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August 25, 2018
Valley News
suncommunitynews.com
• EDITION •
Lawmakers irked over broadband updates — again
ESSEX COUNTY FAIR » Cont. on pg. 15
Public hearings slated for Aug. 31 By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | Lawmakers are again crying foul over how the state communicates details of its broadband program to the public. The Essex County Board of Supervisors claim they weren’t personally informed of a mandated public hearing last week by Empire State Development (ESD) designed for stakeholders to chime in on countywide build-out plans by Slic Network Solutions. The hearing was scheduled for Monday, Aug. 6 in the basement of the Essex County Courthouse. A second hearing was scheduled concurrently to discuss build-out plans in Keene, where ESD has finalized a $308,760 grant to Slic, whittled down from about $772,000 when first awarded last February. The Nicholville-based provider received $26 million in statewide grants for the third round of grant funding, and will deploy a total of 865 miles of fiber. » Broadband Cont. on pg. 11
Charlette Lindsay and Mara Ashline enjoy the rides at the Essex County Fair.
CUOMO NON-COMMITTAL ON BOOSTING FOREST RANGER STAFFING LEVELS
Ausable moves towards civic center bond vote Vote on $4.6 million bond scheduled for Aug. 28 By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
All state agencies want more staff, says governor as rangers sound alarm
» Rangers Cont. on pg. 12
“I think we’re at a breaking point with staff levels,” said Scott van Laer, a forest ranger. “At some point, I think things will collapse, and we’re at a point close to that.” Photo provided/Twitter
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Photo by Jill Lobdell
AUSABLE | The Town of Ausable will ask for voter approval on a proposed $4.6 million bond to fund a major infrastructure overhaul at the town-owned Keeseville Civic Center. Officials haven’t pinpointed a precise usage for the former Keeseville Central School, beyond it being a mixed-use facility, but they aim to facilitate infrastructure upgrades that will hopefully result in multiple tenants. But first the proposal needs to garner approval from taxpayers. The town’s voters will have their say on Aug. 28.
By issuing the bond, the town’s taxpayers would shoulder a tax increase of $1 per $1,000 in assessed value for two to three years until the principle is paid off, according to Ausable Town Supervisor Sandra Senecal, then $1.60 per $1,000 in assessed value for the next 25 years. For a homeowner whose house is assessed at $100,000, this would mean a tax increase of $100 then $160.
BIG UPGRADES
The town hopes use to the bond money for infrastructure upgrades. Projects slated include replacing the building’s roof, electrical system, plumbing and adding a new entry ramp and elevator for handicap accessibility. At fi rst glance, the old civic center appears normal. It sits atop a hill in the center of the town’s hamlet and looks like any other school building in the area — immense, a fortress built to last — and still hosts an American flag on the pole at its main entrance. » Ausable vote Cont. on pg. 16
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3609 Essex Road, Willsboro, New York 12996 • Phone (518) 963-8612 • Fax (518) 963-4583
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2 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Grant means free breakfast and lunch at ELCS USDA program takes stigma, lunch money management issues off the school lunch table By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | School breakfast and lunch costs $0 this year at Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School. At least for the first pass in the lunch line. The district recently received four-year grant funding via the Community Eligibility Provision, a U.S. Department of Agriculture program that supports nutritious school meals. School district officials at ELCS knew they were close to qualifying a few years ago and monitored changes to eligibility requirements closely. They applied for and received the grant this year. ELCS Superintendent Scott Osborne announced the four-year provision in July. “It’s a rule through the federal government and New York state to give a free breakfast and a free lunch for every student grades Pre-Kindergarten through Grade 12, every day, all year, for four years.” Osborne said one parent called to verify the information was true, and was thrilled, anticipating a $700 annual savings per child. “We qualified for this because the rules of the program state that the total number of students
Schools awarded CEP:
- Meet eligibility requirements. - Serve free breakfasts and lunches to all students during the four-year cycle. - Count total breakfasts and total lunches served to students daily. - Agree not to collect household applications for school meal programs. - Will determine if non-Federal funds are needed to cover costs above USDA reimbursement. ■ who qualify for free or reduced-price lunch has to be at a certain threshold,” Osborne said.
FIESTA PARTY
School Lunch Manager Julie Holbrook, whose position is shared with Keene and Schroon Lake Central schools, and business official Sharlene Petro-Durgan worked with Osborne to monitor qualifying numbers. Cost-free breakfast and lunch starts on the first day of school. It applies to first helping of the main course meal. A la carte breakfast or lunch menu items, extra items and second helpings are not covered by the grant, so students who like to have extra with their meals might still need some lunch money, Osborne said. “We’re having a student favorite, chicken fajitas on the first day, Thursday, Sept. 6 —it’s a fiesta party on the first day of school,” Osborne said. “And it’s pizza day the following day. Both have ingredients that come out of farms here in
Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School’s salad bar provides a colorful blend of vegetables and fruit every day. School breakfast and lunch at ELCS is free starting this year and for three subsequent years via a grant from USDA. Students will have to buy seconds or a la carte and “extras,” but second helpings of veggies or fruit are always free. Photos provided
the county and the pizza dough is made fresh.” The provision does not change how and where schools buy food, so emerging food-toschool initiatives at ELCS are not impacted. “We are going to continue purchasing food from our local vendors, and with the governor’s enhanced reimbursement, we are
going to be able to do more,” Osborne said. The USDA’s CEP is more about access to school meals, not source. “The state’s enhanced reimbursement helps keep it local, which supports local farms,” Osborne said. “The big thing to know is that the first time a student goes through the serving line, that serving is free. Extras and second helpings will still have a cost. “But additional helpings of fruits and vegetables are always free and always have been.” Parents will be asked to fill out a survey to help inform the grant award. “One of the reasons we did this is because we understand that proper nutrition does so much for a student’s all-around affect. We want everybody to be full and happy and ready to learn. As a school, we know and we believe it’s not just about academics,” Osborne said. Information about free meals at school will be included in the school packet on Backto-School night. “This will be our third year with a Backto-School night. It will be held on Sept. 4 at 4:30 p.m. Students can meet their teachers and move back into their lockers,” Osborne said. USDA says the program is designed to reduce stigma in school lunch lines. It provides “Access to free nutritious meals for all students, no stigma, and less time spent in cashier lines and more time to eat nutritious meals.” And for parents “No household application means less paperwork and no worries about lunch accounts.” ■
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New Vendors Always Welcome 518-637-5395 Like us on Facebook and see our “THIS WEEK AT THE MARKET” news!
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Auctions: 12pm Tuesday September 25 In Cooperation with Berkshire Hathaway Adirondack Premier Properties 518-524-7347
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If you have already contributed to the Future of Care Campaign, we thank you. If you haven’t, now is the time to help us reach our goal and make a difference for your family, friends, neighbors, those in need—we’re depending on you. To make your gift or pledge, please call the Foundation Office at 518.897.2348, or you can conveniently make a gift through our secure online site and watch us grow at www.futureofcarecampaign.org.
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The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 3
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Engel & Völkers Lake Placid 2284 Saranac Avenue, Lake Placid, NY 12946 800-724-8778 • 518-523-4404 • Fax 518-523-4405 lakeplacid.evusa.com lakeplacidvacationhomes.com 194356
4 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
School boards ready for merger discussion
North Country SPCA
Thank you to open house visitors
The North Country SPCA would like to extend a huge thank you to everyone who attended our recent annual open house! It was heartwarming to see so By Kathy Wilcox many cats and dogs find loving • COLUMNIST • homes, including Dapper Dan and Gizmo, two of our residents who were very ready to transition to a forever home! A big thank you to Stacy Lambrinos of Red Fern Mobile Vet for volunteering to help us provide services to pets in our community! You can view pictures from the open house on our Facebook page. If you attended and you have some pictures that you would like to share, please feel free to post them on our page!
Super contract at ELCS would not extend to new district By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | The Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School Board of Education met last week and fielded feedback on the merger debate. The boards here and in Westport are tasked with tending public outreach to answer questions about centralization: a merger that would build a new school district serving Elizabethtown, Lewis and Westport combined.
YES AND NO
ELCS board members heard a lot of pros and cons last Wednesday. All at the meeting said they are ready to work together with residents in Westport to build a new and fiscally resilient district that could keep school tax rates low and add courses. Arin Burdo, a resident of Lewis who has encouraged factbased discourse via social media, drew attention to unease in Westport regarding ELCS’s contract extension with Su-
perintendent Scott Osborne. Some think the contract sets a leadership course without input from Westport voters. Burdo urged ELCS’ school board to discuss the contract with their Westport counterpart to help clarify the timing and intent. ELCS Board President Doug Spilling said they have met. “The best part is we are talking about this,” he said. Spilling said Westport School Board President Alice LaRock and Interim Superintendent and Principal Josh Meyer sat down with the ELCS board to talk about why the contract was extended. It does not extend into any new district. “It’s not up to us to force Scott Osborne on a new district,” Spilling said. The contract update was part of 2018-19 budget planning cuts impacted the superintendent’s travel allocation and salary. The extension secures leadership as ELCS’s readies for fiscal turbulence ahead, Spilling said. If ELCS and WCS merge, a new school board is elected from interested candidates in all three towns. And that board hires administrators.
PUBLIC FORUM DATES: On Sept. 12 and 13, ELCS and Westport Central School Boards will meet independently and each will decide whether to put the merger to a nonbinding, straw-poll vote on Oct. 9. If community support fails in either district on Oct. 9, the merger discussion ends.
Our featured pet this week is AUTUMN, a terrier and labrador retriever mix who is a springy, lovable little girl. Miss Autumn has lots of energy, playfulness and quite a bit of puppy silliness. She is under one year old and she is just super excited to be alive! She is a bit shy at first, but this little lady warms up quickly. Once she knows you, she will be your friend for life. This youngster has so much to offer— she will easily blend into any home. She is very vocal when meeting new dogs so slow introductions will be needed if you have other dogs in your home. If you’re looking for a nice, happy young dog you have to come check out Autumn, but you had better hurry, we don’t expect her to be here long! ■ - Kat Wilcox’s weekly column works to publicize the shelter’s adoptable pets. Find out more at ncspca.org
WESTPORT
Superintendents Josh Meyer in Westport and Scott Osborne at ELCS have set dates to field questions and concerns about the merger process. At Westport Central School, four informal Conversation Sessions are planned on Aug. 23: 7 a.m., 12 p.m., 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. A public forum is set for a special School Board meeting on Aug. 29 at 6
p.m. at Westport Central School. On. Sept. 13, Westport’s School Board meets 6 p.m. for regular session and will decide then whether to put the measure up for straw poll vote on Oct. 9.
measure up for straw poll vote on Oct. 9. If both school boards move to send the measure to straw poll vote, each will host a public forum
Public engagement sessions “Coffee and Conversation” at ELCS are set for Aug. 23 at 7:30 a.m., 12 p.m. and at 6 p.m. at Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School. On Aug. 29, a public forum for anyone with merger questions or concerns will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the ELCS school auditorium. On. Sept. 12, the ELCS School Board meets 6 p.m. for regular session and will decide then whether to put the
Sun Community News is hosting a community forum on the proposed school merger at The Depot Theatre in Westport on Tuesday, Sept. 25 at 6 p.m. The community forum will offer an opportunity for a panel discussion, moderated by Sun Community News and Printing’s Publisher Dan Alexander and Managing Editor Pete DeMola. The forum is free and open to the public. ■
SUN COMMUNITY NEWS FORUM
ELIZABETHTOWN-LEWIS
» Merger Cont. on pg. 5
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 - Andy Kane, speaker. Wednesday Prayer Service 6:30 p.m. Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. KEENE Keene Valley Congregational Church - Main Street. 576-4711. Sunday Worship Services 10 a.m.; Sunday School 10 a.m. Choir Wednesday evening 7 p.m. and Sunday 9:15 a.m. St. Brendan’s Catholic Church - Mass Saturday at 4 p.m. & Sunday at 11:15 a.m. from first Sunday in July to Labor Day. Saturday at 4 p.m. the rest of the year. Pastor: Rev. John R. Yonkovig; Pastor. Rectory Phone 523-2200. Email: stagnesch@roadrunner.com St. Hubert’s All Souls Episcopal Church - Sunday Holy Eucharist 9 a.m. (on some Sundays, Morning Prayer), July 3 through September 4. Varying roster of priests celebrate communion each week. KEESEVILLE Front Street Fellowship - Front Street Fellowship - 1724 Front Street, Keeseville, 645-4673. Pastors Rick & Kathy Santor. Sunday: Worship Service 10 a.m. Tuesday: Ladies Coffee 9:30 a.m. Wednesday: Prayer Fellowship 6 p.m. Website: www.frontstreetfellowship.org Email: kathy@frontstreetfellowship.org Immaculate Conception Church - Rt. 9, Keeseville, 834-7100.
Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John Lucero; Mass: Sunday 11:15 a.m. Confessions: Sunday after Mass. Independent Baptist Church - Rte. 22 & Interstate 87, P.O. Box 506, Keeseville, NY. 834-9620. Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Sunday Morning Worship 11 a.m., Sunday Evening Worship 6 p.m., Prayer Meeting & Bible Study - Wednesday 7 p.m.; Youth Group Sunday 6 p.m. Website: ibck.org Email: oneillr@ibck.org Keeseville United Methodist Church - Front Street, Keeseville. 834-7577. Rev. Edith Poland. Sunday School 11:00 a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. 834-7577. Email: ediepoland@aol.com St. John the Baptist Catholic Church - Rt. 22, Keeseville, 8347100. Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John Lucero; Mass: Saturday 4:30 p.m. Confessions: Saturday 3:45-4:15 p.m. St. Paul’s Church, Episcopal/Anglican - 103 Clinton Street, Keeseville. 518-563-6836. Sunday Sung Service 9 a.m. Email: bcbiddle@aol.com, Rev. Blair C. Biddle, Deacon Vicar. The Good Shepherd Church of the Nazarene - 124 Hill Street, Keeseville, NY. 834-9408. Pastor Richard Reese. Sunday Service 10:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Tuesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 7 p.m. LEWIS First Congregational Church - Lewis, 873-6822. Rev. Frederick C. Shaw. Sunday Services 9:30 a.m.; Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Email: Fshaw@westelcom.com www.firstcongregationalchurchoflewis.com MIDDLEBURY Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Middlebury Ward) - Sacrament Worship Service: Sunday 9:00am. Meetinghouse-133 Valley View, Middlebury, VT 05753.
REBER Reber Methodist Church - Reber Rd., Reber. 11 a.m. Sunday 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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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. 8-18-18 • 34448
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The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 5
» Merger Cont. from pg. 4
SURVIVOR CLAUSE
The “survivor” clause with Osborne, Spilling said, defines how the contract winds down if he is not selected by a new school board at a new district: Osborne is paid until he finds a new position or stops searching for one. The clause is standard, Spilling said. “The new district does not take on liability to pay severance,” Spilling said. Instead, a remnant business entity — a district “ghost” — is kept in place for each school to see such matters through to conclusion.
LEGAL INTERPRETATION
ELCS clarified Westport’s inquiry with the school attorney, Spilling said. The legal detail is in Osborne’s contract. It says: “The district (ELCS) shall continue in existence as provided by law for the purpose of paying such debt.” Sometimes that “ghost” of a district continues for a few years, Spilling said. Spilling also understood that Westport residents are concerned merger incentive aid from the state would be used to pay off an unfinished contract. But that is not what happens, he said. Reserve funds at both schools are brought together with a merger, though each district must keep a financial reserve with its “ghost” until all contracts or legal obligations are closed. “In essence what this boils down to is a great recommendation,” Spilling said, expressing the ELCS board’s confidence in Osborne’s leadership.
