LGA Supports Senate Invasives Bill

The Lake George Association supports a new bill on invasive species introduced in the New York State Senate by Senator Betty Little, Bill S6826. A companion to the bill introduced earlier this month in the assembly, this new Senate bill will authorize the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) to establish a list of invasive species that will be prohibited from being sold, transported, and introduced in New York State.

“The Lake George community spent over $630,000 in 2011 to fight the Asian clam alone,” said Walt Lender, executive director of the Lake George Association, “and we expect to spend a similar amount in 2012. We need to do everything we can to prevent the very expensive spread of invasive species. This New York law will help us to do that on a statewide basis.”

Assembly members Sweeney and Sayward introduced a similar bill – A9422 – earlier this month.

“The LGA thanks Senator Little, and assembly members Sweeney and Sayward, for taking the lead on this important legislation,” said Emily DeBolt, LGA Director of Education. “Many of our neighboring states throughout New England have already established laws of this kind, including Vermont, Connecticut and Massachusetts. It is essential that New York State join them so we can work together regionally to help prevent the spread and introduction of invasive species,” she said.

Once introduced, invasive species are expensive to eradicate and manage, and threaten valuable industries in New York State. As a nation we spend $167 billion each year to address only the economic impact of invasive species. In addition to significant ecological and health impacts, invasive species can prevent access to waterways important for the fishing industry, and can invade forests and farms, resulting in the loss of timber and crops.

Bits of Everything

I haven’t done these in a while so they’ve piled up.

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NCPR: Huletts May Get New Congressman thru Redistricting

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Adirondack Almanack: 1932 Death Mystery in Hague

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Whitehall’s Roma Sold, Will Reopen Under New Name

The Post Star tell us about the Waters family, the new owners of what was the Roma.

Committee of Lake George Park Commission Hopes to Test Decontamination Program

The Post Star reports here.

Superbowl Champs to Return to Albany

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The Hogs Are Running Wild

Invasive feral hogs appear on the eastern side of the Adirondacks, so says NCPR.

Kateri to be Canonized in October

October 21st is the canonization date for the young Native American who lived in the Mohawk Valley in the 17th century, reports the Times Union.

Another American Captures Gold in Lake Placid

Katie Uhlaender won at the skeleton world championships Friday on Mount Van Hoevenberg in Lake Placid. Read ESPN to learn more.

Who Represents the Students?

New York State spends more per student than any other state, but ranks only 38th in graduation rates. It’s obvious that our system is failing. And the reason it’s failing is because Albany has cared more about the business of education — contracts, salaries, and benefits — than they’ve cared about the needs of our children.

In Governor Cuomo’s State of the State address, he noted that all the players in the education establishment — school boards, principals, teachers and even bus drivers and maintenance staff — have lobbyists in Albany. Everyone that is… except the students. That’s why the Governor has pledged to take on a second job this year: lobbyist for the students.

Inspired by the Governor’s remarks, a group of East Harlem high school students filmed their own video about what this means to them: “My Governor, My Lobbyist,” was recently featured in the New York Times.

Sad but true!

Washington Post Applauds Governor Cuomo on School Reform

Governor Cuomo noted in his State of the State address that everyone in the education system in Albany from bus drivers to school board members has a lobbyist – everyone that is except for the ones who need it the most, our students.

“Our schools are not an employment program,” Governor Coumo has stated in the past, according to the New York Times.

This explains why more time has been spent in Albany worrying about the “business of education” — contracts, salaries, and benefits — than worrying about the children. This must be changed and our priorities need to be reversed.

That’s why Governor Cuomo has now declared that he will become the lobbyist for the students. And his goal will be to make major changes in our state’s education system, including shifting the focus in Albany to improving student performance and school accountability.

An important part of this reform is adopting a real teacher evaluation system. In 2010, New York was awarded a $700 million grant from the federal government that required teacher evaluations. But the state has failed to produce the system, and the schools are now at risk of losing this Federal aid.

The process is now bogged down in a lawsuit between the education unions and the State Education Department. To break the logjam, the Governor has announced that the State Education Department and the unions have 30 days to agree on a new effective teacher evaluation system. If they don’t, the Governor will propose an evaluation system in his 30 day budget amendments. Schools will be given one year to implement the system or risk forfeiting increases in education aid.

