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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,ÊD ecemberÊ12,Ê2015

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In SPORTS | pg. 13

Sports Preview New season begins Red Storm returns an experienced squad

www.SunCommunityNews.com

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In OPINION | pg. 4

A rash of violence

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Cooler heads need to prevail

In ARTS | pg. 7

‘Dolly’s Word’ on the arts scene

Market Street Brass to perform in Keene Valley

Essex Center cited for violations New protocols in place to safeguard against elopement, wandering residents By Pete DeMola

pete@suncommunitynews.com

ELIZABETHTOWN — A local nursing home says they’ve switched administrators and have reviewed all protocols and procedures since they were reprimanded by the state for serious violations that put residents in “immediate jeopardy.” The violations at the Essex Center for Rehabilitation and

DeckÊ the Town

Healthcare, which were noted in August during a site visit, State inspectors returned one month later and concurred. were for having an ineffective resident elopement system, All violations have since been corrected, said McCartin. The housing residents with inaccurate risk assessments and not next round of inspections should be favorable, he said. having a quality assurance committee oversee such a system. Those results are expected imminently. The center was also dinged for failing to provide proper Inspections at the facility have revealed a mixed bag. safeguards against wandering. Citations from November 2011 through Oct. 31 of this year Thomas McCartin, a spokesman for the facility, stressed have determined life safety code citations at Essex Center are that no elopement took place. below the state average. “It was the state’s judgement however, that there was a poStandard health citations are slightly above average, while tential risk,” said McCartin. “That risk was addressed and mit>> Story Continued | pg. 11 igated immediately.”

Empire State Games schedule announced

For one local firefighter, carrying on the town’s Christmas light legacy is a solemn calling

AU SABLE FORKS — He remembers it like it was yesterday: The 1954 fire truck made its way down Main Street. Upon rolling to a stop, four guys from the Au Sable Forks Fire Department leapt Pete off, positioned a wooden ladder under the DeMola Editor utility poles and ascended skywards. The crew then decked the town in boughs of garland and lights, connecting the strands from the poles to the elm trees across the street. Down below, men supported the lights with poles until they were firmly attached. The result was a downtown cast in a warm glow. That was in 1968. Nearly 50 years later, while the elms are long gone, Kevin Zaumetzer is still overjoyed by the lights and imbued with a strong dose of Christmas spirit. The firefighter is the inheritor of a tradition that started back in 1932 when a group of merchants on the Jay side of

1,700 athletes expected to compete in amateur athletic competition Since 1982, the Au Sable Forks Fire Department’s Kevin Zaumetzer has spearheaded the installation of Christmas lights in downtown Au Sable Forks. For Zaumetzer, the undertaking is the continuance of a long holiday tradition in the community. This year’s installment boasts 15 strands of overhead lights paired with numerous pole decorations. “Christmas is everything,” he said. Photo by Pete DeMola

the Ausable River worked with the Associated Gas & Electric Company to hang 15 strands of lights on Main Street, from the bridge up to Holy Name Church. “They used to call them pig tails,” said Zaumetzer of the large 25 watt bulbs bunched together on custom-made strands. After a long apprenticeship, the torch was passed to Zaumetzer in 1982. For the Jay resident, decorating is a year-long endeavor. Preparation starts in January, with plans coalescing around a >> Story Continued | pg. 11

MALONE — Event organizers met at Titus Mountain in Malone last week to unveil plans that have been in discussion for several years and marks a significant turning point in what is already the largest community-supported collection of athletic games in the nation. The 2016 Empire State Winter Games is set for Feb. 4-7 in the Adirondack region. The ESWG Organizing Committee is anticipating some 1,700 athletes in 23 sports, including many adaptive athletes. An Opening Ceremony is planned for Thursday, February 4 at 6 p.m. in the 1980 Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, highlighted by a Parade of Athletes. It will be preceded by a torch run. The 2016 edition of the annual event dates back to 1981. It will offer the classic and traditional winter events in the Lake Placid, Wilmington, Tupper Lake and Paul Smiths Adirondack region. Before numerous local and regional officials as well as sportsmen, sportswomen and Titus Mountain owners, ESWG representatives also brought forth newly created contemporary >> Story Continued | pg. 10


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