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Saturday,ÊJ ulyÊ15,Ê2017

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www.SunCommunityNews.com

In MINERVA | pg. 12

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What’s on the line?

In opinion | pg. 6

Invasives mascot

Annual fishing derby held

More needed to get the word out

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In lake george | pg. 2

Band festival returns Events start this weekend

Broken sewer line discovered near Million Dollar Beach Infrastructure damage caused by National Grid, supervisor says By Thom Randall

thom@suncommunitynews.com

LAKE GEORGE Ñ An ongoing investigation to identify the source of E. coli contamination at Million Dollar Beach yielded results last week, as a major breech in the townÕ s sewer system was discovered by a task force of municipal workers.

Town of Lake George Supervisor Dennis Dickinson described the break in a sewer main under Beach Road to town board members at their July 10 meeting. He said it was likely the primary source of this yearÕ s recurring bacterial contamination of water at the popular beach. Dickinson said the workers discovered that the hardened-clay sewer pipe, about 10 inches in diameter, had a large hole it Ñ and that a natural gas line ran perpendicularly through it. He said the sewer main had apparently been shattered inadvertently by National Grid

workers while they were installing the gas line under the road several years ago. The workers found the broken sewer main July 5 as they were running a robotic camera through sewer lines in the area. After discovering the breech, workers then blasted smoke into the sewer line below the break, and the vapor emanated from local storm sewer drains Ñ indicating that sewage flowing from the underground sewer breech could have migrated to nearby storm sewers which

drain into Lake George near Million Dollar Beach. Dickinson said that several years ago National Grid had driven the gas line horizontally under the road, hammering the line through the pipe, which punctured and shattered it. Dickinson reported that National Grid had earlier asked Warren County officials for permission to dig up the road to install the line, but the county had denied their request because the road had recently been reconstructed. >> See BEACH | pg. 15

Possible central sewage system for Halmet of North Creek explained Two of four options essentially ruled out By Christopher South

chris@suncommunitynews.com

Shown at left are North Creek resident Renate Wildermuth and her daughter, Emma, receiving input from Kate Hartley (center), lead artist for Photo by Chris South the North Creek Mosaic Project, as passersby enjoy seeing the project’s progress.

Tickets to place mosaic piece being raffled By Christopher South

chris@suncommunitynews.com

NORTH CREEK Ñ The North Creek Mosaic Project is raffling the chance to place the final piece in the second panel of the mural being created on Main Street. Kate Hartley, the projectÕ s lead artist, said the mural, with the

theme of Ò Nature and Recreation in Our Area,Ó began in 2011 as a project of the Johnsburg Fine Arts League. The project is sponsored by the Friends of the Town of Johnsburg Parks. She said what she imagined would be a three-year project is now in its seventh year. The raffle will be part of a Ò Last

Piece PartyÓ with the drawing scheduled for Thursday, July 27, at 5:30 p.m., at mural site on Main Street. Hartley said the raffle will help fund the continuation of the project, which started with a grant out of the Johnsburg occupancy tax account. >> See MURAL | pg. 15

WEVERTOWN Ñ Sewer Commission Chairman Matt Parobeck presented the Johnsburg Town Board last month with the engineerÕ s report containing options and the recommendation for a centralized wastewater system in the Hamlet of North Creek. Parobeck outlined a draft report, created in March by Cedarwood Engineering Services, Inc., containing four possible options and estimated costs for each. Parobeck said the nine-member Sewer Commission basically ruled out Options No. 1 and 4. The first is a conventional septic tank and absorption bed system. Parobeck said this was the least expensive option, but according to the report, it would require approximately 4.8 acres of land. The estimated cost for this option is nearly $1.6 million, and annual operating costs would be about $32,000. Option No. 4 would be the construction of a force main system to pipe wastewater to the existing Gore Mountain Wastewater Treatment Facility. This would be the most expensive to construct at over $5 million, and the most expensive to operate ($167,500 annually). Option No. 2 would be to construct an in-ground advanced system, which would be similar to Option No. 1, but smaller. It would require approximately 1.6 acres, >> See NORTH CREEK | pg. 15


2 | July 15, 2017 • The Sun NE/AJ

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Community Band Festival returns to Lake George Jam-packed schedule slated to begin July 14 By Thom Randall

thom@suncommunitynews.com

Teens involved in the Warren County 4-H recently travelled to Cornell University to take part in the annual 4-H Career Explorations Conference. For over 70 years, the purpose of the three-day conference has been to provide youth with exposure to academic fields and career exploration, the opportunity to develop leadership skills, and experience life on a college campus. Over 6 million youth in the United States participate in 4-H making it the nation’s largest youth development organization. For more information about 4-H in your community, contact your local Cornell Cooperative Extension office or visit the regional website at ccecapitalregion.org.

LAKE GEORGE Ñ The sounds of spirited Broadway show tunes, patriotic marches, movie themes and classic music will fill the air this weekend as a handful of orchestral bands perform in a lineup of free concerts in the Shepard Park amphitheater. The bands, hailing from small and large municipalities around the northeast U.S. and Canada, will be participating in the

13th annual Lake George Community Band Festival, set for Friday, July 14 and Saturday, July 15. The concerts begin at 5:15 p.m. on Friday with three jazz bands Ñ the Big Band of Ottawa, Canada, the Ballston Spa Community Jazz Band and the Center Stage Band of Plainville, Connecticut Ñ each performing successively for about 70 minutes each. The music resumes at 10:45 a.m. on Saturday with an opening ceremony, followed by the Eagles Community Band of Pittsfield, Massachusetts at 11 a.m., then the Middletown, Connecticut Symphonic Band at noon, the Simsbury, Connecticut Community Band at 1 p.m., the Concert Band of Kanata of Ashton, Ontario at 2 p.m., followed by the Phoenix Community Band of Manlius at 3 p.m. The Nepean Concert Band of Ottawa, Canada concludes SaturdayÕ s first set beginning at 4 p.m. with an hour-long concert. After an intermission, the next group to perform is the Honeoye Falls Community Band at 5:30 p.m., followed by Ballston Spa Community Band at 6:30 p.m., and it concludes with a performance by the Lake George Community Band at 7:30 p.m.

Event Coordinator Timothy Powhida said Tuesday that the Community Band Festival annually draws thousands of people, with audiences of as many as 700 people at a time in the amphitheater. Ò Every year, the crowds absolutely enjoy the huge variety of music that we present,Ó Powhida said, noting that the various bands range from 45 to 70 members each, with musicians ranging in age from 15 to well past 90 years old. Festival Publicist Dale Perry of Lake George has said that the festival annually upholds the hometown community band tradition of bringing musical enjoyment to all generations. Families are urged to bring folding chairs Ñ and their friends, Powhida said. If it rains, the concert venue will be the Lake George High School on northern Canada Street in the village. For details, visit lgcb.org. ABOVE: Several tuba players play the bass notes anchoring a band’s performance during a recent year’s edition of the annual Lake George Community Band Festival. This year’s band festival, with its free lineup of concerts, is set for Friday July 14 and Saturday July 15 in the Shepard Park amphitheater. Photo provided


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The Sun NE/AJ • July 15, 2017 | 3

Residents celebrate 30th annual ‘Minerva Day’ Community event saw turnout despite rain By Mike Corey

news@suncommunitynews.com

MINERVA Ñ The Town of Minerva celebrated the 30th installment of its annual Ò Minerva Day,Ó a beloved local tradition celebrating the town, on July 1. This yearÕ s celebration came in the middle of the townÕ s three day bicentennial celebration. Minerva Day itself was jam-packed with a variety of events and activities, kicking off with a community breakfast at the Town Hall. Though cloudy, with bursts of heavy rain throughout the day, there were smiles abound Ñ residents enjoying coffee and doughnuts at KlippelÕ s Maple Knoll Farm, perusing through yard sales throughout the town, viewing a military memorabilia exhibit at the Town Hall and taking the Bicentennial Historic Bus Tour. Meanwhile, various local organizations, artisans and vendors set up under tents at Courtney Park in Olmstedville. At the park, residents were able sign the official bicentennial guestbook, pick up a bicentennial commemorative pin and have an Ò Old Timey Photo Op.Ó Throughout the day the Ò Minerva QuestÓ competition allowed folks to compete for prizes donated by area business and individuals. From late morning into early afternoon, the annual KidÕ s Fishing Derby got cooking at Minerva Lake, the St. MaryÕ s Church Open House took place in Irishtown and the Irishtown Schoolhouse opened its annual art show. Residents enjoyed a performance by singer-songwriter Dan Berggren at noon in Courtney Park, followed by the opening of Ò Minerva: 200 Years,Ó a new exhibit at the Minerva Historical Society Museum in Olmstedville. Minerva Citizen of the Year Bob Savarie was front and center at the Museum opening. The big Bicentennial Parade got started at 5 p.m., parade floats lining up at SportyÕ s Iron Duke Saloon in Minerva.

Organizers say that a record number of participants made this parade a special one. The annual community potluck dinner at the Donnelly Beach pavilion immediately followed the parade. Diners were treated to live music by the Gregson Brothers Band. The Minerva Day festivities concluded with fireworks at The Point on Minerva Lake Ñ despite the damp conditions, the fireworks display still went off with a bang. BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION The Minerva Bicentennial Celebration began on June 30 with a standing room only historical bus tour of the Town of Minerva, departing from the Minerva Historical Society Museum in Olmstedville. The tour provided riders with a full guided historic Minerva adventure.

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MinervaÕ s bicentennial celebration continued on Sunday, July 2 with a Minerva Central School alumni brunch at Donnelly Beach, a Ò CutieÓ pageant at the bandstand, a canoe/kayak paddle down the Minerva Stream and a concert at

2017 Minerva Day Parade winners This year’s parade float winners include: Most Original: St. Joseph’s Parrish Funniest: Blue Line Big Foot Prettiest: Hatarondacks Red Hats Most patriotic: Minerva Day Band BEST IN SHOW Theme: Minerva Service Organization Business: Lil’ Nony’s

Courtney Park featuring the band Ò Finger Diddle.Ó ABOVE: Despite heavy rain, residents still turned out to celebrate the 30th installment of Minerva Day. Pictured are vendors at the Town of Minerva’s Courtney Park. Music Group: Police Pipes and Drums of Plattsburgh Animal: Cuzzacrea’s Spinones Car: Jeff Barnett and his El Camino Organization: MCS Alumni Association Bicentennial Float: The Re-enactors Spirit of Minerva Award: Past & present Minerva Supervisors SPECIAL RECOGNITION Mammy and Pops Hornbeck Boats Sullivan’s Store Minerva Youth Program Irishtown Junior Ski Patrol


4 | July 15, 2017 • The Sun NE/AJ

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Chestertown eyes state funds for Pottersville water project By Christopher South

chris@suncommunitynews.com

CHESTERTOWN Ñ The Town of Chestertown has submitted an application to the state Department of Environmental Conservation for a $500,000 project to provide a new water delivery and treatment facility for Pottersville. Supervisor Craig Leggett said the town is trying to get a 60/40 split on the project, with the state paying $300,000. The remaining $200,000 would likely have to be in the form of a 20-year bond that would be paid by water customers in the district, Leggett told the Sun. Leggett said after residents reported an inconsistent water supply, the town determined there was a problem with the water delivery system. In June, he said the townÕ s engineer provided four options, which ranged from $180,000 to $550,000.

