the majority of Americans back Obamacare, according to a Axios/SurveyMonkey poll released last week. The poll shows 59 percent of adults surveyed would like to see Obamacare stand or be bolstered. Fifty-seven percent of adults do not approve of Trump’s policies on health care. ■
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6 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
A man who touched so many
The North Country lost a man who holds a special place for many who knew him as a hard-working busiBy Dan Alexander nessman, good father, • PUBLISHER • and husband — just a regular guy who loved his Ford cars and a man with a really big heart. By now, you’ve no doubt heard Dennis Egglefield of Elizabethtown passed away last week, far too soon in this day and age of life-saving medicine. Denny was the fourth generation Egglefield to own the state’s oldest Ford Dealership, Egglefield Brothers Ford in Elizabethtown. This column is not written to eulogize Denny. Far too many of his friends and family have already detailed his remarkable life, his passions and how he touched so many other lives. This column is more about observations of community pillars like Denny Egglefield, who come and then go so quickly. How those of us who watch from afar, assuming there will always be more time to appreciate their efforts, yet now realized we failed to acknowledge their contributions. I’ve known Denny for 30 years. We were not best friends, but rather business acquaintances and customers of each other’s services, fellow Kiwanians and neighbors in this small community. I always enjoyed talking with Denny when we were together. I admired his philanthropic efforts throughout the area and just plain liked him as a human being. As small family business owners, we shared many common challenges, and once we started talking, the only thing that would pull us away was the need to get back to work. It’s hard to put words on paper as to how quickly life can speed by for all us. It is so easy to get wrapped up in your own life’s pace, responsibilities and daily activities. We know none of us are promised tomorrow but, who among us can predict when any of us are likely to pass on? Only then can you begin to take full stock in what was lost. It will be hard to fill Denny’s shoes but I have no doubt his two sons and daughter are more than up to the challenge — not just through the business, but in establishing their own passion for being community leaders. Those of us who now mourn the loss, we too must step forward help fill the void left by the man who touched far more than he may have realized. ■
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‘Videogate’ flap an exercise in uselessness The sleepy summertime political season was disrupted with bang last month with the release of secret video in which Tedra Cobb, a Democrat challenging Rep. Elise Stefanik, told a group of teenagers she wanted to ban assault weapons but publicly embracing the issue would be political suicide in the gun-loving district. Since then, Cobb has largely kept a low profile. That is, until last week, when investigative reports by a pair of local media outlets revealed the teen was paid nearly $1,000 by the National Republican Congressional Committee to track the candidate. After pressure from local reporters, Stefanik confirmed the teenager is an unpaid intern for her campaign and doesn’t have an issue with his actions — including using a fake name as part of his intelligence gathering efforts. The furor was instant and outrage broke down along predictable fault lines: Democrats condemned Republicans for using minors to do their bidding, while the GOP bunkered down and renewed a flurry of breathless attacks questioning Cobb’s truthfulness. We think the whole incident was an exercise in uselessness. What did we ultimately learn from this? Both Democrats and Republicans use “trackers,” or operatives that follow opponents around seeking to catch them in a
Letters
Ashamed at actions
To the Editor: The other day, I was listening to the news on my car radio while driving to Wilmington on the winding part of Route 86 in the Notch, enjoying the view of the west branch of the AuSable River. I caught up with a pickup truck trailering a small metal fishing boat, creeping along at 20 miles per hour. I honked my horn with anger, assuming the driver was slowing down to look at the river. He waved me to pass, but we were on a curve, and I could not see if there was any oncoming traffic. I laid on my horn until the driver of the truck pulled over on a shoulder of this narrow road. I passed, as did others who were behind me. After about 10 minutes, I thought about why I was so angry. My nature is not to honk incessantly at a motorist, especially someone who may be in distress. I thought about how I’d let the negative news affect me as I listened to another incident of Trump inciting negative emotions in his base. It is better to try to understand others than to be filled with hate.
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gotcha moment. This is not new, even here in the North Country. We also don’t buy the manufactured outrage that the 17-year-old high school student was wound up like an automation by Republicans and set loose. Teens now are politically engaged more than ever, and while we think it’s a little odd that a kid wants to make some summertime dough by spying on a rival political campaign, that’s ultimately his choice. Ultimately, both sides deserve to be rapped. Stefanik should have immediately admitted her campaign’s connection to the teen instead of dodging for days. We surmise the famously risk-averse lawmaker, largely viewed as a rising star in Republican politics, didn’t want to ding her carefullycultivated public image and sully her political brand by acknowledging her fingerprints on the more sordid side of politics. And while we can’t blame Cobb for being upset at being secretly filmed, candidates shouldn’t expect privacy at public events — especially those who have spent an entire year lobbing bombs at a sitting member of Congress with little pushback. More importantly, the source of the video doesn’t wipe away the fact that Cobb still refuses to clarify her stance on assault weapons, dismissing the question as a “moot point.”
What if this family had been saving for months for this vacation, buying an inexpensive used boat so they could fish in the river in an attempt to escape from the crowded, sweltering heat of the city – perhaps just for a few days. But the truck had problems on our mountain roads and was going as fast as it could. I’m sorry for the grief I may have caused this family. I wish I’d stopped and asked if they needed help. — Lorraine Duvall, Keene ■
Low for Stefanik to use teenage tracker
To the Editor: Elise Stefanik has really gotten low using a 17-year-old to tape conversations of Tedra Cobb, her opponent in the upcoming Congressional election. I am not surprised by this tactic as it is nothing new to those who have followed her actions in Congress. Stefanik voted to end the ACA and the “pre-existing medical care” mandate the act protects. Those with existing medical problems would be froze out of getting
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But it’s not a moot point — especially in a district that continues to seethe over the SAFE Act, which is among the most restrictive gun control laws in the country, and one passed by the state legislature under questionable circumstances. Agree or disagree with Stefanik’s positions, at least the lawmaker stood in front of hundreds of angry people at a town hall earlier this year following a massacre at a Florida high school and firmly told them she wasn’t going to budge on gun control no matter how much they protested. Nonetheless, the real victim here isn’t Cobb’s privacy or Stefanik’s squeaky clean public image, but rather the American public, who is now swimming in a poisonous, vituperative cesspool of modern politics that casts all issues in a zero-sum mentality; one in which people think nothing of hurling the most nasty insults at each other; one in which common ground is increasingly appearing extinct, and one in which we allow ourselves to get whipped into a frenzy for a week over such a petty controversy at the expense of common sense. Our advice is to the kid: There’s still time to turn it around. Get out of this rotten business while you still can. Maybe next summer you can get a job as a lifeguard — not as a political footsoldier. — The Sun Editorial Board ■
health insurance and Stefanik did this with a smile. Her family would stand to benefit from this as they are business owners! Her campaign people said using the 17-year-old was not their doing but rather the National Republican Party! Are we to be taken for fools? Stefanik made a big deal out of a remark made by Cobb saying in a recording made by the 17-yearold at a small gathering on the porch of a private residence in the Saratoga Springs area. When pressed about recent school shootings, Cobb said she told a questioner at an earlier event that if she came out in favor of an assault weapons ban, given the composition of the district, “I can’t win.” One has to wonder what is wrong about this statement? Cobb spoke a truth and Stefanik took a cheap shot. Cobb has not stooped as low and she is running on a record of helping those less fortunate not taking away their health coverage! Stefanik also voted for the Keystone Pipe Line which would go through Farm land and aquafers, again, she smiled
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as she cast her vote not caring about what could happen! She claims to be pro-life but doesn’t care if a mother has to die by not stopping the pregnancy! — Gary Philip Guido, Ticonderoga ■
Dems hijacked by radical left
To the Editor: This letter is in rebuttal to John O’Neill’s letter “GOP being hijacked by radical right.” He begins by bemoaning the fact that money has influence in politics but that in a democracy, the majority can vote for politicians who will favor the needs of the many. In fact, all the majority gets to vote for are the members of the ruling elite. For every reference Mr. O’Neill makes of the Kochs and the conservatives, you can insert George Soros and MoveOn.Org for the Democrats, also well known for funding radical left organizations. He then inserts rubric of Social Security and Medicare.
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» Broadband Cont. from pg. 1 But the state Public Service Commission (PSC) contends the provider has constantly failed to reach those benchmarks. Charter has played a central role in the state’s New NY Broadband Program designed to fully wire the state by the end of the year, filling in the gaps not covered by three rounds of grant funding that will pump upwards of $1 billion in public and private investment into the state. “That was the linchpin of the rest of the program,” said Essex County Board of Supervisors Vice Chairman Shaun Gillilland. “With Charter being through, the whole thing will fall through — it’s a disaster.”
SERVICE AREAS UNDISCLOSED
Th irty percent of New Yorkers did not have high-speed broadband in 2015, according to the state Broadband Program Office (BPO). Charter claims they have wired 86,000 locations, but the state regulatory agency contends 18,000 of them are invalid because they’re in urban areas that are already covered. The BPO and Charter have long declined to share the proposed buildout areas with stakeholders, leaving them wondering what will happen now that the provider has been given their marching orders.
Charter again declined to share that info with The Sun when contacted for this article, nor detailed which local communities were among those poised to receive service. The BPO, too, also declined to disclose the exact locations, but said they’re closely monitoring developments as Charter works on a transition plan to find another provider and ensure an “orderly transition” within 60 days without an interruption in service for customers. “Charter has not received any state funding and the Broadband Program Office remains committed to providing highspeed internet to all New Yorkers, regardless of where they live,” said BPO spokesman Adam Kilduff. “The BPO will be closely reviewing Charter’s transition plan when it is made available.”
‘A DIFFICULT TRANSITION’
Local officials said they’re concerned about franchise agreements, including Moriah Supervisor Tom Scozzafava, who has been attempting to negotiate a deal with the provider for three years. He said past discussions with Time Warner revealed approximately 90 homes on Cheney Road, Route 9N and Mullen Bay Lane would stand to be included in expansion efforts. Now he doesn’t know what to tell his constituents who have been waiting for the service.
