Vn 05 31 2014

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Editorial» County Supervisors should award bid to George Moore

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Going Gray

HEROES

This Week ON THE FARM

Non-profit nursing homes continue to wait for aid By Pete DeMola

Farm-to-table at Fledgling Crow in Keeseville

pete@denpubs.com

PAGE 2 AIRPORTS

Regional airports get economic shot in the arm PAGE 9

Several generations of one of the county’s most esteemed military families gathered in Willsboro on Monday, May 26 for Memorial Day services. Ensign Paulina P. Pine (center right) graduated from the United Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD, on Friday, May 23 and will continue her Naval Flight Officer training in Pensacola, Florida. Pictured from left: US Army SP-5 Lloyd J. Brockney, US Navy MU-1 Frederick W. Morgan (Ret.), US Marine Corp. Master Gunnery Sergeant W. Scott Pine, US Navy Ensign Paulena P. Pine, Corporal Geoffrey P. Pine and Staff Sergeant Richard E. Morgan, US Army. Photo by Pete DeMola

State Police memorialize their fallen

SPORTS

By Jon Hochschartner jon@denpubs.com

Westport’s Jon Gay captures second title PAGE 10

RAY BROOK Ñ The New York State PoliceÕ s Troop B held its Memorial Day service on May 21 at the Ray Brook headquarters. The event honored those in their ranks who died in the line of duty. The New York Police was founded in 1917, and since its founding 131 members have died in the line of duty, according to Major Richard Smith, Troop B Commander. Ò Sadly, since our gathering here last May, four members from our agency made the ultimate sacrifice in the performance of their duties,Ó Smith said, adding CONTINUED ON PAGE 14

NYS Troopers line up for a ceremony to remember those lost in the line of duty. Photo by Jon Hochshartner

TICONDEROGA Ñ ItÕ s been six months since the announcement that the Blue Line Group (BLG), a partnership of four regional not-for-profit nursing homes that was created to explore new models of elder care for the regionÕ s aging population, was slated to receive $7.1 million from the state to shore up their struggling bottom line. Last December, officials from the facilities in the network, including Adirondack Tri-County in North Creek, Heritage Commons in Ticonderoga, Mercy Living Center in Tupper Lake and Uihlein Living Center in Lake Placid, said the monies would be used to fund essential supplies and daily operations that would keep the facilities afloat as they explored options for long-term sustainability. While the first payments were scheduled to reach their accounts in late March, their accounts remain empty. Ò At this time, we have not received VAP monies,Ó said Charlie Miceli, Interim CEO of Inter-Lakes in Ticonderoga. Ò It is our understanding that receipt of VAP monies should occur soon, this is good news.Ó Miceli, who is serving temporarily after Inter-Lakes CEO Chip Holmes stepped down in April for a position with a Tennessee-based healthcare consulting firm, said he expects the funds to be released within the next 30 days. Ò These will be used to sustain operations that will keep CONTINUED ON PAGE 15

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May 31, 2014

Keeseville’s Fledging Crow farm keeping farming local By Shawn Ryan

shawn@denpubs.com KEESEVILLE Ñ The farm-to-table movement is making great strides throughout the country, and no place is that more apparent than at Fledging Crow farm in Keeseville. The farm, which features “Certified Naturally Grown” vegetables as an alternative to organically grown but with the same

high standards, was founded six years ago by SUNY Plattsburgh student Ian Ater, who leased 18 acres of hay fields from one of his professors, and set to work building a farm. The farm has grown steadily in reputatutation as well as output in the intervening years. They are primarily a Community Supported Agriculture, or CSA, farm. With a CSA, people pay a fee in the winter and are then supplied with vegetables weekly throughout the 21 week

North Country growing season. They make their CSA deliveries to locations in Plattsburgh, Lake Placid, Saranac Lake, Keene and Keene Valley. They also sell at farmersÕ markets in Keeseville, Keene Valley, Saranac Lake and Lake Placid, as well as at the North Country Food Co-Op in Plattsburgh, and ConroyÕ s Organics in Beekmantown. Ò We just like to take good care of the land and our community, feed people good food and celebrate the seasons,Ó said Brittany Harris, who works at Fledging Crow. One thing that becomes apparent at the farm, is that itÕ s all about the young generation, with new ideas about how to do this age old trade. Ater is 31, and co-owner Lucas Christenson is 29. Many of their crew of 10 people working at Fledging Crow are even younger. The farm is currently a beehive of activity, with a new building going up and greenhouses nearly overflowing with early produce. To bring more attention to the farm and the local food movement, Fledging Crow will feature Ò Crowfest,Ó a music festival featuring local bands being held at the Keeseville farm. A very limited number of CSA slots are still available for the current year.

Brittany Harris waters produce at Keeseville’s Fledging Crow farm. Photo by Shawn Ryan

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Amidst uncertainty, Elizabethtown readies comprehensive plan By Pete DeMola

pete@denpubs.com ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ Much like its role as the connective tissue between the austere pine-dotted High Peaks and the rolling farmland of the Champlain Valley, this small town in Essex County is at a crossroads. In one direction, purposeful growth. The other, directionless ennui. For the past half-decade, work has been under way in the county seat on the creation of something called a comprehensive plan, a non-binding roadmap for the townÕ s future. At a yet-unspecified date in June, Elizabethtown will host a public hearing, one of the last mileposts in a journey that has systematically deconstructed, analyzed and reassembled the inner workings of the community and mapped out the challenges that lie ahead. The process has dredged up no small amount of raw feelings, a microcosm of the wider battle that has historically constituted life in the Adirondack Park: Autonomy versus bureaucracy. State control versus home rule. Insider versus interloper. THE BASICS Proponents of the comprehensive plan, including Nan Stolzenburg, the Albany County-based consultant the town hired in 2010 under the leadership of Supervisor Noel Merrihew III to facilitate the process in conjunction with the townÕ s all-volunteer planning board, say these plans are crucial in determining the future of communities as they enter the next phase of their existences in a post-industrial landscape. Gone are the days when towns would organically evolve from manufacturing centers, large businesses or proximity to natural resources. A firm hand is now needed on the tiller to actively shape growth, say advocates, including local business owners who are becoming increasingly vocal in their desire for a plan to bolster the townÕ s sagging economy and develop the infrastructure they say is crucial to the successful operation of their businesses. In a town like Elizabethtown, this means deciding on how the community is going to brand itself Ñ as a recreational tourist mecca or regional service hub, for example Ñ target development, channel growth, facilitate infrastructure, retain the young people who are leaving the area and serve the elderly who remain. In a departure from the past, the state is now requiring towns to create these plans in order to access the funds distributed by economic development councils. Funding applications for, say, a civic beautification project that would create a green spine down Court Street, now specifically ask how such a project will fit into the town’s comprehensive

plan. Communities that decline to create plans are less likely to receive funding, if at all. Monies will then be awarded to the communities that do have plans. And, in a development that has struck a nerve with critics, the plans are the rationale for future land use regulations. They preemptively address concerns when it comes to infrastructure, demographics and how to best utilize the limited land that is available for economic development as a result of Adirondack Park Agency regulations. Above all, say proponents, the comprehensive plan is essentially a toolbox Ñ a living document created by, adjusted and revolving around the needs of the community. Ô NOT A LAWÕ A comprehensive plan is not a zoning law or even a law at all, Stolzenburg told local officials and members of the public at a meeting earlier this year, but rather a resolution passed by the town board. Any recommendations within the plan Ñ like to implement an active living strategy that would encourage more walkability through town, for example, or a decision to rezone districts within the hamlet to funnel growth Ñ would have to work its way through the standard legislative process just like any other proposal, from parking ordinances to leash laws. Critics believe that civic planning is more evidence of government overreach and chips away at home rule, the perceived erosions of which remain a prickly issue more than 40 years after the creation of the Adirondack Park Agency in 1971. A comprehensive plan would create an additional layer of bureaucracy, they say, and undermines property rights. While those holding this view are fewer and tend to be entangled more in the legal minutiae rather than focusing on the bigger picture — e.g: Is Elizabethtown just fine just the way it is or does it need to develop a strategy? Ñ the ideological battle has resulted in an outsized mushroom cloud in the public sphere, one that all agree has cast a pall over what everyone, despite on where they stand when it comes to the plan, agrees is a town that they are proud to call home. Between the advocates and the critics are the skeptical, including several members of the town board. Some of them remained on the fence until a series of revisions were incorporated into the document in mid-May that softened the planÕ s ideas and restated ideas in the form of friendly suggestions Ñ not stern bullet points that could be misconstrued as laws. That’s what June’s meeting is for. The public is encouraged to attend, said planning board member Elena Borstein, and ask questions and glean the document for themselves (it is also currently on display at the town hall and open to anyone who

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would like to have a look). After the public chimes in, the town board will then vote on if they will join Lewis, Willsboro and Keene in making their plan official. COMING UP This article marks the first in a series exploring the comprehensive plan and what it means not only for Elizabethtown, but how it relates to the trends shaping the region. In the months to come, The Valley News will talk with a variety of people from across the spectrum, from past and current elected officials, planning and zoning board members, citizens, business leaders, civic planners and outside observers to cast the plan into focus and how it will affect the community.

Local Boy Scouts of America Troop 63 of Westport helped prepare for Memorial Day by putting flags on soldiers’ graves. Pictured from left: Trent Clark, Myles Madill, Edward Nesbit, Lawrence Lobdell and Troop Leader Larry Carrol. Photo by Jill Lobdell


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Elizabethtown

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Helen DeChant • 873-9279 / time4hfd@yahoo.com

hope everyone had a safe enjoyable Memorial Day. While our summer plans are filling up quickly preparing for guests, vacations and picnics, think about shopping at the Elizabethtown-Lewis Thrift Shop for those little extras you might be needing. There are always new items being added for your shopping pleasure, especially after a collection day. The next collection day is this Saturday, May 31, from 10 a.m. until 12 noon at the United Church of Christ parish hall. If you are spring cleaning, sorting those summer clothes, think of our own little department store. They are looking for clean, slightly used clothing of all sizes, household items, linens, toys and craft supplies. For more information call 873-6518 or visit their website at etownthrift.org. You can also follow them on Facebook.

Keeseville

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received an email from the Elizabethtown Community Hospital informing me that the Hospital has reached an agreement with Dr. Richard Bremer to assume his practice in AuSable Forks pending his retirement this summer. Hospital staff will begin seeing patients in Dr. Bremer Õ s location on July first pending State approval. Plans are to either renovate an existing structure or build a new health center in town. DonÕ t forget that the Chesterfield Fish and Game Club have many great activities available. Check out their website at chesterfieldrange.com for more information. I did get a chance to visit Wickham Marsh this past weekend and saw several geese resting among the marshes. I had a reader very correctly inform me that the correct term is Ô Canada GeeseÕ not Ô Canadian GeeseÕ . A subtle difference but still important, and as someone who has dedicated his life to studying and teaching the English language, I do appreciate the correction. Thanks.

I hope everyone has noticed that the beautiful bridge baskets are up, adding a bit of color to town. Thank you to the Elizabethtown-Lewis Chamber of Commerce for sprucing up our community. The Chamber would like you to know they are hosting a mixer at the Meadowmount School of Music on Friday, June 6, from 6 - 7:30 p.m. Anyone interested in becoming a member, or if you would like to know more about what the Chambers of Commerce do for our communities, join the members from our chamber, along with the neighboring chambers for an enjoyable social, light hors dÕ oeuvres, and beverages. There will be opportunity to win door prizes, cost is $3 with advance reservation by emailing etownlewiscoc@gmail.com or $5 at the door.