The higher figure was revised to $500,000, and includes the drilling of two new wells and a new water treatment building. Ò Number one is an umbrella option. We will salvage what we can from the existing building,Ó Leggett said. Additional options included replacing just one of the townÕ s wells and rebuilding the water treatment building. Ground water is treated with chlorine and soda ash before being distributed to the customers. A third option, he said, was to rehabilitate the back-up well and move an adjoining property ownerÕ s septic system. Ò There needs to be distance between the well and any septic system,Ó Leggett said. Under this option, the town would have to rehabilitate the existing building. The final option the town had considered was to build a new well field next to the water tank on Landing Hill Road and

North Warren Central School Honor Roll PRINCIPALÕ S LIST Grade 12: Lane Feldeisen, Emily Gould, Hannah Kenney, Emily Kilcullen, Amelia Robbins, Samantha Rogers, Hayden Smith, Sarah Stewart. Grade 11: Delilah Monroe, Stephen Monroe, Ben Storman. Grade 10: Sydney Gagnon, Chloe Howe, Caleb Morehouse. Grade 9: Jodi Bartlett, Madison Jones, Lauren Monroe, Manon Stevens, Ava Storman, Karli Wood. Grade 8: Jack Jennings, Kaitlyn Kramar, Olivia Sheffer. Grade 7: Andrew Beadnell, Wesley Bolton, Megan Bruno, Nicole Buckman, Tiana Buttino, Thomas Conway, Kimberly Glascock, Makayla LaGuerre, John Mesch, Peyton Robbins, Gracie Staunches.

rehabilitate the existing buildings. Leggett said the town has the technology and financing options available to get the project completed. Ò The state has made a lot of money available to find options for clean drinking water,Ó Leggett said. Ò We spend a lot of money protecting ourselves from ourselves, especially with drinking water. Ensuring the publicÕ s safety costs a lot of money.Ó RESOLVING OLD BUSINESS Pottersville resident Patrick Powers asked Leggett last month to place a list of items on the agenda as Ò old businessÓ to be checked off as they are resolved. Since June 13, Powers said he has contacted the Warren County Department of Transportation regarding repaving on Olmstedville Road.

HONOR ROLL Grade 12: Madasyn Bush, Mariah Campbell, Sydney Cooper, Alyssa Dewar, Ethan Hayes, Melissa Jay, Jacob Smit, Jack Williamson. Grade 11: Dylan Baker, Cristina Becerra, Shyann Durham, Jacob Ferguson, Brooke French, Chen-Fu Hsu, Alyssa Kramar, Timothy Lucid. Grade 10: Jack Buckman, Jayson Hopper, Rosie Lewis, Brandon Olden, Colton Peet. Grade 9: Cassandra Rogers, Sarah Stevens. Grade 8: Lily Bradley, Owen Buzzell, Lucas Dunkley, Anthony Girard, Frederick Griffen, Alexis Lail, Mackenzie Lucid, Logan Melecci Baker, Ethan Pepin, Emma Phelps, Gavin Smith. Grade 7: Ethan Dancz, Faith Haire, Amelia Hilton, Summer Lambrecht, Michael Maxwell, Nevin Monroe, Brayden Olden, Tanner Robbins, Isabella Swartz, Kaden Wood.

Over the past several years, small sections of the road have been repaved and are cracking. He said he sent a letter to the governorÕ s office regarding the condition of curbing and sewer grates around the triangular traffic island at Route 9 and Olmstedville Road. Powers said he sent instructions to Leggett for treating the Japanese knotweed that is particularly prominent around Rt. 9 and Valley Farm Road. Leggett said the state treated a small portion of knotweed along Rt. 9, recently. He said the town canÕ t simply decide to treat knotweed on state-owned or private property. These issues will likely be brought up at the Chester Town Board meeting scheduled for Tuesday, July 11 at 7 p.m. at the Pottersville Volunteer Fire Company, 20 Valley Farm Road, Pottersville.

MERIT ROLL Grade 12: Sarah Brown, Daniel Caunter, William Davis, Parker Hamblin, Kyle Monroe, Cody Peet, Tyler Peet, Joseph Sapienza. Grade 11: Summertyme Baker, Devon Bencze, Paige Campbell, Owen Librett, Joseph Pepin, Mason Phillips, Glenn Redmon, Jesse Schwarz, Joseph Slattery. Grade 10: Caitlin Bohmer, Eliza Brown, Victoria Campbell, Julianna Hilton, Joseph Phelps, Olivia Viele. Grade 9: A. Reece Bradley, Ethan Gould, Ryan Miller, Conner Monroe, Thomas Needham, Olivia Primo, James Steen, Nevaeh Weeden, Daniel Wescott. Grade 8: Danielle Cole, Dominic Giordano, Ezra Heath, Tyler Herrington, Hunter Jordan, Jaden Smith. Grade 7: Dylan Carawan, Eduardo Hernandez, Isabella Lewis, Jacquelyn Rundell, Kaleb Smith, Aleya Williamson.


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Volleyball to prevail in Lake George this weekend EVP National ProAm Beach Volleyball Tour coming July 14

who are 45 and older. SaturdayÕ s competitions are to be videotaped and nationally broadcast over cable sports networks on later dates. Locally, the EVP Volleyball competition in Lake George will be aired on Spectrum (Time-Warner) SportsChannel. EVP Volleyball Tour Commissioner Ross Balling, based in Chicago, said he was looking forward to the weekend in Lake George, one of the 2017 tourÕ s dozen or so host sites nationally. Ò With Lake GeorgeÕ s natural setting and fun things to do, itÕ s just amazing,Ó he said. Ò It will be quite an enjoyable new experience for many of our athletes, particularly those from the western U.S.,Ó Balling added, noting that a few Olympic athletes may be among those competing. In January, the Lake George ChamberÕ s announcement of hosting EVP National Pro-Am Beach Volleyball Tour was made with considerable fanfare, with state Sen. Betty Little hailed the news. Ò This volleyball competition will bring hundreds of people here and give them the opportunity to find out how great the area is,Ó she said. Ò This is wonderful for the Lake George area Ñ and great for the local economy. Prior to the weekend, teams may register for several of the tournaments at evptour.com or call 312-287-5988 for details.

By Thom Randall

thom@suncommunitynews.com

LAKE GEORGE Ñ For the first time ever, beach volleyball in Lake George will garner national attention, as 75 or so teams of both professional and amateur athletes compete at Million Dollar Beach this weekend for trophies and for purses as large as $5,000. Lake George will be hosting the EVP National Pro-Am Beach Volleyball Tour from Friday July 14 to Sunday July 16, and the action is to be televised nationally. The public is invited to witness the dozens of competitions from the sidelines Ñ and thereÕ s no admission fee. Since there will be no grandstands on the beach, the public is urged to bring beach chairs or blankets. Kristin Hanifin of the Lake George Chamber of Commerce, who helped bring the EVP Tour to Lake George, said the weekend beach volleyball events would focus considerable attention on the southern Adirondacks Ñ as well as being a fun experience for all. Ò WeÕ re thrilled to have the EVP Volleyball tour here,Ó she said. Ò ItÕ s a great opportunity for Lake George to get some national exposure, highlighting the fact we have such great recreational resources here, not just for vacations but for sports events too.Ó FridayÕ s competition, beginning at noon and ending at about 6 p.m, features 20 junior teams and eight corporate challenge teams. SaturdayÕ s action begins at 8 a.m., featuring 24 professional volleyball teams and 30 amateur squads compet-

ing through the day. Saturday also hosts EVP grass volleyball games on the Festival Commons beginning at 10 a.m.. Playoffs and finals extend from 3 p.m. through 6 p.m.

Sunday, the Beach Volleyball competition in Lake George concludes with 15 amateur teams battling it out Ñ including juniors, open classes for 18 years and up, and Masters divisions for those

International volleyball star Ricardo Santos, 2004 Olympic gold medalist, spikes the ball during a game held in Bradenton Florida, the site of the opening event of the 2017 EVP National Pro-Am Tour. The EVP Tour is coming to Lake George this weekend, with 75 professional and amateur athletes competing for trophies and prize money — and the public is invited to witness the action from the sidelines. The competition, to be televised nationally at a later date, is the first of its kind ever in Lake George. Photo provided/EVP Tour


6 | July 15, 2017 • The Sun NE/AJ

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OPINION www.suncommunitynews.com/editorials

SUN EDITORIAL OurÊ goalÊ atÊ SunÊ CommunityÊ NewsÊ isÊ toÊ publishÊ accurate,Ê usefulÊ andÊ timelyÊ informationÊ inÊ ourÊ newspapers,Ê newsÊ products,Ê shoppingÊ guides,Ê vacationÊ guides,Ê andÊ otherÊ specialtyÊ publicationsÊ for the benefit of our readers andÊ advertisers.Ê WeÊ valueÊ yourÊ commentsÊ andÊ suggestionsÊ concerningÊ allÊ aspectsÊ ofÊ thisÊ publication. Publisher Daniel E. Alexander Associate Publisher Ed Coats Operations Manager William Coats General Manager Central Daniel E. Alexander, Jr. Managing Editor Pete DeMola General Manager North Ashley Alexander General Manager South Scarlette Merfeld

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StateÊ shouldÊ developÊ anti-invasiveÊ speciesÊ mascot

