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News

Four of Tupper’s top student athletes carry torch through town last week

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Four of Tupper Lake High School’s top students- both academically and sports-wise- had the honor Thursday of carrying the New York State Empire Games torch from the school, down Park Street, to Community Bank, which is one of the Empire Games sponsors each year. In front of the bank they were joined by Athletic Director Dan Brown (far right) and Mayor Mary Fontana.

The torch bearers were Taylor Stohl, with the torch, Ellie Dukett, Tommy Peterson and Griffin Shaheen.

Ellie, a solid soccer player on the girls varsity team, competed in the girls’ figure skating event in the Empire Games and Taylor, another solid high school athlete, has played on a women’s hockey team in the games in years past. Both Tom and Griffin are record-breaking athletes in their respective sports, basketball and hockey.

Next to the mayor was Community Bank Manager Christine Mozdzier, and staffers Cailyn Sauve, and Courtney Duval.

Our new mayor spoke briefly at the brief ceremony in the front of the bank.

“Tupper Lake is honored to have the Empire State Games coming back...we’re very excited to see these athletes from around the state showcase their skills here and in our neighboring villages. It’s become a great tradition for the North Country each winter! So, Happy Games!”

Big week for Tupper Lake Basketball Jacks clinch East, Peterson all time scorer, Corneau hits 1,000th point

Dan McClelland

by Dick Sterling

To say the Tupper Lake Lumberjacks had a busy week would certainly be an understatement!

Last week the Jacks played league games on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday. They won all four, including a Friday evening showdown with Chateaugay in front of Tupper’s home crowd, that clinched the Lumberjacks first place in the Northern Athletic Conference (NAC) East Division.

The Jacks remain undefeated in the East (12-0) and have an overall record of 14-3.

In addition to the team’s exciting week, a couple of Lumberjack players also carved their way into the Tupper Lake Basketball history files.

Tom Peterson scored career point number 1,223 on Tuesday evening, earning him the distinction of becoming the top scorer in Lumberjack history.

On Friday, Mikey Corneau swished a jump shot from just inside the three-point arc, giving him 1,000 points for his career.

The home crowd cheered for Corneau at the contest against Chateaugay, early in the third quarter, was stopped so that the special moment could be captured with the presentation of a special ball and photos. As he neared the 1000-point mark at the start of the second half, many youngsters in the crowd were yelling “Mikey just need two more.”

The Jacks toughest game of the week came on Monday with a showdown against the Colton-Pierrepont Colts. The two NAC East foes played to as 13-13 draw in the first quarter, and the Colts, behind a big night from their top scorer, Eric Friedel, actually held a 27-26 lead at the intermission.

After the break, the two league foes continued to battle as Tupper Lake outscored the Colts 17-12 to hold a slim 43-39 advantage heading to the final quarter. The Jacks sharp-shooting season returned for the final eight minutes as they tallied 24 points and gave up 13, winning by a final score of 67-52, in a game that was much closer than the final score would indicate.

Corneau drilled seven 3-pointers and finished with 27 to lead the Jacks. Tyler LaPlante had a big game as he finished with 15 and Peterson scored 14 and dished out 11 assists. Ashton Clark scored six.

Friedel nailed six three-pointers and finished with 24 to lead Colton-Pierrepont. Nate Smith scored eight points and pulled down 14 rebounds and Cody Trimm added seven.

On Tuesday, the Lumberjacks raced to a big 18-2 advantage after one quarter against Brushton-Moira and went on to roll over the Panthers 69-27. Peterson entered the game needing 27 points to establish the new school scoring standard… he finished with 29.

Tom Peterson connected on five of his eight three-point attempts, collected six rebounds, six assists and five steals. Mikey Corneau, who also swished five of his eight three-point tries, finished with 17. Garrett Pelkey scored nine points and pulled down a team-high 11 rebounds.

Last Wednesday, the Jacks played for the third night in a row as they tangled with the St. Lawrence Central Larries. St. Lawrence surprised the Jacks as they scored the first six points of the contest, four of them from Ayden Beach, who is battling with Peterson for the East Division scoring lead. It took the Jacks three minutes to score as Peterson drove the lane for a lay-up, which ignited a 13-0 Tupper Lake run, Beach scored the last basket of the quarter as Tupper held a 13-8 advantage after one.

The two East Division rivals played even in the second quarter, trading baskets, as Tupper Lake headed to the half-time break with a 24-18 advantage. The Jacks had trouble shaking off the Larries as Beach continued scoring and St. Lawrence Central did their best to play tough defense against the Lumberjacks.

Tupper won the third quarter 16-13 and headed to the final eight minutes with a 40-31 advantage.

Peterson finally got on track offensively in the final quarter as he scored the first six of Tupper Lake’s 24 points, and finished the quarter with 13 as the Jacks outscored the Larries 24-4 in the quarter and pulled away for a 64-35 victory.

Peterson finished with 26 points, grabbed 10 rebounds, dished out six assists and contributed five steals. LaPlante scored 10, Corneau added nine, Pelkey finished with eight, and led the team with 14 rebounds and Clark added eight points and finished with 10 rebounds. Sophomore Tim Peterson, Tom’s younger brother, scored his first varsity points as he connected on his only attempt, a three-pointer, with an assist going to his big brother. Beach finished with 25 points to lead the Larries. Logan Lemay added seven.

Lumberjack Head Coach Brian Bennett commented on the special moment, “the fact that Tim Peterson’s first varsity points were assisted by his brother is amazing!”

The Jacks were only called for three personal fouls in the entire game.

On Friday, the Jacks entertained the Chateaugay Bulldogs with first place in the East on the line. Tupper Lake has been the only team in the division to beat the Dogs this season, who have dominated the East Division for many years.

The Jacks opened up a 13-6 advantage after the opening quarter, but then found their shooting touch starting in the second quarter as they opened with a 12-3 run to open up a big 25-9 advantage, and closed the period with a 10-0 run to up the advantage to 35-11 at the halftime break. The Jacks fans and players were excited to see Corneau shoot the ball late in the half, knowing he was just a basket short of reaching the 1,000-point mark.

The senior sharp-shooter lined up a long jumper early in the third quarter and found nothing but net as the game was stopped long enough to honor Number 21 on his special accomplishment.

The game resumed, and so did the rout as the Jacks put up another 24 points in the quarter to extend the lead to 59-27 after three quarters and rolled to the easy win by a final score of 73-38.

Corneau paced Tupper Lake with 23 points. Peterson finished with 18, Pelkey earned another double-double as he scored 14 points and pulled down 12 rebounds, as the big crowd chanted “he’s a freshman,” every time the Jacks’ youngster scored.

Wyatt Godin and Clark each scored six, LaPlante finished with four and the crowd came to their feet when reserve Caleb Roberts scored the final two points of the game with a layup just beating the final horn.

Coach Bennett commented on the big week the Jacks had last week, “it was an amazing week! So many milestones. Although those boys earned those milestones this week, they were long in the making. There were so many countless hours in the gym working, when no one is watching. I have coached both Tom and Mikey since fifth grade, so it’s amazing seeing these things happen. I knew we needed more emphasis on the youth, and now look where we are today,” said the coach.

The Tupper Lake head coach also commented on winning the NAC East.

“The East is a big deal. It’s been a long time since a team besides Chateaugay or Madrid-Waddington has won the East. It’s a great accomplishment, but my eyes are on the Class C title.”

The win extended the Lumberjacks winning streak on their home floor to 17 straight games. On Monday the Jacks headed to Edwards-Knox for a non-league contest against the Cougars. Tuesday they entertained Madrid-Waddington and Friday they will wrap up the regular season with a road game at Colton-Pierrepont.

Congratulations to Coach Bennett and the Lumberjack team on an incredible season… a championship season! And let’s hope that the best is still to come for this talented group of Tupper Lake athletes.

Important benefit coming up for Tri-Lakes Humane Society

Dan McClelland

The Tri-Lakes Humane Society is beginning another year of exciting fundraising to support its important mission of kind and humane pet and animal care. One of the first events will be in Tupper Lake at Raquette River Brewing on Thursday, February 8 from 5p.m. to 9p.m.

It will be an evening of celebration for a very great cause- the kind and humane treatment of all local pets that come under the care of the regional society.

For every beer sold during those hours that evening, $1 will go to the humane society. The event will feature a 50/50 raffle and the sale of all sorts of souvenir t-shirts, sweat shirts and other merchandise.

Support of the event with a good turn-out that evening will help make the difference in the lives of many dogs and cats in need.

In addition to monetary donations, the organization is also in need of cat and dog supplies.