Kyle Page • kmpage1217@charter.net I set up a new bird feeder right outside my office window, so I have a new distraction to keep me from writing. So far not many have ventured over to the other side of the house but they will come IÕ m sure. My cat and I had a hysterical time watching a chipmunk chase another chipmunk and baby squirrel who were trying to eat seeds on the ground around my first feeder. The chipmunks plowed right into a mourning dove actually knocking the poor bird over. The surprised mourning dove just got back up and continued eating as the chipmunks and squirrel settled down and began stuffing their faces. My cat was very amused. IÕ m happy to report while writing this one of the chipmunks has found all the seed that I left on the ground around my new feeder, a very pleasant distraction for me, but you reading this means I did get my column in on time. Visit my website at www.kylempage.wordpress.com for more details as well as links to my column here and other writings I have. Have a great week.

Essex

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he Adirondack Art Association’s first show of the season opens this Friday evening, the 30th, in their new quarters in the former Halpin residence. ItÕ s on Main Street in downtown Essex, right across from the Community Church. The show will have works from artists around the Champlain Valley and the opening is from 6 to 8 pm. On Saturday, the 31st, assistant librarian Julie Steeves will give a talk on her recent trip to Concord, Massachusetts. This will be at 11 a.m. at the library, and while youÕ re there, check out the new bike rack. We are now in the midst of the greenest time of year, with trees and grasses at their finest, and to many it seems that the greens of this year are the strongest, richest colors theyÕ ve ever seen. Increased levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may be driving this noticeable difference. Plants use the power of sunlight to break down carbon dioxide and water and convert them into sugars and oxygen. ThatÕ s a very oversimplified explanation of the process, but adding a little extra carbon dioxide will enhance plant growth. This is all speculative and hard to prove one way or another. WeÕ re also on the tail end of apple blossom

Rob Ivy • robhivy@gmail.com time. Have you noticed how apple trees will bloom one year, but not the next? This is known as biennial bearing and itÕ s caused by the tree putting too much energy into young fruit at the expense of next year’s flowers. Apples will make their flower buds for 2015 this June, so if their energy is now going into fruit, there will be very few flower buds formed. However, if the tree has no young apples, it will devote that energy to flower buds and so you see the on-off cycle. Orchardists control this propensity with pruning and fruit thinning to get a crop every year. Flowering crab apples reliably put on a display of blossoms every year, but their fruit load is much lighter than standard trees so they have plenty of energy to form flower buds and grow fruit at the same time. Our crab literally hums with bees on sunny days during blossom time, but this year IÕ ve spotted almost no honeybees, just familiar bumblebees gathering nectar and pollen. The absence of honeybees may be related to colony collapse disorder, a syndrome thatÕ s currently killing off these important pollinators worldwide. Or it could just be my incipient cataracts making bees hard to spot.

Elizabethtown-Lewis prepping for sale

ELIZABETHTOWN — The Elizabethtown-Lewis Chamber of Commerce is preparing for a townwide yard sale slated for Saturday, July 19. Anyone in Elizabethtown can have a yard sale listed on the map. For entry on the free map, send the following info to Maggie Bartley via email: Name, address or location of yard sale and phone number: msbartley@aol.com. Alternatively, participants can drop their info at the town hall. Deadline is Tuesday, July 15. Maps will be available at Champlain Bank & Ticonderoga Credit Union & the Town Hall on Friday July 18 and on E-town Day at the Chamber of Commerce table on Court St. Email copies of the map will also available by contacting Maggie Bartley at msbartley@aol.com.

Wadhams water lines to get flushed

WADHAMS — Please be advised that there will be a flushing of the water lines in Wadhams on Tuesday, June 10, 2014.

May 31, 2014

North Country SPCA

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Kathy L. Wilcox • 873-5000

he North Country SPCA would like to remind you of our upcoming 4th annual Benefit Golf Tournament at the Westport Country Club on Friday, June 13 at 1 p.m. The date is swiftly approaching, so you may want to get your registration turned in as soon as possible! We are excited to feature a $400 award paid to the MenÕ s and WomenÕ s team with the lowest gross score. For more information and to register, visit our website at ncspca.org. What a great way to kick off the summer! This weekÕ s featured pet is sweet Maggie, a young, domestic shorthair mix who came in with her mother and sister. Maggie has a black and white patchwork coat with a big inky splash on her upper lip, which gives her face lots of character. Maggie is also a Hemingway Polydactyl with extra toes! Legend has it that cats with extra toes are good luck... we certainly feel it was Maggie’s good fortune to find her way to us. This little lady was a bit shy at first, but she has overcome this with gusto and has lots of kittenish exuberance to entertain you. She loves to play and especially enjoys pouncing on her sister! Maggie enjoys being petted and coddled,

Westport

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he fifth annual Celebrate Champlain Area Trails (CATS) Event takes place on National Trails Day, Saturday, June 7, from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Block House Farm in Essex. CATS has also scheduled two exciting hikes for earlier in the day, one at 8:45 a.m. on the Cheney Mountain Trail on Pelfershire Road, and the other at 12:30 p.m. on the new Ancient Oaks Trail between Essex and Willsboro. For more info, go to www.champlainareatrails.com or call 962-2287. And the Westport Heritage House Visitors Center is getting ready for its sixth summer of welcoming the world to our little town. If youÕ d like to volunteer a few hours of your time as an ambassador, they ask that you attend one of two brief training sessions at the Heritage House. The first will be held on Tuesday, June 10 from 7 to 8 p.m. and the second on Saturday, June 21 from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Email Meredith Johnston at johnst@westelcom.com or call Meredith at 962-4590, Judy Bertsche at 962-8670, or Betty Band at 962-8917. Delicious strawberry shortcake, ice cream

Willsboro

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ell, Memorial Day is the start of our summer season here in the North Country and the time for many special activities to get under way. We had a great turn out for the school budget and election vote this past week. The same evening, there was a tremendous gathering for the schoolÕ s Spring Concert. They had a full house and it was said to be a great program. I was working on the polls and so did not get to enjoy it in person. We have much to be proud of to have a wonderful music department at our school. As a community, you passed the school budget and the approval to purchase the needed bus and van. You elected Herb Longware and Jack Thompson to serve us on the school board for the next three years. The Heritage Society had a very informative lecture on the subject of the Civil War period and noted some local persons that served in that war. The Museum will soon be open weekly to share the present seasonal exhibit of honoring many of our local people that have served in the many wars over the years. This display will be available each week on Wednesday afternoons from

Maggie and would be a terrific addition to any home where she can get lots of attention and playtime. If you could use a little bit of luck, why not bring this fantastic little feline into your home?

Colin Wells • WestportNYNews@gmail.com and an irresistible Lawn SaleÑ donÕ t miss the Wadhams Strawberry Festival at the United Church of Christ in Wadhams on Sunday, June 15 (Father’s Day), from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Church will sponsor a drawing with a chance to win items handmade by local artisans, and the Wadhams Free Library will hold a Book Sale. And the same day the Wadhams Volunteer Fire Company will hold their annual Boquet River Duck Derby to benefit their Community Fund. To enter a duck, contact any Wadhams firefighter or stop by Dogwood Bread Company. To sign up as a player or sponsor for the Westport FiremenÕ s Golf Tournament at the Country Club on June 21, call Jim Forcier at 962-4420 by June 7. And there’s still time to sign your business up for the printed promotional material about to be put out by the Chamber of CommerceÑ check the chamber website westportny. com. Finally, both the Wadhams Free Library and Westport Library Association welcome your donation of books for their book sales. Happy Summer!

Janice Allen • 963-8912 • allens@willex.com 1-4, then on Friday and Saturday from 10 to 4 beginning the weekend of June 14. This is the weekend that the town will be celebrating the 200th Anniversary of the Battle at the Mouth of the Boquet. There will be a short ceremony at the monument on Main Street, followed by a rededication of the monument of General Ransom Noble, a run along the Boquet River to Noblewood at the start of the day. This is also the townwide yard sale day and this should keep people interested for most of the day. The Willsboro United Methodist Church will be holding a public supper on June 4th serving pot roast starting at 4:30, with both eat in or take out meals available. Volunteers are always needed at several places in town, the museum, visitorÕ s center, Adsit cabin, just let us know of your interest and willingnesss to offer some time. Happy Birthday to John Uhlig June 1, Sue Dwyer June 2, Richard Morgan June 6, Lindsay Hammel June 6, Candy Lacey June 6. Happy Anniversary to LeAnn & Dick DeNeal June 8, John & Vivian Ball June 8, Terry & Jean McNahon June 8, Tammy & Tim Benway June 8.


May 31, 2014

CV • Valley News - 5

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Westport fundraising for Independence Day fireworks By Jon Hochschartner jon@denpubs.com

WESTPORT Ñ Sheila Borden, Westport town clerk, is co-chair of the fireworks fundraising committee and looking to collect donations for WestportÕ s Independence Day pyrotechnic show this year and a larger display for next yearÕ s town bicentennial celebration. Westport holds its Independence Day festivities on July 5. Ò We try to have a day when others donÕ t have it,Ó Borden said. “The other fire departments and emergency squads can’t participate in other townsÕ activities if theyÕ re all happening at the same time.Ó Borden said the funds for the fireworks are raised privately.

Ò ItÕ s the only way that theyÕ re paid for,Ó Borden said. Ò We do it by donation.Ó Among other things, activities at WestportÕ s Independence Day observation include a parade at the fairgrounds, a fire department roast, a magic show in Ballard Park, ice cream offerings, square dancing in the street, music by Gary Finney, and of course fireworks in Lee Park at dusk, according to Borden. Borden has been in charge of fundraising for the fireworks for the past three years, after a member of the chamber of commerce began looking for someone to head the project. Ò I couldnÕ t let my grandchildren go without having a parade,Ó she said. She is also hoping to raise extra funds to make next yearÕ s celebration, which will mark WestportÕ s bicentennial, special.

“We want to have even larger fireworks — a little bit longer and a little bit more sensational,Ó Borden said. Borden said that she had a favorite activity from the event in years past. Ò I think itÕ s participating in the parade,Ó Borden said. Ò ItÕ s handing out candy to the kids and watching their smiling faces.Ó To donate to the fireworks, checks should be made payable to the Westport Chamber of Commerce, PO Box 394, Westport, NY 12993. Those donating are asked to write Ô FireworksÕ on the check.

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GOODYEAR • UNIROYAL • FIRESTONE • GENERAL TIRE DUNLOP • MICHELIN • BRIDGESTONE • B.F. GOODRICH • PIRELLI Essex County Sheriff Richard Cutting presides over an honor guard at the Wadhams Veterans Cemetery on Memorial Day on Monday, May 26, one of many solemn ceremonies across the county to commemorate the military personnel who paid the ultimate sacrifice when serving their country. Photo by Pete DeMola

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Valley News Editorial

Supervisors: Accept the bid!

