Opinion: Extravagant Projects Doom Whitehall


Another Whitehall store sits empty while municipal officials spend extravagantly on unnecessary projects.

At a time when Whitehall is literally flooded, no new businesses are coming into the area, and school enrollment is dropping faster that Newton’s apple, what does the school board in its “wisdom” decide to do?

If you guessed, approve a special election on June 29th to vote on spending $625,000 in reserve funds to completely reconstruct the school’s auditorium, you clearly know how the Whitehall school board operates. School officials trot out their standard lines that it will have no impact on taxes when in fact the effect has already been felt because we have already been taxed for this money.

Sadly, this is why Whitehall is at the tipping point as an area in rapid decline. Instead of attracting new business, focusing on lowering the tax base and stabilizing the population, Whitehall is doing everything in its power to destroy the tax base and drive out those who would consider investing in the community.

Additionally when municipalities across the country are working on shedding costs and tightening their fiscal belts, the town and village of Whitehall are considering acquiring the former armory that the state of New York is trying to give away. (That’s correct, the state of NY doesn’t want it but Whitehall may acquire it.) It has been reported that a new roof for the armory alone may cost $400,000.

Every year when passing through Whitehall it seems that things continue to slide downhill. This is in spite of the fact that Whitehall has many natural advantages; its location on a major thoroughfare between Vermont and New York, a train stop three and half hours from Manhattan, summer tourism, and even the local scenery. Somehow, Whitehall is never able to fully capitalize on any of these great assets.

Why then is Whitehall stuck in a permanent state of demise? This is my opinion.

For many years, Whitehall has suffered from very poor local leadership. This applies across the spectrum from town and village officials to members of the school board. The first course of action seems to be always to raise taxes and very little is done to save money or cut taxes, market the community or reach out to business owners. When a developer approached Whitehall last year about building a new supermarket and restaurant, the proposal went nowhere.

What should Whitehall do? What has been shown to work in other states and municipalities?

Cut taxes everywhere, try to get new business to come into the area, use the area’s assets to invite people in, not drive them out. Be encouraging and helpful to those who invest in the community. Whitehall is now at the tipping point, continuing to raise taxes and take on public projects that are unnecessary and costly.

Whitehall’s demise will continue and accelerate on its current path. It needs to change quickly and soon. Why are we spending money on capital improvements at the school which is projected to lose students for the foreseeable future? Why is the expensive undertaking of acquiring the armory necessary when people can’t afford their taxes currently?

Sadly the answer is poor leadership that has no vision. Leadership that is dooming the Whitehall area with tax and spend policies that are too extravagant for its taxpayers to afford any longer.

Memorial Day: 2011

Please pray for all those who have given their all to protect and defend our nation AND all those currently serving to keep us free.

The Post Star had a moving piece about the Aiken family of Huletts Landing and the sacrifices they have endured. If you read one thing today, this should be it.

Saturday Quote

Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy which sustained him through temporary periods of joy.

W.B. Yeats

LGA Seeks Volunteers for Salmon Stocking

The Lake George Association is seeking volunteers with boats to aid in the annual stocking of landlocked salmon on Lake George. Stocking will take place on Monday, June 6 at the Green Island Dept. of Environmental Conservation (DEC) dock at 10 am, and on Tuesday, June 7 at the Hague public dock at 10 am. Four volunteer boats are needed for each day. Upon arrival at the dock, each volunteer will receive a big trash can to fill with lake water onboard their boat. Volunteers will then transfer salmon into the trash can from the DEC’s stocking truck. Next, volunteers will drive out into deeper water to release the salmon.

“It is a lot of fun to stock the fish around the Lake. Hard work, but a lot of fun seeing those thousands of 5″ – 7″ salmon with brilliant colors swim away from the boat after being put in the Lake,” says John Schaninger, past president and current member of the Lake George Fishing Alliance.

If you can help with this year’s salmon stocking effort, please contact Emily DeBolt at the Lake George Association at 518-668-3558. For more information about the stocking effort, please visit the Lake George Fishing Alliance website at www.lgfa.org.

Casino to Open & New Website

I’m pleased to announce that the Casino will be open this Memorial Day weekend and that the Casino will have its own website this summer:

www.HulettsCasino.com

This way the menus, events and “goings on” in the Casino, every weekend this summer, will be just one mouse click away!

Cheers.

Dresden Fire Company Appeal & Barbecue

Recently, I received this letter from Alan Bascue, Fire Chief of the Dresden Volunteer Fire Company. The Dresden Fire Company routinely assists the Huletts Landing Volunteer Fire Company and vice-versa.