Organizers, who include volunteers from across the tri-lake communities, say it’s all about supporting our furry friends.

Area residents are also asked to pen onto their calendars the date of this year fourth annual “Bark in the Park” at the Tupper Lake Municipal park on the third Sunday of September- the 15th from noon to 4p.m. The annual event has brought animal lovers and pets together for an afternoon of fun and food to help support the area humane society, and its offices and kennels in Saranac Lake.

Plans have already started for this year’s version and it promises to be bigger and better than the three in recent years.

The humane society’s fundraising began on a high note this month with a generous $12,500 donation from Elan Credit Card, the company that provides credit card services to members of the Adirondack Regional Federal Credit Union, according to an announcement this week from Russ Cronin, ARFCU president and CEO. The credit union is also a sponsor of Tupper Lake’s “Bark in the Park.”


Adirondack Jazz Ensemble delights hometown audience

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Some of the best in jazz performers in Upstate New York were on stage Sunday afternoon to the delight of nearly 80 hometown music lovers.

The Adirondack Jazz Ensemble is something of a rotating ensemble from the 20-member Adirondack Jazz Orchestra, dubbed the “Big Band of the Adirondacks.”

The orchestra plays once a month- on the first Wednesday- at Plattsburgh’s Olive Ridley’s Taphouse and Grill. Out of that skilled performance group comes the ensemble, one of which played here Sunday.

The seven who entertained at the free event in the high school auditorium included Matt Pray of Keeseville, trumpet player and founder of the group, Todd Pray with his big tenor sax, Tupper Lake’s own Wayne Davison on alto and soprano sax, Piano Player Neil Wright of Saranac Lake, Mike Iturrino of Ticonderoga on lead guitar, Eli Moore of Saranac, bass player and Michael Lewandowski of West Chazy on drums.

The concert was made possible by funding from the Tricia Woods Memorial Music Fund and by Stewart’s Shops. Tricia is the late daughter of Bob and Betty Woods of this village, who was a talented professional musician before her premature passing.

Arrangements for the first time event here were made by music teacher and band director, Laura Davison, with help from some of her music students, along with Liz and George Cordes.

Rumor of food trucks coming to Park Street untrue

Dan McClelland

In her report to her board members at Tuesday’s monthly board meeting, Mayor Mary Fontana said one of her board members recently received an anonymous letter, about a recent rumor where village leaders were poised to permit the operation of food trucks on Park Street in the uptown business district.

She indicated that the rumor was unfounded and that the village board does not intend to allow food trucks there, at any time of the day or night.

Board members all concurred with her comments.

Tupper Lake volunteers impress visiting nordic skiers at first Adirondack Tour de Ski here

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Tupper Lake’s first Adirondack Tour de Ski was a resounding success- and well received by the 200 or more people who came to the Tupper Lake Golf Course’s James C. Frenette network of trails to enjoy it.

That it came off so well is solid testimony to the hard work of the trail maintenance crew, who overcame what could have been a wash-out for the Sunday, January 14 event with heavy rain the day before.

Although the second big storm of the season forecast for January 12 and 13 didn’t really materialize it brought heavy rain that Saturday for several hours in the morning.

High winds overnight that Friday blew a lot of the snow off the race course and Saturday morning’s steady rain melted what was left.

Fortunately the rain turned to snow Saturday afternoon when about two inches or so of the fresh stuff fell in less than an hour.

The maintenance crew, directed by John Gillis, spent much of the day before the race shoveling snow back onto the trails. Volunteer Herbie Kentile gathered snow from the driving range part of the course with a Skidsteer and loaded it onto our sleds so we could spread it on the trails, according to Mr. Gillis.

When the squalls of snow fell briefly Saturday afternoon, the volunteers packed it down with four wheelers and let it sit all night for the trails to dry out, he explained.

John’s trail groomers, who include Eric “Shakey” Lanthier, John Quinn, Scott Chartier, and Owen Littlefield were delighted to see three or four more inches on the ground when they awoke Sunday morning, and they were out early packing it and restoring the miles of the trail network.

Winds continued to blow Sunday morning but the new snow was packed into place by then. The mercury rose all morning to about 24 degrees F. for the 11a.m. start.

There were a number of volunteers helping out in various ways including Adam Hurteau, Paul O’Leary, Tim Littlefield and others.

All the parking lots at the golf course were filled with vehicles by 10a.m..

Of the 200 or so people- many of them families who came for the event, there were about 53 or so racers- in various ages from toddlers to teens to adults. Some of the more mature nordic ski racers were in their sixties and early seventies.

The course lengths varied by the age of the competitor- from the “lollipop” oval in front of the club house for the youngest to three laps around the entire mile plus long trail that rings the perimeter of the golf course as well as the Hull’s Brook trail.

“I was absolutely pleased with how everything went,” Organizer John Gillis commented last week. Mr. Gillis brought the new family-style competition to Tupper after joining area ski race organizers early last summer to formulate plans for the new six-venue winter racing series here and in Lake Placid and Saranac Lake.

The series began at Mt. Van Hoevenberg in December, with its snow-making ability and moved next to Saranac Lake, which was cancelled due to lack of snow cover. Tupper’s race was the third in the series scheduled but the second one staged.

The skiers came from all over- Keene, Jay, Lake Placid, Saranac Lake and according to the town councilman, there was even a group from Old Forge.

Mr. Gillis said that because so many people in the region have been at the local course for the popular Brewski each February, they were familiar with it. Many visitors too, he said, “jumped right in to help!”

“We had a lot of help and that was the greatest part of the event. He said the way the series has been organized, various organizers of the six individual races in the three tri-lakes communities help each out immensely at each event.

A crew of Wild Center-based Americorp volunteers were also very helpful to Mr. Gillis and his team this year. They were organized by the town’s recreation assistant, Christielee Geiger, who worked alongside Laura LaBarge, as part of the town recreation department’s contribution to the event.

Mr. Gillis said he hopes there will be a second Adirondack Tour de Ski and a second Tupper event in it. “We’ll just have to see how the whole thing shakes out in the weeks to come!”

He said one major sponsorship for the series came forward this year to help underwrite many of the expenses this first year “and we have to keep getting more sponsorships going forward.”

“-And Franklin County Tourism gave us a big shot in the arm with a grant of $15,000!”

The county tourism agency, through its robust grant-giving arm, also provided about $8,000 in funding for the town’s new tracked trail groomer- about a quarter of its cost.

The man who the course is named after, John’s Uncle Jim, wasn’t able to make the event, and that was unfortunate John thought, noting “he always loved that community of ski people.” Jim Frenette coached many young nordic skiers here over the years in the town’s and school’s Torgle Tokle and Bill Koch ski programs and was also the primary builder of the trail network on and around the golf course, maintaining it almost by himself for decades, before he coaxed his nephew into the program.

Mr. Gillis said there were many smiles on many faces that Sunday. “Cross country skiing events as a rule are relaxing, happy times,” where participants are typically not as outwardly competitive as you might find at a hockey, football or basketball game, he explained.

It was a day of sunshine for a time and milder temperatures when the 200 or so who came for Tupper’s first “Tour de Ski appeared to be happy to be outdoors after a couple of weeks of nasty winter weather.

“Weatherwise, we got absolutely lucky because when our crew went to bed that Saturday night we were figuring things were going to be very rough. But I woke up early Sunday and looked out at my shop’s steps, which is my snow gauge, and I saw a very welcome three or four inches of snow!”

By race time that Sunday, the race courses on the trail were in top shape.

Groomer Eric Lanthier said the snow both that Saturday afternoon and then overnight really helped the crew.

“We were out grooming at 6a.m. After that I took a few tours up to the upper trails and they were excellent and fast!”

Adirondack Jazz Ensemble to perform at high school later this month

Dan McClelland

Music lovers here should mark on their calendars a performance of the Adirondack Jazz Ensemble on January 28.

The ensemble will perform a free concert at the Tupper Lake Middle/High School auditorium at Sunday afternoon at 2p.m.

The Plattsburgh-based AJE plays all sorts of great music including jazz, funk, Latin, soul, rhythm and blues and rock, plus a few pleasant surprises. It’s free and open to music lovers of all ages. It’s expected to be a performance that explodes with musical energy.

It comes to the community thanks to the Tricia Woods Memorial Music Fund and Stewart’s Shop.

First phase of $20.46 million building project design shown to local educators

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Representatives from the school district’s architectural firm presented schematic drawings of the improvements in the district’s now voter-approved 20.46 million building project to the board of education at its January 8th monthly meeting.

