This is a public announcement from the Lake George Mirror. The notice says the hearing will be in Whitehall but it’s actually scheduled for the Dresden town hall.
FHHL Speakers – 2011
The Friends of Historic Huletts (FHHL) will be bringing in three guest speakers during the summer of 2011 to speak on interesting, historic, topics of interest.
With today being a cold winter’s day, this is a perfect opportunity to announce the first talk.
Adirondack Ice, a Cultural and Natural History
By Caperton Tissot
Ice has determined the course of Adirondack history in many surprising ways. Ms. Tissot will present a slideshow, talk and book signing highlighting the cultural and natural history of Adirondack ice based on her recently published book. The book traces the evolution of that influence, touching on everything from ice industries and transportation to recreation and accidents.
Caperton Tissot is an author whose fascination with regional history has led to the publication of two books: History between the Lines, Women’s Lives and Saranac Lake Customs and Adirondack Ice, a Cultural and Natural History.
“In Adirondack Ice, a Cultural and Natural History, author Caperton Tissot illuminates the history of our relationship with a defining element of winter. Valued and reviled, ice is an unavoidable fact of life in the Adirondack Mountains. As Tissot points out, it has ‘substantially determined the natural, economic, and cultural history of the North Country, yet it is an often overlooked and underappreciated influence. Filled with surprises, Adirondack Ice is a fascinating look at the many ways ice touches our lives in the Adirondack Mountains.”
Laura Rice,
Chief Curator, The Adirondack Museum, Blue Mountain Lake
More information on specific dates and times will be announced by the Friends of Historic Huletts as we get closer to summer. Plan on being at all three, you’ll be glad you did.
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.
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.
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.
Interview with Congressman Chris Gibson
Congressman Chris Gibson was recently sworn in as Huletts Landing’s new congressional representative. I thought he would be an interesting person to interview, so I contacted his staff and they were able to accommodate my request. Today, I had a chance to interview Congressman Gibson by phone. Below is my interview with him.
The voters spoke very loudly on November 2nd. What would you say is the message they wanted to convey by electing you?
“I think the message the voters wanted to send was really quite simple, and I break it down into three categories:
1.) They want the focus to be on creating jobs. They want Congress to be empathetic to those who create jobs and they want the impediments to growth removed. The election was also a clear repudiation of health care reform.
2.) They want to balance the budget and rein in spending.
3) They want to protect our freedom. They know that the United States is different. We’ve always been the “land of the free,” and they want the United States to stay this way. This protection not only means from foreign enemies, but it also goes deeper in that they want protection from laws that take away our freedoms.
I must also say that the election was a testimony to the over 1200 volunteers who worked so tirelessly to bring about this result. We overcame a significant spending disadvantage because so many volunteers knocked on doors, made phone calls, and spoke to neighbors.”
For the record, what committees have you been appointed to and what are the important things that these committees will be doing over the next few months?
“I have been appointed to two committees; Agriculture and Armed Services.
In regards to Agriculture, I may be biased, but I believe the farmers in the district are the hardest working, most honorable farmers anywhere. Their issues regard profitability. Taxes, regulations and healthcare costs are driving their profitability way down. I have spoken to Chairman Lucas of Oklahoma and, during the next 6 months, the committee will conduct oversight hearings into the impediments farmers face. We are going to look at how specific EPA regulations are affecting farmers. I love to go for climbs in beautiful bucolic upstate New York. However, I think we can all agree that “spilled milk” is not “spilled oil.” The EPA now wants to regulate dust levels on farms. This is part of life, and these regulations are now completely out of balance. We’re going to be looking at these things over the next 6 months.
Looking beyond that, the Agriculture Committee will be doing the Farm Bill Reauthorization in 2012, and I’ll be reaching out to farmers throughout the 10 counties that the 20th District covers to see what advocacy they need. I’ll have an advisory committee made up of farmers from every county in the district to hear their concerns.
