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News

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“Junction Function” planned Sunday to celebrate Downtown Tupper Lake

Dan McClelland

Downtown Tupper Lake will be hosting a community celebration, dubbed the “Junction Function,” at the Tupper Lake Train Station on Sunday, October 16 from 1p.m. to 3 p.m. The free community event features local businesses, vendors, attractions, live music and artists.

“Junction Function” has been organized by the community of Tupper Lake, in partnership with the Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism (ROOST), to showcase Tupper Lake’s downtown area, businesses and local attractions. The event also coincides with the arrival of the first passenger train at the Tupper Lake Train Station in more than 40 years.

Community members and visitors are invited to the free event where they can welcome the train to Tupper Lake, take part in the festivities, learn more about upcoming regional events and area attractions and learn more about development plans for downtown Tupper Lake.

Among the many organizations participating in Junction Function include The Wild Center, Adirondack Sky Center and Observatory, ROOST, and Adirondack Rail Trail Association (ARTA). 2023 Lake Placid FISU World University Games representatives will also take part in the event and Tupper Arts will present a pop-up Art Show featuring works from the recent Tupper Lake Plein Air Festival. The event will feature live music by Josh Weise; and our local craft brewery, Raquette River Brewing, will be offering tastings.

Adirondack Mac, the Lake Placid 2023 FISU World University Games mascot and Ollie, The Wild Center otter mascot, will be on-hand to welcome attendees. Games, prizes and giveaways will round out the family-friendly event.

One highlight of the event will be the arrival of the first passenger train since 1981. Adirondack Railroad is making its inaugural journey along a scenic route through the Adirondacks from Utica to Tupper Lake. The 11-hour round-trip includes a one-and-a-half-hour stop in Tupper Lake beginning around 1:30 p.m. As passengers disembark they will be met with the local celebration where they can become acquainted with the community and its attractions, meet business and elected leaders, learn about future developments, and visit downtown businesses.

ROOST has created a map of the downtown Tupper Lake so that train passengers and visitors to the community can explore the area during their visit. The map indicates local businesses and restaurants that are a short walk from the train station. Some of the downtown businesses have adjusted their hours of operation to coincide with the event and visitors and local residents are encouraged to visit the downtown area before and after the festival.

Community members and those who travel to Tupper Lake for the event will also have the opportunity to board and explore the train while it is at the station.

According to Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism’s Tupper Lake Regional Manager, Katie Lalonde, “Junction Function “is an opportunity for the community of Tupper Lake to celebrate all that the village has to offer, along with sharing information about its ongoing revitalization. “Between the village’s recent submission of a NY Forward Grant for the downtown area, the revival of train service, construction of the highly anticipated Adirondack Rail Trail, coupled with the area’s thriving businesses, attractions and events, Tupper Lake is truly at the junction of a really exciting time.”

In September, the village applied to the NY Forward program to gain support for 18 transformative projects in its downtown area, positioning it as a vibrant connector of community and business at the junction of the Adirondack Rail Trail and the scenic rail line. NY Forward was established to support and encourage revitalization of small and rural communities, especially villages, hamlets and other small, neighborhood-scale municipal centers.

Tickets are still available for the Adirondack Railroad’s High Peaks Limited inaugural journey. Those interested should visit Adirondack Railroad for information and pricing. Regular trips from Utica to Tupper Lake will begin in 2023. Businesses and organizations that wish to take part in the Junction Function event should visit the Tupper Lake website to sign up.

Village seeking public input on “The Junction Connects” NY Forward application projects

Dan McClelland

The Village of Tupper Lake is developing “The Junction Connects,” a NY Forward funding request. The Junction is Tupper Lake’s historic Main Street “downtown” commercial district, home to anchor businesses, local retail, tourism centered businesses and attractions like Raquette River Brewing, and the train station/trail hub soon to be the connection point of the Adirondack Rail Trail and scenic rail to Thendara/Old Forge.

For the past few weeks businesses and property owners have been submitting proposed projects for the application. In order to submit a winning application, the Village needs to hear your thoughts on projects that have been proposed for inclusion in the application. To share your thoughts on the projects online, please visit the project website www.tupperlakejunction.com between September 14 and September 18, 2022.

Here is a sampling of the projects the community will propose to achieve Tupper Lake’s vision of connecting Junction businesses to the opportunities the rail trail offers, and visitors and residents to the Junction’s assets and amenities:

- Business expansion projects at Faust Cabins, The Enclave B&B, P2s Pub, Tupper Lake Supply, and Fleury's Automotive.

- Installation of green infrastructure; bicycle parking, charging and amenities; and access and site improvements at Raquette River Brewing.

- Mixed-use redevelopment of the former Maroun's Store and Pharmacy buildings on Main Street, with updated commercial space on the street level and housing above.

- Expanded accommodations offerings.

- Private sector site landscaping and green space enhancement at businesses throughout the target area, and

- Public sector streetscape enhancement to “connect the dots” including sidewalks, bike lanes, green space and plantings, wayfinding signage and public art, all linking the Train Station/Adirondack Rail Trail trailhead with the Junction's restaurants, shops, services, lodging and residences.

NY Forward is a new state program for downtown areas in hamlets and villages. Like the DRI, NY Forward applicants must submit a vision for the downtown and a slate of projects to achieve that vision. The Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) reviews the applications and nominates winners. NY Forward awards will be smaller, but more numerous, than the DRI. Rather than one $10 million award per region with the DRI, each Regional Economic Development Council can award up to three awards per region—either two $4.5 million awards, or one $4.5 million award and two $2.25 million awards. More information about the NY Forward program is available at https://www.ny.gov/programs/ny-forward.

The Department of State (DOS) and its agency partners then engage the winning communities in a strategic planning process with assistance from a consultant to develop a slate of readily implementable projects.

If you have questions about Tupper Lake’s NY Forward application, please visit the project website at or email Melissa McManus at tupperlakecommunitydevelopment@gmail.com.

Adirondack Railroad train arriving Tuesday

Dan McClelland

by Bob Hest

Many in the Tupper Lake community over the years believed their town deserved passenger rail services again and to encourage that the town board, headed at the time by Supervisor Dean Lefebvre, created a committee about 2004 that in the ensuing years built a new station in the Junction, a historic replica of Tupper’s first station that was razed on that site a century ago. The aim was that if Tupper Lake as a community could build a train station, it would show the world, and state officials in particular, that it wanted to see trains return to town.

Passenger service disappeared here in 1965 and the corridor remained absent of train traffic from that point on with the exception of a brief operation for the 1980s Winter Olympics.

The town committee called “Next Stop! Tupper Lake,” chaired by Dan McClelland, raised over $300,000 in hundreds of donations from railroad supporters here and built the station in 2006 and 2007 with the help of dozens of volunteers, and a contracting crew headed by Darryl Robideau. Many local businesses gave generously to help the station get built. A long-time summer resident at Big Wolf was a key benefactor of the train station project.

