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News

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Caucuses tonight and tomorrow night

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

All three local political parties have caucuses scheduled for tonight and tomorrow night.

The Republican Party, which was originally slated to hold its village and town caucus to nominate candidates for the fall election this evening at the Aaron Maddox Hall on July 7, has village and town political caucuses tonight- Wednesday, July 14- beginning at 6p.m. at the community room of the Emergency Services Building on Santa Clara Ave.

The first caucus that evening will ask party members who live in the village to nominate people for the three two-year posts up for grabs in November: mayor and two trustee positions.

Following the village caucus will be the town Republican caucus where nominations will be sought for the three open town positions this fall: supervisor and two council posts. All three are four-year terms.

The village caucus will be chaired by Councilwoman Tracy Luton and the town one will be chaired by Lidia Kriwox, local Republican Party chair.

Also tonight the Town Democrat Party will host its caucus at 7p.m. at the Aaron Maddox Hall.

Party members will endeavor to nominate candidates for the three town posts coming vacant: supervisor and two council positions.

That caucus will be chaired by John Quinn, who currently serves as town councilman and deputy supervisor.

The party hasn’t scheduled a village caucus at this point.

The Tupper Lake Conservative Party which held village and town caucuses one week apart last month, will redo its village caucus, but not the town one, on Thursday, July 15 at 7p.m. at 53 Cedar Street. Nominations will be sought for mayor and two trustee posts.

There was apparently a procedural challenge to the Franklin County Board of Elections office in Malone to the first village caucus in the days following it.

At the first village caucus businessman Eric Shaheen defeated Mayor Paul Maroun by several votes and won the party's nomination. Also nominated that night were former Trustee David “Haji” Maroun and Deputy Mayor Leon LeBlanc for the two open trustee spots this fall.

At the Conservative Party's July 15 village caucus, all four of those candidates are expected to be nominated and a run-off for mayor is expected.

Mayor Maroun and Eric Shaheen will both be seeking the Republican Party's nod for mayor at tonight’s GOP village caucus.

Mr. LeBlanc and David Maroun are also expected to be nominated for the trustee positions.

Contractor Clint Hollingsworth, who won the Conservative Party's nomination for town supervisor last month, is expected to seek the GOP nomination tonight.

Rick Donah and Tim Larkin, who won the Conservative nomination last month, are expected to throw their names in the hat for the two town councilman posts which come vacant in November. Those positions are currently held by Mike Dechene and John Quinn.

Sunset Series continues Monday

Dan McClelland

The Tupper Arts Sunset Stage series continues this week with the Blind Owl Band from Saranac Lake on Monday, with their “freight train string music.” On July 19, Geo Beat will be providing a taste of the south, with their Jazz and Latin music, featuring guitar, vibraphone, and percussion. The hard-driving Tupper Lake-based classic rock group Hammer Lok takes the stage on July 26.

The Summer Sunset Series is open to the public and free. Tupper Arts recommends bringing lawn chairs or blankets. All current New York State COVID-19 protocols for outdoor performance events will be followed for the safety of the performers and audience members.

Class of 2021 graduation slated for Thursday at L.P. Quinn

Dan McClelland

By Rich Rosentreter

The Tupper Lake High School Class of 2021 will have its graduation ceremony Thursday at the L.P. Quinn Elementary School parking lot.

The ceremony will begin at 6:30 p.m. and since it is outdoors, those attending are not required to wear masks. There will be limited space for vehicles in the parking lot, so attendees are asked to bring only passenger cars and pickup trucks - trucks will be required to park in the back row of the lot. Once the ceremony begins, attendees can tune into the proceedings on their radios at 99.9. Attendees who are driving are asked to come via Stetson Road instead of Park Street as to keep traffic moving in one direction.

A professional photographer will also be taking photos of each senior as they accept their diploma and sometime following graduation, the photographs will be provided to the families free of charge.

For those unable to attend, the graduation ceremony will also be streamed live on the school’s YouTube and Facebook pages and also https://video.ibm.com/channel/geiSeUtnW9G.

As of press time, the forecast for Thursday is sunny and 77 degrees, but in case of inclement weather, seniors will join their families in their vehicles.

Mac’s Safe Ride getting ready to roll again

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

After a hiatus of 18 months because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Tupper Lake’s very popular Mac’s Safe Ride program is set to resume in coming weeks.

“We weren’t able to operate during the pandemic because of Center for Disease Control and state guidelines, concerns for our volunteers health, and many other reasons,” Vivian Smith, who directs the program, told the Free Press Thursday. “Like almost every other business, we were shuttered by the pandemic.”

“We are hoping to be back in operation, starting the July 4 weekend.”

For about six years the volunteer-run program has driven local residents and visitors to and from local bars and house parties, where alcohol is consumed, to make sure everyone arrives home safely at the close of every Friday and Saturday evening. It has also operated during a number of public events that aren’t on Friday or Saturday evenings.

It is widely supported by many local businesses and their logos adorn the front, sides and back of the 2015 Ford 12-passenger van, acknowledging that support and the important mission of Mac’s Safe Ride.

Each evening that Mac’s rolls, in the vehicle are two people- a driver and a navigator.

Mrs. Smith said that before their van can be put into service again, some routine repairs like new brakes are needed. The vehicle has sat idle for most of the pandemic. There are also two Ford recalls that must be addressed in coming weeks. “They are important recalls and we’re waiting on Ford for the parts!”

Mrs. Smith said their vehicle is in otherwise great shape. “Larry at LeRoy’s Auto Sales got it for us as a very inexpensive price.”

To be successful as they resume their operation the board of directors of Mac’s is going to need new and returning drivers and navigators.

“We’ve spread the word via social media that we need help and we’ve seen a nice response from people. But we always need more volunteers!”

The board of directors is comprised of 13 local volunteers. Each board member is required to recruit enough volunteer drivers and navigators for their month. -And sometimes that can be a challenge.

Vivian said the board members have decided to add some flexibility to the operation and to take some of the scheduling pressure off them.

“Before we use to keep our van on the road every Friday and Saturday and during every special event where alcohol is consumed...no matter what.”

The board members have come to the collective realization that there will be some evenings when there won’t be people to run the van. So the service may not be available to the public every Friday and Saturday.

Another change is that from now on all the responsibility for finding volunteers to fill the month will not just fall on the one board member's shoulders. Others on the board will try to help, according to the chairwoman.

Another step the board has adopted to make it easier on volunteers as it looks to resume service are shorter hours. Hours have been trimmed from 8p.m. to 3p.m. every Friday and Saturday to 9p.m. to 2p.m.

“It’s very tough on volunteers to be out there from 8p.m. to 3p.m.” Most times volunteers don’t get to their homes until 4a.m., and you don’t fall asleep until 5a.m. so it’s very tough on them the next day.”

Vivian said another rule that has been amended to help the board members is one which used to require a board member to take the vehicle out if a volunteer driver can’t be found for a certain evening.

Now they will post a calendar on Facebook when Mac’s will be running and people who anticipate calling for ride on a certain evening to first check the calendar to make sure Mac’s is in operation. “If you are planning to go out that evening, check our Facebook page first to make sure we’re running.”

“We’re not going to be so stressed trying to find drivers and navigators,” she said, admitting many of the board members and volunteers were getting burned out before the pandemic.

The bottom line is there may be some nights when Mac’s won’t run because of the lack of volunteers, she explained. “Hopefully volunteers will step up so that won't happen!”

Mrs. Smith and her board members are getting prepared for their big annual fundraiser- their golf tournament at the Tupper Lake Golf Course on August 8.

In past years the event has also featured silent auctions and other money-making events. This year it will be tailored down a bit to give the community’s very supportive businesses a break. Consequently organizers won’t be canvassing the business community for gifts and prizes for the August 8 benefit.

“People of this community are so amazing. I can’t believe how generous everyone is whenever we ask for help!”

Mrs. Smith can be contacted at (518) 651-6178.

The number to call for a ride to an alcohol-serving place or a ride home is (518) 302-3282.

The only time that number is answered is during the hours of operation. It will now go dark at 2a.m.

All rides are free but tips are always appreciated, not necessary but appreciated, according to Vivian.

Riverpigs ready for opening day on June 12; face the N.H. Wild

Dan McClelland

By Rich Rosentreter

The Tupper Lake Riverpigs baseball team, and the village, are ready to start its first season beginning with opening day on June 12 against the New Hampshire Wild, and those involved are eager to see the team hit the diamond and play ball.

Eddie Gonzalez, the president and director of the Empire Baseball League and Haji Maroun, who led the effort to bring the franchise here and who chairs the “Keepers of the Diamond” committee, recently discussed the upcoming season with the Free Press.

In recent years the village board has devoted considerable expense to improving the local playing field and Mr. Maroun and his committee of volunteers have devoted hundreds of man hours to that effort. The members of the “Keepers of the Diamond” group includes the Skiff brothers- Jay and Rick, Trustee Ron LaScala, Jed Dukette, Tom Callaghan, Paul Moeller and Royce Cole.

The Keepers of the Diamond raised through donations the $30,000 that has been spent so far on improving the local stadium, including the $8,000 that went for new infield sod two years ago and the $22,000 for the professional grade clay last summer.

This season there will be four teams competing in the league in this region - the Riverpigs, Wild, Saranac Lake Surge and Plattsburgh Thunderbirds. The Puerto Rico Islanders and Georgia Rhinos are also members of the league, however, those two teams, because of the travel and coming back from COVID, did not meet the timeline after the restrictions started slowing down, therefore will be inactive for this season, according to Mr. Gonzalez.

The league

The Empire League is not a major league baseball league, not an affiliate nor a pro-federation league, Mr. Gonzalez said.

“It’s a truly, truly an independent rookie-level baseball league. It’s focus is not on what team is going to do good or what team is going to be the best. The focus is more on developing young talent out of college or rookie-level pros that get released so that we can develop them and get them ready so that MLB can pick them back up or we can send them up to the higher federation pro leagues that are MLB-affiliated,” he said, adding that some of those are the Atlantic League, Frontier League, the American Association and the Pioneer League. “These are certified minor leagues, that, when there’s a need, when guys get injured, they look into our league as a feeder league to feed players to them. We’re kind of like a first step into pro baseball. We help them get to move up in the ranks.”

With that said, the league truly follows the premise that “It’s not whether you win or lose, but how you play the game.”

“Every game is important, your statistics and how you progress is very important, so yes, we want the team and the individual to do good, but ultimately we want to make sure we’re developing players and help the standouts, the best players, move on to an MLB league or a partner league and move up in their careers,” Eddie explained.

The league president also gave his take on what fans can expect to see when they come to a Riverpigs' game.