Representing CSArch that evening were Dan Woodside, president of the firm and Kyle Smith. With them was Tupper Lake’s Chris Brunette, who is with Eric Robert’s Schoolhouse Construction, which will oversee the construction.

Also with the architectural firm was Carol Pratt, a building designer, who had been touring the school buildings that day.

“Our team has been busy since this community passed the vote last fall, working through our various design phases” Mr. Woodside began.

“As we talked pre-referendum, 90% of the design still comes after the vote.

“So we are currently in the first phase of our three-phase design work.” He said that evening’s presentation of the schematic designs was the first.

“Following that will be design development, where we will continue to refine the designs and then we’ll get into the construction document phase, as we get ready to submit the entire package and scope to the State Education Department for building permit review and approval.

That step precedes the start of construction, he noted.

“Along the way we’ll be working with Chris and his team at Schoolhouse Construction, which will be involved in estimating and gearing up for how the project will unfold, in terms of the phasing of it,” Mr. Woodside told the elected officials that evening.

He turned the presentation over to Kyle Smith, who said what his firm was tasked with in this first phase of the design, had a deadline of December 21. That work was highlighted in the presentation that evening.

Full details of that work were distributed in a lengthy report shared with the school officials that evening. Electronic copies are available to the public through the district office, he noted.

Mr. Smith said the schematic design report- the first 30% of his firm’s work for the district- featured “a lot of information gathering, verifying the project’s scope, and having programming meetings.

He took the board through a handful of slides of the various components of the project, with color photos and graphics and bullet points of the work planned.

The scope of work at the middle/high school building involves new exterior steps and railings, both at the two main entrances on Chaney Ave. and one entrance in the rear of the building. Also in the plans for that building are new roofs for the Baker Wing and locker room, replacing both large sections of the building roofs entirely.

All exterior doors will be replaced, adding “card-reader” access devices. Many of the windows in the building will be upgraded as well, he explained.

All the bathrooms in the Baker Wing will be renovating and made handicapped compliant, according to Mr. Smith. Design work for that portion of the project has already been finished, he noted.

Other pieces of the middle/high school improvement work will be the repair of interior stair landings, stair treads and risers, replacement of air handling units in both the auditorium and gym, the replacement of all pneumatic controls with DDC controls in the new systems to be installed, the replacement of all the 1954 vintage copper piping in the entire building, the complete replacement of the building’s electrical panels and switchboard systems and the replacement of the building’s generator and exhaust system.

His slide showed a mock-up of what is planned in the Baker Wing bathrooms, the exterior windows and doors to be installed and the switchboard apparatus.

“We work closely with Schoolhouse Construction in identifying” what he called “long-lead items.” Those hard-to-get items are part of a list the company is compiling to submit an advance request report to state education so they can be delivered in time for the construction period, Mr. Smith explained.

“What we don’t want to do is wait and submit all the plans as one package and then end up waiting a year and a half for some” of the pieces of equipment to arrive.

Some of those pieces of equipment include some of the transformers and such that the village electric department will have to install around the high school to accommodate the new service panels going into the building. At recent village board meetings Electric Superintendent Mike Dominie has alerted officials of major supply chain delays and that some of his equipment like transformers have a delivery waiting time of more than a year right now.

Mr. Smith said in the back of the middle/high school building in the parking lots where the buses park, it will perform “full replacement right down to sub base” because of water issues undermining that area over the years. Underground storm water piping installed there is now part of the new plan, with connections to other storm water piping on the site, he told the board.

“There’ll be heavy paving in that bus parking area, but the front driveway loop will be an asphalt melt-down” of the binder course, and then resurfacing.

Both sections will meet DOT standards for bus traffic and parking, he assured the elected leaders.

Also on site he said some of the sidewalks will be moved or replaced to address draining issues and deterioration.

In the bus garage, an oil-water separator device will be installed. A large diesel fuel underground tank near the bus garage will also be removed. Also planned is a new building exhaust system with gas detection.

The middle/high school work is priced at $7.1 million and the bus garage work at $288,757.

Secure vestibules are planned at the entrances to both schools here.

“In order to provide a secure vestibule at the entrance of the middle/high school, one of the exits had to be removed. In order to provide a new entrance there for students and faculty we provided one out front”- and that changed since the last time you saw these plans, he told the board.

“What we came back with is that we can remove about 15% of the addition, allowing the doors to come out on the side underneath your existing roof canopy. It also allows for the egress window on the classroom above the entrance to remain- at that’s required by code!”

“This solved a number of issues including lowering the cost and permitted the egress window at top to stay!”

To accomplish that, the slides show, involved the creation of a new stairway addition which will attach to the roof canopy over the gym entrance.

The secure entrance area would be moved to the south end of the building, adjacent to the gym, versus the other end of the building where the entrance currently is.

He said currently visitors to the high school go to the main door, they are buzzed in by someone in the main office, and they enter the school and hopefully go to the main office where they would be greeted.

“Obviously there’s no control of those visitors,” however, under the current arrangement.

“The goal here is to provide a brand new secure vestibule where there would be an intercom, a card reader and ADA push button. Visitors will go into that secure vestibule where all doors are locked. They would ten meet and be greeted by school staff at the transaction window. Ninety percent of the people who go in there would pass their ID into the tray, they would have a conversation such as my son or daughter left their lunch or their violin and then they would leave the building. The other ten percent of the people with business in the building would be permitted in and go first to the main office.”

He said this type of new arrangement is what is being done in all schools in this state.

Mr. Smith said his team has met with Principal Amanda Zullo twice in past months to get her views on what is being proposed at the middle/senior high school.

The new layout for the office portion of the MH building includes two guidance offices, the principal’s office, vice principal’s office, a new school resource officer office, a mail room, a break room and a conference room, plus bathrooms- one for students, another for faculty.

He said the rooms lay-out is not yet final, so input is welcome at this point. Storage needs in each office remains under study, he added. “As a team, we need to do some more work on storage areas there.”

At the L.P. Quinn Elementary School there are two front roof canopies that are rusting, so new soffits will be installed. Some masonry will be repointed above the existing gym wall, he stated. “There’s some leaking there, and we plan to investigate that more to find out where the water is getting in, before any repointing.”

The entire flat roof on the school building will be replaced, as will a boiler exhaust “which is breeching.

Other work planned there include the replacement of all exterior windows and doors, and the replacement of interior door hardware, the creation of a secure vestibule in the entrance area and renovation of the main office, a dedicated ventilation system in the existing nurse’s office, replacement of unit ventilators in the second and third grade classes, replacement of the main copper piping and domestic copper pipes in the building and the replacement of the oil tank.

He said a roofing contractor was recently hired by Schoolhouse Construction to determine the moisture content of the roof, and it found that 90% of the roof under the membrane is dry. A second test in the spring is planned and depending on what is found, it would give the district the option of only replacing the membrane, and not the underlying sheathing, which would be less expensive and would give the district some flexibility in the event some other part of the project ran into extra unforeseen costs, according to Mr. Smith. The work at L.P. Quinn, including many improvements to the Rotary Track and Field complex is expected to cost $8.1 million.

The work at the athletic field includes the full replacement of the asphalt track and possibly the addition of a pole vault area and a steeple chase site, including a water hurdle, based on forthcoming research by Schoolhouse Construction, he said.

“One of the reasons to include areas for those other events,” said Mr. Woodside, would be to accommodate some type of regional track and field event, should you want to host something like that in the future. It was noted that steeple chase events are featured at most regional or section track and field events.

The metal bleachers will be relocated to the opposite side of the field. A brand new bleacher system and new press box would be built where the old ones were on the north side of the complex.

In the expanded secure vestibule section planned at the elementary school the entrance of the library would be moved out of the secure area.

Work planned at the Tupper Lake Civic Center with a price tag of just over $500,000 involves upgrading the artificial ice-making system with a new dehumidification unit, modifying the duct work to accommodate all improvements, provide 120-ton water cooled condensing unit and controls, replacing the existing steel brine tank with a new polypropylene one, and if the budget allows, to replace the evaporator/chiller unit that is at the end of its expected life and the brine material itself.

Adirondack Tour de Ski coming to golf course this Sunday

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

A new nordic event is coming to the town’s trail network at the golf course Sunday morning that will bring competitors from across the region.

Tupper Lake will host one of the six parts of the new Adirondack Tour de Ski that day.

Councilman John Gillis, who also directs the maintenance and operation of the town’s four-season trails at the Tupper Lake Golf Course, announced the new event at a board meeting last fall, noting that “The Adirondack Tour de Ski” is a six-venue, six-race series.”

