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• EDITION •
State audit ESSEX COUNTY SEEKING finds fault JUDGMENT AGAINST with Schroon SLAUGHTERHOUSE record keeping Now-shuttered Adirondack Meat Company Town hall expansion ran over by nearly $100,000 state says
under investigation
» Slaughterhouse Cont. on pg. 7
By Tim Rowland STA FF W RITER
SCHROON LAKE | A state audit has concluded that the Town of Schroon failed to use proper accounting practices for a $1.45 million expansion that added new municipal court and library space to its town hall, and must repay money the town advanced to the project to cover cost overruns. To pay for bills that were coming due, the town advanced the project $117,155, auditors said. The project fund ran out of money still owing the town nearly $98,000. Further, auditors said, at any given time, it would have been difficult to gauge the true financial condition of the project, which was recently completed after two and a half years of work, because nothing was put in writing until the project’s bank account was reconciled at year’s end. » Audit Cont. on pg. 2
Photo provided
End of an era at Bulwagga Campground Port Henry campground managers retire after 14 years By Tim Rowland STA FF W RITER
Wayne and Ruth Plunkett (left) are honored at a retirement lunch at the Moriah town offices. Photo by Tim Rowland
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PORT HENRY | For the past 14 years, campers at Bulwagga Bay have had more than the breathtaking view across Lake Champlain to Vermont’s Green Mountains to look forward to each summer. They’ve had potluck suppers, bingo, Halloween parties, Christmas in July celebrations and most of all the soft southern style of Wayne and Ruth Plunkett, who’ve managed the campground for the Town of Moriah and welcomed back old friends year after year as the weather warmed. Next year, however, will be different. Wayne and Ruth are retiring to their home in Aiken, South Carolina, replacing the camp-
ground business with antiquing and watching their great grandchildren grow up. “We’re going to miss them bad, bad, bad,” said camper Connie Stoddard, who assists the Plunketts in the office that is shared with their pet bird Sadie, who repeats back parts of a visitor’s conversation, adding a bit of an acquired southern drawl. “They brought a lot of great southern hospitality to the North Country,” said Moriah Supervisor Tom Scozzafava during a lunch at the town offices thrown in the Plunketts’ honor. Wayne said he and Ruth lived by something along the lines of a campground Golden Rule. “I tried to treat the campers like I would myself,” he said. “I want to make sure everything is clean and everyone is happy. Because it’s the people who make the campground.” Bulwagga has over 150 campsites, mostly rented by the season by people who live within 150 to 200 miles of Port Henry and return year after year, Plunkett said. » Campground Cont. on pg. 2
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» Audit Cont. from pg. 1 The town did not contest the state’s findings, and said it will take action to correct shortcomings outlined in the report, including repayment of the $98,000. “An itemized budget was never prepared for the project outlining the financing sources needed to fund the estimated cost,” said the Division of Local Government and School Accountability. “Accounting records for the project were not maintained throughout the fiscal year.” The report did not take issue with the manner in which the money was spent, although auditors projected expenditures will exceed the financing sources for the project by approximately $98,000, or 7 percent, resulting in the project not being able to repay interfund advances made from the general fund.
» Campground Cont. from pg. 1 They come from all walks of life — factory workers, doctors, preachers — and throughout the summer meld into one big extended family. “What I think I’ll miss most is the kids,” Wayne said. He would ride the grounds with children in his golf cart singing “Did you ever see a whale with a polka dot tail” and sneak up on campsites where, on Plunkett’s cue, the kids would shout “How y’all doin’? The walls of the campground office are covered with pictures of the kids, many of whom, Stoddard said, have now graduated from college. Wayne is quick to credit others for the campground’s success, most notably his wife. “Ruthie is the backbone,” he said. “She’s the most important person. And all of this has been possible because of our volunteers.” Plunkett said the couple will still be in Port Henry in spirit, and is certain to return some day. “We’ll come up and surprise everyone with some South Carolina peaches,” he said. ■
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SCHROON LAKE | For an outdoor enthusiast, Schroon Lake is the perfect spot: Long expanses of lake shore, and homes scattered through the deep woods. But what makes Schroon Lake good for the nature lover makes it bad for Trick-or-Treaters. “Houses are spread out, and it’s especially hard for people living on the back side of the lake,” said Amy McCoy, a member of Schroon Lake Emergency Squad Inc. Many people there might like to see kids in costume, but don’t have the chance to participate in Trick or Treat, because walking doorto-door with a bag for the treats is pretty much out of the question. So this year, the rescue squad
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The audit also determined that grant monies were deposited in other accounts, where they stayed for up to nine months. Although they were eventually transferred, the state said this made it hard for board members to understand where the project stood financially at any given time. “The Supervisor’s lack of sufficient oversight of the clerk’s accounting records has resulted in incomplete records for the project being maintained throughout the fiscal year,” state accountants wrote. “As a result, the Board was unable to adequately monitor the project’s financial operations and determine the true financial condition of the project.” ■
will sponsor a “Trunk or Treat” celebration in the parking lot of the Tops supermarket on Oct. 31. Patterned after events in other rural communities, those who wish to see the kids and pass out candy can pull in and decorate their cars. Set-up will be from 5:30 to 6 p.m., with “trunk or treating” to run from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. “These events are fun, and the kids really have a good time,” McCoy said. So do older people who might otherwise miss out on the festivities. “It gets them down to where they can see more kids,” she added. The central location is also well-lit and safe. People typically decorate with traditional holiday fare, some even bringing hay bales and pumpkins. Donuts and apple cider will be served, and emergency vehicles will be on hand as well, decorated within reason. Obviously, a fire truck loses a lot of face driving down the road trailing cobwebs and witches hats. “If we have a call we still have to answer it, so we need decorations we can quickly take off,” McCoy said. ■
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a separate account for the project, out of which expenses were paid. “(T)he Board never prepared an itemized budget for the project outlining the financing sources needed to fund the estimated cost,” the report stated. “As a result, the Board could not effectively monitor the project, ensure financing sources were sufficient to fund expenditures incurred, or ensure expenditures did not exceed the estimated cost.”
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Schroon Supervisor Michael Marnell said the town was not aware of the state’s accounting requirements and that the expansion project was handled in the way other capital projects had been treated in the past. Marnell agreed the town had not documented the project in the way the state wanted, but that nothing was fi nancially amiss. “The main thing is that all the money to the penny is accounted for,” Marnell said. At a special meeting on Sept. 17, the town worked out a response to the Office of the State Comptroller, which was sent four days later. At the meeting, the town agreed to address the cost overrun with $21,276 from the general fund, and $73,500 from the unappropriated fund balance to the Town of Schroon’s revolving loan fund. The town also prepared a resolution to ensure that future capital projects are handled in accordance with state requirements. According to the audit, board con-
tracted with an architect who estimated a project cost of $1,457,750. In December 2015, the board authorized the project, which would mainly be paid for by selling $1.1 million in bonds. But, auditors said, the board did not adopt a new resolution acknowledging the total project cost, nor did it say how it planned to make up the difference. The town did secure several state grants, but these still left the project almost $200,000 short, an amount the town indicated it could make up through donations to the library’s capital campaign and in-kind services. But that still left the project shy of full funding. Marnell took issue with the state’s characterization of a $98,000 shortfall, saying that the revolving loan fund — from which the bulk of the shortfall will be repaid — was an anticipated revenue source. But the state said there was no way to know in detail how the project was to be paid for, because the town didn’t write anything down. Instead, it established
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 3
Ticondeoga reaching out to homeowners for water project Project requires special equipment in some homes By Tim Rowland STA FF W RITER
TICONDEROGA | As the Ticonderoga water project enters its final months, engineers are trying to get in touch with 20 or 30 homeowners who have yet to give contractors permission to install pressure-reduction valves on their in-house water lines. If these homeowners act now, the valves will be installed for free; if they wait, it could cost them thousands of dollars. The new water system will have more pressure than the old, and while that’s normally good news it can cause problems if the pressure isn’t dialed down with special valves, said Greg Swart, senior associate for the AES Division of Water Resources. Older plumbing joints and fixtures such was rubber washing-machine hoses can blow under the higher pressure. The majority of the homes served by the water system do not require the individual valves because the pressure will be reduced on the water main itself. But 68 houses are on a section of the system that will not be served by the depressurized main. Specifically, the homes that require these valves are located more or less north of the Rod and Gun Club and intersections of routes 22 and 74, and south of the new well building currently under construction on route 22 north of town. Swart said AES wrote letters and knocked on doors of the homes that need the valves, asking that homeowners grant a temporary easement that will allow contractors to come into their houses and install the valves. There could be various explanations why so many people have not responded. “People get lots of junk mail and sometimes they don’t
Construction pictured over the summer on the Ticonderoga water project, which is expected to be completed in early 2019. Photo by Tim Rowland
read it, Swart said. “And some people don’t want people coming into their homes.” This could be an expensive decision. Contractors will come through and do all the valves at once — homeowners who do not have the work done then will have to pay to have it done privately, which could cost up to $2,000, Swart said. Swart said that officials will continue to knock on doors
~l~~~~~~~-
through the end of October, and replace the valves in November. The new system will probably be completed by the end of January. “That pressure spike will happen as soon as the water is turned on,” Swart said. “For some of the people it will definitely improve pressure.” But for those without pressure-reduction valves it will be too much of a good thing. “Any of the old plumbing parts could be blown apart,” he said. ■
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County touts real results in telehealth program Hospital admissions down 61 percent By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
TICONDEROGA | Home health appears to be taking off in Essex County. Telehealth programs from Essex County’s Home Health Unit (HHU) have reached over 60 patients. And the county’s new rural monitoring program has reduced hospital admissions by 61 percent, Essex Health Director Linda Beers reported to lawmakers last week, resulting in some $43,000 in cost savings for preventable hospitalizations this year. Beers told The Sun that telehealth is a viable solution here for patient well-being, health education and critical illness prevention.
The system works by helping home health nurses connect patients to practitioners before a situation becomes an emergency. “In rural areas and in an aging community where transportation and mobility are stretched to the limit, telehealth will be the answer for tomorrow, we need to use every source of technology to provide monitoring, create inclusion and reduce loneliness in homes,” Beers told the Sun.
ONE-ON-ONE
Jennifer Newberry RN, BSN, is director of patient services for the HHU. Asked how the county agency achieved such dynamic results, Newberry said they established a pivotal role for telehealth coordinator, a staff member to work one-onone connecting patients with equipment that monitors health every day. “The coordinator does really well with it,” Newberry said. “It stretches our workforce because we’re able to monitor people
remotely. If someone has a wound or an IV, for example, they can contact you via video with this unit and troubleshoot. The equipment sends us important patient metrics 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It engages people to learn about their illnesses. We teach them: This is the time you call your doctor.” The 40 initial units were purchased through a federal grant award. Information on each tablet device is tailored for individual conditions, such as diabetes, wound care, chronic heart disease or COPD. There are tutorials and quizzes set up in large type with easy-to-follow touch pad buttons to help patients learn what to watch for if a chronic health concern flares up. Several key monitoring tools comes with each device and connect via Bluetooth technology. At the health department’s central offices on Water Street in Elizabethtown, Newberry showed The Sun the devices included with each telehealth unit. There is a blood pressure cuff, a scale for weight measurements, a pulse-oximeter, a stethoscope, a thermometer, training video components, treatment program reminders and medication reminders. Tracking via online connection helps nurses check activity level, medication, spikes in weight gain (which can be important for symptoms of water retention in some heart conditions), blood pressure, among many other health indicators. The components are easy to use and feed data to the tablet, which connects to the home using either a cellular phone system, a nearby cell tower or to a wi-fi system in place at the residence. Officials have found, so far, about 10 percent of patients who need the equipment do not have connectivity, Newberry said. But in such cases, the tablet stores data that is then checked by a nurse.
LEARNING CURVE
Jennifer Newberry RN, BSN, is director of patient services for the Home Health Unit, building a program for rural telehealth in Essex County that is seeing important improvements in healthcare delivery and reduced hospitalization. Photo by Kim Dedam
Church
Services
We provide this church directory as a courtesy to our readers and visitors to our area. Any changes or additions can be made by calling 518-873-6368. the service. Children’s church and nursery CROWN POINT Crown Point Bible Church: 1800 Creek available. Senior Pastor Skip Trembley. www. Road, 597-3318. Sunday Morning Worship 10 a.m.; Sunday Evening Youth. Discipleship Ministry and Adult Grow Groups 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer Meeting, 7 p.m. Pastor Doug Woods, 518-597-3575.
lakesideregionalchurch.com
NEWCOMB St. Barbara’s Episcopal Church:
Sunday 9 a.m. NYS Rte 28N, Newcomb. For MINEVILLE information call Adirondack Missions 494-3314. Contact persons: Deacon John Caims. Website: All Saints Church: Mass: Sat. 4 p.m. Pastor Rev. Albert Hauser, 23 Bartlett Pond Rd., theadirondackmission.org. 518-546-7254 Newcomb United Methodist Church: Crown Point United Methodist 9 AM Sunday worship Services, 10 AM Sunday Mountain Meadows Christian School. Church: Sunday Services at 9:30 a.m. Assembly: office located at 59 Harmony NORTH CREEK Located at 1682 Creek Rd. Pastor Lee Ackley. Rd.,Mineville N.Y. 12956. 518-942-8031, Pastors First Congregational Church: Sunday Martin & Deborah Mischenko. Bible study and St. James Catholic Church: Main St. Service 9:30 a.m. Reverend David Hirtle, 597- prayer Thurs 7am-10am at Pastor’s office. sunday Mass at 9 a.m. Pastor Rev. John O’Kane Firefighters for Christ Adk chapter 1st Tues 3398. Park Place. OLMSTEDVILLE Sacred Heart Catholic Church: Mass: of the month at ministry office. Call for times. St. Joseph’s Catholic Church: Service times & locations on website. Road Sun. 9 a.m., Pastor Rev. Albert Hauser, Main Weekend Masses: School Year Sunday 11 a.m.; Riders for Jesus M.M check website. Food Street 518-597-3924 Summer Saturday 7 p.m. Rev. Philip T. Allen, Pantry by appt only. Office hours Mon-Fri 9am- Pastor. 518-648-5422 HAGUE 4pm or by appt. Hague Baptist Church: Pastor - Cory PORT HENRY MORIAH MacNeil. Sunday morning: Adult Bible Study Lake Champlain Bible Fellowship: 6 United Methodist Church: 639 Tarbell Church Street, Port Henry, NY (518) 546-1176. 9:30 a.m.; Worship Service 10:30 a.m., 518Hill Rd., Sunday Worship 9 a.m.; Fellowship & 543-8899 Service 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Office hours - 9:00 coffee hour following. Sunday School offered. a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Other Lakeside Regional Church (Hague Everyone is welcomed! Rev. Dr. Kenneth N. hours by appointment only. Pastor Ric Lewis. Wesleyan Church): Sunday morning services at 10 a.m. at the Hague Campus with Parker Mount Moriah Presbyterian Church: a fellowship cafe time immediately following 19 Church Street, 546-7099. Sunday Worship,
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Preaching Services 10 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study 6 p.m. 12 Olmstedville Road, Pottersville, NY. Pastor Jim Brown Jr. SonRise Lutheran Church: Christ Episcopal Church, Route 9, Pottersville. For worship call 772-321-8692 or 772-321-8692. email: barefootrev1@gmail.com. Pastor Bruce E. Rudolf
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Street. Everyone is Welcomed! Contact Pastor Charlie Bolstridge. 518-585-6391 First Baptist Church: Services: Sun. Schroon Lake Community Church School 9:30 a.m.; Sun. worship 10:45 a.m.; Sun. Evening 6 p.m.; Wed. Prayer meeting 7 p.m. For United Church of Christ United Methodist: Sunday Worship Service 10 a.m. info call Pastor Bill Whittington, 518-585-7107. First United Methodist Church: Sun. Children’s Sunday School 10 a.m. Coffee hour at 11 a.m. All are welcome. Pastor Lynnette Cole. Services 8:30 & 10:30 a.m. Everyone Welcome! 518-585-7995. Rev. Scott Tyler. 1045 Wicker St. 518-532-7770 or 518-532-7272.