In regards to the Armed Services Committee, there are three issues that we’ll be looking at closely. First, we’ll be conducting oversight to support of the wars we’re involved in, while also bringing these wars to a rapid and successful conclusion. Secondly, we’ll be having hearings on the existential and ongoing threat posed by al-Qaeda. We have to always protect our cherished way of life here in the United States. Finally, we have to look 15 to 20 years from now and see that our military is organized in a way consistent to a Republic. We are not an empire, and our military needs to reflect the characteristics of our Republic.”
Now that the House has voted to repeal Obama-care, what are the next votes you would like to make after the repeal vote?
“I would like to vote quickly on two measures. The first one is one I have co-sponsored called the “REINS” Act. Any time a bureaucratic agency makes a new federal regulation that has an annual cost to our economy of $100 million or more, that regulation needs to go to the Congress for an up or down vote. Right now a lot of people are frustrated by agencies that have no accountability. Congress sends them letters but they’re not accountable. If a regulation is going to place costs on our society, why not have Congress vote on it? I think it’s a good idea and I would like to see it voted on quickly.
The next vote I would like to see is a repeal of the 1099 requirement for small business. We need to repeal this requirement and get it to the President’s desk quickly.”
The citizens of Washington County are toiling under some very burdensome property taxes right now. Medicaid is the largest driver in the growth of state spending and new federal mandates will expand Medicaid eligibility. What will you try to do on the federal level to help rein in these costs and help taxpayers toiling under such a heavy burden?
“To begin, we need to repeal the current health care law and replace it with a more patient-centric option. The current law is going to drastically increase Medicaid enrollment. We also need to have comprehensive medical liability reform. It’s an issue where health care impacts property taxes because the states pass it down to the counties.”
Your military service to our nation is well documented. What have we done well in Iraq and what should we be concentrating on doing to win in Afghanistan?
“That is a very good question. To begin, we need to look at why we succeeded in Iraq. The reasons are all inter-related and the individual reasons can’t be isolated from each other. But I would say there were three reasons why we succeeded in Iraq. To begin, we committed the resources to win the fight against the insurgency. This began to allow the civil institutions to take root. Secondly, the Suni’s realized that it was in their best interests to work through the institutions of civil society and the government began addressing legitimate Suni concerns. Finally, the joint special operations task force targeted al-Qaeda in Iraq, and the people really began to see a clear distinction. There were areas in Iraq that al-Qaeda controlled and the people saw what that would bring. For instance al-Qaeda controlled the Dil’al river valley and they instituted Sharia law there. This brought with it things which people abhorred. Cutting off people’s fingers who smoked, making 14 and 15 year old girls join harems. Stuff that gave the people a clear choice: you could stand with the government or stand with al-Qaeda and the people turned against them.
Going forward in Afghanistan, there are some things that are similar and some things that are different. To begin, Iraq had a middle class and some sense of nationalism. We need to train the Afghanistan security forces and partner with them to help them secure their country. They will have to be responsible for their own security at some point. We have to also cultivate civilian agencies to build efficacy and legitimacy and the government has to implement strong anti-corruption measures. It’s a fight that can be won and Iraq, in some ways, can serve as a guide.”
Finally, I would like to extend an invitation for you to visit Huletts Landing sometime during the summer. Please feel free to bring your family and stop by for a visit.
“Please tell everyone that I have heard so much about beautiful Huletts Landing and I will really try to stop by in the summer.”
A Quiet Winter Day
School District News
It’s the middle of the dead of winter, and what does the Whitehall school district decide to do?
If you guessed hold a special election, outside the normal budget process where “unreserved, unappropriated” funds (translated overcharged property taxes) are spent to buy more school buses, you are correct.
In all the years I’ve followed the machinations of the Whitehall school board, they have never held a vote to return overcharged property taxes to the taxpayers.