The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 7
“We’re really in the dark,” said Scozzafava. The lack of clarity has also frozen out local providers who are willing to provide the service, he said. “It’s a difficult transition,” said Scozzafava. “I imagine it will be very difficult to find another provider to come to our area.” While pleased that PSC is forcing accountability, he criticized the state BPO and Charter’s refusal to share footprint info, contending the information should be public. Lewis Supervisor Jim Monty agrees. “It’s going to trickle down and have a big impact on the broadband service the governor is trying to initiate,” Monty said. “Every time I asked, I’ve been told they can’t divulge that. How can it be privileged information?” Assemblyman Dan Stec (R-Queensbury) said the opacity isn’t helping to sooth rattled constituents who are hyperattuned to broadband developments and only contributes to suspicion and skepticism. “It hasn’t been shared with the public,” Stec said. “The 145,000 locations is a closely guarded proprietary secret, and I think that just adds to this level of frustration. My hope is PSC and Charter resolve this quickly.” ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read this story in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
North Country SPCA » Letters Cont. from pg. 6 Social Security was not instituted due to income equality, but in fact due to the Great Depression itself. If saving Social Security was such a pressing Democratic issue, why didn’t President Obama, enjoying majority control of Congress and a fi libuster-proof Senate, make saving Social Security and Medicare his priority? The Republican Congress has not been cowed. It has been frustrated by a Democratic obstructionist policy in the Senate. When one of our senators is the Democratic leader and dictates that no bill shall pass and our other Senator (Gillibrand) votes “no” 99 percent of the time, nothing can be accomplished. As for the GOP going radical right, how about the Dems going radical left? Bernie Sanders is the darling of the party and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has been hailed the future of the party. They both espouse free college education and Medicare for all. Redistribution of all of the wealth in the country could accomplish this. If this is the country we want, then vote for continuation of the status quo. Whether we vote or not in November, we will get the country we deserve. — George King, Westport ■
Please support ALS research To the Editor:
ALS has taken the lives of the following area people, as shared with us by their families and friends. The bulk of the losses have been in the last 15 years. Curtis Alvin Ashline, Doris Barber, David Benham, Lawrence Bliss, Eleanor Bordeau, Barbara Brogan, Jeffrey A. Brown, Marty Bruce, Karen Reid Busch, David A. Caron, Denis Coady, Don Collins, Helen Colver, Sal Contini, Janice Cook, John A. Coolidge, Sister Yvonne Therese Cusson SSJ, Nancy DePew, Steven Desroseilliers, Bert Dillon, Stan Dombrowski, Walter Drake, Donald Duff y, Michael Dufour, Alden “Chuck” Dumas, Leonard P. Duquette Jr., Douglas DuRocher, John Dwyer, Ed Eisele, Michael R. Forcier, Rose Gagnon, Hector Gebo, Matthew Gervais, William Getman, Diane Gilbo, Gene Gilman, Elizabeth Farrell Gleason, Kerrie Anne Guibord, Warren E. Haseltine Jr., Norman L. Hendrix, Curtis S. Hemmila, Dr. Kenneth Jackson, June M. Jones, Robert A. “Bob” Kell, Colin Kelley, Fred “Fritz” Knight, Doug Knight, Andrea Knight, Robert LaMoy, Norman LaVene, Michael R. Leaky, Roger C. Long, Joan Perry MacDermott, Richard Martin, Jimmy John McGuire, Dawne Mihal, Bernice Miller, William Moller, Johnny Nixon, Barbara O’Brien, David Pearce, Blanche Plumadore, George H. Poitras, Allen Pray, Clyde Rascoe, Robert Roberge, Richard Rushford, Mary Jo Saurwein, Charlie Scott, Lorraine Scorsome, Albert Scorsome, Charlie Scott, Guy Ernest
Sears, Morris LeRoy Sheppard, Oliver A. Stone, Robert Sutherland, Mary Roden-Tice, Roger Thompson, Jari Snow-Thwaits, Agatha Washburn, Connie Well, Robert Whitman, Randall G. Williams and Sherly Wray. Please support research. Donations may be sent to ALS Raising Hope Foundation, P.O. Box 2094, Plattsburgh, New York 12901. Our day of remembering these good people as well as showing support for those in our area who are still fighting their own battles with ALS will be on Aug. 12 at Harmony Golf Course in Port Kent. — Darlene Long, Peru ■
‘Totally deplorable’ to remove veteran from park for smoking
To the Editor: Today at the festival at Lake George, Army Major Ed Miller was removed from the park by police for smoking a cigar. This man has been deployed overseas six times serving his country, the latest in the Ukraine which he has just returned from this week. I think it’s totally deplorable that a man who has served his country is removed from a festival because of the smell of a cigar which he has earned. All the while people were indulging in alcoholic beverages and acting a fool and were allowed to remain in the park. No one smoking cigarettes were removed. This is the problem with this country. We’ve become a soft society that bows down to a single voice regardless of the situation. The person who complained about the cigar smell is probably hiding in his/her safe zone right now. The police should be ashamed for catering to this person. Obviously, the tolerance that is preached today doesn’t apply to a U.S. veteran. — Eugene Ring, Eden ■
ELCS-WCS merger would cost town largest employer
To the Editor: As we reflect on the past and look to the future, we are reminded of the effects of the loss of business and their impact on the community as a whole. Currently when a local business closes for a short period, it has a negative effect on those that remain open. The same would be true if the ultimate goal was to close both schools and build a new one. Elizabethtown would not be affected in the same way a Westport as it has a hospital, the county buildings and car dealerships. Westport, on the other hand, would lose its largest employer, negatively affecting the
rest of the community. Each and every person living here will see a decline in business activity and make it difficult for some business to survive in the winter months. On occasions, we have had conversations with new couples, with families that moved here because of the educational record of our school. It is also noted that a number of students from other schools come here as well. It would be a shame to lose that. Studies are many times done with an end result in mind. In this case, it was predetermined that we should merge, and of course the study shows just that. It doesn’t take into account the effect it will have on our town as a whole. Be careful in what you ask for; look ahead down the road and not at the short term results. We urge our Westport citizens to vote against the merger. Good luck! — Dick and Juliann Sherman, Westport ■
Voters shouldn’t rely solely on social media for news
To the Editor: Recently, a friend began vigorously complaining about our current state of the union and then confessed that she had not voted in the last presidential election because she didn’t like either candidate. She went on to admit that now she avoided listening to the news because it was too depressing and agitating but that she felt she was staying adequately informed by what she read on social media. Since she is considered to be a successful, responsible and smart woman, this revelation got me wondering how many more might still be out there thinking this way. Please spread the word: our elections are critical events demanding of us careful study and educated choices based on serious issues facing us now and in the future. I find it helpful to focus on which candidates will help us to avoid or, if necessary, prepare us to face challenges such as climate change, pollution based on greed, health issues, the Earth and our children’s future. Doesn’t it also make sense for us to mainly depend on information from serious, objective journalists with integrity who are willing to put their names and reputations on the line, in print, as verification that they are speaking truth as they see it rather than some online possible Russian hacker or a radio or TV popularity seeker? It’s also helpful to go to candidates’ web sites to read their policies and to tune in and listen carefully to debates. We need, more than ever, to take this responsibility very seriously. Mistakes in the voting booth, or by staying away, can be more far-reaching than we can even imagine. — Susan Willnus, New Russia ■
Variety of crafts to be sold at open house
So you’ve heard that our open house is less than a week away, but maybe you’re wondering what kinds of things will be at By Kathy Wilcox our craft fair? • COLUMNIST • Let us fill you in! We’ll have a wide variety of vendors with a smorgasbord of items: books, wood carvings, dog treats, fly fishing flies, jewelry, soaps, jams, antiques, slate paintings, wreaths, manicures and so much more! You won’t want to miss it! Many thanks to all our vendors, including Saranac Mountain Hearth, MommaBearLittle Moon, Adirondack Wreaths and Things, Bamzees Woodcrafts, Ruff Waters Fly Fishing, A Gift to Remember, Creative Rock Designs, Mountain Weavers’ Fiber Arts Guild and Young Living Essential Oils.
Our featured pet this week is
MOLLY, a 9-month-old purebred
Rottweiler. This poor young lady has been passed around several homes. She is a big, beautiful girl that is hoping to find a forever home where she can have some stability and routine. She has terrific people skills and quickly warms up to visitors, however, she has a more difficult time with other dogs. Molly is eager to please, but she also tends to become possessive of “her” person. Our staff is working with her and we are happy to say that her manners are improving! We know with the right, breed-savvy person to continue working with this lady she will become a great ambassador of her breed. For now, we would like to see her in a home where she is the only animal and not in a home with young children. If you Rottie lovers can please come meet Molly - we know she can be such a good dog! ■ — Kat Wilcox’s weekly column works to publicize the shelter’s adoptable pets. Find out more at ncspca.org
8 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
BRIEFS
Adirondack Sky Center to preview new museum
TUPPER LAKE | On Friday, Aug. 10, from 3 - 5 p.m., the Adirondack Sky Center (ASC) will host an open house at its property at 178 Big Wolf Rd. to share its plans for the AstroScience Center museum and planetarium. The outlines of the new center will be staked out on the grounds so that visitors can picture themselves in the planetarium, exhibit hall and other spaces planned for the museum. A lecture by Jeffrey Miller of St. Lawrence University will follow at Tupper Lake High School at 7 p.m. Free stargazing at the observatory will begin 30 minutes or so after sundown (around 9 p.m.) with a guided discussion and telescope viewing the Adirondack night sky. Organizers will provide free popcorn, lemonade and music. Situated on four acres of raised
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land in the northerly area of Tupper Lake, the Adirondack Sky Center benefits from some of the only dark skies and the most pristine atmosphere east of the Mississippi River. Interest from across the U.S. northeast and the local community has spurred the organization to aim to establish a permanent Adirondack center for astronomy and space science, the AstroScience Center, at the site. Complementing The Wild Center natural history museum, the ASC’s AstroScience Center will greatly expand science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) learning in the region while also strengthening Tupper Lake’s appeal as a meaningful travel destination. Check adirondackpublicobservatory.org, their Facebook page or call 518-359-3538 between 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. weekdays for details. ■
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5th annual remembrance run/ walk 5k slated for Sept. 16
KEENE | The Keene Valley Fire Department will host its fifth annual remembrance run/walk 5k Sept. 16 starting at 10 a.m. at Marcy Field. The finish line is at 3.1 miles at the Keene Valley Fire Department. A shuttle will be provided at the finish line back to parking at the start line. Homemade lunch from local sponsors is offered at the finish line as well as raffle prizes. The Keene Valley Fire Department is hosting the remembrance run/walk in memory of those lost on 9 / 11 at the World Trade Center. This event was also created so that participants could dedicate the day to their own personal hero, in their memory or honor. This year, the fire department is dedicating the day to the 343 Fire/EMS per-
sonnel that were lost that day. Proceeds benefit the Keene Valley Fire Department Ambulance Squad. Pre-register at racewire.com and check Facebook for updates and information. ■
Nature Conservancy will host nature fair Aug. 9
KEENE VALLEY | The Nature Conservancy’s Adirondack Chapter is holding its first ever Nature Fair on Thursday, Aug. 9 from 3 – 6 p.m., on the lawn at their Keene Valley office. The event provides an opportunity to learn more about the work of the organization, meet staff and board members and find out how they are helping to protect the lands and waters in the Adirondacks. It is free, open to the public and everyone is welcome to attend. » Briefs Cont. on pg. 9
Bulletin Board
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
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.
PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm Marie Marvull 518743-1672
WESTPORT - Roast Turkey Dinner, Thursday, August 16, 2018 at the Westport Federated Church, 6486 Main St., Westport, NY. Serving starts 4:30pm with take$10.00 Adults, outs available. $5.00 Children 12 & under, Preschool free. Donations of nonperishable food items accepted for the Westport Food Shelf.
CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Call 1-888-425-2666 or 518561-0838. ELIZABETHTOWN – Al-Anon Family Group meetings every Sunday 4:00pm-5pm, Board Room in Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838
PLATTSBURGH - Celebrate Recovery Meeting every Monday, 6:00 pm, Turnpike Wesleyan Church. call 518-566-8764.
ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 4:30 pm-6pm.
DINNERS & SUCH WESTPORT - Roast Turkey Dinner and Silent Auction Friday, August 17, 2018 at 5:00 pm at the Westport Hotel, Main St., Westport, NY. Suggested donation $25.00 per person. Benefit the Westport Cemetery Association Hillside Cemetery Restoration. For information call 518-962-4545.
BUY-SELL-TRADE WithTheClassifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
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
Check out suncommunitynews.com/events for more events like these.
Calendar of Events I
To list your event call (518) 873-6368 ext. 203 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 -
AUG. 11
Elizabethtown » Open House
held at North Country SPCA; 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. We will have free adoptions for adult dogs and cats, a craft fair, food, prizes, basket raffle and more. We are also offering nail trimmings, rabies clinic an microchipping. For more info 518873-5000 or info@ncspca.org.
AUG. 13 - AUG. 18
Saranac Lake » 10th Annual
Adirondack Plein Air Festival held at Various Locations; There are five days of painting, a Nocturne Contest, a “Meet the Artists” Reception at the Hotel Saranac, a Silent Auction, a “Quick Draw” Competition,a Preview Party and Awards Presentation,and a huge Show Show&& Sale Sale on on
Saturday at the Harrietstown Town Hall. Event schedules available at the Adirondack Artists Guild, 52 Main Street in Saranac Lake. Free Admission.
AUG. 16
Saranac Lake » Opening Art
reception held at Saranac Lake Free Library; 5:00 p.m. -7:00 p.m. Join us for the opening reception of Paint & Palette Summer Art Show in the Cantwell Room. Free. The Art Show runs from Aug. 16 through Sept. 8 at the library during regular library hours.