On Sunday the Washington Post praised Governor Cuomo saying he should be applauded because, “he has now set his sights on shaking up an educational bureaucracy that is better at spending money than serving children.”

Please read the entire Washington Post editorial here.

Bits of Everything

Whitehall School Board Takes Early Stance on Tax Levy

The Post Star reports that the the school board doesn’t want taxes to exceed the new property tax cap. How about decreasing taxes by the enrollment loss?

NY Post: What Cuomo Must Do in 2012

Inside Albany looks at five things Governor Cuomo must do in 2012.

New Washington County Officials Sworn In

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Bits of Everything

NY Times: Adirondacks Warming?

The NY Times follows Jerry Jenkins, an ecologist with the Wildlife Conservation Society.

Hard frosts that a generation ago came in mid-September now arrive in October. Lake Champlain, a huge freshwater body that divides New York and Vermont, once froze over completely every winter, but now remains open in the middle some years.

Groups Look at Lake George Dredging Differently

The Post Star describes the debate.

Cell Service Almost Complete for Lake George

The Lake George Mirror reports that the entire basin has almost complete coverage.

Old Ticonderoga Hospital to Get New Use

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Teddy Roosevelt’s Home Set for Rehab

Yahoo and the AP take a look Roosevelt’s classic home.

The Strange Story of the Lost Dauphin of France and the North Country

A painting of Marie Antoinette with her son, Louis-Charles, on her lap. (circa 1787)

At the time of the French Revolution, the son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, was known as Louis-Charles, Dauphin of France. He was abducted on August 10, 1792, when only eight years old, as the French revolution waged on.

When his parents were executed for treason under the first republic, the newly orphaned eight year old Louis-Charles would have been the nominal successor to the abolished throne.

He was imprisoned in the custody of a shoemaker named Antoine Simon. The Dauphin was kept in confinement and treated with great cruelty until he is said to have died in June 1795. He would have been 10 years old at the time of his death and was buried in an unmarked grave.

Rumors quickly spread that the body buried was not that of Louis-Charles and that he had been spirited away alive by sympathizers.

He had never been officially crowned as king, nor ruled. However, he was called by his royalist supporters Louis VII and the future Louis XVIII’s adoption of the title Louis XVIII rather than Louis XVII only added to the mystery.

Against this background, there is a legend that the Dauphin was taken secretly from his dungeon and brought clandestinely to northern New York, where there was a sizable population of Frenchmen still loyal to the monarchy. This strange story has been the subject of serious historical speculation for many years.

In the middle of the 1800’s, the Rev. John H. Hanson, an Episcopal priest, wrote a logical account of how a certain Eleazer Williams, an Episcopal priest of the North Country who died in 1858, might have been the lost Dauphin.

Williams was thought to be one of 12 children of Thomas Williams and grandson of Eunice Williams of Deerfield, Mass. who was one of the inhabitants captured by the Indians in the massacre of that village. Supposedly, eleven of Thomas Williams offspring bore unmistakable evidence of Indian heritage while Eleazer did not. Also, no record was ever made of Eleazer’s birth.

Williams himself claimed to have no knowledge of his own life before the age of twelve or thirteen. By his own account, he served in the War of 1812 as a scout and spy for American forces on the northern border of New York. After the war, he became an Episcopal missionary and was sent to the Oneida Tribe of upper New York State. He proved to be successful there, converting many of the Oneida to the Episcopal faith.

When the French monarchy was restored in 1814, hundreds of claimants came forward. Would-be royal heirs continued to appear across Europe for decades afterward.

In 1841, Prince de Joinville the younger son of Louis Phillip, the reigning King of France came to the United States. Williams would claim that the Prince had offered him a vast estate if only Williams would renounce his claim to the throne which he said he refused to do. The Prince denied this story as soon as he heard of it, saying that his only interest in Williams was as an Indian missionary.

In the February 1853, issue of Putnam’s Magazine, the Rev. Hanson, an Episcopal minister, published an article entitled “Have We A Bourbon Among Us?” That article also supported Williams’ claims. Serious historians immediately refuted Hanson’s speculations, but many others believed him and, for a while, Williams was something of a minor celebrity.

Williams died in the village of Hogansburg, NY on August 28, 1858.