(Lewis and Elizabethtown) to Westport’s one population base, he said. Data points show more people turn out to vote in Westport. The ELCS School Board presented numbers across 10 years. For example, 2007 brought 168 voters to ELCS and 218 to WCS; 2009 — as recession hit — brought 246 voters to ELCS and 332 to WCS; 2010 brought 514 voters to ELCS and 452 to Westport. In 2010, 260 people voted at ELCS while 328 voted at Westport.
People don’t want to vote ‘Yes’ if they don’t have a blueprint (for a new district).”
SCHOOL BUILDINGS
Merger Committee member Ryan Hatha-
UNCERTAINTY
One resident from Westport did attend the meeting in Elizabethtown. Heather Reynolds, who favors the option to merge, said while the superintendent’s contract was a challenge for some Westport voters, uncertainty is more pervasive. “People don’t want to vote ‘Yes’ if they don’t have a blueprint (for a new district),” Reynolds said. “I think that’s what any of the negativity is being drawn from.” Several Merger Committee members shared what they have heard in general from people in both districts. Jim Monty, who is town supervisor of Lewis, said he has seen little opposition to the merger proposal. But some question school voting numbers because ELCS is comprised of two towns
way said it seems opposition to the merger is based on potential loss of school buildings and location. “A lot of people don’t want to lose the ability for their kids to walk to school,” he said. There is also apprehension about loss of local business in Westport if high school students aren’t in town at the end of a school day, he said. No hard data has informed the after-school economics discussion. But the Merger Study Final Report recommends that Middle School students attend classes in Westport, while High School students go to the ELCS building. Elementary grades Pre-kindergarten through Grade 6 would remain in their current locations. Hathaway suggested that boards reiterate the final report is not a final plan. Its recommendations are guidance, not a
blueprint, he said. And like hiring administrators, any decision to build a new school or any type of shared facility (bus garage or athletic) would be made by the school board of a new district. Neither decision, to hire Osborne or build anew, is part of the merger vote.
MERGED SPORTS
Paul Buehler, ELCS athletic director, Physical Education teacher and coach, helped merge the school’s sports teams, blending Eagles and Lions as “Griffins” to fill one team roster. He said staff at several merged districts he spoke with said merging sports was the most difficult part. “We’ve already done that,” he said. “I personally believe we’re better together.” ■
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6 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
Shared values lost
At one time in our nation, it didn’t matter on which side of the political aisle you found yourself, nor far right By Dan Alexander or left of the middle. • PUBLISHER • Back then, all Americans shared common values. We treasured things like freedom of speech, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, hard work, integrity, honesty, loyalty, love of family, God and America. We could see through falsehoods and misinformation. We knew who the enemy was, and we stood together. I fear we’ve lost our way. The enemy is now us. Case in point; all to score a few political points, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said last Wednesday at a bill-signing in New York, “We’re not going to make America great again. It was never that great.” He went on to argue that only when Democratic priorities like women’s rights are realized will this dark, oppressive dystopia known as the U.S.A. ever become great. While his remarks drew gasps from the crowd, many from the left came to his defense and declared those were sounds of astonished pleasure. By Saturday, the governor issued the following statement: “The expression I used the other day was inartful, so I want to be very clear: Of course America is great, and of course America has always been great. No one questions that.” Cuomo continued: “When Trump started talking about the slogan called ‘Make America Great Again,’ that what he believes establishes American greatness is not greatness at all.” We have allowed our divide and hatred for each other to reach so far that even the thought by as skillful a politician as Gov. Cuomo could use a line such as this to score points and differentiate himself from President Trump and the Republicans shows how far off course we’ve gone. Our country — not your country or my country but our country — is a beacon for the world. We are far from perfection, but every man, women and child once understood what our nation stood for and immigrants from around the world longed to come here for the values and opportunities we shared as citizens. We continue to seek improvements and do our best to make amends for past discretions by those who lived in a different time. When any of us use words or actions that defame or deface those who’ve defended our nation with life and limb or her citizens who seek to live in peace, then clearly we’ve lost far more than just our way. ■
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Cuomo should prioritize state issues in debate with Nixon — not Trump Gov. Andrew Cuomo will debate his Democratic primary opponent Cynthia Nixon on Aug. 29. The televised event at Hofstra University will air on WCBS-TV and other CBS affiliates throughout the state. Nixon, an actor and education activist, has been pushing Cuomo to debate for months, and the hour-long event will likely mark the first and only time the pair will face off ahead of the Sept. 13 primary. The governor refused to debate his 2014 primary opponent, Zephyr Teachout, so this is certainly a welcome move. For the past 18 months, Cuomo has been locked in combat with President Trump. It’s like the frog in boiling water: The governor went from seldom mentioning the president’s name to blasting him daily on every imaginable issue: the GOP tax bill, health care, gun control, the administration’s response to Puerto Rico, his appearance with
Letters
Disagrees with ‘cold logic’ letter
To the Editor: The following is in response to the letter from Kenneth G. Barcomb published in the Aug. 18 edition of The Sun. I welcome the input of any conservative to the political discussion between liberals, conservatives and anyone inbetween. However, the opinions expressed need to be educated opinions and not based on “kneejerk” reactions. For e x a mple , Ba rcomb bemoans “noisy street demonstrations and mob intimidation” as not conservative. I hope he would agree that the demonstrations by white supremacists in Charlottesville or the raucous intimidation of the media at Trump’s rallies are not acceptable in the eyes of conservatives. With regard to the costs of undocumented immigrants, Barcomb should note that undocumented immigrants are not eligible for children’s health insurance (CHIP), disability (supplemental security income), food stamps, health insurance (including Affordable Care Act benefits), Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security and welfare benefits. For the most part, they actually help underwrite the costs of these programs while being ineligible for benefits.
Submit letters by email to feedback@suncommunitynews.com Letters can also be sent to our offices: 14 Hand Avenue: P.O. Box 338. Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Letters and guest commentaries do not reflect the editorial opinion of the newspaper and its owners. We’re always looking for guest columnists to offer extended commentaries. Contact pete@suncommunitynews.com to learn more. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid endorsements. The paid endorsement notice can be purchased in three sizes — a quick 50 words or less for $15; a 51-175 word endorsement for $ 50 or a 176-300 word endorsement for $75.
Russian President Vladimir Putin — the list seems endless because it is. But it takes two to tango. Trump successfully baited Cuomo last week in his swing through upstate New York, and the two sparred all week as the general public rolled their eyes. A casual observer would be forgiven for thinking Cuomo is waging a 2020 presidential campaign against Trump — not for re-election as the state’s chief executive. He’d be wise to let state issues take the lead in the debate with Nixon. And while his eye may be on Trump, Cuomo would do well to explain how positioning the Empire State as a bulwark against the administration’s policies is within the state’s best interest. Cuomo is a notorious control freak and despite his grandstanding, likes to keep the press tightly controlled, relying more on telephone conference calls than traditional
Th irdly, I would hope that Barcomb would agree with me that the Trump Tax Act, which added $1 trillion to our national debt, was indeed “cruel and inhumane.” Finally, if the midterm elections in November result in a significant loss for the Republicans, I hope he will continue to respect the will of the voters no matter what feelings may guide their decisions. - Richard Barney, Ticonderoga ■
Moses Ludington leaves locals out of the loop
To the Editor: Boos to the “new” Moses Ludington under the management of University of Vermont-Elizabethtown Hospital. Perhaps many people will benefit from the “high quality” medical care now available, but some of us will suffer. MVP Insurance Customer Care informed us the contract with them was eliminated in April 2018 by the University of Vermont Health Network-Elizabethtown Hospital-Moses Ludington consolidation. Hudson Headwaters Health Network will still honor MVP Insurance. But those of us who are insured by MVP must now travel greater distances for services, including radiology, labs, etc.
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press conferences, for instance. He also seems to have a dim view of retail politics and working rope lines. As such, the public is fed lots of pablum, but seldom is the governor forced to publicly defend his record. Cuomo has a lot to answer for, particularly as Albany continues to be mired in corruption scandals and his economic development programs churn out questionable results. Nixon shouldn’t be given a pass, either. Since the celebri-candidate announced her campaign in March, Nixon has run a New York City-centric campaign. While she’s lashed Cuomo endlessly on the MTA, Nixon doesn’t appear to have an appetite for upstate issues, nor has she stepped foot in the Adirondacks, or even seems inclined to do so. Perhaps the debate will serve as a reminder that as governor, she would have to represent all residents — not just those south of the Bronx. — The Sun Editorial Board ■
Some of us born (in the old Moses Ludington Hospital) and raised here have to rearrange our lives so that the top echelon that created this dilemma can have their cake and eat it too. There must have been a route they could have taken to keep us in the loop but isn’t that the norm these days? No more consideration for those who rely on local services unless one is part of the “new” way which no longer includes face to face, one on one, down to earth interaction. Now it’s log on, click the app, love that device while the world around you spins out of your realm. Sad. - Michele Gautreau, Hague ■
Trump health care order is unscrupulous
To the Editor: Your Aug. 11 article about the “skimpy” health care plans now allowed by President Trump’s executive order described them too positively. Plans like these amounted to a racket some years ago and were rightly disallowed under Obamacare. Insurers were routinely using the plans’ short-term status as a way to deny coverage to those who had bought them on the grounds of pre-existing condition.
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Since the policies last for only a year, coverage is never more than a few months old, and any earlier doctor’s visit could provide an excuse to deny coverage. Consumers bought these plans under the impression that they were renewing them — an impression the insurers cultivated. Young people in particular who thought they had health coverage, found that it disappeared if they actually needed it. Although old news, none of this is a secret. Rep. Elise Stefanik should have known it. If she did know it, she should not have praised Trump’s executive order allowing unscrupulous companies to take advantage of people hoping to find inexpensive health care coverage. - Tom Konda, Plattsburgh ■
Too few voices heard on beach regulations
To the Editor: As a resident of Diamond Point, I would like to comment on the article your paper published in the Aug. 11 issue regarding Diamond Point Beach. The writer states that, “Amended regulations for activities...at the beach were endorsed at a town board meeting July 9... and were the topic of a public hearing recently.” » Letters Cont. on pg. 6 This free community newspaper exists to serve the informational needs of the community and to stimulate a robust local economy. No press release, brief or calendar item can be guaranteed for placement in the paper nor run in multiple weeks unless it is a paid announcement. All free placement is on a space-available basis.
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The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 7
WWI gun, discovered in local park, has been restored A mystery ensues: How did the British trench mortar get here?
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ELIZABETHTOWN | A century hence, the intriguing gun at Elizabethtown’s Veteran’s Memorial Park has been restored. In the process, a historic mystery surfaced. The relic is trench mortar and British made, as indicated by marks on the steel barrel. “For almost a century, the park included an unusual object that most people thought looked like a gray metal pipe,” said Margaret Bartley, a trustee at the Adirondack History Museum in Elizabethtown. “With the centennial of World War I in 2017, we learned that the unidentified object is actually a World War I trench mortar. How it came to Elizabethtown’s park is a mystery.” Caring for relics is what secures their place in time. “This spring a group of volunteers decided to restore the trench mortar to its proper appearance,” Bartley said. “Essex County American Legion Adjutant Newman Tryon announced on Memorial Day that the artillery piece would be restored by E-town Day.” It was done on time and wasn’t moved for restoration. “Loren Henrichs, from the Elizabethtown Highway Department, volunteered to sandblast the gray paint from the mortar, and in doing so revealed the original casting marks made a century ago,” Bartley said. “He had a sandblaster that he borrowed from the county and he did it at the crack of dawn.” Markings on the barrel revealed it to be a British artillery piece made in Sheffield, England, Bartley said. “It even bears the mark of a Royal Crown. “Near the middle of the barrel are the calibration lines used to adjust the barrel’s elevation angle so that mortar rounds could hit close-in enemy targets.” Essex County Sheriff’s Deputy Bob Rice, a U.S. Marine Corps Veteran, painted it and the Adirondack History Museum provided a new sign.
MYSTERY REMAINS
Living memory places the gun in the park at least 80 years ago. Lew Egglefield, age 88, who regularly plays taps at Memorial Day ceremonies, remembers the mortar being in the » Letters Cont. from pg. 7 This is false. None of the proposals made at the town hearing were endorsed by the residents and in fact, a subsequent meeting to continue discussion of the proposed changes was canceled at the last minute, robbing the residents of their chance to have their views heard. Several of the amended rules were vigorously opposed at the meeting, including the idea of locking the beach during the winter months and more discussion was supposed to be had at the subsequent meeting that was canceled without notice. There has been no notice to residents that the town is going to install a key fob system and in fact, recently Dickinson was quoted in the Post-Star saying he wasn’t going to do anything at our beach. This is actually preferable to the town unilaterally trying to lock our beach in the winter which no residents want, with the possible exception of a lakeside homeowner who has been exerting undue influence on the town since he recently bought his house next to the beach. No valid reason has been proffered by the town to justify closing our beach, and it is completely unacceptable to the majority. Also, the issue of restricting swimming hours was already settled a few year years ago at a public meeting, and no restrictions are acceptable. There seem to be a few entitled individuals trying to ruin the beach for residents, and we will not stand for it. - Ann McGarry, Diamond Point ■
Stefanik ‘all-in’ on Trumpism’
To the Editor: The Stefanik campaign probably chose Fort Drum for Trump’s visit because it was a controlled venue. They knew the assembled troops wouldn’t
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World War I Trench Mortar in Elizabethtown Veterans Memorial Park. Photo by Margaret Bartley park when he was a child. His father, Spencer R. Egglefield, was one of those veterans who founded the American Legion Post, Bartley said. Egglefield’s mother, Evangeline Nye Egglefield, was a founding and lifelong member of the Boquet Valley Post Auxilliary. Boquet Valley Post #551 was established in 1928 with 30 veterans of the Great War, as evidenced by membership drives chronicled in historical newspapers. Lake Placid American Legion Post #326 was among the first to muster in 1919, and had as its trophy a German trench mortar. The German gun sits in front of Post #326 headquarters on Main Street in Lake Placid today. Digging further into the history of English weaponry, it appears likely the Boquet Valley Post #551 is a Newton trench mortar, which was standard issue British weaponry used in World War I. Cables (traversing and elevating guys) connected by loops on the barrel to eyebolts on its base were used to aim the gun. America did not start building their version of the trench mortar until near the end of the Great War. The British trench mortar has been stationed in Veteran’s Memorial Park since the glory days of the Hotel Windsor. The park green was somewhat larger and wooded then. Court Street was narrower, minus the parking lanes in place now. “The Windsor was still standing on the site where Stewart’s Shop is now,” Bartley said of the gun’s spot.
be holding Q-Anon signs, wearing pro-Russia shirts, violently harassing the media or chanting “lock her up” and “build the wall.” They also knew, given the numbers of minorities and immigrants in the military, equating them with MS-13 or reciting “The Snake” could be a problem. Stefanik supporters may have wondered why she, according to Trump, pleaded with him to visit. After all, she’s on record opposing the wall, family separation and Trump’s failure to release his taxes. She opposed his trust of Putin over U.S. intelligence agencies and his trade wars. But there was our congresswoman in front of the troops, next to the man who was too privileged to wear the uniform, the guy who bragged about sexual assaults and who dog whistles to racists. He mispronounced her name, said he doesn’t take her calls, then gave her only 30 seconds to speak. Remarkably, his handlers managed to get Trump in and out of here without causing a PR fiasco. But voters, at least the ones paying attention, saw that despite her words, Stefanik is now all-in with Trumpism. That’s all we need to know on election day. Those, like our congresswoman, who are comfortable with Trump’s incompetence, corruption, racism, corporatism, environmental degradation, nepotism, authoritarianism, etc., should vote for her. - Frank Pagano, Jay ■
Good deeds deserve acknowledgment
To the Editor: Sometimes there are people who do the little things that make a big difference but do not get acknowledged for it. I live on Route 24 in the Town of Schroon. We locals refer to it as Hoffman Road. Somehow, garbage accumulates on the
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Boquet Valley Post #551 joined the ranks of Essex County American Legion posts in 1928, as evidenced by their mention in the Lake Placid News on April 26, 1929. which tallied change in Legion membership over the prior year. “The park with the bandstand, fountain, and various monuments today would have been in front of the porch of the Windsor. The roadway between Stewart’s and the park was the driveway for the hotel,” Bartley said. It’s likely the gun was placed after 1928, sometime during the busy first decade of Boquet Valley Post #551 activities. By 1937, the post boasted 60 members and hosted dances, dinners, picnics and even an annual air show at the “Elizabethtown Airport.” What remains unknown is how a British trench mortar made its way back across the Atlantic and ended up in Elizabethtown. “While it’s not uncommon for soldiers to bring back souvenirs, an artillery piece would not likely be carried by an individual,” Bartley said. If anyone has information to help solve this historic mystery, contact the Adirondack History Museum in Elizabethtown at 518-873-6646 or email any details to: director@adkhistorycenter.org. ■
sides of the road, whether purposefully or by chance of blowing out of a pickup truck. One of our very own neighbors takes it upon himself to be the road steward and go about picking up the litter and putting it in its place, several times a year. Steven Collins, along with his sister Cheri, patrol several miles of roadway and do their part in keeping our road litter-free and beautiful. If you happen to see them during one of their missions, stop and say, “Thank you.” - John Rose, Schroon Lake ■
If ‘cold logic’ actually applied, who would support Trump?