“They’re going to see some great national-quality talent, guys that are prospects that could someday be wearing a MLB uniform in their early stages. They’re going to see them right out of college or rookie ball and some guys who have already achieved Triple A ball or got released and are working their way back,” he said, adding that the league recruits players who are still young enough to qualify to play in the league and not older such as a 15-year veteran who is 30 years old trying to use the league to get to the next level. “We want ones that are of the age who has one or two years of experience.”

“What (fans) are going to see is great major-league quality talent at their beginning stages competing against one another,” he added.

The final roster for the Riverpigs has not been set because the team has been busy scouting and has watched nearly 1,000 ballplayers during the past three months so that team officials “can make the best 20-man roster available.” Mr. Gonzalez said this week’s team workouts at the field “is more like a spring training” and as the team prepares for the season, next week, the manager will make the final roster decision.

“It’s more of a training period to get ready for the season and the opener on June 12,” he said. “The goal is having some fun helping these young men get to the next level. That’s our mission.”

Ready for action

Everyone in the league is geared up and ready for action, Mr. Gonzalez said, especially after a near fatal hit by the pandemic.

“We’re very excited. COVID destroyed a lot of baseball, a lot of leagues. MLB cut down their minor league system by almost half. MLB went from about 9,000 minor leaguers to about 5,000 minor leaguers, so there was a lot of young talent that wound ended being home without a place to play,“ he said. “The league almost folded, we almost didn’t exist anymore because we didn’t know how long this COVID thing was gong to be. With marketing and our partners and everybody involved in helping us try to make sure that didn’t happen, it worked out. We had some national showcases and a lot of good talent show up, sponsors got back on board, so, the excitement is there and we’re ready to put some good fun, affordable entertainment in the community.”

Eddie said bringing baseball back in the community is only one of the positive aspects of the Riverpigs and the Empire League.

“It’s not just about helping these ballplayers, but we want to have an impact socially on the kids (in village) to get them away from video games and bad tracks, drugs and other things, and come out to the ballpark,” he said. “It’s also about the economic impact we can have in the community by having so many visitors and families, and tourists come in as another attraction in town.”

So far, the local response to the league and the Riverpigs has been positive, Mr. Gonzalez said - and he shared a moment that demonstrated to him just how important this is for the region.

“I was invited to be a guest at the Adirondack Young Professionals group meetings and they got all these great plans and future ideas in place for how they could put together an economic development plan so that they can pursue an economic development grant. They’re looking to upgrade some of the trails, the lake activities and several other things,” he said. “It was surprising to see some of the people at the meetings stand up and say ’This baseball thing is a really big deal and we should really put a lot of attention into making sure this thing works. This is great for our community. I think it’s a great thing to be utilized as a starting point to bring another great attraction into the town.’”

“That was really neat and overwhelmingly humbling to hear - other folks seeing us as a great way to really kick-starting something here, getting some impact into the town. It was exciting to hear that. That gives me reason to keep doing this kind of stuff and keep the teams and launch the league even though we almost lost it because of COVID,” he added.

Former Village Trustee Haji Maroun, who led the local effort to bring the team to his beloved municipal park ball field, said he is equally thrilled to have the team ready to play ball in the local field and stressed just how important the Riverpigs are to the community.

“Because after COVID, I want people to get out of the house and have a good time. We haven’t had baseball here for a long time and people are going to see top-quality baseball,” Maroun said, adding that it will definitely be kid and family friendly. “I am so excited and ready for the action. I love baseball and I couldn’t wait for this. This is what Tupper Lake needs to bring people into town. Hopefully this is something that will be around here for years to come, and for people to come out and to travel here just to watch a baseball game. I’m excited because I just can’t wait to watch good baseball.”

Tickets and support

Tickets for Riverpigs game will be available online, in addition, fans will be able to show their support and local pride by purchasing merchandise such as caps and shirts.

Mr. Maroun said the plan is to have hats and shirts made up by a local business and the team will give the shop the rights to the logo that will allow them to produce merchandise. Also the field is about 90% ready for action.

“We still have to put up screens for the fans and the bullpen and bleachers are coming in,” he said.

“Right now tickets are limited and available only online,” Mr. Gonzalez said.

Currently there are still some COVID restrictions, however, those are being relaxed daily and as the season progresses, more tickets should become available. Right now it is too soon to announce just how many tickets will be available for games but the exact number of tickets that will be available should be known in the next few days.

“We’ve got to make sure we’re following all the restrictions and guidelines,” he said. “Since tickets are limited right now, it’s important for fans to know, they do sell out.”

For now, tickets will only be available online so that the team can keep track of sales and restrict attendance numbers until all restrictions are lifted. Cost for tickets will be $5.

“We just want to prove it is another great Tupper Lake-Adirondack tourist attraction. We want people to know about it and join us for an incredibly affordable great activity - and have fun and support their local team,” the Empire League president explained to the Free Press last week.

Riverpigs to start season June 12; EBL tryouts June 6-10

Dan McClelland

by Rich Rosentreter

The Tupper Lake Riverpigs, a professional baseball team will start the season on June 12 at 7 p.m. with a home game against the New Hampshire Wild. The teams are part of the Empire Baseball League, an independent league whose skill level is considered equivalent to rookie ball at the Class A-level of minor league baseball.

From June 6 to 10, the league will host try-outs right at the Tupper Lake Municipal Park, the home of Riverpigs. The try-outs will be to fill the rosters of all the teams in the league. Registration is required by visiting the leagues website at empireproleague.com/tryouts/.

The Empire League is a professional baseball developmental independent league that was established 2015.

In addition to the Riverpigs and Wild, among the other teams is the Saranac Lake Surge.

More information about the Riverpigs and the upcoming season will appear in next week’s Free Press.

Editor's note about Riverpigs name: Instead of using two separate words in the name of the new Tupper Lake semi-pro baseball team, Empire League officials apparently opted to run the two names together as one, according to a check with the league's web site this week. In the giant forests of America's northwest, river pigs were the hearty lumberjacks who rode and directed the floating logs with pike poles.

Local history museum needs new home...again!

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The dedicated board members of the Tupper Lake Historical Museum will be homeless again this fall for the second time in about three years years.

Several years ago the keepers of the local history museum were evicted by the Town of Tupper Lake board from their longtime headquarters in the former downtown firehall on Pine Street. Town officials found several major health and safety issues with the old frame two-story structure and served notice on the museum volunteers to find another place for their collection.

The town later sold the place to Eric Shaheen and a business partner who are renovating it into apartments.

When town leaders notified the museum volunteers they had to leave the Pine St. place, leaders of Next Stop! Tupper Lake train station group offered them the use of the large room at the station for their collection on a temporary basis. The board members and their families moved the museum’s hundreds of artifacts to the station where they have been on display to the local and visiting public for the past two summers and early falls.

The museum board members enjoyed their time at the expansive main room at the station and hoped it might someday be the museum’s permanent home.

The volunteers on the museum board will staff the museum at the station again this summer, beginning on opening day on Saturday, May 29. The place will be open Saturdays during June from 10a.m. to 4p.m. Starting in July it will be open six days a week and closed on Sundays, same hours.

The museum drew over 1,000 visitors the first summer at the station and about 800 during last summer's pandemic.

The six-day-a-week operation will stop on Labor Day and the museum will be open Saturdays in September, before closing on Columbus Day.

The large room in the station will be the headquarters for the northern end of the Adirondack Scenic Railroad, which is operated by the Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society (ARPS), based in Remsen, at the southern end of the Adirondack Railroad line.

In the past two years ARPS has been paying a generous rental stipend each month to reserve the station for its use when train travel returns to Tupper Lake as early as next year. The money has helped

The New York State Department of Transportation has plans to reconstruct the rails and ties into a functioning railroad from Big Moose, currently ARPS' most northerly point, to Tupper Lake. It’s part of the two-fold state initiative to rebuild the railroad line to Tupper Lake and remove the tracks from Tupper Lake to Lake Placid for the creation of a new hiking, biking and snowmobile trail, expected to open in 2023.

Plans are in the works by the state DOT to develop a turn-around facility just beyond the station and other train traffic amenities there to accommodate the line rehabilitation to Tupper Lake. According to reports, a public information session is expected to be held by the state agency sometime this summer.

“This is indeed bitter sweet news,” Dan McClelland, chairman of Next Stop! Tupper Lake said this week. “We’re excited the ARPS train operation is coming to Tupper Lake and our building will finally be a train station, as the community built it to be!”

“However, I’m deeply saddened our museum has no home again! As a community we have an obligation to protect and cherish our local history and our museum was the tool to do that!”

Mr. McClelland is also a member of the museum board. Other museum leaders are Kathleen Lefebvre, president, Dian Connor, vice president, Jeannette Keniston, treasurer, Peg Mauer, secretary, Jim Lanthier, Jr., Jon Kopp, Joe Kimpflen, Mary Richer, Shirley Lavigne, Stuart and Laurie Amell and Marlene Hyde.

President Kathleen Lefebvre said members of her board tried unsuccessfully to convince the not for profit ARPS to permit them to share space in the great room of the station with them. The collection would have been tailored back to allow enough space for the company to run its ticket-selling and other operations there, but Justin Gonyo, ARPS executive director, ruled that out.

Several weeks ago he asked the museum organizers to plan to be out early this fall, so he and his board members can finalize their plans for new excursions and various rail offered that will be offered out of Tupper Lake. Part of the ARPS' plan is to erect wall partitions for new offices inside the station.

Earlier this year, during a meeting with museum volunteers, he predicted train travel to and from Tupper Lake could commence as early as next year.

“We think the people who come here by train and to ride the train would have very much enjoyed our historical collection during their time waiting in the station,” said Dian Connor this week. “It makes very good sense to us to share space there, and to enhance the train travelers' experience by viewing our displays while they are visiting here.”

Stuart Amell, who recently rejoined the museum board with his wife, Laurie, thought the ARPS leaders were being very short-sighted in their plans for the station by not wanting the museum there. He said he thought there was room for both a train station and a museum in the spacious quarters of the train station. His fellow board members agree with him.

Mr. Amell said many train stations around the country include historical displays and exhibits which travelers find fascinating.

“Our immediate need right now is finding a place to relocate to,” stated Mrs. Lefebvre. “For the winter, at least, we are going to have to put most of our collection in storage. The lack of storage places right now in Tupper Lake presents an even bigger problem for us in the immediate future!”

“Our next move will be to a permanent home once and for all,” a determined Jeannette Keniston promised. She vividly remembers the work it took to move he collection from the Pine St. building to the train station three years ago.

On the horizon for the museum board members to tackle will be an ambitious fundraising campaign to generate the financial means to either buy or build a suitable replacement for the station quarters.