Mr. Gillis has been part of the organizing committee since early last summer.

The races began at Mt. Van Hoevenberg in Lake Placid in December, and were supposed to continue at Dewey Mountain in Saranac Lake in the following weeks. That event was postponed due to lack of snow cover until later this winter when hopefully there is enough snow. It will likely be held on a Saturday evening, under the trail lights there, Mr. Gillis said yesterday.

Sunday is Tupper’s turn and Mr. Gillis is hoping for snow, not rain between now and then.

Yesterday he was up grooming the local course, and while it’s fine right now, more snow would help, he said.

Upcoming races will be at Scotts Cobble and Cascade trails in Lake Placid and the Visitor Interpretive Center at Paul Smith’s, plus the Dewey Mt. One.

He said the way the new tour will work is that it began with a 3K race and will build up to a 15 or 20 kilometer race by the final one. “It’s geared for families. It’s a fun race series.”

The races begin about 10:15a.m. this Sunday and the public is very welcome to come out and cheer on the nordic racers.

He said the schedule is set up so most of the races will be held on Sundays and in that way it will encourage families and couples to come for the entire weekend.

“We’ve had good support from Franklin County Tourism and their program “The Adirondack Frontier.” There’s also been a generous donor come forward from Lake Placid who posted a $25,000 sponsorship.

“We should see a lot of turn-out” from around the northeast, he said he and the other series organizers expect.

He also noted that the reason Mt. Van Hoevenberg was selected as an early race next month, is because of the state facility’s snow-making system.

He said too the series is designed so if one of the host places can’t host an event due to lack of snow, it can always be moved to the Lake Placid site with its artificial snow.”

For its part in hosting one of the six races, the town will receive money from the overall tour budget to underwrite maintenance costs on the golf course trails here.

Another event on our trails- and this one in the middle of February- will be the New York State Empire Games’ winter triathlon- a brand new event for Tupper.

Exhibit-building begins at renovated Tupper Lake History Museum

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

With many of the interior renovations completed at the Tupper Lake History Museum, the volunteer board members are now turning their attention to exhibit-arranging and exhibit-building.

This week the directors have started to move artifacts in storage in their Amish-built shed outside and elsewhere around town into the renovated building.

The plan is to position artifacts where they will eventually be exhibited and then incorporate them into the exhibits built around them. It’s part of the museum board’s current organizational scheme.

Two of the three interior rooms have been completely renovated since early fall.

The primary builder has been Board Member Jimmy “Cookie” Lanthier, who has devoted hundreds of hours of his carpentry talents to the major chore.

He’s been a one-man building crew since last summer.

Just before he took a trip overseas to Scandinavia to visit friends he finished up the great room in what was likely service bays in the former gas station.

The room features a beautiful tongue and groove pine ceiling, that Mr. Lanthier stained a honey shade.

The ceiling features two large fans and several dozen tiny inset lights- some of which will be pointed directly on the coming exhibits.

Before he single-handedly constructed the ceiling, he thoroughly insulated the entire attic area. Mr. Lanthier also stripped the walls of the large room, firred them out and insulated them before affixing new sheetrock, after most of the building was completely rewired.

After finishing the sheetrock, Mr. Lanthier installed a half wall of wainscoting around the room’s perimeter, topping it with cherry rail. The room is very impressive and ten feet high, providing plenty of wall space to hang photos and other museum artifacts.

The museum board recently retained Brandon Moeller to install a new vinyl laminate flooring in the room. The flooring material was provided below wholesale cost by Tupper Lake Supply Co.

Before the flooring could be laid, there was a recessed section of the concrete floor that had to be filled, and that project, done by hand-mixing cement, was tackled by museum volunteer, Bob “Popcorn” Duhaime, last fall. A remarkable chore for a nonagenarian!

Last summer Mr. Lanthier devoted considerable attention to the redecorating of the middle room in the building, which will be the main entrance area where guests will enter through a newly repaired front glass door. The center room is dressed in various types of wood- to reflect this community’s lumbering heritage.

The only area of the building still to receive a face-lift is the former beauty salon on the western end. Mr. Lanthier has repaired the main bow window there- and work in that now cordoned off section of the building will be tackled over the winter, as exhibits rise in the other two rooms.

Related improvement chores like painting and replacing ceiling tiles have been tackled in the building over the by a number of museum volunteers including Mary Richer, Bob Duhaime, Joe Kimpflen, Diane Connor, Jeannette Keniston, Tom and Marlene Hyde and the Hyde Fuel crew and others.

The museum board is looking to have the new community showpiece open briefly for the Total Eclipse weekend on April 6, 7 and 8 to familiarize what is expected to be a full house of celestial fans coming for the event with the community’s heritage.

The museum will then close for several more months to get it ready for an opening early this summer, and a grand opening celebration event then.

The Tupper Lake History Museum continues to accept donations to fund the work of the directors as they ready their new place. Gifts may be sent to P.O. Box 824. All contributions are tax-deductible as the museum organization won IRS 501-3c tax exempt status last year.

Tupper Arts reaches $200,000 goal to purchase, re-develop State Theater

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The leaders of Tupper Arts are delighted to announce this week that their organization’s Encore Campaign this fall to raise funds to purchase and develop the Adirondack State Theater has reached its goal in an effort of resounding success. The local arts and cultural organization met is ambitious goal in only four months.

The support from the community has been overwhelmingly strong, according to Susan Delehanty, who chairs the Tupper Arts board of directors.

She said an anonymous matching donation of $75,000 announced in September to boost the fundraising effort has been met, even exceeding the goal of $200,000.

“Locals, visitors, and seasonal residents have stepped up to save this important cultural resource in Tupper Lake. Tupper Arts will be closing on the property shortly and looks forward to beginning renovations on this iconic structure.”

On behalf of her board Mrs. Delehanty expressed her gratitude to the community for making this campaign so successful. “ We are so grateful to everyone who has supported this cause. Thanks to their generosity, the Adirondack State Theater will be saved and will continue to serve the community for the next century.”

Several months ago the Tupper Arts leaders announced that “Mr. and Mrs. Anonymous” had stepped forward to make a significant impact on the campaign underway to buy and renovate the State Theater by offering a matching pledge of $75,000. 
The anonymous benefactors’ $75,000 pledge serves as a heartfelt call to action, doubling the impact of every donation made by year’s end. The generosity of these donors has not only multiplied the potential for a successful campaign, but also inspired others to join in, Mrs. Delehanty and her board members announced at that point in their campaign.

“This initiative has sparked a wave of unity, as other compassionate donors have eagerly come forward to contribute to the match.”

When the match of $75,000 was met in the weeks following the news this fall, the campaign was only $50,000 shy of its $200,000 goal. Part of the match was a generous donation of $25,000 from Lee and Nancy Keet who had pledged to donate the "last $25,000" toward the match.

Other donations from generous supporters of the local arts and cultural organization since then filled the $50,000 gap to the goal and more.

Tupper Arts in August announced its mission to save the Adirondack State Theater, which has been a cornerstone of the community for over 100 years. In order to preserve the iconic theater, it launched an ambitious capital campaign it called

“Encore: Saving the Adirondack State Theater.”

As a part of the Downtown Revitalization Initiative awarded to the Village of Tupper Lake in late 2022, Tupper Arts was granted $700,000 to expand its footprint on Park Street by buying the theater and redeveloping it into not only a modern movie house but a community theater with a stage where local and visiting artists could perform. As a prerequisite to access these funds, Tupper Arts had to first own the building. The goal of the Encore campaign was to raise $200,000 to purchase the property in order leverage the $700,000 state grant.

At a presentation in late summer at the start of the campaign , Louise McNally, founding past president of Tupper Arts, spoke of the sense of urgency and why Tupper Arts plays a crucial role in saving the theater from demise.

“I cannot stress enough, the urgency and cultural importance of this campaign. With the success of streaming platforms, rising costs, and the aftermath of COVID-19, the future of small regional commercial theaters is very grim. Without Tupper Arts’ intervention and commitment, the theater may be lost forever. With the support of individuals, local business, and philanthropic organizations, I believe we will breathe new life into this historic space and create a venue that will captivate audiences for generations to come.”

Rec department leaders present many good reasons to support new teen center

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Laura LaBarge and Christilee Geiger of the town’s new recreation department have devoted considerable time and attention this past month or so to developing what appears to be a solid plan for the creation of a new Tupper Lake teen center.

They briefed the town board on it at Thursday’s monthly board meeting.