The letter covers numerous topics, including their chicken barbecue and the biggest problem they face at this time.

One of my goals for the Huletts Current has always been to assist those doing good and giving back to our small community. The Dresden Fire Company more than meets this criteria. So if you can help them in any way, please consider doing so.

Bits of Everything

Rain Cause Mudslide Into Lake George

The Post Star gives some details about a Hague mudslide.

Big Changes at Fort Ti

The Press Republican tells of some big changes this year at Fort Ticonderoga.

Water Funding Drying Up

The Adirondack Almanack reports on a little known Lake George program in need of funding.

Gaslight Village Demolition Stalls: No Money

Appears as though NY State is late paying grant money in the pipeline, according to the Post Star.

NFL Lockout Leaves Giant’s Albany Training Camp in Jeopardy

The GiantsFootballBlog reports on NFL news impacting Albany.

School District Vote Results

The school district election was on Tuesday.

Current incumbents George Armstrong and Virginia Rivette ran unopposed for reelection.

Mr. Armstrong received 209 votes and Ms. Rivette received 192 votes.

While I provided both candidates with questionnaires, I never received Ms. Rivette’s questionnaire back.

The budget passed with 175 votes “for” and 58 “opposed”.

I congratulate both candidates on their victories and service to the community. I would especially like to thank Mr. Armstrong for taking the time to answer my questionnaire and to inform you about his positions.

Vote Now: For Lake George

I received this today and thought people would enjoy it. The Lake George Association has applied for a grant from the Boat US Foundation. They award grants based on a voting system. The voting opened about a week ago and goes for a few more weeks. The more votes Lake George gets, the better the chance the LGA gets the grant for their Clean Boater Program. As of today, the LGA program was in the lead, BUT YOUR HELP IS NEEDED.

Please follow the link below, click “vote now” and then choose the LGA Clean Boat Program:

http://www.boatus.com/foundation/Grants/vote.asp

School District Election

The Whitehall School District will have an election Tuesday, May 17th between 12:00 noon and 9:00 p.m. in the LGI room of the Junior/Senior High School on Buckley Road:

1.) To adopt next years budget.
2.) To elect two (2) members of the school board.

I have posted here the yearly budget comparison mailed out by the school district.

As of this moment I have not received the candidate questionnaire from Ms. Virginia Rivette that I submitted to her. When and if I receive her answers, I will post them.

Please remember to vote!

Lake Steward Program to Expand


LGA Lake Steward Monika LaPlante holds samples of three invasive species Eurasian watermilfoil, curly-leaf pondweed and zebra mussels. These were pulled off a boat at Norowal Marina during her first day on the job for 2010.

The 2011 Lake Steward Program on Lake George will significantly expand over last year’s level, thanks to new funding provided by the Lake George Park Commission (LGPC).

Lake stewards, posted at several Lake George boat launches throughout the summer, inspect incoming boats for invasive species, remove suspicious specimens, and educate boaters about the threats of invasive species and how to prevent their spread. The Commission’s marine patrol is contacted whenever stewards encounter a boat being launched that has obvious signs of invasive species and is unwilling to be inspected.

Since 2008, the Lake George Association (LGA) has managed training, hiring, supervision and reporting for the Lake Steward Program.

The additional funding provided this year will provide maximum coverage for peak periods and for the launches that receive the highest traffic. The estimated program costs for 2011 are $67,000. $25,000 will be funded through the Lake Champlain Basin program, $35,000 will be provided by the Lake George Park Commission, and the LGA will provide the remaining funds from its Helen V. Froehlich Foundation grant awards.

In 2010, Lake stewards were posted at four launches around Lake George: Norowal Marina, Mossy Point, Hague Town Beach and Rogers Rock. In 2011, two additional launches will be added. Days and hours of coverage will also increase; the goal is to provide seven-day-a-week coverage during the busiest times of the season. Twelve-hour-a-day coverage is the goal for Mossy Point and Norowal, while other sites will receive eight hours per day. Mossy Point and Norowal were chosen for increased coverage due to the high volume of their traffic.

“The Lake George Lake Steward Program is critical to protecting the water quality of Lake George,” said Bruce Young, chair of the Lake George Park Commission. “By visually inspecting boats and trailers, and removing suspicious samples, the LGA stewards help stop the introduction and transport of invasive species between waterbodies throughout the Lake Champlain Basin and the Northeast,” he said.