AUG. 18
Lake Placid » Heritage Fair held at The History Museum; 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Browse the used book sale, grab a tasty treat from the bake bake sale, sale, and and enjoy enjoy live live music by Scott Sileol Sileo! There by Scott Tl1er will be activities and activities for for all all ages, E admission admission is is free. 1
AUG. 18
AUG. 11TH
Open House held at North Country SPCA, Elizabethtown
Plattsburgh » Plattsl Film Film Screening 5 of “The of"T Anniversary” Anr held he at The Newman NE Center; 0 7:00 7: p.m. Join Jc us for fo a Free showing on Sil Reel Re film, including incl free food. free Donations Done Welcome. Welco
AUG 21
Wilmington Wilmingt(J »
Falconer Falconer Science/ Seier Natural Natural History History Lecture Le
held at ASRC Whiteface MT Field Station; 7:00 p.m. In Depth Analysis of Major North Country Weather Events Media, presented by Brooke Tabor. Review an in depth analysis of the last two years weather impact on the North Country.
AUG. 24
Plattsburgh » Family Fun Day held at Flynn Ave., South Acres Park; 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Free & Fun for the whole family!
AUG. 25
Wilmington » Adirondack Show
& Shine Car Show & Road Rally held at 1 Cunningham Lane; 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. We will have Music, Food, Awards, Raffles. Bring NonPerishable Food to donate to local Food Shelves. For each Item you bring, get a Raffle Ticket in return.
AUG. 25
Keene Valley » 26th Annual High
Peaks Arts & Antiques Show held at Marcy Field; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. In it’s 25 years we have seen the most amazing artists and quality antique vendors. There is always room for growth. For more information contact: Lindsay Kelly at highpeaksartandantiques@ gmail.com for an application or to answer any questions.
AUG. 29
Elizabethtown » Diabetes Awareness Free Health Fair and Walk held at Elizabethtown Community Hospital; 9:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. ECH will host a Free Diabetes Awareness Health Fair and Walk, including: Nutrition & Diabetic Education, Labs, EKG, Vitals, Visual Acuity, Games, Demonstrations, Prizes, Light Refreshments, Vendor Booths &
more!
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
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.
NOW - AUG. 23
Westport » Summer Concert
Series held at Ballard Park; 7:00 p.m. Come join us Thursday evenings for a free concert in the park featuring various local musicians. For a full schedule visit: ballardparkny.org/events
NOW - AUG. 26
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T H U R S DAY
16 AUG.
FILM: INFLUENZA 1918 held at
Adirondack History Museum, Elizabethtown. Thursday: 7:00 pm Presenting the Film Influenza 1918. Details: 518-873-6466 or email echs@adkhistorymuseum.org 184137
S AT U R DAY
11 AUG.
KEESEVILLE FIELD DAY AND PARADE held at
Keeseville
Plattsburgh » Tours of the Bluff
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. More info, Visit: www. clintoncountyhistorical.com/
NOW - AUG. 31
Keeseville » Keeseville Riverfront 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. These events are free to the public.
8:30 FREE 5k fun run – meet at North country club. 11am parade – goes through town and ends at field day at Jaycee park. Noon-5pm Field Day - food, music , games, crafters, bounce house, obstacle course and more! 192522
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» Briefs Cont. from pg. 8
munities and nature. Modeled like a science fair, guests will enjoy interactive displays, fun activities for all ages as well as favorite carnival snacks. Other local organizations and community members will also
The Nature Conservancy staff will be showcasing their specialties and demonstrating how their work supports com-
===============--!-~==============
The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 9
be attending and displaying their work, including an exhibition with live animals from the Adirondack Wildlife Refuge. For more information, contact Bethany Pelkey 518-5762082 or Bethany.Pelkey@tnc.org. ■
Arts & Entertainment
Eye on the Arts “Plastic Madness/ Luctura del Plastico,” an international traveling exhibition, will open at BluSeed Studios in By Elizabeth Izzo Saranac Lake on Aug. • COLUMNIST • 16. The exhibit features 25 different Mexican and U.S. artists, all using plastic found in their areas to create unique pieces. As the exhibit travels from California, to Canada to the North Country, new works have been added. An opening reception with the exhibit’s original curator, Glen Rogers, is slated for Aug. 16 at 5 p.m. The exhibition at BluSeed — curated by Artistic Director Carol Marie Vossler — will run through Sept. 15. Normal gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 1-5 p.m. Learn more at bluseedstudios.org. A new exhibit also opens at the Ti Arts Downtown Gallery in Ticonderoga on Aug. 10. That show will feature artists both new and old exploring various mediums; oil, pastel, ceramics. An opening reception is slated for Aug. 10 from 5-7 p.m. Learn more by contacting edieschroon@aol.com. On display now at the Corscaden Barn Gallery in Keene Valley is an exhibit featuring the works of artists Michael Gaudreau, Anastasia Osolin, Francis Gaffney, Stephanie DeManuelle, Bear Miller, Michael Gaudreau, Garrett Jewett and Barbara Kaufman. A variety of mediums are showcased: paintings, drawings, ceramics, sculpture and more. The exhibit runs through Sept. 3. Gallery hours are Saturday, Sunday,
BluSeed Artistic Director Carol Marie Vossler stands with one of the works slated to be featured in “Plastic Madness/Luctura del Plastico,” an international traveling exhibition opening next week at the gallery. The artist is Jane Gregorious, “Crowded Seas.” Photo provided
Monday and Tuesday from noon to 5 p.m. Learn more by calling 518-576-9850 or via email at marthac@kvvi.net. The Adirondack Artists Guild in Saranac Lake has on display “Recent Work,” an exhibit by photographer Eleanor Sweeney, through Sept. 4. Sweeney is a founding member of the gallery. Open hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Find out more at adirondackartistsguild.com. The Westport Heritage House is of-
fering an acting camp for kids this summer, with a focus on the works of Shakespeare. Kids entering grades 6-9 are invited to attend Aug. 26 through Aug. 31, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Organizers say the program includes acting and voice work, improvisational and slapstick technique, and some textual and theme study. The workshop is free, courtesy of a grant from Stewart’s Shops and the Westport Heritage House. To sign up, contact Scott Gibbs at 518-962-4916.
Folksinger Dan Berggren is set to perform at the Wild Center in Tupper Lake on Aug. 15. Berggren takes the stage at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 for children, $20 for adults. Contact info@ eagleisland.org with any questions. Annachristi Cordes will perform at the Calvary Methodist Church in Long Lake on Aug. 16 at 7:30 p.m. Learn more by visiting the Long Lake Friends of Music Facebook page. North Creek will have piano mania next weekend! The Tannery Pond Center is hosting a group of pianists through the Lake George Arts Festival on Aug. 19. Organizers say that the pianists will play solo, four- and eight-hand. Tickets are $10 per person. Learn more at lakegeorgemusicfestival.com. Critically-acclaimed jazz duo Eli Yamin and Evan Christopher will perform at the Keene Valley Congregational Church on Aug. 18. With their setlist including classic songs from Duke Ellington, Mary Lou Williams, Louis Armstrong and more, Yamin and Christopher take the stage at 8 p.m. A donation of $10 per person is suggested. For more information, call 518-576-9124 or contact eastbranchfriendsofthearts@gmail.com. The Emerald Trio lands at the Saranac Methodist Church on Aug. 19. With a program full of riveting contemporary works, including “What Have I Got to Lose” by Howard Cass and “Girl Without Hands” by James Sheppard. The group takes the stage at 4 p.m. A donation of $15 per person is suggested. Children 12 and under can attend for free. Learn more by calling 518-293-7613. ■
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10 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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Armed Vermont man arrested following Northway pursuit
Austin Blodgett picked up near Bolton By Pete DeMola EDITOR
WESTPORT | A Vermont man faces a raft of charges following a police chase on Thursday. Austin K. Blodgett, 37, was pumping gas at the Westport Mobil off Exit 31 when he allegedly made threatening statements about the government, according to a witness at
neighboring pump. Blodgett appeared to have a pistol in his waistband, according to state police, who responded at approximately 10:41 a.m. The suspect got into his 2018 Subaru WRX and entered the northbound lane of the Adirondack Northway at the nearby ramp. Blodgett was later located on Blue Ridge Road in the town of North Hudson, said state police in a statement. He then turned southbound back onto I-87 and led troopers on a pursuit until he was stopped at mile marker No. 65 in Bolton shortly after 4 p.m. The Sun was in the northbound lane and witnessed a convey of troopers whiz by Exit 24 shortly before 4 p.m.
ation. He was arraigned in the Town of Ausable Court and was remanded to the Clinton County Jail in lieu of $1,000 cash bail or $2,000 bond. ■
Off-duty officer arrested after domestic incident Unlicensed vehicle operator caught after speeding
AUSABLE | A Plattsburgh man was arrested last month for allegedly speeding and driving while under the influence without a license. Derick J. Terry, 27, was arrested on July 30 by New York State Police after a traffic stop on Clintonville Road in the Town of Ausable. He was driving a 2018 Jeep Renegade at 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. As the vehicle pulled over, police say Terry exited the vehicle and started to walk away from the vehicle. Terry was found to be operating with a revoked license due to a previous driving while ability impaired (DWAI). His blood alcohol content was determined to be 0.06 percent and he was placed under arrest. Terry was charged with aggravated unlicensed operation in the first degree, aggravated unlicensed operation in the second degree, DWAI and further ticketed for speed in zone and unlicensed oper-
WILLSBORO | A Saratoga Springs man was arrested for allegedly assaulting another person. Jeffrey W. Horn, 49, was arrested on Aug. 5 at approximately 3:09 a.m. by New York State Police. Police were dispatched from the Lewis barracks to residence in the Town of Willsboro for a reported domestic incident. The caller stated they were assaulted subsequent to an argument. State troopers identified the other party as Horn. Horn was arrested for assault in the third degree and was transported to the Lewis barracks for processing. Horn, an off-duty member of the New York State Police, was arraigned before the Hon. Jessie C. Morgan and released on his own recognizance with a return date of Aug. 9. ■
DWI arrest made in North Elba
NORTH ELBA | A Queens man was arrested on Sunday for allegedly driving while intoxicated. On Aug. 5 at approximately 1 a.m., New York State Police arrested 46-year-old Douglas C. Altmansberger of Forrest Hills, Queens following a
Elizabethtown Kiwanis Club 11th Annual Student Scholarship Golf Tournament
with their lights on. Blodgett, 37, of Mount Holly, Vermont, was in possession of a loaded handgun, ammunition and approximately 5 grams of marijuana, authorities said, and taken into custody without incident. He was charged with second degree criminal possession of a weapon, third degree unlawfully fleeing an officer in a motor vehicle, unlawful possession of marijuana and multiple vehicle and traffic offenses. Blodgett was arraigned in the Warrensburg Town Court where he was remanded to the Warren County Jail in lieu of $10,000 cash bail or $20,000 bond, state police said. He remained in custody Friday afternoon, said jail officials. ■
traffic stop. Altmansberger was in a 2014 Nissan Altima on State Route 86 in the Town of North Elba. Altmansberger refused a preliminary breath test and also refused a chemical test to determine the alcohol content of his blood. He was charged with DWI. Altmansberger was arraigned in the Town of North Elba Court and released on his own recognizance. ■
Trespassing leads to arrest
LAKE PLACID | A Lake Placid man was arrested last month for allegedly trespassing on private property. Burton H. Smith was arrested July 26 by the Lake Placid Police Department following a complaint that he was on private property he had been told to stay away from. Smith was charged with trespassing, a violation. Smith was processed and released on an appearance ticket to appear in village court at a later date. ■
Property damage results in arrest
LAKE PLACID | A Lake Placid man was arrested for criminal mischief after allegedly damaging a neighbor’s property. Lake Placid Police arrested Derek A. Patterson on Aug. 1 at approximately 1:35 p.m. Patterson was arrested following the investigation of a neighbor dispute where property was damaged. Patterson was charged with criminal mischief in the fourth degree, a misdemeanor. Patterson was arraigned in village court and released on his own recognizance to re-appear at a later date. An order of protection was issued to the victim. ■
third degree, a misdemeanor. Patterson was arraigned in village court and released on her own recognizance to re-appear at a later date. An order of protection was issued to the victim. ■
New Jersey woman arrested for driving while intoxicated
LAKE PLACID | Elyse Malecki of Hillsborough, New Jersey was arrested by Lake Placid Police on Aug. 5 at approximately 2:44 a.m. Malecki was stopped for violating vehicle and traffic laws. A subsequent investigation revealed the defendant to be driving while intoxicated. Her blood alcohol content was over 0.18 percent. Malecki was charged with aggravated driving while intoxicated, a misdemeanor; failure to signal turn, an infraction; failure to stop for stop sign, an infraction and open container in a motor vehicle, an infraction. Malecki was arraigned then released on her own recognizance with an order to appear in village court on a later date. ■
Texans arrested after pulling flowers
LAKE PLACID | Christopher D. Peterson and Collin D. Clark of Austin, Texas were arrested Aug. 3 at approximately 2:51 a.m. by Lake Placid Police. Peterson and Clark were arrested after a civilian reported the two males were responsible for pulling out and damaging flowers in a flowerbox along Main Street. Peterson and Clark were both charged with criminal mischief in the fourth degree, a misdemeanor. They were released on appearance tickets with $200 cash bail and given court date for later date and time. ■
Lake Placid man arrested on bench LAKE PLACID | A Lake Placid woman was ar- warrant
Lake Placid woman arrested for assault
Proceeds to benefit the students of Elizabethtown-Lewis, Keene, Westport, and Willsboro Central Schools.