The doors to the old basement quarters of the Aaron Maddox Hall which was the local food pantry had been closed only for a couple of weeks when Mrs. Geiger requested use of the space in the town-owned building to fashion a place for teens there.

“So we all know about the rash of recent vandalism at the municipal park, Mrs. LaBarge began their presentation Thursday evening, using the town’s large video screen.

The two women believe that teenagers without meaningful activities to do and comfortable places to do them often fall into mischief for entertainment.

She said after she won town board approval to hire Christilee this fall as the town events coordinator, both of them were approached by local residents about their plans for teenagers here.

“You have great programs for young children, but what are you doing for teens?” they asked both of us, Mrs. LaBarge told the board.

“After a panic attack because teens are terrifying,” she joked, she said they decided to meet the problem head on.

She said they created a “community input survey” that they posted online and distributed across the school district. It was also placed on the town’s Facebook page.

“We encouraged teenagers, their parents, their care-givers, neighbors, grand parents, everyone involved with teens to please complete the survey.”

A new name “Tupper Teens,” was suggested by Library Manager Courtney Carey, who has started co-hosting events and particularly children’s events with the town recreation department this past year.

“We did some research on what it will take to create a teen center- to make sure all our ducks were in a row.”

She said they have created a “Tupper Teens” board of directors. There have been discussions between the town pair and the new board members about the responses to the community survey and from that work has come a new mission statement, which reads as follows:

“The Town of Tupper Lake Recreation Department and the Tupper Teens board have a mission to improve the quality of life for Tupper teenagers and offer constructive opportunities for maturity and growth in a safe and supportive environment and encouraging teens to becoming active, productive members of their schools, families and the community.”

Mrs. Geiger listed the board members, who she said many of whom wanted to be in attendance that evening, but could not because of conflicts.

One of them, Mayor Mary Fontana, was in attendance, however.

The other board members consist of Courtney Carey, one of the founders, who Christilee described as “a visionary who is new to our community, who is objective in her approach to things with strong ties to the community through the local library.”

The Tupper Teens program in its infancy is currently operating out of the library’s community room, Mrs. Geiger told the board.

Another board member she said is Chelsea Schaffer, “a holistic mom of a teen and local business owner.” She said as a former “troubled teen,” she brings much insight to exact problems teens routinely face.

Matt Arsenault, also the parent of a teenager, is another board member. He considers himself “authoritative but approachable” and who is involved in both church and community. She said Matt believes he is well versed in current teen topics of diversity and inclusion

Bethany Cassell is also a new board member, “a mom of many teens,” who is experienced in numerous local outreach programs centered on helping teens, and direct’s Tupper Lake’s Family Matters program. “She is experienced at writing grants with insight into low-income demographics,” according to the town employee.

As a board member too is Mary Fontana, former town board members and mayor who she said “is dedicated to developing a strong town recreation department and through that creating good programs for people of all ages here.”

Laura LaBarge said the survey also showed the following pros and cons of starting a teen center.

Among the pros would be the availability of adult supervisors to help keep teens out of trouble at the park and elsewhere around town. The new teen center would be “a safe space” where teens can gather, she said. A new center could be a place where supervisors could bring in speakers from various local and regional programs. It could be a place to eventually foster a mentoring program that would be aimed “at building relationships and creating those important community connection.”

She said they are finding “many troubled teens don’t feel connected to their community.”

Balanced against the pros pointed up in the survey were some cons or things, Mrs. LaBarge said, might be negative about starting a teen center.

One con was the fear that when troubled teens assemble in one place, they may end up just creating more trouble. Others who responded to the survey worried about the appearance of teens hanging out on the street, looking “somewhat sketchy.”

“People wanted to make sure any selected location was accessible to everyone in town,” Mrs. LaBarge stated.

“-And lack of funding is always a concern with any new program starting up!”

“Discouragement from the community,” is another con which could adversely affect any teen program.

The inability for organizers “to tackle the tough issues facing teens,” was another potential negative element listed by those who took the survey. “Most of those who cited that concern wanted to make sure we were prepared to tackle those kinds of issues!” Laura noted.

Christilee addressed the issue of sustaining a new teen center. “It will take more than concern for this program to become successful. Every one loves the idea of a teen center. But most of these programs don’t last past the first year. It’s actually a very scary number...about 61% fail in the first year.”

“Lack of dedication from adults is the number one reason for failure. Adults in our community need to do better for our youth! Consistency is key to success. Dedicated volunteers, board members and a set schedule is essential! We also need to be prepared for the tough stuff, to maintain proper training for all staff members and volunteers. We owe this to the next generation.”

It all comes down to this, she stressed: “We need bodies, we need time, we need money!”

“Laura and I have ideas, but we are only two bodies...so we need more bodies. We also need time and we need money!”

Laura explained the program right now is an after-school program run out of the basement community room at the Goff-Nelson Memorial Library. It runs twice a week, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 2:30p.m. to 5:30p.m. She said as of now it is run by community volunteers, some of whom are from the Americorp program.

The women also listed the goals of the program, which include the involvement of teen advisors on the board, teaching life skills like cooking, doing laundry, filling out popular forms and budgeting. They would eventually like to offer teens instruction in arts, photography, dance and painting, as well as some outdoor activities like roller blading and car care.

Another important goal would be building relationships with first responders and local government agencies and organizations.

Securing exercise equipment for the new center is another goal they listed in their presentation.

“We really want a teen perspective of what they want” in the offerings before them and what’s at the new teen center, according to Mrs. LaBarge.

They showed photos of some of the teens doing various activities in the library the two afternoons a week.

Some of the teens have made solid connections with several of the volunteers who are helping there each week, it was noted.

Christilee said the owners of Lakeview Lanes have also offered very low priced bowling deals for kids to have fun there, rather than hanging out on the local streets.

Mrs. LaBarge said in recent weeks since the food pantry moved, local electric inspector and contractor, Mike Corneau, has been working to improve the electric system in the basement quarters, as well as adding smoke detectors and lighted exit signs.

“Mike is working his magic there, and donating his hours of labor” to get the center open and operating, she said.

She said while struggling right now getting volunteers, their one year plan is to have what she called “a consistency of faces” working with the teens at the center.

“We’d like to extend program hours. Initially Monday to Friday after school. Down the road we’d like to see it open seven days a week!”

She said five or ten years down the road they hope the town could afford a paid staff for the teen center. Another long-term goal would be to incorporate the teen center as a federal IRS 501-c3 organization to qualify for tax-deductible donations and grants to pay for permanent staff.

Since the proposed quarters in the Aaron Maddox Hall is not handicapped accessible, a building that is would be another long-term goal.

They presented to the board a lay-out of the new quarters that evening. There would be areas for activities and others designed “quiet space” to read, play games or do puzzles.

Incoming Board Member Crystal Boucher encouraged the pair to reach out to school district officials to help guide the development of the new place here and to become board members.

Mrs. LaBarge said they haven’t asked for board member participation because many of the district’s faculty and staff are already wearing many hats.

“Right now some of them are advising us, providing information to us when we ask questions.

Mrs. LaBarge noted too that as mentors and counselors are needed they were hoping the district personnel could help filling those roles.

Mrs. Boucher said she would like to eventually see the process by which the teen advisors are selected, in order to get candidates from a broad cross-section of the student body, rather than just select from the smaller pool of student leaders.

Christilee Geiger admitted while she isn’t the mother of teenagers yet, she is aware of some of the local issues teens face, “and I want to make it better for them!”

Councilman Rick Donah applauded their vision and enthusiasm for the new program and the work they have put into it in recent months.

“I’ve attended a number of the youth activities events in the past years, and when you see the kids and the smiles on their faces, you see how important the work is engaging these kids and giving them many options!”

“Offering alternatives for our children is great and it’s one more connection local governments have with teens in the community that we really need to form!”

As a Park Street business owner he said he knows that when kids don’t have worthwhile and meaningful things for them to do, it’s easy for them to hang out on the street, which can lead to trouble.

He said there was a teen center in town when he was a teenager, “that was a good outlet” for healthy fun and activities in many ways.

He told the ladies they were on the right track and when it comes to sustainability of the new facility, it will be up to the kids to determine that.

Help from local adults is also part of a successful sustainability formula, it was noted.

“The kids got to like it and enjoy it, and hopefully it catches on,” he told them.

Councilwoman Tracy Luton said one key to a center’s success is finding dedicated volunteers to staff a new teen center, a task made more difficult given the disrespect some teenagers hold for adults who are in charge of them.

“I find it hard that Laura and Christilee will fail,” given their dedication to the project and their enthusiasm, Supervisor Rickey Dattola confidently told his board at their close of their presentation.