Lots of volunteers and staff at the Remsen-based Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society (ARPS) also believed trains could eventually return here, committing thousands of hours of time and energy in the fledgling train operation in the south end of the Adirondack Railroad corridor during the past 30 years.

Rail service to Tupper Lake from points south on the track and excursions out of Tupper Lake are expected to commence on a regular basis, ARPS officials have said this summer.

The dream of many in the community is coming true next Tuesday when the non-profit railroad company has planned ceremonies to celebrate this historic milestone. A train with more than 100 invited passengers aboard is expected to arrive around 1p.m. having started the journey from the Thendara Depot near Old Forge. Community residents wishing to be a part should plan to arrive at the Junction depot no later than 12:45 to see the train arrive.

Parking near the depot is limited. Emergency vehicles only will be parking on the Depot property. Handicapped persons may wish to park behind the Lumberjack Restaurant. Arrangements have also been made to use the large parking area near the playground on Washington Street. It is a short walk from there to the station and a shuttle service is being organized.

The ceremonies will feature tributes, remarks by state and local elected officials, and a ribbon cutting. Regional news media have been invited. Local photographer and train enthusiast Jim Lanthier will be taking pictures for the historical record. Locals may wish to walk through the train which will include a glass- topped dome car, a dining car that once was in service to Tupper Lake when operated by the New York Central railroad, and first class cars that offer passengers an enjoyable and memorable experience. A ribbon cutting ceremony and photo opportunity is planned around 3p.m. in front of the newest locomotive acquired by the railroad, before the train departs to return to Thendara.

Railroad company officials have said numerous times this year that they look forward to being good community partners in the years ahead.

-Bob Hest is the corporate secretary of the Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society and board member who resides near Malone. He has been working diligently in recent years with fellow ARPS board members Jim Ellis and Al Dunham along with the Next Stop! Tupper Lake group, to bring about this event.

Mountain Challenge set for this weekend

Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Archers 29th Annual Mountain Challenge is this Saturday and Sunday, August 27 and 28. Testing the skills of local archers and visiting archers from around the northeast will be two courses of 30 targets. Featured too will various novelty shoots, door prizes and raffles. Registration at the Tupper Lake Rod and Gun Club starts at 8a.m. each day.

School taxes for Tupper Lakers going up by 4.28%, down for Piercefield, Colton property owners

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Board of Education met in special session Monday to finalize the tax rates in the district’s three towns, in preparation for school tax bills coming next month.

Town of Tupper Lake school taxpayers will see their school tax rate increase from the current rate of $14.71 per $1,000 assessed valuation to $15.34 per $1,000- an increase of 63 cents per $1,000 this year. It represents a 4.28% increase in taxes.

By contrast, however, property owners in Piercefield and Colton will see their school taxes drop when their bills arrive in September.

The 2022-23 school tax rate in Piercefield is $13.66- down by 2.3% from the current tax rate of $13.99. The 2022-23 tax rate for property owners in Colton drops too by over a $1 per $1,000 or 7.39% to $12.94 per $1,000 of assessed valuation- from $13.99 last year at this time to $12.94 per $1,000 for the new school year.

A factor in the new tax rates are declining state equalization rates in each of the towns. Tupper Lake’s equalization rate dropped this year from 95% to 81%. Piercefield’s equalization rate dropped from 100% to 91% and Colton’s from 100% to 96%. The state equalization rates set each year are based on a comparison of assessments here and full market values.

The total tax levy shared by district taxpayers is up by 3.06% to $9,275,397 from $9 million in 2021-22. Tupper Lake taxpayers will together pay $7.1 million of that, while Piercefield property owners will contribute $1.765 million and Colton taxpayers, only $332,841. That’s based on the fact that only a small portion of Colton lies within this school district.

The tax cap allowed by the state for this school district for the coming school year was 3.064%. District officials used all of that in their budget preparation this spring, with the total tax levy increasing to $9.275 million in the new budget from $9 million this current year, 2021-22.

When the budget for the operation of the Goff Nelson Memorial Library is figured into the equation, Tupper Lake property owners will see an additional 42 cents per $1,000 added to the tax rate on their bills next month. The combined school and library rate is $15.77 per $1,000. That is up by 66 cents per thousand or 4.35% over the current year. The tax levy contribution to the library from Tupper Lake this coming school year is $198,086. The tax rate to fund the library of 42 cents per $1,000 is up by 7.2%.

Piercefield property owners will contribute $48,716 to the financial workings of the library here with a tax rate assessment of 38 cents per $1,000 on their property. That rate is up one half of one percent. Colton property owners will ante up $9,186 toward the operation of the library this coming year with a school tax rate of 36 cents per $1,000, which is down by 4.8% over the current school year.

The school tax rate in Tupper Lake has increased from $12.74 per thousand in the 2014-15 school year to $15.34 per $1,0000 this coming year or by 21%. During that same nine-year period the Tupper Lake school tax levy, or the amount property owners pay in support of local education here, has grown from $5.8 million to $7.2 million or an increase of 24%.

Rotary Club-sponsored Red Cross Blood Drive August 11

Dan McClelland

The need for blood is constant, and although always in short supply, that shortage is such, now, that it leaves our country with less than a one day inventory.

Only volunteer donors can fulfill the need for patients in our community. Nationwide, someone needs a unit of blood every 2 to 3 seconds and most of us (family, friends, ourselves) will need blood in our lifetime. The Tupper Lake Rotary Club’s upcoming drive will be in the community room of the emergency services building on Santa Clara Ave, on Thursday, August 11 from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Masks are not currently required, but may be worn if desired. All donors will receive a $10 gift card to a merchant of their choice and will be entered to win gas for a year.

Save a life, donate blood. To make an appointment, go online to redcrossblood.org.

Milling of Lake Street from Wawbeek Ave. to Mill on August 3

Dan McClelland

The Village of Tupper Lake Department of Public Works will be milling the Lake Street road surface on August 3, weather permitting, from the Mill Street intersection to and including the Wawbeek Avenue intersection. The road will be closed completely for the day. Residents are asked to park on the adjacent street.

Because this project will also include milling from sidewalk to sidewalk, parking will be restricted too during the day.

Paving of that street will be done on August 10.

Nedd Sparks defeats Paul Maroun in Tuesday's primary

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Tuesday's primary for the county's Republican Party saw an upset in legislative district No. 6 when newcomer and challenger, Nedd Sparks, soundly defeated incumbent and multi-term legislator, Paul Maroun.

Across the three towns that make up the district- one of two in southern Franklin County that comprise the towns of Tupper Lake, Santa Clara and recently added Brighton- Mr. Sparks received 248 votes and Mr. Maroun, 132. There were no write-in ballots cast.