Legal Notice
Whitehall Central School District
Whitehall, New York 12887
NOTICE IS GIVEN that a special meeting of the qualified voters of the Whitehall Central School District, Washington County, New York, will be held in the Large Group Instruction Room in the Junior-Senior High School Building on Buckley Road in the Town of Whitehall, New York, on January 26, 2011, between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 8:00 o’clock P.M. during which hours the polls will be opened to vote by paper ballot upon the following item:
RESOLVED that the Board of Education of the Whitehall Central School District is hereby authorized to purchase one, 65 passenger school bus and one 28 passenger school bus for the use of said School District, the estimated maximum cost thereof, being a total estimated maximum cost of $152,000 that such sum or so much thereof as may be necessary, taken from the unreserved, unappropriated fun balance.
by order of,
Martha Basque
Districk Clerk
LGA Issues Ice Safety Tips
The Lake George Association has published its 2011 Ice Recreation Safety Tips. People who plan to venture out on Lake George ice this winter are urged to follow these tips. Pressure ridges and areas of weak ice present dangerous hazards to those unfamiliar with the Lake.
According to Walt Lender, LGA’s executive director, “Most of the winter emergencies on the Lake are due to complacency. Before heading out, we urge everyone to follow these safety guidelines.”
ICE SAFETY TIPS TO LIVE BY
Always check the ice before you go out on it. Use an ice auger, ice pick, spud bar or a cordless drill to make holes. New, clear, bluish-black ice is stronger than ice that is white or bubble-filled.
Ice does not form uniformly. If ice along the shore is cracked, stay off. Lake George has sub-surface currents that also make the thickness of the ice variable.
Avoid ice that is honeycombed or piled up.
Ice is thinner near running water. Avoid shoreline areas near stream channels or ice eaters on docks.
Stay away from shoals and other underwater hazards as the ice above them is thinner.
Once on the ice, do not congregate in large groups, build a fire, or drive a large vehicle out on the ice.
When snowmobiling at night, don’t “out-drive” your headlight. Give yourself time to spot and avoid open water, pressure ridges and patches of weak ice.
Do not drink. Alcohol increases your chances for hypothermia, impairs your judgment and slows your reaction time.
What to bring:
– Another person. Never go out on the ice alone. Keep a good distance apart as you move about.
– Dress in layers, with a hat and gloves. Wool and fleece are great insulators. Wear a wind- and water-proof outer layer. Top it all off with a Personal Flotation Device.
– A length of rope, a pair of ice picks, or a pair of screwdrivers tied together with a few feet of strong cord. You can use these to pull yourself up and onto the ice.
– Your cell phone in case of emergency.
– A sled (instead of a backpack) if you are bringing along heavy gear. (A sled will help to distribute the weight more evenly across the ice.)
If you fall through:
– Try not to panic.The cold shock that makes you hyperventilate will subside within 1-3 minutes. Get your breathing under control and stay above water. You are more likely to die from drowning than hypothermia.
– Remove any extraneous objects that will weigh you down. (skis, snowmobile helmet, skates, etc.)
– Try to get out from the direction that you came in. Place your hands and arms on the unbroken surface of the ice.
– Begin kicking your feet to get your body horizontal. Then, pull yourself along the ice until you are out of the hole. Be slow and deliberate to conserve your strength and body heat.
– If the ice breaks, move forward and try again.
– Once you are lying on the ice, DO NOT stand up. Roll away from the hole, then crawl following your footsteps back toward shore. Don’t stand until the hole is well behind you. You want to distribute your weight evenly over a wide area to prevent going through again.
– If you can’t pull yourself out within 10 minutes from the time that you went in, cease all attempts. At this point, you need to extend the time period in which someone else could rescue you by conserving body heat. The body loses heat much faster in water than it does in air, so get as much of your body out of the water as possible. Keep your forearms flat and still on the ice. Hopefully, your clothing will freeze to the ice, possibly preventing you from going under, even if you become unconscious. It is possible to survive for up to two hours before succumbing to hypothermia. In other words, if you stay composed and keep above water, you have almost a two-hour window of opportunity to be rescued.
If someone else falls through:
– If you are on the ice, DO NOT run up to the hole.
– If you are on shore, DO NOT run onto the ice.
– Try to keep the victim calm.
– Call 911.
– Look for people nearby who can help.
– Use an item on shore to throw or extend to the victim that will allow you to pull them out of the water. (Rope, ladder, branch, extension cord, skis, jumper cable, etc.) You can also form a human chain with people lying flat on the ice to distribute the weight as evenly as possible.
