Leann Says Thanks

Leann asked that I post the following message from her:

Please post a huge thank you to everyone – the opening weekend of the new Casino was a great success. People were very happy and the new Casino “culture” was well received. Now that we’re open, I’ll look forward to seeing everyone again soon. If anyone has any ideas on things they would like to see – please call the Casino anytime: 499-0361

I hope everyone traveling had a safe trip home but know we’ll be working over the next few weeks to make the Casino even nicer for you when you return.

Memorial Day 2009


Photo Courtesy of Arlington National Cemetery

To all those who have served, and their families who have sacrificed, we say thank you.

Bits of Everything

Can Anyone in Albany Balance a Checkbook?

The NY Post reports that the recently passed budget is already projected to be out of balance by as much as $3 billion and that next year’s deficit could grow to $6 billion.

Home is Where They Don’t Pick Your Pocket

Three-time gubernatorial candidate, Tom Golisano, just announced he’s leaving the state of NY. Why? You guessed it. High taxes. The Times Union reports here.

Foster Brook Delta Update

We have received an update from the Lake George Association that the DEC has issued a draft permit to remove the delta from the mouth of Foster Brook. That is the good news. Presently though, the LGA only has partial funding to undertake this project. This means that it will be a little while longer before the project can proceed.

Read the Lake George Association’s update.

Before You Leave – Try These

This is a great piece on becoming an eco-driver. If you do these simple things when driving, you’ll help the environment and save money also.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COvzakAmcF8

To learn more about eco-driving check out this website.

One Hundred Years Ago – 1909

New York Daily Tribune Sunday July 25, 1909

I have searched for a picture of the baseball team(s) for over ten years. I once came close, finding a picture with players with H’s on their uniforms, but it wasn’t the Huletts team. I’m still searching.

Springtime is Golf Time!


The Golf Course Needs You

We received the following flyer from Mr. Quick and wanted to encourage everyone to join for this ’09 season.

There’s no better value than Huletts Golf.

Shut off that TV and get out there and play!

School District Vote Results

Yes     No
Budget – No Tax Increase or Decrease 215     39
Prop # 1 – $184,000 for Two School Buses 197     39
Prop # 2 – $500,000 Surplus to Reserve / No Tax Decrease 188     47
Prop # 3 – $15,000 for the Whitehall Library 197     41


Budget and all 3 Propositions Pass
No Tax Decrease Next Year

Memorial Day Weekend 2009


Just wanted to let everyone know:

The Casino will have an informal “open house” on Thursday, May 21st and will formally open on Friday May 22nd.

The Huletts Landing Property Owners Civic Association meeting will be on Sunday, May 24th at 10 a.m.

What do they say? “Be there or be square!”

John Paul Jones – Hero of the Seas


A rare photograph of President Theodore Roosevelt speaking in front of the remains of Captain John Paul Jones as his body is re-interred on U.S. soil in 1913.

John Paul Jones (July 6, 1747 – July 18, 1792) was America’s first well-known naval commander in the Revolutionary War. He is regarded as the first leader of America’s navy and is known to have uttered the legendary reply about surrendering to a British captain: “I have not yet begun to fight!”

The historical circumstances regarding his burial and the finding of his body over 100 years later are equally as fascinating.

In May 1790, Jones arrived in Paris, where he remained in retirement during the rest of his life. He died of a severe brain tumor and was found lying face-down on his bed in his third-floor Paris apartment, on July 18, 1792. He was buried in Paris at the Saint Louis Cemetery, which belonged to the French royal family. Four years later, France’s revolutionary government sold the property and the cemetery was forgotten. The area was later used as a garden, a place to dispose of dead animals, and a place where gamblers bet on animal fights.

In 1905, Jones’s remains were identified by the US Ambassador to France who had searched for years to track down the body using old copies of Jones’s burial record. Jones’s body was ceremonially removed from his interment in Paris and brought to the United States aboard the USS Brooklyn, escorted by three other cruisers. On approaching the American coastline, seven U.S. Navy battleships joined the procession escorting Jones’s body back to America.