According to Tracy Sparks, Republican Commissioner of Elections and Nedd's wife, the vote count was unofficial but included early voting ballots and the absentee ballots received by the county office by primary day. There may be a few absentee ballots still to come in as state election law allows seven days for boards of election to accept ballots, if envelopes were postmarked on or before primary day.

Under recent election law changes boards of elections must now count absentee ballots received by election day “ahead of time” so they are included in unofficial vote counts on the day of the vote, she noted.

She said two absentee ballots arrived Wednesday and Thursday.

In the Town of Tupper Lake Mr. Sparks garnered 235 Republican votes and the incumbent legislator received 81.

Although he was defeated in the GOP primary, Mr. Maroun's name will still appear on the November ballot in the race for county legislator on the Conservative Party line.

Mr. Sparks' name will also be listed on an independent “Integrity” line.

Nedd said last week he was “very overwhelmed by the support” he received.”

He said he attributed his victory to a lot of door to door campaigning and many telephone calls made in recent months, including the day before and the day of Tuesday's primary. He said his campaigning last Monday and Tuesday reminded many people of the primary and the need to get out and vote.

“I was very humbled by all the support I received and I appreciate all of it.”

Paul Maroun, who is also village mayor, has served as county legislator many terms over the past three dozen years since he succeeded Nedd's father, the late John Sparks in the late 1970s after his tragic death.

Mr. Maroun was not discouraged by the vote count Thursday among his fellow Republicans. “This is the same thing that happened in the mayor's race,” he said, pointing to his win at the general election despite losing the GOP nod to Businessman Eric Shaheen at the party caucus.

Last November he ran on an independent line tying Mr. Shaheen on election night and later winning on absentee ballots. This time he'll be running on a main party line with the county Conservative Party's endorsement.

In the mayor's race last time he received strong support from Democrats and independents in the village.

He called the GOP primary challenge by Mr. Sparks “a good campaign” by both candidates “with no hostilities.”

“These things happen in primaries when you have relatively low numbers compared with a general election” where there may be a 1,000 or so people voting here.

“-And when you have been in office as long as I have been, no matter what you do you are bound to make enemies.” He said he believes too the Republican Party right now in Tupper Lake “is a little unstable!”

He said he too knows he lost a number of friends and past supporters by some of the actions he had to take during the pandemic to keep people safe here.

“I'll be be campaigning hard in the weeks and months to come” before the fall election, “just like I did in the mayor's race last year.

In the race for the GOP nod for Franklin County Sheriff between Sheriff Kevin Mulverhill and challenger Jay Cook, the county vote count saw Mr. Cook as the clear winner with 1,124 votes. Sheriff Mulverhill received 780 votes from his fellow Republicans.

Among the Tupper Lake Republicans, however, Kevin Mulverhill was the favorite with 169 votes, while his challenger secured 133 votes.

In the primary races for governor and lieutenant governor in both parties the vote counts for Tupper Lake alone weren't available as of last week but will be in coming weeks when all votes are canvassed, according to the election commissioner.

In Franklin County, Democrats gave Congressman Tom Suozzi 163 votes while Governor Kathy Hochul was the overwhelming favorite among her party members with 676. New York City's elected public advocate, Jumaane Williams received 93.

For lieutenant governor, Governor Hochul's lieutenant governor Antonio Delgado received the most votes in this county for that post with 455. He replaced this year Governor Hochul's original pick for that post, Brian Benjamin, who was arrested in April on federal corruption charges and who subsequently left that post.

County Republicans in their primary for governor gave the statewide winner, Lee Zelson, the most votes, 685.

Rob Astorino, who had the most campaign signs around Tupper Lake in recent weeks, came in second among county voters with 530 votes. Andrew Giuliani landed 428 and Harry Wilson, 192.

The race for New York State Governor is now between Governor Hochul and Congressman Lee Zeldin, a staunch ally of former President Trump who was among the Republicans who voted against certifying the 2020 election results.

Mr. Zeldin overcame primary challenges from Mr. Astorino, former Westchester county executive, businessman Wilson and Mr. Giuliani, the son of former New York City mayor and attorney for Donald Trump.

Triathletes in town this weekend!

Dan McClelland

Motorists are urged to keep a keen eye out for hundreds of triathletes this weekend when the Tupper Lake Chamber of Commerce brings its popular Tin Man Triathlon back to real life, after two years of virtual competitions.

Hundreds of triathletes and their families are expected to be in town to challenge themselves against the three legs of the event, which has a rich history here dating back to the early 1980s.

Swimmers will hit the water of Raquette Pond about 8a.m. Saturday and after strenuous bike and run pieces the triathletes will end back at the park by mid-day or thereafter Saturday.

Wendy Peroza as race director, working with dozens of volunteers, is expected to produce another banner event for the community.

Gary LaQuay Fishing Challenge Saturday

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

On the waters of Tupper Lake, Lake Simond, Raquette Pond and Raquette River there will be anglers of all skill levels Saturday for the Ninth Annual Gary LaQuay Fishing Challenge. The family of Gary LaQuay will again present the fishing tournament in his honor to benefit High Peaks Hospice.

The fishing tournament, Tupper's only public summer derby, has raised thousands of dollars for the work of the local hospice chapter over the years- and there's big money paid too each year to the fishermen who catch the biggest Northern Pike and the biggest bass.

According to Gary's son, Cory, who is the lead organizer of the annual event, about three dozen local businesses step forward each year and donate merchandise and services that are the prizes for a host of raffles associated with it. For the price of $30 registration, participants are automatically entered into the drawings that day.

The challenge runs from 7a.m. to 3p.m. that day.

The three major event sponsors this year are Neil and Linda Pickering's Mountain Market and Redemption Center, Homenergy and the Tupper Lake Sportsman's Club (formerly the Tupper Lake Rod and Gun Club). Mountain Market is donating a trolling motor this year and the fuel company is donating 100 gallons of fuel- both big prizes.

At recent derbies organizers have donated between $2,000 and $2,500 to High Peaks Hospice from events on the water. Those totals have grown from about $1,200 the first year to as much as the higher figure in recent years, Cory noted.

Gary was an avid fisherman who died far too prematurely over a decade ago.

For more information about the event contact Cory at (518) 569-3988 or Terry at (518) 304-3748.

Ninth annual Gary LaQuay Fishing Challenge slated for June 18

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Anglers of all abilities are encouraged to hit the waters of Tupper Lake later this month for the community's fun, yet competitive major fishing tournament of the summer season. On Saturday, June 18 the family of Gary LaQuay will again present the fishing tournament in his honor to benefit High Peaks Hospice.

This year marks the ninth annual version of the Gary LaQuay Fishing Challenge this past decade. The tournament was pre-empted by COVID-19 two years ago.