St. Andrews Episcopal Church:
Sunday 10 a.m. US Rte 9, Schroon Lake. For information call Adirondack Missions 4943314. Contact persons: Deacon John Caims. Website: theadirondackmission.org.
SILVER BAY Sabbath Bay Point Grace Memorial Chapel: Sunday Service June 30- Sept. 1,
260-9710 for more information.
14 Park Ave. Tel: 518-636-6733. Pastor Steve Blanchard Email: PastorSteve@ for Sunday worship services at 10 a.m. All AdirondackCommunityFellowship.org • www. are welcome! 365 County Rt. 2, Off Rt. 22 in AdirondackCommunityFellowship.org Sunday Putnam. For further information call 518-547Service at 10:30 a.m. Celebrate Recovery 8378. Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in cooperation with SCHROON LAKE Hague Weslyan Church. Tuesday 6 p.m. Bible Mountainside Bible Chapel: Sunday Study. Worship Service, Children’s Church & Nursery Cornerstone Alliance Church: Sunday - 10 a.m.; Sunday Evening Youth Programs for School 9:30 a.m., Worship Service 10:30 a.m. Pre-K through Grade 12 - 6 p.m. from September Sunday B.A.S.I.C. youth group meeting 9:30 a.m. through mid-June. For more information, call Wednesday Prayer Meeting 7 p.m. 178 Montcalm
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month 10 a.m. Service at the Best Western Conference Center. A fellowship café time immediately following the service. Children’s church and nursery available. Senior Pastor Skip Trembley. www.lakesideregionalchurch. org St. Mary’s: Masses: Sat. 4:30 p.m. and Sun. 9 a.m., Pastor Rev. Kevin McEwan, Deacon Elliott A. Shaw. 12 Father Joques Place 518585-7144
The Episcopal Church of the Cross: Sunday Eucharist, Church Service 9 a.m. with Eucharist. 129 Champlain Ave. 518-585-4032
Ticonderoga Assembly of God:
Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 a.m. (Children’s Church Provided) Wednesday Bible Study at 6:30 p.m. Thursday Prayer Meeting 6:30 p.m.. Pastor Sheridan Race, 32 Water Street. 518-585-3554. 10-6-18 • 34421
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Savings in hospital visits is measured in increments of “avoidable hospital stays.” Essex County has dropped, for example, from 18 percent trips to a hospital to 11 percent, an impressive statistic compared to the state average of 16.2 percent and the national average at 15.8 percent. Telehealth equipment and medical response is covered by private insurance and by both Medicare and Medicaid. “The next thing is to teach doctors how to bill for telehealth,” Newberry said, a step that would help expand the reach of HHUs in this rural county. Evolution of the program in Essex County depends on its ability to become sustainable through payment structures with seamless technology streams to medical offices. County officials are seeking additional grants to expand the program. ■
PUTNAM Log Chapel Fellowship: Rt. 22. Services: 2019 10 am. All are welcome. Sun. School 10 a.m.; Sunday Worship Service TICONDEROGA 11 a.m.; Pastor Roger Richards. Please call 518- Adirondack Community Fellowship:
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Most patients recuperating at home in Essex County can qualify for the telehealth equipment given the region’s designation as an underserved area, Newberry said. Criteria for telehealth monitoring includes a person’s chronic illness, observed frequency
of health visits or health instability. Newberry demonstrated with the teaching template how a problem notification is sent in red letters to a health department phone. The key to implementation, Newberry said, was to add staffing to help educate patients and connect the equipment, allowing medical practitioners the time to focus on data. “I recognized that our clinicians would use them if it was an asset,” she explained. “So I brought in personnel who could spend time with the patients.” So far, she said, patients using telehealth units are learning to self-monitor and watch for symptoms specific to their health condition. “Many times we teach patients to use the information and when to call if something is off. We teach them how to access healthcare before a problem becomes a visit to an emergency room. We teach them how to be their own advocate and know when something is not right.” Improved patient comfort also helps reduce anxiety and uncertainty as people note their own progress. “They also don’t panic, and their anxiety comes down,” Newberry said. “We’re probably one of the biggest success stories using this equipment.”
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Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
'A house divided'
Over the next few weeks while I’m on vacation, I plan to use some old columns that I hope provide By Dan Alexander some perspective on • PUBLISHER • where we find ourselves today. Below is a partial from July 2011. The problem as I see it, is not who pays more or fewer taxes, nor who’s right, the Democrats or the Republicans. If we let the two parties work this out, they’ll never solve the debt problem nor any major issues facing the country. Ninety percent of Americans who vote will fall behind one party line or another, and it’s as clear as the day is long how you view these issues. The divide between the sides is getting deeper and far more entrenched. In reality, it’s the 10 percent of independent Americans who voted in the last election who will swing the majority one way or the other. The problem is, we need fewer liberals and conservatives in elected office and more non-partisan Americans who are willing to begin to address the issues and start solving some of the problems before either party runs this country into the ground with their constant ideological battles. I think most of us are getting tired of the two parties beating the other side into the ground when they are both responsible for the mess we find ourselves in today. Back in 1858 when the country was split over the issue of slavery, President Lincoln said, "a house divided against itself cannot stand," but was it really about slavery or was it about economics and finances? His point back then was that one side or the other would eventually win out. Within a few years, the country was plunged into the Civil War which nearly destroyed the Union. The rhetoric and anger has been growing over the past several decades with the sides growing farther apart. The parties are seriously divided on nearly every issue, and while we’re a long way from a civil war, the time to solve these issues is now. With the 2012 presidential campaigns starting to heat up, I wonder if Lieberman and McCain had it right in 2008 when McCain considered Lieberman as his vice president running mate? If we can’t get an independent in the highest office, perhaps we need one from each party who can agree to work together and lead their party to the table to reach a true compromise. We all know that won’t happen, but something needs to change, or I fear we are in for more of the same as we zigzag from one election to another while the divide grows and once again threatens the Union. ■
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Civic engagement still needed as merger proposal enters final stretch Westport Central (WCS) and Elizabethtown-Lewis Central (ELCS) voters decided last week to move forward in the merger process between the two districts. The straw poll vote passed by wide margins in each district, portending a strong public appetite for the proposed merger. We commend everyone who voted and has participated in the years-long discussion, including the panelists and stakeholders who participated in Th e Sun’s forum last month. But we hope civic engagement won’t drop off over the next six weeks ahead of the final vote. Despite the wide margins in favor of the proposal — 85 percent at ELCS; 64 percent at WCS — a merger is far from a done deal, and voters must again head to the polls for the binding referendum on Dec. 4.
Letters
Political parties should reconcile differences
To the Editor: It is very real. There are, roughly speaking, two sides to a major portion of the issues today, and each side sees the other side as being seriously deluded. The sides can be labeled liberal/ progressive versus conservative, but truly that does not seem to be an accurate labeling of either side really. It would not seem so odd if on any particular issue, the composition of the opposing groups varied from issue to issue. But to have the same groups coherently disagree in total on so much seems weird. Particularly, because each side sees the other side as deluded. Or at least that’s the way it appears to me. It is easy enough to attribute the differences according to who watches Fox News and who watches MSNBC, but then it would just be by chance which news you watched, and it clearly is not by chance. It is very hard to discuss things when it appears to each of us that the other side is speaking nonsense. Maybe the words “deluded” and “nonsense” are not quite accurate or too strong, but at the risk of oversimplifying, they seem fairly apt to me. Of course, it seems perverse to me that the others don’t see their own delusion if I point it out to them and ridiculous that they could see my thinking as deluded. I mean that seriously,
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In some ways, the discussion leading to that vote will be more granular and cerebral than its predecessor, probing into what enhanced academic offerings would look like in a shared district; details underpinning infrastructure projects, and the makeup and mechanics underpinning a newly constituted school board. Many considerations, of course, are intangible — including the threads constituting the identity, traditions and rich legacies at each school, both of which are the centers of their communities. It should be noted that one district wouldn’t be absorbed into another in the wake of a merger: This is not an annexation, and officials from both districts have repeatedly underscored a merger would result in entirely new
but there you have it. The lack of trust is so apparent now in contrast to B.T. (Before Trump). Maybe it only seems worse because “the other side” is so in our faces, but maybe it’s always been this bad? So, what are these two sides? Try to stop seeing the other side (I’m writing this to both sides) as deluded and not as liberal/progressive or conservative, what is it? - Don Austin, Elizabethtown ■
Stefanik claims of helping veterans are propaganda
To the Editor: Being an honorably discharged, disabled veteran who is serviceconnected and who has found it extremely difficult to rely on the Veterans Affairs (VA) Health Care system for my health care needs, I am sure that there are many other veterans in New York’s 21st Congressional District that have found it very difficult to receive their health care from the VA that we need and earned. If veterans have turned to their federal elected representatives for help, they also know how disconnected our federal representatives are with their veteran constituents. As a voter, I am concerned about the Nov. 6 election for New York’s 21st Congressional seat presently filled by Rep. Elise Stefanik, who has been airing her TV propaganda advertise-
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systems being created. As we move forward, we hope discussion continues to be fact-based and dignified, and that stakeholders prioritize the interests of those most poised to be affected by a merger: students, both current and future. We also discourage district officials and stakeholders against writing the “no” voters off as a lost cause. Th eir concerns should be taken into consideration. Th e Sun looks forward to hosting a second forum next month designed to further discussion. While we’re still working out the details, we encourage your feedback. Drop us a line at feedback@suncommunitynews.com with your thoughts and suggestions. — The Sun Editorial Board ■
ments by stating that she helps us veterans obtain our benefits. That is the furthest thing from the truth. I can state this because for the past two terms, she has failed to help me in my request for her help. What she has told me is to file an appeal on the VA decisions about my health care. Any veteran who has filed an appeal with the VA knows it can take up to 17 years to win an appeal. I will most likely be dead in 17 years, and that was how Stefanik addressed my VA health care needs. I am asking my brother veterans and the residents in New York’s 21st Congressional District to register and vote for someone other than Stefanik on Nov. 6 because we veterans need a person in Congress who will represent us without waver. The other two candidates are Tedra Cobb (D) and Lynn S. Kahn (G). Both have assured me that they will help their constituent veterans when elected, but please if you want to thank a veteran for his service, do it by not voting for Stefanik. - Thomas Campanile, Broadalbin ■
Citizens should fulfill responsibility to vote
To the Editor: It is my fervent hope that all of us who are American citizens will
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fulfill our responsibility to vote in the upcoming national election. The future of our country is in our hands. Hopefully our local newspapers will begin publishing helpful articles about all of the candidates for local and national offices so that we can make informed decisions at the polls on Nov. 6. If you are a registered voter in New York state, please become informed about all the candidates running in your district, decide who best represents your views and vote on Nov. 6. I hope to see you at my polling place! - Jane Claus, Severance ■
Stefanik a big help with Honor Flight
To the Editor: Since Elise Stefanik’s election to Congress, Elise has been involved with just about every North Country Honor Flight. Whether it’s showing her respect to our veterans here in Plattsburgh at the send off ceremony or in Washington D.C., Elise is a welcome part of our Honor Flight family. Elise has met our veterans at Arlington Cemetery, the World War II memorial and the Korean War memorial. Last spring, when our air carrier was in doubt, it was Elise who opened the line of communication between Honor Flight and SkyWest. » Letters Cont. on pg. 7 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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» Slaughterhouse Cont. from pg. 1 By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
TICONDEROGA | Essex County Industrial Development Agency (IDA) is seeking judgment against the owners of the former Adirondack Meat Company. Denise and Peter Ward founded the stateof-the-art meat slaughterhouse and processing center in Ticonderoga, opening in 2014 with nearly $500,000 from IDA, state economic development and federal United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) funds. But the slaughterhouse closed its doors last December amid complaints from area farmers and unpaid property taxes.
INVESTIGATION ONGOING
IDA had been working with a potential meat processing buyer, but that deal fell through several weeks ago, IDA co-executive director Jody Olcott told county lawmakers last Monday. The mortgage is held by Glens Falls National Bank and guaranteed through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Olcott told supervisors Adirondack Meat Company and owners Denise and Peter Ward owe IDA $304,000 to date. IDA funds were used to purchase equipment for the facility, which the owners allegedly removed. As a result, the IDA board moved in a special meeting in August to seek criminal charges. “We are out equipment we had a lien on,” Olcott said. “We have judgments filed against the owners and the company at the Essex County Court.” Olcott could not specify the status of any
criminal case, citing the ongoing investigation by Ticonderoga Police Department. Police are also working with the Essex County District Attorney’s Office. The USDA-certified building was designed to fulfill slaughter and modern meat processing for regional farmers. Olcott said the failed business deal is a “black eye” for the county IDA, which is now actively marketing the property and seeking interested parties. “We are working with a broker to sell the property,” Olcott said. Crown Point Supervisor Charles Harrington said he was “aggravated” that the Lake George/Lake Champlain Commission had also endorsed a loan for the business. “I understand now that the IDA they felt they had a buyer for that facility, but it fell through,”he said. “You can understand how a purchase could fall through with so many liens on it. It would be dangerous until it’s resolved through the courts.” Peter Ward denied grant-funded Uniform Commercial Code equipment was removed from the facility. “I want to deny all of those allegations,” Ward told The Sun. “Only personal property was removed from the property.” Ward declined comment on the allegations Adirondack Meat Company owes $304,000.
FARM CONCERNS
Chesterfield Supervisor Gerald Morrow, who sits on the IDA Board of Directors, said the agency had nothing to do with day-today business operations. “But farmers couldn’t work with them,” Morrow said of the Ward’s alleged mismanagement. “They were not listening.”