“We’re looking for a site on a main travel corridor here for the maximum visitor exposure,” board member Jim Lanthier told the Free Press. A large number of artifacts in the museum were donated by Mr. Lanthier, including audio-visual equipment which screen historic photographs of the late Kathleen Bigrow at the far end of the big room. He said during a museum meeting Friday he will be picking up his material which he’ll personally store until a new place is found for a museum.

There was considerable frustration expressed by Peg Mauer and Mary Richer and others at Friday’s meeting about the train company’s notice of eviction.

The museum board Friday directed Mr. McClelland to contact Justin Gonyo again to see if a more flexible schedule can be arranged for their departure from the station.

During a telephone conversation Monday Mr. Gonyo agreed to meet with Mr. McClelland and Mrs. Lefebvre in early summer to further discuss their space requirements and to try to figure out what historical displays there may be room for in the big room once his rail company moves in.

Mrs. Lefebvre said her group is looking to hang as many of their artifacts on the interior walls of the station as possible, perhaps with new shelves and wall displays.

Mr. Gonyo said he is amenable to that.

Anyone with space in a local building where the museum leaders can safely store the rest of their artifacts until a new home for the museum can be found is asked to contact any of the board members listed above.

TLBG to host community discussions on new recreation plan

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Business Group leaders have invited the community to attend one or more of four community forum planned for this month.

These events are intended to brief the community on recent revisions to the bold recreational plan advanced by the group last year, based on the work of five sub-committees that have begun studying the five elements of the first phase of the plan: the re-acquisition of the Big Tupper lands from the county if it is put up for sale for back taxes owed, snowmobile improvements planned here, the mountain bike facility eyed for the shores of Tupper Lake south of here, the improvement and expansion of the James C. Frenette Trail System at the golf course and the watering of the lower nine at the golf course.

There will be good news to share with the local public at each forum.

The community in general is encouraged to attend the first two meetings: Tuesday and Thursday, May 11 and 13.

Each of the four sessions will begin at 7p.m. at the Knights of Columbus home on High Street.

The second two sessions are geared, in particular, to Tupper Lake’s younger generations- those currently between 18 years of age and 40, who have the most to gain as more recreational opportunities are created here.

These local residents in their twenties and thirties are encouraged to attend one of two meetings set for the next week: Tuesday, May 18 and Thursday May 20.

The intent of the public meetings is to inform, educate and solicit help from more local residents- and particularly younger people- to build a more sustainable and enjoyable environment here through recreational improvements.

“We want people here to better understand our recreational objectives and goals,” noted Mark Moeller, a member of the TLBG’s steering committee who will be the master of ceremonies at the four meetings.

The TLBG has created a new vision for the community in a multi-stage process, that comes at an important time when the new pedestrian and bike trail is due to open soon on the 30-mile stretch of the Adirondack Railroad corridor between here and Lake Placid. An ambitious rail removal project has been underway there since last fall.

Also on the community’s upcoming horizon is the arrival of train excursions and special train events, via the expansion to the north from Big Moose of the Adirondack Railroad. Train traffic is expected to begin in the spring of 2022.

“This is a once in a lifetime opportunity for Tupper Lake,” stated Rick Dattola, who created the group a year ago this past March.

For more information about these coming events contact either Mr. Dattola or Mr. Moeller or any other member of the business group.

TLBG to host community discussions on new recreation plan

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Business Group leaders have invited the community to attend one or more of four community forum planned for this month.

These events are intended to brief the community on recent revisions to the bold recreational plan advanced by the group last year, based on the work of five sub-committees that have begun studying the five elements of the first phase of the plan: the re-acquisition of the Big Tupper lands from the county if it is put up for sale for back taxes owed, snowmobile improvements planned here, the mountain bike facility eyed for the shores of Tupper Lake south of here, the improvement and expansion of the James C. Frenette Trail System at the golf course and the watering of the lower nine at the golf course.

There will be good news to share with the local public at each forum.

The community in general is encouraged to attend the first two meetings: Tuesday and Thursday, May 11 and 13.

Each of the four sessions will begin at 7p.m. at the Knights of Columbus home on High Street.

The second two sessions are geared, in particular, to Tupper Lake’s younger generations- those currently between 18 years of age and 40, who have the most to gain as more recreational opportunities are created here.

These local residents in their twenties and thirties are encouraged to attend one of two meetings set for the next week: Tuesday, May 18 and Thursday May 20.

The intent of the public meetings is to inform, educate and solicit help from more local residents- and particularly younger people- to build a more sustainable and enjoyable environment here through recreational improvements.

“We want people here to better understand our recreational objectives and goals,” noted Mark Moeller, a member of the TLBG’s steering committee who will be the master of ceremonies at the four meetings.

The TLBG has created a new vision for the community in a multi-stage process, that comes at an important time when the new pedestrian and bike trail is due to open soon on the 30-mile stretch of the Adirondack Railroad corridor between here and Lake Placid. An ambitious rail removal project has been underway there since last fall.

Also on the community’s upcoming horizon is the arrival of train excursions and special train events, via the expansion to the north from Big Moose of the Adirondack Railroad. Train traffic is expected to begin in the spring of 2022.

“This is a once in a lifetime opportunity for Tupper Lake,” stated Rick Dattola, who created the group a year ago this past March.

For more information about these coming events contact either Mr. Dattola or Mr. Moeller or any other member of the business group.

Oval Wood Dish development site on Stec visit tomorrow

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Senator Dan Stec is expected to tour various sites in the community alongside local officials tomorrow.

According to Mayor Paul Maroun the newly elected senator will be joining him and others here in his first official tour of Tupper as Senator Betty Little’s successor.

Part of the day’s agenda includes an afternoon meeting with Joseph Gehm and his partners in the Syracuse-based Lahinch Group to discuss their plans for the residential and commercial development of the vacant and former Oval Wood Dish Corp. building complex on Demars Blvd.

Mr. Maroun announced last week that the investors just closed on the purchase of the former industrial complex from Norman Bobrow and Associates, the New York City firm which also owns the former Ames Plaza next door.

The Lahinch Group bills itself as a “real estate company with core principles focused on clients’ needs, community investment and partnerships that help preserve the fabric of of neighborhoods we call home.”

According to its web site, Lahinch was founded as a development company and has since grown to take on property management and brokerage services in the Upstate New York market. “At its core Lahinch Group strives to provides its clients, tenants and investors a seamless and transparent experience from concept to completion.”

It was founded by Joseph Gehm after working for over a decade in the financial services industry.

Mayor Maroun has been working with Mr. Gehm and his partners on trying to redevelop the former industrial site in the center of the village for the past several years.

“These are some talented young guys who have great things planned there,” he said yesterday.

What the Lahinch Group is planning there will include residential units and commercial space, the mayor said yesterday.

The residential portion will include what are called “blended income” apartment for families of all incomes, as well as more upscale “market apartments,” the mayor told the Free Press Monday. Retail shops will also be a piece of the development.

The company has apparently done successful developments in both Utica and Syracuse, where it developed “Franklin Square.”

Senator Stec is also planning to make a stop to see the campus director at Sunmount DDSO, Kim Higgins.

Towns, counties will win big in COVID “rescue plan”

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

As part of the federal government’s new $1.9 trillion COVID-19 stimulus bill that passed last week towns and counties across the country will see windfalls in economic aid.

What has been dubbed in Washington, D.C. as “the American Rescue Plan” will see Franklin County get $9.7 million in aid in upcoming weeks and another $5 million will be shared by towns in this county.

The Town of Tupper Lake is expected to see an unexpected bonus this year of $630,000- behind Malone which will get $1.54 million and Harrietstown, due to receive $600,000. A story about the assistance for counties and towns was published in daily newspapers last week.

The coming windfall for Tupper Lake was discussed briefly by happy town leaders, when Councilman John Quinn raised it at the close of Thursday's town board meeting.

“The news came as a total surprise to me. I’m sure we’ll have a million people with a million ideas on how to spend it,” he told his fellow board members that evening.”

“I think in coming months we’ll want to be talking about some specifics,” he suggested.

“I already had a call about it today, and what we were going to do with it,” Councilman Mike Dechene told him.

“Maybe buy a bunch of lottery tickets?” joked Mr. Quinn.

Supervisor Patti Littlefield said there are some details still up in the air. One unknown, she said, is whether or not that $630,000 will go directly to the town, or will some of it go to the village.”

Apparently a funding formula for villages has not yet been released.

The supervisor said she participated in a conference call with New York Senator Chuck Schumer that afternoon announcing all the municipal recipients of the stimulus bill in this state.

Councilman Mike Dechene asked the supervisor if there has been information released from the federal government about how the money must be used.

“My understanding is local governments can’t use it to reduce property taxes,” she told him, adding that wasn’t detailed in the briefing by Sen. Schumer.

She said they were using 2019 U.S. Census data “to determine populations eligible for assistance” under the relief bill.

“The projected amounts may be distributed to more non-entitlement governments than are listed in the break-down to the extent that eligible non-entitlement governments with over-lapping populations,” she said reading from a document she received from Sen. Schumer’s office.

She anticipated the Town of Tupper Lake will receive “some sort of formal notification from the state” soon.

“Potentially very good news,” John Quinn called it.

“We could make a list of priorities and once we learn what we need and what we can use it for, how it will be received and how long we have to use it and if there’s any strings attached,” we can go forward with it, the supervisor recommended. “There’s so many unknowns, as it all just happened so quickly.!”

Mr. Quinn said it was unfortunate the federal money can’t be used to reduce taxes.

Mrs. Littlefield said there were a number of town buildings that could use repairs and town programs that could benefit from federal funds.

“The Tupper Lake Business Group is doing a good job making recommendations for recreational improvements to the town and what it thinks will be good for the town.” She indicated she expected that group may look for some of this new money to help accomplish some of its goals in the first phase of its plan.

She said the town has completed master plans for town-owned properties like the golf course, the lower parcel at the Rod and Gun Club and at Little Wolf Beach and Campgrounds. “We’ve been waiting for grants and other funding opportunities” to tackle some of those projects.

With the town hall entrance addition completed there are other buildings owned by the town which could be improved, she suggested. “There’s always something to do when you have buildings.”

She predicted it won’t be hard to find uses for the new money. “We all know $600,000 doesn’t go far” for local governments.

“We’re thankful for it and look forward to learning all the details.”

Business group leaders brief village leaders on plan

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

In the interest of keeping all community leaders informed of their plans, the leaders of the Tupper Lake Business Group briefed village elected leaders Wednesday on the major points of their plan to build our economy in the years ahead through recreation.

The meeting, as most are now, was held via a conference call, with most of the village officials and department heads calling in.

Mayor Maroun announced the village board may begin meeting soon via the Zoom computer application soon.