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here is a right way to conduct business and a wrong way. The way in which the Essex County Board of Supervisors handled the bid from Keeseville businessman George Moore following the recent county tax auction was the wrong way. For background, George Moore attended the April 30 county tax auction and in good faith bid $49,500 for a cluster of four parcels that once held the popular Frontier Town theme park in North Hudson. The theme park has sat vacant for years, slowly disappearing into the Adirondack wilderness, and taxes have not been paid on the four parcels since 2006. Moore already owns the large A-frame structure at the entrance of the defunct park, for which taxes are fully paid, and his intent was to purchase the adjoining 88-acres for possible future development of a campground or summer camp. What happened following the auction is what truly has us puzzled. During a May 12 committee meeting, county supervisors voted 17-0 to reject MooreÕ s bid and instead accept a $60,000 offer made on behalf of the town of North Hudson by Supervisor Ronald Moore. Supervisor Moore said county officials had discussed not accepting a bid on the former theme park of less than $146,000, the amount of back taxes owed, and said the 88-acres has considerable value to his town Ñ possibly as a business park Ñ because the small community has virtually no private property available for development. In our opinion, the supervisor should be commended for his forward thinking, but the sequence of events that led to his offer was completely flawed. First, if the town were truly interested in the parcel, why not put a representative at the tax sale to bid alongside everyone else? Since the parcels had been seized by the county for back taxes, and therefore by default owned by county taxpayers, wouldnÕ t it be in the best interest of those taxpayers to receive as much as possible for the properties through competitive bidding? Sure, county supervisors reserve the right to reject any bid. But in this case they then turned around and totally undermined the bidding process by okaying what, on the surface, appears to be an insider deal with North Hudson. Supervisors owe it to the taxpayers and to bidders at future tax auctions to conduct these auctions in a fair and transparent manner, otherwise, it will affect how people bid at future auctions. Secondly, other than a few conversations during previous meetings, we see no record

of a minimum bid ever being posted on these parcels. A cursory glance through the material provided to bidders Ñ including George Moore Ñ shows no mention of a minimum bid. We presume this would be the basis of the lawsuit George is threatening Ñ one that supervisors would no doubt spend thousands more in taxpayer dollars defending. And, even if this unpublished minimum bid truly does exist, the offer on the table from North Hudson comes nowhere near the $146,000 owed in back taxes. At the same time, placing these parcels in municipal ownership would remove them from both the county and town tax rolls. As much as county supervisors love to bemoan raising taxes, it baffles us that they would want to remove properties with a full market value of $568,900 from the tax rolls. Finally, Ronald Moore may have the best of intentions, but this property has proven to be an albatross for the private owners who have invested in it, which is why the county is in this pickle with back taxes in the first place. So, why should residents of the town and county believe it can suddenly be converted into the Silicon Valley of the North Country? It is a super location with great ingress and egress to I-87, but there are a lot of similar locations in the Adirondacks that, like the former Wild West park, contain more tumble weeds than business growth. A look at the dozens of unoccupied industrial parks inside the Blue Line is testament to that. Perhaps the residents of North Hudson should be given the opportunity to vote on the purchase prior to it taking place. George Moore has been criticized by some for not developing the one Frontier Town parcel he owns and allowing it to fall further and further into disrepair. In his defense, however, he owned just a small piece of the pie and it now appears he is making an effort to restore the property to something that will benefit the town. We believe he should be given the opportunity to do so. History has shown the odds of a successful businessman Ñ who pays his taxes, by the way Ñ redeveloping a parcel into an endeavor that will benefit the entire region are far greater than a government entity doing so. In an effort to avoid litigation, George Moore has now offered $5,000 more for Frontier Town than North Hudson did. The board of supervisors is aligned to potentially vote on the matter during its June 3 regular board meeting. It is time they clean up this ethical quandary, and accept the bid offered by George Moore. Ñ Denton Publications Editorial Board

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May 31, 2014

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6 - Valley News • CV

Viewpoint

What’s behind the curtain

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Do you think that was the moany years ago when tive or do you think they looked I was a junior in high at the game board that makes up school, I needed to the political districts and thought, earn a letter in one more sport along with perhaps a little perbefore I could earn my coveted suasion from political operatives, Varsity Club Jacket. Back in where do I have the best opportuthe days of high school, next to nity to land a gig in congress? owning your own car, the varIÕ ve not had the opportunity to sity club jacket was a symbol of meet any of the so called Ò carpetsuccess. bagger candidatesÓ running for You are, no doubt asking Dan Alexander office yet, but I must confess I do yourself, why this trip down Thoughts from question their motives for seeking memory lane? Well, bear with these positions. Unlike the Denton me for a few quick paragraphs Behind the Pressline Editorial Board, I do think your and IÕ ll get to that point shortly. roots are an important bond with My goal to get the jacket was purely a selfish motive on my part. To be the people you represent. Are we just a stepping stone in there calculated political careers? awarded the jacket I had to letter in three differDo these candidates have a deep rooted love ent varsity sports before my senior year. Spring for this rural area and seek to make a name for time sports were limited at our school, so I had themselves by giving voice and bringing opto pick the sport and the competition at the poportunity to our region of the country? Let me sition or in my case in the event in which I felt make this clear, not being from here should not I could excel. disqualify them, but I think itÕ s very important I decided my best chance to get that letter was in track, running the dreaded two mile that we know their motivation for seeking the position and what they see as their long term race. I was not a distance runner. I wasnÕ t fast political and personal aspirations. enough for the sprints or huddles. Not strong Skepticism aside, these may be talented peoenough for the pole vault or shot-put, but I was tough enough to gut out the long distance race ple who perhaps can change the way of Washin order to place at least third in enough meets ington politics, but IÕ m not interested in being a stepping stone to boost the career of someone to get my letter. You see there wasnÕ t much comwho seeks a permanent and lucrative lifestyle petition at the two mile event. It wasnÕ t all that in Washington. I want to know that the person glamorous running around the track 8 times seeking my vote has my best interests at heart, with your tongue hanging out while other comnot theirs. petitors lounged around the inner track waiting My other fear, regarding candidates not for the more fashionable events to take place. rooted in the district they hope to represent, is My decision to seek that role was not based in my deep rooted desire to do well for my school the outside influences from PACs and political or team. It was purely personal and strictly parties who will flow extensive dollars from outside the district to insure their hand picked about my desire to own the jacket. candidate is elected. I know this is a political So with that thought in mind I wonder if there is any correlation between my motives reality, but when my elected representative has greater loyalty to those outside the district, just way back then and why we see folks from outwho are they really representing and exactly side our political districts relocating to our communities to seek office. Our areas don’t hold where to do their loyalties lie? This country faces many serious problems great prestige. As a member of our editorial and we need serious candidates who are comboard wrote last week on this subjectÉ . Ò We mitted to resolve those problems rather than are older than the rest of the country. WeÕ re losthose who want to join the Washington elite ing more people. WeÕ re sicker, poorer and less party and follow the established trends set by educated. Public services Ð are crumbling into dustÓ . So why does someone who doesnÕ t sleep the partisan leadership. We need elected offihere or spend their lives here among us want to cials who are able to lean on real life personal experiences in the private sector to guide them represent our views in Washington, D.C.? through the political maze in Washington. In There must be a driving motive that caused the end, to this standard, every candidate must them to wake up one day and say to themselves, Ò Hey I want to go represent, those poor, be held accountable. sick, less educated people, up north, where Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of Denton Publimany of their own are moving away and their cations. He may be reached at dan@denpubs.com. infrastructure is crumbling around them!Ó


May 31, 2014

CV • Valley News - 7

www.valleynewsadk.com

Economy, outdoor recreation linked

From the Editor

To the Valley News: The Champlain ValleyÕ s economic vitality is inextricably linked with trails and outdoor recreation. Our recent Grand Inn-to-Inn Hike is a great example of that. Over 200 people came out to hike from the Westport Hotel & Tavern to the Essex Inn. Many came from far away and will tell their friends about the easy hike between two historic hamlets through the valleyÕ s scenic landscape. Some will undoubtedly return for our National Trails Day hikes and Celebrate Champlain Area Trails event on June 7. As we create more trails connecting communities, the word will continue spreading that this is a great place to visit. And that is good for business because people will patronize restaurants, eat local food, stay at our inns, purchase items in stores, send their children to local camps, and need ancillary services like shuttles, guides, entertainment, and bike rentals. We had a lot of help in making the hike a success. Thank you to Poko-MacCready Camps for shuttling hikers; to Ernies Market & Deli, Dogwood Bread Company, Lakeside School at Black Kettle Farm and WillsboroÕ s Village Meat Market for providing tasty snacks at the hike oases; to Cupola House, The Depot Theatre, Emmett Carter Green Design, EssexonLakeChamplain.com, Essex Ice Cream CafŽ , The Galley at Westport Marina, Lake Champlain Yoga & Wellness, Normandie Beach Club, Overtime Photography, Old Dock Restaurant, Pataki Farm, Phillips Art Conservation Studio, The Pink Pig, Joe and Debbi Shaw, Sim Vivo, LLC., and the Westport Country Club. Special thanks to Rick Dalton for the idea to have the hike, to Steven Kellogg for making the happy oases signs, and to Katie Shephard of the Essex Blog and Aubrey Bressett of College for Every Student for publicizing it. Finally, thank you to the volunteers, all the hikers, and everyone who noticed and talked about the Grand Hike. Chris Maron Champlain Area Trails

Thank you to this volunteer To the Valley News: Back in December of 2013 several community members of Westport did their annual volunteering to put the holiday decorations up in the Library Park. As we were doing this, a news reporter came by and later did an article with a picture on what was said as a group, remarking about one of the statues very much in need of fresh paint. That article brought this project to the attention of Donna Landon of Lewis, through her brother living in Westport. Donna came to look at the project and volunteered her time to repair and repaint the statue for us. As one of the Holiday Decorations Team and on their behalf, I would like to express our appreciation to Donna. You did a fabulous job and we are very grateful! Nancy Decker Westport

Proper flag protocol To the Valley News: With the parade season upon us, I would very much like to issue a reminder. The proper protocols for the American Flag and the National Anthem

ECH to host blood drive

are to rise to your feet, remove your hat or headgear, hold it over your heart and stand in reverence to these great icons of American Freedom. All too often, we see the proud veteran struggle to rise and remove his hat in respect while those around him continue their conversations, leave headgear on and ignore the passing of the flag or the playing of our National Anthem. Please remember that are hundreds of thousands of brave souls who are not here to celebrate parades and holidays because they stood up, stepped up and fought under the flag for our freedom. When these brave soldiers are fighting on foreign soil, the flag is the symbol that energizes them and reminds them of those back home waiting for their return. Please enjoy your parades, enjoy your cookouts and parties, but also, please remember where we are and who gave us this freedom Ð rise, show respect and honor those who have given that to us. Richard Cutting Essex County Sheriff

Heritage House welcomes ambassadors WESTPORTÑ Ambassador training session(s) will be held on Tuesday, June 10 from 7 - 8 p.m. and on Saturday, June 21 from 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. at the Westport Heritage House. We ask that you attend one of the brief sessions to familiarize yourself with new updates at the Visitor Center. We are always seeking new volunteers - perhaps you know of someone that you would like to suggest we contact. Please let us know their name or better yet, ask them to attend one of the training sessions with you. We are excited about the changes that have been made over the past few months and are eager to share them with you. This year will see a change in our display cases. Westport will be celebrating its bi-centennial in 2015 and we will begin this year with displays of photos and Items representing time through the years. Many of you have asked for Wi-Fi at the Heritage House and we are pleased to let you know that you can access it this year. To begin the season we are organizing a student art show to hang June and early July, just before the annual Spirit of Place art show and silent auction. We invite you along with the community to our open House on Thursday, June 19th at 5:00 PM as the Westport Heritage House Committee puts on a party to begin our 2014 Visitor Center season. Come join us! rable tunes from Frank SinatraÕ s career! Please email Meredith Johnston at johnst@westelcom.com or call Meredith at 962-4590, Judy Bertsche at 962-8670 or Betty Band at 962-8917 and let us know which training you can attend.