Town board approves actions in support grant to fund Junction improvements near station

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Melissa McManus, who now serves as both the village and town community development coordinator, briefed the town board Thursday on one of her latest town projects: getting ready for the opening of this end of the Adirondack Rail/Trail and the arrival of regular train service in the next year or so.

Since the spring Melissa has directed what is called “the Rail/Trail Readiness committee,” comprised of local volunteers.

“As you all know a committee of super-dedicated Tupper Lakers has been working on getting our community ready for the coming of the rail/trail and the resumption of regular rail service.”

She said four of those members were at that night’s meeting: Councilman John Gillis, Free Press Publisher Dan McClelland and Kelly and Reese Fleury, who head the Tupper Lake Snowmobile Club and who chair one of the group’s new sub-committees.

“Through the committee’s hard work these past months, we’ve identified a set of goals, a scope of work for the station itself and what we’re talking about tonight- the enhancements around the station.”

In the committee’s discussions- some live, some via Zoom- have been the need for bike racks, repair stations, water dispensing units, picnic tables, various other user amenities- at this the southern terminus of the new pedestrian, biking and snowmobiling recreational corridor between here and Lake Placid.

The eastern most section of the new 30-mile long trail officially opened at Ray Brook in recent weeks.

Many committee discussions, too, have centered on the connections needed where the recreation trail ends east of the station near McCarthy Street to get trail users to local streets and roadways where local businesses are situated.

“We want to convert its economic potential into new spending in our business in the Junction and beyond. We know what needs to be done to improve our streets and sidewalks- we’ve done a lot of thinking about that over the years.”

She said a number of new concepts and ideas are in the works “-and we’re now in the position to go after the money to design these improvements. And happily we had a Plan A in mind all the time and that was to try and secure some federal money, in particular the bipartisan infrastructure law money you’ve all heard about.”

“There’s still some money out there banging around and we’re hoping to get some of that or potentially an earmark. Alternatively our Plan B is the state Transportation Alternatives Program (TAP) grant that is custom-made for this kind of hub project!”

She had forwarded two resolutions in support of the latter to the board for its consideration. Both were adopted that evening in support of the state grant.

The first represented the town board’s support for the application for Junction Hub improvement funds through the $165 million in DOT TAP funds to improve pathways and make safe connections to the new train service and $44 million state investment in the new rail/trail.

Of those grants, 80% would come from the state and 20% from the community.

The second resolution she presented that was also adopted by the board was an agreement with the LaBella Associates firm of Glens Falls to provide preliminary design and engineering services to the town that are necessary to file the application of a forthcoming TAP grant. The firm will submit the town application and the preliminary work it involves to the DOT for a one-time fee of $2,500.

Jamie Konkoski, who is a member of the trail and train readiness committee, is a senior planner with the firm.

Mrs. McManus explained to the town board the preparations for this grant are really complex. “We need to know exactly how much it is going to cost to use these federal highway funds to build streets and sidewalks here.”

She said the LaBella firm was the only one that responded to the town’s recent request for proposals to help with the grant applications.

Councilman John Gillis noted that the LaBella firm has already provided important services to the town at very little cost in recent months, noting the $2,500 fee is “a drop in the bucket” compared with what the town has already received from the company. It’s a great deal for Tupper!”

Both resolutions were adopted unanimously by the four board members present. Crystal Boucher, who begins her term as a new councilwoman was in attendance that evening in the gallery but not at the board table, as her term doesn’t begin until January 1.

Councilman Rick Donah asked Mrs. McManus if there has been any progress on a better and safer path from the end of the rail/trail at McCarthy Street directly to the train station.

One of the first connections proposed by the state designers was a newly built trail through the woods from where the new rail/trail concludes to the corner where Hebert Lane meets LeBoeuf Street. The connector trail route has been viewed as both unsightly and unsafe, by community leaders here.

“We have expressed our thoughts and concerns and have brought it to all the right peoples’ attention. We’re optimistic that it will be properly taken care of until the final plans are released,” the consultant told him.

A committee of local leaders has met with DOT and DEC higher ups on an informal basis several times this year, where the connection between the terminus of the new trail and Junction neighborhoods have been discussed. The preferred path voiced by the local committee has been directly along the railroad tracks to the station, with several safety measures put in place, rather than the remote route proposed in the state plan via Hebert Lane.

“We’re optimistic” state officials have heard our concerns, Mrs. McManus told Mr. Donah.

The grant applications are due January 9, and in response to another question from the councilman, Mrs. McManus estimated news of the awards might come as early as this summer.

It was noted that evening the completion of the rail/trail to Tupper Lake is expected in the fall of 2025, when it would be nice to have many of the improvements eyed for trail users in place by then.

If the grants come, the improvements they will fund may not be all completed until 2026, the grant writer speculated.

In a related matter that evening the Free Press publisher, who is chairman of Next Stop! Tupper Lake, which still owns the Junction station, said he had been approached by Erik Thomas, an engineer with Bette & Cring, which has won the bid to construct the new platform in front of the station and the “Y” train turnaround site beyond it between next April and December, during which time train service to the station from points south will be temporarily suspended.

Mr. Thomas asked if there was a small amount of space available in the station for a small field office and Mr. McClelland said space would certainly be found for them there to help facilitate the important work that would be going on outside the station.

At Thursday’s meeting Supervisor Rickey Dattola indicated that if the station has passed into town hands by then, he felt his board would certainly welcome the contractors to the station for its oversight of the project.

“So it looks like the train track improvements around the station have come to reality,” after several seasons of late when bid amount tendered far outdistanced construction estimates for the track improvements here, Mr. McClelland told the board.

The town supervisor said that when he attended the recent ribbon-cutting near Ray Brook that marked the opening of the first section of the rail/trail, “everyone there-including many state officials- were optimistic the project would stay on schedule and many couldn’t wait for the new trail to get to Tupper Lake.”

“I told them we have a beautiful station” and the connection of the new trail and the railroad will “be very nice when everything is done!”

He joked that when the trail eventually opens here, “we’ll be serving beer.”

Retiring Town Clerk Laurie Fuller honored at her last meeting

Dan McClelland

Recreation Department Chief Laura LaBarge presents Laurie with a plaque that will hang on the town hall lobby wall, commemorating her many years of excellent service to the town and its residents. (McClelland photos)

Retiring Town Clerk Laurie Fuller and her successor, Mary Kay Kucipeck Strack, on the last evening they will sit together, chronicling the actions of a town board.

Retiring Town Clerk Laurie Fuller was honored by the Tupper Lake Town Board and her colleagues both at the town hall and around the region at her last town board meeting Thursday.

Before the meeting a town clerk from the Town of Franklin appeared briefly. Lauren LaFave, who is a member of the board of directors of the New York State Town Clerks’ Association, extended to Laurie the thanks of her organization to Mrs. Fuller for her many years of service to it over the years. Tupper Lake’s town clerk served on the association’s board of directors for six years. With the commendation came some attractive wind chimes.

Mrs. Fuller also received a bouquet of flowers and a bottle of Jameson whiskey from the members of the town highway department, all appreciative of her efforts helping them over the years.

Laurie has been attending town board meetings taking accurate minutes of the deliberations and resolutions at each since she was elected town clerk in the fall of 2002, following the resignation of Beth Bierwirth, whose family left town that year. Laurie had served as Beth’s deputy clerk for about two years before her election. Beth, a former town councilwoman, succeeded the town’s long serving clerk, Aluva Marconi about two years earlier.

During Mrs. Fuller’s time as town clerk, she has also served as the town court clerk, a position she will continue to hold in the new year.

The retiring town clerk said this week she loved her job, and very much enjoyed working with the public and with her fellow employees and past and present board members.

“Our office staff was always excellent-” making for a great place to work, she noted.

Laura LaBarge of the town recreation department presented the outgoing town clerk with a wooden plaque with her photo on it which will hang in the town hall with plaques of her predecessors. The message was “Thank You, Laurie J. Fuller for your hard work and dedication, that will never be matched. You have set the standard for all! Years of service: 2000 to 2023.”

Laurie was also presented with a glass award for her own keeping, carrying the same message of the one that will hang in the town hall lobby, next to one of Aluva Marconi.

At the close of Thursday’s meeting the outgoing town clerk thanked everyone she has worked with over the years. “I’ve worked with some wonderful people.”

She named Town Attorney Kirk Gagnier, in particular, who she said helped her through some of the legal dealings of her job.

“It wasn’t a job to me. I loved coming to work every day. I’m sure I am going to miss it...thank you all.”