As he did at a recent town board meeting steering committee member Mark Moeller introduced his group and thanked the board in advance for listening to and considering their plan to increase recreational tourism in Tupper Lake.

“You are aware that back in the fall we made a presentation to the town board of a three-phase plan that would cost $2.6 million to increase tourism here” by developing and expanding various community recreational assets, Mr. Moeller told village leaders.

“We realize $2.6 million is a lot of money, but at the same time we think this will set us up for 20 to 40 years into our future and therefore is a wise investment.” He said their comments that evening delve into phase one- a five point plan to acquire, if possible, the Big Tupper Ski Area property at county auction this year, the development of new snowmobile trails into the community from the west, the continued improvement of the James C. Frenette trails at the golf course so they are suitable for year-round multi-use activities, the irrigation of six fairways on the lower nine of the golf course and the creation of a six- to ten-mile mountain bike on state forest preserve land bordering the lake in the Rock Island Bay area.

“The cost of phase one originally priced out at $928,000. We’ve reduced that estimate by $45,000 to date and will continue to refine our pricing.”

Realtor Rob Gillis, another member of the steering committee, began his short address by thanking the village leaders for their service to the community. “We know how much your service is appreciated and how much effort you folks all put into it.”

“As community leaders, community property owners and taxpayers and business people, we know you realize how much our recreational assets like Big Tupper mean to a small community like ours!”

“The days of giving someone a map and a compass and telling them to go outdoors and have some fun are over!” he told the village leaders. “What people want now is planned recreation...they want a nice ski area to ski at, they want nice trails to hike and bike on...and that’s essentially what our recreational plan is!”

Mr. Gillis said he believes “everyone here has a soft spot in their hearts for Big Tupper” and its legacy of recreation and its importance in drawing tourists here for decades, beginning in the early 1960s.

He said he and his colleagues on the business group that was formed last March have asked the town leaders to buy the 440+ acres on Mt. Morris if it goes to county auction for back taxes this year.

“If there is any possibility the town gets a crack at buying the mountain before the auction...then it should jump and make that purchase!”

He said that “would give the town a seat at the table” in any future development of the facility.

The back taxes owed on the property by its owner, Preserve Associates LLC to the county amounts to $130,000. With interest and penalties the amount owed has grown to over $170,000.

“Every time you drive across The Flow and look up and see those trails that sit idle up there, you realize what a big shadow that is over our town, and how wonderful it was when Big Tupper was open and how wonderful it could be in the future if it was open again.”

The business group does not want the town to operate the ski area again as it did for nearly 30 years. The members have pledged to find an interested party to lease and operate it. Prospective operators could be the state, a regional college, a business group, a not for profit cooperative of skiers, a private business and more.

Kelly Fleury, one of the leaders of the Tupper Lake Snowmobile Club who serves on the business group’s leadership committee, briefed the board on trail improvements proposed in the recreational plan.

Before she began Wednesday, Mr. Moeller said her group has made some major advancements since the business group readied its plan last year. “The club has already done a lot of work since we began meeting last March.”

Mrs. Fleury said their group appreciated the board’s willingness to listen to the new plans to promote more tourism here.

“We’ve done extensive work already on the Billboard trail” which connects the Junction Pass trail between uptown and downtown and Upper Park Street near where the billboards are situated.

She said that trail clearing and improvement work were done by club volunteers and private citizen Jack Moody, with the help of heavy equipment from Mike Vaillancourt’s Sootbusters business.

“That trail is ready to ride this winter”- providing an important connection between the two parts of the village. “Snowmobilers are already riding it!”

“The additional trails we are hoping to have to bring new visitors into the community are in the downtown area” and they would circumvent Little Wolf Lake, which riders now cross but because it is a body of water it can’t be officially included on local or state maps.

One trail will run from Mountain Market Redemption Center, behind the Holy Name Cemetery and eventually to Berkley Ave. and the other runs on streets north of Little Wolf Lake. Both new trails will eventually connect to the train station site and the entrance to the new rail-trail corridor that will soon open there.

“Those trails will not be ready until next winter but we plan to get started building them this spring. That’s a number one priority for our club!”

“We believe that will increase our snowmobile traffic dramatically!

She said too with the generous donations of $5,000 from both the village and town last fall, the snowmobile club has purchased “a new to us” trail grooming machine and a pull-behind drag “so we are ready to groom the local trails and be very aggressive about it so that riders here have some nice trails to ride on!” She added her thanks to both boards for their recent donations and support for the work of the snowmobile club volunteers here.

“Snowmobiling is going to be an important part of the rail-trail corridor” which will open sled traffic to Tupper Lake and from here to many points east of here, added Mr. Moeller.

He said the third piece of the business group’s recreational strategy in the first phase involves the Frenette trails at the golf course. “You are all familiar with the great job John Gillis and his trail volunteers have done there” and particularly the new trail built in the woods and off the fairways last winter with the help of the village and town crews.

“We’d like to see the surfaces of the main trail improved so it would see four-season use including hiking and biking” in the warmer seasons, as well as for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing in winter.

Another piece of the plan is a new mountain bike trail system on the shoreline tracts both north and south of the Rock Island Bay of Tupper Lake, south of here.

“The trails will go along the shoreline and there will be nothing else like them in the Adirondack Park. The trails will be cut by hand to mountain bike-specifications. They will also be able to be used for hiking and in the winter for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing.”

He said steering committee member Matt Ellis has had many conversations with NYS Department of Environmental Conservation officials already “about the concept and how it can be done. Matt is an avid rider who regularly rides the mountain bike trail system at Wilmington. He has seen the explosion in mountain bike usage there!”

He said the business group would also like to see the new trail system there eventually connect to the Big Tupper property with future mountain biking trails there. “We’ve even thought about the possibility of asking the owners of the former Oval Wood Dish Corp. property which surround the former ski center if we could cut a trail from the ski center parking lot southwest to Route 30 that would take riders to the Rock Island Bay facility.”

Mr. Moeller explained the fifth piece of the plan is irrigation on six lower nine fairways at the golf course currently without it.

“We believe it’s time to irrigate the lower nine. In order to do that, our estimates are that the materials and labor would cost about $240,000.” Added to that, he noted, is another $60,000 to install a new water pump to supply the water to the watering systems on both nines.

He said the new watering system added to the lower nine would complement the work tackled by volunteers when they rebuilt the entire upper nine two decades ago.

The current total cost of all five pieces of the first phase is $883,000.

He said the group, with the help of advisor Rick Donah, has launched a petition drive on Change.org and has so far collected 1,000 signatures of Tupper Lake people who back their plan. “We’ve also started a gofundme page which in several weeks time has seen donations of over $6,000” that will help support the plan.

Matt Ellis was late into the meeting and picked up the presentation from there.

“One thing I’ve learned about mountain biking other areas like Wilmington is there has been a tremendous growth in the sport. I’ve been at the Wilmington trail system many times and it’s like ants on a hill. There’s just so many people now who love the sport. One day I was there and I started thinking about the places here where we could offer it.”

He said the former Litchfield Park property that was purchased by the state many years ago came to mind. “It’s really perfect for single-track mountain biking” with its lake views and varied terrain.

“Mountain biking is something very near and dear to me and I’d like to see a facility here and for Tupper Lake to get on this band wagon!”

“This will just be one other piece of the puzzle” that will bring more tourists to Tupper Lake each year.

Dan McClelland, another member of the group, said in the past week since the group last met with the town board, five committees have been formed to study each of the five goals in more detail. He invited the mayor and the trustees to join in some of that committee work, if they wished to in the weeks ahead.

“We would very much welcome the village board members to any of these committees for a full-scale view of what we are doing!” He said they have invited town leaders to join them.

“The town department of public works, under Bob Degrace, and the town highway department, led by Bill Dechene, were very important to the creation of the new golf course trail completed last winter. “With the board’s blessing, if Bob could be available to help advise us and help us on some of these trail projects, I know the business group members and the community at large would appreciate it.”

He also asked the mayor to don his county legislator’s cap for a moment. “We appreciated the meeting you had with us a few weeks ago. We know the possible purchase of the Big Tupper property, if it becomes available, it’s going to take some finessing and we know you will help us.”

“If we can do anything to help you by way of talking to other county board members or if we can make a presentation to the full board, if it helps lighten your load, our group would certainly be willing do that. We’d certainly take our marching orders from you. Acquiring the Big Tupper lands is an important piece of our first phase!”

Mr. Maroun said he would keep the business group fully informed on any matters relating to the county and the possible purchase by the town of the ski center tract.

“I can’t tell what can happen at the county right now. It’s very complicated!”

He said Judge Robert Main hasn’t signed the in rem proceeding to permit the auction to move forward. On each property in that sale, the property owners can come in until the last day and pay off the back taxes, he explained.

“There are some liens and mortgages that could or could not be carried over to a new owner by a judge’s order. So there’s a lot going on.”

He said he would welcome any help from the business group to talk with county officials to convince them of the wisdom of passing the title of ski center parcel to the town for the back taxes owed. -Or he said he would arrange for the group to address the full county board “when the time is right!”

The mayor turned the meeting over to the trustees for comments or questions.

New Trustee Jason McClain applauded the business group’s work “calling it very important” for the community to attract new tourists each year. Your work is appreciated by many here!”

“As a new trustee, I’m beginning to understand how much effort it takes to invest in our community in ways to make it better and more prosperous!”

Trustee Clint Hollingsworth was very outspoken in his support of the recreational plan.

He began by thanking the business group leaders for all they have done to date in preparing these bold plans.

At the top of the list, he said, was the Big Tupper reacquisition. “Big Tupper is the biggest recreational asset in our community. It is the anchor of major recreational development here!”

“Now that doesn’t mean the other things can’t happen without Big Tupper- because they can.” He called the ski area “the golden nugget” when it comes to advancing recreation and the commerce it will bring here.

“If we don’t do everything in our power- as village and town leaders- to obtain and secure this asset, there’s a good possibility we could lose it forever!”

He calling snowmobiling another major winter-time recreational asset to the community that is extremely important to the area. “It’s great work you’re doing- Kelly and the whole snowmobile club- with new trails and connecting trails. Cutting trails is hard work. That represents some dedication!”

“Like Big Tupper, snowmobiling is an important part of your plan,” he stressed.

He also applauded the development of the new hiking and mountain bike trails in the plan, calling them “a secret” about the Adirondacks that “is getting out and that needs to fully get out.”

He said different types of recreational trails developed here will help greatly Tupper Lake’s future.

He said the new town grant to light some of the cross country trails at the golf course will bring many skiers there in future winters. “I remember skiing under the lights at Big Tupper and how much fun it was!”

He predicted the new lights on the cross-country trails will shine that recreational gem.

He thought too the group’s plan to develop mountain bike trails along the Tupper Lake shoreline was an excellent concept.

