Bits of Everything

Thinking Outside the Bowl Wins Outhouse Race

With a headline like that, it must be the annual outhouses races on Lake George. See the NY Times.

Missing Fort Ti Letter Gets Returned

According to the Press Republican a piece of history returns to the Massachusetts state archives six decades after it disappeared.

State Says Reserve Funds Can Cover Education Cuts

WNBZ reports that school district’s statewide have over $1.1 billion in reserve accounts.

Packer’s Pastor Profiled

A short story about faith and football from the National Catholic Register.

Saturday Quote

“It’s important to be heroic, ambitious, productive, efficient, creative, and progressive, but these qualities don’t necessarily nurture soul. The soul has different concerns, of equal value: downtime for reflection, conversation, and reverie; beauty that is captivating and pleasuring; relatedness to the environs and to people; and any animal’s rhythm of rest and activity.”

— Thomas Moore

Cell Phone Tower Permit Issued

In today’s mail I received a public notice from the Adirondack Park Agency stating that the Agency conditionally approved a permit for a cell phone tower to be located on the Vanderplaat parcel. This was one of two applications made to the Agency for a cell phone tower in Huletts. I know many people favored one proposal over the other but all-in-all this apparently settles the issue.

My biggest concern has always been for the safety of those who rely on a cell phone while boating or camping on Lake George. It now looks like the tower’s construction will proceed.

To read the public notice issued by the Adirondack Park Agency, click here.

West Brook Project Receives Major Gift

Construction work continues on the south parcel of the West Brook Conservation Initiative project in Lake George. Culverts and rough grading are underway on the site where Charley’s Saloon once stood. The new stormwater treatment complex and environmental park will treat millions of gallons of stormwater each year.

J. Buckley Bryan Jr., recent past president of the Lake George Association, has given a gift of $45,000 to the West Brook Conservation Initiative (WBCI) in Lake George. This gift brings Bryan’s investment in the project to $107,000, making him the second largest individual donor.

Currently under construction on the south parcel of the former Gaslight Village property, WBCI is the largest environmental project in the Lake’s history. The stormwater treatment complex and environmental park will redirect stormwater from Route 9 into settling ponds, marshlands, and a gravel wetland.

“After all our hard work it was gratifying to see physical work begin on the project this past December,” said the LGA’s Buck Bryan. “The demolition of Charley’s Saloon on the south side is complete, and now rough grading is underway,” he said.

“The inlet and outlet culverts have been installed by Kubricky Construction (working for the NYS Department of Transportation), and the land is being graded to the proper elevations for the park’s various components,” said Walt Lender, LGA executive director. “Stormwater from Route 9 will enter the first settling pond via the inlet culvert,” he said. “From there it will travel through shallow marsh wetlands where pollutants in the runoff will be naturally treated through uptake by the plants. Finally, the water will be diverted into either a deep water marsh a gravel wetland, where dense root mats, crushed stones and a microbe rich environment will improve the quality of the water before it returns to West Brook via the outlet culvert.”

Three environmental groups – the Lake George Association (LGA), the Fund for Lake George, and the Lake George Land Conservancy (LGLC) – have worked together to develop the project under the terms of a conservation easement they jointly hold with the village of Lake George and Warren County. Jointly, the groups need to raise an additional $1.56 million to secure ownership of the easement.

The LGLC needs to raise $2.3 million toward the purchase of the 1,436-acre Berry Pond tract, to protect West Brook’s headwaters. The final payment on principal for Berry Pond is due January 17, 2012. “This winter, snowmobilers are already enjoying the wide trails on the Berry Pond tract, that we have approved for use,” said Nancy Williams, director of the Lake George Land Conservancy.

“This project will cleanse millions of gallons of stormwater every year and provide a much needed environmental boost to Lake George, which we all know is our region’s most important environmental as well as economic asset. We salute those who have generously given back to the lake,” said Peter Bauer, executive director of the Fund for Lake George.

The NYS Department of State awarded $152,000 in grants from the Environmental Projection Fund to design the project and $1.2 million for project construction. The West Brook Conservation Initiative partners, including the LGA, the Fund for Lake George, the Lake George Land Conservancy, the village of Lake George, the NYS Department of State and the NYS Department of Transportation are members of the Lake George Watershed Coalition. Formed in 2001 under the direction of the NY Secretary of State, the coalition provides a forum for members to coordinate the complex issues affecting Lake George’s water quality. The nine municipalities and three counties around the Lake, as well as five state agencies and nine nonprofit organizations are members of the coalition.

Bits of Everything

Warren County Lake George Patrols May Go

The Post Star tells us that the Governor’s proposed budget may eliminate Warren County boat patrols on Lake George.

Preview of the Winter Carnival

The Free George previews the annual Lake George winter carnival.

Orion’s Left Shoulder Blowout

A great article on io9 about a nearby star that’s going to go supernova relatively soon.

Friends of Historic Huletts – Speakers 2011

I’m happy to announce that the Friends of Historic Huletts Landing will be bringing in a number of very interesting speakers this upcoming summer. Last year the FHHL sponsored the Lake George Association’s Floating classroom for two visits. This summer the plan is to have a number of speakers bring interesting talks, slideshows and book signings to the Landing for some cultural education and entertainment. The topics will center on ……., you guessed it, ………. local Adirondack history.

There will be three speakers, who will appear on different Saturdays throughout the summer, and I will announce the speakers here in the not too distant future. Stay tuned.

Please Make a Donation

There will be a Basket Party on April 16th, 2011 at 11 a.m. for Gidget Machiski Connors at the Dresden Firehouse. The organizers are looking for basket and monetary donations. Please contact Pam Hobus at 499-0951 if you can help.

Bits of Eerything

Lake George Park Commission Supports Invasive Law

It was reported in the Adirondack Almanack that the Lake George Park Commission is supporting a new law to help control the spread of invasive species.

Gov to Slash State Payroll

The Governor is planning on slashing the state’s payroll to close the projected $11 billion deficit next year, says WNBZ.

A Tale of Two Governors

The NY Post highlights important differences between Governor Cuomo and former Governor Spitzer.

Whitehall School Board Continues Spending

As enrollment falls and the cost per student rises, the Whitehall School board is proposing to spend $500,000 on building improvements, the Whitehall Times reports.

The fact that is not really presented in the article is that, if undertaken, the project has already been paid for by the taxpayers.

This is how the school board does it:

The budget is consistently over estimated and excess taxes received are deposited in “reserve accounts” after approval by the voters. The voters have never been asked, as long as I can remember, if these excess funds should be returned to the taxpayers and the next year’s budget never seems to reflect the overcharges from the prior year. Projects are then proposed where the state reimburses a percentage of the amount expended and claims are made that it will not effect the budget. That’s because we’ve already been overtaxed. When the state reimburses where does the money go? It goes back into the reserve funds.

Governor Patterson made note last year of the large amounts of reserve funds many school districts, like Whitehall, are holding.

In the last couple of years, we’ve added a large addition to the school, added tennis courts to the school, refurbished the pool, refurbished and added a new roof to the gymnasium and now we are proposing to refurbish the auditorium. All the while, enrollment is plummeting and costs per student are rising because of falling enrollment. When you see the school board holding special elections in the middle of winter, you can surmise that their budget excesses where better than they had forecast and they either want voter approval to spend the excess or put in into reserve accounts.

Keep an eye on the propositions that the school board puts forth in May. Excess money that they want approval to put into reserve accounts comes from our checkbooks that they have overcharged.