A

s summer heats up, so are statewide efforts to raise awareness of invasive spe-

cies. Little in sight, huge in bite Ñ these critters have an outsized impact. Forests and bodies of waters throughout the Adirondack Park are threatened. From Lake Champlain and Lake George to inland bodies like Upper Saranac, all are subject to toxic hitchhikers catching rides from unassuming boaters. Take the spiny water flea, for instance, which was discovered for the first time last summer in Indian Lake. While these crustaceans are small enough to dance on the head of a pin, theyÕ re no angel Ñ Once they infest a body of water, the flea wreaks havoc. Not only do the creatures affect the food web, but they are easily caught on fishing lines, frustrating anglers who may choose to visit elsewhere, taking their tourist dollars with them. The state incurs $500 million in economic losses occur each year just from canals and the Hudson River system, the state Department of Environmental Conservation has reported Ñ 80 percent of which is from the commercial and sport fishing industry. Use the chestnut blight as another example. WeÕ re old enough to remember when the streets of cities across upstate New York were lined with this handsome-looking tree. TheyÕ re all gone, eradicated by a fungus. ThereÕ s a veritable army of creepycrawlies invading the state: Milfoil, zebra mussels, the Asian shore crab and sea lamprey are already well-established. Others are looming, including the emerald ash borer, the fastgrowing hydrilla or the hemlock wooly adelgid, an insect with an appetite for destruction that is reportedly making its way northward. The problem is magnified by New YorkÕ s status as home to some of the countryÕ s busiest ports. While there is no state law or regulation that can prevent this invasion, the good news is weÕ ve got world-class soldiers on the frontlines, and everyone is marching in lockstep, from local governments to environmental groups. State lawmakers have aimed a firehouse of funds at the issue, doubling the budget for invasive species to $12 million since 2015. As part of a new rapid response strategy to stamp out the threat, the DEC divvied out $320,000 in grant funds last week for regional projects. The funds join changes in the stateÕ s environmental law that now require boaters to take Ò reasonable precautionsÓ to prevent their spread. In addition to funding boat contamination stations, the state has also fostered the creation of stakeholder coalitions designed to carry out eradication missions. Here in our region, the Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program has taken the lead, and works with groups like the Nature Conservancy, the Adirondack Watershed Institute at Paul SmithÕ s College and Lake George Land Conservancy. Rep. Elise Stefanik, too, has made a valiant effort to get involved, and has introduced symbolic legislation asking her colleagues in the House to take the issue seriously. (Unfortunately, her Ò Stamp Out Invasive Species Act,Ó which would direct proceeds from a special

stamp to federal agencies for programming, seems to have stalled in Congress.) This past week marked the stateÕ s fourth annual Invasive Species Awareness Week. Local folks, we hope, participated in activities designed to raise awareness and empower a sense of action, be it an interpretive hike, visiting a restoration project, or simply flipping through an educational pamphlet. The state should be commended for their aggressive approach towards the issue. But one small suggestion: This campaign needs a mascot. WeÕ re all familiar with Smokey Bear. Seventy years after his creation, Smokey remains synonymous today with the U.S. Forest ServiceÕ s wildfire prevention efforts and is an indelible American icon. New York should conceptualize something similar. The opportunities are endless. How about Lenny the Loon? Or perhaps to showcase how much is at stake here, Johnny Adirondack has a nice ring to it. The state neednÕ t enlist a high-profile advertising agency, but could simply crowdsource the effort to local nonprofits and schools. Because for all of the educational efforts, nothing is as sticky as a good motto: Ò Remember... Only YOU Can Prevent Invasive Species.Ó The State of New York should create a mascot to raise awareness of invasive species. File photo

OpINION pOLIcy • Letters can be sent to its offices, 14 Hand Avenue, PO Box 338, Elizabethtown, 12932 or e-mailed to pete@suncommunitynews.com • Letters can also be submitted online at www.suncommunitynews.com. • Letters should not exceed 300 words and must be signed and

include a telephone number for verification. Sun Community News reserves the right to edit letters for length and/or content. Letters deemed inappropriate will be rejected. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid advertisements.


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The Sun NE/AJ • July 15, 2017 | 7

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

SupervisorÊ spinningÊ onÊ waterÊ project TrumpÊ hasnÕ tÊ deliveredÊ onÊ promises To the Editor: If anyone had a chance to read Mr. GiordanoÕ s letter to the editor in last weekÕ s Times of Ti, I hope you noted the same blatant inaccuracies that I did. Mr. GiordanoÕ s obvious attempt to spin this story in his own best interest was insulting to anyone knowing the facts of the situation. First, when I took office, the only people that wanted a well as our primary water source were from state Department of Health. There was no plan or report in place to advance the water project or financing to fund it. Over the course of the following months, the Town accomplished these items to advance the project. A plan for the system to include Lake George and the well as equal sources for water. Secured zero interest loans for most of the funding. The Town was awarded a $2 million grant, previously denied, for the balance of the funding, and began formulating a Ò Basis of DesignÓ report for approval by the agencies involved. This report is reviewed in detail by both state and federal [DOH/EPA]. It involves many meetings and conversations to accomplish. We got the agencies to agree with the two-source concept the Town desired. It includes a new filter system for Lake George. This was researched by making trips to other communities that use a newer technology than Baldwin. The report was approved by the agencies and adopted by the Town in 2014. Did I mention that this report also has the project timeline as defined by the Town not the DOJ? DOJ never imposed anything on the Town, except a penalty during Mr. GiordanoÕ s term, for lack of progress. When I left office, the Town was in the process of securing short term financing, ready to start construction drawings and had Essex County finishing the SEQR report. There was a filtration study ongoing at Baldwin [it passed]. The project was expected to go to bid in January of 2015. You donÕ t have to take my word for this. Ask anyone involved with all the work to make it happen. Better yet, look in the minutes of the Town Board and Water committee meetings. It is all documented. It was all done in front of the public Bill Grinnell, Ticonderoga

TiconderogaÊ mustÊ addressÊ Ê Ê Ê Ê Ê dangerousÊ roadway To the Editor: On the morning of June 29, a semi-truck driving east on Route 74 in Eagle Lake, Ticonderoga left the road and was unable to recover before it hit a utility pole, tree and boulders at the edge of our property. Unfortunately, this is not the first time a vehicle has driven off the road and into our yard. Since moving to our home here in 1999, four major accidents involving semis have occurred, two of them ending up in the actual lake. We have also witnessed dozens of car accidents and even a two-person motorcycle fatality. Over the years, Eagle Lake Property Owners, Inc. and individual home owners have tried to work with the Town of Ticonderoga and the Department of Transportation to increase safety measures along this stretch of road. The speed limit here is currently 35 mph, and after a previous truck accident, the DOT installed two tippy truck signs, one just west of the causeway and one just east before the dangerous curves begin. But even with these measures, it seems that the frequency of accidents is actually on the uprise. Once again, we appeal to the Town of Ticonderoga for assistance. We have repeatedly in the past asked for help in obtaining permanent flashing speed limit signs and/or flashing tippy truck signs at the two locations previously mentioned. The DOT has expressed their interest in working in cooperation to make this happen, but has informed us that it must be the Town that makes this request. How many more accidents and possible fatalities must occur just outside our front door before someone says enough? Todd and Tonya Condon Eagle Lake Ticonderoga

To the Editor: The Republican Senate and President Trump have blinders on and all they can see is that the ACA was signed by President Obama, a Ò black manÓ in the Office of President. They try to hide their racism, but the truth has a way of coming out and is easy to see. When President Trump was running for office, he promised health care for everybody that would be better than the Affordable Care Act. Going after Wall Street was a joke and the only things he has done for America is letting big oil drill in our National Parks and doing away with all the work done by our EPA. President Trump has been busy destroying the protections of our drinking water and making inspection of our meat and dairy products a thing of the past. We now have billionaires in top offices who have never had to scrub for a living and have no idea what its like to raise children on meager wages. When running for president, he said he would Ò drain the swampÓ and all he has done is make it bigger. His promise to rid Washington of lobbyists has turned out to be another joke as their number has increased by hundreds. Every promise he made has not happened! His promise to bring American companies back from Mexico and Europe softened when he met with the leaders of these countries and was all smiles. One by one, every promise made by President Trump has yet to be realized. In point of fact, everything he promised was just Ò fake news,Ó according to his press secretary Sean Spicer and Sarah Huckabee Sanders, deputy press secretary. He knew more than the generals and ISIS would be gone in a week! ISIS is alive and well. I know it hurts, but he has four years to make things worse so keep tuned to Fox News as Ò fake newsÓ is what they do best! Gary Guido, Ticonderoga

SchoolÊ mergersÊ ignoreÊ studentÊ needs To the Editor: Unfortunately, school mergers harm the very people they are supposed to serve. We may as well call children our Ò commodity,Ó since the numbers report strictly financial rather than humane concerns. It seems the only portion of the population receiving the nod are the wealthy retirees who have second homes. The data put forth ignores large segments of school-age children. In the North Country alone, there is a rapidly growing homeschooling population: around 300 families as of 2016. On a wider scale, the national levels are increasing as well, as reported here: library.stmarytx.edu/acadlib/edocs/homeschoolers.pdf. Another demographic unaccounted for is the amount of students attending private schools. There is evidence that certain small public schools may follow and benefit from using the alternative methods these private schools demonstrate. Individualized attention not only benefits our students, but our teachers, parents, communities, and our nation Ñ not to mention the bottom line. At the end of the Industrial Age, our country certainly does not need monolithic schools training children to work assembly lines. When huge schools bus children in for longer periods of time, herd them through lunch lines like cattle, and crowd them into large classes where they feel like just a number, the conditions are ripe for problems. School mergers represent outdated hierarchies. Many private schools are faculty-run, where there are no high-paid administrators at all. In the 21st century, citizens need to work together and build consensus to solve these problems. School districts can work with their communities to find ways of keeping their schools. Just because demographics are changing, it doesnÕ t mean we need to ignore the welfare of our children. Let us Ò keep an open mindÓ to improve upon what we already have: our wonderfully small, community schools. .Jenn Cantwell Wilmington

cOMMENTARy

From the Mayor

A jobless recovery

Colin Read

Mayor of Plattsburgh, readc@cityofplattsburgh.ny,gov

W

eÕ ve all seen a lot. I remember the death of JFK, RFK and MLK. I recall the moon landing, Apollo 13, and Watergate. I witnessed 20 percent interest rates and inflation rates, Paul Volcker, Ronald ReaganÕ s supply side economics, Alan Greenspan, and Volcker again. But, IÕ ve never experienced what we are seeing now. All the old rules are out. The new normal is constant change. Our inability to constantly rejig to unrelenting change explains the angst we all sense. No longer can one finish high school, get a good job at the local mill, buy a house and raise a family, and know exactly what one will be doing in a week, a year, or a decade. Few will retire from the sole job they ever had, and very few will get to retire at the age of 65. Global competition explains a lot. We once demanded the world open their borders to our products. We excelled as American firms dominated world trade and then began to export our technologies to their foreign subsidiaries. The world quickly caught up, and with their lower wages, they eventually grabbed from us our once dominant competitive edge. And we were forced to reinvent ourselves. We did so by shifting from the manufacturing and agriculture that once constituted 80 percent of our economy to something that represents 25 percent today. We robotized our factories, and technology allowed farmers to be orders of magnitude more productive. Meanwhile, our labor was relegated to the lower-paying service industries. We serve, advise, teach, cook, police and entertain each other. Some U.S. workers, in the high technology and research sectors, still design, engineer, and invent for the world. IÕ m more worried about the rest, though. There are just not enough really good service jobs to keep America comfortably in the middle class. And now, even some of the service jobs are being replaced by technology, from telephone operators to order takers, bank tellers, and, soon, taxi drivers. We once dreamed of a utopian world where weÕ d toil no longer. WeÕ re now finding weÕ re unemployed. Meanwhile, owners of these new technologies make extraordinary profits as a reward for their innovations. My fear is that the economy now grows without creating jobs. Our current unemployment rate is almost historically low, only because our labor force is discouraged and shrinking. We need to reinvent our economy. I donÕ t see much on that front, though. Ñ Colin Read is the Mayor of Plattsburgh


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JUL. FILM: SUFFRAGETTES 20 Thurs. IN THE SILENT CINEMA@ ADIRONDACK HISTORY MUSEUM, ELIZABETHTOWN.