The story did not die until 2000 when DNA testing proved beyond doubt that Louis-Charles had indeed died in prison.

Philippe-Jean Pelletan was one of the doctors who attended Louis-Charles shortly before his death and subsequently performed the autopsy. He removed the heart and this was not interred with the rest of Louis-Charles’s body. Philippe-Jean Pelletan tried to return Louis-Charles’s heart to Louis XVIII and Charles X, both of whom could not bring themselves to believe the heart to be that of their nephew.

The heart was stolen by one of Pelletan’s students, who confessed to the theft on his deathbed and asked his wife to return it to Pelletan. Instead, she sent it to the Archbishop of Paris, where it stayed until the Revolution of 1830. By 1975, it was being kept in a crystal vase at the royal crypt in outside Paris, the burial place of Louis-Charles’s parents and other members of France’s royal family.

In 2000 DNA testing was performed on the heart using samples from Marie-Antoinette, her sisters, their mother, Maria Theresa, and two living direct descendants in strict maternal line. The tests proved that the heart was that of Louis-Charles. It was buried in the Basilica on June 8, 2004 and forever dispelled the claims of the North Country preacher named Eleazer Williams.

(Compiled from online and print resources.)

LGA Testifies at State Assembly Hearing

Walt Lender, executive director of the Lake George Association, testifies at a New York State Assembly hearing on invasive species on Tuesday, September 13th. Mr. Lender spoke out in support of laws to prohibit and regulate the transport and sale of invasive species, both terrestrial and aquatic.

Lake George Association Executive Director Walt Lender testified for a state assembly hearing on invasive species on Tuesday. The hearing reviewed how aquatic and terrestrial invasive species are introduced in New York State, methods to combat the species already present, and the effectiveness of state funding, including Environmental Protection Fund monies.

While environmental groups across the nation spend millions trying to combat invasive species from destroying our natural habitats, many of these same species, including the Asian clam, continue to be sold and transported legally in the state, and the nation.

‘‘We request and strongly support the passage of laws to prohibit and regulate the transport and sale of invasive species in New York State,’’ concluded Lender in his testimony. Lender described the effort and expense of the Asian clam eradication project in Lake George, which topped $500,000 in only one year. He also explained the ongoing expense of invasive species management on the Lake, including $3 million spent since 1995 by several groups to manage Eurasian watermilfoil, $50,000 spent annually on the LGA’s Lake Steward program, and thousands more spent each year on education and outreach efforts. Lender stated, ‘‘If laws were in place prohibiting the transport and sale of invasives, some of this spending might have been unnecessary.’’

Lender also requested that additional funds be set aside for invasive species management in Lake George and statewide. ‘‘In the case of the Asian clam fight on Lake George for example, local governments and environmental groups contributed over $400,000, in addition to state funding. But invasive species are not just a Lake George issue. They are a statewide and nationwide threat,’’ Lender added.

Other testimonies were provided by Michael Goehle, US Fish and Wildlife Service; Chris Amato, assistant commissioner of the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation; Troy Weldy, director of ecological management for The Nature Conservancy; Terry Martino, Adirondack Park Agency, and Judy Littrell, NYS Association of Conservation Districts, among others.

The hearing was sponsored by NYS Assemblyman Robert Sweeney, chair of the Assembly Standing Committee on Environmental Conservation. Mr. Lender was invited to testify by Assemblywoman Teresa Sayward. The New York State Invasive Species Council was created in 2008 to coordinate among multiple state entities and partners in addressing the environmental and economic threats of invasive species. The council prepared a report to the legislature and the governor to recommend lists of prohibited, regulated, unregulated species plus a procedure for the review of unlisted non-native species. ‘‘Two pieces of this suggested legislation have stalled,’’ said LGA Education Director Emily DeBolt. ‘‘We are hopeful that this hearing will help get things moving forward,’’ she added.

Bits of Everything

No NY Giants in Albany This Summer

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Fort Ticonderoga to Show Artwork Collection

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New Lake George Boaters Guide

A must-buy for the boaters out there, from their Facebook page.

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Adirondack Land Deal Dispute

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Glens Falls Man Drowns in Lake George

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NY Post: Education $ Poorly Spent

The NY Post explores how the education establishment wastes money. It also reports that the fine print on the property tax cap is causing one backer to object here.