The fishing tournament, Tupper's only public summer derby, has raised thousands of dollars for the work of the local hospice chapter over the years- and there's big money paid too each year to the fishermen who catch the biggest Northern Pike and the biggest bass.

According to Gary's son, Cory, who is the lead organizer of the annual event, about three dozen local businesses step forward each year and donate merchandise and services that are the prizes for a host of raffles associated with it. For the price of $30 registration, participants are automatically entered into the drawings that day.

The challenge runs from 7a.m. to 3p.m. that day.

The three major event sponsors this year are Neil and Linda Pickering's Mountain Market and Redemption Center, Homenergy and the Tupper Lake Sportsman's Club (formerly the Tupper Lake Rod and Gun Club). Mountain Market is donating a trolling motor this year and the fuel company is donating 100 gallons of fuel- both big prizes.

Each year Cory and his family members try to split the registration fees into a share for the good work of hospice and a share for the cash prizes that go to the fishermen who land the three heaviest pike and the three heaviest bass. It is a 100% pay-out event.

How much money is raised each year for hospice and how much is paid out in prizes to the best anglers is based on the total registration pool, Cory told the Free Press this week.

Typically about 40% of the total registration fees goes to hospice each year. The balance is shared by the six top fishermen- three in each fish category- that day on a pro-rated basis.

Some years, Cory remembers, first place prizes have amounted to $900. Second prize in that category that year was about $650 and third was $300.

The tournament has attracted between 100 and 150 participants in the past few years- many of them local but also a number from around the northeast.

There are two weigh stations manned by LaQuay family members and friends- one at the shoreline parcel below the Tupper Lake Sportsmen's Club headquarters on Lake Simond Road and one at the Tupper Lake Municipal Park on Raquette Pond. Participants can weigh their fish right out of their boats at the two shoreline stations.

A prize ceremony follows the derby in late afternoon that Saturday at the Lake Simond Road site.

At recent derbies organizers have donated between $2,000 and $2,500 to High Peaks Hospice from events on the water. Those totals have grown from about $1,200 the first year to as much as the higher figure in recent years, Cory noted.

Gary was an avid fisherman who died far too prematurely over a decade ago. At every fishing outing with pals or family members he also liked to promote a wager between the parties. At the end of the day, maybe the team with the smallest catch might have to buy dinner. “He was a competitor,” Cory said of his father and how he would have enjoyed the event that honors him. Gary fished often with his brother, Terry.

The tournament date was established from the outset on the first day of bass fishing- the third Saturday in June every year.

Cory said in the past he has been asked why they don't feature a children's contest. Usually those competitions are featured from shore, whereas boats are used in this adult tournament. He noted too they do not have the volunteers to run a derby for kids.

Like every outdoor event, weather is always a big factor, but it's rain or shine, he explained. “Unfortunately we can't do a rain day, so if it rains very hard,” some people are reluctant to fish. He said the last two years saw relatively strong winds on the day of the derby and some participants had difficulty launching their boats.

“We always look forward to good weather, and most years it has been good!”

“We've had some very hot days in the past, when it's great and people have a lot of fun.” But a day in the hot sun can also be very taxing. “It's good for a turn-out but it's not good for fishing!”

He said overcast days can produce some of the best fishing. “We've had years when we had a little rain in the morning and then it cleared up in the afternoon, and some of the best fish we've seen has been caught those days.”

“I also remember one year it was super hot, with not a cloud in the sky. It was a great day to be out in the boat and everyone had fun. But I had some people who were discouraged at the end, because they caught smaller fish and put them back and not weighed them because they did not think they would place. But they might have, after all. The biggest Northern that year was only about four and one half pounds.”

One of the biggest fish caught in the tournament was during one of the first years saw a ten-pound pike caught and entered. Some years the bass caught out weigh the pike.

Last year Cory entered the tournament for the first time ever and landed the biggest fish- a five and one-half pound bass. That was bigger than the biggest pike caught last year.

One year a fisherman from the Boston area caught a six and one-half bass- the largest caught in the eight annual events to date.

Many of the participants are locals but the event is starting to attract anglers from around the region. He said an old acquaintance is a professional bass fisherman who will be fishing a big tournament that same weekend on Lake Champlain. Cory noted he was told by him that several of those pros have fished this tournament in recent years because of the prize money here.

One of the primary rules of the contest is that all fish weighed in at either station have to come off a boat from our lakes or our river.

“We also use hand scales to weigh all fish and we don't use a basket-type of scale. We like to keep it a little old school in that fashion!”

That way, too, he explains the volunteer weighing the fish and the one who caught it can both see the weight of it.

Cory said ROOST (Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism), based in Lake Placid with an office here, has been helping to promote the event and spread the word about it digitally across the region.

Tickets to the derby are sold on the ROOST web site and at Mountain Market and Redemption on the west end of town.

-And between ROOST's efforts and word of mouth, people are learning about it.

For more information about the event contact Cory at (518) 569-3988 or Terry at (518) 304-3748.

Village PD's bike rodeo returns Saturday

Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Police Department and a collection of local organizations and businesses will again present the 2022 version of the Tupper Lake Bike Rodeo and Celebration of Youth this Saturday from 10a.m. to 2p.m. at the Emergency Services Building on Santa Clara Ave. between McLaughlin Ave. and Route 3.

Last month Police Chief Eric Proulx received permission from the village board to close off Santa Clara Ave. for six hours that day- from an hour before to an hour after the annual event.

The fun and safety-oriented event for young bike riders here was created by Patrolman Mike Vaillancourt over a decade ago.

Traditionally it was a way to make sure every kid in Tupper Lake had a bicycle helmet and was familiar with the rules of the roads when riding their bikes.

The event promises to be bigger and better this year, Mr. Vaillancourt and fellow organizers say.

“Flutterbug,” the clown will be back, with some of her time devoted to painting young faces.

Young riders will again be challenged to on-road and off-road courses, navigating traffic cones and other obstacles.

There will again be an inflated bounce house and other giant balloon-style rigs there.

Free helmets will be available to any child who needs one.

-And every child who attends the event will be registered in a drawing for a free bicycle.

As usual too this year there will be plenty to eat and drink- all for free. Kids and their parents can make their own sundaes, courtesy of Stewarts Shop. For others with a hunger for sweets, there will also be free cotton candy and snow cones.

Games will also be on the event's agenda over the four hours that day.

Sponsors this year, in addition to the village PD, include the Woodmen Lodge, the Adirondack Foundation, the Kiwanis Club of Tupper Lake, High Peaks Cyclery, among others.

“Party on Park” Saturday

Dan McClelland

Businesses in the uptown business district are celebrating the arrival of the summer season with a day-long party, this Saturday, May 28. The event, appropriately dubbed “Party on Park” runs from 1p.m. to 5p.m.