On April 24, 1906, Jones’s coffin was installed in Bancroft Hall at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, following a ceremony presided over by President Theodore Roosevelt. On January 26, 1913, the Captain’s remains were finally re-interred in a magnificent bronze and marble sarcophagus at the Naval Academy Chapel in Annapolis.

Proposition # 2


The School Budget vote and election will be held on Tuesday, May 19th between 12:00 noon and 9:00 p.m. in the large group instruction room in the high-school on Buckley Road.

One of the things to be considered is Proposition # 2. What is this?

Here is the wording of the legal notice which the district ran in the paper.

Proposition # 2
“Resolved that the Board of Education of the Whitehall Central School District is authorized and directed to increase the ultimate amount of the capital reserve fund known as the “Future Renovations to the Elementary and Jr./Sr. High School Buildings Capital Reserve Fund”, which Capital Reserve Fund was approved by the voters on May 20, 2003, from the original sum of $1,500,000 to be increased (to the) sum of $3,500,000. A sum not to exceed $500,000 shall be transferred from the current general fund into this Capital Reserve Fund as part of the increased ultimate amount authorized by the proposition. The original term of such Fund shall remain at ten (10) years from May 20, 2003.”

What is this really all about? It’s about our tax dollars being frivolously wasted.

In 2005, the school spent over $ 2 million dollars from a reserve account to build an addition on the school and tennis courts. Now the district is building up the account again by overcharging the taxpayers on the yearly budget, putting the excess into reserve accounts and planning future construction projects. All the while, enrollment is dropping!

This year $500,000 is proposed to be put away and the reserve account is proposed to grow to $3.5 million. This would seem to indicate that the district is planning on putting $500,000 away for 4 years before they spend it.

When they go to spend it, they will claim it will have no effect on taxes. When in fact, the district has already taken it out of our pockets.

The problem Whitehall is having is that the town is dying because of the school district’s taxing policy. Dresden has actually cut taxes two years in a row, and increased spending at the same time because Dresden has grown its tax base. The school district could do the same; put money in reserve, cut taxes and improve the tax base of the town.

Whitehall is doing exactly the opposite. I keep a list of businesses that have left Whitehall over the last 10 years and every year it continues to grow. Dunkin Donuts left last year.

Sadly the good news is, you can’t miss the problem any more. Recent local headlines about Whitehall all show a town in significant decline; water problems unresolved, a former police chief who couldn’t pass the civil service exam, a low-income subsidized housing center which can’t attract enough residents, the municipal offices being located in a state facility which doesn’t want them there. Do I have to list more?

Dresden on the other hand, and especially Huletts, is growing and thriving because of low spending and wise stewardship. Every year positive change is happening in Huletts.

While the Huletts Current recommends a “NO” vote on Proposition 2 this Tuesday, Whitehall will most likely continue to go down the declining path it has chosen. The real news is that enrollment will plummet in the years ahead and the district will have put itself and the town of Whitehall out of business. They might build a fancy new school with our tax dollars, but at this pace it will be empty because there won’t be any children or businesses left in Whitehall.

The Problem With The Stream Rules: Video

The Lake George Park Commission is scheduled to say something at their May meeting this week, regarding their proposed stream rules.

I took this video a few weeks ago which demonstrates the loophole which I have been talking about.

The proposed regulations don’t accomplish what they set out to accomplish in so far as they exempt State, County and Town highway crews from cutting drainage ditches allowing salt and road runoff to flow directly into streams along their highway right of ways. The rules will effectively take 5000 acres of private property off the tax rolls but will do nothing to stop this.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1xFbJ7iQe8

Saturday Quote

“If you aren’t fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm.”

Vince Lombardi

Bits of Everything

Whitehall School Budget Set For Vote

The Whitehall Times has a good piece on the school budget up for vote next week. I’ll have more analysis over the weekend.

Mammals, Mammals, Everywhere

The Adirondack Almanack has a really interesting piece on the number of mammals in the Adirondacks. It has some great statistics about the moose and bear populations.

NY Post Picks Lake George

Lake George is ranked # 2 in a NY Post survey of inexpensive destinations close to NY City. Then again, you know that!