To the Editor: Kenneth G. Barcomb who recently wrote that conservatives are controlled by “cold logic, not emotions,” had some valid points. Chaos at the border isn’t good. Adding to the national debt is bad. And then he blew it. After lofty words about “competing civilly with quiet discourse,” he went on to call liberals “self loathing.” He wrote that they act only to “assuage their guilty feelings” and declares that they are “destroying…America.” This is not cold logic. These words do not promote civil or quiet discourse among us. I’m a liberal, and I want a “noble” (Barcomb’s word) America too. But my version of a noble America doesn’t separate immigrant parents from their children at the border with no plan to reunite them. My noble America doesn’t pass a tax law that benefits the rich and raises the national debt. My noble America doesn’t call the press “the enemy of the people” or declare that a black lawmaker has a “low IQ” or label thousands of immigrants “rapists and murderers” or….well, the list just gets longer every day. If Barcomb’s “cold logic” actually applied,
no real conservative would support the current administration. If only it were so. - Sandy Sexton, Morrisonville ■
Refreshing to see positive change in others
To the Editor: Lorraine Duvall of Keene, thank you for being bold and humble enough to describe your change of heart in your letter to the editor published in the Aug. 11 issue. It is that kind of change of heart — being willing to step into another’s shoes and walk in them a bit — that would change our world. I know it has changed mine. It is also so refreshing to read about one person seeing their own faults and their honest desire to change in the midst of an almost constant focus of pointing out the faults of others. Thanks again. - Dan Smith, Brant Lake ■
Grateful for ‘Hometown Heroes’ banners coming to Ti
To the Editor: Many thanks to the “Hometown Heroes,” Ticonderoga VFW No. 146 and Ticonderoga American Legion No. 224 at this recent Ticonderoga Town Board Meeting, well attended by vets. Board members finally made it possible to hang veteran’s photos (banners) throughout the streets of Ticonderoga. The applications for this event will recognize the men and women who have served in World War II, the Korean conflict, Vietnam, as well as those who have served their country and those who are still serving since 9 / 11. It is hoped that these banners will be in place in the spring of 2019. - Bob Spring, Ticonderoga ■
8 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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Arts & Entertainment
Eye on the Arts A new exhibit featuring the work of nine local artists from the Hague-Silver Bay area will open at Ti Arts in downBy Elizabeth Izzo town Ticonderoga • COLUMNIST • on Aug. 29, 5-7 p.m. “Artists of the Adirondacks” will feature paintings by Susan Cacici, Jack Collins, Susan Darrin, Mary Ann Eaton, Jim O’Toole, BrendaJean Rider, Vicki Stewart, Richard Stout, and Mike Strutz. The Upper Jay Art Center will host “The Space We Make,” a performance troupe run by Simon Thomas-Train and Caitlin Scholl, for what organizers are describing as “a slate of experimental, immersive and innovative performance art,” on Aug. 25. The artists will take the stage from 7-10 p.m. with a postapocalyptic-inspired production titled “The End of the World.” A donation of $20 per person is requested. For more information, visit upperjayartcenter.org. The Indian Lake Theater will screen “The Seagull,” a 2018 drama based on the Anton Checkhov play, on Aug. 27-29 at 7:30 p.m. Regular admission is $7 for adults, $5 for minors. Visit indianlaketheater.org for more information. In Blue Mountain Lake, country duo Martin and Kelly will perform at the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts. Jilly Martin and Ryan
Brooks Kelly are known for their crossover country style, swinging between traditional and contemporary songs with ease. They’re slated to perform Aug. 25 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $25 for adults, $15 for students and minors. Learn more at adirondackarts.org. The Seagle Music Colony is slated to perform a revue of the music of Cy Coleman, of “Sweet Charity” and “City of Angels” fame, at the Depot Theater in Westport on Aug. 30 at 5 p.m.; Aug. 31 at 7 p.m. and Sept. 1 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $35 for adults,
$32 for seniors and students and $28 for groups of 10 or more. Call 518-532-7875 or visit depottheatre. org for more information. Plattsburgh’s Strand Center for the Arts will see a performance from Lee Rocker, of The Stray Cats fame, on Aug. 25 at 7:30 p.m. The Stray Cats sold over 10 million records and Rocker has performed with the likes of Ringo Starr and The Rolling Stones. Tickets range from $20-35 in advance, $25-40 day-of. Call the Strand Center Box Office at 518563-1604 ext. 105 to learn more. ■
Jilly Martin and Ryan Brooks Kelly will perform in Blue Mountain Lake this weekend. Photo provided
Police: Man stole 2,221 gallons of fuel oil in criminal scheme Fuel covertly siphoned into converted box truck By Pete DeMola EDITOR
LAKE PLACID | A Pennsylvania man has been charged with grand larceny following a scheme in which he allegedly stole 2,221 gallons of fuel oil from a municipal storage tank by pumping it into a converted box truck. Robert A. Detter, of Shartlesville, Pennsylvania, was arrested Friday morning at 2:08 a.m. and charged with third degree grand larceny, a class D felony. Lake Placid Police Department Assistant Chief Charles P. Dobson declined to disclose the specific municipality, but confirmed the theft was from a government-owned building. “The government agency that maintains this tank thought they might have had a leak because they noticed they were missing a large quality of fuel,” Dobson told The Sun. Authorities launched an investigation after determining there was no leak. Detter’s vehicle was ultimately located by an off-duty state trooper. Detter, who has no connection to the municipality, allegedly stole the fuel by pumping it into tanks hidden within his box truck. He was remanded to the Essex County Jail in lieu of $10,000 cash bail or $20,000 bond. The fuel has not been recovered. ■
Check out suncommunitynews.com/events for more events like these.
Calendar of Events I
To list your event call (518) 873-6368 ext. 133 or email calendar@suncommunitynews.com. Please submit events at least two weeks prior to the event day. Some print fees may apply.
- Not all listings that appear in print will appear on our website -
AUG. 25
Wilmington » Adirondack Show
& Shine Car Show & Road Rally held at 1 Cunningham Ln.; 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
Tupper Lake » 7th Annual Rock
the Arc held at Municipal Ball Field; 12:00 p.m. Featuring live music all day, games and fun for kids of all ages, delicious food and vendors selling a variety of wares. Free Admission. Rain date September 8th.
AUG. 25
Lake Placid » Phil Dumond at
Taste Bistro held at Mirror Lake Inn; 7:30 p.m. Using a looping system Phil’s rhythms and layering adds a complex texture to his music. Close your eyes and you will swear
there’s more than a solo act going on! Free Admission.
com for an application or to answer any questions.
Westport » Community Forum
Westport » Riotous Youth Camp
AUG. 25
- Proposed School Merger Discussion held at Depot Theatre; 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. The community forum will offer an opportunity for a panel discussion on the proposed merger of Westport Central School and Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School, moderated by Sun Community News and Printing Publisher Dan Alexander and Managing Editor Pete DeMola. The forum is free and open to the public. Community members from both school districts are strongly encouraged to attend.
AUG. 25
Chazy » Free Children’s Yoga and Mindfulness Program held at Chazy Public Library; 12:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. Join us for a Mindfulness Program followed by class r'IUSc)ldlll lUIIUWeU uy Yoga 1 from Certifi ed Children’s Yoga from Certified Chil( Instructor. Space is limited Instructor. Spa so please in so please register rE advance advance at 518-8467676. 7676.
-~AUG. -
AUG. 25TH
Keene Valley Ke, » 26th Annual »2 High Peaks Arts Hi & Antiques & sShow held at a Marcy Field; 10:00 F a.m. a. - 4:00 p.m. p. In it’s 25 years we have ye, seen the most see amazing amm artists and antique and quality qL vendors. There is vendors always always room roe for growth. For For more more information info contact: contact: Lindsay Lindsay Kelly at highpeaksartandantiques@gmail. hig hpeaksa rta nda ntic
held at Heritage House; 10:30 a.m. -12:30 p.m. Shakespearian stage combat and scene work for children entering grades 6-9. We will work towards producing a Shakespearian scene that includes both combat and character development. For more info Scott Gibbs 518-962-4916 or gibbss@ westelcom.com.
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!
AUG. 31
Plattsburgh » Blood Drive held
at MAB, 3rd floor conference rooms; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Will be conducted by the North Country Regional Blood Donor Center. Donate and not only do you get coupon to the café, but you get to help a neighbor in need.
AUG. 31
Point au Roche State Park »
Annual Fall Picnic held at Nature Center; 5:00 p.m. The public is invited to join the Algonquin Chapter of the Adirondack Mountain Club for their annual fall picnic. Bring your own place setting and beverage and a dish or dessert to share. Grills will be available.
AUG. 31 - SEPT. 2
Saranac Lake » ArtWorks Studio
NOW - SEPT. 7
Willsboro » “Life Poses” exhibit
held at Champlain Valley Senior Center; all day The exhibit of two-dimensional art offers works on paper in various mediums from artists locally, as well as from Brooklyn, Virginia and San Francisco, CA area. After the exhibit closes the selected work will be provided for permanent installation in the six New York physical therapy facilities of the Vermont Health Network.
SEPT. 1
Chazy » Chazy Walking Tour: The
Miner Buildings held at Alice T. Miner Museum; 10:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Learn more about the man and the myths as we explore William H. Miner’s legacy through
SEPT. 2
Saranac Lake » 10th Annual
Hobofest held at Riverside Park; 12:00 p.m. All-day free music festival celebrating American roots culture and the independent hobo spirit. The day showcases many of the area’s finest musicians paired with imported traveling veterans.
T H U R S DAY
30 AUG.
LECTURE: “THE INFLUENZA EPIDEMIC IN THE ADIRONDACKS” held at
Adirondack History Museum, Elizabethtown.
Thursday: 7:00 pm
W E D N E S DAY
29 AUG.
the buildings he constructed in the town of Chazy. Return to the museum after the walk for refreshments.
Presenting the lecture “The Influenza Epidemic in the Adirondacks.” Details: 518-873-6466 or email echs@adkhistorymuseum.org 184152
T U E S DAY
DEMENTIA MEMORY CAFÉ WITH MITCHELL WILLETTE
CLINTON COUNTY 04 DEMENTIA SEPT.
Turnpike Wesleyan Church 2224 Military Tnpk., Plattsburgh
SUNY Plattsburgh Room #534 Sibley Hall, George Angell Drive
held at
Wednesday: 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Clinton County’s Memory Café with the Caregiver Support Initiative provides a gathering place for friends with Alzheimer’s disease or other dementias and their caregivers and families to relax and enjoy social events, refreshments, and entertainment. Free and open to the public. For details: (518) 564-4322 or www.wehelpcaregivers.com
192785
Free Children’s Yoga and Mindfulness Program held at Chazy Public Library
25
AUG. 27 - AUG. 31
Tours held at Various Locations; 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Saranac Lake area artists open their workspaces to visitors. See works in all stages of creation and watch artists demonstrate their techniques. Details: Kathy 518-891-3799.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP held at
Tuesday: 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or other form of dementia can be challenging and often overwhelming. We invite you to attend our Support Group. This program is supported by a grant from The New York State Department of Health. Free event. Details: (518) 564-4322 or www.wehelpcaregivers.com 192786
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 9
Ex-ORDA official, accused of credit card misuse, claims innocence Padraig Power allegedly used stateissued cards for bar tends, say officials
in a statement. Power appeared in Village of Lake Placid Court on Aug. 16 with his counsel, Brett Joshpe and Edward Paltzik of the New York Citybased law firm Joshpe Mooney Paltzik LLP. Following a huddle with Essex County Assistant District Attorney Jamie Martineau, Lake Placid Village Justice David Chapman adjourned Power’s case until Oct. 29. State policy prohibits using governmentissued cards for personal benefit, according to the inspector general’s office, and specifically exempts the purchase of alcoholic beverages as a reimbursable expense. ORDA also has an internal policy prohibiting employees from consuming alcohol during the performance of their official duties. Joshpe and Paltzik said their client will be vindicated. ”Our client is categorically innocent and is being prosecuted for incurring business expenses that were authorized and approved by his employer,” said Paltzik in a statement. “Notwithstanding the highly prejudicial statements from the Inspector General and District Attorneys’ offices, it remains our hope that the district attorney will recognize these
“
By Pete DeMola EDITOR
Even the most basic guidelines were nothing short of unabashed hubris,”
LAKE PLACID | The Olympic Regional Development Authority’s (ORDA) former finance director has pleaded not guilty to charges associated with allegedly using a state-issued credit card to purchase alcohol at local bars and restaurants. Padraig Power, 34, of Lake Placid, was charged by New York State Police last month with third degree grand larceny, a felony, and official misconduct, a misdemeanor. The state Inspector General’s Office has accused Power of “routinely and repeatedly” racking up $6,300 in personal expenditures in a four-year period between 2013 and 2017, “the majority of which were comprised of alcoholic beverages purchased at restaurants and bars.” “Even the most basic guidelines were nothing short of unabashed hubris,” said Inspector General Catherine Leahy Scott
charges should not be pursued. If they are, we will vigorously defend our client’s innocence.” The Essex County District Attorney’s Office is scheduled to meet with the Inspector General’s Office this week to discuss the case. “We’re in discussion mode now,” said Essex County District Attorney Kristy Sprague. The investigation was sparked when ORDA discovered discrepancies in an internal audit and referred them to the Inspector General’s Office. ORDA, which manages the state’s Olympic assets, including Whiteface and Gore Mountain, pledged to “cooperate fully” with the investigation. Power parted ways with ORDA last year, but officials declined to disclose the specific reasons. The Adirondack Daily Enterprise quoted ORDA CEO Mike Pratt as saying the state agency was in the process of revising its credit card policy. “It hasn’t been updated in many, many years,” Pratt said last May. ORDA spokesman Jon Lundin said the state agency has since updated its credit card procedures, but declined to discuss details. ■
Padraig Power, former finance director at the Olympic Regional Development Authority, was arrested in July after allegedly using his state-issued credit card to run up alcohol tabs at local bars and restaurants. Photo provided
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Monthly Specialty Clinics Specialty
Provider
Visiting Dates
Acupuncture
Dr. Lynne Macco - 518-873-3168
September 11
Cardiology
Dr. Seema Lodha - 518-563-2404
September 14
Chemotherapy/Infusions
ECH - 518-873-3168
Call to schedule
Diabetes Clinic
ECH - 518-873-9005
Call to schedule
Gastro
Dr. Eugene Cassone - PCP Referral
September 19
Gynecology
Dr. Lynne Macco - 518-873-3168
September 10, 17, 24
Oncology & Hematology
Dr. Jan Duus - 518-314-3002
September 13, 27
Orthopedic
Dr. Eugene Byrne - 518-523-1327
September 6, 20
Pacer Clinic
CVPH - 518-562-7993
September 14
Podiatry
Dr. Richard Donela - 518-523-8345
September 7, 10, 24
Pulmonary
Dr. Sabieli Kabeli - 518-562-9119
September 18
Vascular
Dr. Claude Roland - 518-562-7557
September 24
Essex Jct, VT
Bulletin Board
Ticonderoga Campus
(Formally Moses Ludington Hospital) 1019 Wicker Street, Ticonderoga, NY 12883 www.ech.org (518) 585-3727 • (518) 585-3732 (fax) Specialty
Provider
Visiting Dates
Audiology
David Beaulac - 518-798-6428
September 5, 19
Cardiology
Dr. Nidal Makhoul - 518-563-2404
September 6, 20
Colorectal Screening
Dr. Eugene Cassone - PCP referral
September 24
Echocardiograms
CVPH - 518-585-3727
September 5, 19
Fidelis Care New York
Katelyn Smart - 518-593-5341
September 6, 13, 20, 27
Holter Monitors
ECH - 518-585-3727
Call to schedule
Infusions
ECH - 518-585-3727
Call to schedule
Mental Health
Essex County - 518-873-3670
Call to register
Oncology & Hematology
Dr. Jan Duus - 518-314-3058
September 13, 27
Orthopedic
• • • • •
Dr. A. Michael Imobersteg - 518-585-3727
192317
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 ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 4:30 pm-6pm.