“I’ve hunted those peninsulas and there’s some amazing landscape there.” He said the Rock Island Bay parcels offers some incredible “vistas” of the lake and the mountains beyond.

“-And bringing water to the lower nine and upgrading that section of the course will be a huge improvement!”

He said he figures these first five initiatives will create “a domino effect” in Tupper Lake, which will bring many more good things.

The town is where our growth is and in the town we have to capitalize on these recreational assets and new ones we can create, he stated.

He predicted the development and growth of recreational facilities here is going to create “an economic boom here” in the years ahead.

“I’m all in on your plan...hook, line and sinker,” he told the business group members. “I’m 100% behind this plan!”

Trustee Ron LaScala said he agreed with his colleagues. He too applauded the group for its work. “We are a community which thrives on tourists who want to come here and be active.” He said the community’s recreational assets are a large part why people visit Tupper Lake and build their summer places here.

“Your plan is a great idea and I continue to support your efforts!”

“We are going to continue to work with you as we move these projects along,” the mayor said in summary that evening.

Revised PILOT schedule for hotel will see no assessment reduction in plan

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Jeremy Evans, the executive director of the Franklin County Industrial Development Agency (IDA, brought good news with him when he outlined for the town board’s benefit details of the payment in lieu of taxes (PILOT) proposal his agency has crafted to help Betsy Lowe and Nancy Howard finance their $10.888 million hotel plan. Jeremy was a guest presenter at Thursday’s monthly town board meeting.

The good news he brought to the meeting was that a revised schedule of payments in the tax abatement plan will see no loss in assessment from the outset, unlike the original plan.

At a public hearing on Tuesday, January 5 at the village court room, with most of the two dozen guests participating via the Zoom computer application, Mr. Evans had explained the process of offering the hotel developers a number of tax breaks including the PILOT plan that would see them enjoying a 50% cut on all local property taxes for a 20-year period. In the revised schedule he produced Thursday, over those years the developers would pay about $2.07 million in property taxes, based on an estimated assessment of $4.3 million. Property taxes for them without a break would amount to about $3.77 million in taxes over the 20 years.

At Thursday’s meeting Mr. Evans said he appreciated the opportunity to address the town board and the several dozen people who tuned into the meeting. He also said it was timely for him to also hear the Tupper Lake Business Group’s new recreational strategy for the town.

“Tupper Lake is a fun place to work. There are many good things going on. There’s a great community effort underway here,” not found in many communities today.

He called the PILOT plan “an important topic, but no where near as interesting” as the plan advanced by the business group earlier in the meeting.

Mr. Evans was able to include on everyone’s computer screens some visuals of payment schedules and the like.

He mentioned that Jim Ellis, the Tupper Lake representative on the county IDA board, is a very strong advocate for Tupper Lake. “You do not need to worry that the interests of Tupper Lake are not being voiced by Mr. Ellis!”

He said the IDA is a public benefit corporation created in New York State law.

An IDA can undertake commercial and industrial projects to “promote the economic well being of communities,” he told the officials and guests.

“There are four different ways an IDA can support an eligible project. We can issue tax-exempt bonds that allow a project to raise money and financing that is cheaper than conventional financing. We can offer a property tax exemption, which comes with a PILOT agreement. That’s the main discussion this evening. We can provide a sales tax exemption on equipment, supplies, fixtures, materials that are purchased in the development and construction of a project. -And we can provide a mortgage tax exemption.”

The last three are what are being proposed for the Tupper Lake Crossroads Hotel project.

On the property tax abatement, a PILOT schedule details what the local taxing entities can expect to receive over the life of the agreement, he explained.

He said the county IDA’s board of directors can extend PILOT plans for up to 30 years. “Our general policy, however, is 20 years or less.

He said the payment each year comes in two parts- a basic value based on the assessment of the worth of the parcel on which the project sits. The PILOT is calculated, however, on the added value of the improvements to the property. A variety of graduated scales are used to determine how the PILOT figures increase over the period of the contract.

In the case of the new hotel proposed here, those payments would increase by 5% from $0 the first year to $216,058 in the 20th year.

He said after the 20th year of their proposal, the hotel owners would be paying “full taxes” on their property.

Mr. Evans said the proposal that has been advanced for the hotel project “does not deviate from IDA policy,” although it could.

He outlined the general criteria the IDA board members look at before approving a PILOT.

“If a project fails to perform under the agreement, the IDA has the right to recapture its funds. If there are payments promised that are not fulfilled then the IDA has the right to take recourse.”

He said the Crossroads Hotel project involves 44 rooms for lodging on a 1.2 acre tract at the corner of Park and Mill comprising seven different parcels.

Mr. Evans said the IDA board reserves the right to negotiate the terms of any PILOT agreement with the applicant “at any point right up until the actual approval by the board.”

The initial resolution by the board came on November 17, calling for the public hearing on January 5, he said. Over 30 people tuned into the hearing, with only two actually appearing in the village court room.

He said “there were multiple requests” made to expand the time period for public comments.

Based on those requests, the IDA board at its meeting last Tuesday set the close of the public comment period to be February 3, according to Mr. Evans.

He said they had tried to publish the notice of the public hearing in the Tupper Lake Free Press as well as the Adirondack Daily Enterprise but the date of the submission to the hometown weekly, in his words, “did not align” with legal publishing requirements for a hearing on January 5. “Had we had the opportunity to redo, we would have made sure we had that timing right so the notice could have appeared in the Free Press.”

“We take responsibility” for not having the notice in the local weekly. We wanted to publish it in the Free Press.”

He said the IDA also had the obligation to notify the heads of the local governments affected and that was done by registered mail.

Mr. Evans also said the hearing was intentionally not scheduled between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day because in this pandemic year. “We knew know one would be paying attention. We purposely waited until January.” He said if he were to do it over, he would have not published the notices of hearing until the new year for a hearing in later January.

He said the agreement proposed calls for the new hotel owners to continue to pay the taxes on the bare property or what is called as “base value.”

“In the first year that’s all they would pay.” The amount is $12,770.”

That amount is based on the current total assessments of the parcels as they now exist. The total is $338,900.

In the first draft of the schedule considered at the public hearing, that figure was only $1,153- based on an total assessment of only $30,600.

In the second year they would pay that plus 5% of the new assessed value of the improved property.”

The amount of the taxes on the assessment of the hotel would increase by 5% until the 20th year.

Mr. Evans said the applicants have also asked for abatements of the mortgage tax ($44,000 savings) and sales tax (estimates at $445,000).

The property tax exemptions over the 20 years would total about $1.7 million, he said. The total of the three types of abatement would total $2.2 million.

Mr. Evans said since the hearing his office has been receiving comments, via e-mail and would continue to until the Feb. 3 deadline.

“They’ve been good comments and they come with good questions. We’re not getting that ‘I hate this...or I love this’ types of comments with no reasons. The comments so far have all been very thoughtful!”

His e-mail address can be found on the Franklin County IDA's web site.

He asked if the board wanted him to review the schedule of payments in depth, but Supervisor Patti Littlefield thought it would be enough for him to send her those schedules and she would forward them to anyone who requested them.

She said she thought his schedules were quite self-explanatory.

Mr. Evans said there was one change in the schedules presented at the recent public hearing.

“I had asked the town assessor to confirm the current assessed value of the properties. He also indicated what the assessed values would be once the buildings were removed and the parcels merged. The numbers I shared at the public hearing were based on that the merged parcels would be approximately $30,600. The assessed value today with the buildings is $338,000. Since the public hearing I have been looking at those figures closer and talking to our legal counsel. The intent of our exemption policy is to make sure there is no initial loss to the taxing jurisdictions. That being the intent, it is our intention to make sure that if approved the base value that we use would be the $338,900- not the $30,600.

He promised a revised schedule would be forthcoming, “because that’s quite a difference.”

“The intention of our policy is that any community is held harmless at the outset” of any PILOT plan. “So that there is no loss or reduction and that the PILOT agreement is based on the improvement to the property.”

He said it was “nobody’s fault” that the $30,600 was used in the schedule, noting he wanted to show the worst case scenario in his calculations.

With the change, in year one, none of the taxing jurisdictions would see any decrease from those properties.”

He noted that many of the criticisms so far have centered around that proposed loss in taxes those first two years in the schedule he advanced based on the $30,600 basis for basic rate.

In the new schedule, he said the PILOT plan won’t now require the rest of the taxpayers in the community to pick up the decreases in tax revenue those first two years.

Supervisor Littlefield said she had spoken to Mr. Evans in a telephone conversation earlier that day and told him “that you don’t want to have any local taxpayer feel the pain of a loss in assessment and you don’t want anyone to have to pick up the tab for a PILOT.”

“When we first heard about this PILOT thinking we were going to lose $300,000 in assessment for the first few years...that was a harder thing to take on our part!”

“So that’s good news that the IDA has revisited” that calculation “and not have a hit for taxpayers in those beginning years.”

Councilman John Quinn said he appreciated the time Mr. Evans took to discuss this directly with the town board. “I wish we could have done this before the hearing so a lot of (misunderstandings) could have been avoided” when the board discussed it at its Dec. 31 year-end meeting.

“I’m really relieved to hear about the hold harmless part of it. That’s great news for the taxing jurisdictions!”

He asked Mr. Evans if fiscal impacts on the local governments had been completed yet.

Mr. Evans admitted that analysis hasn’t been completed yet. “There’s no descriptive way” the IDA has the means to do that. He said the taxing entities could estimate those impacts and submit them to the IDA board members for their consideration.

“So you want the taxing jurisdictions to tell you what they think?” asked Mr. Quinn, obviously looking for clarification.

“We do it (this analysis) to an extent, but you guys are the ones who know your financials the best,” the IDA official told him.

“That’s why we are here having this discussion tonight.”

He also said that the PILOT numbers need to be plugged into the school district’s tax cap formula, admitting that figuring out that very complex state formula is a challenge for every school leader. “I wouldn’t pretend to know how to estimate that kind of impact to the school district!”

Mr. Quinn said he thought the IDA’s hold harmless intention with the new calculations “will go along ways to resolve any concerns I had.”

“During the hearing there were many questions raised and you responded you would get those answers. Do you know how that will be done and when?”

Mr. Evans said he is working on the questions, including the new ones he’s received in recent days.

“I’m trying to compile a question and answer fact sheet and I will send it to everyone including the boards here.” He said it will also be posted on the Franklin County IDA web site.

Mr. Quinn suggested that information be submitted to the Free Press for publication in the weeks ahead. “I’m sure Dan McClelland would be only happy to run that.”