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ast week I travelled to New York City to witness my daughter receiving her masterÕ s degree from New York University. The night before the ceremony, the majestic Empire State Building was all lit up with purple and white lights, NYUÕ s colors. We walked to the university campus and grounds surrounding the university. We sat in the By Scot Hurlburt park and we discussed the upcoming graduation, what a journey it has been and what might be next. I felt great pride that my daughter would receive her masterÕ s degree from such a fine university and in her last semester of college finishing with a 4.0 grade point average. The day of the graduation, people arrived in taxi cabs, limousines, bicycles and on foot. Parents snapped pictures around the cascading water fountain in front of Lincoln Center where the graduation would take place. The graduates kept arriving in their dark purple gowns and formed little purple pods across Lincoln Centers Ô grounds. Classmates found each other for final hugs and final goodbyes. The day included many tears and much laughter and many profound and heartfelt words from professors, alumni and students. As I jostled about on the subway trip back, I considered the six years that my daughter, our family, has committed to arriving at this day. I can still remember her first day of school, her new clothes and new backpack, her expectant smile and her eagerness to have it all begin. My daughter, like most people who are successful, have enjoyed the support and wisdom of many helping and teaching adults and classmates along the way. There have been many fine teachers within the school community and also those on the outside of school. I recalled some of those very special people, a Girl Scout leader who did amazing and inspiring things, like scuba diving in a pool that was sixty feet deep or snow camping during winter. These events, and many others, helped my daughter to think big even if she was just a little girl from a very small town. Her grandmother taught her many things about life and about family but not how to speak French, though she spoke it fluently. Ò You are an American, you speak English,Ó she would say. A close friend became a beloved surrogate uncle and showed her the Ò other worldÓ of big cities and helped to teach her the importance of long friendships. A wonderfully kind retired lady became her at home baby sitter and taught her the importance of patience, kindness and so much more. While she attended graduate school she lived with a dear family friend who both supported our daughter and gave her a place to live while in graduate school. She also had many wonderful teachers in school that both taught and challenged her to do her very best whether it was playing a sport, learning a school lesson or taking part in a school or after school play. My daughter was also lucky to be part of several very special school classes where she was learning alongside of many very bright and intelligent classmates. In some very important ways, the many friends that frequently came to our house may have taught her as much as any other part of her life experience. As her parent, I want to thank everyone who helped her to arrive at this remarkable day and there have been so many along the way. I continue to be impressed with my daughters many schoolmates from the North Country that have gone off to major universities and done very well. As so much is said about the quality of school education and how poor it is, I believe that schools have a role in educating our children; however, it will take many other adults and young people outside school to insure that our children are receiving a quality education. I believe that it is possible to provide a quality education in the North Country and the many accomplished young people that come from here provide substantial evidence of that fact. Remember, all kids count.

Kids Count

Variety show a hit To the Valley News: Westport/Elizabethtown Cub Scout Pack 63 held its first ever Variety Show Fund Raiser on Friday, May 16 at the Whallonsburg Grange Hall. Because of lots of help and support from the community, it was a success. The proceeds will be used for programs for the boys and in their service to the community. On behalf of the scouts and their leaders, I would like to offer a special thanks to these generous sponsors: StewartÕ s Shops, Dragon Press, Egglefield Bros. Inc, Dr. Kevin O’Keefe, Plattsburgh Animal Hospital and Bradamant. Thank you, also, to the following businesses and individuals for their in-kind donations: Elizabethtown Sunoco, The Arsenal Inn, Aubuchon Hardware, Ernie’s Market, CynthiaÕ s Photos, Westport Marina, Lyn & Lillian Lobdell, Brandon Madill, Scott Gibbs and Kathryn Cramer. Thanks to Keith Lobdell for serving as host, Kaitlin Perry-Rowe for handling the lights and to the scoutsÕ parents for their help in putting the show together. I would like to acknowledge and thank Jill Lobdell, Unit Commissioner for her creative ideas, energy and tireless work on this event and all of the packÕ s programs and projects. And finally, thanks to all those who came to the show in support of Cub Scouts! We couldnÕ t do it without you. Larry Carroll Cub Scout Pack 63 Committee Chair

Letter Guidelines The Valley News welcomes letters to the editor. •Letters can be sent to johng@denpubs.com. •Letters can also be submitted online at www.valleynewsadk.com: click the About button at top, and select Contact the Editor. •Letters should not exceed 300 words and must be signed and include a telephone number for verification. •Denton Publications reserves the right to edit letters for length and/or content. Letters deemed inappropriate will be rejected.

News Briefs Keene antiques show needs vendors

ELIZABETHTOWN — There will be a blood drive at Elizabethtown Community Hospital (ECH) on Tuesday, June 3 from 3 – 6 pm. The blood drive is being managed by the North Country Regional Blood Center which provides blood and blood products to hospitals in the region. The main benefit of working with the North Country Regional Blood Center is that donations are processed, stored and used locally Ð at hospitals throughout the local region. ECH uses blood in its emergency room and in its chemotherapy and infusion department, where patients often receive platelet and blood transfusions. “I hope that our community members roll up their sleeves,” said Jane Hooper, ECH community relations director. Ò By donating blood, they can, quite literally, do something that helps their friends and neighbors in a very tangible way.Ó

Apparently, it does take a village

KEENE VALLEY Ñ Space for artisans, crafters and antique dealers is still available for the 22nd Annual High Peaks Arts and Antiques Show to be held on Aug. 23 and 24, on Marcy Field. Show times are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day, rain or shine. The show features regional exhibitors displaying pottery, jewelry, rustic furniture, woodturning, basketry, photography, metal work, handmade knives, paintings, textiles, and glass. Antique dealers display vintage Adirondack books and memorabilia, furniture, collectibles and unusual finds in one of the finest shows the area has to offer. Outdoor space is available as well as tent space. There is food available for purchase, live music, free parking and no admission fee for attendees. Artisans or vendors who wish for more information on this event can contact Laurie Berube at 518-891-6126 or email at: lauriejaneb@verizon. net.

Call for entries at the Adk Lakes Center for the Arts

BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE Ñ The Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts wants to show the diversity of your lens. All are encouraged to submit photographs to be considered for their Juried Photo Show, Diversity. Entries are being excepted through May 30. All photography styles will be considered in the selection process, donÕ t miss out, apply today! $30/$20 members (for 3 images), $10 per additional image. For more information, contact 518-352-7715.

E’town CoC hangs flower baskets ELIZABETHTOWN — For the sixth year in a row, the ElizabethtownLewis Chamber of Commerce has hung baskets of beautiful spring flowers on two downtown bridges in Elizabethtown in time for Memorial Day. The 24 baskets were planted in March by Rob Hastings of Rivermede Farm in Keene. The cost of the baskets and flowers comes from Chamber membership dues. The work of hanging the baskets was done by Chamber Officers Bruce Pushee, Evelyn Hatch and Mary McGowan with assistance from chamber members Margaret Bartley and Harry Gough. They also received help from a surprise volunteer, Elizabethtown resident Aaron Woolf, who is running in this yearÕ s race for US Congress. The Bridge at the East end of River Street could not be decorated because it is is being rebuilt by NYS DOT. Volunteers from Mountain Lakes Services will be caring for and watering the flowers through out the summer.

Reach the writer at hurlburt@wilidblue.net


8 - Valley News • CV

www.valleynewsadk.com

May 31, 2014

Frontier Town dispute heats up at county Dispute over auction bid heads toward courts By Pete DeMola

pete@denpubs.com NORTH HUDSON Ñ Three weeks after the Essex County Board of Supervisors moved to reject a local businessmanÕ s bid for the former Frontier Town property, a once-popular theme park off the Northway, the stakes have been raised, counter offers have been made and legal teams are bracing for a fight. At the county tax auction on April 30, Keeseville resident George Moore offered a bid of $49,500 for a cluster of four parcels adjacent to the property he already owns, a structure known as the A-Frame that he purchased at a previous sale. But at a lawmaker meeting in Elizabethtown on May 12 to accept or deny each of the bids — altogether, 139 bidders bid on 150 total parcels Ñ the board of supervisors moved to reject MooreÕ s bid in favor of a higher offer from the town of North Hudson, who offered $60,000 at the meeting (but did not, like Moore, attend the auction and engage in the bidding process). His was the only bid that was outright rejected by lawmakers. North Hudson Supervisor Ronald Moore (no relation to George) told lawmakers at the meeting that discussions with county officials prior to the auction stipulated that the parcels would only be sold if the buyer met the $146,379.88 owed in back taxes, a condition that was singularly applied to these parcels, which span 88 acres and have a market value of $568,900. George Moore expressed uncertainty when asked if he was aware of a minimum bid on the parcels. Now, Moore is offering $65,000, to outbid North Hudson. Ò IÕ m 87 and IÕ ve been to a lot of auctions of all kinds,Ó Moore told the Valley News in a phone interview. Ò IÕ ve bought a lot of property over the years and I never saw one handled this way.Ó Ô VERY DISAPPOINTEDÕ Moore’s attorney, William Russell, confirmed that a counter offer was sent to County Attorney Dan Manning’s office and told the Valley News he was Ò very disappointedÓ in the boardÕ s decision and that his client would rather resolve the issue Ò in a practical wayÓ than through the courts. Ò If we canÕ t work it out, we will have to bring court action,Ó he said. Ò My client wants to give an opportunity to rectify this lack of notice,Ó referring to the decision that apparently caught Moore off guard after media reports surfaced following the supervisorsÕ decision. Russell said accepting the $65,000 would immediately benefit

the county. Ò County taxes are being affected by this as well as town taxes,Ó said Russell. Ò Taxpayers would be better off if this were put back on the rolls.Ó Essex County currently pays tax on the properties it has seized. No numbers were immediately available by the time this story went to press on how much it has paid annually on the Frontier Town parcels since 2006, the last year taxes were paid by the former owners, who have since vanished and could not be reached for comment. Manning confirmed on Friday, May 23 that his office is reviewing the options for moving forward and doubled down on defending the boardÕ s actions. Ò There was absolutely nothing improper or clandestine with the Board of SupervisorsÕ decision to reject Mr. MooreÕ s bid,Ó he said in a written statement. Ò This issue has been repeatedly discussed at numerous committee and full board meetings prior to the auction.Ó Manning explained the saleÕ s terms and conditions Ò basicallyÓ form the basis of the auction contract between the parties and were contained in the auction brochure, published on the website and given to and signed by each bidder. Ò All bidders were aware that any bid on any sale could be rejected by the board,Ó he said. Ò Mr. MooreÕ s bid was rejected for legitimate and good reasons after consideration of the bid price and other associated factors. It is unfair and disingenuous to suggest that there has been any impropriety.Ó It remains unclear what constitutes Ò other associated factors.Ó Owing to the holiday weekend, Manning could not be reached for further comment by the time this story went to print. Ô VIRTUALLY NO PROPERTYÕ Ronald Moore previously told lawmakers and reporters he envisioned the former Wild West theme park as a much-needed economic engine for the town. While he declined to comment on an ongoing legal case, a letter to his constituents dated Tuesday, May 20 sought to explain the town boardÕ s decision. Citing previous reports from the Valley News and the Press-Republican, Moore discussed his role on a county task force that was set up to discuss the property and reaffirmed the now-familiar argument that Moore’s bid of $49,500 was one-third of the back taxes owed on the property and the countyÕ s right to accept or deny all bids. He emphasized that if the town managed to sell the property within five years, they would pay the county one-third of the proceeds above the $60,000 paid. He also cited the concerns of his constituents:

Ò For years, many of you have asked the [town] board to do something, anything, to bring business to town,Ó he wrote. Echoing comments he previously made to the Valley News that some 90 percent of the North HudsonÕ s land is state-owned, and therefore prohibited from being developed, Moore said the town has Ò virtually no propertyÓ that a business could be developed other than the parcels at the center of the debate. RECREATION HUB If the town lands the former theme park, a decision that will not be handed down until the Essex County Board of Supervisors meets on Tuesday, June 3, Moore said he plans on partnering with the Essex County Industrial Development Agency to try to market the property at a reasonable price to bring business to town, something he hopes will create jobs and give rise to the possibility of a small grocery or diner. At a task force meeting earlier this year, the board threw out the option of IDA involvement, citing the estimated two years that it would take to see the project through its completion as impractical. In the interim period, said Moore in the letter, North Hudson would try their hand at developing some of the property for recreational use, including snowmobiling, horseback riding and biking, something that would help attract what he predicts will be an influx of tourists after the state acquires the Boreas Ponds tract, 22,000 acres formerly owned by Finch Pruyn, the Glens Falls-based paper company. Moore also cited ongoing efforts by the Department of Conservation to construct a trail from Newcomb to North Hudson that will eventually tie to Indian Lake, Long Lake and Minerva. Ò With our location directly off the Northway, we will be the start of this major trail system,” he said, also floating the idea of a guide service and parking lot for snowmobiles and horseriding rigs. Ò Yes, it will come off the tax rolls for a time, but we would hope that it would eventually return to the rolls with advantages, such as a business, that would far outweigh any early loss in taxes.Ó George Moore said while he is getting up in years and doesnÕ t yet have exact plans for what he would do with the parcels once they are finally combined, the separation of which he said has prohibited him from fully developing his holdings in the past (and have elicited complaints from critics), he is confident that his family Ñ including Philip, owner of MooreÕ s Concrete Ñ are capable and will hatch a plan for the future. Ò They will take over for me, but IÕ m still very active. I canÕ t walk good or see much, but my mind stills works.Ó