Town Councilwoman Tracy Luton, whose last meeting after eight years was also that night, called Laurie “amazing” at her job.

She said during Laurie’s grave illness several year ago she was deeply missed at the town hall and officials there were so happy upon her return to work. “Happy retirement to you!”

Others around the board table offered that same wish too, and applause for her erupted at the close of the monthly meeting.

Former councilwoman and the new mayor, Mary Fontana, whose last meeting at the town board table was last month, attended Thursday’s session to recognize and thank Laurie for all her contributions to the town.

Take a festive holiday stroll this weekend on Park Street, other sites

Dan McClelland

The Park Street businesses and the business community in general are inviting those wishing to bask in a little holiday glow to take the Tupper Lake Holiday Stroll. It’s happening December 15th and 16th!

Residents and visitors are invited to take a walk down a festively decorated Park Street, Friday, December 15 from 4p.m. to 7 p.m., or on Saturday, December 16 from noon to 7p.m.- enjoying the beautifully lit trees, stunning storefronts, and some fun holiday activities are to be expected.

In Tupper Lake’s Junction the Tupper Lake Train Depot will be open with vendors ready to help shoppers wrap up their holiday shopping.

By shopping at home this weekend residents will find many holiday shopping deals right here and get themselves into the festive spirit of the holiday- as they walk and stroll through the community with their neighbors.

Park Street businesses will be aglow with white twinkle lights, and will visited by a few special guests (Santa, the Grinch, and Ollie the Otter), and full of family fun!

The Town of Tupper Lake recreation department and the Tupper Lake Public Library are offering a craft and movie night for children on Friday evening. Children must be pre-registered to attend. Parents can register their children either at the library or the town hall.

Raquette River Brewing will also be hosting its annual Tree Decorating Party Saturday, December 16 where Santa is going to make an appearance.

Joining the retailers on Park Street this weekend will be Tupper Arts which has put up a number of types of new Christmas ware, including soaps, tree ornaments, trinkets and more- many of which have been made by local artisans.

-So take a stroll this weekend and check out all that Tupper Lake businesses have to offer!


Bowling is district’s new varsity school sport here

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Bowling is Tupper Lake High’s new varsity sport.

The Tupper Lake Board of Education has approved the introduction of bowling as an official school sport, following a well-reasoned presentation by Athletic Director Dan Brown at the November board meeting.

In the weeks after the meeting Mr. Brown canvassed the student body at the middle/high school and found at least 20 students who want to bowl for the new school teams. So bowling is a go and competition will start in coming days!

The new varsity bowlers held their first practice at Lakeview Lanes Thursday after school.

Mr. Brown told the Free Press that the amazing thing about the new athletic venture is that the majority of the students signed up to participate so far have never played a school sport before.

“I’ve come to talk to you this evening about the potential of a Tupper Lake (High School) bowling team,” he told the board of education last month.

He said in recent years there has been just a single bowling team in Section 10 where the Tupper Lake teams will compete. Then two and three more teams were formed and this year there are four school bowling teams in all.

“Now that more and more teams are coming on board with bowling teams,” Section 10 officials are trying to organize the league and which schools will be taking part. The start of the new bowling season is just week’s away, he noted.

“There may be other schools that come into the mix in coming weeks,” he told the elected school leaders.

“This year we would make it an even six teams”- if we were the field a team.

“Typically we come into a new sports season with anywhere between 140 and 155 student athletes. That’s not where we end the season, but on paper that’s where we generally start.”

He said typically too the winter sports season (with hockey, basketball and track) generates the lowest participant numbers of any sport season.

“In the winter sports season we have a lot of students who are active in the skating club- the figure skating program at the civic center.

“It takes a little away from our girls basketball program, where we’ve seen some decline in recent years.

“But there’s also a very healthy mix of kids in the figure skating program.

“However still having 30 to 50 students not participating in a high school sport is not something we desire.

“We know that athletics increase our civic awareness and athletics increases our positive personality traits. It increases our student health and all round it makes are students better humans and prepares them for lifelong practices of sportsmanship, commitment and engaging with other people.

“Bowling is an athletic opportunity that most people can do. Hockey in the winter, for example, if you don’t know how to skate, you can’t start playing hockey and make your way onto a high school team. And with basketball you only have five kids on the court at any one time, with a goal of having a team of about 12 players for practices and games. Whereas bowling is an opportunity for a student of any athletic ability, as long as they want to participate and build upon a skill they maybe have only done a few times in their life before that.

Organizationally, he said, it’s a ten-match season: five home games and five away. He said sectionals end February 6 and the matches leading up to that end rotate among the bowling alleys in the section.

Following the sectional matches, there’s a state tournament in Syracuse “that would give our team a one in six chance of going to the states.”

“-And what an opportunity for our students that would be,” he said of the two-day tournament that typically draws hundreds and hundreds of young bowlers from across the state who would compete.”

“It’s quite an event that organizers put on for them!”

He said high school bowling teams typically practice three times a week. From a physical standpoint, he noted, it’s not the type of sport you would want to practice five or six times a week.

“It gets repetitive...the ball gets heavy after a time and wears on the body.”

“As a new program, the expectation being the three days a week of practice” would continue through the development of a somewhat seasoned team by year three.

He reasoned that practicing more days each week could become cumbersome for some students to do, and increases the likelihood they may eventually lose interest.

“Practicing five and six days a week is a huge commitment for student athletes,” he added.

“It’s also a great way for our district to work with the community” through Jen Larsen at the local bowling alley.

Ms. Larsen bowled competitively in both high school and in college, which she attended on a bowling scholarship. She was a professional bowler for several years. Jen has been promoting the idea of the district introducing high school bowling for a number of years, according to a recent interview we did of her and her partner Mike in recent weeks.

“Mr. Bartlett and I have been talking with Jen about it over the last couple of years.”

“We were just waiting to see where the other schools in the district were going with it!”

“Right now we’re sort of at an explosion point, as we wait to see which of the new schools to introduce it will be.

He said in the Section 10 discussions on bowling- and even though the start of the season is only a few weeks away- some of the schools are saying to the others, “we’re in, if you’re in, but we all need to get in” if it’s going to work.

“Last week we had a unified bowling event” at Lakeview Lanes “that was well received by Section 10. He said six schools were represented, with over 40 students bowling, including some with special needs.

“That’s also something we’re looking to grow in Section 10.

He said the teams were bussed in. They arrived about 10a.m., bowled, had lunch together...all sorts of students bowling together, and it was a great event to happen here.

Mr. Brown said Section 10 is currently the only section in the state “that does not have a unified, organized” sports league that brings together students of all abilities.

“Bowling could help to build that and for not only bowling for Section 10 but unified sports in Section 10 bringing students with special needs and general education students together to be in a competitive environment.”

The athletic director said that although the sport of bowling wasn’t budgeted this year, his department had planned this year to offer a JV girls basketball team that didn’t materialize.

“So instead of creating a new team” and budgeting for it, “we just replacing a team.”

“Our bowling alley is eager to work with our kids and our school- and this is something Jen is very enthusiastic about and very willing to help!”

He said while they haven’t formally polled students about bowling in recent years, in various informal conversations, he has been told by many students it might be a sport they would be very willing to try.

Mr. Brown said Tupper Lake historically was home to many youth leagues which have disappeared in recent years.

“Jen is very interested in trying to bring some of those leagues back, which would provide something of a feeder program to any new high school varsity program.”

Asked by the board the ages of the team members, Mr. Brown said varsity teams can include students in grades nine to 12. “There are sports, however, that can allow for seventh and eighth grade expansions and bowling would be one of those sports, much like golf.”

The inter-school competition involves a bowling match, which consists of three games, he told the board members, in answer to another question.

Student bowlers can compete individually or as a team, he noted.

He also said that sometimes an individual section will create something of an all-star team to compete at regional or state levels.

Mr. Brown said there is no limit on the number of student bowlers on a school team, given the various available configurations of matches.

The only restriction, he guessed, would be the number of lanes a particular bowling alley offered.

The school here would likely have both boys and girls teams, versus a mixed team.

Superintendent of Schools Russ Bartlett spoke in favor of introducing bowling to the local sports regimen. He said of all the school officials in larger schools and smaller schools around the region that he and Mr. Brown had spoken to over the years and “nobody who implemented a bowling team at their school has found that impacts the numbers in the other school sports. It’s not a sport that typically draws from other athlete pools!”

Mr. Brown predicted that about 15 students this year would join a school bowling team if it was offered. Through his recruitment efforts in recent week, he has surpassed that estimate.

“Chateaugay introduced bowling last year and at some of their practices, there were 30 students!”

