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ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron

Saturday,ÊA ugustÊ15 ,Ê2015

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In SPORTS | pg. 13

Lax Tourney $18,800 raised

Wounded Warrior Lacrosse Tournament

www.SunCommunityNews.com

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In OPINION | pg. 4

Alexander: Insanity begins Unconventional candidates stepping up

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In ARTS | pg. 7

Dolly’s World: Bucket’s Bog

Local arts scene heating up for summer

Army medic finds new armor in lacrosse GroupÊ raisesÊ fundsÊ forÊ veteransÊ inÊ LakeÊ PlacidÊ lacrosseÊ tournament By Andrew Johnstone

half of the element. He took off in that direction when another explosion rang out — this time LAKE PLACID — It was near the end right underneath him. He had stepped of his deployment in Afghanistan when on the secondary IED in his push forCalvin Todd, a U.S. Army medic, heard ward, ultimately losing the lower half of the explosion and ambush at the front his left leg. andrew@suncommunitynews.com

Fast forward almost three years and Todd found himself in a different type of armor: that of a lacrosse goaltender for the Old Army - Wounded Warrior Project Grand Masters 2 team at the Summit Lacrosse Classic in Lake Placid. The group, one of two at the tournament that consisted largely of U.S. Army veterans and West Point graduates, helped put a face on a major fundraising effort by the 26-year-old lacrosse vent: to support wounded service members.

“It was pretty bad, I guess,” recalled Todd of that day in 2012. “It’s all good. A little banged up, but everything is fine now.” Todd now plays on an artificial limb, and though he admitted having the desire to play in a younger, faster division at the tournament, in the end having the opportunity to play a game he loves while supporting the Wounded Warrior Project (WWP) mattered most. “This is one of the premier tourna-

ments in the country,” Todd continued. “The fact that they’re supporting the WWP and having them be the benefactor, it’s really cool.” The tournament, he added, is a special one in that it brings together the veteran and lacrosse communities, both alike in many ways. Together the two thrive and bring attention to a program that addresses a wide-ranging spectrum >> Story Continued | pg. 13

BigÊ ideasÊ brewingÊ atÊ EssexÊ FarmÊ In wake of controversial ruling ... BOE agrees to Institute Farm effort thriving in the Champlain region

revamp policies

pete@suncommunitynews.com

By Pete DeMola

ESSEX — Lightning flickered across a bruise-colored sky. Thunder rumbled; the party paused, the air quivered with tension and eventually, Mark Kimball bounded through the shimmering green rows and dusted himself off. Several minutes later, he’d helped tame a spooked horse. Now, he plucked a broccoli stem from the earth and made quick work of it with his knife, handing out thumb-sized chunks to the group who’d come to tour his operation. “Before you tour the farm, we’ve Essex Farm Institute Co-founder Mark Kimball shares a moment with Executive Director Michele Drozd and Rep. Elise Stefanik during a tour of the 1,200 acre facility earlier this month. got to feed you,” said Kimball. Photo by Pete DeMola And then it started, a tornado of ideas: whom have spun off to start their own farms right here in the neighShifts in global climate patterns. Education gaps. Funding solu- borhood. tions. Farms as incubators for young talent. Safety nets. Dating, the More than 250 local families participate in their CSA program — global economy… shares, if you will, in exchange for weekly grocery pickups, with FriThe future. days becoming a weekly social event in this verdant pocket of Essex Essex Farm is the granddaddy of the revitalized local farm move- County with views of both the High Peaks and the Green Mountains. ment. It’s all promising. As such, Kimball and his wife, Kristen, decided, Since its formation in 2003, the full-diet, 1,200-acre organic operation has trained and mentored over 50 beginning farmers, 10 of >> Story Continued | pg. 8

LAKE PLACID — Following a flap at the board of elections last month that saw the county’s two election commissioners disagree over the procedure for reviewing ballot objections, a new process will now be instituted, reported the commissioners on Monday. Democratic Commissioner Mark Whitney said he and his counterpart, Republican Commissioner Allison McGahay, worked with the state board of elections to adopt the procedures, which will be in place by the time petitions from independent candidates are due on Aug. 18. Using state guidelines as a baseline, the new regulations lay out the rules for objections, including which abbreviations can be used and ensuring clear and exact reasons for why the objector is challenging the signatures. In addition, a bipartisan

By Pete DeMola

pete@suncommunitynews.com

team must review the materials and make their rulings in a timely manner, with deputies assigned in the event of the absence of either commissioner. Whitney said the lack of a set process was why the procedure got tripped up last week. McGahay disagreed, arguing these were the very same set of state-approved rules that she had been pushing for all along. “It sounds like these are already in place,” said Moriah Supervisor Tom Scozzafava. “Don’t you have to follow those anyways?” “I’ve always followed what the state board of elections puts out,” responded McGahay. Last month, Whitney wanted to stage courtroom-type proceedings to rule on the disputed ballots of three local candidates, said McGahay. McGahay said the process was illegal and would have got the county sued, a viewpoint she reiterated to lawmakers on >> Story Continued | pg. 9


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