rested last week for allegedly assaulting a neighbor. Elisabeth T. Patterson was arrested by Lake Placid Police on Aug. 1 at approximately 4:15 p.m. Patterson was arrested following the investigation of a neighbor dispute where an individual received minor injuries during an altercation. Patterson was charged with assault in the
LAKE PLACID | Michael G. Tyler Jr. was arrested at approximately 6:35 p.m. by Lake Placid Police Aug. 1 on a bench warrant issued by the Essex County Supreme Court for violating general conditions of his probation. Tyler was arrested and remanded to the Essex County Jail. ■
Prevent
Lead Poisoning The place: Elizabethtown Golf Course Shotgun start time: 9:00 AM
Lead-based paint chips or dust are the most common sources of lead exposure in the US. Houses built before 1978 are likely to have lead based paint. Lead is a poison that can pass from a mother to her baby.
The date: Saturday, August 25th Registration will begin at 8:00AM
The tournament format is a two person scramble with prizes awarded to the top three teams in both the men’s and woman’s division. There will also be a putting contest, prizes for closest to the pin (on three holes) and a prize for closest to the line with your drive.
Follow these steps: Avoid renovation dust. Wash children’s hands and toys often. Wash hands before eating. In babies & toddlers lead can cause:
Learning disabilities Behavioral problems Hearing damage Language or speech delays Lower intelligence
Burgers, hotdogs, salads, soda and beer, will be served from 11:30AM until tournament close. Donuts and coffee will be served during the 8:00AM to 9:00AM registration period. The all-inclusive cost for this event is $50 per entrant ($42/entrant for entrants riding in a private cart, or walking the course)
Children with high lead levels may not act or look differently. Ask your pediatrician or Essex County Health Department about lead testing for your child at ages 1 and 2.
~ HEALTH ~ DEPARTMENT ~
191563
Public Heal t h Unit
518.873.3500
132 Water Street | Elizabethtown, NY 12932 www.co.essex.ny.us/Health www.facebook.com/EssexCountyPublicHealth
192867
Please pre-register (this helps to insure we have enough carts) by filling out and sending the following information to: Golf Tournament C/O Paul Kullman, PO Box 29, New Russia, NY 12964. If you wish to arrange your own playing group, please provide the names of the other members of your 4some; or call Paul at 518-873-6430.
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 11
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Wednesday, August 15th CHAMPLAIN NATIONAL BANK DAY
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9. Petting Zoo 10. 4-H Saddle Horse Barn 11. Draft Horse Barn 12. Floral Hall 13. New York State Police 14. Conservation Area 15. Sugar House 16. First Aid Station 17. Vendors 18. Restrooms 19. Food 20. Midway 21. Food 22. Vendors
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23. Car Dealership 24. Fire Station 25. Horse & Ox Pull Ring 26. Lower Horse Show Ring 27. Race Horse Barn 28. Race Horse Barn 29. Race Horse Barn 30. Food 31. Bleachers 32. Grandstand 33. Handicap Seating 34. Stage 35. Judge’s Stand
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
th Thursday, August 16 * NORTHERN ADIRONDACK RIDING CLUB DAY Time: Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily
The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 13
th Friday, August 17 * TICONDEROGA FEDERAL CREDIT UNION DAY Time: Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily
Event: Baby Animal Barn Antique Exhibit Skeleton Crew 4-H Demonstrations/ Presentations+ Floral Hall: Local Farmers’ Displays Vendors and Exhibits Sugar House - Adirondack Maple Producers Cornell Cooperative Extension Programs+ Master Gardeners on Duty 4-H Exhibits & Ice Cream Sales Cow Milking Demonstration Cattle Show Ring & Tent Cattle Demonstrations Beer Garden Bossy Bingo
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Event: Baby Animal Barn Antique Exhibit Skeleton Crew 4-H Demonstrations/Presentations+ Floral Hall: Local Farmers’ Displays Vendors and Exhibits Sugar House - Adirondack Maple Producers Cornell Cooperative Extension Programs+ Master Gardeners on Duty 4-H Exhibits & Ice Cream Sales Cow Milking Demonstration Cattle Show Ring & Tent - Cattle Demonstrations Beer Garden Bossy Bingo
9:00 AM Essex County Fair Horse Show 9:30 AM Essex County Fair Cattle Show 10:00 AM Midway Opens 11:00 AM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 12:00 PM Bicycle Rodeo# & Bike Giveaway 1:30 PM Pork Chop Review 1:30 PM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 2:00 PM Pudding Eating Contest at EMS Building 3:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 4:00 PM Bike Give-Away 4:00 PM Pork Chop Review 5:00 PM Agri-Puppets Drive Around 5:15 PM John Longware Memorial Pancake Super in the Conservation Area 6:00 PM Pork Chop Review 7:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 7:00 PM Trailer Race, Burnout Contest ($5.00 Grandstand Charge)
9:00 AM 4-H Horse Show w(all other classes) 11:00 AM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 12:00 PM Midway Opens 12:00 PM Pork Chop Review 1:30 AM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 2:00 PM Milk Drinking Contest at The Cattle Show Ring 3:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 4:00 PM Bike Give-Away 5:00 PM Pork Chop Review 6:00 PM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 7:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 7:30 PM Monster Truck Free Style Event & Quad Racing ($10.00 Grandstand Charge)
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Saturday, August 18th GORDON OIL DAY
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Sunday, August 19th EGGLEFIELD FORD STORES DAY
Event: Baby Animal Barn Antique Exhibit Skeleton Crew 4-H Demonstrations/Presentations+ Floral Hall: Local Farmers’ Displays Vendors and Exhibits Sugar House - Adirondack Maple Producers Cornell Cooperative Extension Programs+ Master Gardeners on Duty 4-H Exhibits & Ice Cream Sales Cow Milking Demonstration Cattle Show Ring & Tent - Cattle Demonstrations Beer Garden Bossy Bingo
Time: Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily Daily
9:00 AM Saturday Open Horse Show 9:00 AM Lawn & Garden Pulls 10:00 AM Horse Pulling Contest 11:00 AM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 12:00 PM 4-H Rabbit Fun Show 12:00 PM Midway Opens 12:00 PM Pork Chop Review 1:00 PM 4-H Poultry Costume Show 1:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 2:00 PM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 3:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 4:00 PM Bike Give-Away 4:00 PM Pork Chop Review 4:00 PM Cattle Costume Class 5:00 PM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 6:00 PM Pork Chop Review 6:00 PM Street Legal Truck Pulls Adirondack Tractor Pullers Association ($5.00 Grandstand Charge) 7:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show
Event: Baby Animal Barn Antique Exhibit Skeleton Crew 4-H Demonstrations/Presentations+ Floral Hall: Local Farmers’ Displays Vendors and Exhibits Sugar House - Adirondack Maple Producers Cornell Cooperative Extension Programs+ Master Gardeners on Duty 4-H Exhibits & Ice Cream Sales Cow Milking Demonstration Cattle Show Ring & Tent - Cattle Demonstrations Beer Garden Bossy Bingo
9:00 AM Essex County Fair Horse Show 11:00 AM 4-H Poultry Breed Show 11:00 AM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 12:00 PM Midway Opens 12:00 PM Egglefield Ford Demolition Derby# ($5 Grandstand Charge) 12:00 PM Pork Chop Review 1:00 PM Essex County Fair Gymkahana Horse Show 1:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 2:00 PM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 3:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show 4:00 PM Pork Chop Review 4:00 PM Bike Give-Away 4:00 PM 50/50 Giveaway Drawing 5:00 PM Agri-Puppets: Drive Around 5:00 PM Egglefield Ford Demolition Derby# ($5 Grandstand Charge) 7:00 PM Agri-Puppets Show
Legend: # = Gordon Oil Grandstand * = Stage on South Lawn + = 4-H/Cooperative Extension Area Events ^ = Conservation Area > = Horse Ring or Pulling Ring
Note: This schedule is subject to change. Updated schedule at www.essexcountyfair.org Legend:
# = Gordon Oil Grandstand * = Stage on South Lawn + = 4-H/Cooperative Extension Area Events ^ = Conservation Area > = Horse Ring or Pulling Ring
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 15
Local provider gets heavy lift from Microsoft to expand high-speed internet By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ESSEX | As the region continues to await universal high-speed internet, a local provider has been tapped by Microsoft to participate in their grant initiative to expand broadband. Essex-based provider CvWireless was among the four providers nationwide to secure the highly selective third annual Airband Grant Fund, Microsoft announced last week. The fund aims to support “high-potential, early-stage startups creating innovative new technologies, services and business models.” “Their use of innovative technologies like TV white spaces will help close the broadband gap in New York state,” said Shelley McKinley, Microsoft’s head of technology and corporate responsibility, in a statement. Start-ups in California and West Virginia also received funds as part of the initiative, joining projects in Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya and Bangladesh.
TV WHITE SPACE
CvWireless currently deploys service to approximately 80 clients in eastern Essex County, including Whallonsburg, Willsboro and Reber.
The funds — which CEO Beth Schiller said were “sizable” — will allow the provider to deploy TV white space technology, or the former frequencies once utilized by analog television. Unlike microwave service, white space can be delivered without a direct line of sight, penetrating rough terrain speckled with trees, the default landscape in the rugged Adirondacks. Schiller said it’s too early to discern precisely which locations CvWireless will serve and when she will launch the service, but says she will work with Slic Network Solutions, which received subsidies to cover portions of the area as part of the state’s universal broadband program, to jump off of their network in areas where they will not cover. “The timing of it depends a little bit of when Slic is out there,” Schiller told The Sun. Schiller received application assistance from Fred Engelmann at Rainmaker Network Services, which pioneered the use of white space technology in a groundbreaking project in Thurman in Warren County. Engelmann will also serve as a consultant.