Thursday: 7:00 pm

Suffragettes in the Silent Cinema and other archival film. Sponsored in part by Humanities NY. Free. 101775 Details: 518-873-6466

JUL. LECTURE/ EVENT: MAGGIE 16 Sun. BARTLEY@ ADIRONDACK HISTORY MUSEUM, ELIZABETHTOWN.

Sunday: 2:00 pm

Maggie Bartley “The School on Schoolhouse Hill.” Free. Details: 518-873-6466 101774

BINGO

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

PUBLIC MEETINGS

PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday

CHESTERTOWN - On July 27 at 7:30 Carl Heilman will present a media productrion at the Chestertown Municipal Center. He will be featuring the spectacular photography from his new book THE ADIRONDACKS: SEASON BY SEASON. Accompanying him will be songwriter and performer Dan Berggren. Dan Duggan, whose specialty is the hammered dulcimer, and The First Lady of Adirondack Music, Peggy Lynn, will round out the musical trio. It will be a thoroughly enjoyable evening. Advance sale tickets are $15 and can be purchased at the Chester Library or at the Farmers Market by stopping by the Friends of the Library book sale tent. Adult tickets are $20 at the door. Children under 12 are free and students ages 12-18 are $5. Proceeds will benefit the Chester Library Endowment Fund.

PORT HENRY – Essex County 2017 WIC shedule at the Knights of Columbus January 12, Feb 9, March 9, April 13, May 11, June 15, July 13, august 10, September 14, October 12, November 9, December 14 9:30-2:30pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

TICONDEROGA – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Cornerstone Alliance Church January 9, 23, 30, Feb 13, 27, March 13, 20, 27, April 10, 17, 24 May 8, 15, 22 ,June 12, 19, 26, July 10, 17, 24, August 14, 21, September, 11,18, 25, October 16, 23,30 November 13, 20, 27, December 11,18 9:30- 2:30 PM.

TICONDEROGA - American Legion Post #224 Monthly Meeting. Second Thursday

TICONDEROGA - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday. BOOKS SCHROON LAKE - Schroon Lake Public Library Friends Used Book Store: Every Wednesday and Saturday from June 1 through September 2, 10 am 2 pm Basement of Health Center. Over 10,000 items books, CDs, DVDs, tapes - great prices. CLASSES & WORKSHOPS NORTH CREEK - Water Aerobics July – September Tues, Thurs and Friday 11:00am – 12 ;00pm at the Copperfield Inn. For more info call 518-251-2225. TICONDEROGA - Take Control Exercise classes. Ticonderoga Armory Senior Center. 9:30 a.m. Free. Details: 518-585-6050, rsvp@logocail.net. Every Wednesday. COMMUNITY OUTREACH LAKE GEORGE - Grief and Loss Support Group Wednesdays , 3:00 pm. Explore the root of your grieving & learn to process it in a healthy, healing way. Randi Klemish, a retired mental health thrapist leads this healing group All are welcome. Group meets every Wednesday, From 3-5 pm at St. James Episcopal church in Lake George Village.

SCHROON LAKE – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Schroon Lake Health Center January 11, Feb 8, March 8, April 12, May 10, June 14, July 12, August 6, September 13, October 11, November 8, December 13 9:302:30pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518-569-3296 TICONDEROGA Alzheimer's Caregiver Support Group monthly support group for caregivers InterLakes Health, Ethan Allen Library. 4 p.m. Details: 518-564-3370. Second Tuesdays

MORIAH – Essex County 2017 WIC schedule at the Moriah Fire Department January 10, Feb 14, March 14, April 11, May 9, June 13, July 11, august 8, September 12, October 10, November 14, December 12 9:30-2:45pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

TICONDEROGA - Essex County Lethernecks, Marine Corps League, Det 791, Ticonderoga American Legion Post. 6 p.m. Active Marines and Marine Veterans invited. First Thursday of every month.

PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month Port Henry, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org

TICONDEROGA - Nar-Anon Family Group A support group for family and friends of addicts. Location: Office of the Prevention Team 173 Lord Howe St., Ticonderoga, N.Y.Mondays at 6PM (excluding Holidays). For more info go to naranon.org

January 19, Feb 6, 16, March 6, 16, April 3, 20 , May 1, 18, June 5, 22, July 3, 20, August 7, 28, September 21, October 2, 19, November 6, 16, December 4, 21 1:30-6pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296 DINNERS & SUCH TICONDEROGA - Elks cook to order breakfast will start Oct. 23, from 8-11 every 2 and 4th Sunday each month any question please contact me at 518-585-1052 WESTPORT - 66th Annual Chicken BBQ Thursday, July 20, 2017. Westport Federated Church (Stone Church on Main St.) Serving starts 4:30 pm, Takeouts available. $10 Adults, $5 Childeren 12 & under. PUBLIC MEETINGS TICONDEROGA - The Champlain Valley Bluegrass & Old Time Music Association holds their Monthly Meeting on the 2nd Sunday of each month at the Ticonderoga American Legion, Montcalm Street at 1 p.m. All are welcome to attend. Please bring a dish to share.

WESTPORT - Westport, NY - Cornell Cooperative Extension Association of Essex County will hold a regular board meeting on Tuesday, July 18 at 6:30pm at the CCE building at 3 Sisco Street in Westport. This meeting is free and open to the public. For more information please contact Laurie Davis, 518-962-4810 x404 or email lsd22@cornell.edu. SENIORS TICONDEROGA - Free arthritis exercises. Ticonderoga Senior Center, 10 to 11 a.m. Details: Cornell Cooperative Extension of Essex County 518-962-4810, mba32@cornell.edu. Second and Fourth Wednesday VENDORS NORTH CREEK - Vendors wanted for the Adirondack Tri-County Nursing and Rehabilitation Center Auxiliary Annual Flea Market to be held at 112 Ski Bowl Road, North Creek from 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. on Fri., August 4th & 10:00 a.m. 2:00 p.m. on Sat., August 5th. Crafts, white elephant items, books, plants, baked goods, hot dogs, hamburgers, and strawberry shortcake to be sold. Vendors are needed cost of a 10 x 10 space is $20 for two days, or $15 for one day. Call 518-251-5271 by August 1st for more information.


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EyE ON THE ARTS

> Arts columnist

elizabeth@suncommunitynews.com

The Clinton Community College Ò Concerts on the BluffÓ series will continue with a free performance by the Too Tall String Band on July 19. The band is set to perform traditional Celtic and Adirondack songs in Plattsburgh at 6 p.m. For more information, visit clinton.edu. Artist Joann Quinlivan will lead a pastel painting class on July 15 at the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts (ALCA) in Blue Mountain Lake. Her class, set for 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., will focus on painting landscapes. The fee for this class is $40 per person for members of the ALCA, $50 for nonmembers. On July 18, the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts will host a performance by Rustic Riders at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $15. For more information, visit adirondackarts.org or call 352-7715. On July 19, Western Centuries will perform at Lake GeorgeÕ s Shepard Park. Westurn Centuries is known for their diverse, upbeat country sound. The band is set to take the stage at 7 p.m. For more information, visit lakegeorgearts.org or call 668-2616. The R. Bailey Trio, known for their electric blues sound, will perform at the Upper Jay Art Center on July 15. Soul vocalist Theresa Hartford will open. For this 8 p.m. performance, a donation of $15 per person is requested. For more information, visit upperjayartcenter.org. The Long Lake Community Chorus will perform their annual summer concert on July 22 at 7:30 p.m. in the Calvary United Methodist Church. The chorus boasts members from Long Lake, Newcomb, Indian Lake, Tupper Lake and Saranac Lake. Guitarist Arthur Buezo, of the Blind Owl Band, will perform a solo set in Thurman on July 14 as part of the Kemp SanctuaryÕ s annual Ò Cheese JamÓ fundraiser series. Buezo is set to take the stage at 5:30 p.m. For more information, visit kempsanctuaryatnettlemeadow.org. On July 18, the Mirror Lake Music Series will continue with a performance by Floodwood, a Central New York based string band. The band is set to take the stage at 7 p.m. For more information, visit thepinesoflakeplacid.com or songsatmirrorlake.org. The Keeseville Free Library will host a summer art exhibit from now through Aug. 27. The exhibit will feature a variety of mediums Ñ oil paintings, pen and ink drawings, pottery and more. On July 16, Incahoots Ñ a Southern rock band Ñ will perform at PeruÕ s Little Ausable Park Gazebo. The bandÕ s set will begin at 6 p.m. For more information, call 643-2745. Glens FallsÕ Crandall Public Library will see Ò A Night at the OperaÓ on July 27 at 7 p.m. as part of the Summerland Music Society series. The event will feature the talents of JosŽ Ad‡ n PŽ rez, Sahoko Sato Timpone and Michiyo Morikawa performing selections from Ò The Barber of Seville,Ó

ABOVE: Rani Arbo & The Daisy Mayhem will perform in Ticonderoga at 543 Baldwin Road on July 21 at 5 p.m. Photo provided.

w w w . s u n c o m m u n i t y n e w s . c o m /A & E f o r t h e l a t e s t e v e n t s

ELIZABETH IZZO

Ò Don Giovanni,Ó Ò The Marriage of Figaro,Ó and more. Admission is free. For more information, visit summerlandmusicsociety.com. Saranac LakeÕ s BluSeed Studios will open a new exhibit featuring the works of Italian artist Italo Clemente on July 28. Following an opening reception at 5 p.m., attendees will be able to see the new exhibit, Ò Whimsical, Bold & Romantic,Ó during gallery hours through Sept. 16. For more information, visit bluseedstudios.org. The Essex Theatre Company will hold its 25th Anniversary Ò Sweet Ô nÕ SaltyÓ Gala on July 14 at the Masonic Lodge in Essex. Doors open at 6 p.m. A performance by the Russ Bailey Trio and the Sweet Adelines is set for 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $25. For more information, call 526-4520, or visit essextheatre.org. The Adirondack Art AssociationÕ s ChildrenÕ s Art Program will host its second session on July 22 from 1-2:30 p.m. at their gallery in Essex. Pre-registration is requested by emailing adkartessex@gmail.com. A new exhibit by artist Anastasia Osolin opened at the Adirondack Artists Guild in Saranac Lake on July 7. The exhibit, Ò Lost and Found, Collages and Assemblages,Ó will run through Aug. 1 during gallery hours. For more information, visit anastasiaosolin.com. On July 21, folk quartet Rani Arbo & The Daisy Mayhem will perform at 543 Baldwin Road in Ticonderoga. The band is set to take the stage at 5 p.m. A donation of $20 is requested, all of which will benefit the band, organizers say. For more information, visit valleystage.net.