» Letters Cont. from pg. 6 Her congressional liaison set up the meeting with the senior regional manager and a great relationship beneficial to Honor Flight has ensued. North Country Honor Flight is proud to have such a helpful and caring congresswoman on our team. - Barrie Finnegan, executive director North Country Honor Flight, Plattsburgh ■
Character shouldn’t be ignored at the polls
To the Editor: When we are finally alone in the voting booth, what comes to mind just before we make our marks? I think that almost all of us still think about “personality” and “character” in the candidates. Yes, some of us do worry about trade tariffs and health care, immigration and the right to bear arms, but ultimately, we want to elect representatives who care enough to help out as many Americans as possible. And yet, I sense that all of us citizens are now trapped in a crazy feedback loop where we await further spectacles of Democrats and Republicans bashing each other — which provokes reactions from the electorate, which in turn, causes further bouts of two-party mixed-martial-arts. So then we’re left with the party that fought better — and that better entertained us. When you vote, vote with heart and mind. We pick candidates whose personalities strike home. Now what about the elusive “character?” Yes, we say that all politicians lie: this is part of their definition. We might do better to choose the candidates who lie to us less. - Dave Iasevoli, Brant Lake ■
Both sides should move to the middle — but who goes first?
In “Thoughts From Behind The Pressline” (Oct. 13 edition), Kavanaugh was never fit for this position. Church organizations, the American Bar Association and other respected organizations and individuals recognize that Kavanaugh didn’t have the temperament or lifelong morals for this job. The Senate Judicial Committee hearing and the FBI investigation that was stifled by Trump from the beginning were a sham. There were better-suited Republicans, but Republicans wanted a drama, and they got it at the expense of Dr Ford. Kavanaugh was no middle of the road appointment. Yes, both sides need to move toward the middle. Who goes first? Certainly not the Republicans who don’t seem to care about our environment, the lives of innocent children, women’s rights, LGBT rights or Trump’s consistent and daily lies, daily pot hate
The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 7
Willsboro Supervisor Shaun Gillilland, a cattle farmer, said the prices for slaughter were “ridiculous.” “They didn’t know what they were doing,” Gillilland told lawmakers, describing what he encountered when he brought a hog to the facility to be slaughtered and processed. Gillilland said he dropped the animal off with a quote for $200. “And they charged me $1,000,” he said. USDA regulations require meat to be wrapped and boxed. But Gillilland was told to bring boxes to collect the meat. Harrington decried the lack of slaughterhouse operations as a hardship for local farmers. Harrington, a farmer, described how hopeful farmers were when the facility first opened four years ago. “They had welcomed them with open arms,” Harrington told The Sun. “You can see where Farm-to-School would have been accommodated with a USDA certified meat processing facility. But the farmers were very, very angry that this had unfolded the way it did. They were angry at the way they were treated.” Harrington said Gillilland’s comments echo every other farmer’s experience with the operation. “The slaughterhouse closed because they hadn’t demonstrated any allegiance to the farmers in terms of scheduling.” Harrington said he has also heard from farmers that Adirondack Meat Company would schedule animals to be slaughtered, but abruptly call off the procedure — or even tell farmers at the gate when they arrived. “And this happened repeatedly,” Harrington said. “They weren’t able to conduct a plan that was beneficial not only to themselves, but also to the people who wanted to work with them.”
stirring or his lack of knowledge of running the government. What have the Republicans constructively done in two years? Move us closer to destruction of our government. If they had convinced Trump to withdraw Kavanaugh’s name and encouraged him to offer almost any other Republican, this election would have been theirs. I get the feeling you are against the slogan “resist.” Well, women, environmental groups, LGBT groups and unions have fought long and hard to gain the rights they see slipping away under Republican rule, so “resist” they will, and I don’t blame them. Our constitution granted us freedoms and protections. Many pompous, self-serving individuals professing to be Christians think those rights are for a limited few, for folks looking and living like they do. I admire your effort to talk about the middle, but your dig about what Democrats might do or not do was uncalled for. Democrats have always fought for the little guy. Do all politicians line their pockets, maybe, but only one party fights for me. Vote blue! - Barbara Paye, Willsboro ■
Health care must be addressed
To the Editor: Despite being one of the most developed countries in the world, we still lack a health care system which provides affordable health care for all. Under President Obama, a health care plan was passed by Congress which was not perfect but did much to increase access to more affordable health care for all. Sadly in the past two years, Congress has sought not to improve but to dismantle this health care program. Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) voted repeatedly to do just that. Though the vote for total repeal failed, parts of the health plan have been altered making it difficult for many to obtain affordable care. Medical care in our country and the cost of prescription drugs are more expensive than in any other industrialized country. I have friends who are paying unbelievably high prices for the drugs and care they need to live a healthy life. We need to be able to purchase drugs at a more affordable price. We also need to maintain hospitals in our rural area. Without these hospitals, people would have to travel long distances to obtain the care they urgently need. We who live in New York’s 21st Congressional District need someone to represent us who understands that need for affordable care, lower drug prices and a strong network of rural medical centers. - David H. Schlansker, Riparius ■
Cobb not a ‘weak’ candidate
To the Editor: I disagree with The Sun’s Oct. 6 editorial. Initially, you properly point out the misleading and outright false claims of Stefanik’s campaign, including the
Ward declined to address those allegations.
ON THE MARKET
The decision to pursue the Wards and the company was made last summer. At a special board meeting on Aug. 9, the IDA received a letter from William Ball, Code Enforcement Officer for the Town of Ticonderoga, noting he had inspected the property and found several issues outstanding, including minor roof damage, air conditioning unit damage, a blood holding tank partially filled with waste and mold in a small area on the second floor. The facility also lacked a plan for a septic system and required an electrical inspection needed, Ball said. The 22-acre property is listed for sale at a price of $750,000 by Howard Hanna Capital Inc. According to the listing, the owners are on the “Pilot-10 tax program that has 5 years left.” The property is being billed as a “fully custom functioning slaughterhouse and meat processing plant.” Olcott said the location is central for farm and food processing in southern Essex County given its four-corners site in Ticonderoga. “The commercial center is there and traffic is busy at the location. It has full municipal services.” Supervisors suggested that IDA brainstorm with the Cornell Cooperative Extension Service to see if successful processing could be added to the southern end of the county to support the farm industry, similar to a Hub-on-the-Hill model. Tax history on the property shows taxes unpaid at $23,994.30 for 2018 and 21,247.55 for 2017. The first two years of Meat Co. operation were tax exempt as part of a start-up payment-in-lieu-of-taxes (PILOT) program. ■ — Pete DeMola contributed reporting.
childish name-calling, after which you decry the incumbent’s financial advantage but don’t explain why generally (Citizens United) or specifically (Cobb had just exhausted funds to convincingly win a primary). During the quiet summer season, the Cobb campaign was reloading. Yes, she answered the ridiculous Stefanik attack ads with calm press releases, refusing to be drawn into reciprocal attacks. Stefanik’s record says all it needs about her support of the North Country. You report that the Cobb campaign had less funds than her opponent to start the general and that her fundraising is “anemic,” but it’s mystifying that you ignore the important 3Q Federal Election Commission fundraising deadline that just occurred prior to your editorial! This filing demonstrates the support the campaigns are generating. As it turns out, in 3Q Cobb raised a record amount for this district (unlike Stefanik, the vast majority from within the district). As of this writing, we have yet to hear from the Stefanik campaign. Their silence is deafening. Finally, and perhaps most disturbing, partly based on your erroneous, premature assumptions about her fundraising, you claim that Tedra Cobb is a “weak” candidate because she campaigns on “core values,” not specifics. First, that’s just wrong: a review of her website shows for every general issue (e.g., healthcare, environment, economy) 5-6 specific actions Tedra will take. Secondly, when a congresswoman who despite overwhelming calls from her district to the contrary, nonetheless votes against the Affordable Care Act, the effect of which is to throw 64,000 North Country residents off healthcare without a replacement, a call for “core values” is sorely needed. - Richard C. Teitelbaum, Essex ■ Editor’s note: The Sun did not “ignore” Q3 fundraising totals. The editorial went to print on Monday before the Cobb campaign announced Q3 fundraising totals on Tuesday afternoon.
To the Editor, People of the North Country In the 21st Congressional District Take Notice We the people have a chance to have one of our own go to Washington to represent us! Tedra Cobb is a working person for working people! She has been a North Country resident for over 30 years! Her credentials are solid as Tedra has served on the St. Lawrence County Legislature for eight years and she led the effort to create and pass the current St. Lawrence County ethics law and the St. Lawrence County (NY) Board of Ethics. Her opponent lives in Washington and has little contact with North Country residents. In point of fact her opponent has worked to cut Medicare, Medicaid and Affordable Health Care! Tedra Cobb will protect Medicare! Tedra Cobb will protect Medicaid! Tedra Cobb will protect Social Security! This November Vote Tedra Cobb Paid for by Gary Philip Guido
8 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
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Arts & Entertainment
Eye on the Arts Saranac Lake’s BluSeed Studios kicks off its second “Open-Minded Mic Night” next Thursday, Oct. 25, at 7:30 p.m. The two-andBy Elizabeth Izzo a-half hour local showcase will be hosted by • COLUMNIST • Adirondack folksinger Dan Berggren. A donation of $5 for adults, $3 for students is requested. Learn more at bluseedstudios.org or call 518-891-3799. On Saturday, Oct. 30, the Cardinal Pickers will perform at the Plattsburgh Kent-Delord House Museum’s autumn festival. The bluegrass troupe is set to play two 45-minute sets from 12:30-1:15 p.m. and 1:45-2:30 p.m. The Pickers will be joined by SUNY Plattsburgh staff and faculty. Plattsburgh State’s a capella group, the Minor Adjustments, will open the show at 12:15 p.m. Hula hoop club Flow Tribe will perform from 1:15-1:45 p.m. Learn more about the festivities at kentdelordhouse.org or by calling Venne at 518-564-2180.
The Indian Lake Theater will screen “The Song of Sway Lake,” a 2017 film starring Rory Culkin, Robert Sheehan and Isabell McNally, on Sunday, Oct. 21 at 2 p.m. The movie was shot at the Crane Point Lodge in Blue Mountain Lake, organizers say, where a reception will be held after the screening. Tickets are $25 per person and include a movie ticket and access to the reception. For more information, visit adirondackarts.org. Next Saturday the Strand Center for the Arts in Plattsburgh will screen “The Phantom of the Opera,” the classic silent film featuring Mary Philbin and Lou Chaney, at 7:30 p.m. The movie will be accompanied by a live organ, played by Organist Jonathan Ortloff. For more information, or to purchase tickets for $20 in advance, visit strandcenter.org. This Saturday, Oct. 20 at 7:30 p.m., the Whallonsburg Grange Hall will screen 2018 documentary “Won’t You Be My
BRIEFS
Christmas wreaths on sale now
TICONDEROGA | Orders for Carillon Garden Club Christmas wreaths and kissing balls will be taken until Oct. 31. Wreaths may be purchased plain for $20, with a bow for $22 or decorated with pine cones, berries and bows for $25. Decorated kissing balls are $30 and plain are $25.Wreaths may be picked up Nov. 13–15 from Hague Community Center or delivered by special arrangement. All are invited to a “Pine and Wine” event Nov. 16 to decorate pre-ordered wreaths. For more information or to order, call Judy Walker at 518-9840088, Claire Best at 518-543-6765 or any garden club member. ■
Local chamber spotlights small biz
MORIAH | The Moriah Chamber of Commerce has announced “Small Business Saturday” will take place Nov. 24. Businesses should register with the chamber by Nov. 2 with a promotion, specials, raffle, etcetera. To register, call 518-250-1050. ■
Fundraiser to benefit class of 2021
TICONDEROGA | The second annual mattress fundraiser will be held at the Ticonderoga High School gym on Oct.
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The Pendragon Theatre will bring Kate Hamill’s “Pride and Prejudice” to Peru Central School on Oct. 22. Photo/Burdette Parks Neighbor,” an in-depth look into the life Junior/Senior High School on Oct. 22 of Mister Rogers, the star of the classic at 7 p.m. Produced by Saranac Lake’s children’s show “Mister Roger’s Neigh- Pendragon Theatre and sponsored by borhood.” Tickets are $6 for adults, $3 for the Peru Drama Club, the performance minors. Learn more by calling 518-963-7777. is open to the public and free to attend. Kate Hamill’s stage adaption of the For more information, contact the Peru classic Jane Austin novel “Pride and Drama Club at perudramaclub@gmail. Prejudice” will land on stage at the Peru com or at 518-551-0811. ■
28 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Every purchase will benefit the class of 2021. All mattresses are brand new with full factory warranties, and all sizes are offered. Mattresses will be delivered upon request. Discount coupons are available. Military and fire department members as well as local police get 10 percent off. For more information, visit bit.ly/beds4sentinels18 or contact Jennee Iturrino, Class of 2021 advisor at 518-5857400 ex. 1101 or at jiturrino@ticonderogak12.org. ■
New members invited to join Bridge Flotilla 15-13
CROWN POINT | All are invited to join the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary Bridge Flotilla 15-13 in assisting the United States Coast Guard as auxiliary members. Bridge Flotilla 15-13 meets at the Ticonderoga Elks Lodge at 6:30 p.m. on the third Monday of each month Facility ownership (boat, plane, radio) is not required to become an auxiliarist, however those interested must be a U.S. Citizen at least 17 years of age and be able to pass a basic background check. ■
Halloween movie to screen at Hancock House
TICONDEROGA | The Ticonderoga Historical Society will host its last free movie night of 2018 with a showing of the classic Halloween comedy, “Arsenic and Old Lace” on Friday, Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. at the Hancock House, 6 Moses Circle, Ticonderoga. Popcorn and beverages will be provided, and advance reservations are not necessary. ■
Volunteers sought for tax assistance
TICONDEROGA | The Earned Income Tax Credit Coalition of the Adirondacks is seeking volunteers for the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) and AARP Tax Aid program in Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties for the upcoming 2018 tax season. The VITA and AARP Tax Aid Program offers free tax help to low-to-moderate-income people who cannot prepare their own tax returns. Volunteers do not need to have experience in taxes. Certified volunteers can receive training online via irs.gov or via supplemental classroom training. Call Kyle Miller at 518-546-3565 for more information. ■
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OCT. 20
Port Henry » Halloween Party
held at Pocket Park; 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Come in costume. Pumpkin Painting, games, balloons, face painting by Penelope The Clown. Donuts and cider to be served. Fun for all!
OCT. 20
Bolton Landing » Trunk or Treat
held at Up Yonda Farm; 6:00 p.m. -8:00 p.m. Bring the kids, come in costume and trick-or-treat from car to car. There will be fun games, crafts and you will enjoy spooky stories by the fire and free refreshments. Great prizes for the best-decorated cars! Rain or Shine!
OCT. 20
Hague » Meet & Greet
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik held at Hague Fire
Department; 3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Light refreshments provided. Donations appreciated. Paid for by the Hague Republican Party.
OCT. 20
Hudson Falls » Chili Supper held
at Kingsbury Baptist Church; 5:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. Hosted by ADK Church Without Walls, followed by a family friendly, alternative and inclusive welcoming worship celebration. All are invited; dinner is served free of charge.