September 4, 11, 18, 25
24-Hour Emergency X-Ray/Digital Mammography/Ultrasound/CT/MRI Laboratory Services Specialized Outpatient Clinics Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy
PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm Marie Marvull 518743-1672 194353
PUBLIC MEETINGS
PUBLIC MEETINGS
CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Call 1-888-425-2666 or 518561-0838. ELIZABETHTOWN – Al-Anon Family Group meetings every Sunday 4:00pm-5pm, Board Room in Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838
PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street. 7:30pm-8:30pm. Call 1888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.
PLATTSBURGH - Adult Children of Alcoholics meeting Wednesdays at 8:00 pm at Auditorium B at CVPH. More information can be found at www.adultchildren.or or by emailing adkacoa@mail.com PLATTSBURGH - Celebrate Recovery Meeting every Monday, 6:00 pm, Turnpike Wesleyan Church. call 518-566-8764. PLATTSBURGH – 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.
WESTPORT - The Westport Central School District Board of Education will hold a public forum special meeting on August 29, 2018 at 6 PM in the auditorium for further discussion and conversation regarding the proposed merger. Members of the Merger Study Advisory Committee have also been invited to attend to ask questions, make particular points and to answer questions if needed. Community members and interested others are welcome to attend.
FishingForA GoodDeal? CatchTheGreatest BargainsIn The Classifieds
1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
DINNERS • MEETINGS • BINGO • EXERCISE CLASSES • CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS • SENIOR ACTIVITES • BOOK SIGNINGS • BLOOD DONATION • ARTS & CRAFTS & MORE
10 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Community rallies for local man Pleasant Valley heart transplant Chorale open for awaiting Spaghetti Elizabethtown Social Center
new members
Love to sing? Need an outlet? The Pleasant Valley Chorale just might be what you are looking for. Led by director Susan By Arin Burdo Hughes, the chorale is a • COLUMNIST • fun group with over 30 members from all over the Champlain Valley. New members are always welcome; no audition is required. The Pleasant Valley Chorale will kick off its fall session on Tuesday, Sept. 11. Rehearsals are held Tuesday evenings, 7-9 p.m. at the center. Dues for the fall 2018 chorale session are $15. Committed attendance is much appreciated. This year’s program will feature holiday selections from around the world, with songs from Germany, Austria, France, Italy, the West Indies and other countries. Rehearsals are in preparation for two December concerts on Dec. 7 in Essex and Dec. 9 in Elizabethtown. Mark your calendars: Monday yoga at the social center with Karin DeMuro starts back on Sept. 10. More details to come. The Elizabethtown-Westport Garden Club will be on the road on Thursday, Sept. 6. If you are interested in this day trip, please contact Louise von Brockdorff at 518-962-4095. The Social Center Teen Rec program will venture to the Great Escape’s Zombie Run on Saturday, Sept. 29. The Zombie Run is not only a zombie-infested 5K race through an amusement park but also a fundraiser, with a portion of the proceeds going to the American Red Cross to aid in their life-saving missions. Anyone interested in sponsoring a teen who can dodge zombies better than they can come up with $30, please contact the center. Teens who would like to register should submit a permission form and payment to the center before Sept. 12. The cost increases after Sept 12. Permission forms with full details can be found at the center. For more information about Elizabethtown Social Center programming, visit elizabethtownsocialcenter.org or call 518-873-6408. ■ — Arin Burdo is the Executive Director of the Elizabethtown Social Center.
dinner fundraiser to benefit Westport family By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER
WESTPORT | A Westport man is currently awaiting a heart transplant — and he’s got the community behind him. A spaghetti dinner fundraiser to benefit Matt Looby, a 59-yearold veteran of the Marine Corps., is slated for next weekend. Looby was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy 16 years ago, and he’s suffered with a weak and enlarged heart for years, according to his wife Charie Looby.
BRIEFS
His heart valve has “essentially become non-functioning,” she said. “He needs a transplant, and he’s on the list. But it could be a year or more.” Matt will undergo a surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital later this month as doctors attempt to repair his valve and implant an artificial LVAD pump. The recovery period will be lengthy, around 20 days in the hospital alone, and it’s unclear how long it may be until he’s able to get a new heart. With trips back and forth from Plattsburgh and the hospital in Boston ongoing, his family is raising money to help with medical and travel expenses during this waiting period. At the community dinner on Sept. 2, the family will cook the spaghetti, Essex Farm and Full and By Farm will provide produce for salads, homemade meatballs will be served with
John Brown Farm will celebrate blues, civil rights
LAKE PLACID | John Brown Lives! will host the third annual “Blues at Timbuctoo Fest” at John Brown Farm in Lake Placid Saturday, Sept. 15, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. The event will celebrate the blues in a place synonymous with the struggle for civil rights. Ellen Rocco of North Country Public Radio will host. ■
ECH to host diabetes informational and walk
ELIZABETHTOWN | The University of Vermont Health Network – Elizabethtown Community Hospital will host a diabetes health fair and the Walk to End Diabetes on Wednesday, Aug. 29 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the hospital located at 75 Park St., Elizabethtown. Th is free event is open to the public and will include vendors, demonstra-
WESTPORT GOLF Under New Ownership!
Come play along side our grazing sheep and take in our beautiful views!
fresh beef from Ben Wever Farm, the Dogwood Bread Company is providing baguettes, local beer will be available from the Ledge Hill Brewing Company and for dessert, Stewart’s Shop is donating ice cream sundaes. Vegetarian and gluten-free options will be available. Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for children ages 6-12, and kids under 6 will eat for free. All proceeds benefit the Loobys. Dinner is served from 2-6 p.m. A variety of entertainment is on tap, including performances by Ploughman’s Lunch and the Plattsburgh Police Pipes and Drums. A bake sale, 50-50 raffle and Chinese auction are also planned. “I’ve never seen a Chinese auction this big,” said Charie. Items include stained glass from the Westport Trading Company, art and gift certificates to a vast swath of local businesses and
tions and health assessments including blood pressure checks, body mass index, LDL cholesterol, A1C (glucose) screenings and vision tests. Mary White-Ferris, certified diabetes educator, will be available to answer questions and provide information. The event will also feature an “Ask the Pharmacist” table where pharmacists from Elizabethtown Community Hospital will answer questions from participants about medications they’re taking. The Walk to End Diabetes, a mile-long walk around the campus and surrounding neighborhood, will begin at noon in front of the hospital’s main entrance. Registration for the walk will open at 11:30 a.m. For more information, call 518-873-9005. ■
Westport Marina announces race winners
WESTPORT | The Westport Marina
A Westport man is awaiting a heart transplant. His community is backing the family by hosting a fundraiser at the Whallonsburg Grange Hall next weekend. Photo provided restaurants in Plattsburgh. “It’s going to be a terrific time,” she said. ■
hosted its 24th annual Westport Challenge Regatta from 10:45 a.m. to 4 p.m. The winners for the class A boat race were Hollandia, helmed by Chuck Meyer, in fi rst with a corrected time of 4:24:30 and Gabriel Gervais on Cloudspin in second with 4:28:32. The class B winners included Ed Smith on Moondance who took first with a time of 4:02:57. Second place went to Allen Hickok on Trillium with 4:05:45. Peter Brooks took third on Sparrow with 4:05:49. Cold Sophie, with Loren Swears at the helm, f inished fourth with 4:08:54. Tim McGill closed the race with 4:15:09 on Patina. The J24 boat race winners included Joshua Girard on Gloria in fi rst place, Paul Reese on Dancing Queen in second, David Girard on Bugaboo in third, Neil Chippendale on Gemini in fourth, Jack Knox on Know Name in fi fth and sixth place went to Rob Knippler on Kat Knip. ■
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» Broadband Cont. from pg. 1 Locations in Essex County scheduled to be served include Lewis, Essex and Willsboro, as well as a handful of addresses in Chesterfield, Schroon, Ticonderoga and North Hudson.
‘SHROUD OF SECRECY’
Lawmakers say they should have been informed, particularly considering they were meeting at the exact same time in a nearby building at the county complex on Court Street. “They never bothered to notify the 18 communities, the chair, vice chair, or county attorney they were doing this,” said Town of Lewis Supervisor James Monty. “Why didn’t they hold it here instead of in the basement?” Monty acknowledged the state agency adhered to the state’s Open Meetings Law by placing a legal notice in a daily newspaper on July 21. But lawmakers unanimously passed a resolution of disapproval, citing frustration at being kept out of the loop. The buildout plans were adopted on July 19, according to the notice. Local officials have long sought clarity on the program, and have attempted to stay hyper-tuned to developments as constituents continue to await the service and pepper their offices with questions. Broadband forums across the region — including North Creek and Willsboro — have been well-attended by the public. Monty fired off an email to state officials later that afternoon. “This is just another example of the lack of communication between the appointing authority (ESD) and the communities being served,” Monty wrote. “I again have to ask, what are they afraid of. This is just one more reason that we are not trusting the process. Monty continued: “As the supervisor and a taxpayer of this state, we deserve better. We deserve answers and we will not go away until we get these answers. The shroud of secrecy must end.”
TENSE RELATIONSHIP
While local officials enthusiastically support the broadband program, their relationship between the state agency overseeing the effort has crackled with tension since the program’s 2015 debut. Lawmakers have long griped over its execution, often citing a lack of communication and transparency between
The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 11
the state Broadband Program Office (BPO) and local offices on the bidding process for unserved areas, grant awards and build-out details, among other concerns. As such, they argue they don’t have details to share with their constituents. “It’s probably one of the only things Gov. (Andrew) Cuomo has done that everyone in the North Country supports,” said Monty. The state, for their part, has bristled at the criticisms, stressing the scope and ambition of the project, which is among the most ambitious nationwide, and is said to be eyed by other states as a model. Essex County and the North Country is poised to benefit significantly from the third and final round of state subsidies, announced last January by Cuomo in Plattsburgh. The ESD will hold a second public hearing in the county in response to the criticisms, said an agency spokesman. “Constituent feedback is a vital part of the New NY Broadband Program as we continue to ensure that all New Yorkers gain access to high-speed internet,” said Adam Kilduff. The two public hearings will be held at the Essex County Board of Supervisors chambers at the Old County Courthouse in Elizabethtown on Aug. 31 at 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
VIGILANCE NEEDED
Robert Freeman, executive director of the Committee on Open Government, said the meeting was legal despite lawmaker complaints. “People sometimes read legal notices, sometimes they don’t,” Freeman said. “We all need to be vigilant. Along with authority comes a degree of responsibility.” Hearings were also held last week in St. Lawrence, Clinton and Franklin counties. Officials, citing the well-attended public forums in Willsboro and North Creek, hoped those efforts would be expanded into their communities. Monty cited his displeasure that sessions are not currently scheduled for Lewis and neighboring Elizabethtown. “I think in our conversation you said your agency is an open book and that we could see anything,” wrote Monty to Jeff Nordhaus, the state official overseeing the broadband program. “It appears a couple of chapters are missing.” For more info on address-level data and build-out efforts, visit nysbroadband.ny.gov. ■
NEW HIRE: Essex County supervisors welcomed new Transportation Coordinator Kaitlin Egglefield, who will manage public transportation functions under the county Department of Public Works. Egglefield started in the position a week ago Thursday. “I am excited to work with the communities to strentghen our transportation services,” she said. Members of the DPW committee unanimously approved the hire. Photo by Kim Dedam
Diabetes Awareness Diabetes Awaren
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FREE HEALTH FAIR & WALK Wednesday, August 29th, 2 Wednesday, August 29th, 2018 Wednesday, August 29th, 2018
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264 Goff Rd • Westport, NY 12993 (518) 962-4311
FREE HEALTH FAIR & WALK
Nutrition & Diabetic Education
9:00am-11:30am Health Fair Nutrition & Diabetic Education Labs (A1c & LDL) Nutrition &EKG Diabetic Education 11:30am-12:00pm Walk Registration Labs (A1c & LDL) 12:00pm-12:30pm Walk Labs (A1c & LDL) Vitals (Height, Weight, Body Mass Index, & Blood Pressure)
EKG
Acuity EKG Visual Vitals (Height, Weight, Body Mass Index, & Blood Pressure) Elizabethtown Community Hospital Games Vitals (Height, Weight, Body Mass Index, & Blood Pressure) Boardroom Demonstrations Visual Acuity
Prizes Visual Acuity Games Nutrition & Diabetic Education Refreshments Games Light Demonstrations Labs (A1c & LDL)
Vendor Booths & MORE!
Visual Acuity
Prizes
EKG Demonstrations Prizes Services offered are on a first come, first served basis. Vitals (Height, Weight, Body Mass Index, & Blood Pressure) Prizes Light Refreshments A Walk to End Diabetes will conclude the health fair.
Registration will open at 11:30am in the hospital Vendor Booths & MORE! Light Refreshments Games boardroom. Walk to begin at 12:00pm in front of the hospital, rain or shine. Demonstrations Vendor Booths & MORE! Services offered are on a first come, first served basis.