“It's a kick-off of our summer season,” explained Organizer Josh Mclean of the Adirondack Store. “We're hoping folks here and around the region will visit us that day and find out what's new in our businesses.

Participating merchants in addition to Josh's unique store are Earthgirl Designs, Tupper Arts and its gallery, Birch Boys and Spruce & Hemlock and its new bakery. At Tupper Arts the latest Kathleen Bigrow exhibit is still running.

There will be food specials that afternoon at business district eateries- Well Dressed Food, The Swiss Kitchen, China Wok and The Washboard Donut Shop. Mike Vaillancourt's Porkbusters BBQ trailer will also be parked there.

Several local organizations including the Wild Center, the Adirondack Skycenter and Goff Nelson Memorial Library are planning activities and exhibits there that afternoon.

A number of local and area vendors will also be participating. They include Usher Farms, KW Ranch, Shear Paradise, All Wound Up In The ADKs, Alpine Moon Magic, AW Pottery, Hamard Art, Suko Thai Treasures, a Supply Drop Pastry Shop. Beer lovers will have an opportunity to try some of the best beer in the region, with free tastings by Raquette River Brewing.

For more information about the party or to join it contact Josh at the Adirondack Store.


Town needs crusher run

Dan McClelland

The Town of Tupper Lake is advertising for bids for 4,500 tons of item No. 4, one and one half inch minus crusher run for summer construction projects of the town highway department. Of the total, 1,200 tons has to be delivered to a site on Gull Pond Road for work there this summer. The balance has to be delivered to the stockpile at the town garage on Pine Street. Offers are due at noon June 6- at which time the sealed bids will be opened by town staff.

Tupper Lake CSD annual student exposition Tuesday May 17 at High School from noon to 8p.m.

Dan McClelland

After two long years without the opportunity to present the annual Student Expo, the halls of the middle high school will once again be filled with amazing projects and the sound of music! Months of preparation and weeks of displaying are leading up to this long anticipated event.

On Tuesday May 17 the community is invited to a night of student creativity. The hard work and talent of our Pre-K through grade 12 students throughout the year will be on display. Everyone is very excited to show parents and neighbors what they’ve created at school this year.

Our art teachers and students have been busy putting the final touches on hundreds of beautiful projects to share, including ceramics, photography, paintings and sculptures. We will have high school students painting live and throwing on the pottery wheel as well. Teachers of all grade levels and subject matter will be showing off their students’ work, including 2D and 3D projects.

The highlight of the evening, the annual Community/Alumni Concert will begin at 6:30pm. Members of our student band and chorus, along with alumni and community members will perform in the gymnasium for your listening pleasure. Always a wonderful show, please join us for a unified performance. If you would like to perform with one or both of these groups please contact Laura Davison (laurad@tupperlakecsd.net) or Liz Cordes (elizabethc@tupperlakecsd.net) or call the school for more information at 518-359-3322.

Our students are very proud to share their accomplishments with you. Their effort is honored and validated by these displays, performances and community participation.

Organizers hope to see everyone at the middle high school on Tuesday, May 17 for a wonderful evening.

Water, sewer rates erupt

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Sewer and water rates for Tupper Lake water and sewer customers will increase by nearly 50% when customers get bills after June, following a public hearing and vote of the village board Wednesday.

The higher rates are designed to enable the village to pay for millions of dollars of improvements and upgrades to both systems undertaken in recent years. Improvements made to each system totaled more than $10 million each.

The rate increases will be the same for both village residents and town residents who enjoy village utilities. Town residents currently pay slightly more for their monthly water and sewer services.

“We've had two major projects going on- both water-side and sewer-side for the last few years,” Mayor Paul Maroun said after reading the public notice to start Wednesday's 5p.m. public hearing. The hearing preceded April's rescheduled village board meeting.

The recent capital improvements in both departments have included, the long search for new wells to replace the big lake as a primary source of village water, the drilling of two new wells beyond Pitchfork Pond, the village's meter/monitor project ordered by the state Department of Environmental Conservation, and major improvements to the sewer lift station on Demars Blvd., a new line between there and the Water Street treatment plant as well as many improvements there.

Mayor Paul Maroun, after reading the legal notice to introduce a local law to permit the rate increases at Wednesday's public hearing, said all the improvements in those departments have been “short-term financed to date. Now we're moving into the bond phase of the projects which means a significant chunk of money we have to re-pay each year.”

“Now we have to come up with the payments” for all this work “as it is not currently budgeted” in the monies we receive from our water and sewer rates. The village's coming bond payments for the water improvements will be $237,580 per year. The new sewer bond payment will be $274,500 each year.

“That means we have to increase the rates because we have to pay for all of this! We've been short-term financing the work. Now we are going to bond for 30 years!” explained the mayor.

The monthly rate increases will be $10.80 for water and $10 for sewer.

The rate increases will be equal for both village and town customers, Superintendent Mark Robillard noted.

He said the two village departments “now have a lot of long-term debt” following the recent years of upgrade work. “And now we have to pay the debt...it's pretty black and white!”

Trustee Ron LaScala, who oversees Mr. Robillard's departments, said much of the work was required by state agencies through their mandates in matters of water and sewer. He listed the meter project and the development of the new wells as two projects forced on the village by state order.

“We can't tell the state 'no.' We have to follow what they say. We have to follow their mandates because that's the law.”

“I know my phone is going to blow up because people are going to tell me you are raising my sewer and water rates but we still can't drink our water and in some cases the water looks worse than when we started!”

He was referring to the blasts of brown water people occasionally see when they turn on their taps caused by a high percentage of iron in the wall water. The presence of iron started a short time after the new wells went on line. Also of concern to water customers are the continually failing quarterly water tests by the state department of health.

He said neither are the village's fault. “We have done everything we can. We've hired the best people to figure out these problems and this is where we are at.”

“We were told there would be no iron” in our well water supply before the wells were developed. “Now there is an iron issue!”

“It's going to cost us more money to solve that, but at the end of the day our rates are still cheaper than most municipalities around us.”

In Saranac Lake, for example, where charges are based on the size of the house, owners of three bedroom houses currently see a charge of about $99 per month for water and $78 for sewer. That information was supplied by the mayor at Wednesday's hearing.

“We've held the line (on our rates) for a long time,” Mr. Robillard noted.

The mayor said all of Tupper's rates are flat, whereas in nearby communities like Saranac Lake, many water customers are on meters and pay based on usage.

“I don't like raising the rates, but it's still cheap for what we are getting,” he added.

He said, too, if in the future the village receives grants or other monies that can help it pay down these bonds, there's a possibility that rates could fall in the future if that happens.

Although most of the sewer improvements are completed, the village still has more work to do to solve problems in its water system.

“And we're not done yet. This is not the last rate hike we will see,” commented Mr. LaScala.

