Vn a 0099 0227

Page 1

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

Saturday,ÊF ebruaryÊ27,Ê2016

>>

In SPORTS | pg. 18-19

Sectional fight

Top seeded Lady Beavers remain in the hunt

www.SunCommunityNews.com

>>

In OPINION | pg.6

Policy not platitudes

Albany needs to address EMS woes

>>

InArts | pg. 9

Warm up with Rusted Root Popular band coming to the LPCA

Green Line comes calling Massive electric proposal promises low cost, renewable energy and tax incentives for northern New York

affect local residents. The $600 million project — known as the Vermont Green Line — requires 6.7 miles of underground cable in New York, 13.3 miles in Vermont and 40 miles underneath Lake Champlain. Power for the project would be generated by wind By Teah Dowling farms in New York’s northern tier. teah@suncommunitynews.com A partnership between local power company NationBEEKMANTOWN — The developers of a proposed al Grid and Massachusetts-based Anbaric, the proposal electric transmission line running from Beekmantown promises to deliver clean, carbon-free renewable energy Representatives of National Grid, Anbaric and other parties met with community members to upstate New York as well as the New England states. to New Haven, Vt attended a Feb. 17 town board meetFeb. 16 to discuss potential concerns of the Vermont Green Line Project in Beekmantown. >> Story Continued | pg. 10 ing here to layout details of the plan and how it might Photo by Teah Dowling

Keene Central goes red to raise hearts disease awareness

Area residents are on a ...

MissionÊ toÊ serve

Locals strive to aid refugee crises ESSEX — A spin-off meeting of a group determined to help Syrian refugees met in Essex to explore options recently. The group of about 20 people met at St. John’s Church in Essex and included people from Keene Valley, Elizabethtown, Lewis, Willsboro, Essex and Westport, an By Keith offshoot of a recent gathering of over 75 Lobdell people, which was called the Refugee SumWriter mit and held in Keene Valley. “We are connected with other cluster groups from Lake Placid and Tupper Lake, which makes us part of a larger group interested in helping these refugees,” Lyn Barrett, a retired minister with the United Church of Christ, said. One of the ways the group has decided to help is through the Bicycles For Refugees program, a German program which receives used and broken bicycles to fix and train refugees how to use. “People donate the used and broken bikes and the group finds parts to repair them and work with the refugees,” Barrett said. “They train the refugees in the repair and care of the bikes, along with teaching them traffic laws in Germany.”

By Teah Dowling

teah@suncommunitynews.com

In Germany, groups are working with Syrian refugees to supply bicycles, along with training on how to care for the bikes and traffic laws. A local group of concerned citizens are looking to raise $3,000 to help support the cause. Photo provided

Barrett said the need for bikes is great, especially in some of the small towns where the refugees are being relocated to in Germany. “In these towns, there is no public transportation, so these bikes are vital,” she said. Barrett used connections she made through her time as a minister to get in contact with the program. “We partnered with a German church when I was in Pennsylvania and I kept contact with them,” she said. “We talked to them in the fall when the news of the refugee crisis really started to be publicized. This is a project that will be easy for >> Story Continued | pg. 10

KEENE — Keene Central celebrated Go Red Day last week by wearing red. Doing so, hoped the organizer, would raise awareness for the top cause of death in women, heart disease. Heather DeZalia introduced the event four years ago after her mother, Jeannie, suffered her first heart attack. DeZalia received the news from a phone call at school, learning about her mother’s attack and airlifted transfer from Elizabethtown to Plattsburgh. Jeannie recovered but had two stents put in. But just before Christmas 2014, she suffered a second attack. “It was a life changing experience not only for her,” DeZalia said, “but the entire family.” DeZalia said the setback isn’t going to get her mother down. “She’s a very strong person,” DeZalia said. Heart problems, DeZalia said, are genetic in their family. >> Story Continued | pg. 10


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.