A Walk to End Diabetes the health fair. are on a first come, will firstconclude served basis. Everyone is welcome! Registration will open at 11:30am in the hospital To find more information Vendor MORE! ABooths Walk&to End Diabetes will conclude the health fair. please call us at (518) 873-3125 UVMHealth.org/ECH boardroom. Walk to begin at 12:00pm in front of the Registration willare open at hospital, 11:30am in thebasis. hospital Services offered on a first come, first served rain or shine.
offered LightServices Refreshments
A Walk toWalk End Diabetes will at conclude the health fair. of the boardroom. to begin 12:00pm in front Registration will open at 11:30am in the hospital hospital, rain or shine. boardroom. Walk to begin at 12:00pm in front of the
Everyone is welcome!
hospital, rain or shine.
To find more information
UVMHealth.org/ECH 194442
00 UVMHealth.org/ECH
UVMHealth.org/ECH
194186
Effective Saturday September 1st, 2018 we will now be open every other Saturday from 8:30 am to 2:00 pm and closed on the alternating Saturdays. Sundays we will continue to be closed. We will be providing after hour emergency service for small animals on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays only. On Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays small animal emergency service can be obtained at either the Burlington Emergency & Veterinary Specialists in Williston, VT or the Northway Ani- mal Emergency Clinic in Gansevoort, NY. These veterinary emergency centers are open 24 hours every day, 365 days a year. On those days we don’t offer after hours emergency service for small animals our on call answering service will provide you with these options including phone numbers and addresses. We are confident that you will receive expert and compassionate service at either of these facilities that specialize in emergency care. We do want assure our large animal clientele that our doctors will continue to provide emergency care on nights and weekends.
Elizabethtown Community Hospital Elizabethtown Community Elizabethtown Community HospitalH Boardroom Wednesday, August 29th,Boardroom 2018 Boardroom
call us at (518) 873-3125 Everyone is please welcome!
Everyone is welcome!
ToTofind information find more more information
pleasecall call us us atat(518) 873-3125 please (518) 873-3125
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12 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
» Rangers Cont. from pg. 1 By Pete DeMola EDITOR
SARANAC LAKE | Tourism is up in the Adirondacks. But despite the success of state-sponsored campaigns designed to boost visitation, the state appears to be holding the line on boosting the number of forest rangers. “There’s a growing call in almost every area for more state employees,” said Gov. Andrew Cuomo. “We are trying to do the job we have to do and balance the state budget. If we want to cut taxes, that’s one of the main goals.” The uptick in visitation paired with the growing expanse of state-owned land has led to concerns by the Police Benevolent Association of New York State Law Enforcement (PBA of NYS) that the force is overwhelmed, and the workload has become too great for current staff to handle. “Nearly one million acres of new public lands and easements have been added to ranger patrol responsibilities,” said the PBA of NYS
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at the governor’s remarks, he won’t read too much into them. “I appreciate trying to keep taxes low, but there’s intense pressure on the lands up here, not only in the High Peaks, but also the Adirondacks in general,” van Laer said. “I think we’re at a breaking point with staff levels. At some point, I think things will collapse, and we’re at a point close to that.”
event in Saranac Lake in which he touted the importance of balancing economic concerns with environmental conservation, including the state’s purchase of the Boreas Ponds Tract. NYS of PBS Forest Rangers Director Arthur Perryman said the success of the state’s tourism initiative “is a great problem to have.” But the increase in rescue operations comes at the expense of stewardship and state land protection care and custody. Rangers are now forced to remain in the front country to handle parking issues, and maintain a state of readiness for search and rescue operations. “There are so many hours in the week, and hours each day,” Perryman told The Sun. “Hard choices need to be made.” Their campaign — which has taken off on social media with the #AddNYSRangers hashtag — is designed to solely raise public safety concerns, Perryman said. “We see there’s a deficiency and it needs to be addressed,” Perryman said. “I hope the governor will see value in that and add forest rangers.” Scott van Laer, a union delegate based in Ray Brook, said while he was “disappointed”
in a statement, “yet there are 10 fewer forest rangers in Region 5 then there were in 1971.” Search and rescue operations have increased 58 percent between 2012 and 2016, according to the union. Union delegates have methodologically racked up symbolic resolutions of support for an increase in staffing from town boards across the Adirondack Park, and have been joined by environmental groups and concerned residents. “We repeatedly hear the success of marketing efforts,” wrote Brendan Wiltse, an environmental photographer and co-founder of Adirondack Wilderness Advocates on Twitter. “But funding to steward those lands and educate visitors (continues to) stagnate.” Cuomo, who implemented a 2 percent annual cap on state spending, said every state agency wants more staff. “So we are actually, I think doing more than the state government has ever done,” Cuomo said, “and we’re doing it smarter and more efficient than ever.”
HARD CHOICES
Cuomo weighed in on the issue following an
DEC DEFENDS
The state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has defended current staffing levels, noting recent graduates from the academy have been concentrated in the Adirondacks. Rangers are being outfitted with new equipment, and DEC increasingly relies on stewardship programs coordinated by outside groups, including the Adirondack Mountain Club, while search and rescue operations are bolstered by local law enforcement. The state agency has also launched a campaign to steer visitors to less-trafficked areas of the Adirondacks, and will reroute popular High Peaks trails and create new ones as part of a recently-approved package of changes to the High Peaks Unit Management Plan. ■
Driver pleads guilty in fatal crash that took life of Willsboro man Jacob Bass to be sentenced Oct. 9 By Pete DeMola EDITOR
ELIZABETHTOWN | Nearly three years after causing the death of a Willsboro man in a head-on crash, the driver has accepted a plea bargain. Jacob G. Bass, 26, pleaded guilty to one count of criminally negligent homicide, a class E felony, and one count of reckless driving in Essex County Court before Judge Richard Meyer on Thursday. As part of the plea agreement, Bass admitted to crossing the center lane while driving south on Route 9 in Lewis
at a high rate of speed on Dec. 8, 2015, causing a head-on collision that killed Nicholas Boardman, who was driving north in a 2012 Dodge Caravan. Boardman, 27, of Willsboro, was pronounced dead at the scene. At the time, Boardman, a Mountain Lake Services employee, was transporting a resident. Bass suffered a head injury and told Meyer he could not remember the accident. “I believe it is true, yes,” Bass said after Meyer relayed details of the accident back to him during court proceedings. Bass, who was coming from Plattsburgh, was traveling between 67 and 70 miles per hour in his 2016 GMC Yukon, the subsequent investigation revealed, and had earlier ran a motorist off the road in Chesterfield, authorities said. Bass, who listed a Georgia address during court proceed-
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ings, faces between 1 and one-third to 4 years in state prison on the criminally negligent homicide charge. He will be sentenced on Oct. 9 at 2:30 p.m. Reckless driving, a misdemeanor, carries a sentence of one year in county jail. As a result of the plea, a charge of second-degree manslaughter will be dismissed. The Essex County District Attorney’s Office was represented by Chief Assistant District Attorney Michael Langey. Bass, who spoke softly and kept his head down during the proceedings, was released on his own recognizance. Alcohol was not a factor in the crash, authorities said. “It’s just an odd set of circumstances,” said Essex County District Attorney Kristy Sprague. Boardman’s family did not appear in court on Thursday. “They’ve been very, very understanding,” Sprague said. “And forgiving.” ■
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The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 13
Conservation Conversations
Dangerous plants spreading upstate I loaded my bush hog on the trailer and hauled it to Westport to get some welding done. The skid plate on the By Kathy Wilcox front corner was torn • COLUMNIST • off during some intensive mowing and was now dragging down on the one edge. The welder gave me the piercing stink eye when I brought the machine in, his first statement was, “Were you mowing poison parsnip?” “No,” I replied. “I was in the woods chopping down raspberry brush and grasses in my log roads.” He looked it over with that scrutinizing eye once again and asked what I needed. His concern was working on a piece of equipment that was covered in juices of poison plants, especially wild poison parsnip or hogweed. He must have been bitten by the stuff before and doesn’t want to get anywhere near it. I don’t blame him! My friend Myrna also noted poison parsley plants across from her home and is very concerned about the spread of this nasty plant. She expressed her concerns and ask me to let you all know about it. So this is for Myrna and you all! Cow parsnips (Heracleum maximum) and wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa), produce a sap, or plant juice, containing a substance that can cause burns to the skin in the presence of sunlight. In some cases, the burns are like second-degree sunburns that can cause painful rashes and raised blisters. Giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) is another nasty plant that can
ruin your summer. This is from the state Department of Transportation file, “Giant Hogweed Origin: Native to Central Eurasia.” “Causes severe skin irritation for most people. The sap contains a phototoxin that causes skin to be sensitive to sunlight. Sap can produce painful, burning blisters within 24 to 48 hours after contact as well as red blotches that can develop into scars that persist for several years. “Giant hogweed has been declared a federal noxious weed, meaning it is illegal to propagate, sell or transport this plant in the United States.” In some cases, the juices from these plants can cause blindness. Extreme care should be taken when you see these. I have seen more and more poison parsnip along our roadways, it is spreading fast. Giant hogweed is scarce in our area, but it is known to be around, so keep a look out. Learn what these plants look like. You don’t want your kids or family pets running amuck through this stuff. I don’t know how it affects cattle, goats or sheep if it gets in hay, but it probably is a serious problem, so keep track of where the animals graze and what is in the hay. If grazing animals get too close, it may be a problem near their eyes. As farmers, you may need to check with Cornell Cooperative Extension about any studies concerning grazing and hay, especially during a drought year when pasture is scarce. Cattle have enough problems with pink eye, flies and this year, the heat and humidity. We don’t need to add any more stress to the herd by nasty urushiol juices
getting into their eyes, so beware. So, what do you do to get rid of it? Mowing when it is young is a good choice, but you need to keep mowing it to get rid of it. Hand pulling is an option, but wear gloves that won’t get saturated with the juices or you will be in trouble. HAZMAT rubber gloves would work. Be careful you don’t rub up against it or get the juice on you. You may or may not be allergic to it, but its not the way I would want to find out. That would be a hard lesson learned. Washing with a strong detergent and hot water or steam cleaning your equipment to clean off any nasty oils is strongly recommend right after using it. If you don’t, you may forget and do mechanical work later, (yeah, we are all getting older) and get the oils on you, you’ll learn the hard way. Right now, the plants are going into the reproductive mode, meaning there are seeds developing. To keep it from spreading, you may want to clip off the seed heads, put them in a plastic bag and then send them down the road in the garbage truck. You can then mow the rest of the plant or cut them down individually. Remember, the juice contains chemicals which react with sunlight and can cause nasty blisters, so be careful. Herbicides are another option, check with Cornell Cooperative Extension for what to use and how to use it. Read and follow the labels; don’t spray herbicides near any water bodies. The spread of these plants and what towns or highway departments will do about it is a concern. It’s all along many roadways. Spreading the seeds and
CHAMPLAIN VALLEY A S S I S T E D L I V I N G HAMPLAIN VALLEY p AA rttaootped locally owned and owned and I N G S S I S T E raDted locally L I V family run community family run community
Wild parsnips.
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plants by ditch cleanings and for fill could also be a problem. If you get fill material from ditch cleanings, you may get the seeds with it, so keep your eyes open and take care of the problem before it spreads further. Remember this is nasty stuff, so be careful. If you see a plant and suspect it is one of these mentioned, please check with a professional before you touch it. Make sure you get it identified, then get some guidance from the Cornell Cooperative Extension staff on how to handle and dispose of it. Be safe, not sorry! My bush hog is fixed, and I can go back to mowing now. No nasty plants are near me so far, but I’ll keep a scrutinizing eye out for sure. ■
Essex County Health Priorities ... as identified in our 2016 Community Health Assessment
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Essex County Obesity Rates
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194283
14 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Stefanik checks in on dam progress in Willsboro stop Lawmaker staved off cuts to Lake Champlain Basin Program
sure that we have more environmentally-friendly policies when it comes to energy production,” Stefanik said. “I think we should continue moving down that path.” But the lawmaker, who has long criticized executive orders, said it was problematic that the Clean Power Plan is an administrative action by the Obama administration — not an act of Congress. “I think Congress needs to step up and make sure we are legislating on these issues,” Stefanik said. “But I agree generally with Sen. Schumer on the importance of making sure that we have standards in place so that it doesn’t impact the Adirondack region.” Stefanik said she has been “consistent and clear” to ensure environmental programs are fully funded, whether it’s opposing Trump’s proposed budget cuts to the EPA, or leading efforts on combating invasive species and ensuring continued federal funding for an acid rain monitoring program in Ray Brook.
By Pete DeMola EDITOR
WILLSBORO | Walking along a burbling river flowing through her adopted hometown, Rep. Elise Stefanik got a crash course in all-things aquatic, including the migration habits of salmon and habitat restoration. Stefanik worked with Rep. Peter Welch (D-VT) earlier this year to appropriate $8.4 million for the Lake Champlain Basin Program. President Trump had called for the program’s elimination, and the House Appropriations Committee met him halfway with a partial funding restoration. Stefanik and Welch doubled it. “This $8.4 million appreciation was the highest appropriation that we’ve ever received through the (Environmental Protection Agency),” said LCBP Program Director Eric Howe.
DAM REMOVAL
Funds for the program are used for regional efforts to preserve the watershed, including the removal of the former Willsboro Dam in 2015. Many dams no longer serve an ecological function, Howe said, and blocked water can prevent fish migration and lead to ice jams. Willsboro suffered flooding in 2011 from Tropical Storm Irene, Howe said, and removal of the dam will also allow for better flood resilience. “It looks fantastic,” Howe said. Scientists from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service also hope salmon migration upstream will eventually spur economic de-
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But critics say the lawmaker’s environmental record isn’t as strong as it could be. Julie Kasper, a member of Saratoga Unites, said the lawmaker voted last month to oppose a tax on carbon dioxide emissions. The Climate Solutions Caucus, she said, “failed miserably” on the vote. The non-binding resolution passed by a vote of 229-180 along party lines. “A carbon tax would be detrimental to the U.S. economy,” wrote Stefanik on Facebook, echoing House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, who declared a tax “detrimental to American families and businesses.” Stefanik noted she authored a resolution that calls on Congress to commit to working on “economically viable solutions that address the threat of climate change.” “However, I oppose a carbon tax that would increase the cost of energy for North Country families,” she said. Rep. Carlos Curbelo, a Florida Republican who founded the Climate Solutions Caucus, voted for the tax. “We do price carbon, we also repeal the gas tax, which is regressive and is unfair to low- and middle-income Americans who drive traditional vehicles like I do,” Curbelo told The Hill. Kasper also criticized Stefanik for walking a fine line when it comes to denouncing former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt. “I called her office, wrote her letters when Pruitt was just nominated, she remained SILENT,” Kasper wrote on Twitter. “I called when I saw the Trump budget, with 30%+ EPA budget cuts. I wrote to those ‘green groups’ to enlighten them on their paid ads w/ $tefanik support. Tired of the BS. GOP is Big Oil.” ■
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velopment through a resurgent fishing industry, including a return of the fish-to-table culture that thrived in the 1970s. LCBP is authorized to receive up to $11 million in federal funding annually. “We really worked on a bipartisan basis,” Stefanik said. “It’s a real win for the local community, but it’s example of federal dollars at work here.”