SOLID TECHNOLOGY
AdkAction Broadband Project Chairman David Wolff welcomed the initiative. “In my mind, the technology is solid and offers a viable alternative solution to some of the remote access issues that we face in the Park,” Wolff told The Sun. The cash investments join access to tech-
Essex-based provider CvWireless was among the four providers nationwide to secure the highly selective third annual Airband Grant Fund, Microsoft announced last week. Pictured above is CvWireless’ current service area. Photo provided nology, mentoring and networking opportunities, including a trip to Seattle next month for Microsoft-sponsored workshops on technology and business development. Much of the region is slated to be served by HughesNet, who will start rolling out satellite service by the end of the year as part
SPECIAL OLYMPICS: Athletes from Clinton and Essex counties attended the New York State Special Olympics event at Siena College recently. The contingent competed in track, basketball, swimming and tennis. Photo provided
ESTATE AUCTION Gokey’s Auction Facility I-87, Exit 29, North Hudson, NY Saturday, August 18th @ 10am Preview: 8:30am to Start of Sale
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of the state program. While their service meets the minimum state guidelines of 25 mbps, usage will be throttled once the data cap has been reached. HughesNet must cap the monthly price at $60 month annually for five years, according to the deal worked out with the state Broadband Program Office (BPO), the agency overseeing the effort. Schiller while said it’s too early to offer price estimates for CvWireless, white space is “generally more expensive” than satellite service. “I need to see how everything is going to shake out in 2019,” Schiller said. Unlike the state program, Microsoft’s initiative does not mandate speed requirements. “It’s my hope to provide the 25 mbps (upload) by 3 mbps (download), which is the state standard when I can for those people that sign up based on technology and what we can provide,” Schiller said. ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read this story in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
This sale will consist of the Warren Estate of Glens Falls, along with partial contents from Keene Valley and Paradox Lake homes combined with barn contents from Crown Point, NY to make a well rounded sale of 800+ plus lots to include Antiques, Collectibles, Modern, Vintage and Rustic Furniture & Furnishings plus attic, cellar and barn contents, tools, shop equipment and more. Check website for updated listings, order of sale and 100’s of photos of this auction www.gokeysauctions.com Auction held under tents rain or shine with ample parking, seating & lunch available Terms: Cash, Check, M/C & Visa 13% Buyers Premium (3% Discount for Cash or Check) All items sold absolute w/ no minimums or reserves Sale Conducted by Gokey’s Auction Service AUCTIONEER– JOHN GOKEY CES,CAGA,RMI (518) 532-9323/9156
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listl
16 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
» EMS Cont. from pg. 1 It also responds by adding paid positions county-wide to address a critical shortage of volunteer responders, a situation exacerbated in part by time constraints for training in a small population base and extensive training requirements. “We are going to have to hire people and purchase at least four fly cars,” Preston said. “That (grant) is going to go a long way toward getting this project up and running.” But a law enabling county tax collection to sustain is not in place. A key piece of state legislation that would allow a taxation district to sustain the service did not make it through both houses in Albany. In late June, the taxation measure met with approval in the state Senate but did not get through the Assembly before the session ended. It does not leave the system disabled.
SECTORS
Essex County Emergency Medical Services Coordinator Patty Bashaw presented an overview of the program at the Ways and Means Committee meeting in June with Rob Wick from the county’s Community Services Office. County EMS planners created sectors to address need, in sequence, from critical to supporting role. Cost analysis was measured by ambulance call volume, Bashaw said. Initial spending would add AEDs (automated external defibrillators) and First Responder Bags for some areas, Bashaw told supervisors in June. “So we have additional capability to respond.” Medic cars, often referred to as “fly cars,” would be purchased, one for each sector “to enhance the capability to respond where the ambulances are not able to respond,” Bashaw told the supervisors. Medic cars would also support EMS logistics for largescale community events, such as Ironman, sporting events or touring road races. Start-up investment in the county-wide system would include staffing, Bashaw said, adding advanced EMT and paramedic personnel for the cars and a dedicated medical director for the county system.
PRIORITY: PATIENT CARE
Asked Monday if the system as proposed is ready for financing, Bashaw said it is.
COUNTY’S EDGE
The move to add a county-wide EMS response overlay in Essex County has hurdles, like mountains and miles, to cross. The disparity in total town property assessment ranges in Essex County from resort areas, like North Elba, where county taxable assessments top $2.2 billion, to smaller towns with a large percentage of state-owned forest lands, like North Hudson, where the county taxable assessment totals $144.6 million, according to 2018 final assessment rolls. Minerva Supervisor Stephen McNally asked whether such disparities would cause unequal distribution of services. “It’s geography. I think if you’re going to have a countywide system, it has to reach the entire county,” he told The Sun in an interview on Tuesday. Minerva sits at the county’s southern border. Their EMS response, in fact, is dispatched by Warren County. “We are eight miles from the Johnsburg rescue squad, which is a paid service,” McNally said. “When you call 911 in Minerva, it goes to Essex County, but automatically gets transferred to Warren County. We’re 30 miles from the Warren County
dispatch center and 50 miles from Essex County’s. And people here are taken to Glens Falls Hospital. We’ve been on that program for 30 years.” Having one fly car in a sector run between Newcomb, Schroon Lake and Minerva doesn’t guarantee improvement in Minerva’s EMS response system, he said, questioning the cost if any county tax is levied. “The three towns are 20 to 25 minutes apart. If the fly car is in Newcomb when its called, we could have North Warren here in less time. I can see where towns that are close together could consolidate the rescue squads and share services,” he said. But how do you span 50 miles without losing response time? “A lot of the larger communities have paid EMS staff, so my concern is that if we’re going to pay additional taxes to the county, we need to get quality services. “Then if you get six or seven towns that opt out, it could leave this program in trouble. It needs work going forward,” he said. As for lagging state legislation, “I don’t believe we’ll have a problem getting the taxing district approved,” McNally said.
“We do have a good plan set up. What it will highly depend on is what folks in the towns need or want. Those that feel that they need the service and where we are currently dropping calls are areas where we are going to focus first,” Bashaw told The Sun in an interview. “In the end, I believe this will be beneficial to the whole county.” Supervisors and the county manager determine how towns opt out of any taxation district, she said. “As much as we can, we need to keep the volunteers
“And the grant could be used to implement some of the plan moving forward. But we have to have coverage benefits for everybody in the county, at a cost the same or less than what we can do with an individual town budget.” “The situation is very different in towns like Minerva, Newcomb, Schroon Lake and North Hudson. I can’t speak for those towns, but for us, a new county tax might not have any benefit.” Other towns with existing paid services are already looking for ways to stay out of the county-wide system. Supervisors Gerry Morrow of Chesterfield and Archie Depo of Jay have said their town taxpayers fund and maintain excellent ambulance companies. Both Chesterfield and Jay border Clinton County and have mutual aid agreements in more widely populated areas. Adding a county-wide overlay for advanced medical support for towns that double or triple in size from summer through fall may gain support from areas with a large second-home population. “They are still working on a plan. I am going to be open minded about it,” McNally said. ■
engaged, but there are some agencies that are clearly struggling. People are waiting long amounts of time to get their call covered, often through mutual aid.” The first priority, Bashaw said, is patient care. “Patient care has got to be number one. And the patient cannot be waiting for mutual aid to come from another town. We keep getting more and larger activities coming to this area, and many tourism organizations are working hard to bring these activities here. A solid EMS program is part of that,” she said. ■
Tariffs continue on newsprint — for now
Tariffs on imported Canadian newsprint were imposed in January after a hedge fund-owned paper mill in Washington complained about unfair trade practices it contended put American mills at a competitive disadvantage. Pictured here: A printing press at the Sun Community News in Elizabethtown. File photo
U.S. Commerce Department offers slight reprieve By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | The U.S. Department of Commerce is moving ahead with tariffs on imported Canadian newsprint, albeit lower than those initially proposed. The tariffs will impose a 16.88 percent duty on groundwood paper, down from the 22 percent anti-dumping tax proposed earlier this year. While the duties will be applied to just one firm, Catalyst Paper Company, the Trump
administration also slapped new tariffs on several Canadian paper companies to counter their government subsidies. The tariffs were imposed in January after a hedge fund-owned paper mill in Washington state complained about unfair trade practices it contended put American mills at a competitive disadvantage.
AWAITING ITC VOTE
Industry officials welcomed the slight reduction, but continued to call for their full elimination when the International Trade Commission will conclude its final investigation and vote on Aug. 29. The decision will be decided Sept. 17. “Although this is a step in the right direction, the reduced rates only lessen the pace at which the tariffs are harming the industry,”
said David Chavern, president and CEO of News Media Alliance. “We hope that the International Trade Commission will entirely reverse these misguided tariffs at the end of the month.” Ongoing tariffs would be poised to most effect newspapers in small, rural communities least positioned to absorb to increased costs The New Media Alliance found in a recent survey that most newspapers would not have been able to pass along the costs to subscribers, and that a permanent tariff may lead to an intensified shift to digital products in the industry, which would have further harmed U.S. groundwood paper producers and had a cascading effect on advertisers and printers. The countervailing duties have had impacts on a newspaper industry already contend-
ing with seismic shifts in subscription and advertising models. The hikes have led to increased newsstand prices across the country. Other newspapers have chopped sections, reduced page counts and cut down on the frequency of publication. And some media outlets, including the Tampa Bay Times and the Salt Lake Tribune, have laid off staffers to accommodate the increases. According to the Pew Research Center, 39,210 people worked as reporters, editors, photographers, or film and video editors in the newspaper industry in 2017, down 15 percent from 2014 and a jawdropping 45 percent from 2004. Sun Community News Publisher Dan Alexander said while the taxes have led to belt-tightening, they have not posed an existential threat to the family-owned company. “We appreciate the opportunity to have the U.S. Department of Commerce weigh in on this important issues and we look forward to the International Trade Commission’s investigation which should be released later this month,” said Alexander. Alexander said he was heartened that white birch paper will be reopening the Bear Island Mill in Virginia to increase tonnage for publishers and ease the overall availability of stock. Federal lawmakers from both parties have introduced legislation in Washington siding with the newspaper industry, including five members of New York’s House delegation who urged the U.S. Commerce Department to drop the tariffs altogether. “Lowering these unwise and unjust tariffs is a very positive step in the right direction to support our already at-risk community newspapers and the American paper industry and the many jobs it supports,” said U.S. Minority Leader Schumer in a statement. “I will now use my influence as the Senate Minority Leader to push the United States International Trade Commission to lower these unfair tariffs even more.” ■
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» Egglefield Cont. from pg. 1 He was renowned for the attention to detail he brought to every car show, car race and Ford’s remarkable motorcar history. He added a second Ford dealership in Ray Brook, High Peaks Ford, about 15 years ago. Egglef ield Ford won the company’s President’s Award several times, including 2009 and in 2013.
‘HOT ROD EXTRAORDINAIRE’
Memories began to fill in around the emptiness last Friday. Ken Fenimore counted Egglefield as a lifelong friend, recalling his pal as a “hot rod extraordinaire.” “He’s always been a car guy,” Fenimore said. Fenimore lived on Wadhams Road when their gang of friends all started getting their driver licenses in the mid-1960s. He recalled Egglefield flying down the country lane in a ‘55 Ford with flat black primer. “He was kind of like a rebel — the James Dean of his era,” Fenimore said. Egglefield liked repurposing drive shafts from other cars to create great big exhaust pipes. And he enjoyed giving nicknames. Fenimore was dubbed Humphrey, which was later shortened to “Hump.” “He’d say that every time he saw me,” Fenimore said.
ALWAYS THERE
Gay Olcott was a lifelong friend. When her stepbrother Mark Hildebrandt was killed in helicopter crash, Egglefield took over as the family’s big brother and substitute son to her stepfather, Herb. Their daughters became fast friends from the time they were 2, creating a lifetime of memories: Overnights. Halloweens. Christmas. Baby showers. Proms. Weddings. Vacations. Beauty pageants. Egglefield took Olcott for a cruise in a Mustang for her 50th birthday.