May 31, 2014

www.valleynewsadk.com

CV • Valley News - 9

North Country airports receive $1.4 million By Jon Hochschartner jon@denpubs.com

LAKE PLACID Ñ U.S. Senators Charles E. Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand announced on May 21 that three North Country airports will receive nearly $1.4 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) for airport facility upgrades. Specifically, Lake Placid Airport will received $427,500 for taxiway repairs; Adirondack Regional Airport in Saranac Lake will receive $684,000 to rehab an aging terminal apron and make drainage improvements and Malone-Dufort Airport will receive $270,000 to repair and upgrade electrical systems and lighting equipment. Steve Short, manager of the Lake Placid airport, was happy to hear his facility had received money. Ò ItÕ s always good to have the airport maintained,Ó Short said. Ò There are cracks in the taxiways.Ó Corey Hurwitch, the manager of Adirondack Regional Airport, was similarly excited to hear his facility had been awarded the funds to repair what he said was essentially a parking lot

for planes. Ò ItÕ s pretty important to us because the apron was never designed to handle the size of aircraft we park on it.Ó Hurwitch said his organization had been soliciting funds for the project for three or more years. A representative of the Malone-Dufort Airport could not be reached for comment. Schumer said he was pleased with the federal investment in North Country airports. Ò We should always strive to achieve the highest standards of aviation safety, and this funding will support that goal by repairing and upgrading the infrastructure at Lake Placid, Adirondack Regional, and Malone-Dufort Airports,Ó Schumer said. Gillibrand said the investments would be important for North Country airports. Ò These federal dollars will help support infrastructure upgrades to improve our airports and provide better, safer service for New Yorkers,Ó Gillibrand said. The funding for the three airports is part of the Airport Improvement Program, administered by DOTÕ s Federal Aviation Administration. The Airport Improvement Program pro-

vides grants to public agencies for the planning and development of public-use airports that are included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (NPIAS). The Airport Improvement Program (AIP) was established by the Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982. Since then, the AIP

has been amended several times, most recently with the passage of the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012. Funds obligated for the AIP are drawn from the Airport and Airway Trust fund, which is supported by user fees, fuel taxes, and other similar revenue sources.

Vietnam veterans’ photos sought ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Foundation project Ò Faces Never ForgottenÓ needs help obtaining missing photos of Vietnam veterans from New York. These photos will help complete an electronic Ò Wall of FacesÓ in the new education center at the Vietnam Memorial Wall. Ò The Faces Never Forgotten program is an effort to put a face and a story to each name on The Wall through the generosity of those willing to help locate their photos and make financial contributions to build the Education Center,Ó according to the VVMF website. Ò This program will ensure this vital piece of history will be remembered and honored by visitors from around the globe for generations.Ó The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Foundation is working to locate photos of all 58,286 soldiers listed on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D.C. They are building a new Education Center at the Wall right near the existing memorial wall on the National Mall. Construction for the facility is planned to start in 2016 and be completed for a grand opening in 2019. Ò If you have a picture of a loved one or fellow veteran whose name is on The Wall, please help the Memorial Fund honor these individuals by putting a face with a name,Ó the VVMF website said. Ò Regardless of whether or not the Memorial Fund has a photo of the individual already, we encourage you to submit it anyway. We are trying to collect as many photos of each individual as possible.Ó The new building will include an electronic Ò Wall of FacesÓ corresponding to the names on the wall. So far, the VVMF has collected 34,000 of the photos and still needs to find approximately 24,000 photos of soldiers listed on the wall. More information about this project can be found at vvmf.org. In Franklin County, local servicemen whose photos need to be found include: Vaughn O. Doty of Rainbow Lake; Tyrone F. Lamitie of Brushton; Earl F. Macey Jr. of Saranac Lake; Charles R. Martin of Hogansburg; Howard R. Paquin of Gabriels; and James H. Rust and Scott F. Wemette of Malone In Clinton County, local servicemen whose photos need to be found include: Edward F. Brown Jr., Thomas E. Townsley, Robert C. Wallace, Robert V. Snipe, Gene A. LaBounty, Albert W. Cudworth, Eugene E. Bonnett, Michael F. Conley, Arthur R. Duprey and Carl J. Latour of Plattsburgh; Michael J. Petrashune of Lyon Mountain; John F. Snow of Rouses Point; and Gerard M. McDonald of Ellenburg Depot. In Essex County, local servicemen whose photos need to be found include: Joseph F. Ribeiro and Henry A. Mitchell of Keeseville; Charles E. Gay of Westport; Melvin A. Wade of Lewis; and Richard D. Stevens of Elizabethtown.

ELCS 2014-15 spending plan budget passes easily ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ On Tuesday, May 20, voters approved the 2014-2015 proposed school budget with an 81 percent majority vote: 184 Ô yesÕ votes and 43 Ô noÕ votes. In addition to authorizing the $7.93M spending plan for next year, the community authorized the creation of a Transportation and Maintenance Equipment Reserve Fund (170 yes, 51 no), authorized the creation of a Capital Improvement Reserve Fund (162 yes, 48 no), elected Douglas Spilling of Elizabethtown to the Board of Education (182 votes running unopposed) and elected Darlene Hooper of New Russia to the Board of Education (198 votes running unopposed). Ò ItÕ s rewarding to be part of a school community that overwhelmingly supports the schoolÕ s budget,Ó said Superintendent Scott Osborne. “The 2014-2015 budget addresses the shortfalls generated by the lack of funding for New YorkÕ s schools, but weÕ ll need to continue to employ a conservative approach to stretch every available dollar in regard to expenditures,Ó he said. Ò Governor Cuomo’s new Property Tax Freeze initiative will impose new fiscal challenges for public schools in building a budget for 2015-2016. “Sharing services will need to be an intensified focus for us moving forward. For tonight, however, weÕ re grateful for the school communityÕ s continued support.Ó

Robert Zayas, Executive Director of the New York State Public High School Athletic Association, presents the Heart of the Arts award to Willsboro teachers Derrick Hopkins and Jennifer Moore. Photo provided


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10 - Valley News • CV

May 31, 2014

The Week In Sports Peru baseball defeats AuSable Valley CLINTONVILLE Ñ Pitching for Peru, Andy Kneussle registered 14 strikeouts to lead his team to 15-0 defeat over the AuSable Valley baseball team on May 20. Also for Peru, Mitch Cunningham, Connor Casey and Blake Altizer had four hits each. For AuSable Valley, Mike McDonald had the only extra-base hit.

E’town-Lewis golfers inch past Schroon Lake ELIZABETHTOWN — Elizabethtown-Lewis golfers defeated Schroon Lake on May 20 based on total strokes after splitting six matches. Royce Rawson and Caleb Denton both fired a 43 for the Lions, and Cortland White also won a match for the team. Levi William, T.J. Garcia, and Nathan Peace won matches for Schroon Lake.

Madison Rondeau, the PatriotÕ s pitcher, struck out nine, walked four and hit two. For PeruÕ s offense, Kara Barber had a triple and Brittany Miner had a double.

AuSable Valley softball tops Saranac Lake CLINTONVILLE Ñ Miranda Sheffer led AuSable Valley to a 19-4 victory over Saranac Lake with three hits, including a triple. Also for the Patriots, Alyssa Baughn, Logan Snow and Priscilla Coats got two hits apiece. Brittany Woodruff led the Red Storm offensively with two hits.

Gay triumphs

Johnsburg baseball triumphs over Elizabethtown-Lewis May 21

NORTH CREEK — Johnsburg baseball narrowly defeated Elizabethtown-Lewis 8-7 on May 21. For the Jaguars, pitcher Kyle LaBounty gave up only three hits. Also for Johsnburg, Jimmy Morris accumulated three hits and Nate Prouty had a double and a single. With three hits, Jerry Mitchell led the Lions offensively.

Westport baseball topples Keene WESTPORT Ñ Westport baseball handed Keene a one-sided, 13-2 defeat on May 21. Pitching for Westport, Dylan Limlaw struck out ten and walked three. Despite Westport only registering three hits over the entire contest, Keene pitching gave up 12 walks and 10 wild pitches. James Moricette contributed a double and a single for Westport, and Sam Napper notched a double.

Schroon Lake softball defeats E’town Lewis ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ Kiana Fiore contributed to Schroon Lake’s 34-8 victory over Elizabethtown-Lewis on May 21 with ten strikeouts as a pitcher and two hits as a batter. Molly Wisser added a triple, a double, a single and five RBI for Schroon Lake. Dakota Gadway also assisted with four hits for the Wildcats, and Abigail Veverka had two hits. Alex Simard powered the LionsÕ offense with two hits. Westport’s John Doyle hauls in a fly ball in Westport. The Eagles defeated Keene 13-2 on May 21. Photo by Keith Lobdell

AuSable Valley softball pummels Peru PERU Ñ Vanessa Garrow led Ausable Valley softball to a 10-1 victory over Peru on May 20 with a triple, a double and a single.

LAKE PLACID - Jonathan Gay felt a little tight entering his Saturday, May 24 800 race in the Section VII track and field championship meet in Lake Placid. However, the EKMW sophomore fought through to capture his second straight title in the event, crossing the line in a time of 2:02.2. “My leg was really tight in the event, but I will be fine for the state qualifier,” Gay said after the run. He also finished third in the 3,200. Photo by Keith Lobdell


May 31, 2014

CV • Valley News - 11

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Your complete source of things to see and do in the North Country Thursday, May 29 WESTPORT — Fifth in a semi-regular healthy meal planning workshop at the Cornell Cooperative Extension. Space is limited, call 962-4810 for reservations: 3 p.m.

Friday, May 30

PLATTSBURGH — North Funktree perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Saturday, May 31

PLATTSBURGH — Universal Transit perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials. ESSEX — Board of trustees meeting. Essex Theatre Company. 10 a.m. to noon. All welcome.

Sunday, June 1

CHAZY — Community Variety Show. C.C.R.S. auditorium. 6 p.m. For more information, call 846-7135 ext. 111.

Monday, June 2

LAKE PLACID — Book club discussion. 7 p.m. Lake Placid Public Library.

Tuesday, June 3

LAKE PLACID — Book club discussion. 7 p.m. The Bookstore Plus.

Wednesday, June 4

WESTPORT — Last in this past spring’s semi-regular healthy meal planning workshops at the Cornell Cooperative Extension. Space is limited, call 962-4810 for reservations: 3 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Open mike 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518563-2222 for food and drink specials. WILMINGTON — Wilmington Historical Society: “The Whiteface Mountain Horse.” Refreshments provided. For more info, contact Karen Peters at 518-4208370. 7 p.m., Wilmington Community Center.

Friday, June 6

SARANAC LAKE — Painting exhibit. Adk Artists Guild. 5-7 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — East Bound Jesus perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials. PLATTSBURGH — Big Slyde performs at 7:30 p.m. Palmer Street Coffeehouse. $10. SARANAC LAKE — Art by Italo Clemente: “The Media and Moods 1930-2010.” Bluseed Studio. 5-7 p.m. Free.