OCT. 20
Chestertown » Chestertown
Community Dinner held at 11 Church Street; 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Homemade soup, bread and dessert. Free Admission.
OCT. 24
North Creek » Meditation Program held at Town of Johnsburg Library; 6:00 p.m. Presented by Tobey
Gifford. Please call to register for this free program 802-251-4343.
OCT. 25
Ticonderoga » Community
Appreciation Dinner & Awards Ceremony held at Best Western Plus; 6:00 p.m. The free dinner and awards ceremony will be used as an opportunity to recognize all area businesses, organizations, and volunteers as well as the 2018 “Business of the Year,” “Organization/Non-Profit of the Year,” “Chamber Volunteer of the Year,” “Community Volunteer of the Year,” and give out TACC Appreciation Awards.
OCT. 25 - OCT. 27
Lake George » Rummage Sale held at Caldwell Presbyterian Church; Proceeds from this fundraising event help the needy in our community as well as towns nearby. Thursday 3 - 7p.m., Friday 10 a.m.- 6p.m., Saturday, Bag Sale 9- 11a.m.
OCT. 26
Schroon Lake » Family
OCT. 20TH
Halloween Party held at Pocket Park, Port Henry
Fall Fun Night held at Schroon Lake Community Church Community Room; 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Fun games, pumpkin painting, Family apple desert bake off with prizes and delicious cider. Free to all ages and everyone is welcome.
OCT. 27
Fort Ann » Fall Festival held at Fort
Ann Rescue Squad; 2:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. There will be Food Trucks, Beer Tent, Vendors, Photographer, Chili Cook Off, Kids Halloween Activities (come dressed in your costume).
OCT. 28
r.J. ~
,
S AT U R DAY
KID’S HALLOWEEN 27 PARTY OCT. held at
Thurman Town Hall
Crown Point » Harvest Dinner
held at Sacred Heart Church; 12:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Turkey, stuffing, potatoes, gravy, veggies, rolls/ butter, assorted pies and drinks. $10 per dinner, $5 for children, $30 per family of 4 or more.. Take out available. Join us for a great meal and check out the beautiful baskets/gift certificates that will be raffled at our Christmas bazaar on December 1st.
DEC. 9
Bolton Landing » New York City
Bus Trip; 6:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Enjoy a day in the city on your own. Bus departs at 6am at the Bolton Landing Frirehouse and will arrive in NYC (Bryants Park) at approximately 9am. We will meet back at Bryants Park for a 6pm departure, with an approximate arrival time of 9pm back at the Bolton Landing Firehouse. Contact Jean Norton to reserve your spot 518-321-3081 or 518-644-2072. This event is sponsored by the Bolton Landing Fireman’s Auxillary.
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Saturday: 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Kids wear your costumes for prizes - scariest, funniest, most original. Crafts, games, raffles, grab bags and a buffet of goodies.
198310
S AT U R DAY
27 OCT.
ELLEN SINOPOLI DANCE COMPANY held at
Tannery Pond Community Center, North Creek Saturday: 7:30 pm
A Combination Of Music And Dance Compositions, Entangling The Performers With The Music, Promising To Dazzle And Inspire. Adults $15 Advance / $20 At The Door. Free Admission For Youth. Tickets And Information: (518) 251-2505 ext. 128 or www.tannerypondcenter.org.
198183
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 9
Ti to usher in season with HalloweenFest HalloweenFest will feature pumpkin carving, parties, trick or treating
TICONDEROGA | The Ticonderoga Montcalm Street Partnership (TMSP) and the Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce (TACC) have announced the schedule of events for HalloweenFest 2018 which will take place Oct. 26-Oct. 31.
FRIDAY, OCT. 26
4-7 p.m. — Pumpkin carving and painting workshop at North Country Community College (NCCC) in Ticonderoga. Pumpkins can be brought to the Ticonderoga Natural Foods Co-Op to be used in the pumpkin walk. 7-10 p.m. — Maze by moonlight at Fort Ticonderoga. Explore the maze using only a flashlight as a guide for $10 per person. This event also takes place on Oct. 27.
SATURDAY, OCT. 27
1 p.m. — Juggling and variety show at Ticonderoga Community Building. Fast paced and exciting displays of many classic Vaudeville and circus skills. All kids and families are invited to attend. 6:30–8:30 p.m. — Pumpkin walk at LaChute River Trail. Jack-o’-lanterns will be displayed along the LaChute River Trail from Frazier Bridge to the Pocket Park (behind Montcalm Street). Pumpkins donated by local farmers are being carved by local school children and community members. Those interested in carving a pumpkin for the event or vol-
unteering should contact the Ticonderoga Natural Foods Co-Op. Hot cider and treats will be available for purchase. 8–10 p.m. — “Halloween Family Glow Bowl Party” at Adirondack Lanes. Prizes for best and most creative Halloween costumes (kids and families). Music, family fun and more. 8–10 p.m. — Teen Halloween dance at Silver Bay Teen Center. Music, dancing and more. Cost is $3 for each teenager grades 6-12.
SUNDAY, OCT. 28
2–4 p.m. — “Monster Mini Golf Party” at Five Nations Golf. Trick or treat at each hole. Friendly monsters will be in attendance. Mini golf will be $1 off all day.
MONDAY, OCT. 29
4–7 p.m. — Scary movie night at NCCC Ticonderoga Campus. The horror movie night will feature a classic horror or thriller film. Movie to be announced.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 31
3–5 p.m. — Free trick or treating in downtown Ticonderoga and area businesses. Candy will be given out by participating businesses and organizations that have a pumpkin displayed and at the Ticonderoga Community Building. Montcalm Street will be closed from Sunshine Laundry to 1888 Building. International Paper Company “Trunk or Treat” will take place in front of the Ticonderoga Heritage Museum and LifeNet of New York in Bicentennial Park. 3-5 p.m. — Children’s Halloween photo shoot in the Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce office. One 4 x 6 photograph (individual photo) for $5 per child. Halloween backdrop will be used. Child must be able to sit or stand on their own. Visit the Nancy Frasier Photography Facebook page for more details.
Robin Breault was arrested Thursday, Oct. 11 for endangering the welfare of a child and harassment in the second degree.
ADULTS 21 AND OVER
Oct. 27 — Madden’s Pub Halloween costume party. Live music featuring Generation Gap starts at 8 p.m. Oct. 27 — EMA Club Halloween party. Details to be announced. Additional events will also be taking place during the weekend. For a complete calendar and details, call 518-585-6619. For more information on HalloweenFest, contact the TACC at 518-585-6619 or visit ticonderogany.com, timainstreet.org or the TACC or TMSP Facebook pages. ■
BOOK YOUR CHRISTMAS PARTY WITH US! SUNDAY FOOTBALL SPECIALS
Arrest made for child endangerment TICONDEROGA | The Ticonderoga Police Department arrested a woman last week for allegedly endangering the welfare of a child.
4–7 p.m. — “Great Pumpkin Trick or Treat Hallway” at NCCC. Candy will be handed out by spooky ghosts and goblins. Trick or treaters will have a chance to meet the great pumpkin. 5–7 p.m. — Pet trick or treating at Tractor Supply. Dress up a pet for trick or treating. Kids can also trick or treat. Costume parade at 6:30 p.m.
Breault was processed and released with appearance tickets to appear in the Ticonderoga Town Court at a later date. ■
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Saturday, Oct. 20th - Tuesday, Oct. 23rd
COMMUNITY OUTREACH LAKE GEORGE - Grief and Loss Support Group Ever Wednesday, 3:00 pm. 3-5 pm at St. James Episcopal Church. COMMUNITY OUTREACH ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, 4:30 pm-6pm. PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm Marie Marvull 518743-1672 TICONDEROGA - Nar-Anon Family Group A support group for family and friends of addicts. Office of the Prevention Team 173 Lord Howe St., Mondays at 6pm, nar-anon.org
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First Man (PG13) 12:50PM • 3:45PM 6:45PM • 9:40PM
Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 12:10PM • 2:15PM 4:40PM • 6:50PM 9:00PM
A Town Hall Meeting to learn more about:
St. Joseph’s Addiction Treatment & Recovery Centers’ Range of Services
Friday, October 26 at 5:00 5:00 pm the Town Town Friday,October 26 at pm in onthe Government Building Government Buildingat at 132 132 Montcalm MontcalmSt. St. Pies, coffee, and and cider cider provided Pies,coffee, provided
Smallfoot (PG) 12:15PM • 2:35PM • 4:50PM 7:05PM • 9:20PM
The Hate U Give (PG13) 12:50PM • 3:45PM 6:40PM • 9:35PM
The House with a Clock in Its Walls (PG) 12:50PM • 5:55PM
The Old Man and the Gun (PG13) 12:10PM • 2:15PM • 4:25PM 6:35PM • 8:45PM
Gosnell: The Trial of Americas Biggest Serial Killer (PG13)
The Sisters Brothers (R)
12:15PM • 3:00PM 6:15PM • 8:40PM
12:10PM • 2:35PM • 5:00PM 7:30PM • 10:00PM
1:05PM • 3:45PM 6:25PM • 9:05PM
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10 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Search for fire training site narrows County emergency services hopes to break ground on firefighter training building next spring By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
TICONDEROGA | County supervisors are working to find a site for the new Emergency Services fire training building. Ongoing discussion looks to place the new fi refighting simulation structure at a central county location, accessible to all fi re companies. Ideas on the table so far include a lot beside the Elizabethtown Volunteer Fire Department, a picnic area in Keene, a site near the Lewis Transfer Station, a location near the county highway garage in Lewis and a parcel on the Essex County Fairgrounds in Westport. No one area has been tested in any location. Compaction tests are required for the concrete foundation. The building can be erected as modular structure with live burn rooms and multiple story sections. Some supervisors see benefits at one location or another. Westport Supervisor Michael “Ike” Tyler says the fairgrounds would be the best choice given the fact that Air One, the county’s air resupply vehicle, is stationed at Westport Hose Company No. 1. The new fire training facility, Tyler said, would also accommodate Air One. But Willsboro Supervisor Shaun Gillilland said the fairground location might stymie training access. “The fairgrounds are booked every weekend through summer,” Gillilland said of the po-
tential conflict. The county is also in the process of expanding event use at the fairground, which has Floral Hall, a grand stand and a race track among numerous barn and restaurant facilities. Horse training and other race events require the central racetrack area to be kept open. “It seems to me it is a mutually exclusive activity,” Gillilland said of fire training and spectator events at the fairground. Tyler said firefighter training would be periodic. He also said Westport would relinquish management of Air One if the training building is not placed at the fairground. The new training center would be built using a $500,000 line-item grant from state Senator Betty Little (R-Queensbury). It has to be spent by December of 2019. Essex County Emergency Services Director Don Jaquish told supervisors the fire training simulator would be used fairly frequently. After the meeting, Jaquish told The Sun that the structure is set up like a house or an apartment building with multiple floors. It is built of fireproof materials, but is made with fire simulation areas and smoke conditions helping f ire personnel learn to use of air packs, rappelling in fire, fire entry, smoke entry and many other training modules. It would help fire companies build skill sets and increase the number of firefighters with advanced training. “It’s absolutely a must-have,” Jaquish said. “We’ve been using Lake Placid’s fire training building, but it’s just too far for some firefighters in the southern end of the county given the amount of time for travel with the hours of training required.” Training courses for fi refighters can be lengthy, Jaquish said. Basic firefighter operations, for example, take 88 hours per person to complete. Firefighter 1 is 70 hours and Firefighter 2, with interior attack, is another 45 hours.
UPSCALE RESALE
The new facility would be used for these courses along with the 109 hours it takes for each firefighter to complete Interior Operations with Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus. “We need a fire training building for that,” Jaquish said. Two primary conditions were identified for siting the fi refighter training facility: proximity to the county’s center and a preference for county-owned property. Jaquish said access to sewer and water infrastructure is important, but not mandatory. “That would be needed if we add a training room,” Jaquish said. Jaquish said the project has a four-month lead time to receive the building, which comes partially made in segments. Supervisors asked Jaquish to find specific
areas on property they’ve selected. “Pick out other sites on the fairgrounds,” Tyler said, suggesting they keep the training center away from the racetrack. “Test the sites (for compaction) and come back with a suggestion for one site with an alternative,” Essex Supervisor Ron Jackson said. “We’re building as large of a structure as we can. If we have to do a lot of site work testing, we will run out of money,” Jaquish told The Sun. The Fire Training Building Committee met after Public Safety discussion at the county on Monday. The plan is to present options to the Ways and Means Committee members at the end of October. Jaquish said he is hoping they can break ground next spring. ■
Elizabethtown Fire Department.
Essex County Fairgrounds.
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Photos provided by Essex County Emergency Services
Lead Poisoning Prevention Week
October 21-27, 2018
Lead poisoning is caused by swallowing or breathing lead. Children under 6 years old are most at risk. If you are pregnant, lead can harm your baby.
*Avoid renovation dust. *Wash children’s hands & toys often. *Wash hands before eating. *Get your home tested.
Meet & Greet
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik
Ask your health care provider or Essex County Health Department about lead testing for your child at ages 1 and 2.
October 20 • 3:00 - 6:00PM Hague Fire Department
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– This advertisement paid for by the Hague Republican Party –
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Stories told through hair
The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 11
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Fort’s ‘Pieces of Eight’ exhibit includes locks from Washington and others By Tim Rowland STA FF W RITER
TICONDEROGA | In the days before selfies, American colonists would remember their loved ones by snipping a lock of their hair and embedding the keepsake into a book or weaving it into a work of art. In May, Fort Ticonderoga exhibited a hank of hair from Revolutionary hero-turnedtraitor Benedict Arnold, and the response was so positive that it got curators wondering what other intimate artifacts might be lingering in their massive collection. The result is “Pieces of Eight,” an exhibit telling the story of eight men and women of historical consequence through a snippet from their own person that has been handed down over the years. The exhibit runs through April. Taking a lock of hair even from a corpse would not have been seen as disrespectful or macabre at the time, said curator Matthew Keagle. In fact, just the opposite, harkening to the days when relics of saints were displayed by the Church. “It was a fairly common practice in early America,” Keagle said. Artists would advertise for customers who might want to turn a lock of hair into a piece of jewelry, and one of the most exquisite in the display is a delicate mourning pendant designed around the hair of George Au-
Fort Ticonderoga curator Matthew Keagle with the fort’s new Pieces of Eight exhibit. gustus Lord Viscount Howe, an immensely popular British officer who was killed in a skirmish with the French near Ticonderoga. The piece of jewelry was made for the Chaplin of Howe’s regiment the 55th Regiment of Foot, and affirmed the 33-year-old officer’s popularity. The items on display were foraged out of Fort Ticonderoga’s collections where — due to its size and the way it has been organized through the generations — unusual items can sometimes fall through the cracks. It’s easy to know how to catalogue and where to store a gun or a uniform, Keagle says, but one-of-a-kind pieces often defy organization. “I’m continually blown away by what is actually here,” he said. The display also allowed visitors a rare insight into what happens behind the scenes at museums, which must make decisions about what artifacts are displayed and how.