Arts& Arts &Entertainment &Entertainment

From Sunrise to Sundown


10 | July 15, 2017 • The Sun NE/AJ

ANOTHER YEAR, ANOTHER TIME July 1, 1656 Ð The first Quakers arrived in Boston to evangelize and after they got out of jail five weeks later, they were shipped back to England. July 1, 1907 Ð PitkinÕ s Restaurant in Schroon Lake opened for business under the management of Arch Pitkin. The exact July day is unknown. There were only two owners in 100 years of operation. July 1, 1908 Ð The first auditorium at the YMCAÕ s Silver Bay Association Conference Center burned. It was built in 1906-1907. July 1, 1916 Ð Dwight D. Eisenhower married Mary (Ò MamieÓ ) Geneva Doud in Denver, Colorado. July 1, 1961 Ð Princess Diana Frances Spencer was born. July 1, 2004 to 2005 Ð New York census figures showed New York had lost 26,000 residents. July 1, 2011 Ð Adirondack ecologist and Woodswoman Mariette Ò AnneÓ LaBastille, 78, died in Plattsburgh. July 2, 1881 Ð Charles Guiteau shot President James Garfield, who lingered on and died Sept. 19, 1881. July 2, 1937 Ð Amelia Earhart Putnam and Fred Noonan, flying a twin engine Lockheed Electra, disappeared at the end of a 2,500 mile trek from Lae, New Guinea searching for Howland Island. July 2, 1998 Ð A pill-shaped UFO was video-taped flying over a church steeple in Ticonderoga. July 2, 2005 Ð Hadlock Pond Dam, in Fort Ann, broke at 6:17 p.m., just six weeks after the structure was rehabilitated on a state order. July 3, 1863 Ð There was a historic suicidal Confederate attack at Gettysburg. There were 20,451 Confederates dead and missing and 23,049 Union soldiers dead and missing. July 3, 1965 Ð Saturday, Peter Stancati and Gene Stelling opened the Porto Fino Restaurant, in Warrensburg. (Update: This place was next to todayÕ s Northway exit in South Warrensburg.) July 4, 1826 Ð Patriots John Adams and Thomas Jef-

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Turning Back The Pages Jean Hadden > columnist jhadden1@nycap.rr.com

ferson died on the same day. July 4, 1868 Ð There was a big celebration in Johnsburg. William Wakley and wife were starting for home when their horse started suddenly and she fell out of their wagon and died instantly. He was injured. July 5, 1810 Showman P.T. Barnum was born. July 5, 1906 Ð James Palmer, of North Fort Ann, drowned in Lake George. July 5, 2009 Ð A broken sewer pipe at the Shepherd Park Pumping Station leaked 8,000 to 10,000 gallons of sewage into Lake George. July 6, 2006 Ð Work began on the $8.69 million dollar Glen Street, Glens Falls project. July 8, 1730 Ð Baby boy John Thurman was baptized in the Dutch Reformed Church in New York City. July 8, 1777 Ð Fort Ann was the site of an important battle in the Revolutionary War where the new Ò Stars and StripesÓ were flown for the first time in battle. July 8, 1800 Ð Dr. Benjamin Waterhouse successfully inoculated his five-year old son with a cowpox vaccination against smallpox. July 10, 1915 Ð W.D. Wright bought the Grand Army House, in Warrensburg, from A.C. Stone. (Update: The former Warren Inn, this is now the George Henry bar and restaurant location.) July 11, 1804 Ð Aaron Burr fatally wounded Alexander Hamilton in a duel on the bluffs of Weehawken. July 11, 1906 Ð Pregnant Grace Brown drowned in Big Moose Lake. Chester Gillette died in the electric chair March 30, 1908 for her murder. (Update: The movie version of this famous true story was called Ò A Place in the Sun.Ó )

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July 11, 2007 Ð Lady Bird Johnson, 94, wife of President Lyndon B. Johnson, died in Austin, Texas. He died in 1973. July 12, 1927 Ð Heavyweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey appeared in Hague to act as race starter for the Lake George Swimming Marathon. July 13, 2011 Ð The historic and time honored old Maddon Hotel, on South Street, Glens Falls, was torn down. July 14, 1901 Ð The Hudson Valley Railway extended their trolley line to Lake George and Warrensburg. July 14, 1922 Ð Air Force Brigadier General Robin Olds was born in Honolulu, Hawaii. He shot down 17 enemy planes in two wars. July 16, 1848 Ð Eben Rexford, songwriter, was born in Johnsburg. He wrote Ò Silver Threads Among the Gold.Ó (Update: My grandmother used to sing this song to me when I was a little girl. My good friend, Delbert Chambers, has done a lot to keep RexfordÕ s name alive and well in Johnsburg.) July 16, 1906 Ð Seventy-two cars, carrying 400 people, passed through Warrensburg en route to the White Mountains in the Glidden and Deming Car Race. July 16, 1999 Ð John F. Kennedy Jr., and wife, Caroline Bessette and her sister, Lauren Bessette, died in a plane crash near MarthaÕ s Vineyard in the Atlantic. July 17, 2007 Ð My adorable and much loved Maine Coon cat, Ò Reggie,Ó came from the Lake George Animal Shelter to rule at my house. July 18, 1902 Ð Emily Heintzelman, wife of Captain Charles Stuart Heintzelman, a Civil War Veteran, died of appendicitis. In 1902 she loaned 150 books to the town of Horicon to start a library. July 19, 1692 Ð Rebecca Nurse, a 71 year old invalid, was hanged after being found guilty of witchcraft during the Salem, Massachusetts Witch Trials. Readers are welcome to contact Adirondack Journal Sun correspondent Jean Hadden at jhadden1@nycap. rr.com or 623-2210.


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Rain does not keep kids away from annual Minerva Day Fishing Derby By Mike Corey

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MINERVA Ñ ItÕ s true Ð it can rain on Minerva Day and it did on July 1. However, for the annual kids fishing derby on Minerva Lake that damp morning, the fish rose from the lakeÕ s depths to nail worms and various lures attached to the lines with which a large group of kids used to catch plenty of finny friends. Kids from 1 to 16 years old were out on the lake and shoreline areas that morning, including 16-year-old Genevieve

Coonradt. Coonradt first participated in the Kids Fishing Derby in 2007 when she was 6 years old. Back then, she won the tinniest fish prize. This year, she took home the trophy for biggest fish in her age group. All of the young ones present were trying their luck at angling a diverse amount of fish. In addition to pumpkinseed sunfish and yellow perch that were brought to the balance-beam scale for pin-point accuracy weighing, largemouth bass,

smallmouth bass, a chain pickerel, golden shiner and a painted turtle made appearances. Some of these unfortunates had been caught for a second time that morning, but they were all allowed to return to Mi-

Minerva Day Fishing Derby results Ages 7 and under: First prize: Brynn Zbikowski Second prize: Madelyn Daubney Third prize: Jeremiah Parrish Ages 8 to 11: First prize: Ian Jackson Second prize: Isiah DeLoach Third prize: Wyatt Hitchcock

nerva Lake to grow larger for next year. The Minerva Service Organization donated money for the fishing tackle prizes, including the $50 grand prize. The town of Minerva also gave a cash donation.

Ages 12 to 16: First prize: Genevieve Coonradt Second prize: Abby Seaman Other prizes: Friskiest fish: Johnny Sweet Prettiest fish: Elizabeth Dague Tiniest fish: Blake Goodsell Most fish caught: Nate Vanderwarker Monster fish of the day (a largemouth bass): Thomas Williams


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Gillibrand offers broadband pep talk in Indian Lk. “I’m trying to get as much as I can,” says senator on securing more funds By Chris South

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INDIAN LAKE Ñ U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand visited with Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce members last week to discuss her officeÕ s efforts to secure more broadband funding for the Adirondacks. Gillibrand said she would be working with her colleagues in Congress to try to secure more federal funding. Ò IÕ m trying to get as much as I can. We are trying to provide much needed internet service nationally,Ó Gillibrand said. The senator previously announced up to $170 million in federal funding would be made available through the Federal Communications Commission. The state is also in the midst of a $500 million broadband initiative to wire some of the more remote areas of the Park. Gillibrand said she is trying to get U.S. Department of Agriculture grants for broadband into the annual Farm Bill. But the senator said it is difficult to get broadband

providers to expand their areas of service into such remote areas. Bill Murphy, chairman of the Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce board of directors, said the state Broadband Program Office and providers have said it costs about $26,000 per mile to run fiber optics cable. Hamilton County Board of Supervisors Chairman Bill Farber said providers tend to deploy new technology and improve service in areas where there is already a high volume of customers rather than investing in expanding service; especially to remote areas. Ò We are working with colleagues on federal last mile legislation for regulations and create funding for internet,Ó Gillibrand said. Thurman Town Board member Kathy Templeton said in a letter to state and federal legislators that both cellular and Internet service in her town are Ò patchyÓ at best. Templeton said Verizon made internet available to only about 100 of ThurmanÕ s 1,200 residents. At the July 6 meeting with Gillibrand, Murphy said the technology has to be in place for people to telecommute, which is becoming more and more common in todayÕ s work environment. Others said visitors to the area might stay longer, which would be a help to the local economy, if they had the availability of reliable broadband service. The Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce is manag-

ing the Adirondacks Teleworks Project, which among other things, is attempting to promote a partnership the public and private sectors to Ò advance the availability of high speed broadband service throughout the (Adirondack) Park.Ó Ò Without (broadband) you canÕ t start a business, today, and kids canÕ t do their homework,Ó Gillibrand said. Gillibrand listened to other concerns from those at the meeting, including lack of economic development, and an economy that was both seasonal and weather dependent. Gillibrand said healthcare and the new federal legislation are a concern to residents of the Adirondacks. Ò We really have to speak up. People donÕ t have the money to pay the crazy amounts the insurance companies are asking for Ð wages are not high Ð and the for-profit system is broken,Ó she said. Gillibrand touched on invasive species in the area, referring to the zebra mussel, saying the federal government has to make sure ships are not dumping ballast water in the Great Lakes. Gillibrand poured a cup of coffee for Garry Douglas, visiting from the North Country Chamber of Commerce. Douglas commented on it being the first time a U.S. senator had poured him a cup of coffee, saying, Ò Chuck Schumer never would have done this for me.Ó

North Creek church pastor to make world record attempt Local pastor to host 60 hour live stream to benefit Adirondack Community Outreach Center NORTH CREEK Ñ The North Creek United Methodist Church will attempt to break a Guinness World Record with a 60 hour audio livestream on July 20-22. Pastor Terry Mosholder will attempt to

break the Guiness World Record for longest continuous live streaming program over the internet with a broadcast from the Adirondack Community Outreach Center (ACOC) in Wevertown. The live stream will raise money for the ACOC, organizers say. The ACOC Center partners with Johnsburg and Minerva Central Schools and the Minerva Service Organization to pro-

vide the backpacks to 65 children annually. The cost of each bag distributed is $5.25 per bag, or $199 per child, per year. The backpack program provides bags filled with food that is child-friendly, shelf stable and easily consumed. The North Creek Methodist Church is now seeking volunteers to take donations as the live stream runs.