The councilman questioned him about the 20-year term of the proposed agreement, saying that 20 years is the maximum under current IDA policy. “Has the IDA considered something shorter. I hope this hotel is wildly successful. But if it’s not in ten years, I don’t think it will be any more successful in 20 years.”

“Are these PILOT contracts renewable?” the councilman asked.

“Generally a project that comes through the IDA has to have a meaningful impact on the economic wellbeing of the community in order to be approved,” Mr. Evans replied. “So theoretically, the applicant could come back at the end and ask for another PILOT for so many years. But they would have to show some meaningful increase on community impact above what they were doing at the time of that request which is why PILOT agreements like this are for new projects and new construction.”

“If an applicant just said ‘we want a PILOT extension,’ that would be a tough argument. But if the applicant came back to us and said they wanted to add more floors and more rooms and create more jobs through a $30 million renovation, that would be something to consider.”

“But if a business that received a PILOT was just plugging along and wanted their PILOT renewed, it would be hard for it to meet our criteria.”

Mr. Quinn also asked if a PILOT would be transferrable, if the hotel was sold to a new owner.

Mr. Evans said it would be, but that transfer of ownership would have to be reported to his agency and would involve “some paperwork.”

Any new owners would also have to be investigated by his agency, he added.

Mr. Quinn said his only remaining concern as a private citizen here is the term, and asked the IDA to consider at ten-year term instead. “-And maybe renewable for a second ten years if so needed?”

“I’m not against the PILOT” Mr. Quinn told the IDA representative, but he said he disagreed with its premise of transferring a tax burden to others.

He said he appreciated Mr. Evans’ presentation and his candor with them.

Contrasting the new and old schedule of payments, in the first draft that was presented at the public hearing the four taxing entities here would have only received $1,153 on properties that currently generate about $12,000 in tax revenue shared by the four. In the new schedule that amount would grow to $12,770 that first year- approximately what is generated now.

In the first draft the governments would have received $9,044 the second year of the schedule- still below what they now receive. In the revised schedule the total payment in the second year would be $20,302 instead.

In the third year, in the new schedule of payments, the governments would share about $28,000 or more than twice what is currently being paid versus the $17,251 forecast in the first draft.

More on the IDA discussion at the town board meeting next week.

IDA hearing generates comments from many

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

First to speak during the public comment period was Town Councilman John Quinn, who repeated several points he made when the IDA hearing was discussed at the December 30 town board meeting.

“The town board just became aware of this PILOT project on or after December 23- two days before Christmas- when the notice appeared in the newspaper. The town board met on December 30 and voted to support the project” but had concerns about the proposed PILOT agreement.

On the PILOT plan, he said he didn't think the town board was opposed to it in principle. We have concerns, however, about the length of it and hence the loss of tax revenue” to the both the community and the school district.

He said he found the process “lacking in transparency,” given that there had been no discussion between the IDA and the applicant and the town board about the exemption plans.

Mr. Quinn said he hoped there “would be a reasonable deadline for public comments” on the plan- extending out into the New Year.

He said he tried to call but was unable to reach Mr. Evans prior to the town board's December 30 meeting so that he could invite the IDA leader to attend and explain the financial plan and the reasons for it.

He said in the public notice there was mention of finding the plan on the IDA web site, but he was unable to find it there.

“I don't object to the IDA's authority to grant these tax abatements. It's in the law. It's legal. Is it right, however? I guess that question remains to be seen!”

He said any financial proposal done by the IDA should be done in consultation with the local taxing entities which will be the most effected by this process.

He wondered if the village and town planning board and the Adirondack Park Agency were aware of the PILOT plan “so they could consider it as part of their analysis of the impact on the community.”

He asked if the PILOT would be renewable at the end of the 20 years as many PILOTs are.

Tupper Lake Supervisor Patti Littlefield also mentioned several things she noted at the recent town board meeting.

“I agree with everything John said, as far as the town goes. We do support the project but I've had a little experience with PILOT projects in Tupper Lake since about 1980. My experience is that the owners of the company always approached the taxing entity. Back in the day there was two separate taxing entities in Tupper Lake- the village and the town since both the village and town had their own assessors.”

“Years ago the applicant would come before both boards and present their case and ask for a PILOT. All of the PILOTS granted these past several decades were for low-income or elderly housing. I don't recall any granted for private, retail businesses! I don't believe there are any here.”

She said she was concerned that not everyone in Tupper Lake was aware of the PILOT proposal, given the way the announcement only appeared in the Saranac Lake newspaper and when it appeared on the Christmas weekend.

“That's why we brought it up at our recent meeting so the public would be aware of the hearing.”

“I'm thankful there are so many people here this afternoon.”

She said like Mr. Quinn she hoped the public comment period would be extended some weeks.

“I don't know how the IDA can do this. I don't know the law, with respect to PILOTs, so I need to be educated on this! The fact that someone can go to the IDA and a public hearing is held and then the IDA tells the taxing entities in Tupper Lake you now have a new PILOT agreement. And that without us ever being aware of it, except for finding out through the notice you sent. So I don't know how the village and town and school fit into this process!”

“I'd like some clarification on how the PILOT through the IDA all works.”

“I noticed in the newspaper several weeks ago when a hotel project applied for a PILOT in the Town of North Elba officials there said flatly they don't grant PILOTs.”

“I'm concerned about the fairness of a PILOT for 20 years when there are other avenues to get tax breaks for new businesses starting.”

“It's also concerning for other businesses in Tupper Lake who paid the full shot- motels and other businesses.”

“We'll see what you end up with, but I think we should tread lightly creating a PILOT for 20 years!”

School District Business Manager Dan Bower asked several questions on what he called “a project that is exciting for Tupper Lake.”

“I have an obligation to provide our school board with the best information about this I can.

He wondered how the assessed value figure on the base evaluation was calculated at $30,600. He said the current assessment on those properties on Park, Mill and Lake streets is about 338,000. “I wonder if you could talk to the $300,000 difference in figures?”

He also asked the IDA officials to tell him how the PILOT would effect the calculations of the tax cap for the taxing entities in the community.

He said the new abatement is being proposed “at a time when state aid is being reduced drastically.”

Jeremy Evans, in answering the second question about any impact on the tax cap calculation, said “it gets worked into the work sheet that has to be completed each year by the taxing jurisdictions. He encouraged the taxing entities to use the estimates that were provided that day and plug them into their respective work sheets.

He said Mr. Bower was correct that the current assessed value of the various properties was $338,000. He said he was told by Assessor Paul O'Leary that if all the properties were merged and the buildings all removed that estimated assessed valuation would be $30,600.

Lake Simond Road resident and retired assistant district attorney Jack Delehanty said the hotel proposed “will be a valuable asset” for the village and the town.

“I'd like to echo a couple of Mr. Quinn's and Mrs. Littlefield's comments, however, with regard to the element of transparency. We want success in the village and we need an amenity such as this. But we're in a situation where I think it would behoove the applicant to have as much of a coordinated review of this matter as is humanly possible. We've got experience in Tupper Lake as to what happens when you've got a bifurcated or three-part review or a completely fractured review. If I were an applicant I think I would want everything to happen at once instead of putting the financial part of this out front. I think it would be appropriate to have the community understand the complete implications of this project with regard to location, amenities, local approvals by the planning board and any zoning decisions which need to be made, in addition to the financial elements of the plan.

“I do think as well that 20 years is a long time. I know I probably won't be here in 20 years and I don't want my kids to have to pay for this!”

“There are things that are wonderful about this project and about the people behind it. They are winners and I support them moving forward on this!”

“But I think we should move at a pace. I don't think we should be precipitous about anything that happens here, especially with regard to the financial impact and implications of the taxpayers of our community.”

“I hope the notice of public hearing passes muster and I hope the record would remain open for an adequate period of time to allow the entire community to weigh in on this project and its implications.”

Rosi Littlefield of Lake Simond Road asked a question about the numbers presented that afternoon. “If you have spent nearly $11 million building the hotel, why are you predicting it is only going to be worth $4.5 million? And if the assessor were to say: 'double that number!' am I right in thinking all the numbers in those columns would double?”

Jeremy Evans said he couldn't explain why “an improvement to a property doesn't equate to the same increase in assessment. I don't know why that is...that's a good question for assessors. It's very common that that's the case.”

He said Mrs. Littlefield's assumption was correct that if the evaluation or assessment number increased so too would all the numbers in annual PILOT schedule in corresponding fashion.

According to Mr. Evans, “that's why I've been stressing that these are all estimates based on two factors: the assessed value of the project” when built and the tax rates of the respective taxing entities.

Rosi said she would love to hear from owners Betsy Lowe and Nancy Howard how they got to this point in the PILOT process.

Ms. Lowe said the partners met with IDA officials to explore the possible exemptions to help their financing of the project and to make the whole project feasible.

She asked Jacob Wright, whose firm is managing the various aspects of the project, to continue.

Mr. Wright said they tried unsuccessfully to find “new market tax credits” because the funding in that program had dried up.

“They wouldn't fund us in Tupper Lake. Sometimes they have problems with hotels in certain geographic areas.” He said considerable resources were spent in that search until it eventually fell through.

“We had a meeting with the IDA and Jeremy to review the benefits that New York State and the county offers new development projects” in the early fall. “We went through its entire application process. I attended an IDA board meeting and then notices went out.”

He said they started the zoning process with the village and town back in January 2019. “For the past 12 months we've been at meetings with the planning board and zoning board of appeals here and with the Adirondack Park Agency staff” to secure our permits. He said he just learned they should expect their approval from the APA this week.

“That gives us full entitlements for the project to move forward.”

“Now we're finalizing our financing to hopefully make the project happen!”

Betsy joked that just buying the parcels of property over the years was “a 20-year process.”

Robyn Doolen, co-owner of Shaheen's Adirondack Inn, questioned a statement in a newspaper article in the Adirondack Daily Enterprise that day that quoted Mr. Wright saying the new hotel will likely have a financial return lower than a normal hotel.

At past public meetings here the professional developer said the boutique hotel proposed here has attracted what he called “angel investors” who were not seeking a big return on their investments but who were investing here to help the downtown area and the community at large.

She asked if Mr. Wright could speak to that statement and any statistical data he has to back it up.

She wondered which hotels were compared to the proposed one here and where they were located.

“Is there a projected ADR (average daily revenue) to determine this?”

Mr. Wright said there were two feasibility studies completed for the project- one by Pinnacle Advisors of Boston and one by HVS- the largest hotel consulting company in the nation.

HVS does regional and national comparisons of ADRs and daily occupancies. Those studies compared our proposed hotel compared with the average hotel in the northeast and across the country. “The predicted ADR and occupancy rate is less than your normal hotel. When you raise private equity for hotel investments the internal rate of return (IRR) that is expected by investors is significantly less than a standard hotel project.”