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A prime example on display in the exhibit is the rib of a woman whose story is fascinating, not so much for the event that took her life, but for how her death was manipulated through history. Jane McCrea was a loyalist engaged to a loyalist in the Army of British Gen. John Burgoyne. She was killed in 1777, the popular story went, by Indians also in the employ of the British. Yet, her death paradoxically became grist for patriot (and anti-Native American) propagandists, for whom the rather dull loyalist was suddenly transformed into a heroine of epic beauty and virtue whose death was facilitated by the British and their Indian henchmen. In the words of American Gen. Horatio Gates, “Miss McCrea, a young lady lovely to the sight, of virtuous character and amiable disposition, engaged to be married to an officer of (Burgoyne’s) army, was carried into the woods, and there scalped and mangled in the most shocking manner.”
Photo provided
Keagle said McCrea’s legend lasted well into the 19th century, as the American government was uprooting and relocating Native American populations. Artists in the 1800s depicted the lovely visage of McCrea about be slaughtered by wild savages, as her story, twisted as it might have been, has handed down through the ages. Her body has been exhumed multiple times, once by a canal construction worker who took one of McCrea’s ribs for a souvenir. This makes for a harder choice about how, or if, to display the artifact. “This poor woman suffered being killed, but also the indignity of being dismembered postmortem,” Keagle said. Her story is worth illustrating, because it highlights a “dark subtext” to the way her death was treated by future generations and also reveals the staying power of history. “The Revolutionary era continues to echo through American history,” Keagle said. ■
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12 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
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Threads opens in Port Henry Store offers brand name used clothing at discount prices. By Tim Rowland STA FF W RITER
PORT HENRY | It had always been in the back of Mike Esposito’s mind to open a business for his daughters, but the years went by, and one thing or another always seemed to stand in the way. This month, he finally opened Threads, a discount clothing store, even if his daughters weren’t there to help him at the counter. “I was going to open this a few years ago,” Esposito said. “Really all this was for the girls — then they went off to college.” Esposito is a heavy-equipment operator — he was last seen in Port Henry deftly dismantling the burned-out ADK Emporium building — who got the idea for a thrift store from his sister-in-law in New Jersey who sells used clothing herself. “She said I should open a store up here,” he said. “She gets so much stuff she can’t possibly use it all.”
Esposito, who says he is “always up for any business venture,” said the thrift store made sense because of the local demographic. He has a large inventory of kids’ clothing, which helps disadvantaged families — but even better, he said, is a wide selection of brand names including Coach, Old Navy, OshKosh and Abercrombie & Fitch. “Disadvantaged families can afford to buy their kids clothes that other kids have,” he said. And while they may be used, they are in excellent condition. “I go through everything before it goes on the rack, and if it has a tear or a stain, no matter how small, I won’t sell it,” Esposito said. “I’ll donate it to a church of someplace, because I know somebody could use it.” Threads is located on the southern edge of Port Henry, next to Walt’s used cars. In past lives, it’s been a lumber store and more recently a restaurant. But the entrance is in the back, so it’s a bit tricky to get to. Nevertheless, when Esposito opened on Oct. 6, he was able to use social media and balloons to attract attention. “Nobody even knew about it, but they saw the balloons out front and that brought them in,” he said. “It’s been an absolutely fantastic response. Facebook has blown up and it’s all
Mike Esposito stands amidst his considerable inventory at the new discount clothing store Threads in Port Henry. Photo by Tim Rowland been word of mouth and all been positive — se we must be doing something right.” Threads is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5
p.m on Sunday although Esposito will stay open longer if people are still shopping. “I tried to get out of here at 5 last Sunday, but it didn’t happen,” he said. ■
Applefolkfest The Penfield Museum Applefolkfest attracted a crowd over the weekend, as visitors enjoyed fresh-pressed cider, apple deserts and chili dogs, while listening to music and perusing a large craft fair. Guests also were able to tour the historic Penfield Homestead Museum, in the Federalist-style house built by Allen Penfield in 1827. Using an electromagnet to separate iron ore filings in 1831, Penfield gave Ironville the distinction of being the first community to put electricity to an industrial use. The museum also houses a unique collection of Civil War artifacts focusing on Allen’s son James, who was a calvary officer in the Union army. Photos by Tim Rowland
Town of Moriah to Accept Brush
carillon garden club
199347
t FiElD StReAm HaBiTa S e R T- Fo
ReStOrAtIoN SeRvIcEs
Grazing, Forest & Wildlife Management Plans, Pond Site Evaluation
Annual Christmas Wreath Sale & Workshop Our lovely, fresh balsam wreaths made on a 12” form and measure around 20”-24” when completed. You can buy wreaths or kissing balls undecorated, decorated by the Garden Club or attend our Pine and Wine Workshop and decorate your own wreath or kissing ball.
Undecorated Wreath ................................... $20 Wreath with Bow ......................................... $22 Decorated Wreath ....................................... $25 Undecorated Kissing Ball .......................... $22 Decorated Kissing Ball ............................... $30
Purchase SOON for delivery before Thanksgiving. Deadline to order is Thursday, November 1.
We thank you for your support!
•
164243
Proceeds from this sale benefit community beautification
A. Johnson Co. Bristol, VT 05443
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TICONDEROGA ELKS LODGE - WINE AND PINE DECORATING WORKSHOP Fri., Nov. 16th 7pm-9pm
Orders may be placed by calling Judy at 518-984-0088 or Claire at 518-543-6765
518-546-3378
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Pickup and Decorate Locations, Dates, Times HAGUE COMMUNITY CENTER Wed., Nov. 14th 9am-4pm • Thurs., Nov. 15th 9am-4pm
Fly Casting, Fly Tying Instruction & NYS Fly Fishing Guide (NYSOGA)
196927
The Town of Moriah transfer station will be accepting brush, three (3) inches in diameter and under ONLY, on Friday, November 2, 2018 from 8:30am – Noon and 1:00pm -4:30pm, and Saturday, November 3, 2018 from 8:30am-Noon and 1:00pm-4:30pm. RESIDENTS ONLY. All Residents MUST check in with Transfer Station Attendant before unloading any brush.
802-453-4884 • 802-545-2457 (Evenings)
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 13
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MVPad0000_201810 MVP Medicare General Sales Meetings Schedule Newspaper Wrap Publication: The Times of Ti Sun Run Date: 10.20 .2018 Trim Size: 10” x 15.5””
14 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
2018 FALL AUTO CARE How to safeguard your vehicle from the elements In a perfect world, all vehicle owners would be able to park their cars and trucks in
garages. In such a world, automobiles would not be vulnerable to sun, storms and other natural elements that, over time, can contribute to wear and tear. But many drivers cannot or choose not to park their cars in garages. Some are content to let their vehicles brave the elements, while others look for ways to protect their cars and trucks as much as possible. Drivers who count themselves among the latter group can take these simple steps to protect their cars and trucks from whatever Mother Nature has in store for them. • Park in the shade. Parking in the shade can protect both the interior and exterior of a vehicle. Shaded areas protect upholstery and dashboards inside the car from suninduced fading, while also limiting the damage sun can cause to exterior paint. Faded paint may hurt the resale value of a vehicle, prompting prospective buyers to walk away or at least wonder if a vehicle with a faded exterior was well maintained.
• Wash and wax. Washing and waxing a vehicle helps to minimize damage that’s inevitable regardless of where drivers park their cars. Dirt and debris litter roadways, and over time cars can collect a large amount of these unwanted stowaways. If dirt and
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debris are not removed, they can cause long-term damage to vehicle exteriors. Washing and waxing a car can ensure its exterior looks good and reduce the likelihood of rust and other corrosion from occurring.
• Don’t write off bird droppings. Some drivers, especially those who do not park their cars and trucks in garages, may write off bird droppings as an annoying yet harmless side effect of vehicle ownership. However, bird droppings are acidic and, if left to their unsightly devices, can cause permanent damage to vehicle paint. Tree sap is an equally formidable foe, potentially causing scratching because it can be very difficult to remove without spreading. Specially formulated sprays can help drivers remove bird droppings and sap from their vehicles. • Employ a car cover. Drivers who have garages but use them to store things other than their vehicles can use car covers when parking their cars in their driveways. Covers protect cars from the elements and can be quickly and easily removed.
Nature can be harsh on vehicles. Protecting automobiles from the elements should be a priority for drivers, especially those who do not park their cars and trucks in garages. ■
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 15
How to recognize potential brake problems Maintaining a vehicle is more than just a way to protect one’s financial investment. Vehicle maintenence can protect against accidents and make the road safer for drivers and their passengers as well as their fellow motorists. Fully functioning brakes are an important component of automotive safety. In its 2015 Crash Stats report, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said that brakerelated problems accounted for 22 percent of crashes where vehicular failure was cited as the cause of the collision. Bad brakes are particularly notorious for rear-end collisions. Faulty, worn brake lines, antilock brake system malfunctions and worn brake pads and discs are some potential brake problems. It is important that motorists learn to recognize the first symptoms of brake trouble so they can address issues before they put drivers, their passengers and other motorists at risk of accident or injury.
• Unusual noises: Screeching, grinding, rubbing, and high-pitched sounds are common indicators that brake pads, rotors and other parts of the braking system need attention. Worn pads can cause damage to other vehicle parts, resulting in more expensive repairs if they’re not addressed promptly.
• Pulling: If the car pulls to one side when applying the brakes, this may indicate brake pad linings are wearing down unevenly. A brake adjustment may be necessary. Pulling also may be indicative of an object or debris caught in the brake fluid.
• Less responsive: If when pressing on the brake pedal the brakes just do not seem to be as effective as they once were, or it is necessary to press the pedal harder for the brakes to engage, there may be a brake fluid leak or an air leak. Check under the vehicle to see if any fluids are pooling.
• Pungent odors: Firestone Tire Company says a burning smell may be indicative of worn out brake pads and friction on the tires. Each of these issues require immediate attention. • Vibrations: Certain vibrations may indicate brake issues. Rotors can become warped from metal-on-metal rubbing, potentially leading to a failure of the vehicle to brake properly. Vibrations also may indicate tires are misaligned. These problems can be properly assessed by a trained mechanic.
Do not let potential brake problems go unchecked. Keeping brakes in good working order helps drivers stop more readily and avoid collisions. ■
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www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Two headlights are better than one: How changing headlights in pairs makes nighttime driving safer When it comes to vehicle maintenance, professional automotive technicians and organizations that promote safe driving have always advocated replacing certain safety components in their vehicles, such as tires, brakes, shocks and wiper blades, in pairs. Replacing parts in pairs ensures that the vehicle is properly balanced and functioning safely. But it’s not just tires, brakes and shocks that should be replaced in pairs. Vehicle lighting plays an integral role in keeping drivers and their passengers safe, and motorists should exercise the same level of caution regarding their vehicles’ headlights, taillights, and turn signals that they do with other parts of their cars and trucks.
Why replace aging headlight bulbs? Most drivers are not aware that headlight bulbs can wear out and degrade over time. As a result, headlights are often overlooked when drivers conduct routine vehicle maintenance. As they age, headlight bulbs put out less light, which can dramatically compromise visibility at night, when drivers’ visual acuity is already naturally reduced by as much as 70 percent. According to Lumileds, a leading lighting solutions company for the automotive industry, headlight bulbs begin to project significantly less light within two to three years of their initial installation, producing dimmer light outputs that can compromise the safety of drivers and their passengers. Why replace bulbs two at a time? Though replacing both headlight bulbs when only one is dimming may seem
unwarranted, maintaining a consistent light output from both headlights makes the road safer for drivers, their passengers and oncoming motorists. When only one bulb is replaced, the resulting light output can be both unbalanced and unpredictable, providing inadequate lighting that can compromise driver visibility. In addition, when one bulb burns out or starts dimming, the other bulb will likely follow, forcing drivers to deal with the expense and inconvenience of getting it replaced all over again.
How else can drivers improve visibility? In addition to properly maintaining their headlights, drivers can take the following proactive measures to make nighttime driving safer. • Replace worn out wiper blades each season or in three-month intervals to ensure adequate visibility during rain or snow.
• Clean interior glass and mirrors to remove any film-like buildup that reduces vision and creates hazy reflections from the sun. This is especially important for smokers who smoke while driving. • Don’t hang accessories on rearview mirrors. This includes fuzzy dice, photos and other items that can be distracting and block your vision.
To learn more, check out the public service website and video produced by Lumileds at: philipsautolighting.com/chips. ■
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 17
Fluids to check before your next road trip For many traveling enthusiasts, few things are more enticing than the open road. Road trips have long been popular, and that popularity appears to be on the rise. According to a report from MMGY Global, a travel and hospitality marketing firm, road trips represented 39 percent of vacations taken by United States travelers in 2016. Road trips also remain popular in Canada, where vast, rugged terrain makes for idyllic trips. Before embarking on road trips, motorists would be wise to inspect their vehicles to ensure their getaways are not derailed by car troubles. • Brake fluid: Squeaky brakes are not the only potential indicator of brake problems. Brake fluid, which should always be topped off before beginning a road trip, also might shed light on potentially serious problems. According to the National Motorists Association, brake fluid looks honey-like and translucent when fresh. A puddle beneath a vehicle that is clear to brown and slick indicates a brake fluid leak, which can ultimately lead to a complete failure of the brakes. The NMA recommends brake fluid be changed at least once every three to four years.
• Transmission fluid: When fresh, transmission fluid is red, darkening over time. However, transmission fluid should never appear brown or black, which indicates potential internal damage to the transmission. To determine if there are any issues with the transmission fluid, the NMA recommends drivers wipe a cool dipstick between
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their thumb and index finger. If even the slightest bit of grit is felt when wiping the dipstick, the transmission is likely in need of work.
• Oil: Drivers should change their vehicles’ oil before embarking on road trips, especially if such trips will be lengthy. The NMA notes that fresh oil is light to dark amber and translucent, and that is how oil typically looks immediately after an oil change. Oil darkens over time, and that is natural (black oil indicates it’s time for an oil change). However, oil that appears cloudy or milky indicates that coolant is getting into the oil, perhaps due to gasket problems. Drivers who are not getting their vehicles’ oil changed before a road trip should at least check their oil before leaving to inspect the color of the oil and ensure the vehicle has enough oil. • Windshield washer fluid: The unknown of the open road is part of what makes it so appealing. While many road trippers plan their trips during the summer and fall when the weather tends to be both pleasant and predictable, there’s no guarantee inclement weather won’t rear its ugly head. Filling the windshield washer fluid reservoir before embarking on a trip ensures drivers’ visibility won’t be adversely affected by unforeseen issues that can soil windshields. Checking fluids before embarking on a road trip can help drivers avoid breakdowns and ensure a safe, fun trip. ■
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Sports
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
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Pairings set as soccer enters sectional season By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
MORIAH | The playoffs in Section VII soccer are ready to begin as Chazy, Saranac and Plattsburgh High will host championship games next week. Peru, Seton Catholic and Chazy are the top seeds in the boys Class B, C and D playoffs, respectively, while Beekmantown, Lake Placid and Chazy occupy the top seeds in the girls brackets.