Pledges will be taken for each hour Terry successfully completes toward the goal of 60 hours. If a person pledges 10 cents per hour and Pastor completes all of 60 hours, that would be a pledge of $6 toward a backpack. For more info, email Terry at pastor. terry@myownsong.org or call 742-6707.


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Congresswoman Stefanik tours CCE Lawmaker talks invasives, federal funding By Christopher South

chris@suncommunitynews.com

WARRENSBURG Ñ Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) visited the Cornell University Cooperative Extension in Warrensburg as part of a fact finding trip related to agriculture in the Empire State. Ò I would love to hear about the USDA grants you receive and if they need to be refunded,Ó Stefanik told Director James Seely after she arrived. Ò I would like to make sure there is funding.Ó The facility recently received a $56,000 grant for an outdoor education center, including a pole barn and greenhouse. Stefanik toured the extension building, speaking with officers of the 4H program, the Master Gardener program and parenting program, among others. Master Gardener Program Coordinator Catherine Martini told Stefanik she was excited about the new greenhouse being developed, which she said would extend the growing season. The extensionÕ s experimental garden includes planting seeds sent from Cornell University. The extension

grows plants in the natural, regional environment, monitor their growth, and supply the data back to Cornell University. Ò It is used to determine the viability of the plants,Ó Mitchum told Stefanik. The lawmaker said she was aware that climate change impacts growing and the proliferation of invasive species. Several plants, including wild hogweed and yellow parsnip, have established themselves in the region Ñ and both have a sap that will irritate peopleÕ s skin. Mitchum also updated Stefanik on the work on some local organic farms and USDA programs. Ò I am co-sponsoring a bill to award $5,000 grants to start-up farmers,Ó Stefanik said. Stefanik said she understands the Milk Pricing Program regulations are another issue important to local dairy farmers. Ò It has not worked for our district,Ó she said. LEFT: Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) asks 4H Nutrition Educator Mary Beth Mitchum about plants being grown in the experimental garden at the Cornell University Cooperative Extension in Warrensburg. Stefanik was on a fact finding visit during the holiday recess. Photo by Christopher South


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First annual hunter education challenge slated JOHNSBURG Ñ JohnsburgÕ s Jr. Outdoor Club will hosting the first annual Ò NRA YHEC (Y-Heck)Ó at the Johnsburg Fish and Game Club on Saturday, Aug. 19. YHEC stands for Youth Hunter Education Challenge. This is a daylong competition in which youth will participate in rifle, shotgun, muzzle loading, archery, orienteering, hunter safety, hunter responsibility, and wildlife identification. This event is open to kids ages

North Creek << Continued from | p. 1

Shown are finished sections of the North Creek Mosaic Project on Main Street in North Creek. The project has been funded by grants and involves the work of nearly 1,200 contributors.

Mural << Continued from | p. 1

Ò We have also received a number of grants from various foundations, organizations, and individuals,Ó Hartley said. Hartley said besides the monetary contributions, nearly 1,200 people have contributed to the work on the wall. Ò WeÕ ve completed two panels (of four) with a few pieces missing from the second,Ó she said. Hartley said the first of the four sections was completed in 2013, with the second waiting for the final few pieces. Hartley said much of the work has been done by the Johnsburg Fine Arts League, and with the help of local school children under an Arts in Education grant. Ò Almost every kid in school from second grade up has helped with the project,Ó Hartley said. North Creek Resident Renate Wilder-

Travel presentation slated BOLTON LANDING Ñ On July 17 at 7 p.m. in the Bolton Landing Town Hall, Ed Sheridan will present a powerpoint presentation on his recent walk on St. JamesÕ Way. Also known as El

Photo by Chris South

muth and her daughter Emma, 9, were helping with the project July 4. Wildermuth said about a year ago she found an old bottle, which she though could be found as part of the project, and has started helping with the wall; a point not lost on her daughter. Ò ItÕ s a good idea that people can see what to do with old things and make things more beautiful and brighten up your day,Ó she said. Ò All those pieces have gone to create this,Ó Hartley said. Raffle tickets to support the mosaic project can be purchased at CafŽ Sarah and at the mosaic project site on Main Street. Refreshments for the July 27 drawing will be provided by local merchants. Hartley is also holding mosaic camps for children through adults. For more information, contact Hartley at katehartleyvt@gmail.com. Camino de Santiago, the trail begins at Saint Jean Pied de Port, France, and travels 500 miles through four of SpainÕ s 15 regions, ending at the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia.

and cost nearly $2 million, with yearly operating costs estimated to be $52,000. The report lists the third option as the Ò recommended alternative.Ó The plan calls for the creation of a sequencing batch reactor (SBR) which would treat the water, removing nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen, and likely discharge it into surface water. The project is estimated to need 1.3 acres of land and cost just over $3 million to construct, and needing $116,500 per year to operate. Parobeck said the goal is to attempt to create a system that will cost users not more than $500 per year. Every property within the sewer district would be required to hook up to the system. The report, he said, is just an initial step in a process, which if the town authorizes it, would be years in development. Ò This (report) could get us grant money to get

the engineering done,Ó Councilwoman Katharine Nightingale said. The draft report says North Creek has been identified in regional plans prepared by Warren County as Ò an area of concentrated growth for the region.Ó The report continued: Ò Regional plans indicate that (having) no centralized wastewater system has been a limiting factor to development in the hamletÉ Ó Page 20 of the 83-page report listed three reasons for considering a centralized wastewater system: • The report says while there have been no reported health issues from existing wastewater systems, including residential septic systems, there is a potential for the discharge of untreated wastewater into the environment, where it could contaminate groundwater and create health issues. • Related to the first

Beach << Continued from | p. 1

Ò In my professional opinion, this is the major cause of the high E. coli readings at the beach,Ó Dickinson told the board members. Dickinson is a professional surveyor with an engineering background. The broken sewer line was dug up and repaired without delay last week, he said. The iconic state-owned beach on Lake George had been closed to swimming intermittently in May and June because of levels of E. coli bacteria deemed hazardous to human health. Because the bacteria levels spiked primarily after rain storms, officials surmised the pollution was related to sewage seeping into the lake via storm drains or groundwater. Since June 23, however, bacteria levels in the water at Million Dollar Beach have been below actionable levels. Dickinson told the town board that the investigation work is not yet complete, as tests of water emanating from West Brook Ñ northwest of the beach Ñ have also shown the presence of E. coli bacteria, which indicates pollution by human waste. Sewer lines adjacent to West Brook from the lake uphill to Canada Street have all been investigated, however, and they all appear to be intact, he said. Dickinson said that the large manmade concrete bowl at the base of West Brook Ñ where the streamÕ s water drains into Lake George Ñ has been harboring

wildlife, which may be adding to bacterial pollution. He also said that the investigative work would be continuing, particularly regarding the older cottages and homes along East Brook, which drains into the lake on the east side of Million Dollar Beach. This settlement is known as Snug Harbor. The investigation is a collaborative effort by town and village public works employees, representatives of the Lake George Association and the Fund for Lake George Ñ plus employees of the state Department of Environmental Conservation, the state Health Department, the Lake George Park Commission and the Warren County Soil and Water Conservation District.

9-18. There will be three divisions. Rifle, shotgun and muzzle loader will be limited to the junior and senior division. There is a $10 registration fee, and all participants will receive a t-shirt, bumper sticker, pencil and certificate of participation. Registration includes all ammunition, a picnic lunch and spaghetti dinner. Deadline is Aug. 1. For more information, contact Erika Patton at 251-4658 or epatton516@outlook.com. Space is limited to 30 participants and will be filled on a first come, first serve basis.

Dickinson and town board members discussed the possibility of seeking remuneration from National Grid for the sewer breech, as thousands of manhours have been dedicated to the beach contamination investigation. Ò ItÕ s my position that we spent a lot of time and money to investigate this, and it might make sense to seek damages from National Grid,Ó Dickinson said. JOINT Ô MOTOR POOLÕ IDEA MOVES FORWARD In other business conducted at the July 10 town board meeting, the panel approved a memorandum of understanding with the Lake George School District to work toward establishing a

point, the report cited Ò individual wastewater systemsÓ (residential septic systems) of various ages and conditions and the need for some of them to be replaced over the next five to 10 years. The concern was effluent from these systems entering the groundwater or Hudson River. The third need listed in the report was the need for reasonable growth. The report says limitations on new wastewater systems has been a limiting factor for new development in the hamlet, and a centralized wastewater system would help facilitate growth.

Acting supervisor Gene Arsenault said the system would be important for the hamlet over the next 30 years. Parobeck said whatever option the town authorizes would require state or federal grants.

joint Ò motor poolÓ headquarters where vehicles belonging to the town, the school district and Lake George Village could all be repaired and maintained in a single facility. The agreement calls for the town, village and school district to share the cost of an engineering study to determine the feasibility of the initiative. The town and village are each to spend $10,000 towards the study, and the school district, $5,000. This multi-agency garage would be situated at both the town highway department headquarters off Gage Road and on adjacent property Ñ three acres owned for many years by the late James Corkland, who for decades served as town justice. The town is in the process of purchasing the property for $175,000 with the intent of expanding the highway department headquarters to accommodate the new joint motor pool. Dickinson said the Corkland property has an assessed value of $192,000. ABOVE: LONESOME LOUNGER — Ivan Posilovic of Schenectady relaxes on Lake George’s iconic Million Dollar Beach — near empty in mid-June because it was closed to swimming due to high levels of E. coli detected in the lake water there. Officials from various agencies and municipalities have been investigating potential sources of pollution — and on July 5 municipal workers discovered a sewer line breach that is believed to be the major cause of the contamination. Since June 23, Million Dollar Beach has been open for swimming, as E. coli levels well below actionable levels. All other beaches in the town of Lake George, with nearly non-detectable levels of bacteria, have been open all summer. Photo by Thom Randall


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Status of former Johnsburg Garage up to state, courts Resident proposes lottery to finance clean-up By Christopher South

chris@suncommunitynews.com

JOHNSBURG Ñ Local resident Bob Nessle told Johnsburg Town Board he had an idea to help the town and county rid itself of a longstanding eyesore. Nessle last month proposed a 50/50 raffle at $100 per ticket, with entrants making a guess as to when the roof of the former Johnsburg Garage on Route 8 would collapse. Ò ItÕ s going to come down this year, you just have to pick the day,Ó Nessle said. Nessle, a 50-year resident, said this week the site was a former Dodge dealership, then auto repair shop. The site, he said, has not done any retail sales since about 1998, perhaps earlier. Ò A local logging operator bought the site and used as a home base and did repairs on machinery for several years,Ó Nessle said. The owner of record is Edna Mosher, widow of the late Henry Mosher. Warren County Attorney Brian Reichenbach confirmed that the county has a foreclosure action against the owner for unpaid taxes. He said taxes continue accrue on the property, and the county would like to see the matter resolved and the property returned to a tax paying status. Reichenbach said the law prevents the county from simply going on the property and cleaning it up. As it stands, he said, the property is still the possession of the last owner. The county does not want to take ownership of the

property because it would be liable for any ground contamination from underground fuel storage tanks and whatever else might have seeped into the soil as a result of running an auto repair business. Reichenbach said the county is seeking a temporary incident of ownership that would allow the county to investigate to see if there is contaminated soil. Reichenbach said he believes the state Department of Environmental Conservation has conducted a Phase I Environmental Survey and located the fuel storage tanks. However, he said, the state doesnÕ t have the money in its coffers for removing the tanks and, if necessary, cleaning up any contamination. Ò The problem is the state does not allow remediation unless the state pays for it, and there is no money for the state to do it,Ó Reichenbach said. Reichenbach said Warren County is asking the state to allow the county to pay for demolition and site cleanup, but the county has not yet received a response from the state. Ò We keep trying to work through and obtain permission to do the cleanup without taking on responsibility for the contamination,Ó Reichenbach said.