He said the new hotel is being built at a time “when the hospitality industry has been decimated. Building a hotel today is essentially impossible so hopefully we can pull this one off!”

He said their information comes from the two feasibility studies commissioned and from his own experience as an instructor of hotel feasibility at Cornell University. “At our firm we do our own internal analysis of the numbers.”

He said he also gets a STAR report every week on what the franchise hotels and motels in Lake Placid and Saranac Lake are reporting in occupancy and revenue numbers.

“Occupancy rates in both villages were down 58% last week,” he gave as an example of what those reports tell him.

“So you take those numbers and figure you're in Tupper Lake and not in Lake Placid so you are not going to have close to those same ADR and occupancy numbers.”

Park Motel co-owner Maggie Ernenwein said she's always believed that “business generates business and that overall this should be a good project for Tupper.”

“However, I am concerned with this amount of gifting to this new project. It may undercut how much they can charge and make others like me uncompetitive. So I have a lot of concerns about it. I wondered if the IDA did any kind of study on the impact of it on other local businesses” and how many other accommodations places “will be driven out of business?”

Mr. Evans told her the IDA did not do an impact study, “although we do have impacts like the number of jobs that will be created.”

“So you don't have any balance of the jobs we will lose compared with the jobs created?” the Park Motel co-owner pressed.

The IDA representative said they did not have that information.

Trustee Ron LaScala, an outspoken member of the village board who was in the village court room that afternoon, admitted he was unaware the PILOT was under consideration for this project. “I was fortunate to get a hold of Jeremy today and he spent a good amount of time explaining the entire process.” He said before then he was not that familiar with PILOT programs.

“After listening to what Jeremy had to say and discussing it with some people in the community, it does make sense! The 20-year term, that's a long time. It's a career in most people's lives.” He said he didn't know why the term of the plan had to be that long.

“At the same time I feel we need more rooms in Tupper Lake in the summer-time. Hopefully with the rail/trail coming that will be a problem for us too in the fall and winter.”

He said the new hotel will be very positive for the community.

“As it stands now with the information I have, I will support this 100%!”

He said he did understand the concerns about transparency, given the single notice about the event published in the Adirondack Daily Enterprise on Christmas weekend.

He said he was sure that Mr. Evans would like to have given the local public more notice about the hearing.

“For the money we're not getting up front, I think it'll work for us on the flip side!”

Mayor Paul Maroun thanked everyone for their comments that day and said he will ask the IDA chairman Justus Martin to extend the public comment period for 30 days. That way the people of the community “can give you written input about how they feel about this!”

He said Supervisor Littlefield's comment about North Elba is “not the same as Tupper Lake. North Elba doesn't need any more rooms right now. Officials there don't need to offer an incentive to get someone to build a hotel in Lake Placid because it's a destination point for the world.

“We need an incentive to permit people to have the financial ability and stability to have a hotel in Tupper and allow it to continue to grow after the first few years. With a hotel in Tupper Lake we will be able to draw more tourists to our area.”

The mayor said he hoped the IDA would answer the questions raised and the questions that come in the weeks ahead and respond to all questioners “so we have a full understanding of the fiscal dynamics of the plan.

He said the village board worked with the developers to find the 12 off-site parking spots that the zoning board of appeals required in its permit.

Mr. Maroun said he believes too that when the hotel is built it's assessment will be more than $4.5 million, based on the $10.88 million estimate to build it. “And that way we'll see an increase in our tax base.”

“Overall, it will be a benefit to all the taxing entities and the community at large.”

He said he looked forward to the village working with the IDA and the owners on this project.

Cheryl LeClair said she was “totally supportive of the idea.”

She said she believes it will add to the appeal of the community's natural assets.

“-But I really dread seeing this project dragged down. We lived through more than 12 years of the previous project (Adirondack Club and Resort) that didn't pan out because of so many hoops they had to be jumped through. I would hope this project could be condensed.”

She wondered if the numbers shown in the payment tables “were written in stone or is there room for negotiations to help out but maybe not over 20 years.

Mr. Evans said the negotiations were crafted by the IDA staff, the applicant and the IDA counsel. “This is the proposal being considered and on the table.”

He said it will be up to the IDA's board of directors to make the final decision and it's only official when the board does that. The board hasn't considered the proposal yet and is awaiting the conclusion of the public comment period so it can review all those comments.

He said too the board does have the authority to change the request, with the permission of the applicant. “There's always room for negotiations” before the final board resolution.

Jerry Selini called a 20-year plan “excessive.”

“I don't mind helping someone get started, but a heckva a lot of things can happen in 20 years. We saw what happened in town in ten years!”

Terry Doolen, referred to the Enterprise article about the hearing that day, said the story reported that in the first year of the PILOT only the basic value would be taxed. “In the second year it would be the base line assessment plus 5% of the new assessment.” He asked Mr. Evans for an explanation on the new assessment.

Jeremy said the payments from the owners would come in two parts: the taxes generated on the parcels of land before the building starts and then in each successive year the building’s assessment is added in on an upward sliding scale, beginning at 5% in the second year.

“So you have the land value and the new assessed value of the building, once the hotel is complete and the town assessor assesses it.”

“We have estimated that is approximately $4.1 million and the assessor will make a final determination once the project is complete.”

“Would this be done every year?” Mr. Doolen asked.

Mr. Evans said the hotel would be assessed only whenever there was a new total re-assessment of the community.

Free Press Publisher Dan McClelland echoed several of the points made by earlier speakers that the public comment period needs to be extended into the new year. He said it was an unusual way the single legal notice came to be and the notice was missed in the Free Press. “Had it been a different time I think there would have been a lot more people here.”

“I would urge the IDA board to keep the public comment period open for another 30 days or perhaps even 60 days.”

He wondered if the IDA had set a closing date and Mr. Evans said it hasn’t been set yet.

He said there’s no chance the public comment period would end at the close of Tuesday’s hearing.

“Anyone and everyone is welcome to submit written comments.”

He said there was no date for the IDA board to act on the proposal, noting the board meets the second Tuesday of each month and it would likely be the subject of discussion either in January or February.

“Right now we’re listening to all the comments and we’ll keep the public comment open” for a time.

Mr. McClelland called the hotel project “a great project. The people behind it are great people. The community is looking forward to this hotel happening and it will greatly boost the economy of the community and particularly the businesses of the uptown business district.”

He said those who pay a lot of property taxes here are “sensitive to any more burden” and were looking for some relief by the expected growth of the tax base when the new hotel arrives.

“If we can do something to make this project a go, then that’s something we should strongly look at!” See editorial this week.

Co-owner Nancy Howard, who was president of the Tupper Lake Chamber of Commerce here for years, said that she and Betsy have always looked at this “project as a complement to existing motels. As a full-service hotel we think it will attract new people to Tupper Lake over and above our faithful, long time guests” who frequent the local motels.

“As I worked with the chamber over the years it was so clear to me, the people who came to the triathlon and other events each year fell in love with Tupper Lake and were very sorry they couldn't find places to stay in Tupper Lake!”

“This increased my interest and enthusiasm in continuing with this project!”

“I know for a fact, and so does Betsy, that the weddings we do at the Wild Center attract many, many guests who could not stay in Tupper Lake.”

Those in attendance Tuesday were Ms. Bourgeois and Russ Kinyon of the IDA staff, IDA board members Jim Ellis and Steve Erman and IDA chair Justus Martin, hotel developers Betsy Lowe and Nancy Howard, Jacob Wright of the firm helping to develop the project, Skyward Hospitality, and several of his people- Bayle Reichert, Tom Accordino and Michael Doran, Marcy Gotzmer, marketing and business director for the Franklin County Local Development Corporation, planning board member Jan Yaworski, Town Supervisor Patti Littlefield, Town Councilman John Quinn, Mayor Paul Maroun, Trustee Ron LaScala, Dan Bower, school district business manager, Russ Bartlett, superintendent of schools, village code enforcement officer Peter Edwards, Melissa McManus, community development director and local residents Sue Moeller, Maggie Ernenwein, owner of the Park Motel, Cheryl LeClair, Jack and Susan Delehanty, Donna Sloan, Hope Frenette, John Gillis, Robyn and Terry Doolen, owners of Shaheen's Adirondack Inn, Jerry Seleni and Rosi Littlefield.

After the hearing Stewart Amell of McLaughlin Ave. and a retired superintendent of schools suggested the IDA or the town or village prepare a question and answer document to better inform residents about specifics of the PILOT application. Keep questions and answers simple and to the point and post it on their respective websites and in the Free Press. “I understand there is a 30-day comment period in place and this document would be a valuable instrument to educate folks. I believe it's difficult to ask for comments when most community members lack the knowledge of what a PILOT program really means to the community.

Fourteen new cases of COVID in county this week, no new ones in Tupper Lake

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

There are currently 119 active COVID-19 cases in Franklin County, as of yesterday. Of the total there were 14 new cases.

In his weekly report, County Legislator Paul Maroun said of the 14 new cases this week, none were in Tupper Lake. “There was one in Malone, one was from Constable, and the balance were from the Bare Hill Correctional Facility.” He said this was the first time in recent weeks there has not been a new case from Tupper Lake.

County health officials reported this week there were 31 new cases over the weekend with the 14 added on Monday. There are apparently nearly 1,100 residents across the county either in isolation or in quarantine as of yesterday.

Mr. Maroun said Tupper Lake's active cases haven't decreased in recent days.

“Right now there's 29 active COVID cases in Tupper Lake. There are 137 people currently quarantined or in isolation here.”

Huge spike in COVID in Tupper Lake, county

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

There's been a huge spike in corona virus cases in Tupper Lake and in Franklin County this week.

County Legislator and Mayor Paul Maroun said the Franklin County Health Department reported 120 active positive cases on Monday- an increase of about 35 cases in a 24-hour period.

On Sunday there were 84 active cases reported, up from 72 on Saturday, according to reports this week. Friday saw 15 new cases.

Traditionally the county COVID positive numbers have been running around 50 or 60.

The totals Sunday and Monday broke county records for the most new active cases any day since the pandemic began.

As of Monday 455 people across the county were in quarantine, meaning they have possibly been exposed to someone with the virus, or in isolation, meaning they have tested positive for the virus.

A sixth resident of the Alice Hyde nursing home in Malone died Sunday, bringing the county's COVId-related death toll to date to eight.

County Legislator Paul Maroun who serves with Supervisor Patti Littlefield and others on the local and regional COVID emergency committees, reported yesterday that among county officials “there is a big concern about this sudden rise” and that this county, based on its numbers, “is going into the state's yellow area.

The color zone system set by the state involves a rolling average of cases over a set number of weeks.

If cases continue to rise in the North Country and the county enters the state's orange designation that could bring a return of the closure of restaurants to all but take-out service, the mayor warned.