BOYS
AUSABLE VALLEY AT MORIAH:
Photos from the Oct. 5 swim meet between the Patriots and Vikings available online at mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. ■
Here are just a couple of the stories found online this week at suncommunitynews. com/sports
The playoffs open Wednesday with quarterfinal games in Class B and C. In Class B, fifth seed Beekmantown will travel to Champlain for a 6 p.m. contest against fourth seed Northeastern Clinton, with the winner facing top seed and defending champion Peru in the first of two semifinal games at George Brendler Field in Chazy Saturday, Oct. 20, with a noon kickoff. The second semifinal will have third seed Saranac playing two seed Plattsburgh High at 2 p.m. The Class B title game will be played Friday, Oct. 26, 7 p.m. at Brendler Field. The Class C quarterfinal will be a rematch from last season as fifth seed AuSable Valley will travel to face fourth seed and defending champion Lake Placid at 3 p.m. Wednesday. The winner will face top seed Seton Catholic at 5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 22, to be played at Saranac High School. The second semifinal to be played at 7 p.m. will match up third seed Saranac Lake and second seed Northern Adirondack. The Class C championship game will be at Saranac Thursday, Oct. 25, with a 7 p.m. kickoff. The Class D playoffs will also feature only five teams, with the
Crown Point plays to 4-4 draw against Willsboro. ■
SECTIONAL COVERAGE:
See suncommunitynews.com/sports for upcoming sectional games, including the Schroon Lake boys team. ■
Andrew Pelkey and the Schroon Lake varsity soccer team will face Crown Point Friday in the lone Class D quarterfinal game this season, with the winner advancing to play Chazy Tuesday, Oct. 23. Photo by Jill Lobdell
First
Class C opens with three games in the quarterfinal round Tuesday, Oct. 16, as seventh seed Ticonderoga will travel to Moriah, sixth seed Seton Catholic will go to third seed Saranac Lake and fifth seed AuSable Valley will be hosted by fourth seed Northern Adirondack. All three games start at 3 p.m. Class C semifinals will be played Saturday, Oct. 20, with the top seed Lake Placid playing at 5 p.m. against the 4-5 winner and the 2-7 and 3-6 winners playing at 7 p.m. The Class C final will be held Thursday, Oct. 25, at Saranac with a 5 p.m. kickoff. The Class B playoffs open with fifth seed Peru going to fourth seed Northeastern Clinton for a 6 p.m. game Tuesday, Oct. 16, with the winner playing top seed Beekmantown at Brendler Field Friday, Oct. 19, at 5 p.m. The 7 p.m. game will pit third seed Plattsburgh High against second seed Saranac, with the championship game to be played Friday, Oct. 26, at Brendler Field with a 5 p.m. start. The Class D playoffs open Thursday, Oct. 18, all with 3 p.m. starts as seventh seed Wells goes to Camp Dudley to face second seed Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport, sixth seed Willsboro going to play third seed Johnsburg, and fourth seed Keene hosting fifth seed Crown Point, as the two teams will play for the third time in as many weeks. Chazy will host the winner of the Keene/Crown Point game in one semifinal Monday, Oct. 22, at 6 p.m., while the other semifinal will be held at the site of the highest remaining seed at 3 p.m. the same day. The Class D final will be played at noon Saturday, Oct. 17, at Plattsburgh High. ■
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opening round contest between fifth seed Schroon Lake and fourth seed Crown Point being played Friday, Oct. 19, hosted by the Panthers. The winner will travel to Chazy for a contest against the defending sectional and state champions at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 23. The other semifinal will have third seed Willsboro traveling to second seed ElizabethtownLewis/Westport for a 3 p.m. start Oct. 23, with the championship game being played at Plattsburgh High School Saturday, Oct. 27, at 2 p.m.
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Samantha Hayes and the Moriah Lady Vikings, winners of the Class D sectional title a year ago, head into this season’s Class C tournament as the second seed. Photo by Jill Lobdell
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 21
Ticonderoga, EKMW prepare for postseason By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
TICONDEROGA | As the 2018 Champlain Valley Athetic Conference cross country regular season winds down, the local cross country teams are setting their sites on the upcoming league championship and Section VII/state qualifying meets. Ticonderoga and the Elizabethtown-KeeneMoriah-Westport (EKMW) combined team have been working on progressing throughout the season with team members focused on earning personal bests and improving on their times. “I am pretty excited about the season,” said Ticonderoga coach Jay Wells. “We are a young team and improving steadily throughout the year. We are looking forward to putting our best effort forward and sectionals.” “Our team has really improved,” said Zylen Tyler. “I am looking to improve my time a
EKMW’s Logan VanBuren.
Photo by Keith Lobdell
Ticonderoga’s Zylen Tyler.
Photo by Jill Lobdell
lot before then so I can do really well.” “I think I ran well today,” said Emery Tausinger after his eighth place finish Oct. 16 at SUNY Plattsburgh. “Our team is doing really well. We have all improved.” They have also been working to grow as a team. “We have a really good group of kids that are a joy to coach and we have had a lot of fun,” said EKMW coach Luis Garnica. “They are good student-athletes and Howard Hammonds has been back working with the boys program and it has been a fun year.” Logan VanBuren has been at the top of the standings in each race he has competed in, setting the Mount Van Hoevenburg course record in the teams Oct. 16 meet. “He has been having a great season and we are hoping for a top three finish out of him at sectionals,” said Garnica. “He has been working very hard in his junior year.” ■
Moriah dominates in win over previously unbeaten Beekmantown By Keith Lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
MORIAH | Jerin Sargent caught five passes Oct. 13 against the Beekmantown Eagles, but only one was on offense. While his one reception was a 20-yard touchdown pass from Moriah Vikings quarterback Jeff Strieble, it was his four interceptions of Beekmantown quarterback Brandon Belrose which helped to seal a 24-0 for the Vikings, who knocked off the sole unbeaten team in the Champlain Valley Athletic Conference for the second year in a row. “It’s probably my best varsity game ever, to be honest,” Sargent said, who also caught a pair of two-point conversions. “I think we executed the best we have all year. We controlled the line of scrimmage and made our cuts well.” Dyllon Bougor also had a strong game on both sides of the ball, rushing for 110 yards and the opening score of the game while grabbing a pair of interceptions, giving the Vikings six total for the game while the team did not turn
the ball over once. “We knew we were coming in for a game where we could prove ourselves heading into the playoffs,” Bougor said. “We went for a zone and executed. We had a couple blown plays but didn’t give up the big play.” Moriah head coach Don Tesar said the strong day started with the defensive line. “The whole defensive squad played well,” Tesar said. “We got the picks because we were able to shut down the run. Once they had to pass the ball, we put pressure on the quarterback and the guys in the secondary did their jobs. Alex (Larrow), Mike (Rollins) and Myles (Madill) all had great games today on the line.” Tesar also tipped his cap to the other set of linemen for his squad. “The whole game the offensive line played extremely well,” he said. “We used some things Beekmantown had not seen before. You get Mike and Alex side by side and that is a tough tandem to work against.” “We had a strong scout on them and a good week on practice,” Larrow said. “The defensive line has come together well and it is going to be good for us as we go into sectionals.” Along with Bougor and Sargent, Maddox Blaise scored for the Vikings on a 60-yard pass up the seem to give the Vikings their 24-0 lead.
Ticonderoga receiver Bryce Gautreau tries to slip out of the tackle from AuSable Valley’s Trevor Wilkinson during their Oct. 12 game in Clintonville. Photo by Keith Lobdell
» Football Cont. on pg. 22
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Moriah’s Dyllon Bougor runs through the tackle of Beekmantown’s Jalen Belrose during the Vikings’ 24-0 win over the Eagles Oct. 13. Photo by Keith Lobdell
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» Football Cont. from pg. 21 “It’s a pattern that we had worked on and it just worked out perfectly,” Tesar said. The Vikings will host Section II’s Granville Friday night at Linney Field before playing the Section VII/Class D title game against rival Ticonderoga the following week. “Now we will head into the crossover game and then it is on to week nine,” said Tesar.
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“We have to keep working hard and get ready for week nine, because that is the game that matters,” added Sargent.
SENTINELS FALL TO PATRIOTS
As for Ticonderoga, the Sentinels were able to grab a late lead against AuSable Valley on a nine-yard scoring play from Terrance Benedict to Michael DuShane, but were unable to hold the lead as the Patriots scored
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was the top receiver with 115 yards. Ticonderoga head coach Scott Nephew said the team learned from being in a close game. “We have not been in a lot of those this season,” Nephew said. “Our kids stepped up and made some plays, but we have to continue to keep making plays. We did not execute after we took the lead but we will move on and work to get better off this game.” ■
a 26-25 win Oct. 12. Benedict threw a pair of touchdown passes and ran for one more for the Sentinels, also connecting with Bryce Gautreau on a 14-yard scoring play. He finished with 230 yards passing and 22 yards rushing. Russ Gallo III, who scored on a six-yard run, had 62 yards rushing in the game to go along with 54 receiving yards, while DuShane
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The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 23
Candidates refine health care pitches Health care solutions remain in focus ahead of election
H.R.676 currently has 123 co-sponsors. “She will co-sponsor it as long as her amendments are added in,” said Paul Paterakis, a campaign spokesman.
By Pete DeMola
Stefanik cited skyrocketing costs and declining choices for her vote to repeal Obamacare last year. But the legislation remains intact after GOP-led repeal efforts died in the Senate. Asked if Americans are better off when it comes to health care than they were four years ago, Stefanik said Obamacare remains a “very Band Aid approach” and said she continues to field complaints from constituents over rising premiums and out-of-pocket costs and difficulty retaining services. Stefanik said she was not among the Republicans who wanted to repeal President Obama’s namesake legislation without a replacement plan. “I was not in that group,” Stefanik told The Sun in an editorial board meeting. “I worked hard to make sure there was a replacement package, and it didn’t end up passing the Senate.” Stefanik, who is on Obamacare, said she has been successful in crafting bipartisan fixes to the legislation, including repeal of the medical device tax and the auto-enrollment mandate. The lawmaker also helped to secure $27 million in funding for rural and Medicaid-dependent rural hospitals, as well worked to secure a five-year extension for the Children’s Health Insurance Program. Cobb, the lawmaker’s Democratic opponent, earlier this summer released a statement from her husband’s insurance company pinning a 8.7 percent premium increase directly to GOP measures designed to weaken the legislation, including repeal of the auto-enrollment mandate. Stefanik disputed those claims, and said premium increases were rising at higher percentages before the law took effect. “(Health care costs) have been rising since before Obamacare,” Stefanik said. “They were exacerbated after Obamacare was passed.” Stefanik, who is seeking a third term, said Congress must do more to address rising costs. “I think providing more flexibility, more patient-centered choices and thinking creatively about using technology effectively so we can look at health care plans that meet our needs and purchase them across state lines,” said Stefanik. The lawmaker does not support a single-payer health care system, including Medicare-for-All, which she contends will result in $1 trillion in new taxes. “I don’t think that’s the right approach. I don’t think that a government-run health care works effectively. We’ve seen in Vermont that has not worked effectively and it’s caused major fiscal challenges there.” Stefanik has proposed legislation that would require insurance companies to cover two annual primary care visits instead of one, and supports efforts allowing small business to create insurance pools designed to lower costs.
EDITOR
TICONDEROGA | Candidates are refining their health care pitches in the waning days of the race for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) is running for a third term and faces challenges from Tedra Cobb, a Democrat, and Green Party candidate Dr. Lynn Kahn. Stefanik voted against the Affordable Care Act (ACA), commonly known as “Obamacare,” last May and opposes a single-payer health care system. Cobb and Kahn have indicated support for single-payer systems, but with caveats.
LYNN KAHN, GREEN PARTY
Kahn last week released eight proposed fixes to “Expanded and Improved Medicare for All,” the single-payer health care backed by Democrats in the House. The organizational psychologist wants to expand mental health services covered under the legislation, boost usage of medical marijuana and lower the price of prescription drugs, including allowing Medicare to directly negotiate with drug companies. Kahn’s long-term roadmap also aims to clarify “realistic implementation plans and schedules” and implement “mechanisms of cross-government coordination that will enable measurable health outcomes.” “I really want to make sure that we’re focused on expanding health care and lowering the costs but improving health outcomes,” Kahn told The Sun in an editorial board meeting. “That’s one thing that bothered me. What difference is this going to make if we’re not improving the outcomes?” The Mercatus Center, a libertarian-leaning think tank, reported that the Sen. Bernie Sanders-sponsored version of the legislation would cost about $32.6 trillion in new federal spending over the first decade. Kahn indicated costs could be offset by reinvesting some $60 billion in funds recovered from health care fraud back into the system. “I have done an enormous amount of research about the waste in the federal government, so I think everybody’s assessment of what things cost is so far off-base and detached from reality because we’re not looking at how wasteful the federal government is,” Kahn said. The candidate said her own number-crunching has flagged $1 trillion in waste, and she said she strongly opposes raising taxes on working families and small businesses. Seventy percent of Americans favor a single-payer healthcare system, said her campaign, citing an August Reuters-Ipsos poll.
STEFANIK, REPUBLICAN INCUMBENT
COBB, DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE
Cobb supports the concept of “comprehensive health insurance” and has cited Medicare-for-All or ACA expansion as possible fixes. But she has not endorsed a specific policy proposal, citing the need to hold Congressional hearings to discuss the cost and impact of potential legislation. Cobb won’t commit to supporting H.R. 676, a spokesman told The Sun, because lawmakers haven’t adhered to that process. “This is the same response we would give for the Chris Murphy plan (to allow Medicare buy-in), plans to expand the ACA or any other health care legislation that (hasn’t) yet followed these specific steps,” said Brian Phillips, Jr., the spokesman. Cobb, who started a health care non-profit in St. Lawrence County in the 1990s, has long said she supports “affordable and portable” health care. “I will work for affordable and portable healthcare that is available to everyone, with no exclusions or premium increases due to pre-existing conditions,” Cobb said in a statement. The candidate defines “affordable” as “health care that can be obtained by families for a price they can afford” and “portable” as “health care that is not dependent on a person’s employment status.” “Tedra believes that if you lose a job you should be able to keep your coverage. If you move, you should be able to keep your coverage,” said Phillips. The Medicaid expansion under Obamacare has resulted in greater access and affordable coverage for many rural communities, said the candidate, who has cited Stefanik’s vote to repeal the legislation as the reason for entering the race last summer. Cobb issued a volley of attacks on Stefanik last week, contending repeal would have led to 64,000 residents of New York’s 21st Congressional District losing health care coverage and stripped rural hospitals of funding, leading to potential job loss. The proposed American Health Care Act (AHCA) contained $880 billion in Medicaid cuts by rolling back federal shares to the traditional 50-50 model as opposed to a 90-10 split. Each state would have been free to pick up the difference, which would have amounted to $2.3 billion in New York. Cobb alleges Stefanik’s health care policy is influenced by corporate donations from the insurance and pharmaceutical sectors, citing nearly $681,000 the candidate received in campaign contributions between April and June. Stefanik campaign spokesman Lenny Alcivar fired back at Cobb for the candidate’s criticisms. “Taxin’ Tedra Cobb supports a trillion dollar tax hike on North Country families to pay for her government-run, single-payer health care scheme,” Alcivar said. Stefanik, he said, “has a proven, bipartisan record of fighting to make health care and prescription drugs more affordable, more accessible and she has consistently fought to protect those with pre-existing conditions.” ■ — This story has been abridged for print. To read this story in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
Social Security checks to grow 2.8% Gillibrand wants to change how COLA increase is calculated By Pete DeMola EDITOR
TICONDEROGA | The Social Security Administration announced last week that cost-of-living adjustments (COLA) to beneficiaries will be 2.8 percent next year. The adjustment marks the biggest increase since 2012. The average Social Security benefit in 2018 is $1,422, CNBC reported, and the COLA will result in an extra $39 per month, or $468 annually. COLA increases affect 1 in 5 Americans nationwide. AARP said the increase brings “needed income security to those Social Security beneficiaries and their families who depend on their earned, modest benefits.” “The COLA is particularly important for the tens of millions of families who depend on Social Security for all or most of their retirement income, many of whom may have lost ground during the Great Recession,” said Chief Executive Officer Jo Ann Jenkins in a statement. “Unfortunately, the cost of living increase may not adequately cover their expenses
that rise faster than inflation including health, prescription drug, utility and housing costs.”