“While dozens of different aquatic invasive species reside nearby, only four are currently found in Lake George. We aim to keep it that way,” said Emily DeBolt, LGA education director and manager of the Lake Steward Program on Lake George.

In addition to inspection, lake stewards will collect data about lake users and invasive species spread: the species found, number of boats launched, the type of boat, number of people in the boat, the last body of water the boat was in, and the presence of a LGPC decal. This information sheds light on the pathways of invasive species, and helps to identify target areas for early detection and control. A report for the public is prepared at the end of the season.

The program is closely coordinated with similar programs. Lake George, Lake Champlain, and the Adirondack Watershed Institute collaborate on training, printed materials, and data collection as members of a regional partnership, the Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program (APIPP).

While Lake Stewards primarily cover boat launch sites, they also assist at special events such as the Adirondack Park Invasive Species Awareness Week, and inventory terrestrial invasive species on state-owned islands.

In 2010, Lake Stewards inspected a total of 2,538 boats, and educated boaters about the threats of Eurasian watermilfoil, zebra mussels, curly-leaf pondweed, and the Lake’s most recent invader, the Asian clam. Thirty-six samples of Eurasian watermilfoil were removed during the season. Nine samples of curly-leaf pondweed were found, three samples of zebra mussels, and five of water chestnut, an invasive that is not currently found in Lake George.

The 2010 Lake Steward Program was funded by the Bolton Local Development Corporation, the town of Hague, the town of Ticonderoga, the Lake George Park Commission, the Helen V. Froehlich Foundation, and the NYS Department of State with funds provided under Title 11 of the Environmental Protection Fund. The program was originally conceived by the Invasive Species Task Force of the Lake George Watershed Coalition.

Bits of Everything

They’re Back. After a Year in Limbo, Stream Rules Reimerge

The Times Union reports that the widely opposed Lake George stream regulations are being considered again.

Jimmer Poster Released

KSL reports on Jimmer’s preparation for the business world. Buy his new poster here.

Can Cuomo Deliver Property Tax Cap?

The NY Post thinks the Governor has a challenge in front of him.

You Really Want to Know: Donald Trump’s Hair is Real

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0rc2972HNwc

Interview with School Board Candidate, George Armstrong

This year there are two vacancies on the Board of Education and two candidates running for these seats. The Huletts Current submitted the following questions to each candidate running for the school board. I explained to each candidate that I would run their answers as they submitted them on the Huletts Current. The questions are entirely my own and hopefully you will get a better sense of who the candidate is and what their positions are after reading their responses.

Today I present Mr. George Armstrong’s answers to my questions.

Could you please tell us about yourself and why you are running for the school board?

I am a retired GE manager who now operates with my wife’s help a green house and vegetable business. I have a life long love for education and a belief that our young people can be better educated if we become involved and show the way.

The Whitehall school district’s enrollment has been falling (and is predicted to continue to decline). When do you expect that falling enrollment will translate into lower taxes for all?

Probably the best we can hope for is a slight increase in the budget and a small increase in taxes. Sharp increases in health insurance and pension obligations are driving budget increases. Soon we will not have enough fund balance to offset increases in health costs and pension obligations unless (the) state increases school aid or eliminates mandates.

Whitehall and Granville had a long history of playing each other in sports. However, Whitehall is now in the “D” conference for smaller schools while Granville is in the higher “B” conference. Would you like to see this rivalry begin again and if so, what will you do, if elected to the school board, to bring residents and students into Whitehall?

No. I would not like this rivalry to begin again. Granville school will soon have twice our population. We can barely dress enough players to be competitive most years.

Do you believe that increased spending per pupil translates into a better education?

No. I do not believe that increased spending automatically translates in a better education. Involved parents, good teachers and a caring community are the key to a better education. Money is very important but must be used wisely.

If elected, will you advocate for or offer a resolution that any yearly budget surpluses be returned to the taxpayers in the form of lower taxes the following year? If not, why not?

No school district should over tax, however; following state guidelines fund balances should be maintained for a year like this one. Without some of our fund balance being applied this year we would be looking at 10% + tax increase despite our cut backs. We have never exceeded the legal limit, 4% on fund balance.

Governor Cuomo has recognized that lowering state spending is essential to a healthy state. Do you feel a responsibility, if elected, to cut spending and taxes on the local level to have a healthy and prosperous community?

You can talk about lowering spending and taxes all you want, but with health cost and pension obligations sky rocketing, mandates increasing and business fleeing N.Y., its not going to happen. We need some structural changes that are hard to get in Albany. Governor Cuomo seems to have the right ideas but entrenched interests have killed many a good idea.