– Once the victim is safely on shore, they may seem to be in relatively good condition. However, a potentially fatal condition called “after drop” can occur soon afterward. Cold blood that has been pooled in the body’s extremities starts to circulate again as the body warms up. At this point, the body begins to shiver violently in an attempt to raise the temperature again.
– Never rub the victim’s arms, hands, legs or feet, as this could cause or exacerbate the “after drop.”
– Never give the victim alcohol or caffeine. They restrict blood vessels and slow circulation.
– If possible, exchange wet clothes for dry clothes, wrap the victim in a blanket and get the victim out of the elements.
The Lake George Association would also like to remind the public to remember to remove any debris or garbage created out on the Lake ice, as once the ice melts, it will sink into the water.
Gibson Sworn into 112th Congress
Washington, DC – Congressman Chris Gibson (NY-20) was officially sworn into the 112th Congress on Wednesday by House Speaker John Boehner, on the floor of the House of Representatives. A private ceremony with the Speaker followed.
“I was honored and humbled to take the Oath of Office today and begin my service to the 20th Congressional District of New York. I was afforded the distinct privilege by the people of the 20th Congressional District to represent them in Congress, and I look forward to utilizing this opportunity to ensure that the policies the federal government put in place in Washington, DC reflect the will of my constituents and the American people,” said Congressman Gibson. “I hope that every constituent will take the opportunity to contact me and my staff with their position on pending legislation in Congress and with any issue on which we may be of help.”
Attending the swearing-in with the Congressman were his wife, Mary Jo, and his three children, Katie, Maggie, and Connor. Congressman Gibson will be maintaining offices in Washington, DC; Saratoga Springs, NY; Glens Falls, NY; and Kinderhook, New York.
Cell Phone Tower Update
When I posted the top story for Huletts in 2010 last week, I mentioned that I had spoken to Adirondack Park Agency staff who gave me an update on the two competing cell tower proposals.
Today I received this notice in the mail. While it is dated November 10, 2010, I just received it today.
It is an “Application Completed Notice” for the Independent Towers (Vanderplaat) proposal. It gives a good, technical description of that proposed project.
Top News Story of Huletts: 2010
While I’ve been blogging here on the Huletts Current I’ve gotten in the habit of posting what I consider to be the top news story of Huletts Landing from the past year.
This is entirely my own opinion and while others may disagree, I’ve found it to be a fun exercise which a few have told me they enjoy.
So for 2010, the Huletts Current declares the top story from Huletts Landing to be ………..
The dueling cell phone tower proposals.
In one corner we have the AT&T / New Cingular Wireless proposal (otherwise known as the firehouse proposal), which has now been under review by the Adirondack Park Agency since December 28, 2009.
The Huletts Landing Volunteer Fire Company proposed siting a cell tower on its property in late December 2009.
The project is briefly described as follows: “installation of a 100 foot stealth monopole with three flush mounted antenna centered at 84 feet in height with room for two additional carriers to be located below. The monopole will be installed behind the new firehouse with equipment to be located inside the firehouse”.
In the other corner, we have the Independent Towers proposal (otherwise known as the VanderPlaat proposal), which has recently been deemed complete by the APA. The public comment period expired on December 2, 2010. (Which I just became aware of this past week because the APA never sent me a notice.) This is usually the last step before a permit is issued.
This would be for a 90 foot tall monopole which would be located back from the road on a 60 ft by 60 ft wooded area. It also would have room for a total of three carriers.
In a conversation I had with APA staff today, this is the current status of the two proposals. After performing a “balloon test” on both sites, (this is where a balloon is floated at the approximate height of the proposed tower), the conclusive evidence is that the Independent Towers (VanderPlaat) site will have a lower visual impact and have a greater signal range. AT&T is suspending their application until a decision is finalized on the Independent Towers application. At this time, the APA has determined that the Independent Towers application is complete. A final decision is expected by the first week in February.
So no matter where you stand on the issue of a cell phone tower or which proposal you favor, the Huletts Current deems this the biggest story of Huletts Landing from 2010.
Can you hear me now? Maybe in 2011?????
Some End of Autumn Pictures
Sign Time
Looking up from the Black Mountain trail head from Pike Brook Road.