“He was always the big brother I never had,” she said. “It just seemed like he was always there for everybody.” While Egglefield’s love of cars is legend, his fondness for community was even bigger. Noel Merrihew III has long had a personal relationship with the Egglefield family. “The Egglefields have been synonymous with Elizabethtown,” Merrihew said last Friday, citing their commitment to local and charitable outreach. “They’ve always been generous and supportive of the community over the years.” Lewis Supervisor Jim Monty bought his first vehicle from Egglefield Ford. “Denny was one-of-a-kind,” Monty said. “He was a great community supporter, never wanting a lot of fanfare. He’s going to be greatly missed. He was a gentleman, a friend to everybody.” Monty recalled when the proprietor of a local recycling redemption center absconded with hundreds of dollars donated to the Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School’s fifth grade class field trip fund in 2015. “Denny and two other businesses stepped up to replace that money,” Monty said. “To me, that just tells me what kind of person he was. He had no connection with the kids in the class, but it was his community.” That touched a lot of people, Monty said. Adirondack Community Action Programs CEO Alan Jones recalled working with Egglefield Ford for the “Drive 4 UR Community” event designed to raise funds for local school districts. “He was always very genuine and very forthright,” Jones said. “In the true sense of the word, he was a community pillar.” Arin Burdo, a lifelong family friend, said Egglefield never said no to aiding in a charitable effort. “Even though he was kind of gruff on the outside, he was a big teddy bear on the inside,” Burdo said. “He had a big heart and always wanted to help.” Shelby said he lived and worked his passion. He always said, “Do what you love,”
The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 17
of guy. He was charitable, but also a guy who would sit and chat for hours.” Though Egglefield’s carries the sponsorship package, Denny was humble and never called in any favors, Walker said. Airborne Speedway honored Denny Egglefield at the race track last Saturday. Sept. 1 is Egglefield Ford Night, and Walker expects to assemble a commemorative event for Egglefield’s family and friends and racing fans from around the region. Car restoration enthusiasts and classic car collectors were saddened with a collective loss last Friday. Denny owned many Fords classics, including Mustangs. Adirondack Show & Shine Car Show founder Christopher Straight of Wilmington said the loss for motorheads and car show connoisseurs was hard to put into words. “Denny did a lot for the community, his reach went all around the Adirondack area. He sponsored our show almost every year, and this is our eighth year. He was just a great guy, always there to lend a hand.” Straight is planning a memorial to Denny Egglefield at the Adirondack Show & Shine Car Show in Wilmington on Aug. 25.
she recalled. “I have that as a plaque in my office,” she said, “and remind students every day to do what they love so their work won’t seem like work. He’s taught me that.” Automotive News called the Egglefield story “one of building, surviving, rebuilding, reinvesting, taking risks and making them work.” The family business, founded in 1910 by Wilbur Egglefield, celebrated its centennial in 2010. Egglefield threw a huge party that caught national attention at Automotive News. “Century-old dealerships are rare. Ford Motor Co. says it has only seven dealerships older,” writer Jesse Snyder said in July 2010 shortly before the celebration. “Dealerships that stay in the same family through a hundred years and five generations are rarer yet. “When Dennis throws a party in a burg the size of E-town, as the locals call it, you either leave town before it starts or fill your plate and relax, because the streets will be jammed.”
‘NO. 1 GUY’
At Airborne Speedway, promoter John Walker said he and Denny go back to the late 1980s when Egglefield’s sponsored a race car that he worked on. “Back then, American Tour Founder and President Tom Curley opened the track in 1990, and converted it to asphalt. Denny Egglefield was one of the first sponsors,” Walker said. Fast-forward to a few years ago when Curley leased the track to do the International 500. But they had issues with selling VIP suites, Walker said. “Curley (told me): ‘I’m going to give it to the first person who supported me in 1990,’” Walker recalled. “‘Denny Egglefield?’” Walker asked. “You’re absolutely right,” Curley answered. When Walker began promoting Airborne in 2016, Denny was the first guy he went to see. “He’s always been a No. 1 guy to go,” Walker said. “A real down-to-earth, no (B.S.) type
SERVICES SCHEDULED
Egglefield celebrated his 70th birthday in March, and is survived by his wife, Joan, and his daughter, Shelby Egglefield Boisvert, and two sons, Cory Egglefield and Kent Egglefield, along with many beloved grandchildren and a large, tight-knit extended family. He was predeceased by his father Spencer A. Egglefield on Oct. 5, 2007, and last year, by his stepmother, Ellen F. Egglefield. A 1966 graduate of Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School, Denny Egglefield attended SUNY Oswego, where he obtained his bachelor’s degree in 1970. Calling hours were held on Tuesday at Heald Funeral Home in Elizabethtown. Services were Wednesday at the Roscoe Cemetery in Elizabethtown. ■
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Keeseville Field Day and Parade marches into town Aug. 11
Parade at 11 a.m., rock and country live music with Duly Noted at 1 p.m. By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
KEESEVILLE | Keeseville is ready for the fourth annual Keeseville Field Day and Parade. The annual old-time family festival comes to town on Aug. 11. The day-long celebration begins this year with a concert in the park on the Friday night before, said organizer Thom Loreman, who helps coordinate the celebration in conjunction with the Keeseville Business Association. “This is our fourth year back after 17 years being without,” Loreman said of downtown festivities that draw hundreds to the streets and parks, sidewalks, restaurants and businesses in Keeseville. The live band playing at Riverside Park from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday is Plain Jane.
The gathering shifts then to the streets with an 8 a.m. Fun Run on Saturday for kids and a 5K race for adults. Registration is at 8 a.m. at the North Country Club parking area, Loreman said. “We have trophies and prizes for the winners,” he said. Keeseville Field Day Parade will start to move toward town at 11 a.m. And people with floats, trucks, cars, carts and walking troupes or bike groups can sign in between 10 and 10:45 a.m. at the registration site in front of Arnold’s Grocery, 182 Pleasant St., in Keeseville. “We have to build the parade from the back,” Loreman said. “And we want to get everyone into position. Groups of walkers can register at Arnold’s,” he said, “then they can go down to the fire station and get ready.” What unfolds as the parade enters town and turns onto Kent Street toward Jaycee Park is an entire day of community activities, food, live music, games and crafts. Keeseville’s popular barbeque and grill chefs and treat vendors will be on hand to feed the crowds, including Marias, Bob-E-C, Tammy’s Lunch Box, Wally’s Cotton Candy and Sno-cones and more. Downtown businesses will have special items for shoppers throughout the day.
Music in Jaycee Park on Kent Street starts at noon with Half Circle coming off the parade route ahead of main stage classic rock and country from Duly Noted, which rocks and rolls at 1 until 5 p.m. “We are going to have bounce houses, and an inflatable obstacle course, a little train ride for little kids, and lots of games for families,” Loreman said. Craft and antique vendors will be set up in Jaycee Park. “We’re having a nice Paddle Raffle as a fundraiser to benefit future community events,” Loreman said. “We try to provide a lot of fun things for kids to do, and try to keep everyone involved locally. We are also having a car show at the event itself this year. We’re hoping for 50 plus cars, it’s being run by the Adirondack Street Rods group. They will be set up right at the Jaycee Park field, from noon until their judging is complete.” Field Day and the parade draws hundreds to Keeseville, Loreman said of the event put together by volunteers. “And it’s all free, except for food and vendors. It’s about spending five or six quality hours with friends, family and neighbors.” Keeseville Field Day and Parade is hosted by the Keeseville Business Association and the Town of Chesterfield. ■
PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • COMPUTER BEGINNINGS?
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of the numbers 1 to 9. Puzzles come in three grades: easy, medium and difficult. Level: Medium
SUDOKU
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WORD SEARCH
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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The Valley News Sun | August 11, 2018 • 19
AuSable Valley awarded $503K for tech upgrades Chromebooks, network updates on the way By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
CLINTONVILLE | The AuSable Valley Central School (AVCS) District has been awarded over half a million dollars for classroom tech upgrades. Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office announced last month that AVCS would receive $503,995 through the Smart Schools Bond Act, with
$453,692 geared toward the purchase of Chromebooks and tablets for students, and $50,303 to bolster the school’s network servers. “Through the Smart Schools Bond Act, we are ensuring that all New York students have access to early education, high-speed internet and new technology, regardless of their zip code,” Cuomo said in a statement. “This funding will help deliver the tools and resources schools need to equip the next generation of New Yorkers to lead this state into the future.” With help from the state funding, students in grades 2-12 will get Chromebooks to help with their studies and students in kindergarten and first grade will have access to tablets.
“Providing 1:1 devices for every student will allow students access to a wider array or resources and technologies to support their personalized learning experiences,” AVCS Superintendent Paul Savage said.. “In addition to helping to enhance the overall learning and classroom opportunities for all students, it also enables equal access to resources and technology right at the fingertips of all children.” AVCS was one of 16 schools throughout the state to garner $12 million in funding this year through the $2 billion Smart Schools Bond Act. “These plans were carefully crafted by the districts through a process that included parents, teachers, students and community members to
Classifieds R E AC H E V E RY H O U S E H O LD I N YO U R CO M M U N IT Y A N D S E LL
put technology in the hands of students,” said state Education Department Commissioner MaryEllen Elia in a statement. “By improving educational technology, infrastructure and security, districts are using the Smart Schools Bond Act funding to ensure that our schools have the resources and increased connectivity necessary for long-term success.” In a previous round of funding, AVCS made technology-related security upgrades throughout the district, including access control and cameras, according to Savage. “We also accomplished essential upgrades in the wireless network throughout the district,” he said. ■
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192767
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20 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun HELP WANTED LOCAL COMMON WEALTH HOME FASHIONS is looking for a full time employee to work in office and warehouse environments as needed. Hrs. 7am – 3:30pm Monday-Friday. Call Sue Trombly for Interview 518-963-8145. PROJECT ADMINISTRATOR: Rewarding f/t year-round career with a leading Architectural /Engineering /Surveying firm serving northeastern NY State out of Plattsburgh. As a PA you will assist project managers, architects, and engineers during all phases of construction projects, from initial permitting and design, through construction. College education preferred but not required. Preference given to those with substantial office experience with an engineering or construction company. Competitive salary commensurate with experience and excellent benefit package. E-mail cover letter and resume to: scottallen@aesnortheast.com. Include the words AES Employment in the subject line of your message. CADNET A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-844722-7993 ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information
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• RESIDENT CARE AIDE • CNA / HHA • DIETARY AIDE • ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR • DIETARY DIRECTOR
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Doug at (518) 817-9108 ext. 403 jobs@champlainassistedliving.com 193040
Clinton County Transactions
DATE
Get your hands dirty while gaining a new set of skills as a
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10 Gilliland Ln., Willsboro, NY 12996 www.Champlainassistedliving.com
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193091
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THESUN COMMUNITY
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
GRANTOR
GRANTEE
-LOCATION
06/01/18
Pamela J. Brothers
Michael L. Duvall
06/01/18
Rachael M. Boardman
Steven M. Lussier
06/01/18
Graymont Materials (NY) Inc
Jessica Ann Coutu
06/04/18
Ruth Snyder
Jason Martin
Dannemora
06/05/18
Gina Post
Drew Racine
Beekmantown
PRICE
Saranac
$6,000
Mooers
$42,500
Schuyler Falls
$220,000 $80,000 $230,000
06/05/18
Effie Tsilivigos
Karin Killough
Rouses Point
$15,000
06/06/18
Christopher Gadway
Jason P. Dubrey
Plattsburgh
$68,000
06/06/18
James E. Snook
Todd Jarvis
Plattsburgh
$191,100
06/07/18
James M. Lammers
Victor Mccasland
Champlain
$70,000
06/07/18
Ruth Ryan
Maggie Mines
Plattsburgh
$123,000
06/08/18
Rebecca Roberts
Mathew Turner
Dannemora
$114,700
06/08/18
Linda Arthur
Drew Costigan
Mooers
$18,000
06/08/18
Christopher Larrow
Michelle Griffith
Ellenburg
$16,500
06/08/18
Verville Enterprises, Inc
Rubix H1, Inc.