Saturday, June 7

MOOERS — Twentieth annual Mooers town-wide yard sale. Town maps avaiilable at fire station. For more Information, call 518-236-7246. PLATTSBURGH — Blind Owl Band perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Wednesday, June 11

PLATTSBURGH — Open mike at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Friday, June 13

PLATTSBURGH — Formula 5 perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Saturday, June 14

LAKE PLACID — Story time. 10 a.m. Bookstore Plus. 518-523-2950. PLATTSBURGH — The Edd perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Wednesday, June 18

PLATTSBURGH — Open mike at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Friday, June 20

PLATTSBURGH — Funk Wagon perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Saturday, June 21

PLATTSBURGH — Universal Transit perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Wednesday, June 25

PLATTSBURGH — Open mike at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Friday, June 27

PLATTSBURGH — North Funktree perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Saturday, June 28

LAKE PLACID — Book signing with Hallie Bond and Stephen Topper. 3-5 p.m. Bookstore Plus. 518-523-2950. PLATTSBURGH — Domm and Friends perform at 10 p.m. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. Call 518-563-2222 for food and drink specials.

Sunday, June 29

ST. HUBERTS — Rick Dennis preaches. All Souls Episcopal Chapel. 10 a.m.

Monday, June 30

LAKE PLACID — Story time. 10 a.m. Bookstore Plus. 518-523-2950.

Wednesday, July 2 WILMINGTON — Wilmington Historical Society: “Hidden Messages in Local Quips and Quotes.” Refreshments provded. For more info, contact Karen Peters at 518-420-8370:. 7 p.m., Wilmington Community Center.

Thursday, July 3 WESTPORT — Ryan Montbleau performs. 7:30 p.m. Ballard Park. Soundwaveswestport@gmail.com.

Sunday, July 6

ST. HUBERTS — Mark Robinson preaches. All Souls Episcopal Chapel. 10 a.m.

Thursday, July 10 WESTPORT — Taylor Haskins performs. 7:30 p.m. Ballard Park. Soundwaveswestport@gmail.com.

Saturday, July 12

LAKE PLACID — Investigations, Intelligence, Security, and Risk Evaluation roundtable. 8:30 a.m. Mountain View Room of the Conference Center of Lake Placid. $30 by reservation, $35 at the door. info@lakeplacidinstitute.org..

ECH to host diabetes health fair ELIZABETHTON Ñ A diabetes health fair will take place on Tuesday, June 3 from 4 to 6 pm at Elizabethtown Community Hospital. This free event is open to the public and includes speakers, cholesterol and A1C (glucose level) testing, an EKG, body mass index assessment, blood pressure check and vision evaluation. Podiatrist Dr. Richard Donaela will be the eventÕ s featured speaker, offering information in regard to foot care for those with diabetes. During his presentation, participants will have an opportunity to ask general questions about concerns that they may have. Attendees will be able to talk with registered dieticians and nutrition educators about how to best manage their glucose and insulin levels. The hospital’s certified diabetes educator Mary White-Ferris will also be on-hand during the event to answer questions and provide information for participants. Snacks and recipes will be offered, for those looking for new ideas. According to Mary White-Ferris, mealtime can be a challenge. Ò People who are suddenly confronted with the necessity of changing the way that they cook and eat can sometimes feel overwhelmed,Ó she said. Ò Additionally, people enjoy exploring new recipes. We want to help provide options and ideas.Ó Novo Nordisk, Sanofi Aventis, and other prescription drug and diabetic testing supply manufacturers will be on site to showcase the latest in prescription drug research and technology, along with an insurance representative from Fidelis. Representatives from local agencies and businesses including Essex County Public Health will also be on hand. Call Mary White-Ferris, at 873-9005 for more information.


12 - Valley News • CV

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May 31, 2014

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14 - Valley News • CV

May 31, 2014

State Police From page 1

that since the last gathering, 12 retirees from Troop B had passed away. Thirteen members of Troop B have been killed in the line of duty since its founding, the most recent death having occurred in 2008. Ò On this day we pause for a brief moment to honor the memory of our deceased members and pay special tribute to the important role they played in our proud heritage,Ó Smith said. Ò On this occasion we also honor the courage, integrity, and dedication of the troopers, investigators, and field supervisors who are currently working to continue our proud heritage of service to the citizens of New York State.” Pastor Shane Lynch of St. BartholemewÕ s Church in Old Forge also spoke at the event. “To remember, to reflect, to honor the memory and sacrifice of those who have gone before us, this is our solemn task this day,Ó Lynch said. Ò The long grey line continues its proud service across our great state. And going forth today we do so not in sorrow but renewed in commitment, enlivened in confidence, and strengthened by the witness and example of those who have come before.” Smith said he also wanted to thank the retired police members who were in the audience. Ò Each of us who continue to serve inherited a place in the New York State Police where honor and pride were both protected and perpetuated by you who served the long grey line before us,Ó Smith said. Ò We forever pledge our integrity and a duty to serve with humility to each of you. Thank you for your years of service and your attendance at these solemn ceremonies.Ó At right: Members of State Police Troop B salute during a May 21 Memorial Day service as the flag is lowered in Ray Brook. Photo by Jon Hochschartner

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Going Gray

• Since 1972, state-owned and protected lands have grown by 50 percent to 3,392,000 acres. They now account for 45 percent of the Adirondack Park land area, while state-owned conservation easements in perpetuity account for another 13 percent of the Adirondack Park. The state does pay taxes on these lands, but those taxes are far less than would be paid if the land were developed or contained structures.

From page 1

us running to explore options for long-term sustainability,Ó he said, including shared services with the other homes in the network. Ò WeÕ re very excited about that. It takes time to adjudicate all those funds.Ó Asked about staffing changes and alterations to the facility’s bed mix once the funds were received, Miceli said their priority was to Ò stay the course.Ó Ò Our goal is making sure we provide essential services for the community. As we go forward, thatÕ s all we can do.Ó GOING GRAY Miceli discussed the Adirondack Park Regional Assessment 2014 with a reporter, a report issued last month that painted the regionÕ s demographics situation as dire. Administrators of the four homes in the BLG network cited the last five-year report as one catalyst in the group’s formation. Among the most striking findings in the 2014 report: • The median age in the Adirondack Park is eight years older than in the rest of the state and five years older than in the communities outside the ParkÕ s boundary in the same 12-county area. • Population within the Blue Line is declining at a steadily increasing pace and the median age will increase by four years this decade alone to 51 (it was 31 in the early 1970s). By 2030, more than one-third of residents will be over the age of 60 and those under 30 will decline by an average of 14 percent each decade until 2030. While the population is growing gray, the land is growing greener:

MOVING FORWARD In the short-term, nursing home administrators said in December, the funds secured by the BLG will help address the fiscal distress their homes have endured following years of Medicaid reimbursements that fell short of the actual cost of care. The bed mix in a typical facility is 80 percent Medicaid recipients, said Miceli. Ò From my perspective, everyone is working together to move forward,Ó he said. Ò The report is a common picture across the rural perspective across the United States.Ó Inter-Lakes made headlines in February when it announced that it was cutting 33 full-time positions. Holmes, MiceliÕ s predecessor, said the cuts were necessary for the facility’s long-term financial health. The health care group lost more than $3 million last fiscal year, he said, citing factors such as more outpatient care rather than inpatient care and continued cuts in reimbursement programs. “The cumulative financial impact of these factors has resulted in a significant drop in revenue,” Holmes told a reporter for Denton Publications. Ò Inter-Lakes lost over $3 million in FY 2013 and the trend is continuing. We have taken all other measures to address this shortfall and, now, very reluctantly, need to reduce staff.Ó

CV • Valley News - 15 Inter-Lakes Health includes Moses-Ludington Hospital, Heritage Commons Residential Health Care, Moses-Ludington Adult Care, Inter-Lakes Dental Clinic and Lord Howe Estates. It employs 289 people and is TiconderogaÕ s second-largest employer. Joe Riccio, the communications director for Adirondack Health, the umbrella organization for two additional homes in the BLG network, Uihlein Living Center and Mercy Living Center, expressed similar sentiments. Asked by via email if the facilities plan on altering their bed mix and if the two facilities have eliminated any staffers, he said, Ò The Blue Line Group has not yet received the funds approved through the Vital Access Provider program. Once secured, these funds will help in the groupÕ s effort to protect the long-term viability of skilled nursing and elder care services within the Adirondack Park. The Blue Line Group is grateful for the support of Congressman Bill Owens and his efforts to facilitate release of the VAP award.Ó Phone calls to the other facility in the network, Adirondack Tri-County in North Creek, went unreturned by press time.

Sinfonietta volunteers to hold reception

LAKE PLACID Ñ The Lake Placid Sinfonietta Guild, the group of community volunteers that supports the activities of the orchestra, will hold its annual organizational meeting in Lake Placid on Thursday, June 12, from 5-7pm at Camp Tamaracks, the home of Karen Holmes. This is an informal gathering to organize the volunteer workforce that supports the Lake Placid Sinfonietta, and new volunteers of all abilities and ages are always welcome! RSVPÕ s are requested to help plan the reception. To RSVP for this reception, or to be added to the volunteer list without attending, please call the Lake Placid Sinfonietta office at 518-523-7380 or 518-523-2051. You can also respond via email through the orchestra website at www.LakePlacidSinfonietta.org.


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16 - Valley News • CV

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May 31, 2014

04 GMC CANYON REDUCED SLE Crew Cab, 4x4, Z-71, 104,000 miles, Automatic, Inspected! Kelly Blue Book Value $11,000, Asking $8,750.00 OBO (518)534-5670

30' 00" 1986 PEARSON 303 D IB 18 YANMAR $24,900. Bruce Hill Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 31' 00" 1986 ELAN 31 D $22,000. Bruce Hill Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 33' 00" 2011 ALERION YACHTS ALERION SPORT G IB 20 YANMAR $225,000. Bruce Hill Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 34' 00" 1977 SWEDEN YACHTS COMFORT 34 G $43,000. Bruce Hill Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 34' 05" 2006 TARTAN 3400 G VOLVO D-130 $149,000. Bruce Hill Yacht Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 34' 05" 2006 TARTAN 3400 D IB D YANMAR $149,000. Bruce Hill Yacht Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 34' 06" 1979 C & C 34 G ATOMIC FOUR $29,000. Bruce Hill Yacht Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798 34' 06" 1984 PEARSON 34 D IB 20 YANMAR $31,000. Bruce Hille Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 054827798 36' 00" 2000 BENETEAU 361 D D 27 $88,000. Bruce Hill Yacht Sales, INC., 4520 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT 05482-7798

AUTO'S WANTED DONATE A CAR - HELP CHILDREN FIGHTING DIABETES. Fast, Free Towing. Call 7 days/week. Nonrunners OK. Tax Deductible. Call Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation 1-800-578-0408 DONATE A VEHICLE, running or not, to Children's Cancer Fund of America, Inc. It is easy and tax deductible. Call 1-866-204-4548 TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800-454-6951 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 14 SECTION OF 8' Pressured treated boat docking w/ latter, adjustable hight stands, excellent condition, Also 12x14 Floating Raft w/latter. 518-563-3799 or 518563-4499 Leave Message. 1977 156 GLASTRON Boat with 70 HP Johnson motor, with trailer, excellent condition. $2500. 518-3598605A 2000 24' LAYTON CAMPER Sleeps 6, very clean, excellent condition, must see, $6700 OBO. 518-643-9391 2006 34' Outback 5th Wheel Trailer with T/O, Best Offer. 1984 Rockwood RV, 34', Class A, good condition, needs some work, Best Offer. 518-597-3270 2007 STINGRAY BOAT 25' Stingray Cruiser, only 29 hours, LIKE NEW, sleeps 4, has bathroom, microwave, fridge, table, includes trailer, stored inside every winter. (518) 5700896 $49,000