He said as of Monday afternoon there are 33 positive cases in Tupper Lake with approximately 175 people here in quarantine.

Mr. Maroun said there may be an additional 20 cases in Tupper Lake not yet included in Monday's update.

In recent weeks there have only been a handful of positive cases in this community.

In the face of this major uptick in cases here and across the county, local and county officials will be beefing up the enforcement of the wearing of protective masks in coming days.

“I'm going to send out our code officer to every business in Tupper Lake to ask owners and managers not to serve people who are not wearing a mask,” he asserted yesterday.

“If businesses serve people without masks and we get a complaint, the county attorney will send a letter out” to the offending business and one of three things will happen on the next complaint: “I will have our police issue the business owner with a summons, or we will look at temporarily revoking their occupancy permit or the county health department will initiate a fine!”

“I'm not trying to put anyone out of business. But at the same time, all business owners have to do is say 'you aren't wearing a mask, we can't serve you!'”

He said he was aware there are residents here who don't believe the pandemic is true. “Well it is and there's at least 33 people here who know it's true!”

He said this newest crack-down is necessary because of the new numbers here.

“If a couple of people get fined- and I don't want to put anyone out of business-” people here are going to start paying attention to this threat.

He said too businesses with liquor licenses need to pay strict attention, because once they are lost they are hard to get back.

Similar measures will take place all across the county, he said in talking this week with his colleagues in Malone.

“We're getting serious and some people may get fined! -Or someone may have to close their business for a half a day or something!”

“I have counseled numerous business owners here...I've begged them to please have their customers wear masks when they come in!”

“It's serious now...we're in the big numbers!”

“I encourage people to please wear their masks!” He also instructed people who see others entering businesses and not wearing masks to take a photo of them and send it to him or the village police chief.”

“We have to get through this until there's a vaccine!”

On the vaccine front this week local and regional officials, in their meeting yesterday morning found out that a vaccine will be released by the end of the year. “Is Franklin County going to get vaccines right away? Probably not, we've been told!”

He said officials at Alice Hyde nursing home in Malone have already been told they are not on the first vaccine round.

“When you are talking 20 million plus people in this state, vaccines will go to the worst places first!”

He said representatives from the sheriff's department, county health and county emergency services have been here in recent days to develop a vaccine distribution plan.

“They'll start first with Mercy Living Center and our first responders- fire, rescue and police.”

He said the plan unfolding is to use the village's new electric department garage for mobile vaccinations where people can drive in one door into a bay and drive out the other. There are four bays to vaccinate a lot of people, he noted.

The state police, he said, have flown drones over the building and its campus to plan how vehicles will line up to access that treatment and where people can park for 15 minutes after the shot to make sure they have no reactions to the immunization.

“So we have a plan set for Tupper.”

He said if the vaccines don't come until spring or summer the shots may be delivered to residents who line up in their cars along the firemen's strip in the municipal park.

The mayor said he is willing to take the first vaccine so everyone here knows it safe.

Wild Center helping students during period of remote learning with free tickets

Dan McClelland

With Tupper Lake schools now completely remote, The Wild Center is offering local school students a way to both learn and have fun. Beginning, Friday, November 27 through Sunday, January 3, The Wild Center is offering free tickets to Tupper Lake School District students and adults in their household.

All Tupper Lake student tickets must be reserved in advance and can be made by visiting https://wildcenter.org/visit/tupperstudents or by calling 518-359-7800.

Tupper Lake students are encouraged to spend the day with their families exploring all the The Wild Center’s Outdoor Winter Campus has to offer including Winter Wild Walk, Forest Music, Snowshoeing on our Trail System, Kicksledding, the Outdoor Classroom Animal Experiences at The Viewing Door and Otter Play Yard.

Students are also encouraged to try out our new Winter Jr. Naturalist booklet. Complete all the challenges in the booklet to earn a special Jr. Naturalist patch and custom certificate. More information and a downloadable version of the booklet can be found at https://www.wildcenter.org/jrnaturalist/winter/

Tupper School Tickets are only available as pre-reserved timed tickets from 10 am to 5p.m. on days The Wild Center is open to the public from now until January3, 2021.  Tickets must be reserved in advance through website or phone – Go online or call before you drive over!  Tupper Lake students must be accompanied by an adult household member for the

duration of their visit. Due to the challenges of COVID-19, household groups of five are best and must be no larger than 10 individuals as per New York State Guidelines Visitors must follow The Wild Center’s COVID-19 safety policies listed in the VisitorCode of Conduct.


Four COVID deaths in county so far

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Franklin County marked its third and fourth deaths this week from COVID-19 and all have been elderly people from the north end of the county.

In a report from the mayor and county legislator Paul Maroun yesterday there is apparently a fifth person gravely ill from the disease who may regrettably succumb to it.

There are 53 active cases currently across the county- with five new cases added yesterday, he reported.

There was a new case reported to the county health agency from Tupper Lake over the weekend, bringing the total of positive cases here to about eight.

He said that the local cases have all been well managed in, with people following quarantine orders, and as a consequence this village has not seen a fatality.

The mayor said that several local businesses have closed this past week, out of caution. One of the places closed is the VFW Post 3120 on Park Street and it is expected to stay closed for several more days, he noted. “Apparently there was a person who visited there recently and who tested positive. Out of caution for her staff and their patrons, Commander Tracy Luton” closed the quarters temporarily and sent her staff members to be tested.

“I want to thank those business owners who have listened to what we've said and the precautions we've suggested.” He said several businesses- particularly local restaurants- have made “some alterations” to their operations to make it safer there for their staff members and visitors.

He said the county department of health also appreciates those efforts and it's working, since the number of violation complaints reported by local citizenry to them and to enforcement agencies has decreased in Tupper Lake.

“We're still getting a few complaints from people but it's really about not wearing face masks in local businesses.”

“I would encourage everyone to please wear masks when visiting a local business or public place. -And business owners or managers just need to tell customers who come in without masks that 'we are not going to serve you!'”

He wished everyone in the community a safe and happy Thanksgiving

County outbreak of COVID closes all schools

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Franklin County is experiencing what county officials are calling a major outbreak of COVID-19 and county leaders have called on school officials in the county to close every school as early as this week.

County Legislator Paul Maroun reported yesterday there were 47 active cases in the county- most in northern county towns but two in Tupper Lake.

In addition to the two active cases here, there are several other local ones among people who work here but live in Piercefield, he noted.

Mr. Maroun said the number is more alarming than people think. “People see that number (47) and don't see much of a change,” but it is fluid. He said people go off the list of active cases when their quarantine is done and more go on when they contract the virus.

He said the current number is telling as it is not decreasing. “Every day there are new cases and that worries us!”

“Everyone must understand there is an outbreak in Franklin County. -And it's both north and south ends. More in the north but still some in the south!”

Mr. Maroun said Monday he, County Manager Donna Kissane and County Board Chairman Don Dabiew from St. Regis Falls met with all the school leaders in the county.

“That's where the decision to close all schools came from. People were worried. What would we do here, what would we do there?”

“The safest thing to do to prevent further spread is to do what we are doing,” he explained.

“I know it's hard on families and we're going to have many calls. We're trying to figure out how we can offer some day-care if we have to.”

He said that right now, however, the safest thing for everyone is to close the schools this week.

Mr. Maroun said there are three things county officials want people to understand: if you feel you have symptoms, go get tested.

The second measure is that they are working at resuming Adirondack Health testing in Tupper Lake that was done this summer at the L.P. Quinn Elementary School parking lot. Right now, he said, the hospital's mobile van is visiting the Malone area to what he called “the hot spots” to test as many people as possible to try to “calm done the outbreak there.”

Mr. Maroun said there are currently 341 people in this county in quarantine for the disease.

He said the county's public health nurses are incredibly busy right now and they haven't even got to tracing everyone in quarantine right now.

Contact tracing involves a lot of time and he said county officials are hoping to get help from the state to collect more of that information.

He said the county is also hiring more people to help with the tracing work.

“We're also talking to the district attorney today to start enforcing” social distancing rules so this doesn't spread any farther.

“That means if you go in a business without a mask and they serve you, they are going to get fined!”

“We've had numerous cases all over the county and a lot of them in Tupper Lake too where people are in businesses and not wearing masks!”

He said yesterday there were a half dozen complaints in Tupper Lake about people visiting local businesses and not wearing masks.

“If we want to quell this thing, we have to be tougher...we've become a little lax in our enforcement.”

“We don't want to close businesses, but the other issue is Franklin County is almost into the state's yellow zone in the Governor's office. The yellow zone has a whole different set of standards. If we get into the red zone, we go back to no eating in restaurants, no bars, no yoga, etc.”

“We're are trying not to bet there but everyone has to work with us to avoid that!”

“I don't care about politics right now, but I am dead serious. We've had one death in Franklin County the day before yesterday and I don't want any deaths in Tupper Lake!”

“I don't care if people get angry with me. Anyone who thinks this isn't real is just plain dumb!”

“President-elect Biden last night implored people to wear a mask! He's right...it's our first line of defense!”

“I know there are people in Tupper Lake who will not wear a mask. If they don't, then they can't be served at Stewart's, at Shaheen's, at Larkins, at Tupper Lake Supply, at any business in town!”

“If people go in our local businesses without a mask and they get reported then that business will be fined!”

“We have to stop this. I don't want it in Tupper Lake!”

He stressed that all large gatherings and parties will be stopped henceforth until this crisis is over with enforcement by the state and village police. A recent party here caused several people to catch the virus and test positive, he noted.

“We're not going to have big events period. Because someone is going to get sick and die and everyone will say: why didn't we do more?”

Village board issues statement against discrimination

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

During this time in our community and across the country when thoughts about the ills of racism are on the minds of many, Village Mayor Paul Maroun read a statement on behalf of the village board at Wednesday’s meeting summarizing the village’s position against discrimination, and racism and for racial equality and diversity.

The meeting was again held behind closed doors with all five elected officials and Village Clerk Mary Casagrain safe distancing and wearing masks in the village board chambers. Department heads, reporters and guests all tuned into the meeting via a conference call. Trustee candidate Jason McClain also appeared in person wearing a mask.

The statement was entitled “The Village of Tupper Lake’s Statement on Discrimination and Diversity.” It read as follows:

“Tupper Lake is an all-inclusive, family-friendly community, a supportive and recreational paradise in the Adirondacks. Tupper Lake never has and does not support discrimination by or to anyone or any group. We do not discriminate by race, creed, color or sexual orientation, which would mean LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender or queer).”

He said that is the village’s statement and that hopefully puts to rest any questions about the village policy on racism, bigotry, diversity and discrimination.

Several trustee thanked the mayor for reading the statement.