Reichenbach said if the county owned the property for even a day, it would be responsible for the remediation. He said the county hopes to get permission to perform the clean-up and then foreclose on the property for unpaid taxes and remediation costs. Ò WeÕ d like to own for as long as takes to sell it at auction,Ó Reichenbach said. Warren County is trying to get permission from the state to clean up the site of the former Johnsburg Garage at Route 8 and Oven Mountain Road in Johnsburg. The county would like to auction the property for unpaid taxes, but does not want to take ownership of potential soil contamination on the site. Photo by Chris South

‘Movies by the River’ series launches Town provides occupancy tax funds for free movies By Christopher South

chris@suncommunitynews.com

LEGALS NOTICE OF FORMATION OF CSM TRUE NORTH, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/23/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 21 Elm St., Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-07/1508/19/2017-6TC-157680

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A BIT OF HEAVEN AND HOMES, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/22/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, PO Box 35, Johnsburg, NY 12843. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-07/15-

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A BIT OF HEAVEN AND HOMES, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/22/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, PO Box 35, Johnsburg, NY 12843. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-07/1508/19/2017-6TC-157678

lic. In the event of rain, the movies family-friendly movies. will be shown in the barn. Snacks Ò We canÕ t do this by ourselves Ð are available for purchase and there we canÕ t fund the movies,Ó Arnheitwill be a 50/50 raffle at each show- er said. ing. Ò We are thrilled the town is going Ò We ask people to bring their own to use occupancy tax to fund this,Ó lawn chairs,Ó said Robin Jay from Jay said. Gem Radio Theatre. Jay said she and Arnheiter spearJay and Laurie Arnheiter from headed the move to get another the Hudson Bay Trading Compa- free, family activity in the Riverside ny attended the June Town Board Park area of town. meeting to request the $600 needed For more information, email gemNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVto pay for the rights to show the radiotheatre@gmail.com. EN: Town of Johnsburg

NORTH CREEK Ñ The Gem Radio Theatre is presenting Ò Movies by the RiverÓ after receiving approval from the Johnsburg Town Board for occupancy tax funding for the rights to show four, full-length family movies. Planning Board will hold The series, sponsored by the Huda Public Hearing on July son River Trading Company and the 24, 2017 at the Tannery Annual Bolton Landing book sale upcoming Pond Community CenTown of Johnsburg, launched last BOLTON LANDING Ñ The annual Bolton ter, 228 MainLanding Street, Library book sale week with Ò Eddie the Eagle.Ó North Creek, to New York and will continue will begin on Friday, July 28 from 9 a.m. 8 p.m. 12853. Ò Movies by the RiverÓ continues through Sunday, July 30, 9 a.m. toSubdivision 3 p.m. For more information, call ApplicaSaturday, July 22 with Ò Trolls.Ó Frithe library at 644-2233. tion #SUB-01-2017day, Aug. 11 will feature Ò The SandMaycher-Cooper Hill lot,Ó and Sunday, Aug. 27, Ò Hidden Rd. Tax Map#99.-163 & 99.-1-58 Figures.Ó Climate change seminar set Public Hearing will com- NOTICE OF FORMATION NOTICE OF FORMATION NOTICE OF FORMATION Movies dusk, approxiat 7:00 p.m. PerNOTICE Ñ OF Ò FORMATION OF AJDP Holdings LLC OF start Atetekaat Holdings, OF The on Other Tree Guy, INDIAN LAKE Pushing themence Limits,Ó a three part series climate OF HAGUE 8960 CAMP sons wishing to appear LLC. Articles of OrganiNOTICE OF FORMATION Arts. of Org. filedmately with 8 LLC. to 8:30 p.m.). change, is set to begin at the Indian Lake Library with a reading, viewat said meeting may do zation filed with the secthe Sect'y of State of NY Articles of organization OF CSM DOWN EAST, LLC. Arts of Org. filed program adults on Tuesday, p.m.York at of ing in person, by attor- July with NY Secy of Statefor so (SSNY) on 6/1/2017. All Of- the weremovies, filed with being the Sec-shown retary18 ofat 1 New LLC Arts. Org. and filed discussion or any other means scientist. (SSNY)will on 6/8/17. Office byney, fice location, County of retaryPark, of State of N.Y. (SSNY) onFor 5/1/2017. the Sect'yThe of State discussion be guided a NOAA regional more OfRiverfront North Creekwith Train communication. fice location: Warren location: Warren County. of Warren. SSNY has been (SSNY) on 5.26.2017. of NY (SSNY) on information, contact nberkowitz@sals.edu. Depot, free and open to the pub- Office is designated as Communications will be County. SSNY designatdesignated as agent of are Office location: Warren 6/23/2017. loca- SSNY the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, PO Box 2152, Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-06/1707/22/2017-6TC-155274

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Adirondack River Photos LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY On 7/21/16 Office Location: Warren County SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom Process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, P.O. box 105, Lake Luzerne, NY, 12846 Purpose: any lawful activity NE/AJ-06/2407/29/2017-6TC-155937

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Atateka Farms, LLC. Articles of organization were filed with the Secretary of State of N.Y. (SSNY) on 5.26.2017. Office location: Warren County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon which process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 393 Atateka Drive, Chestertown, NY 12817. Purpose: Any lawful activity. NE/AJ-06/1007/15/2017-6TC-154306

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF AJDP Holdings LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/1/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, PO Box 2152, Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-06/17-

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Ateteka Holdings, LLC. Articles of organization were filed with the Secretary of State of N.Y. (SSNY) on 5.26.2017. Office location: Warren County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon which process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 393 Atateka Drive, Chestertown, NY 12817.

County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon which process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 393 Atateka Drive, Chestertown, NY 12817. Purpose: Any lawful activity. NE/AJ-06/1007/15/2017-6TC-154305

tion, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 21 Elm St., Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-07/1508/19/2017-6TC-157675

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF CSM ASSET MANAGEMENT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/23/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 21 Elm St., Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: any lawful act. NE/AJ-07/1508/19/2017-6TC-157677

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF CSM DTCT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/23/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 21 Elm St., Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: any lawful act NE/AJ-07/1508/19/2017-6TC-157676

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF CSM DOWN EAST, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/23/2017. Office location, County of Warren. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 21 Elm St., Glens Falls, NY

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF HAGUE 8960 CAMP LLC. Arts of Org. filed with NY Secy of State (SSNY) on 6/8/17. Office location: Warren County. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 51 E Allendale Rd, Saddle River, NJ 07458. The name and address of the Reg. Agent is Robert L.

agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 51 E Allendale Rd, Saddle River, NJ 07458. The name and address of the Reg. Agent is Robert L. Basso, 6 Lake Forest Ln., Hague, NY 12836. Purpose: any lawful activity. NE/AJ-07/0108/05/2017-6TC-156535

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: Town of Johnsburg Planning Board will hold a Public Hearing on July 24, 2017 at the Tannery Pond Community Center, 228 Main Street, North Creek, New York 12853. Subdivision Application #SUB-01-2017Maycher-Cooper Hill Rd. Tax Map#99.-163 & 99.-1-58 Public Hearing will commence at 7:00 p.m. Persons wishing to appear at said meeting may do so in person, by attorney, or any other means of communication. Communications will be filed with the board at that time. A Regular Meeting of the Planning Board will follow the Public Hearing. Town of Johnsburg Planning Board Joann M. Morehouse,

filed with the board at that time. A Regular Meeting of the Planning Board will follow the Public Hearing. Town of Johnsburg Planning Board Joann M. Morehouse, Secretary NE/AJ-07/1507/22/2017-2TC-157341

Surgical Pain Center of the Adirondacks LLC filed Arts. of Org. with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/14/17. Office location: Clinton County. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 294 Tom Miller Rd., Plattsburgh, NY 12901. Purpose: any lawful activity. NE/AL-07/0108/05/2017-6TC-156537 NOTICE OF FORMATION OF The Other Tree Guy, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the secretary of New York (SSNY) on 5/1/2017. Office location: Warren County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served, SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, c/o United States Corporation Agents, Inc, 7014 13th Ave, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY

ed as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served, SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, c/o United States Corporation Agents, Inc, 7014 13th Ave, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: Any lawful activity. NE/AJ-06/1007/15/2017-6TC-153907 Tubby Tubes LLC. Filed 11/23/16. Office: Warren Co. SSNY designated as agent for process & shall mail to: Smallbiz Agents, 1710 1st Ave # 121, New York, NY 10128-4902. Purpose: General. NE/AJ-07/0108/05/2017-6TC-156215


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The Sun NE/AJ • July 15, 2017 | 17

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COMMUNITY SALE HAND CRAFTED ONLY for Nassau County's largest family fair, 31st year. Attendance 120,000+, 150200 hand crafted vendors display, 9/16 and 9/17, (516)809-5892. BellmoreCrafts@yahoo.com HELP WANTED 25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Earn $1000 per week! Paid CDL Training! STEVENS TRANSPORT COVERS ALL COSTS! 1877-209-1309 drive4stevens.com MANY RN POSITIONS available in your vicinity. Hospitals, correctional facilities, and home health assessments. Great Pay & Benefits. White Glove Placement 1-866-387-8100 #202 recruit@whiteglovecare.net PAID IN ADVANCE! Make $1000 Weekly Mailing Brochures From Home! NO Experience Required. Helping home workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity. Start Immediately! www.MailingPros.Net

HELP WANTED

PLACE YOUR HELP WANTED WITH US AND REACH 63,464 HOMES! USPS MAILED TO NORTHERN NEW YORK & VERMONT WE HAVE REASONABLE RATES & WE GET RESULTS! CALL SHANNON @ 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 OR EMAIL

shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

OR Kacey @ 518-585-9173 EXT. 104 OR EMAIL

kacey@suncommunitynews.com

HELP WANTED LOCAL Auto Technician Needed. Ticonderoga. Call 518-585-6325. BLUE RIDGE MOTEL IN SCHROON LAKE, NY is looking for help, 1 bdrm apt. included, pay is negotiable depending on what you are willing to do & how much. 518532-7521 or 518-419-9455 CHAMP2000 IS SEEKING A SHOP FOREMAN/MECHANIC/ NYS INSPECTOR Commission based. All makes/models serviced. Must have people skills. 518-572-8800. CHESTERTOWN LUMBER AND HARDWARE store has year round counter/sales position M-S, send application or resume to: slcadmin@stephensonlumber.com TICONDEROGA CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT is now accepting applications for a full time Cleaner position. Interested applicants should submit a letter of interest and resume by July 28, 2017 to Don Olcott at dolcott@ticonderogaak12.org CAREER TRAINING AIRLINE CAREERS start here. Get trained as FAA Certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information, 866-296-7094. AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING Get FAA Technician certification. Approved for military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-4536204 AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue, Boeing, Delta and othersstart here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-866-296-7094 MISCELLANEOUS 8' Slide-In Pop-Up Truck Camper. Call with best offer. 518-585-6340. A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800217-3942 A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-553-4101 HughesNet: Gen4 satellite internet is ultra fast and secure. Plans as low as $39.99 in select areas. Call 1-855-440-4911 now to get a $50 Gift Card!