‘INADEQUATE’
U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a member of the Senate Aging Committee, called the increase “inadequate.” “At a time when Congress is rewarding their corporate donors with tax breaks for investments overseas, they continue to shortchange our seniors,” Gillibrand said in a statement. “This cost of living adjustment is not enough in the face of rising costs for seniors who contributed their earnings into Social Security their whole working lives.” COLA is based on a broad index of consumer prices, which measures price changes for “food, housing, clothing, transportation, energy, medical care, recreation and education,” according to the Associated Press. Advocates for reform want to change the index to more accurately reflect the costs shouldered by beneficiaries. Gillibrand, a co-sponsor of the Social Security Expansion Act, called for Congress to immediately reconsider the legislation she said would change COLA increases to reflect what seniors “actually spend their money on, including skyrocketing health care costs and prescription drugs.” “By using a Consumer Price Index for elderly consumers, every year seniors would be able to receive increased benefits,” Gillibrand said. “The Social Security Expansion
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand called the cost-of-living adjustment announced by the Social Security Administration last week “inadequate.” File photo Act would also ensure that all Americans pay their fair share, and it would increase minimum benefits and extend the Social Security trust fund for more than six decades.”
STEFANIK APPLAUDS
Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) applauded the increase. “This is great news for seniors across our district,” said Stefanik in a statement. “Our offices are proud to work on behalf of Social Security beneficiaries to ensure they are receiving the correct amount they are owed, and to date, we have helped recover over
$1.9 million in Social Security benefits for our seniors. I will continue to work in Congress to protect Social Security and ensure that constituents in our district receive the benefits they deserve.” Stefanik is up for re-election in November and faces Tedra Cobb, a Democrat, and Green Party candidate Lynn Kahn. “It’s a start,” said Kahn. “It still doesn’t make up for loss in buying power and universal health care which could make COLA go a lot further.” The Cobb campaign did not respond to an email seeking comment. ■
24 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
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Enrollment open for health insurance policies
TACC and chamber of commerce to hold insurance info session
TICONDEROGA | A health insurance information session and open house will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 7 at the Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce (TACC) office in coordination with the North Country Chamber of Commerce. The information session will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. refreshments will be served and the general open house will be held from 1–3 p.m. The TACC Office is located at 94 Montcalm St., Suite 1 in Ticonderoga. The information session and open house will cover 2019 rates and new health plans and companies, special chamber plans, changes to regulations and more. While health insurance sessions are held monthly at the chamber office for all members and the Ticonderoga area
business community, the November session as open enrollment is taking place Nov. 1 through Dec. 15. Those who miss open enrollment may have to wait for another full year to sign up unless they qualify for a special enrollment period. Insurance policies can be purchased from the New York State of Health Marketplace or directly through an insurance company. Lisa Bedard-Dupee at the North Country Chamber of Commerce is a licensed insurance broker and certified navigator available to help with enrollment on or off the marketplace and to determine eligibility for a tax credit. “Everyone at the Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce goes above and beyond to provide services and information to their members. Our focus is the same. The partnership we have allows us to offer members across the region not only access to health, vision and dental policies, but to information as well. us help you review your plan, look at NOTICE TOLet BIDDERS your options and any newGIVplans available. No one should be NOTICE IS HEREBY thatinsurance. the UnderwithoutEN, health Give us a call and make an apsigned, on behalf of the pointment. will help health insurance stress free EssexWe County Board make of
Supervisors, will accept sealed bids until October 26, 2018 at 2:00 P.M. for the following: ONE (1) NEW & UNsuncommunitynews.com/public-notices/birth-announcements USED MID SIZE SEDAN Specifications are available by contacting the Office of the Purchasing Agent, welcomed Linda M. Wolf, CROWN POINT | Ashley McGrath Andersen and Donald McGrath Essex County Govern■ their son, Conor Patrick McGrath, to the world on Oct. 7, 2018. ment Center, 7551 Court Street, Elizabethtown, New York 12932, by calling 518-873-3332 or ESSEX COUNTY TRANSACTIONS on the Countys Website: https://www.co.esDATE GRANTOR GRANTEE LOCATION PRICE sex.ny.us/bidders/publicbids.aspx. $365,000 06/26/18 Joan Morris Robert Norcross Wilmington Sealed bids will be reOffice of 06/26/18 Tanya Bashaw Russell Denton Lewisceived at the $34,500 the Purchasing Agent, Govern06/27/18 Bruce Anderson William Joseph Gibney Jay Essex County$244,000 ment Center, 7551 Court 06/27/18 William Decker Robert Politi LakeStreet, Placid Elizabethtown, $125,000 New York 12932 until 06/28/18 Kathleen Carroll-Williams Kaleigh Moore Wilmington October 26, $183,000 2018 at 2:00 P.M. at which time 06/28/18 Nationstar Hecm Acq Trust Thomas Reinckens Essexbids will be$165,000 publicly opened and read aloud. 06/28/18 Timothy Forman 10 Dooling Way LLC LakeAll Placid $260,000 bids submitted in response to this notice 06/28/18 Pamela Macdougal Skiler Rae Stafford Willsboro $105,000 shall be marked SEALED BID MID SIZE SEDAN 06/29/18 Diane Robinson Shawn Pepe Schroon clearly on the $150,000 outside of the envelope with the 06/29/18 Bruce Danek Scott Demarco Minerva $167,500 bidders name and address. 06/29/18 Andrea Rushford Jordon Blanchard Willsboro $90,000 Essex County affirmain re06/29/18 Daniel Johnson Christopher Leege Jay tively states that $154,000 gard to any contract en06/29/18 Philip Forman NOTICE OF FORMATION Frances Reed Keenetered into pursuant $220,000to these instructions, withOF Breakaway Lodge color, out regard filed Spinner 06/29/18 Joshua MeppenLLC. Arts of Org. Bradle Chesterfi eld to race, $143,000 sex, religion, age, nawith NY Secy of State tional origin, $132,000 disability, Of- Schryer 06/29/18 David Woods (SSNY) on 10/1/18.Amy Ticonderoga sexual preference or fice location: Essex Vietnam Era veteran staCounty. SSNY is desig- NOTICE TO BIDDERS nated as agent of LLC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- tus, disadvantaged and EN, that the Under- minority or womenupon whom process against itLEGALS may be served. signed, on behalf of the owned LEGALS business enterLEGALS LEGALS Essex County Board of prises will be afforded SSNY shall mail process NOTICE OF FORMATION to: 111 8th Ave, NY, NY Supervisors, will accept equal opportunity to OF A DOMESTIC LIMIT- 10011. The name and sealed bids until October submit bids in response ED LIABILITY COMPANY address of the Reg. 26, 2018 at 2:00 P.M. hereto. (LLC) for the following: Agent is CT Corporation Dated: October 15, 2018 Name:Adirondack Center System, 111 8th Ave, ONE (1) NEW & UN- Linda M. Wolf, CPA for Osteopathic and Nat- NY, NY 10011. Purpose: USED MID SIZE SEDAN Purchasing Agent ural Wellness, LLC Arti- any lawful activity. Specifications are avail- Essex County Governcles of Organization filed able by contacting the ment Center TT-10/13-11/17/2018with the Secretary of 6TC-198285 Office of the Purchasing 7551 Court Street State of New York Agent, Linda M. Wolf, Elizabethtown, New York NOTICE OF FORMATION (SSNY) on 10/01/2018 Essex County Govern- 12932 OF KOEHNKE CAMP LLC ment Center, 7551 Court (518) 873-3332 Office Location: Essex Arts. of Org. filed with County. The SSNY is Street, Elizabethtown, TT-10/20/2018-1TCdesignated as agent of Secy. of State of NY New York 12932, by 199484 (SSNY) on 09/11/18. Of- calling 518-873-3332 or the LLC upon whom NOTICE OF FORMATION process against it may fice location: Essex on the Countys Website: OF LIMITED LIABILITY be served. SSNY shall County. Princ. office of https://www.co.esCOMPANY (LLC) mail a copy of any pro- LLC: 1679 Ensign Pond sex.ny.us/bidders/pubName: NV Construction cess to the LLC at: 17 Rd., Moriah Center, NY licbids.aspx. 12961-1701. SSNY des- Sealed bids will be re- Consulting LLC Articles Miller Drive, Crown Point, NY 12928. Pur- ignated as agent of LLC ceived at the Office of of Organization filed with upon whom process pose: To engage in any the Purchasing Agent, the Secretary of State of against it may be served. lawful act or activity. Essex County Govern- New York (SSNY) on SSNY shall mail process TT-10/13-11/17/2018ment Center, 7551 Court 08/02/2018 Office Locato the LLC, 20 Prescott 6TC-198346 Street, Elizabethtown, tion: Essex County. The St., Arlington, MA New York 12932 until SSNY is designated as ALGONQUIN HOUSE 02474. Purpose: Any October 26, 2018 at agent of the LLC upon LLC Art. Of Org. Filed whom process against it lawful activity. 2:00 P.M. at which time Sec. of State of NY TT-09/22-10/27/2018may be served. SSNY bids will be publicly 9/10/2018. Off Loc.: Es- 6TC-196747 shall mail a copy of any opened and read aloud. sex Co. SSNY designatAll bids submitted in re- process to the LLC at: P NOTICE OF FORMATION ed as agent upon whom O Box 149, 73 Krissica sponse to this notice process against it may OF Lunkerville LLC. Arts. shall be marked SEALED Way, Schroon Lake, NY be served. SSNY to mail of Org. filed with Secy. BID MID SIZE SEDAN 12870. Purpose: To enof State of NY (SSNY) clearly on the outside of gage in any lawful act or copy of process to The Limited Liability Compa- on 8/03/18 Office loca- the envelope with the activity. ny, 91 Lodge Way, Lake tion: Essex County. bidders name and ad- TT-10/6-11/10/2018Placid, NY 12946. Pur- SSNY designated as 6TC-197762 dress. pose: Any lawful act or agent of LLC upon Essex County affirmaactivity. whom process against it tively states that in re- TOWN OF TICONDEROmay be served. SSNY gard to any contract en- GA, NEW YORK TT-10/13/2018-1TCshall mail process to: tered into pursuant to NOTICE OF PUBLIC 198652 7014 13th Ave, Suite these instructions, with- HEARING NOTICE OF FORMATION Brooklyn, NY out regard to race, color, PLEASE TAKE NOTICE 202, OF Breakaway Lodge 11228.. Purpose: any sex, religion, age, na- that, pursuant to a resoLLC. Arts of Org. filed lawful activities. tional origin, disability, lution adopted by the with NY Secy of State TT-09/15-10/20/2018sexual preference or Town Board of the Town (SSNY) on 10/1/18. Of- 6TC-196087 Vietnam Era veteran sta- of Ticondeoga on Octofice location: Essex tus, disadvantaged and ber 11, 2018, a public County. SSNY is desig- NOTICE TO BIDDERS minority or women- hearing will be held by nated as agent of LLC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- owned business enter- said Town Board on EN, that the Under- prises will be afforded November 8, 2018 at upon whom process against it may be served. signed, on behalf of the equal opportunity to 6:00 p.m., at the Offices Essex County Board of submit bids in response SSNY shall mail process of the Town of Ticonto: 111 8th Ave, NY, NY Supervisors, will accept hereto. deroga, 132 Montcalm sealed bids until October Dated: October 15, 2018 10011. The name and Street, Ticonderoga, New York, regarding the address of the Reg. 26, 2018 at 2:00 P.M. Linda M. Wolf, CPA for the following: Agent is CT Corporation amendment of the Purchasing Agent
Births
Conor Patrick McGrath
for businesses and individuals,” said Lisa Bedard-Dupee, director of Health Services Plattsburgh North Country Chamber of Commerce. Through its licensed subsidiary, the Plattsburgh-North Country Service Corp., the chamber is offering health insurance assistance throughout the North Country region to small businesses, non-profits, employers of all kinds, selfemployed people, individuals and their families. Its trained and licensed professionals can answer questions and assist with available health insurance choices both on and off the New York marketplace, all at no cost to the client. The North Country Chamber and its service corporation are the official providers of health insurance services for many partner chambers in the region including the TACC. For answers to questions about the health insurance market, assistance with enrollment or to make an appointment, contact Lisa Bedard-Dupee at the North Country Chamber at 518-563-1000. For more information, contact the TACC at 518-5856619 or email chamberinfo@ticonderogany.com. ■
Obituaries
suncommunitynews.com/public-notices/obituaries
Dawn Eileen Landers
PURSUANT TO SECTION 4-120 OF THE NEW YORK Eileen STATE Landers ELECTION TICONDEROGA | Dawn LAW, notice is hereby (Webb), 62, of Mayfield passed away sudgiven that the official denly on Tuesday, Oct. 9. Dawn first moved General Election for pubofficesherin homeEssex to the Village of Mayfilic eld from TOWN OF TICONDERO- County will be held on town of Hartford in Washington County in GA, NEW YORK Tuesday, November 6, NOTICEafter OFbeing PUBLIC 2018, from 6:00AM to 1976 married. HEARING 9:00PM of said day. DawnTAKE had worked ColecoElections many years PLEASE NOTICE forFederal for: that, pursuant to a reso- a 30 U.S.year Senator; Represenago before starting career with lution adopted by the tative in Congress, 21st Amsterdam Print where she continued to Town Board of the Town District work as of late. remained active for of Ticondeoga on She Octo-hadStatewide Elections for: ber 11, years 2018, with a public Governor, Governor; many the Mayfi eld Lt. Methodist hearing will be held by Comptroller; Attorney Church andBoard had performed service as said Town on General;past State Senator, November 8, 2018 at 45th District; Member of 6:00 p.m., at the Offices Assembly, 114th DisLEGALS LEGALS of the Town of Ticon- trict. deroga, 132 Montcalm County Elections for: Street, Ticonderoga, County Treasurer, SherNew York, regarding the iff, County Coroner (3) amendment of the Town elections for: Town's Ordinance that Chesterfield: Town Jusregulates peddlers, so- tice; Essex: Assessor licitors, and transient (Unexpired term); Lewis: merchants. Town Justice; Minerva: Tonya Thompson Town Justice; North Town Clerk Elba: Town Justice; St TT-10/20/2018-1TCArmand: Town Council 199487 (Unexpired term); Ticonderoga: Town Justice; NOTICE OF FORMATION Westport:, Town Justice; of Post Tahawus LLC, Willsboro: Town Justice; Arts. Of Org. filed with Wilmington: Town JusSSNY on 09/25/2018. tice, Assessor (UnexOffice Location: Essex pired 3 year term), AsCounty, SSNY designat- sessor (Unexpired 1 ed as agent of LLC upon year term) Proposals: 1 who process against it (One) Town of Essex: A may be served. SSNY copy may be obtained shall mail a copy of pro- by any voter at the cess to: The LLC, 400 Board of Elections. NOSeabury Drive, Apt. TICE IS HEREBY FUR3193, Bloomfield, Con- THER GIVEN that the necticut 06002. Pur- polling places of said pose: to engage in any General Election will be lawful act. the polling places in TT-10/6-11/10/2018each district of the 6TC-198032 County of Essex at which votes were cast at PURSUANT TO SECTION the last preceding Gen4-120 OF THE NEW eral Election (unless othYORK STATE ELECTION erwise advertised), and LAW, notice is hereby that all are handicapped given that the official accessible. General Election for pub- Allison M. McGahay, lic offices in Essex Sue E. Montgomery County will be held on Corey Tuesday, November 6, Commissioners, Essex 2018, from 6:00AM to County Board of Elec9:00PM of said day. tions Federal Elections for: County of Essex, ElizaU.S. Senator; Represen- bethtown, NY 12932 tative in Congress, 21st Dated: October 3, 2018 District VN/TT-10/20, Statewide Elections for: 11/3/2018-2TC-199309 Governor, Lt. Governor; Attorney Comptroller; General; State Senator, 45th District; Member of Assembly, 114th District. County Elections for: County Treasurer, Sheriff, County Coroner (3) Town elections for:
