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Editorial» NIMBY shouldn’t be applicable to medical pot
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Saturday, February 28, 2015
ACAP:
WE’RE BACK!
This Week COUNTY JUDGE
Afterschool funding in jeopardy By Pete DeMola pete@denpubs.com
Meyer speaks about re-election campaign PAGE 3 OUTDOORS
Jim Craig, goalkeeper on the 1980 “Miracle on Ice” team, gives the crowd a wave during the 35th anniversary event in Lake Placid on Feb. 21. Craig stopped 36 of 39 shots to help his team upset the Soviet Union 4-3 before beating Finland 4-2 for the gold medal. See page 10 for the story. Photo by Paige Passman
LITTLE BITS
Gordie Little on high heels ... Why not? PAGE 7
By Pete DeMola
andrew@denpubs.com ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ With a little over a month until runners hit the pavement, organizers for the Doc Lopez Run for Health have already sprouted wings. This yearÕ s race, the 35th installment, is scheduled for Saturday, March 21. ItÕ s namesake, Doctor Robert Lopez, was a beloved veterinarian in the region. Lopez started the race in 1980 after carrying the torch into Lake Placid for the Winter Olympic Games. He was an ultra-runner, recalled his daughter, Susan Allott, and initially envisioned the event as a 50 miler. Over the years, the event was passed from organizer to organizer before it reached Allott, who wanted to keep her dadÕ s memory alive. Since taking over the race, the event has morphed from a 5K to a 12.1 mile. A one-mile walk was later added. And last year, Allott bumped the mile CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
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This year’s Doc Lopez Run for Health, the 35th installment, is scheduled for Saturday, March 21.
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Annual Run for Health takes shape in Elizabethtown
Rich Redman writes about the Two Fly
ELIZABETHTOWN Ñ For the second consecutive year, funding for afterschool programs in Moriah, Schroon and Westport is in jeopardy. Earlier this month, the agency that operates the programs, Adirondack Community Action Programs (ACAP), facilitated a brainstorming session designed to find a solution. Ò We were just informed this past week that we do not have secure funding for the afterschool programs in September,Ó said the programÕ s director, Marge Zmijewski. Funding comes from several state and federal streams, explained Nora NeidzielskiEichner, Executive Director of the New York State Afterschool Network, or NYSAN. Problem is, supply canÕ t keep up with demand. Neidzielski-Eichner said the grant proposal process is extremely competitive, with only about 25 percent of applicants locking down funds. Ò ThereÕ s tremendously more demand than government funding,Ó she said. Ò And demand has continued to grow as both parents enter the workforce.Ó Proposed funding for the Advantage After School stream for 2015-16 is at the same level as last yearÕ s executive budget Ñ about $17.2 million. ACAP needs $156,550 to continue programming at their three sites. Zmijewski said ACAP met the required date for the application. But the state determined they did not score high enough. Ò We were told we wrote an excellent proposal and were next in line to get funded, but CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
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