“Your cable rates go up every year. Your insurance rates increase every year.” It's what we see each year, he stated.

Trustee Jason McClain countered, however, saying that utility cost increases are different. “You can switch some of those other things to avoid the increases. You can change internet services. You can switch your insurance plan and save money for a few years. But when it comes to sewer and water services, we have no other options.”

He agreed with Mr. LaScala that the board members will likely face criticism on the rate hike. “People will be paying $21 more each month crappy water!”

Free Press Publisher Dan McClelland quickly calculated that the new rates represent nearly a 50% hike in water and sewer rates for village users- up from $43.20 to $64 per dwelling unit. Apartment owners who pay for a lot of units “are going to pay a considerable chunk of money more each month” for those village services.

“It looks like rents are going up in Tupper Lake,” commented Trustee McClain.

“By about $50 per month,” added the publisher.

The rates for town residents in water and sewer districts will go from $28.40 per month for water to $39.20 and for sewer from $27.20 to $37.20 each month.

The cost of the well project was about $10 million- $3 million of which was grant money to the village and about $7 million in no-interest loans which now have to be paid back through the new bonds.

Some of that money includes the meter installation project which is about half done and which has cost the village so far about $1.5 million.

Trustee McClain wondered why the entire well system couldn't have been metered for the water draw at the well site, rather than having to meter every customer at their property.

“The reason the state wants those meters at individual houses is because the entire” push to move the village to a ground water-based system was under a water conservation program,” Trustee LaScala told him. “Even though we don't charge customers by the gallon, at the end of this project we're supposed to have a guy drive around and read meters and quarterly report our usage!”

“If the gallons don't match up” then there's a leak somewhere.” Then it will be up to the village to find that leak.

“It would have helped us a few years ago when we had an individual on Stetson Road who was making a pond using village water,” Trustee LaScala told his colleagues. “We had guys working sometimes overtime looking for a leak” when someone was just drawing village water for their new pond.

He argued: “this is when those meters can be a useful tool!”

Trustee McClain figured water conservation shouldn't be such a priority in sections of the country where water is plentiful like here in the Adirondacks. It should be a top priority in drought-prone places like the American southwest, he reasoned, however.

Trustee LaScala said it costs a lot of money for communities to produce treated drinking water and it makes good sense to try to conserve it whenever possible.

Mayor Maroun said the reason for the meter project was that the DEC wouldn't permit the village to draw the well water without a water conservation program in place.

Trustee LaScala remembered as a rookie trustee eight years ago at a meeting with a state official when he and the mayor were discussing the potential well project, they were assured meters wouldn't be required if the village switched to wells as a primary water source.

“So we all moved forward with the well project and we get almost through the entire well project” and all of a sudden we were told we had to do meters because that was all about water conservation.

He said the state put this mandate on the village and held the well project hostage unless a meter program was embraced.

Mr. LaScala said a better alternative for the village would have been to keep drawing water out of Tupper Lake and upgrade the Moody treatment station to a micro-filtration one to produce clean water that met state standards. He said the state wouldn't provide money for such a project, and instead pushed the village to develop the wells.

Trustee McClain wondered how much the village would have to spent to construct a micro-filtration plant to treat the water from the big lake.

It was estimated by Mr. Robillard that the cost would have been approximately the same as developing the wells, to which Trustee LaScala added: “except we wouldn't have an iron issue right now.”

More water department expense lies ahead as village officials try to find a way to treat the iron or remove it from the well water.

Mr. LaScala noted too that the village saw considerable expense rerouting the water from the Moody filtration plant to the new well site on the opposite end of the community. All that expense could have been avoided if the village would have just modernized the Moody plant or replaced it with a more sophisticated one.

The upgrades to the sewer system were all necessary, it was noted, just to extend the life of it. Since its construction there have been major rebuilds of the village sewer system every 30 years or so, Superintendent Robillard noted in the discussion.

“There's a lot more to this ball game than the $10 rate increases in each department,” figured Deputy Mayor Leon LeBlanc. “We have to curtail our spending! Because rate payers are seeing everything go up in price.” He said what revenues that are available to the village, it must live with. “That's the bottom line, guys!”

“We can't hire any more people. Every time we hire someone that's an extra $100,000 in salary and benefits! -And it's coming out of our rates!”

“We have to curtail spending wherever we can,” he asserted, adding there is new debt in both departments right now “that would scare you.”

Mr. LaScala didn't disagree with him, but said that the debt now before the village is legitimate infrastructure improvement debt.

Mr. LeBlanc said he believes there were a number of mistakes made by the board along the way, saying although the village is now going to have to live with this debt, “I am embarrassed.”

“I am embarrassed,” he repeated, “because now we are going to have to tell the public we are raising their rates!”

“I guess it is what it is.”

A bit of a sparring match began between the deputy mayor and Trustee LaScala.

“You are entitled to be embarrassed,” Mr. LaScala told Mr. LeBlanc. “I'm not embarrassed because I am trying to provide clean, drinking water for my community, for the future and for the growth of our community.”

“I would be more embarrassed about our emergency services situation than about our sewer and water.” He was referring to the current lack of active village police officers. See related story this week.

“When our people can't drink the water, I'm embarrassed,” the deputy mayor replied.

“We have invested thousands and thousands of dollars into our water system and you still can't drink the water,” he asserted.

Trustee LaScala questioned Mr. LeBlanc's effort to help the board find answers to the village's water woes.

“Have you been to any of our meetings, Leon? I haven't seen you at any of the water and sewer development meetings over the years,” Trustee LaScala told him.

“You can be embarrassed but you haven't been part of the process!” he scolded Mr. LeBlanc.

“What I hear at our meetings, I take it from there. We still have a problem,” retorted Mr. LeBlanc.

“If you are that concerned about our water problems, show up at the meetings,” replied Mr. LaScala.

“Ron, I have other things to take care of,” said Mr. LeBlanc.

“We're doing the best we can with the mandates we have from the state,” noted Mayor Maroun. “Absolutely, our sewer system needed the upgrades!

Mr. Robillard noted the original sewer plant was built in 1959. It was rebuilt in 1989 “and we were at that 30-year mark again.”

Mr. LaScala said he was proud of the job he has done directing the sewer and water department since he took village office eight years ago. He said many infrastructure improvements have been tackled.

“I remember in those early days, I was on Pleasant Ave. during a rain storm and we had raw sewage pumping out onto the street and onto our taxpayers' front lawns.”

“We took action and that's not happening anymore. I'm embarrassed about other things going on in the village right now, but water and sewer is not one of them.”

“Had we known what we know now, we would have gone back to the lake” for our water, Mark Robillard said of the Moody plant redo.

“But again, the department of health, in order to get funding, was pushing us to ground water!”

In all, it was noted, the village received over $3 million in grants towards the $10 million in water infrastructure spending these past half dozen years.

