ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron
Saturday,ÊM ayÊ28,Ê2016
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In EVENTS | pg. 4
CVFC to host 5K FWD for Recovery
Event to raise funds for center’s prevention programming
www.SunCommunityNews.com
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In NEWS | pg. 3
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In NEWS | pg. 13
Heroin task force Loved ones recall lands $120 million local fire victims State funds granted to assist epidemic
Investigation ongoing with Plattsburgh fire
NCCS closer to obtaining $1.4m for tech expansion District seeks state approval to implement Smart Schools plan By Teah Dowling
teah@suncommunitynews.com
CHAMPLAIN — Northeastern Clinton Central School is one step closer toward their goal of merging the latest developments in the teaching and tech fields. “Technology is so important to our students and we need to be able to change as educators in order to bridge that gap,” said Rick Hunter, the district’s business educator. “This is helping us move in that direction.” The district submitted their plan to the state for review last year and it was approved that November. Since then, student surveys and community feedback have
been gathered. Now, the plan needs to be approved by the state education department. The Technology Committee intends on submitting the plan sometime next month. “We looked at the confines of what we can and can’t do and we formed a plan based around that,” said Middle School Principal Thomas Brandell. If approved, the goal of the project is to integrate technology to “enhance, improve, engage and stimulate” the learning environment. Expanding and updating their wireless and wired networks, along with purchasing devices, are a few key components of the plan. The district plans on first upgrading internet infrastructure to support the increasing demand for more bandwidth.
Photo by Teah Dowling
>> See Technology Plan | pg. 10
BookÊ Review:
Brush presenting eyesore in Rouses Point
Ô WeÊ WereÊ ThereÕ
Traveling physician Daniel Way has spent years administering to patients in the central Adirondacks INDIAN LAKE — Sometimes fascinating stories lurk in the most unlikely places. A young doctor, armed with a degree from Penn State College of Medicine, returned to his hometown of Glens Falls in Pete 1980 and began practicing medicine. DeMola Editor Daniel Way’s work took him deep into the heart of the Adirondack Park, where he discovered patients with ordinary ailments had extraordinary experiences. There was the English war nurse in Thurman who came of age in the Battle of Britain, when skies grew dark as Spitfires battled the German Luftwaffe and bombs rained down overhead. Way learned the man living the life of a “country gentleman” in a remote area between Chestertown and Riparius had participated in some of fiercest fighting in World War II, tasked with rooting out Japanese fighter positions with a small tank at Iwo Jiwa, where the air stunk of volcanic ash. Or Ralph and Robert Barton, the Indian Lake brothers whose odysseys took them from the small mountain town in Hamilton County to the Pacific and European theaters and back again, where they married, found fulfilling work and
Northeastern Clinton Central School is one step closer toward a blended learning environment with traditional teaching methods and technology thanks to the Smart Schools Investment Bond Act.
Village officials discuss options for keeping brush off of curbs By Teah Dowling
teah@suncommunitynews.com
lived next door to one another for years. Way, a baby boomer born 10 years after Pearl Harbor, collected a myriad of stories while working for 35 years as a primary care physician in some of the most remote stretches of New York State. The concentration camp liberator; the torpedoman who sunk the first Japanese aircraft carrier to be downed by an American sub; the elite Night Fighter pilot tasked with shoot-
ROUSES POINT — With spring cleaning over, village officials are pondering why the streets are still filled with heaps of brush-filled bags. Two free pick-ups are offered per year — one in spring and the other in fall — for bagged leaves, shrubs and tree limbs less than 3 inches in diameter. Village officials spent several days earlier this month sprucing up the village, collecting tree limbs and branches, feeding them through the chipper and spreading the chips behind the Public Works Department. It’s a labor-intensive process, said Mayor Daniel Letourneau. However, the village residents didn’t get the memo the pickup was over since heaps of brush have been popping up since then, said village officials during the board meeting last week. Trustee Benjamin Arno said he saw about eight to 10 truckloads piled on one property.
>>See ‘We Were There’ | pg. 11
>> See Brush Pickup | pg. 10
Thomas Smith and Sal Famularo, both corporals in the Fourth Marine Division, share a moment at the Home Front Cafe in Altamont, Albany County in October 2014. Photo by Daniel Way