Plattsburgh
06/09/18
Arthur J. Niederbuhl
Linda C. Domenech
Saranac
$5,800,000 $7,500
I NT ING
192834
Essex County Transactions DATE
GRANTOR
GRANTEE
LOCATION
PRICE
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc. NANI
HOMES
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BUY A LAKE! 35 acres- $149,900 5 ac lake, gorgeous views, old barns & sheds! Quiet twn rd, G'teed buildable. Fin avail. Call 888-650-8166 or go to NewYorkLandandLakes. com for video and photos. Call Empire Today to schedule a FREE in-home estimate on Carpeting & Flooring. Call Today! 1-800-724-4133 CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! We buy 2000-2015 Cars/Trucks, Running or Not! Nationwide Free Pickup! Call 1-888-416-2208
HOUSE FOR SALE A MUST SEE!! Victorian Style, 2 bathrooms, Up To 6 Bedrooms, Zoned Commercial Or Residential (Suitable for a B&B), City Sewer/Water, Located in the Village of Lacolle, CanadaAt The Champlain Border On Nearly 1 Acre. $439,000(CA). Lots of Amenities!!! Call 518236-9558
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LAND ATTENTION HUNTERS & HUNT CLUBS 190 acres – Terry Mnt. Peru, NY, $169,900. Primary White Tail/Bear Area, Hardwood & Everygreens with Seasonal Brooks. 518-265-5109. FCPNY
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192718
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Placid, New York NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF MEMBERS TO BE HELD MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 2018 22 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun www.suncommunitynews.com Published by Denton Publications, Inc. To Members of United Hebrew Community of Lake Placid Cemetery Corporation: Notice is hereby given that an annual meeting of members of United Hebrew Community of Lake Placid Cemetery Sun Community News, a nationally Corporation, a New York award-winning community news Not-for-Profit Corporation (the Corporation), organization, has an opening on its will be held at the Lake team for a sports reporter to cover high Placid Synagogue, 2301 school sports across the region. Saranac Avenue, Lake Placid, New York 12946 on Monday, August 20, The ideal candidate should be knowledgeable about and interested in the variety of sports played in local 2018 at 10:00 a.m. for schools. the following purpose: To elect Stephen M. This position requires writing on tight deadlines, breaking news and producing engaging feature stories that Erman, Alec H. focus on games, players, coaches and rules surrounding various sports. Digital photography experience is Friedmann, John required. Video experience is also an asset. The ideal candidate understands the difference in writing for Heimerdinger, Marilyn Heimerdinger, various social platforms and has the ability to engage and grow a digital audience. Sue Semegram, and Unable to make a full-time commitment? No problem! We’re also looking for freelancers and corresponSteven Bellew as Directors of the Cordents to join our growing team. poration, to serve Here’s what we’re looking for: until the next annual As we prepare for another expansion ofmeeting our commercial web printing of mem 〉〉 Three to five years of experience covering high school sports bers; web pressmen to assist department, we are looking for experienced To approve and rati 〉〉 Education should consist of a bachelor’s degree in journalism or related field or equivalent work in our growing shop. Embracing new technology and new methods fy all actions taken, experience authorized or peralong with high-quality process color reproduction will be required. formed by the Di 〉〉 Demonstrated expertise in creating and editing content for print, web and social media on tight Health insurance, paid days off, matching program rectors ofretirement the Cordeadlines poration since the and life insurance. last Annual Meeting 〉〉 Strong news judgment and sense of what will resonate with the audience of Members held on August 21, 2017; Send resume to: 〉〉 Strong attention to detail and AP style and Bill CoatsTo transact such 〉〉 The ability to develop and maintain relationships with coaches, administrators, athletes and parents business as Sun Community Newsother & Printing 〉〉 In-depth knowledge of local area sports, teams, players, coaches, rivalries may properly come P.O. Box 338 before the meeting. 〉〉 The ability to take photos for galleries and to enhance stories deemed to be an SUPREME COURT Elizabethtown,You NYare12932 owner of a lot in the COUNTY OF ESSEX U.S. 〉〉 Video footage and develop ability for live broadcast Cemetery if (i) you purBANK TRUST, N.A. AS chased a lot directly TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 〉〉 Page layout experience is a plus or E-mail to: from the Corporation, MASTER PARTICIPAUNITED HEBREW COM- (ii) you are the heir of TIONoutdoor TRUST, bill@suncommunitynews.com Working conditions include: frequent standing, walking, sitting, talking, listening, substantial work Plaintiff MUNITY OF LAKE someone buried in the against in all weather conditions. PLACID CEMETERY Cemetery or (iii) you inJOSEPH CONLEY, DeCORPORATION herited a old lot. independently As the fendant(s). This is an opportunity to workLake for a 70-year owned Working hours are usually between 2:30 and 11 p.m. Placid, New York owner of full age of a lot Pursuant to a Judgment company with anNOTICE excellent andthefi nancial Our only OF business ANNUAL in Cemetery,reputation. as of Foreclosure This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year-old independently owned company with an excellent business and Sale MEETING OF vision MEMBERS shown in the records entered on July 09, NOTICE OF reputation. SALE Sun Community News and Printing is locally owned and committed limits are the extent of the of our staff. Quit the ofrat race and start and financial to providing TO BE HELD MONDAY, the Corporation, you 2018. SUPREME COURT news, sports coverage and information to the communities within our region. No corporate edicts, no staff having fun again with company that is deemed as concerned about your AUGUST 20,a2018 may be to be a COUNTY OF ESSEX I, the undersigned Reffurloughs — and no decisions are made from outside our local management team. We do community To Members of United member of the Corporaeree will sell at public U.S. BANK NATIONAL growth as it is about its own. If you believe you have the qualifi cations Hebrew Community of tion with the right to apauction at the Essex ASSOCIATION, reporting the way AS it was meant to be done. Cemetery necessary to fiLake ll onePlacid of these positions, prove please or reject submit certain your resume County Courthouse, TRUSTEE FOR C-BASS GenerousLOAN wage, health basedStreet, out ElizaCorporation: actions by the CorporaMORTGAGE AS- insurance, paid time off, 401K and life insurance offered. This position 7559 is Court including compensation requirements. Notice is hereby given tion, including the acbethtown, N.Y. on the SET-BACKED CERTIFIof our Plattsburgh Office. that an annual meeting tions that are the subject NOTICE OF FORMATION CATES, SERIES 200710th day of September, of members of United Please submit a cover letter, resume and samples or links of your work of this notice. However, OF LIMITED LIABILITY SP2, 2018to: at 11:00 a.m. Hebrew Community of if there are two or more COMPANY Plaintiff,Managing Editor Pete DeMola, Sun Community News, P. O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, premises described as NY 12932 Lake Placid Cemetery owners of a lot, then one (1) The name of the Against follows: All that certain NOTICE UNCLAIMED or OF email pete@suncommunitynews.com Corporation, a New York of them designated in Limited Liability Compa- WAYNE PORTER, PROPERTY HELD BY piece or parcel of land, Not-for-Profit Corpora- writing by a majority of ny is GREGORYS PAVE- SHALONIE PORTER, ET CHAZY & WESTPORT situate in the Tow of tion (the Corporation), them shall have the right MENT MARKETING, LLC AL., TELEPHONE CORP., Westport, County Essex will be held at the Lake to vote as a member. (2) The date of filing of Defendant(s). WESTPORT, NY. and State of New York. Placid Synagogue, 2301 You may have multiple the Articles of Organiza- Index No.: 518/2012 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVSaid premises known as Saranac Avenue, LakeAvenue, votes depending on the New tion with Secretary Pursuant to a Judgment EN pursuant to Section 7019 NYS Route 9N 14 Hand Elizabethtown, Yorkthe 12932 Placid, New York 12946 number of lots owned of State was June 19, of Foreclosure and Sale, 402 of the Abandoned F/K/A 1162 Route 9N, on Monday, August 20, by you, as shown in the 2018 duly granted 6/22/2018, Property Law of the Westport, N.Y. 12993. 192841 193089 2018 at 10:00 a.m. for records of the Corpora- (3) The County in New I, the undersigned Ref- State of NY that: (Section: 66.1, Block: 1, the following purpose: tion. York in which the office eree, will sell at public a) a report of unclaimed Lot: 41.000). To elect Stephen M. Your vote is very impor- of the Company Approximate amount of at the Essex amountsLEGALS of money held LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS is locat- auction LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS ed is Essex County. Erman, Alec H. tant. It is very important County Courthouse, or owing by the above lien $ 46,269.61 plus inAdirondack Tree SoluNOTICE OF FORMATION that your membership (4) The Secretary of 7559 Court Street, Eliza- named corporation has terest and costs. Friedmann, John tions LLC Arts. of Org. OF SCN Properties, LLC. Premises will be sold Heimerdinger, Mari- interest be represented. State has been designat- bethtown, NY, on been made to the filed w/ SSNY 7/25/18. Articles of Organization lyn Heimerdinger, On behalf of the board subject to provisions of ed as agent of the Com- 9/6/2018 at 10:00 am, Comptroller of the State Off. in Essex Co. SSNY of directors of the Cor- pany upon which pro- premises known as 45 of NY, and that a list of were filed with the Sec- filed Sue Semegram, and judgment and desig. as agt. of LLC retary of State on June Steven Bellew as Di- poration, we thank you terms of sale. cess may be served, and Woodlawn Lane, Wills- names of the persons whom process may be rectors of the Cor- for your cooperation. Index No. CV17-0324. the Secretary of State boro, NY 12996, and de- appearing from the 22, 2018. The office of served. SSNY shall mail Sincerely, poration, to serve shall mail a copy of any scribed as follows: records of such corpora- the Company is to be lo- Bryan J. Hughes, Esq., process to the LLC, 61 Stephen M. Erman until the next annual process against the tion to be entitled there- cated in Essex County. Referee. ALL that certain plot, Indian Bay Rd., WillsCompany served upon it piece or parcel of land, to is on file and open to The Secretary of State is meeting of mem- Chairperson Stern & Eisenberg, PC boro, NY 12996. Purdesignated as agent of Attorney(s) for Plaintiff VN-07/28-08/11/2018bers; to 261 Elk Inn Road, with the buildings and public inspection at its pose: any lawful activity. Company upon Port Henry, NY 12974. To approve and rati- 3TC-191645 improvements thereon Woodbridge Corporate principal office in West- the VN-08/04-09/08/2018whom process against it Plaza (5) The Limited Liability erected, situate, lying port, NY where any such fy all actions taken, 6TC-191983 may be served. The ad- 485 B Route 1 South authorized or per- FORMATION OF CALDE- Company is formed for and being in the Town of property is payable; any lawful business pur- Willsboro, County of Es- b) such deposits, pay- dress to which the Sec- Suite 330 formed by the Di- RIA LLC filed with the All From The Woods sex and State of New ments and refunds, to- retary of State shall mail Iselin, NJ 08830 rectors of the Cor- Secy. of State of NY pose or purposes. LLC Articles of Org. a copy of any process to (732) 582-6344 (SSNY) on 7/13/18. Of- Dennis J. Tarantino, York Section 31.13 gether with interest due poration since the Filed NY Sec. Of State the LLC is P.O. Box 338, fice loc.: Essex County. Block 6 Lot 24.200. Esq. For sale information, thereon, will be paid by last Annual Meeting (SSNY) 6/19/2018. OfThe approximate Kenneally & Tarantino it on or before the suc- 14 Hand Avenue, Eliza- please visit www.aucof Members held on SSNY designated as fice in Essex C. SSNY (518) 792-6516 amount of the current ceeding thirteenth day of bethtown, New York. tion.com or call 800August 21, 2017; agent of LLC upon desig. Agent of LLC The purpose of the busi- 280-2832 whom process against it VN-07/14-08/18/2018Judgment lien is September to persons and whom process may be may be served. The ad- 6TC-190720 $108,761.99 plus inter- establishing to its satis- ness of the Company is VN-08/11-09/01/2018To transact such served. SSNY shall mail est and costs. The faction their right to re- any lawful business. 