PLATTSBURGH, NY 2011 COUGAR 327RESREADY TO CAMP!! Hate to give it up but budget says we have to. Your chance to own a dream fifth wheel, below book and ready to go. Absolutely perfect condition. 36 foot, three slides, 13,500 btu A/C, 30,000 btu furnace, twin rocker/recliners, 32" LCD TV, sound system/DVD combination with interior and exterior speakers, electric awning, day/night shades in all windows, dinette with four chairs. Lots of camping extras stay with the sale. Includes 2014 lot rent in small, quiet park in Lewis, New York. All set up. Leave it there or pull her to your own destination. Must see! $28500. 518-572-5901 or dthayerppr@charter.net TOW BEHIND CAMPER 2008 26 foot Keystone Highmark. In great shape. Comfortably sleeps 5 plus. Air conditioning. Ready to roll now. Call (518) 5862864. MOTORCYCLES 1983 SUZUKI GS650L, 4 cyl., new battery, new tires, mint condition, extra's included. Asking $1,495.00. 518-946-8341 2000 Suzuki 800CC Intruder, 8000 miles, poorly stored, needs some work, $600 OBO. 518-873-3250

CANAM SPYDER 2012 Spyder Roadster. Includes battery charger-custom cover-2 helmets(small)-XL CanAm jacket. 59 Miles. $21,300.00 518566-7369

ACCESSORIES (2) TRAILERS (OPEN) - both excellent condition; 2010 Triton 20' Aluminum - max wgt. 7500 lbs. Asking $4900 and 1989 Bison 31' overal Gooseneck, Asking $2900. 518-546-3568. (4) CHEVY RIMS, Steel, 16”x6.5”, 6 lug w/pressure monitors. $250 OBO. 518-524-7124 FISHER SNOW PLOW 7' 6" Minute Mount 2, used 2 winters, $3500 Negotiable. 518-524-0582 or 518643-5244 GARAGE SALE 3-FAMILY GARAGE SALE: 30 General Parker Ave., Cadyville, NY. May 30th 8am-5pm & May 31st. 8am-3pm. Portable air conditioners, clothes, household & garden items, books & homemade goodies. 4-Family Garage Sale May 29th, 30th & 31st, 8am-4pm. 359 Duquette Road, Cadyville, NY. Antiques, perennials, jewelry, toys, clothes, household items, homemade goodies & much more. AUCTIONS Buy or sell at AARauctions.com. Contents of homes, businesses, vehicles and real estate. Bid NOW! AARauctions.com Lights, Camera, Auction. No longer the best kept secret. Manchester, VT Cape on 1.2+ Ac. Foreclosure Auction: June 27, 11AM 3BR, 2.5BA, Garage, Basement THCAuction.com ? 800-6347653 SULLIVAN COUNTY REAL PROPERTY TAX FORECLOSURE AUCTION: 300+/- Properties June 11+12 @ 10AM. Held at The Sullivan, Route 17 Exit 109. 800-2430061 AAR, Inc. & HAR, Inc. Free brochure: www.NYSAuctions.com

FULLER BRUSH COMPANY SALES DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED. Looking for people who could use extra money servicing people in your area. No Investment. Call 1-800683-2002 Email: sb.haney715@gmail.com GREAT MONEY FROM HOME! WITH OUR FREE MAILER PROGRAM LIVE OPERATORS ON DUTY NOW 1-800-707-1810 EX 701 OR VISIT WWW.PACIFICBROCHURES.COM HELP WANTED Earn Extra income Assembling CD cases From Home. Call our Live Operators Now! No experience Necessary 1-800-4057619 Ext 2605 www.easyworkgreatpay.com MORIAH CENTER, NY In Home Health Care needed, CNA preferred but not necessary. $13.50/hr. PT only, several positions available overnight & weekends. Contact Dave 518637-9398 Leave Message to fill out application, references required. Must be Reliable. Possible drug test. HELP WANTED LOCAL ELIZABETHTOWN-LEWIS CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT is accepting applications for a 10 month School Lunch Manager. Responsibilities: general management & oversight of school food services at $15 per hour, to begin 9/1/14. Submit a cover letter & resume by noon on June 6, 2014 to: ElizabethtownLewis Central School District ATTN: Scott J. Osborne, Superintendent @ 518-873-6371 x 502 PO BO 158 Elizabethtown, New York 12932 EOE Summer Restaurant Help at Essex Shipyard Marina & Restaurant – Servers, Dishwashers, Kitchen Assistants. Call Lin at 802-683-4742.

Fishing For A Good Deal? Catch The Greatest Bargains In The Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201


May 31, 2014 HELP WANTED LOCAL

ELECTRONICS

WESTAFF SERVICES We'll find the perfect employee and make you the hero! Office /Clerical, Light Industrial Professional/Technical Managerial Call today 518-566-6061

DIRECTV, Internet, & Phone From $69.99/mo + Free 3 Months: HBO Starz SHOWTIME CINEMAX+ FREE GENIE 4 Room Upgrade + NFL SUNDAY TICKET! Limited offer. Call Now 888-248-5961 DISH TV RETAILER. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available). SAVE! Ask about SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-8264464 REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!* Get a whole Satellite system installed at NO COST and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW 1-800-492-1952

CAREER TRAINING THE OCEAN CORP. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1-800-321-0298.

FARM PRODUCTS Incumabator/Hovabator with automatic turner with racks for chicken, turkey, goose or even quial eggs. Used about 6 times, so like new. $125. Contact 518-962-8674

MISCELLANEOUS

FINANCIAL SERVICES

SAWMILLS from only $4897.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N SYRACUSE RUBBER STAMP & SCRAPBOOK SHOPPING SHOW May 31 June 1, SRC Arena. Shopping with National Exhibitors, Demos, Make-and-Takes, Door Prizes, Friday Classes. Advance tickets $6.00 Order online by May 26 for BOGO FREE! Tickets, class registrations, and details visit www.toomuchfunpromotions.com.#

ARE YOU IN BIG TROUBLE WITH THE IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Seen on CNN. A BBB. Call 1-800-647-3031 DIVORCE $550* No Fault or Regular Divorce. Covers children, property, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. 1800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor & Associates, Inc. Est. 1977 GET CASH NOW for your Annuity or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! 1-855-512-9227 INJURED? IN A LAWSUIT? Need Cash Now? We Can Help! No Monthly Payments and No Credit Check. Fast Service. Low Rates. Call Now 1-888-888-5152 www.lawcapital.com INJURED? IN A LAWSUIT? Need Cash Now? We Can Help! No Monthly Payments and No Credit Check. Fast Service. Low Rates. Call Now 1-888-888-5152 www.lawcapital.com

ADOPTIONS Adopt: Devoted loving couple wishes to adopt newborn into secure home filled with care, warmth, love & happiness. Expenses paid. Anthony/Tim, call 855.975.4792, text 917.991.0612 Loving married couple longs to adopt newborn. We'll provide a beautiful life, unconditional love, opportunites & security. Excpenses paid. Tricia & Don anytime at 1-800-348-1748. https://donandtriciaadopt.shutterfly.com/ PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring adoption expert. Choose from families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abbys One True Gift Adoptions 866-413-6296 Void In Illinois/New Mexico/Indiana ANNOUNCEMENTS VIAGRA 100MG/CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 4/FREE only $99! #1 Male Enhancement! Discreet shipping. 1-888-796-8878 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES ANTIQUES WANTED Local 3rd Generation Dealer, Free Verbal Appraisals. Call Brian Bittner at (802) 272-7527 or visit http://www.bittnerantiques.com/

CV • Valley News - 17

www.valleynewsadk.com

REVERSE MORTGAGES Draw all eligible cash out of your home & eliminate mortgage payments. Seniors 62+! Government insured. Free 26 page catalog. FHA/VA loans also available. 1-888-660-3033 All Island Mortgage. NMLS#3740. FOR SALE 2002 COACHMAN MIRADA self contained, 24,840 miles, clean & runs great, Asking $16,800. 518846-7337 CM 2000 TRAILER 38"x54", tong 33", can be towed by a motorcycle or car. Ideal for bike rallies, $350.00. 518-643-8643.

FOR SALE

COMPUTER CABINET/WORK DESK. Accommodates entire system. Storage and file drawers. Excel. condition. 60"W, 22"D, 53"H. Pd. $1800.00. Sell $250.00 518962-2799. Detoxify your PCB and other toxins with a 2 person Far-Infared Sauna. Hypoallergenic popular, doctor recommended. Must see to appreciate. $1200. 315-769-6760 FRIGIDAIRE 6500 BTU'S AC unit, $200; Consolidated Dutch West wood stove $500; 1 man Pontoon boat $300. 518-708-0678 KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores. Buy Online: homedepot.com Ping Pong Table – folding table, complete w/net, paddles & balls. Good shape. $65. 518-891-5545. RANCH MINK Coat, Black, size 12, seldom worn. A-1 condition. New $2000, Asking $700 OBO. 518-420-8719 TWO TOOL BOXES full of Snap-on Craftsman Tools $2500 OBO Call 518-728-7978 or Email pparksfamily@gmail.com WELL PUMP GOULD, 1 hp,. Call 518-576-0012 WOLFF SUNVISION Pro 28 LE Tanning Bed, very good condition, $700.00. 518-637-1741 FURNITURE QUEEN PILLOW TOP mattress set, new in plastic, $150.00. 518-5348444 GENERAL !!OLD GUITARS WANTED!! Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch. 1930-1980. Top Dollar paid!! Call Toll Free 1-866-433-8277 AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Housing andJob placement assistance. Call AIM 866-453-6204 AIRLINES ARE HIRING Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid for qualified students Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704 CANADA DRUG CENTER. Safe and affordable medications. Save up to 90% on your medication needs. Call 1-800-734-5139 ($25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.)

GENERAL CASH FOR CARS, Any Make or Model! Free Towing. Sell it TODAY. Instant offer: 1-800-8645784 CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960 CASH PAID- UP TO $25/BOX for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. BEST PRICES! Call 1-888-776-7771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-6154064 HERO MILES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org HOTELS FOR HEROES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org HOTELS FOR HEROS - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-888-909-9905 18+. MEET SINGLES NOW! No paid operators, just people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages, connect live. FREE trial. Call 1-877-737-9447 TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920's thru 1980's. Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D'Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-4010440 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 4 FREE for only $99. #1 Male Enhancement, Discreet Shipping. Save $500! Buy The Blue Pill! 1-800-213-6202 HEALTH & FITNESS CANADA DRUG CENTER is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-413-1940 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 10 FREE. SPECIAL $99.00 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL NOW! 1-888-223-8818

ELECTRONICS BUNDLE AND SAVE! DIRECTV, INTERNET & PHONE From $69.99/mo. Free 3 months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX. FREE GENIE 4-room Upgrade LOCK IN 2 YR Savings. Call 1-800782-3956

YOU CAN’T ESCAPE THE BUYS IN THE CLASSIFIEDS! 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

Juggling Your Budget? Advertise Small, Get Big Results! Call 518-873-6368

Let’s Go Garage & Yard Sale-ing Thru The Classified Superstore

1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

HEALTH & FITNESS IF YOU USED THE BLOOD THINNER PRADAXA and suffered internal bleeding, hemorrhaging, required hospitalization or a loved one died while taking Pradaxa between October 2010 and the present. You may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727

VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 4 FREE for only $99. #1 Male Enhancement, Discreet Shipping. Save $500! Buy The Blue Pill! 1-888-797-9029 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 50 Pills $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 1-866-312-6061 VIAGRA 100MG or CIALIS 20mg 40 tabs + 10 FREE! All for $99 including Shipping! Discreet, Fast Shipping. 1-888-836-0780 or PremiumMeds.NET LAWN & GARDEN Privacy Hedges- SPRING Blowout Sale 6ft Arborvitae (cedar) Regular $129 Now $59 Beautiful, Nursery Grown. FREE Installation/FREE delivery 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttrees.com Limited Supply! LOGGING LOGGING, LAND CLEARING, Forest Management. Highest Rates on all Timber. Double Rates on Low Grade Chip Wood. 518-643-9436 WILLIAM THWAITS LOGGING is looking to purchase and harvest standing timber of all species. Will pay New York State stumpage prices. Many references available. Call Wiliam Thwaits 518-593-3263 WANTED TO BUY ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information. CASH for Coins! Buying ALL Gold & Silver. Also Stamps & Paper Money, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419 CASH PAID- up to $25/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAYPAYMENT.1-800371-1136 WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

WANTED TO BUY WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLE KAWASAKI 1967-1980 Z1900, KZ900, KZ1000, ZIR, KX1000MKII, A1-250, W1-650, H1-500, H2-750, S1-250, S2-350, S3-400 SUZUKI GS400, GT380, GT750, Honda CB750 (1969,1970) CASH. FREE PICKUP. 1-800-7721142, 1-310-721-0726 usa@classicrunners.com


www.valleynewsadk.com

18 - Valley News • CV WANTED TO BUY

DOGS

Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

AKC SIBERIAN Husky puppies. Only 2 puppies left! I have 1 AC grey and white female Siberian husky puppy and 1 KC white male Siberian Husky puppy left from a litter of 4. Parents. Family raised with small children and other dogs. Ready to go now with 1st shots and deworming.Adorable and sweet little puppy. See Serious inquiries only Text mileshome4champhionhusky@gmail.com

CATS

Free to a good home 6 week old kittens, 2 males, 2 females. 1-Orange/White the other ones are White/Black & Brown. Please call 518-310-1566

DOGS

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VALLEY NEWS

NEWFOUNDLAND PUPPIES Ready July 1st Family Dogs/Working Health Certificate/Guarantee DNA Tested/Purchase Contract Call for Availability & Pricing northcountrycanineservices.com 518-314-1935 APARTMENT RENTALS Downtown Willsboro Apartment, upstairs, 2 bedroom, hot water, w/ washer/dryer hook-up, no pets. $675/mo., Call 518-963-4284

Visit Us Today!

LEWIS, NY 1 bedroom Apt., for rent, Available June 1st, No pets, No smoking, Utilities & Heat included, $500/month. 518-8736805 RETIREMENT APARTMENTS, ALL INCLUSIVE. Meals, transportation, activities daily. Short Leases. Monthly specials! Call (866)3882607 Westport, NY, 2 bedroom Starting at $650/mo.,+ utilities, Available Soon. Call 518-962-8500 VACATION PROPERTY RENTALS OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com

May 31, 2014

VACATION PROPERTY RENTALS NORTH WILDWOOD, NJ FLORENTINE FAMILY MOTEL Beach/Boardwalk Block Heated Pools, Efficiency/Motel units refrigerator, elevator. Color Brochure/Specials 609-5224075 Department 104? www.florentinemotel.com Out of State Real Estate Delaware's Resort Living Without Resort Pricing! Low Taxes! Gated Community, Close to Beaches, Amazing Amenities, Olympic Pool. New Homes from $80's! Brochures available 1-866-629-0770 or www.coolbranch.com. Out of State Real Estate Delaware's Resort Living Without Resort Pricing! Low Taxes! Gated Community, Close to Beaches, Amazing Amenities, Olympic Pool. New Homes from $80's! Brochures available 1-866-629-0770 or www.coolbranch.com. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RENTALS Historic Village of Essex, NY – Retail Space formally occupied by successful deli/bakery/cafe serving breakfast, lunch & prepared meals to take out, 1200 sq w/2 decks, 1 overlooks lake & Green Mountains, some basic equip included, opportunity for summer or year round business. 802-503-5452 for details.

LAND

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

COUNTRY FARMHOUSE 6 acres $89,900. Beautiful So. Tier location! 5 BR, 2 Baths, 2 levels of decks, mother in law cottage! Ideal family retreat! Owner terms! Call 1-888-701-1864 NOW! www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com

DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Includes poor person application/waives government fees, if approved. One signature required. Separation agreements available. Make Divorce Easy - 518-274-0380.

MOBILE HOME

DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Includes poor person application/waives government fees, if approved. One signature required. Separation agreements available. Make Divorce Easy - 518-274-0380.

COME VISIT OUR NEW MODELS Modular, Mobile Homes & DoubleWides. No Pressure Staff. 600 RT.7 Pittsford VT 05763 factorydirecthomesofvt.com 1-877-999-2555 7 days 9-4

Drivers: $2,000.00 Sign-On Bonus! Home Nightly! Albany, NY Flatbed! CDL-A, 1yr. Exp. Req. Estenson Logistics Apply: www.goelc.com 1-866-336-9642

FOR SALE; 1990 Redman Double Wide, 2 bath, walk in pantry, in Pine Rest East Trailer Park in Beekmantown District, Military Turnpike. Price on Call 518-3100051

HOME IMPROVEMENTS HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc, for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN. www.woodfordbros.com. "Not applicable in Queens county"

VACATION PROPERTY Out of State Real Estate Sebastian, Florida Beautiful 55+ manufactured home community. 4.4 miles to the beach, 2 miles to the riverfront district. Homes starting at $39,000. 772-581-0080, www.beach-cove.com.

½ PRICE INSULATION, Blue Dow or High R. Several Thickness Available. Call 518-5973876. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $189 INSTALLED. White double hung, tilt-in. $50.00 rebate on all Energy Star Windows. Lifetime Warranty. Credit cards accepted. Call Rich @ 1-866-272-7533 REAL ESTATE $29,000 REMODELED 2 BDRM, .3 acre, Rte. 9, Front Street, Keeseville, NY. Live in or a P/E Ratio of 5 to 1 investment. 518-3356904 1 ACRE OF LAND at Wood Rd., West Chazy, NY, close to schools, nice location. Please call 518-4932478 for more information. ADIRONDACK “BY OWNER” AdkByOwner.com 1000+ photo listings of local real estate for sale, vacation rentals & timeshares. Owners: List with us for only $299 per year. Visit online or call 518-891-9919

LEGALS NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (1) The name of the Limited Liability Company is ADIRONDACK MOBILE SHREDDING, LLC (2) The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State was April 1, 2014 (3) The County in New York in which the office of the Company is located is Essex County. (4) The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the Company upon which process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the Company served upon it to 50 Hemlock Drive, Schroon Lake, NY 12870. (5) The Limited Liability Company is formed for

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (1) The name of the Limited Liability Company is ADIRONDACK MOBILE SHREDDING, LLC (2) The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State was April 1, 2014 (3) The County in New York in which the office of the Company is located is Essex County. (4) The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the Company upon which process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the Company served upon it to 50 Hemlock Drive, Schroon Lake, NY 12870. (5) The Limited Liability Company is formed for any lawful business purpose or purposes. Dennis J. Tarantino, Esq. Kenneally & Tarantino (518) 792-6516 VN-5/17-6/21/20146TC-46917 ADK AFFORDABLE PROPERTIES, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 4/17/2014. Office in Essex Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The LLC PO Box 247 341 US Route 9 Schroon Lake, New York 12870. Purpose: Any lawful activity. VN-5/3-6/7/2014-6TC45873

NEED TO MAKE

?

SOME

ALTONA, NY 3 BR/2 BA, Single Family Home, built in 1994, Perfect entertainment home, peaceful country setting 15 minutes from Plattsburgh. Large deck, 28' pool, patio with built in gas grill, 2 car garage with workshop. A MUST SEE 518-5700896 $105,000 BUILDING AND LOT in Moriah 1.3+ acres, paved driveway, town water and sewer. Can be used for residential and/or commercial, Asking $45,000. 518-546-3568

CA$H

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Town of Keene, Essex County, New York, has filed their Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year ending December 31, 2013, with the Office of the State Comptroller. This report is available for public inspection at the Office of the Town Clerk, located in the Keene Town hall, Monday through Friday, from 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM. Ellen S. Estes, Town Clerk Town of Keene May 21, 2014 VN-5/31/2014-1TC48547

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VALLEY NEWS

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: BAC WINE COMPANY LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 03/12/14. Office location: Essex County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, 96 Newman Street, Lake Placid, New York 12946. Purpose: For any lawful purpose. VN-5/3-6/7/2014-6TC45217 NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) Name: Main 2310, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 6/12/2013 Office Location: Essex County. The

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) Name: Main 2310, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 6/12/2013 Office Location: Essex County. The SSNY is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC at: PO Box 245, Essex, NY 12936. Purpose: To engage in any lawful act or activity. VN-4/26-5/31/20146TC-44906 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Phil Jackson LLC filed articles of organization with SOS of NY on 4/25/2014. Principal office is in Essex County, New York. The SOS of NY is designated as agent for service of process against the LLC, and SOS shall mail a copy of process in any

MORRISONVILLE, NY 4 BR/2.5 BA, Single Family Home, 1,920 square feet, built in 1998, Colonial Cape, attached 2 car garage, gas fireplace, finished basement, large fenced in backyard with above Place a ground swimming pool on corner PLEASE TAKE NOTICE lot. Located in Morrisonville in the classified that the Town of Saranac Essex School District. Great ad!Planning Board willFamily hold Neighborhood. $229,500 Callthe518-726-0828 Dfirenut@gNOTICE BY It’s PUBLICAeasya Public andHearing onmail.com TION OF FORMATION following application: Mastrovich - Tax Map OF LIMITED LIABILITY will make Fishing For A Good Deal? #40.73-2-16.100 - SpeCOMPANY youfiledmoney! cial Use Permit for a re-Catch The Greatest Phil Jackson LLC tail shop/studio at 3 articles of organization with SOS of NY on Church Street, Essex, Bargains In The 4/25/2014. Principal of- NY 12936, on June 19, Classifieds 57594 2014 at 7:00 p.m. The fice is in Essex County, 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201 New York. The SOS of Regular Meeting of the NY is designated as Planning Board will imTHE ANNUAL MEETING agent for service of pro- mediately follow. of the Burt Cemetery Ascess against the LLC, Catherine DeWolff sociation will be held on and SOS shall mail a Town of Essex Planning Friday evening, May 30, copy of process in any Board Secretary 2014, at the home of VN-5/31/20614-1TCaction or proceeding Janice Moran, 92 Middle 48451 against the LLC to 7400 Road, Essex New York. US Route 9, ElizabethThe meeting will start at town, NY 12932. The 7:00pm. LLC's purpose is to enAll interested persons gage in any lawful activi- NOTICE OF FORMATION are encouraged to atty. OF STRADA 86, LLC tend. VN-5/10-6/14/2014Arts. of Org. filed with 6TC-45979 the Sect'y of State of NY Karen Crowningshield, Secretary (SSNY) on 4/14/2014. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Office location, County that the Town of Essex of Essex. SSNY has Planning Board will hold been designated as When it’s time to a Public Hearing on the agent of the LLC upon following application: whom process against it Mastrovich - Tax Map may beserved. SSNY Don’t throw it away those unwanted items. #40.73-2-16.100 - Spe- shall mail process to: Promote them in the “For Sale” section in the Classifieds. You’ll turn your trash into cash! cial Use Permit for a re- Dzemal Cecunjanin, 131 Our operators are standing by! Call... tail shop/studio at 3 Bloomingdale Ave., Call 1-800-989-4237 Church Street, Essex, Saranac Lake, NY NY 12936, on June 19, 12983. Purpose: any 2014 at 7:00 p.m. The lawful act. “We’re more than a newspaper, We’re a community service.” Regular Meeting of the VN-5/3-6/7/2014-6TCwww.denpubs.com Planning Board will im- 45531 mediately follow. Catherine DeWolff Town of Essex Planning Board Secretary

518-873-6368

CLEAN HOUSE


May 31, 2014

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May 31, 2014


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