MISCELLANEOUS

MISCELLANEOUS

A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-844722-7993

Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 866-428-1639 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.

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. AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING Get FAA certification. Approved for military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704 CASH PAID for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. HIGHEST PRICES! Call 1-888-7767771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com Comcast Hi-Speed Internet $39.99/mo (for 12 mos.) No term agreement. Fast Downloads! PLUS Ask About Our Triple Play (TVVoice-Internet) for $89.99/mo (lock in 2 years!) CALL 1-844-7144451 Cut the Cable! CALL DIRECTV. Bundle & Save! Over 145 Channels PLUS Genie HD-DVR. $50/month for 2 Years (with AT&T Wireless.) Call for Other Great Offers! 1- 855-781-1565 DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 888-623-3036 or http://www.dental50plus.com/58 Ad# 6118 Dish Network-Satellite Television Services. Now Over 190 channels for ONLY $49.99/mo! HBO-FREE for one year, FREE Installation, FREE Streaming, FREE HD. Add Internet for $14.95 a month. 1-800718-1593 DISH NETWORK. TV for Less, Not Less TV! FREE DVR. FREE Install (up to 6 rooms.) $49.99/mo. PLUS Hi-Speed Internet $14.95/mo (where available.). Call 1-855-891-5734 DIVORCE $350* Covers Children, Property, TAX REDUCTION SERVICES, etc. *Excludes govt. Fees! Budget Divorce 1-888-633-6076, EXT 500. Established 1973. MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 1-855-587-1166 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 IF ADVERTISING IN ONE FREE PAPER IS SMART, then advertising in hundreds of them is pure genius! Do it with just one phone call! Reach nearly 3 million consumers statewide in print -plus more online -- quickly and inexpensively! Zoned ads start at $229 for a 25-word ad. Visit us at AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173 LUNG CANCER? And 60+ Years Old? If So, You And Your Family May Be Entitled To A Significant Cash Award. Call 1-877-689-5293 To Learn More. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.

Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-888-909-9905 18+. MOBILEHELP, America's Premier Mobile Medical Alert System. Whether You re Home or Away. For Safety and Peace of Mind. No Long Term Contracts! Free Brochure! Call Today! 1-800-960-8653 SAVE THOUSANDS ON SURPRISE COSTLY HOME REPAIRS!! With Nations Home Warranty we pay 100% of covered Home repairs! CALL FOR A FREE QUOTE TODAY!! 877-279-3904 Social Security Disability? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1- 855-3766502. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar. SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paidin amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-800-919-8208. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar. Social Security Disability? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-855498-6323. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar. Spectrum Triple Play TV, Internet & Voice for $29.99 ea. 60 MB per second speed No contract or commitment. We buy your existing contract up to $500! 1-855-6529304 SUPPORT OUR SERVICE MEMBERS, veterans and their families in their time of need. For more information visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 50 Pills + 10 FREE. SPECIAL $99.00 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL: 1-888223-8818 Hablamos Espanol. UNDER $1,000 PICTURE WINDOW 6'long by 4' high Call 518-4973044 $100. 518-497-3044 PRESSURE TREATED STAIRS 4 steps $100. 518-497-3044 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES Fort Ann Antiques Always Buying 518-499-2915 Route 4, Whitehall, NY www.fortannantiques.com FIREWOOD Dependable Year Round Firewood Sales. Seasoned or green. Warren & Essex County HEAP Vendor. Other services available. Call today! 518-494-4077 Rocky Ridge Boat Storeage, LLC. SEASONED 1 YR. OLD FIREWOOD Cut 16” Split & Delivered to Chestertown area. $315 Full Cord, $110 Face cord. Extra Delivery Fee Beyond Chestertown. 518-4942321 FOR SALE

FOR SALE

Day Lillies for Sale, 325 varieties, all colors, excellent pricing. Call 518-503-5065.

KILL BED BUGS! Harris Bed Bug Killers/KIT. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com


18 | July 15, 2017 • The Sun NE/AJ

www.suncommunitynews.com FOR SALE KILL BED BUGS, Harris bed bug killers kit complete treatment system. Available hardware stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com. Try Harris guaranteed roach killers too. ½ PRICE INSULATION, Blue Dow or High R. Several Thickness Available. Call 518-5973876.

GENERAL

SUNCOMMUNITYNEWS.COM FOR ALL YOUR COMMUNITY NEWS, SPORTS, EVENTS AND INFORMATION

SAWMILLS from only $4397.00 MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmillCut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N

Published by Denton Publications, Inc. WANTED TO BUY

NORTH COUNTRY LIVING MAGAZINE ASK YOUR SALES REPRESENTATIVE FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION OR CONTACT SCARLETTE MERFELD 518-585-9173 EXT 117 OR EMAIL ads@suncommunitynews.com

A SUN COMMUNITY NEWS

FREE WHITE WESTEN HOUSE Refrigerator/ freezer, 19 cu., ft., Call 585-281-4628

VACATION HOME, CAMP OR LAND FOR SALE OR RENT? Advertise with us! We connect you with nearly 3-million consumers (plus more online!) with a statewide classified ad. Advertise your property for just $489 for a 25-word ad, zoned ads start at $229. Visit AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173 CRUISE & TRAVEL Valentines Getaway! 4-Day Bahamas Cruise on Carnival Liberty Sailing 2/11/18 from Port Canaveral. Inside $363.55pp Balcony $483.55pp, including taxes & port fees. $150pp Deposit by 7/10/17 to secure a $50 Cabin Credit!! Call NCP Travel 877-270-7260. HOME IMPROVEMENTS Maximum efficiency means maximum savings on heating bills. Central Boiler certified OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE. Call today! Vermont Heating Alternatives 802343-7900

TREE SERVICES Tree Work Professional Climber w/decades of experience w/anything from difficult removals to tasteful selected pruning. Fully equipped & insured. Michael Emelianoff 518-251-3936

VACATION PROPERTY

VISIT THE REGION'S PREMIER LIFESTYLE PUBLICATION NORTH COUNTRY LIVING MAGAZINE NCLMAGAZINE.COM PUBLISHED BY: DENTON PUBLICATIONS INC. DOGS

GENERAL CASH FOR CARS: We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2000 and Newer. Nations Top Car Buyer! Free Towing From Anywhere! Call Now: 1-800-864-5960. Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: Call 1-877-737-9447 18+

AKC PUREBRED NEWFOUNDLANDS Landseer in color, 3 boys and 1 girl, ready July 30th. Vet certificate, first shots and wormed. 1,200.00 315-655-3743 APARTMENT RENTALS

HEALTH & FITNESS DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 855-434-9221 or http://www.dental50plus.com/44 FREE VIAGRA PILLS 48 PILLS + 4 FREE! VIAGRA 100MG/ CIALIS 20mg Free Pills! No hassle, Discreet Shipping. Save Now. Call Today 1-888-410-0514 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace at little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1- 855-439-2862 OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 844-558-7482 OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-855-839-1738 Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy, compare prices and get $25.00 OFF your first prescription! CALL 1-844-520-6712 Promo Code CDC201725 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. NO prescriptions needed. Money back guaranteed! 1-877743-5419 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 50 Pills + 10 FREE $99.00. FREE Shipping! Guaranteed. CALL! 1866-312-6061 Hablamos Espanol Viagra!! 52 Pills for Only $99.00! Your #1 trusted provider for 10 years. Insured and Guaranteed Delivery. Call today 1-888-796-8878 LOGGING

PRECISION TREE SERVICE

PORT HENRY 1-2 BR Apartments 40 Minute Drive to jobs in Middlebury and Vergennes. Apartment Near Downtown Port Henry. Walking Distance to grocery store, pharmacy, and other stores and services. No dogs, other than service dogs. $490, plus utilities. Security Deposit. Call 518-546-7003. Temporary Housing - Fully furnished apt., accomodates 2-4 ppl, $200 per week. Full kitchen and bath. 518-597-4772 AM or PM. Ticonderoga – 1 bdrm apartment, 2nd Floor on Warner Hill Rd. Range & Refrig incl, cable avail. No pets. No Smoking. 518-585-6832. TICONDEROGA APARTMENT FOR RENT One bedroom apartment, newly carpeted w/3 large closets. Heat, electricity, and garbage/recycling pickup included. $600/mo. Call 518-585-6269 after 5pm. TICONDEROGA – PAD FACTORY BY THE RIVER. 1 bdrm, 2nd floor, newly remodeled, new kitchen, new paint, $625/mo. Includes heat, hot water and garbage. No Pets/No Smokers. 1 year lease & good references required. Available July 1st. 518338-5424. MOBILE HOME RENTALS Multiple 2 Bedroom Mobile Homes in Schroon Lake. Includes snow plowing, dumpster and lawn mowing. No pets. Call 518-5329538 or 518-796-1865. REAL ESTATE SALES BENSON ARIZONA, DEED RV sites with City Utilities(Snowbird Hill), $ 22,500+ www.cochiseterrace.com or 520-720-0824 / 520-820-1678. LAKEFRONT PROPERTY 100' of waterfront on Chazy Lake in the Adirondack Mountains, 50 foot aluminum dock, 2 RV's, water, septic, electric, and phone, fully landscaped, 12x16 screened gazebo, 4 storage buildings, washer and dryer $179,900 Call Larry 518-561-7369 or email lyndamyers@charter.net HOMES

518-942-6545 WANTED TO BUY Cash for unexpired DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Free Shipping, Best Prices & 24 hr payment! Call 1855-440-4001 www.TestStripSearch.com. Habla Espanol. CASH PAID- up to $25/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAYPAYMENT.1-800371-1136 Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

4 BEDROOM HOME for sale in Lewis, NY Master bedroom on 1st floor large fenced in back yard Priced to sell at only $79,000 (518) 873-2362 LAND LAND FOR SALE 5 acres in Southwestern Colorado, Pictures Available Call 802-774-8420.


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www.suncommunitynews.com

The Sun NE/AJ • July 15, 2017 | 19


20 | July 15, 2017 • The Sun NE/AJ

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.


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