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Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) visited the site of the former Willsboro Dam on the Boquet River to check in on the federally-funded removal project. Photo by Pete DeMola
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194067
r i a F y t n u o C Essex
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The 170th Essex County Fair took place in Westport from Aug. 15 to 19. Photos by Jill Lobdell and Kim Dedam
The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 â&#x20AC;˘ 15
16 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
» Ausable vote Cont. from pg. 1 It’s only when one stops in the empty parking lot, walks on crumbling steps and paintedover doors, fights back hanging vines and peers through the dust-crusted windows that the building reveals its dilapidation. Inside, the paint on the walls is chipping, peeling or covered with graffiti. Tables are overturned, chairs scattered, a piece of artwork is missing its bottom half. When the building has been brought up to code, what happens to the aesthetics of the interior depends entirely on which developers choose to inhabit the structure, according to Senecal. “It will be (the occupant’s) responsibility to build out as they see fit,” Senecal said at a public meeting last week, after a resident asked whether the money would pay for aesthetic updates and outfitting. “We’re not making it pretty, we’re making it usable,” she later told The Sun. “It was a very vibrant place at one time. We’re trying
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to get that back.” Ideas floated in the past have included a community center with a gym for local children, affordable housing, retail space and using the building as the town’s offices. The building will likely remain off the tax rolls, and revenue — if any — would come through rental agreements with future tenants, according to Senecal. Town Councilman Steven Sucharski told residents that the building “would never support itself.” “There’s no guarantee with renting,” he said. Ausable voters will weigh in on the bond issue on Aug. 28. Polls are open noon to 8 p.m. at the civic center. The town’s tax levy for the general fund this year was $5.14 per $1,000 in assessed value, up 9 cents from 2017, not including special districts. The total tax levy was $1,397,745. ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read this article in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The Town of Ausable hosted two public information sessions ahead of a town-wide vote on whether or not to issue a $4.6 million bond for infrastructure upgrades at the Keeseville Civic Center. Dozens of residents attended to share their concerns about the associated tax increase and ask questions about the town’s plans for the building.
Photo by Elizabeth Izzo
The current state of the Keeseville Civic Center.
Photos by Elizabeth Izzo
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The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 17
PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • CLASSIC LYRICS
79. Sesame, e.g. 3. Ancient writings 60. Yak, yak, yak 80. Bar order 4. Intl. carrier 61. Getting it done on your 81. Setting of “The 5. Vane dir. own, abbreviation Across Crucible” 6. Berg material 63. 6th letter of the 1. Statehouse V.I.P. 83. Okla. neighbor 7. Garfield’s cry Hebrew alphabet 4. Go for a dip 84. Pat, a wound for 8. Vicious 64. Irritate 8. Gushing out example 9. Backing 67. Fit 15. Toronto media inits. 87. Bear-like 10. Employer number 69. Compass direction 18. Post office mailing 91. Boat with three tiers 11. Roll 70. Stuffed bear term of oars 12. Vow 71. Catwalk reject 21. Daughter of King 93. Pastoral 13. Compass direction 73. Safari member Minos 96. A Bobbsey twin 14. Grovel 74. Dissimilar 22. “...man ___ mouse?” 75. Ohio team, on score 23. Start of a Led Zeppelin 97. “We need to get a cat!” 15. Provide for free, 98. Little frog informally boards classic 101. Water action 16. A desperate housewife 76. Australian stock 25. Peace, in Russia 103. Parisian pal and a French cheese exchange, abbr. 26. Navy commando 104. Kind of income 17. Mystery writer John 77. Where Switz. is 27. CIA exec. 106. Stallion, once Dickson ___ 81. Footfall 28. Kind of berth 107. Gave it a go 19. Showy flower 82. Kind of rate 30. Enjoyed 109. Kimono sash 20. Top 85. Actress Jessica of 35. Prefix with -pathy 110. Some beans 24. Cpl.,e.g. “The Love Guru” 39. Failing grades 29. Tire pressure fig. 86. Utters loudly and 40. Department store sight 112. Neighbor of Turkey 113. Former Portuguese 31. Sight in the Seine indiscreetly 44. Gang land province 32. Jumper 88. ___ the kill 45. Pre-knotted tie 33. Little box 89. Dub 49. ‘’Horton Hears a ___’’ 116. Post-E.R. place 118. Exam for future J.D.’s 34. Like a coed’s place 90. Tennyson lady 50. Get used to it! 122. German “I” 36. Nip partner 92. Skirt style 51. Ross Sea sight 123. Lyric from a great 37. Old word meaning 93. In a bad way 53. Women’s tennis star John Lennon hit “before” 94. Gave a blow-by-blow Ivanovic 38. Not where it should be 95. ___-bitty 54. Mr. Potato Head piece 133. ____ Spectra 134. Hot 39. Biol. branch 99. Modern office staples 55. Any clever maneuver 135. Like Jerusalem’s 40. Porcelain piece 100. Queenside castle, in 57. Recesses Dome of the Rock 41. “Heartbreak House” chess notation 59. African nation 136. Hall-of-Fame writer 102. Record label inits. 62. Yang’s opposite outfielder Roush 42. Iron chef 105. Shelley’s “___ 63. Word on either side 137. Type of cottage 43. Scale twosome Skylark” of ‘’-a-’’ 46. Dog experimenter 108. Kind of diet 65. Letter-shaped opening 138. Maja painter 139. “Drums Along the 47. Early Ping-Pong score 111. Area of coll. study 66. Pretense SUDOKU by Myles and Flanagan113. Emcee’s need Mohawk” hero Mellor48. Big Susan name in magazine 68. Scorpion star 120. Type of berry 126. Manhattan addition 128. Shine, in product publishing 114. Like Wilde’s wit 72. Fool 121. Be a snitch 127. Empire State building names 52. Red rays 115. Neighbor of Libya 73. Last line of an Eagles Down 124. ___ hurry locale, briefly 129. Heart dr.’s order Each Sudoku puzzle consists of a 9X9 grid that has been subdivided into nine smaller 1. Transcript nos. 56. Ridiculous 117. Space visitor classic 125. Vision health care 130. OJ’s trial judge French river 58. Academy Awardseach row, 119. Performed grids of 2.3X3 squares. To solve the puzzle columna melody and box provider must contain each 78. Tolkien tree dweller by Myles Mellor
131. No, in Shakespeare’s English 132. Golf tour
of the numbers 1 to 9. Puzzles come in three grades: easy, medium and difficult. Level: Medium
SUDOKU
Complete the grids each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9
1
4 9 2
4
1 9
1
4
8
2
3
7
6 9 6 3
9 3
3
5 3 7
2
4 5 8
6
9 5
WORD SEARCH
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 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.
R E M O T E R L ADV MM p E p I B
s
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R N E D N I R
R A
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R E E N T A T I N I N G A P B I T A s I I 0 C MAY T s p u L L E D M I s E D A S M Y D T R U L Y I N 0 A RM 0 RMGGOFM A N 0 E S S N D H H E A G MMI A H E A I C R A A T 0 M N A E A S G I N Q u F T E N C V N R 0 E R T I C K E T s s C R E A E s N A B T E D u s T y p T D s T R I NG T H F 0 R N s L A X E D B I M E L T R I p p I
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••• See anSwerS to our puzzleS in back of the paper •••
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NYSCAN SEEKING LARGE ACREAGE Serious cash buyer seeks large acreage 200 acres and up in the Central/Finger Lakes/So. Tier & Catskills Regions of NY State. Brokers welcome. For prompt, courteous, confidential response, call 607-353-8068 or email Info@NewYorkLandandLakes.com Stay in your home longer with an American Standard Walk-In Bathtub. Receive up to $1,500 off, including a free toilet, and a lifetime warranty on the tub and installation! Call us at 1-844-286-6771 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! Call Today: 800-404-0244 GARAGE SALE
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CLASS A CDL DRIVER Local/Regional. Steady work. Home evenings and weekends. Full Time. Competitive Pay. Full Benefits $2500 SIGN ON BONUS Apply Giroux's Poultry Farm, Inc. 8957 Route 9 Chazy, NY 518-846-7300 Email:humanresources@girouxspoultry.com FULL TIME RESEARCHER Professional Office Position 8:00 am to 4:30 pm, M to F. Elizabethtown area. 4 yr. degree preferred and clean drivers license. Competitive salary and benefit package for the individual who is interested in a career. Please send letter of interest by email to holcombesearch@yahoo.com 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.
18 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
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HELP WANTED LOCAL
CADNET
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UNDER $1,000
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE DIRECTOR OF FINANCE (Controller): The Adirondack Mountain Reserve - Ausable Club, a historic private club located in St. Huberts (Keene Valley), NY, is seeking a Director of Finance (Controller). The Director of Finance will be responsible for directing the financial operations of the club; supervise the accounting functions and directly assist the General Manager on all strategic matters relating to budget management, cost-benefit analysis, forecasting needs and internal controls. Position is open due to a pending retirement and has not been open in over 30 years. This is a full-time annual salaried position with excellent benefits. Very competitive salary commensurate with experience. Job preview at https://tinyurl.com/AusableClub. Interested candidates may send a resume and letter of interest, including salary requirements, via email to employment@ausableclub.org. No phone calls please. The Ausable Club is an EOE.
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192540
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194076
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ESSEX, NY • $219,000 • MLS #R163709A 299 SCHOOL ST: 2-3 BR/2 FULL BA, rear deck & master BR w/views to Lake Champlain. Open floor plan. Stone patio, monitors, wood stove. Walk to Village. Cozy, turn-key.
Bruce Pushee, Associate Real Estate Broker (518) 873-6400 • bruce@friedmanrealty.net
Lauren Murphy, Licensed Real Estate Broker (518) 963-7876 • essexrealestate@westelcom.com
FRIEDMANREALTY.NET
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~ nynewspapers.com
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8-25-18 • 193441
Ifyouareanawesome salesperson looking for anawesome place to work,comeworkforus.
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193443
Ifyouareanawesome salesperson whowants tobehome every night, come workforus.
ELIZABETHTOWN CHARMER 3bd, 2ba old-style w/too many updates to list. Det cottage for guest quarters or studio.
LEWIS, NY • $48,000 • MLS #R163680A FOX RUN RD: Hunting camp/retreat. Set up for generator, propane stove and refrigerator. Bunk room. Fireplace construction started. Spring water.
193442
ELIZABEHTTOWN, NY • $147,500 • MLS #162964
193444
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REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS $25 PER MONTH INCLUDES HEADING, LOGO, CONTACT INFO (2 LINES) (Real Estate Classifieds will appear on the same page beneath the directory.) CONTACT SHANNON CHRISTIAN 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 shannonc@suncommunitynews.com
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CLINTON COUNTY TRANSACTIONS DATE
GRANTOR
GRANTEE
LOCATION
PRICE
06/18/18
Donna M. Depasquale
Christopher L. Gadway
Altona
$187,800
06/18/18
Marita Boulos
Patrick J. Ajmo
Rouses Point
$138,000
06/18/18
John A. Coffman
James Menard
Champlain
$130,000
06/18/18
Brian H. Lapier
John Mccarty
Schuyler Falls
$244,000
06/18/18
Kimberly A. Dragoon
Keanan S. Spurdens
Mooers
$252,500
06/19/18
Christopher D. Kreig
Troy Anderson
Plattsburgh
$294,000
06/19/18
Andrew P. Vincelette
Brian J. Bessey
Rouses Point
$112,800
06/19/18
Bruce K. Furman
Tyler Hargraves
Plattsburgh
$129,500
06/19/18
LCM Holdings, LLC
Robert P. Donlan LLC
Plattsburgh
$240,000
06/20/18
Raymond Salvatore Holding
Pierre Charles
Plattsburgh
$60,000
06/20/18
Bryan Yanulavich
R.t. Steele Inc.
Plattsburgh
$30,000
06/21/18
Timothy Brian Mihuc
Joshua F. Beatty
Plattsburgh
$146,500
06/21/18
Robert J. Rusnak
Claude R. Roland
Schuyler Falls
$215,000
06/21/18
Diane L. Adamson
Marcus I. Maidelis
Black Brook
$221,500
06/22/18
Leslie D. Marcaurelle
Tommy R. Ondras
Rouses Point
$145,000
ESSEX COUNTY TRANSACTIONS DATE
GRANTOR
The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 19
GRANTEE
LOCATION
PRICE
04/30/18
David Dewsnap
Matthew Liamero
Lake Placid
$360,000
04/30/18
Luc Menard
Constance Smith
Chesterfield
$85,000
04/30/18
F Thomas Clark
Chad Carr
Elizabethtown
05/01/18
Kenneth Buckley
Derek Mckeown
Ticonderoga
$180,000
HOMES
2006 BRECKENRIDGE PARK MODEL Trailer w/ Loft, 12x12, Screened Porch, Hearth Stone Gas Fireplace, Metal Roof, Furnished, Ex. Cond., Must be Moved, Asking $29.900. 518-298-3005
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MOBILE HOME
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
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 1-844-258-8586 AIRLINE CAREERS BEGIN HERE Get FAA approved Aviation Tech training. Financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 1-866-296-7094 www.FixJets.com AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Get FAA approved hands on Aviation training. Financial aid for qualified students - Career placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-866-296-7094. 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 CHEAP AIRLINE FLIGHTS! We get deals like no other agency. Call today to learn more. Call Now 1-866-827-6938 DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 855-434-9221 or http://www.dental50plus.com/44 DISH TV - Over 190 Channels Now ONLY $59.99/mo! 2yr price guarantee, FREE Installation! Save HUNDREDS over Cable and DIRECTV. Add Internet as low as $14.95/mo! 1-800-871-1312
HIRING CHAMPLAIN VALLEY SENIOR COMMUNITY
ASSISTED LIVING & MEMORY CARE 10 Gilliland Ln., Willsboro, NY 12996 www.Champlainassistedliving.com
• CNA / HHA • ELDERLY CAREGIVER
STARTING WAGE
$14 PER HR.
Call Email
Doug at (518) 817-9108 ext. 403 jobs@champlainassistedliving.com 193893
WE ARE
HIRING
$92,220
Get your hands dirty while gaining a new set of skills as a
PRODUCTION TRAINEE
05/01/18
Barbara Fowler Houston
Justin Harrison
Keene
$975,000
05/01/18
Elizabeth Eldridge
Stuart Amoriell
North Elba
$585,000
05/01/18
Alfred Engel
Kailyn Walker-Law
St. Armand
$25,000
Yes, we’ll provide you with the best hands-on training!
05/02/18
WHF Inc
David Goetzmann
Lake Placid
$405,000
05/02/18
Gaye O'Neil
Dean Kidder
St. Armand
$115,000
This is a great opportunity to work for a growing independently owned company that has been around for over 70 years, with an excellent business and fi nancial reputation.
05/03/18
Timothy Burke
Albert William Weber
Essex
$210,000
05/03/18
Steven Hilbert
Sara-Placid Inn & Suites Inc
Saranac Lake
$969,999
05/03/18
Harry Treadway
Jeffrey Marchant
Ticonderoga
$33,250
05/04/18
James Virmala
Gabrielle Seltzer
Moriah
$21,000
05/04/18
Linda Milsom
Dara Sullivan
Schroon
$35,000
05/07/18
Patricia Urban
Scott Macdougal
Moriah
$90,000
Get in touch, call (518) 873-6368 x224 or submit an application bill@suncommunitynews.com
14 Hand Avenue, Elizabethtown, New York 12932 jobs@suncommunitynews.com
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Mountain Lake Services seeks an HR Specialist needed for a fast paced Human Resource Office in Port Henry. Responsibilities for this entry level position include, performing general clerical, administrative and receptionist duties.