Trustee LaScala remembered shortly after joining the village board they were weighing whether or not wells should be dug or a modernization of the Moody Plant was the way. “I wanted to go to the lake for our water and Carrie Tuttle, who was working with us at the time with the Development Authority of the North Country” told us quite clearly the state was not going to let that happen.

“It wasn't a matter of what this board wanted, we weren't given the option” of building a modern plant to clean the lake water.

“This is one of the bad parts of being in government,” Paul Maroun lamented of the big rate hike.

“I hope five years down the road people here will be happy, because we have systems that have been upgraded and which should be good for another 20 or 25 years.”

Mark Robillard said he thought the past estimates to rebuild the Moody plant so it produced clean water were about $9 million. He said the well project was about half of that at the time and there were state funds to help accomplish it.

“When the state mandates something, you don't have a choice,” Mr. LaScala said of the board's decision six years ago to develop the new wells.

Jason McClain wondered then why the state doesn't take responsibility when its mandates don't work.

“They don't...that's just the way it works!” declared the mayor.

“Here's how the states works,” added Trustee LaScala. “The state spend $35 million to build a new ski lodge in Lake Placid. It has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in recent years in Lake Placid with ORDA, while the poor people of Tupper Lake scrounge to get clean drinking water!”

“What does the state tells us? It's a mandate...deal with it!”

He said there were few people in power in Albany “that get” what poor communities like Tupper Lake have to deal with.

The trustee said, however, that we have leaders in Assemblyman Billy Jones and Senator Dan Stec who do get it and fight hard for us. “Unfortunately they are in the clear minority!”

Erin's Easter Egg Hunt set for Saturday

Dan McClelland

Youthful egg hunters are reminded of Saturday's big Easter Egg Hunt at the L.P. Quinn playing fields.

The annual Erin's Easter Egg Hunt, sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Tupper Lake and the Adirondack Federal Credit Union remembers elementary school teacher Erin Farkas Dewyea, who loved children and who was loved here by many.

Each year the memorial event puts kids in contact with delicious eggs and other goodies in a celebratory way. This year's hunt begins at noon that day.

Toddlers through pre-kindergarten ages will hunt on half the Rotary Club's football field and older children in grades kindergarten to grade two will search for eggs on the other half of the field. Older children in grades 3, 4 and 5 will hunt in front of the school.

The event, as usual, will go off regardless of the weather, so egg hunters are encouraged to come prepared for the weather that day- be it rain, snow, mud or sunshine.

Kids are also asked to bring a basket to fill with their goodies found in the hunt.

Erin's Easter Egg Hunt is free to all children up to and including Grade 5.

The Easter Bunny,will stop by to have his photo taken with the kids.

Village investigating closing Park St. for May festival

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

A request by the Tupper Lake Chamber of Commerce to close off Park Street for “A Party on Park Street” revival on May 28 is under study by the village board, following discussion about at its March meeting.

“It's tough to close off Park Street,” Mayor Paul Maroun said in opening the discussion that evening. He said the festival is planned for the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend which sees many people traveling through the community.

He turned the discussion to Police Chief Eric Proulx to explain the logistics of closing the state highway, as has been done for a number of events in past years.

“In order to close a state highway (which Park St. is) without using police officers” is difficult, he reported.

He said if he applied to the state DOT on behalf of the village to close a state highway, “we either have to man it with police officers or fire police, which I found out today we don't have any.”

“Or we have to have DOT-approved signage (to direct traffic around the selected section) which we do not have.”

“I'm sure you all remember the old wooden signs used at Woodsmen's Days” parade which were painted and pointed to the various ways to local state highways that by-passed the parade route.

“We would have to buy signs that they (the Woodsmen's Days Association) had! It would cost us a lot of money to buy all the signs we'd need!”

He said it requires “a crazy amount” of signs just to close Park Street.

The chief remembered the years when state construction prevented parade organizers from using the Park Street corridor, and the village was spending thousands of dollars a year to direct motorists to the detours.

He said with his current staffing levels, “while I could do it, it would leave me” with no officers for other duties here.

He predicted he wouldn't see extra officers in his department by the time of the late May event- given the amount of time it takes to train new officers. The chief has intimated to the board at recent board meetings he needs a bigger force.

He said there were other options he could explore, but suggested the board get more specifics about the time of street closure from the organizers of the event.

The chief said, in contrast to state highways, the village board could easily close a village street like Cliff Ave. without police officers to direct traffic by simply erecting barricades.

That was done at several times when Cliff Ave. was closed a day or for an evening for events staged by the Big Tupper Brewing in the years it operated there.

The chief said too with the timing of the event on Memorial Day weekend he didn't know “how generous” other law enforcement agencies in the region would be loaning him officers for the event, like they have done in the past.

“Their communities all have their own events going on that weekend!”

He said he could probably free up his schedule to provide officers to direct traffic around the Park Street business district for several hours. The event, however, is planned from noon to 7p.m. that day which will require he have officers posted there from 11a.m. to 8p.m. for the set up and dismantling of the event.

Mayor Maroun wondered if money could be found in the new DRI grant to buy new multi-purpose signs to direct traffic for many types of events here.

Trustee Ron LaScala reported that the chamber of commerce was proposing to stage the event in the uptown business district to eventually grow it into a major event here.

“They were hoping to do something big to help the Park Street” business owners to kick off the summer season.

Village Clerk Mary Casagrain said the two blocks of Cliff Ave. could contain many street vendors for a party the size the chamber is planning.

“We'll look into it and see what we can do,” the mayor promised as the discussion closed.

Trail counters showing robust use of town ski trail system

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Councilman John Gillis, who directs the volunteer team that has been grooming and maintaining the town's cross-country ski trail system at the golf course for years, reported some impressive trail user numbers at the town board's monthly meeting March 15.

Last year, at Mr. Gillis' request, the town purchased a trail counter system to measure ski numbers there to create a data base which might prove helpful in future grant applications to improve the town-owned network of trails.

“We had our first glitches with our trail counters this year,” Mr. Gillis told his colleagues during the committee reports that evening.

“I had to estimate our visits for February. I went to the very low end of 600 because the January count was over 900 and the count last March was 655.”

He told his colleagues that even using what he figures was a low estimate for February, the trail count for the past year “our trail count stands at 4,750 user visits.”

He joked that of that total, 1,200 were seen at the wildly popular Brewski staged by the chamber in February.

“The chamber volunteers did a great job. Everything went well. The parking (arrangement) was excellent” with all vehicle owners directed to park on the downhill side of the Country Club Road.

Mr. Gillis and his volunteers helped prepare the very packed course that day and shuttled camp fire wood to keep the fires fed at the 12 brewery stations. He said three of the town's grooming machines were used to help the visiting vendors at the Brewski.