4TC-192661 other business as dress SSNY shall mail process to PO Box 556, VN-07/21-08/25/2018process to Stefan Beck, Lexington Asset Man- premises will be sold ceive the same; and may properly come Lewis, NY 12950. Pur6TC-190816 36 Coal Way, Upper Jay, agement, LLC, Arts of subject to provisions of c) in the succeeding before the meeting. pose: any lawful pur- You are deemed to be an NY 12987. Purpose: Org. filed with Sec. of the aforesaid Judgment month of October, and pose. Principal business Any lawful activity. State of NY (SSNY) of Foreclosure and Sale; on or before the tenth owner of a lot in the location: 23 Jeffrey Way, Cemetery if (i) you pur- VN-07/28-09/01/2018COURT Upper Meadow LLC, 7/16/2018. Cty: Essex. Index # 518/2012. day thereof, such un- SUPREME Lewis, NY 12950 COUNTY OF ESSEX U.S. Arts of Org filed with 6TC-191245 SSNY desig. as agent claimed deposits, payIf the sale is set aside chased a lot directly VN-07/28-09/01/2018BANK TRUST, N.A. AS SSNY on 07/10/18. Off. upon whom process and refunds, toments for any reason, the Purfrom the Corporation, Loc.: Essex County, 6TC-191414 Cloudspin Contracting TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 may be served & against gether with interest due chaser at the sale shall (ii) you are the heir of SSNY designated as MASTER PARTICIPALLC, Arts of Org filed shall mail process to still remaining thereon, be entitled only to a resomeone buried in the agent of LLC upon UNITED HEBREW COM- Cemetery or (iii) you in- with SSNY on 07/17/18. 2577 Main St., Ste. 201, turn of the deposit paid. TION TRUST, Plaintiff will be paid to the whom process against it MUNITY OF LAKE against Off. Loc.: Essex County, Placid, NY 12946. Lake The Purchaser shall of the State Comptroller herited a lot. As the PLACID CEMETERY owner of full age of a lot SSNY designated as JOSEPH CONLEY, De- may be served. SSNY General Purpose have no further recourse of NY, and that it shall shall mail a copy of proCORPORATION Lake fendant(s). agent of LLC upon VN-07/28-09/01/2018against the Mortgagor, thereupon cease to be liin the Cemetery, as cess to: The LLC, 3 LorPlacid, New York Pursuant to a Judgment whom process against it 6TC-191646 the Mortgagee or the therefore. able shown in the records of ing St, Auburn, MA NOTICE OF ANNUAL of Foreclosure and Sale may be served. SSNY Mortgagees attorney. Chazy & Westport Telethe Corporation, you 01501. Purpose: to enMEETING OF MEMBERS may be deemed to be a entered on July 09, OF SALE Kristine K. Flower, Esq., shall mail a copy of pro- NOTICE phone Corp. gage in any lawful act. TO BE HELD MONDAY, member of the Corpora- cess to: The LLC, P.O. SUPREME COURT - Referee. 2018. 2 Champlain Ave AUGUST 20, 2018 I, the undersigned Ref- VN-08/04-09/08/2018Leopold & Associates, Westport, NY 12993 tion with the right to ap- Box 925, Lake Placid, COUNTY OF ESSEX 6TC-192182 To Members of United eree will sell at public U.S. BANK NATIONAL PLLC, 80 Business Park VN/TT-08/11/2018-1TCprove or reject certain NY 12946. Purpose: to Hebrew Community of actions by the Corpora- engage in any lawful act. auction at the Essex AS Drive, Suite 110, Ar- 192893 ASSOCIATION, Lake Placid Cemetery County Courthouse, TRUSTEE FOR C-BASS monk, NY 10504 tion, including the ac- VN-08/04-09/08/2018Corporation: 7559 Court Street, ElizaMORTGAGE LOAN AS- Dated: 7/18/2018 6TC-192180 PB tions that are the subject Notice is hereby given of this notice. However, bethtown, N.Y. on the SET-BACKED CERTIFI- VN-08/04-08/25/2018WILDERNESS VAN LLC that an annual meeting CATES, SERIES 2007- 4TC-192183 10th day of September, Articles of Org. filed NY if there are two or more NOTICE OF FORMATION of members of United OF LIMITED LIABILITY SP2, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. Sec. of State (SSNY) owners of a lot, then one Hebrew Community of of them designated in COMPANY Plaintiff, premises described as 7/20/2018. Office in EsLake Placid Cemetery Against NOTICE OF UNCLAIMED Rent Lake Placid, LLC, follows: All that certain sex Co. SSNY desig. writing by a majority of (1) The name of the Corporation, a New York Limited Liability Compa- WAYNE PORTER, PROPERTY HELD BY Arts of Org. filed with piece or parcel of land, agent of LLC whom prothem shall have the right Not-for-Profit Corpora- to vote as a member. ny is GREGORYS PAVE- SHALONIE PORTER, ET CHAZY & WESTPORT Sec. of State of NY situate in the Tow of cess may be served. tion (the Corporation), MENT MARKETING, LLC AL., TELEPHONE CORP., (SSNY) 6/18/2018. Cty: Westport, County Essex SSNY shall mail process You may have multiple will be held at the Lake (2) The date of filing of Defendant(s). WESTPORT, NY. Essex. SSNY desig. as and State of New York. to PO Box 162, Wilmingvotes depending on the Placid Synagogue, 2301 the Articles of Organiza- Index No.: 518/2012 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- agent upon whom pro- Said premises known as ton, NY 12997. Purnumber of lots owned Saranac Avenue, Lake tion with the Secretary Pursuant to a Judgment EN pursuant to Section cess against may be 7019 NYS Route 9N pose: Any lawful purby you, as shown in the Placid, New York 12946 served & shall mail pro- F/K/A 1162 Route 9N, pose. Principal business records of the Corpora- of State was June 19, of Foreclosure and Sale, 402 of the Abandoned on Monday, August 20, tion. 2018 duly granted 6/22/2018, Property Law of the cess to 62 Hillcrest Ave., Westport, N.Y. 12993. location: 5768 NYS 2018 at 10:00 a.m. for Your vote is very impor- (3) The County in New I, the undersigned Ref- State of NY that: Lake Placid, NY 12946. (Section: 66.1, Block: 1, Route 86 Wilmington, the following purpose: eree, will sell at public York in which the office a) a report of unclaimed Lot: 41.000). General Purpose. NY 12997. tant. It is very important To elect Stephen M. that your membership Approximate amount of VN-08/11-09/15/2018of the Company is locat- auction at the Essex amounts of money held VN-7/07-08/11/2018Erman, Alec H. interest be represented. ed is Essex County. County Courthouse, or owing by the above lien $ 46,269.61 plus in- 6TC-193068 6TC-190077 (4) The Secretary of 7559 Court Street, Eliza- named corporation has terest and costs. Friedmann, John On behalf of the board Heimerdinger, Mari- of directors of the Cor- State has been designat- bethtown, Premises will be sold NY, on been made to the lyn Heimerdinger, poration, we thank you subject to provisions of ed as agent of the Com- 9/6/2018 at 10:00 am, Comptroller of the State Sue Semegram, and pany upon which pro- premises known as 45 of NY, and that a list of filed judgment and for your cooperation.
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Stk#19038, Loaded w/Dual Pane
NO
526,499
Panoramic Sunroof, Power Lift Gate, Remote Start, Aluminum Wh eel s, Sirius Radi o and Much More! MSRP $31,170
FOR
O O 199
$
OR ~ LEASE
NOWONLY 36 mos.
Stk#18077, AWD,Loadedw/6.4 Engine, Snow Chief Group, Chrome Appearance Pkg., Remote Keyless Entry, Uconnect w/5" Display, Rear Park Assist and Much Morel
Leather Seats, 3rd Row Seating, Back-Up Camera, Power Liftgate & Doors, Aluminum Wheels, Google Android Auto & App le Car Play Capable and Much More!
5 32,999
OR
MSRP $37,535
s229
LEASE FOR
24
mos.
MSRP $45,315
NOWONLY
539,598
OR
70 OOL
36 mos.
*Prices include allavailable rebates. You may qualify foradditional rebates &incentives. Must finance through Chrysler Capital. **leases Rts. 9&28, Warrens~urg, NY 12885 through Chrysler Capital include allavailable rebates andarebased on10,000 miles ayear with $2999 cash down; 1stpayment, taxes and DMV feesdueatinception; security deposit waived forwell-qualified buyers; disposition fee$395; 25c amile overage. lessee isresponsible Just 4miles offExit 23where Rt. 9and Rt. 28Connect formaintenance andrepairs. Pictures forillustration purposes only. Pacifica lease isfor5,000 miles ayear. Offer ends 8/17/18.
(518) 623-3405 www.krystalchryslerjeepdodge.net 193071
24 • August 11, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
~
._,
NO PAYMENTS FOR
HUGESELECTIONOF PRE-OWNEDVEHICLESALLMAKES& MODELS 2014Buick Lacrosse 45,008Miles,36 MPG,Dual Zone NC, One Owner,VIN 202737
2016Jeep PatriotHighAltitude 22,388 Miles, Leather,Sunroof, Remote Start, VIN 651091
2014Chevy Malibu
2014Subaru Forester 2.5i
22,494Miles,Leather,RemoteStart, Sat.Radio,VIN 293011
2015Mitsubishi Outlander SE
2017FordEscape
30,416 Miles, 4WD, Dual Zone A/C, Backup Cam.,VIN 010902
67,325Miles,AWD,HeatedSeats, BackupCam.,VIN438649
2016JeepCompass 17,549 Miles, Heated Seats,CD Player, Sunroof, VIN 772492
2011Chevy Silverado 1500LT
2015Chevy Silverado 3500HD
84,868 Miles, 4WD, 5.3LVB, Trailering Pkg.,VIN 111069
116,208 Miles, 6.0L VB,4WD, Bedliner, Tow Hitch, VIN 545041
22,219 Miles, Sat. Radio, Backup Cam.,4x4, VIN C03431
r::' #~2~6-~26=-.,:
2017Chevy Equinox LT 18,474 Miles, AWD, Remote Start, Backup Cam.,VIN 349601
2014Chevy Traverse LTZ
2016Ram1500Express
64,053 Miles, AWD, Leather, DVD, Nav., VIN 184216
39,770 Miles, 5.7L VB,4WD, Tow Hitch, Bedliner, VIN 212969
2014GMC Sierra1500SLE 44,463Miles,4WD,5.3LVB, Trailering Pkg.,VIN 332499
! 259 ~
~ ::;;::::::;;::: ...... ....... ......,___. ~;:;:-~~ ~-=.=., r (&18 e) sas:2°842 a 1
SALES HOURS:
Member of the DELLA Auto Group
CHRISTOPHERCHEVY.COM
MON-THURS: 9:00AM-7:00PM.FRI: 9:00AM-6:00PM SAT: 9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED
[f]~ ~ lfa
FIND
All offers are separate, cannot be combined, and subject to change. All prices/offers are plus tax, tag, title, and DMV. Sorry, prior sales excluded. Dealership not responsible for typographical errors. Photo for illustrative purposes only. See dealer for details. Offers end 8/31 /18. Must qualify and finance through GM Financial for all offers. Some customers may not qualify. (1) On select in stock models, while stock lasts. Not available with special financing, lease and some other offers. (2) Monthly payment is $16.67 for every $1000 financed. Example down payment: 18%. Must qualify and finance through GMF. Some customers will not qualify. Not available with some other offers. Take delivery by 8/31/18. See dealer for details.* Pre-owned prices are plus tax, tag, title, and DMV.
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