a Village of Mayfield trustee and a member of the Mayfield Fire Department Auxiliary. Dawn had very much enjoyed crafting and crocheting and she loved camping and spending time with her family and extended family. She is survived by her loving husband, Bart (Bartholomew) Landers; her daughter, Danielle Landers; her grandson, Robert John Landers; three furbaby chihuahuas including Teddy, Cameo and Cinnamon; four siblings including Debbie, Babs, Jeff and Martin; and her stepmother Mary Webb, all of Washington County, along with several nieces and nephews and great nieces and nephews. She is predeceased by her infant son, David Landers; her father, Robert Webb; and her mother, Gail (Edwards) Webb, both of Fulton County. Family and friends are invited to visitation at the Mayfield United Methodist Church on Sunday, Oct. 21 from 1-2 p.m. where a celebration of life service will be held at 2 p.m. Burial will follow in the Mayfield Union Rural Cemetery. Donations in Dawn’s memory are invited to be made to the Mayfield Methodist Church at 20 N. Main St., Mayfield, NY 12117. TOWN OF TICONDEROArrangements are under and GA, the NEWdirection YORK NOTICE Home. OF PUBLIC care of the Gloversville Funeral ConHEARING dolences may be made to the family online PLEASE TAKE NOTICE at gloversvillefuneralservice.com. ■ that a public hearing will LEGALS SCHOOL TAX COLLECTORS NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Tax roll & warrant for the Schroon Lake Central School District have been received for collection of taxes 2018 therein levied. Taxes will be collected at the Glens Falls National Bank, Schroon Lake Branch only. Monday thru Friday 9:00 am to 4:00 pm Taxes may be mailed to the Schroon Lake Central School . PO Box 338 Schroon Lake, N.Y. 12870 anytime before Nov. 2, 2018. Last date for collection is Nov. 8, 2018. There is no penalty on taxes paid by Oct. 01, 2018. Penalties on late payments start Oct. 2, 2018-Oct. 31, 2018 2%. Nov. 1, 2018 Nov. 2, 2018 3% after Nov. 2nd taxes are returned to the county office and relevied. No taxes will be accepted after that date at the school or bank. Mrs. Terri Bearor Tax collector Schroon Lake Central School District TT-10/13-11/3/20184TC-197517 TOWN OF TICONDEROGA, NEW YORK NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that a public hearing will be held by the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga on November 8, 2018 at 6:00 p.m. a.m. at the offices of the Town of Ticonderoga, 132 Montcalm Street, Ticonderoga, New York,
be held by the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga on NovemLEGALS ber 8, 2018 at 6:00 p.m. a.m. at the offices of the Town of Ticonderoga, 132 Montcalm Street, Ticonderoga, New York, for the purpose of considering a local law to override the tax levy limit established in General Municipal Law section 3-c. By order of the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga, New York, dated October 11, 2018. Tonya Thompson Town Clerk TT-10/20/2018-1TC199489
TOWN OF TICONDEROGA, NEW YORK NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that a public hearing will be held by the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga on November 8, 2018 starting at 6:00 p.m. to discuss a Local Law Repealing the Town Taxicab Services Law. Such Public Hearing will be held at the Offices of the Town of Ticonderoga, 132 Montcalm Street, Ticonderoga, New York to hear all those interested parties. By order of the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga, New York, dated October 11, 2018. Tonya Thompson Town Clerk TT-10/20/2018-1TC199485
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198709
The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 25
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The Vermont Community Foundation is seeking an accountant with three or more years of experience. This position is responsible for investment and fund accounting, financial reporting, state and federal lobbying and grant reporting compliance, tax compliance, general accounting, and audit preparation support. The ideal candidate has superb problem-solving and analytical skills; is detail oriented and highly dependable; and is committed to collaboration, teamwork, and personal growth. Please send cover letter and resume to: humanresource@vermontcf.org or mail to: The Vermont Community Foundation, 3 Court Street, Middlebury, VT 05753. Visit www.vermontcf.org/jobs for a complete job description. The Vermont Community Foundation is an equal employment opportunity employer and offers a competitive salary and benefits. 199332
198108
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199377
26 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
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NOVENA Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, Fruitful Vine, Splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O star of the Sea, help me and show me here, you are my mother, oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven & Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. There are none that can with stand your power. Show me herein you are my mother. Oh Mary Conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to thee (repeat 3 X's). Holy Mother, I place this cause in your hands (ask for 3 X's). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, lights all the roads so that I may attain my goals. You who must give me the devine gift to forgive & forget all evil against me & that in all instances in my life you are with me. I want in this short prayer to thank you for all things, as you confirm once again, that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank you for your Mercy toward me & mine. ( The person must say this prayer for three consecutive days. After 3 days the prayer request will be granted). This prayer must be published after the favor is granted. Thank you Christi. ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
FARM PRODUCTS 4X4 ROUND HAY BALES, First Cut, $15 each. 518-796-1967
HARDWOOD BOLTS FOR MUSHROOM CULTIVATION 518-643-9942 BEFORE 7PM
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GENERAL NEED TI ONE-BEDROOM Need Private Long Term Ticonderoga 1-Bedroom for 53 year old single woman. Willing to housesit for winter season or house share. Currently an in Home Health Care Aide and volunteer Church Secretary. Wanting to spend $375 +/- monthly. I have no pet, do not smoke, drink or drugs. Please call 802-774-8655. LOGGING
PRECISION TREE SERVICE 518-942-6545 REAL ESTATE RENTALS LOT FOR RENT IN TICONDEROGA, NY. Zoned for a Single Wide Trailer only, References & Security Deposit Required. 518-586-6587. APARTMENT RENTALS 1 BDRM UPSTAIRS APT. TICONDEROGO, NY Country Setting, $525/mo. + Security, Trash PickUp Included. No Pets. Call 518546-7899 2 APPARTMENTS IN MINEVILLE, NY 3 bdrm apartment for rent, living, dining & kitchen, $650/mo. + utilities, 1st & last mo. rent, security dep. & references required. No Pets. Call 802-948-2652. PORT HENRY 1-2 BR APARTMENTS 40 minute drive to jobs in Middlebury and Vergennes. Apartment near downtown Port Henry. Walking distance to grocery store, pharmacy, and other stores and services. No dogs, other than service dogs. $490, plus utilities, security deposit required. Call 518546-7003 Schroon Lake – 1 Bedroom apt. Heat, Lights, Trash & Water Included, $1000/mo. Can Come Furnished, Pet Deposit. 518-241-0208 Ticonderoga - Mt Vista Apts – 1 & 3 bdrm available + utilities. Appliances, trash, snow included. NO smokers. Rental assistance may be avail; must meet eligibility requirements. 518-584-4543 NYS TDD Relay Service 1-800-4211220 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity TICONDEROGA. All new luxury apartment for rent. Queit neighborhood, off street parking, all appliances & amenities. Call 732-4338594. HOMES FOR RENT CHESTERTOWN-FRIENDS LAKE 2 bedroom year-round house for rent with beach rights. Recent upgrades. No pets or smoking. $900 per month plus security. 518-4943101 Discover the world's best walk-in bathtub from
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2012 UTILITY TRAILER 6X10, Excellent Condition, $800 Firm. 518494-5397 5,000 WATT GEN. W/ Briggs & Straton Engine, less than 80 hrs., kept indoors only, $400. 518-3542115 FULL SIZE BED with decorative metal head and foot boards. Excellent condition. Asking $50 518585-4011 UTILITY TRAILER 4X4X8, good condition $350. 347-996-0676 Brant Lake, NY area.
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Fort Ann Antiques Always Buying 518-499-2915 Route 4, Whitehall, NY www.fortannantiques.com
FIREWOOD FOR SALE: 1 year oldhardwood, cut 16” long & split. $315 a full cord, face Cord $120. 6 month old hardwood, 16”long & split. $285 full cord, $95 face cord Delivered to Chestertown. Extra Delivery Charge beyond Chestertown. 518-494-2321. Seasoned Firewood $70 face cord, you pick up, delivery extra. 518-494-4788. FOR SALE
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
FALL INTO THESE
The Times of Ti Sun | October 20, 2018 • 27
Autumn deals BEFORE
WINTER COMES!
New!
2018 FORD F-150 SUPERCAB STX 4X4 Stock #EV518 • V6 EcoBoost, 10-Speed Auto, Sport Appearance Package, Sirius, Power Equipment Group. Offer ends 1/2/19. Retail ....................................................................$43,275 Ford Manufacturer Discount ..............................-$2,000 MSRP .................................................................... $41,275 Ford EcoBoost ........................................................... -$300 Ford Customer Cash.............................................-$3,000 Ford Credit Bonus Cash1......................................... -$500 Ford First Responder Cash2 ................................... -$500 Ford Dealer Discount .............................................. -$980
New!
35,995
$
TOTAL SAVINGS $7,280
MSRP ................................................................$17,405 Ford Retail Customer Cash.............................-$2,500 Ford First Responder Cash2 ............................... -$500
14,405
$
New!
Stock #EV463 • Auto, Power Locks/Windows, Cruise, SYNC, Rear Camera. Offer ends 1/2/19.
MSRP .................................................................$21,765 Ford Customer Cash.........................................-$3,000 Ford First Responder Cash2 ............................... -$500 Ford Credit Cash1 .............................................. -$1,000 Dealer Discount .....................................................-$470
16,795 New!
2018 FORD ECOSPORT SE 4X4
22,650
2018 FORD FOCUS SE
$
TOTAL SAVINGS $3,000
MSRP ...............................................................$25,400 Ford Customer Cash.........................................-$2,250 Ford 1st Responder Cash2.................................. -$500
$
New!
2018 FORD FIESTA SE
Stock #SEV242 • Auto, Power Locks/Windows/Seat, Moonroof, Rear Camera, SYNC. Offer ends 1/2/19.
TOTAL SAVINGS $4,970
2018 FORD ESCAPE SE 4X4
MSRP ...............................................................$28,045 Ford Customer Cash.........................................-$3,250 Ford First Responder2 ......................................... -$500
24,295
$
TOTAL SAVINGS $2,750
Stock #EV306 • Auto, Cruise, Power Windows/ Locks, Rear Camera, SYNC, Heated Seats/Steering Wheel. Offer ends 1/2/19.
Stock #EV504 • 4X4, 1.5L EcoBoost, Auto, Power Windows/Locks/Seat, Rear Camera, Heated Seats. Offer ends 1/2/19.
TOTAL SAVINGS $3,750
SEE ALL OF OUR GREAT BUYS AT WWW.EGGLEFIELDBROS.COM
Requires Ford Credit Approval, all customers may not qualify. 2Applies to specific job classifications determined by Ford.Not responsible for typographical errors. Photos are used for illustration purposes only.
1
~~~
~~ DLR#3160003
7618 US Route 9, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 518-873-6551 • 800-559-6551
Home for your Ford Since 1910
Higli DLR#7095376
eaks Ford EGGLEFIELD
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1190 NYS Route 86, Ray Brook, NY 12977 518-891-5560
INC.
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Sales • Seroice Rentals • Parts 199375
28 • October 20, 2018 | The Times of Ti Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
CHrlYSLErl
5 vEAR / 60,000
MILES WARRANTY
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0%
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NEW 2019 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE
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OR LEASE FOR
229
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24 mos.
OR
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269
$
36,599
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Stk#18665, Loaded w/ Automatic, 3 Pc. Hardtop, Polished Granite Crystal Wheels, Hard Top Headliner, Remote Keyless Entry and Much More! MSRP $38,305
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ADVU
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ALL NEW 2018 JEEP COMPASS LATITUDE 4X4
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169
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NEW 2018 FIAT SPIDER LUSSO
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OR
0%
36 mos.
*Prices include allavailable rebates. You may qualify foradditional rebates &incentives. Must finance through Chrysler Capital. **leases Rts. 9&28, Warrens~urg, NY 12885 through Chrysler Capital include allavailable rebates andarebased on10,000 miles ayear with $2999 cash down; 1stpayment, taxes and DMV feesdueatinception; security deposit waived forwell-qualified buyers; disposition fee$395; 25e amile overage. lessee isresponsible Just 4miles offExit 23where Rt. 9and Rt. 28Connect formaintenance andrepairs. Pictures forillustration purposes only. Pacifica lease isfor5,000 miles ayear. Offer ends 10/26/18.
(518) 623-3405 www.krystalchryslerjeepdodge.net 199289