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Seeking an energetic and committed professional to work in a dynamic organization supporting individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Responsibilities: Assist with the administrative oversight of Clinical Services. Ensure coordination and delivery of services for individuals served according to regulatory requirements. Oversee Informed Rights Specialist. Prepare clinical and behavioral assessments as needed. Provide preliminary evaluations for new admissions and supervise intake and discharges of individuals served. Chair the Sexual Advocacy and Rights Committee and Human Rights Committee. Experience in the field of intellectual and development disabilities preferred. Bachelor’s degree required, Masters in Social Work or related field preferred. Competitive salary commensurate with education and experience and excellent fringe benefit package.
Nursing Manager - Seeking an energetic and committed professional to work in a dynamic organization supporting individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Responsibilities include: day-to-day supervision and oversight of the delivery of health services, supervising, planning, organizing and assigning responsibilities for all RNs and LPNs, conducting on-site inspections and reviews to ensure compliance with agency standards and serving as a liaison for medical issues and concerns with the Clinical Director, Directors, pharmacies and hospital personnel as needed. RN license to practice in New York State required. Master’s Degree in a related field and 3-5 years of administrative experience preferred. Knowledge of medical/ clinical services delivery needs. A Bachelor’s Degree may be acceptable given appropriate experience. At least two years supervisory experience in a clinical or agency setting preferred. Competitive salary commensurate with education and experience and excellent fringe benefit package.
Must be able to interface with insurance and health care providers as necessary. High School diploma required, Associates or equivalent degree preferred. General office experience required. Proficiency in computer software use including data base management and information processing. Use of office machines, as well as superior interpersonal and communication skills necessary. Excellent fringe benefit package.
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194331
Please apply to: Mountain Lake Services Human Resources 10 St. Patrick’s Place, Port Henry, NY 12974 www.mountainlakeservices.org EOE
Employment Services Manager needed to provide management oversight to Supported Employment Services in Essex County. Responsibilities include managing contracts and related funding, assisting in coordination of job development and coaching activities; coordinating with other Agency programs, local businesses and other providers. Work schedule will be flexible and will include some evenings and weekends. Bachelors Degree and drivers license with a clean driving record required. Experience working with people with developmental disabilities and previous knowledge/experience in a Supported Employment environment preferred. Competitive salary - Outstanding benefit package.
Apply to: Human Resource Office Mountain Lake Services 10 St. Patrick’s Place Port Henry, NY 12974 (518) 546-7721 • www.mountainlakeservices.org EOE
194403
20 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
FCPNY
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DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes.Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 1-855-587-1166
Earthlink High Speed Internet. As low as $14.95/ month (for the first 3 months) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink today 1-866- 586-9798
HOTELS FOR HEROES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org
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DENTAL Insurance Physicians Mutual Insurance Company
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A less expensive way to help get the dental care you deserve
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*Individual plan. Product not available in MN, MT, NH, NM, RI, VT, WA. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN) 6096E-0917 MB17-NM008Ec
Local Job Openings Near You
— Part Time Driver Wanted —
Get access to relevant local jobs, plus fresh jobs from ZipRecruiter. 193466
We have an opening for a truck driving position delivering newspapers to Post offices and sales offices. Applicants should have a clean driving record, knowledge of all highway rules, be able to get a DOT Physical and Medical Card, and be comfortable driving a delivery truck with a 26’ box. Must be able to load and unload wheeled postal cages and hand unload bundles of newspapers into offices.
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Job Responsibilities
Perform electrical and mechanical production assembly work according to engineering drawings, product specifications and quality standards. The Assembler is responsible for his/her own quality of work and must meet company and ISO standards.
This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year-old independently owned company with an excellent business and financial reputation.
Get Your Resume Seen
• Basic computer skills. • Must be detail oriented.
If you believe you have the qualifications necessary to fill this position or have skills you feel we could use in our firm, please submit your resume including compensation requirements.
Create a profile and upload your resume so that local employers can easily find you.
• Must ensure inventory accuracy.
Job Experiences • Solid Basic knowledge of blue prints schematics reading. • Basic mechanical aptitude. • Electrical and mechanical troubleshooting. • Wiring harnessing; crimping, soldering, wire routing, etc.
Generous hourly wage, shared cost health insurance, paid days off, matching retirement program and life insurance. Come in and talk to:
193465
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185908
Go to jobs.suncommunitynews.com and click on the Jobs tab
THE SUN
C O M M U N I T Y
N E W S
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Bill Coats, Operations Manager or call 518-873-6368 x224 Denton Publications (The Sun) PO Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932 E-mail: bill@denpubs.com
192835
Please feel free to stop by the office located at 109 West Bay Plaza Plattsburgh, NY to fill out an application and have an interview with one of our recruiters. Send Resume to: holly.black@protech-solutions.net
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FREE Information Kit www.dental50plus.com/cadnet
• Familiarity with transit and transportation realm
Job Requirements
cleanings, exams, fillings, crowns…even dentures
you can receive
1-877-308-2834
• Minimum 2 years experience electrical testing
• Must be able to read drawings and electrical schematics. • Solid understanding of electrical circuitry • Must have good mechanical skills. • Must be safety conscious. • Must be willing to be part of a TEAM. • Be able to lift 40 lbs. • Successfully pass initial and random drug screenings.
Coverage for over 350 procedures including
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• Associates Degree in Engineering, Technology or related field OR electrical apprenticeship program required
Send Resume to: holly.black@protech-solutions.net
No wait for preventive care and no deductibles –
Keep your own dentist! You can go to any dentist you want
Qualifications:
Relocation Assistance, Health, Dental & Vision Insurance, paid holidays & vacation
If you’re over 50, you can get coverage for about
$1 a day*
Looking for a New Career?
Summary/Objective: The electrical test technician conducts, tests and completes data collection activities of industrial/ utility vehicles, related equipment and component systems. The position fabricates prototype components and test fixtures for lab and field testing and performs installations and repairs of test equipment and components when necessary.
SPORTS REPORTER Sun Community News, a nationally award-winning community news organization, has an opening on its team for a sports reporter to cover high school sports across the region.
WEARE
HIRING
The ideal candidate should be knowledgeable about and interested in the variety of sports played in local schools. This position requires writing on tight deadlines, breaking news and producing engaging feature stories that focus on games, players, coaches and rules surrounding various sports. Digital photography experience is required. Video experience is also an asset. The ideal candidate understands the difference in writing for various social platforms and has the ability to engage and grow a digital audience.
WEB PRESSMAN Looking for a new career with strong mechanical skills?
Unable to make a full-time commitment? No problem! We’re also looking for freelancers and correspondents to join our growing team. Here’s what we’re looking for:
As we prepare for another expansion of our commercial web printing department, we are looking for experienced web pressmen to assist in our growing shop. Embracing new technology and new methods along with high-quality process color reproduction will be required. Health insurance, paid days off, matching retirement program and life insurance.
〉〉 Three to five years of experience covering high school sports 〉〉 Education should consist of a bachelor’s degree in journalism or related field or equivalent work experience 〉〉 Demonstrated expertise in creating and editing content for print, web and social media on tight deadlines 〉〉 Strong news judgment and sense of what will resonate with the audience
Send resume to:
〉〉 Strong attention to detail and AP style
Bill Coats Sun Community News & Printing P.O. Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932
〉〉 The ability to develop and maintain relationships with coaches, administrators, athletes and parents 〉〉 In-depth knowledge of local area sports, teams, players, coaches, rivalries 〉〉 The ability to take photos for galleries and to enhance stories 〉〉 Video footage and develop ability for live broadcast
or E-mail to:
〉〉 Page layout experience is a plus
bill@suncommunitynews.com
Working conditions include: frequent standing, walking, sitting, talking, listening, substantial outdoor work in all weather conditions.
This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year old independently owned company with an excellent business and fi nancial reputation. Our only limits are the extent of the vision of our staff. Quit the rat race and start having fun again with a company that is as concerned about your growth as it is about its own. If you believe you have the qualifications necessary to fi ll one of these positions, please submit your resume including compensation requirements.
Working hours are usually between 2:30 and 11 p.m. This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year-old independently owned company with an excellent business and financial reputation. Sun Community News and Printing is locally owned and committed to providing news, sports coverage and information to the communities within our region. No corporate edicts, no staff furloughs — and no decisions are made from outside our local management team. We do community reporting the way it was meant to be done. Generous wage, health insurance, paid time off, 401K and life insurance offered. This position is based out of our Plattsburgh Office. Please submit a cover letter, resume and samples or links of your work to: Managing Editor Pete DeMola, Sun Community News, P. O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 or email pete@suncommunitynews.com
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JOSEPH CONLEY, DeNA Plaintiff, v. Collector. JEFFERY S. DAVEY, et fendant(s). Installment payment of Pursuant to a Judgment al., Defendants. taxes shall be due in NOTICE OF SALE IN of Foreclosure and Sale three (3) payments on entered on July 09, FORECLOSURE following 2018. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Published by Denton Publications, Inc. www.suncommunitynews.com The Valley News Sun | the August 25, 2018dates: • 21 September 30, 2018, THAT I, the undersigned Ref- WESTPORT CENTRAL October 15, 2018 and In pursuance of a Judg- eree will sell at public SCHOOL ment of Foreclosure and auction at the Essex TAX COLLECTION NO- November 1, 2018. The FCPNY FCPNY FCPNY HOME IMPROVEMENTS payment of the first inCourthouse, TICE Sale entered in the Of- County 7559 Court Street, Eliza- In accordance with Sec- stallment by the taxpayfice of the County CENTRAL BOILERClerkCERTIFIED Reverse Mortgage: Homeowners VACATION HOME, CAMP OR Start Saving BIG on Medications! tion 1322 of the Real er eligible for installment bethtown, N.Y. on the of Essex County on June Classic Edge OUTDOOR FURExt. 201 LAND FOR SALE OR RENT? age 62+ tun your home equity into Up to 90% Savings from 90payments shall be con10th day of September, Property Tax Law, notice 25, 2018, I, William NACES. Exceptional performance Advertise with us! We connect you tax-free cash! Speak with an expert DAYMEDS! Over 3500 Medications “We’re moregiven than newspaper, is hereby thatathe clusive evidence of an Russell, Esq.,Adirondack the Refer- Hardware 2018 at 11:00 a.m. and value. with nearly 3-million consumers today and receive a free booklet. Available! 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Visit AdNetworkNY.com or American Standard Walk-In BathSudoku Solution stallment payments shall Westport, NY during the house, 7559 Court and State of New York. Healthcare to qualify for CPAP call 315-437-6173 tub. Receive up to $1500 off, inrender the taxpayer inelifollowing public hours: Street, Elizabethtown, Said premises known as supplies for little or no cost in cluding a free toilet, and lifetime gible to participate in in7019 NYS Route 9N 4:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. County of Essex, State minutes. Home Delivery, Healthy warranty on the tub and installa1 York, 7 6 8at 411:00 5 2 F/K/A 9 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for 1162 Route 9N, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. stallment payments for NOTICE OF SALE of 3New Sleep Guide and More- FREE!! Our tion! Call us at 1-855-465-5426 September 13 & 27, the following school fisSUPREME COURT $99. - 100 pills for $150 FRE03 A.M., N.Y. 12993. 6 8the9 premises 5 2 1 de4 3 Westport, 7 customer care agents await your shipping. Money back UNABLE TO WORK DUE TO cal year. COUNTY OF ESSEX (Section: 66.1, Block: 1, 2018 scribed as2 follows: call. 1-888-689-4341 4 5 9 3 7 6 8 1 guaranteed! Call now Save INJURY OR ILLNESS? Bill NATIONAL September 8, 22 & 29, The first installment payLot: 41.000). U.S. Call BANK 66 Water Street 1 2 6 4 7 5 NY 3 9 Approximate 8 Gordon & Assoc., Social Security ment shall equal fifty amount of 2018 ASSOCIATION, AS 1-800-870-8711 Elizabethtown, Spectrum Triple Play! TV, Internet Disability Attorneys! FREE FOR C-BASS percent (50%) of the toCloudspin Contracting TRUSTEE October 25, 2018 12932 8 3 5 2 9 6 7 1 lien 4 $ 46,269.61 plus in& Voice for $29.99ea. 60 MBLLC, per Arts ofEvaluation. Attorneys LOAN AStal taxes due, payable on October 13 & 27, 2018 and costs. SBL7 No.: Org filedLocalMORTGAGE 9 55.75-3-9 4 8 1 3 2 6 terest 5 second speed. No contractwith or SSNY on Nationwide Taxes paid on or before September 30, 2018. Premises will be sold ALL THAT TRACT OF SET-BACKED CERTIFI07/17/18.1-800-919-8208 BUY-SELL-TRADE 9 4 3 1 5 2 8 7 6 commitment. More channels. [Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington PARCEL OF LAND situ- subject to provisions of September 30, 2018 will The second installment Off. Loc.: Essex County, CATES, SERIES 2007Faster Internet. Unlimited Voice. DC. Office: Broward Co. FL With The Classifieds SP2, judgment and NOT be charged with payment shall equal fifty ate 5 in7 the 1 3Village 6 8 and 9 4 filed 2 SSNY designated as Call 1-888- 383-5155 agent of LLC upon (TX/NM Bar.)] NOTICE OF Ext. FORMATION Plaintiff, penalty. Taxes paid Oc- percent (50%) of the reof sale. Town 1-518-873-6368 201 2 6of 8Elizabethtown, 7 4 9 1 5 terms 3 tober 1 through October maining taxes due, plus OF SCN Properties, LLC. County of Essex and Index No. CV17-0324. whom process against it Against interest, payable on or PORTER, Articles of Organization Bryan J. Hughes, Esq., 31, 2018 will be charged State of New York may be served. SSNY WAYNE October 15, PORTER, ET were filed with a 2% penalty. Tax- before LEGALS Referee. LEGALS with the Sec- The premises shall mailLEGALS a copy of pro- SHALONIE LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALSare sold LEGALS es paid November 1, 2018. The third and ficess to: The LLC, P.O. AL., Stern & Eisenberg, PC retary of State on June subject to the provisions Adirondack Tree Solu- Box 925, Lake Placid, Defendant(s). 