He said the chamber borrowed from the Tupper Lake Rod and Gun Club its “parking on one side” signs it uses for Lake Simond Road during the Northern Challenge Saturday” and the parking arrangement went off “without a hitch.”

“We couldn't believe how well the parking worked out....so thanks to the Rod and Gun Club for that!”

He said all of the brewers offered robust congratulations on the staging of the event “so hopefully they will all be back next year, plus more, and hopefully we can continue to build the event!”

Mr. Gillis figured their trail grooming has concluded for the year, given last week's melt during several warm days.

He said that the work on the town's rehabilitation and winterization of the golf course pro shop is almost complete. He said the few outstanding items on the contractor's electrical punch list were expected to be completed this week.

Now insulated and heated and with operating indoor restrooms the building was welcomed by both those attending the Brewski and the Lumberjack Scramble Jr. in past weeks.

Town board forms its own committee to explore recreational opportunities of Mt. Morris acres

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Town Board Tuesday formed a citizens' advisory committee to explore recreational opportunities on Mt. Morris should the town be permitted to purchase the 600 plus-acre parcel on which the now closed Big Tupper Ski Center is situated.

Over a year ago, as part of its mission to improve Tupper Lake economy through the development and promotion of recreational facilities and assets here, the Tupper Lake Business Group created its own Mt. Morris/Big Tupper recreation park committee to encourage and help the town promote hiking, biking, cross-country skiing and back-country skiing there.

The business group has lobbied county lawmakers, with the help of Legislator Paul Maroun, to consider selling those acres to the town, should the property go to county foreclosure for non-payment of back property taxes. The town board late last year embraced that plan.

The group's members also met several times last fall with Mike Foxman, one of the partners of the Big Tupper LLC which owns the property, to secure his permission to lease those acres to the town, as he does acres just above the golf course where the town's nordic trail system was expanded. Mr. Foxman has been very amenable to the newest plan in order to help the community.

The lease discussion with Mr. Foxman has continued informally in recent weeks with Town Attorney Kirk Gagnier and Councilman Rick Donah.

The TLBG Big Tupper committee was chaired by Rick Donah and Rob Gillis. That chairmanship arrangement will continue in the new town board group, as will most of the members who served on it.

Introducing the idea last week Deputy Supervisor Mary Fontana said the new town group would be an advisory one made up of town and village residents “with participation from experts and professionals with a working knowledge of business and recreation to come together to explore the idea of approaching Mr. Foxman to allow public use of the Big Tupper property for specific recreations.”

She turned the discussion over to Councilman Donah, who is the only town board member on the new committee.

“This is something I feel very strongly about,” he told his colleagues that evening.

He pointed to several reasons for that. “Going back in Tupper Lake's history we all know the generations of people who grew up here and who understood how valuable the Big Tupper Ski Area was to the community! -And how much it still means to quite a few people here and who live elsewhere!”

He said the ski center unfortunately has been idle for many years. “There was an effort (through ARISE) that many of us participated in as volunteers tried to resurrect it from 2010 to 2015. There was very little snow any of those years. “Unfortunately, it just wasn't sustainable!”

“We all know the circumstances involving the Adirondack Club Resort piece of this, but the ski area itself has large value to the community as a recreational area.”

“I am hopeful with the development of this committee, which has really been meeting informally for about a year and with participation from former Supervisor Patti Littlefield,” a lease for those Mt. Morris lands can be inked.

He said the new town committee will be charged with exploring all the options to bringing four-season recreation back to those lands.

The new councilman said he hopes the new advisory group can devise what he called “a long-term vision” for recreational use of those mountain lands, not just at Big Tupper but below it on Mt. Morris where the excellent James C. Frenette cross-country ski trail network has been created.

“We already have a beautiful recreational foot print” on Mt. Morris and new recreational opportunities developed farther up the mountain at Big Tupper will just add to that.

The new advisory group was dubbed by Mr. Donah as the “Mountain Rec Park” committee. He said its mission will be to “encapsulate all the activities we can develop up there, with the help of Mr. Foxman.”

“Our aim will be to create a major recreational asset there!”

He said as the committee co-chair, he will report monthly to the other elected officials on the town board.

“It will be intense...there are many things we will have to research. -And we want to do this the right way!”

Continuing on from the TLBG group will be Rosie Littlefield, whose family has a wealth of ski industry experience, retired Coca-Cola executive Charlie Frenette, Matt Ellis, who is with the Coldwell-Banker Whitbeck, and Free Press owner Dan McClelland.

New on the committee is Village Trustee Ron LaScala, Tupper Lake Chamber of Commerce President Jocelyn Law, Building Contractor Jim Frenette Jr., Scott Brandy, president of the state ski area association and a man who brings decades of ski industry experience to the group and Eric “Shakey” Lanthier, a volunteer on the town ski trail maintenance team and a lifelong skier.

“I think we have a great make-up of people on what I think will be a very active committee exploring opportunities” for the Mt. Morris acres, Mr. Donah told his colleagues.

Ahead for the committee's discussions will be research of the insurance necessary for the outdoor activities proposed there to protect the town and the property owners, he noted.

Among the activities that could be staged there are hiking, biking, cross-country and back country skiing, snowshoeing and picnicking, as well as community events.

“As next steps we'll be focussing on developing policies and an operating plan. At this point there won't be a significant investment by the town, because so far we are only talking about the cost of insurance,” he explained.

“We're not talking about re-opening the ski area. That's not on our agenda! I just wanted to make that clear!”

“Our focus will be instead on the basic recreational opportunities!”

“This committee is organized for the purpose of creating and marketing recreational opportunities on or around the dormant Big Tupper Ski Area!”

“Improving our community's quality of life and promoting abundant activities for our youth are, in my view, our priorities No. 1.” he asserted.

He said while the new group will function independently from the town board, it will collaborate regularly and vigorously with the town's elected officials.

He said the charge of the new group is “to return to the community something that has been missing in Tupper Lake for many years”- the use and enjoyment of that special parcel here.

Mr. Donah said from recent conversations with the late town supervisor, Clint Hollingsworth, he was very interested in seeing something good happening there, as “all of us would like to see. We just have to make sure we put a good plan together that makes sense for the town” and reduces liability for both the town and the landowners.

“It was a tragedy we lost Big Tupper. We've all seen the effects. Our town is now a lot slower in the winter time and our small businesses” struggle to make it through each winter. This is a wonderful use of our time to look at ways to reinvent” our winter economy, he asserted.

The new group is expected to convene shortly via Zoom, before the end of March.

The board motion was adopted unanimously.

In the second public committee period Tuesday former supervisor, Patti Littlefield, said she really liked the idea of an advisory committee for the mountain to create recreational activities there. “It's great it will be more of a community advisory committee rather than the business group telling everyone what they think should be done. This way, you'll get more feedback from other people here too!”