2018 will be charged a nal installment payment 22, 2018. The office of of the filed judgment, In- Attorney(s) for Plaintiff tions LLC Arts. of Org. NY 12946. Purpose: to shall be the remainder of Index No.: 518/2012 3% interest penalty. the Company is to be lo- dex No. CV16-0168 in Woodbridge Corporate filed w/ SSNY 7/25/18. Pursuant to a Judgment Taxpayers who owe tax- taxes, plus interest, engage in any lawful act. cated in Essex County. amount of Plaza the Off. in Essex Co. SSNY VN-08/04-09/08/2018es in excess of fifty dol- payable on or before of Foreclosure and Sale, The Secretary of State is $91,536.47 plus interest 485 B Route 1 South desig. as agt. of LLC duly granted 6/22/2018, designated as agent of and costs. lars ($50) may elect to November 1, 2018, 6TC-192180 Suite 330 whom process may be Company upon pay their taxes in one (1) which shall be the date Tammy L. Garcia-Klipfel, Iselin, NJ 08830 Lexington Asset Man- I, the undersigned Ref- the served. SSNY shall mail for the expiration of the whom process against it Esq. full payment or in three (732) 582-6344 agement, LLC, Arts of eree, will sell at public process to the LLC, 61 Interest may be served. The ad- Woods Oviatt Gilman For sale information, (3) installments as fol- tax warrant. Org. filed with Sec. of auction at the Essex Indian Bay Rd., Willspayable on the installCounty Courthouse, dress to which the Sec- LLP please visit www.auc- lows: State of NY (SSNY) boro, NY 12996. Purment payments shall be tion.com or call 800- Full payment shall be 7/16/2018. Cty: Essex. 7559 Court Street, Eliza- retary of State shall mail Plaintiff's Attorney pose: any lawful activity. as prescribed by New due and payable by the bethtown, NY, on a copy of any process to 700 Crossroads Build- 280-2832 SSNY desig. as agent VN-08/04-09/08/20189/6/2018 at 10:00 am, the LLC is P.O. Box 338, close of business on York State Statute Real VN-08/11-09/01/2018ing, 2 State St. upon whom process 6TC-191983 November 1, 2018. All Property 924-1 however 4TC-192661 against may be served & premises known as 45 14 Hand Avenue, Eliza- Rochester, New York taxpayers, except as in- the interest rate shall be shall mail process to Woodlawn Lane, Wills- bethtown, New York. 14614 Upper Meadow LLC, dicated below, who fail no less than twelve per2577 Main St., Ste. 201, boro, NY 12996, and de- The purpose of the busi- Tel.: 855-227-5072 Arts of Org filed with to make payment of the All From The Woods cent (12%) per annum. ness of the Company is VN-8/25-9/15-194226 scribed as follows: Lake Placid, NY 12946. SSNY on 07/10/18. Off. tax in full by September That the interest rate LLC Articles of Org. any lawful business. ALL that certain plot, SUPREME COURT General Purpose Loc.: Essex County, Filed NY Sec. Of State shall be one-twelfth the 30, 2018 by the close of piece or parcel of land, VN-07/21-08/25/2018COUNTY OF ESSEX U.S. SSNY designated as (SSNY) 6/19/2018. Of- VN-07/28-09/01/2018rate as prescribed in with the buildings and business shall be 6TC-190816 TRUST, N.A. AS BANK 6TC-191646 agent of LLC upon fice in Essex C. SSNY improvements thereon TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 whom process against it charged a penalty of New York State Statute STATE OF NEW YORK desig. Agent of LLC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- erected, situate, lying PARTICIPA- may be served. SSNY current %, which penal- Real Property 924-1 SUPREME COURT: MASTER whom process may be EN that the Town Board and being in the Town of COUNTY OF ESSEX ty shall be added to the which shall be added for TION TRUST, Plaintiff shall mail a copy of pro- tax by the Tax Collector served. SSNY shall mail of the Town of Keene each month or fraction Willsboro, County of Es- WELLS FARGO BANK, against cess to: The LLC, 3 Lor- and collected by the Tax process to PO Box 556, has set Tuesday, sex and State of New NA Plaintiff, v. thereof until such taxes JOSEPH CONLEY, De- ing St, Auburn, MA Lewis, NY 12950. Pur- September 11th and Collector. are paid. York Section 31.13 JEFFERY S. DAVEY, et fendant(s). 01501. Purpose: to en- Installment payment of Taxes may be mailed to: pose: any lawful pur- Tuesday, September Block 6 Lot 24.200. Pursuant to a Judgment al., Defendants. any lawful act. gage in pose. Principal business 18th, at 6:00 PM, at the The approximate taxes shall be due in Serene-Lee Holland, Tax NOTICE OF SALE IN of Foreclosure and Sale VN-08/04-09/08/2018location: 23 Jeffrey Way, Keene Town Hall, as the amount of the current Collector 25 Sisco Street three (3) payments on entered on July 09, 6TC-192182 FORECLOSURE Lewis, NY 12950 time and place to meet Judgment lien is PLEASE TAKE NOTICE the following dates: Westport, NY 12993. 2018. VN-07/28-09/01/2018for the purpose of con- $108,761.99 plus inter- THAT Unpaid taxes on NovemSeptember 30, 2018, I, the undersigned Ref- WESTPORT CENTRAL 6TC-191414 ducting budget work- est and costs. ber 2, 2013 will be delivOctober 15, 2018 and The In pursuance of a Judg- eree will sell at public SCHOOL shops for the 2019 Fis- premises will be sold ered for relevy to the ofment of Foreclosure and auction at the Essex TAX COLLECTION NO- November 1, 2018. The cal Budget. payment of the first in- fice of the Essex County Courthouse, TICE FORMATION OF CALDE- A special meeting will be subject to provisions of Sale entered in the Of- County the aforesaid Judgment fice of the County Clerk 7559 Court Street, Eliza- In accordance with Sec- stallment by the taxpay- Treasurer. RIA LLC filed with the held Thursday, October of Foreclosure and Sale; of Essex County on June tion 1322 of the Real er eligible for installment LT-8/25/18-194293 bethtown, N.Y. on the Secy. of State of NY 4th at 6:00 PM, also at Index # 518/2012. payments shall be con10th day of September, Property Tax Law, notice 25, 2018, I, William (SSNY) on 7/13/18. Of- the Keene Town Hall, for If the sale is set aside clusive evidence of an Russell, Esq., the Refer- 2018 at 11:00 a.m. is hereby given that the fice loc.: Essex County. the purpose of the Town intention to pay school for any reason, the Pur- ee named in said Judg- premises described as tax roll and warrant has SSNY designated as Clerks filing of the 2019 chaser at the sale shall ment, will sell in one real property taxes in inTaxes follows: All that certain been received. agent of LLC upon Tentative Budget to the Any late be entitled only to a re- parcel at public auction piece or parcel of land, may be paid in person at stallments. whom process against it Town Board. Ellen S. turn of the deposit paid. situate in the Tow of the Westport Central payment of ten (10) on September 25, 2018 may be served. The ad- Estes, Town Clerk The Purchaser shall at Essex County Court- Westport, County Essex School 25 Sisco Street days of more of the indress SSNY shall mail August 16, 2018 have no further recourse stallment payments shall Westport, NY during the house, 7559 Court and State of New York. process to Stefan Beck, VN-08/25/2018-1TCagainst the Mortgagor, Street, render the taxpayer ineli- WILDERNESS VAN LLC following public hours: Elizabethtown, Said premises known as 36 Coal Way, Upper Jay, 194106 gible to participate in in- Articles of Org. filed NY the Mortgagee or the County of Essex, State 7019 NYS Route 9N 4:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Purpose: NY 12987. F/K/A 1162 Route 9N, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. stallment payments for Sec. of State (SSNY) NOTICE OF SALE Mortgagees attorney. of New York, at 11:00 Any lawful activity. SUPREME COURT - Kristine K. Flower, Esq., September 13 & 27, the following school fis- 7/20/2018. Office in EsA.M., the premises de- Westport, N.Y. 12993. VN-07/28-09/01/2018Referee. cal year. COUNTY OF ESSEX (Section: 66.1, Block: 1, 2018 scribed as follows: sex Co. SSNY desig. 6TC-191245 Leopold & Associates, 66 Water Street Lot: 41.000). September 8, 22 & 29, The first installment pay- agent of LLC whom proU.S. BANK NATIONAL ment shall equal fifty AS PLLC, 80 Business Park Elizabethtown, NY Approximate amount of 2018 ASSOCIATION, cess may be served. percent (50%) of the to- SSNY shall mail process Cloudspin Contracting lien $ 46,269.61 plus in- October 25, 2018 TRUSTEE FOR C-BASS Drive, Suite 110, Ar- 12932 tal taxes due, payable on to PO Box 162, Wilmingterest and costs. October 13 & 27, 2018 SBL No.: 55.75-3-9 MORTGAGE LOAN AS- monk, NY 10504 LLC, Arts of Org filed PB September 30, 2018. Taxes paid on or before Premises will be sold ALL THAT TRACT OF with SSNY on 07/17/18. SET-BACKED CERTIFI- Dated: 7/18/2018 ton, NY 12997. PurPARCEL OF LAND situ- subject to provisions of September 30, 2018 will The second installment pose: Any lawful purOff. Loc.: Essex County, CATES, SERIES 2007- VN-08/04-08/25/20184TC-192183 SP2, judgment and NOT be charged with payment shall equal fifty filed ate in the Village and SSNY designated as pose. Principal business NOTICE OF FORMATION Plaintiff, penalty. Taxes paid Oc- percent (50%) of the re- location: 5768 NYS Town of Elizabethtown, terms of sale. agent of LLC upon taxes due, plus maining tober 1 through October OF SCN Properties, LLC. County of Essex and Index No. CV17-0324. whom process against it Against Route 86 Wilmington, interest, payable on or NY 12997. PORTER, Articles of Organization Bryan J. Hughes, Esq., 31, 2018 will be charged State of New York may be served. SSNY WAYNE October 15, before Referee. with a 2% penalty. Taxshall mail a copy of pro- SHALONIE PORTER, ET were filed with the Sec- The premises are sold VN-08/11-09/15/2018Stern & Eisenberg, PC es paid November 1, 2018. The third and fi- 6TC-193068 cess to: The LLC, P.O. AL., retary of State on June subject to the provisions nal installment payment 2018 will be charged a 22, 2018. The office of of the filed judgment, In- Attorney(s) for Plaintiff Box 925, Lake Placid, Defendant(s). shall be the remainder of Index No.: 518/2012 3% interest penalty. NY 12946. Purpose: to the Company is to be lo- dex No. CV16-0168 in Woodbridge Corporate Pursuant to a Judgment Taxpayers who owe tax- taxes, plus interest, engage in any lawful act. cated in Essex County. the amount of Plaza es in excess of fifty dol- payable on or before of Foreclosure and Sale, The Secretary of State is $91,536.47 plus interest 485 B Route 1 South VN-08/04-09/08/2018duly granted 6/22/2018, designated as agent of and costs. Suite 330 lars ($50) may elect to November 1, 2018, 6TC-192180 Company upon I, the undersigned Ref- the pay their taxes in one (1) which shall be the date Tammy L. Garcia-Klipfel, Iselin, NJ 08830 for the expiration of the process against it Esq. (732) 582-6344 full payment or in three eree, will sellWalk-In at public Tubsare Yourwhom BestCh,olce Interest may be served. The ad- Woods Oviatt Gilman For sale information, (3) installments as fol- tax warrant. auction at D the Essex O payable on the installCounty Courthouse, dress to which the Sec- LLP please visit www.auc- lows: Get FAA approved maintenance ment payments shall betraining at campuses shall mail Plaintiff's Attorney tion.com or call 800- Full payment shall be 7559 Court Street, Eliza- retary of State fJ ~~~:r/~;:.":~,\~~:asy / / coast Job placement assistance. prescribed by New ONY, Patented Quick due and payable by the toascoast. bethtown, on Drain•a copy 1of any process to 700 Crossroads Build- 280-2832 fastwaterremoval system Yorkqualifying State Statute Real Financial Aid for students. Military friendly. the LLC is P.O. Box 338, 9/6/2018 at Ill 10:00 am, VN-08/11-09/01/2018close of business on ing, 2 State St. LifetimeWarranty onthebathAND 14labor Hand premises knowninstallation, as 45INCLUDING 4TC-192661 November 1, 2018. All Property 924-1 however Rochester, New York backed Avenue, Elizathe interest rate shallof beMaintenance Institute bethtown, New York. 14614 taxpayers, except asCall in- Aviation Woodlawn Lane,byAmerican Wills-Standard Ill 44and Hydrotherapy jetsfor an The purpose of the busi- Tel.: 855-227-5072 boro, NY 12996, de-massage dicated below, who fail no less than twelve perinvigorating cent (12%) per annum. to make payment of the ness of the Company is VN-8/25-9/15-194226 scribed as follows: p. ~ 193914 tax in full by September That the interest rate anyBIii lawful business. ALL that certain plot, l!:!111 shall be one-twelfth the 30, 2018 by the close of piece or parcel of land, VN-07/21-08/25/2018rate as prescribed in with the buildings and business shall be 6TC-190816 improvements thereon charged a penalty of New York State Statute current %, which penal- Real Property 924-1 erected, situate, lying Mutualshall Insurance Company which be added for FREE ty shall be added toPhysicians the and being in the Town of Information Kit each month or fraction A less expensive way to help Willsboro, County of *Free Es- Vehicle/Boat Pickup tax by the Tax Collector ANYWHERE thereof such taxes the dental careuntil you deserve! and collected by theget Tax sex and State of New *We Accept All Vehicles ,;;a., 31.13 are paid. ~ ~,Collector. York Section Runningor Not CALL Block 6 Lot 24.200. * FullyTax Deductible Installment payment of Taxes may be mailed to: NOW! Make-A-Wish® Holland, Tax The approximate taxes shall be due in Serene-Lee Get help paying dental bills and keep moneyStreet in Collector 25more Sisco three (3) payments amountNew of theYork current ~ Northeast your pocketon *' Westport, NY 12993. Judgment lien is the followingThis is dates: real dental insurance — NOT just a discount plan 1-855-225-1434 Unpaid taxes on NovemWheelsForWishes.org $108,761.99 plus interSeptember 30, You can2018, get coverage before your next checkup Visit us online at ber 2, 2013 will be delivOctober 15, 2018 and est and The Don’t wait! Call now and we’ll rush you a FREE Call:costs. (518) 650-1110 www.dental50plus.com/nypress ered relevy Information Kit withfor all the details.to the ofNovember 1, 2018. The premises will be sold * Car Donation Foundation d/bla Wheels For Wishes. To learn mor e about our programs Policy P150NY MB17-NM003Ec fice of the Essex County or financialto information, visit www.whedsforwishes.org. subject provisions of payment ofInsurance 6129the first installment by the taxpay- Treasurer. the aforesaid Judgment er eligible for installment LT-8/25/18-194293 of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 518/2012. payments shall be conIf the sale is set aside clusive evidence of an County• 150+ Parcels Available intention toSt. pay Lawrence school for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall real property taxes in installments. Any late be entitled only to a reRegistration: 8:00 AM • Auction Start: l 0:00 AM payment of ten (10) turn of the deposit paid. Location: Lockwood Arena days of more of the inThe Purchaser shall 14 l W. River Street, Ogdensburg, NY 13669 have no further recourse stallment payments shall “2-Night Free against Vacation!” Pre-Auction Bidder'sEducationalSeminar:Monday, August 27 at 6:00 PM the Mortgagor, render the taxpayer ineligible to participate in in- For comp lete information, visit the Mortgagee or the UCTIONS stallment payments forwww.auctionsin t erna tiona l.com Mortgagees attorney. or ca ll Auct ioneer Kristine(2628) K. Flower, Esq., the following school fisRJ Klisiewicz, AMM • 800 -536-140 l , Ext. 1 1O INTERNATIONAL Referee. cal year. w w w.boatangel.com COMMUNITY NEWS & PRINTING The first installment payLeopold & Associates, sponsored by boat angel outreach centers STOP CRIMES AGAINST CHILDREN PLLC, 80 Business Park ment shall equal fifty Drive, Suite 110, Arpercent (50%) of the total taxes due, payable on monk, NY 10504 Dated: 7/18/2018 PB September 30, 2018.
BUY IT! SELL IT! FIND IT! 518-873-6368
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22 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The Valley News Sun | August 25, 2018 • 23
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HUGESELECTIONOF PRE-OWNEDVEHICLESALLMAKES& MODELS 11
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2014Buick Lacrosse
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2017FordEscape
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MON-THURS: 9:00AM-7:00PM.FRI: 9:00AM-6:00PM SAT: 9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED
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192321
24 • August 25, 2018 | The Valley News Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
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.,,. DLR#3160003
7618 US Route 9, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 518-873-6551 • 800-559-6551
igfl DLR#7095376
Home for your Ford Since 1910
eaks Ford EGGLEFIELD
1190 NYS Route 86, Ray Brook, NY 12977 518-891-5560
BROS. INC.
www.eggletieldbros.com
Sales • Seroice Rentals • Parts 193907