By their comments most of the board members liked the idea and several had procedural questions.

Mr. Brown noted that both male and female bowling teams would travel on a single bus and that the district would pay only for the bowling fees and shoe rentals, if necessary, for just the Tupper bowlers.

He said he and Jen Larsen have talked about how her bowling alley could help with ball or shoe rentals to minimize the cost of equipment to the school district.

PILOT proposed for “affordable housing,” commercial pieces of Boulevard project

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The Franklin County Industrial Development Agency has proposed a major PILOT program for the “affordable housing units” contained in the residential and commercial complex proposed by Joe Gehm and his partners on the former Oval Wood Dish Corp. parcel on Demars Boulevard.

The Oval Wood Dish development group- based in Syracuse- are planning two apartment complexes actually- one on the Fletcher family property adjacent to the former Ames Plaza and the other on the industrial site adjacent to the town hall. Its address is 116 Demars Blvd. The PILOT proposed is for that one right now.

For the past year the developers- formalized as the Oval Wood Dish Tupper Lake LLC- have been talking about nearly 92 “market rate” or “blended rate” apartments. Some were proposed to be upscale apartments to possibly induce seniors here to move from their family homes into nice apartments overlooking Raquette Pond, and thereby freeing up those houses for young families to buy.

There has also been talk about apartments priced in the range that tradesmen and their families can afford- as an inducement for skilled laborers, electricians, plumbers, etc. to move here from around the North Country to fill job vacancies. Many of these people currently commute here daily from distant communities as do many Sunmount employees hired in recent years.

More apartments are needed here so many people here have been encouraged by the projects.

The composition of the apartment complex proposed in recent months apparently changed, because that of the approximately 92 apartments initially proposed ,80 will now be what is called “affordable housing.”

Rents will likely be subsidized by state and federal programs, much like they are at Don Smith’s Apartments, the “battered women’s” townhouses on the back road and at Ivy Terrace. All three of those housing complexes enjoy substantial property tax abatements each year.

Complicating that switch in housing types to be offered there is a draft document given to local elected leaders about a plan where the developers are working with the Franklin County Industrial Development Agency, headed by Jeremy Evans, and that county agency has proposed a major PILOT for those 80 units.

PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) programs are a way for communities to attract development, by offering major property tax inducements.

This new one is based on a 30-year plan where the assessment upon which annual PILOT payments are based would remain at $677,400.

When Roger Sullivan owned and operated his O.W.D. Inc. plastic utensil business on the eastern end of the old Oval Wood Dish complex the total assessment for his buildings and the ones west of them that he later purchased and used for storage, the assessment was about $1 million.

After Roger’s factory was sold to another company which operated for another two years and then closed, the property was sold to Norman Bobrow and Associates, the New York City real estate firm that owns the former Ames plaza property next door.

That firm was able to convince the town assessment office to lower the assessment to $677,400- and that’s what taxes have been based upon in recent years.

When the apartment project was introduced by Mr. Gehm and his partners its worth upon completion was estimated at about $30 million. With high construction costs seen this past year and high inflation across the nation, most people in the construction business assume it will take probably $40 million to build it.

In the IDA proposal, the project’s cost is estimated at $39.1 million.

Missing from the original plan now is the commercial production brewery that the developers had been encouraging Raquette River Brewing’s Joe Hockey and Mark Jessie to create there. The successful brewery partners have since abandoned that plan. The local brewers now have a small shop in Lake Placid.

The proposed PILOT is based on the 80 affordable housing units and 15,000 square feet of commercial space proposed there, to include a number of business services and commercial tenants.

In the developers’ revenue plan is also several million dollars in Downtown Revitalization Grant money from the village’s $10 million grant win in 2022, some State Historic Preservation Program money and a major chunk is reportedly state tax credit funds. The project actually hinged on lots of that tax credit assistance, former Mayor Paul Maroun has told the community many times this year. It was reportedly approved in recent months.

The county IDA is looking to get their clients a 30-year PILOT where the current assessment of $677,400 would remain in place through 2055 for those certain units where rents would be likely geared to income.

In 2023 local taxpayers are paying $14.98 per $1,000 in village taxes, $1.83 per $1,000 in town taxes, $4.79 per $1,000 in county taxes and $16.39 per $1,000 in school taxes, for a total of $37.90 per $1,000 on their current assessments.

Many property owners, and particularly those with waterfront property on the local lakes, have assessments of $600,000 or more. Some of the great camps around our lakes are assessed at well over $1 million.

So based on the proposed continued assessment of $677,400 the developers would pay $50,000 as a payment in lieu of taxes the first year in 2026 when the project was finished and that would eventually grow by about 2% a year to year 30 in 2055 when the payment would be double that or be$100,800.

The PILOT proposed by the county IDA also would see no taxes paid on the commercial space in the complex until year six or 2031 when the first payment would be $7,500. That sum would grow each year by two percent or so to $12,063 in 2055 for a 25-year total of $240,227.

If there was no PILOT, the developers would pay $95,710 in village, town, county and school taxes in 2026 and $169,967 in 2055- on the 80 units or $3.9 million in total.

Based on the IDA plan the PILOT payments would total $2.27 million over the 30 years, versus $3.9 million without one, for a savings to the project and its developers of $1.6 million.

When that’s combined with two other incentives- a county mortgage tax exemption of $131,670 and a county sales tax exemption of $1,065,378- the developers would see total financial assistance through the county agency over the life of the PILOT of $2.8 million.

All of the local leaders- including Supervisor Rickey Dattola, County Legislator Nedd Sparks and Mayor Mary Fontana- are concerned about the PILOT advanced by the county IDA. There have been several recent meetings with County Manager Donna Kissane, who is also not a fan of the proposal, to explore in detail the impact of the PILOT plan on Tupper Lake’s future tax base, which has seen very little growth in recent years.

If the apartment project doesn’t materialize, the current taxes on the parcel with its decaying buildings are estimated at $26,978 in 2026 and by the year 2055, any owner would be paying $47,910 per year, based on the $677,400 per $1,000 assessment.

New mayor, new village board

Dan McClelland

Mary Fontana was officially sworn into her new position as village mayor by Village Clerk Mary Casagrain at the start of the village’s annual organizational meeting Monday. The first appointment the new mayor made was to appoint Trustee Eric Shaheen as her deputy mayor. Deputy Mayor Shaheen succeeds Trustee Leon LeBlanc, who was always former Mayor Paul Maroun’s choice for his deputy. The deputy mayor presides over village meetings and matters, in the absence of the mayor. Surrounding the new mayor and the village clerk were Trustees Jason McClain, Eric Shaheen, David Maroun and Leon LeBlanc. This fall Trustees LeBlanc and Maroun were returned to another two-year term on the board in an uncontested election.

Village wins another big grant for more park improvements

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Friday the village leaders were notified the village has won $533,500 from the New York State Department of State to continue trail and other improvements to the municipal park.

It’s the latest piece of the village’s ongoing and very successful waterfront revitalization program through the state department that has produced major developments there like the continuation of the shoreline trail, a new entrance way to Flanders Park, the “Sunset Stage” bandshell and the Little Logger Playground. It’s another grant for the village written and won by Community Development Director Melissa McManus.

The grant money will be used to build two new hard-surfaced handicapped trails from the edge of the park on Martin and Mill streets or from the grandstand parking areas to the shoreline walkway and to a new fishing pier that will be built out from it, Mayor Paul Maroun announced this week.

“It will be so everyone will be able to get to this new fishing pier-” regardless of their mobility, he said. “It’ll help handicapped people easily get to our shoreline areas each summer...and a great enhancement for our park!”

The village was passed over in last year’s Waterfront Revitalization Program grant round. Over the years, however, the village has won hundreds of thousands of dollars through it.

Last year’s application scored light in some areas and Mayor Maroun said in the review of it, several areas were strengthened, making for a better application.

Grant monies will also be used to have construction plans designed for a new “club house” or locker room complex so both the Riverpigs and their opponents will have their own changing rooms, with showers, bathrooms, etc., he noted.

The building would also have room where referees and umpires can use for games here.

Mayor Maroun envisions the new building in the park each winter as a warming and restroom area for snowmobiles to use, as well as for ice fishermen wetting their lines on Raquette Pond.

This grant will not include the development of a beach at the park.

The new fishing pier is eyed for a piece of the shoreline, just right of the bottom of Cliff Ave., where a new boat launching site and dock are planned.

Tupper mayors, local officials welcome Sen. Chuck Schumer to Wild Center

Dan McClelland

The mayors of Tupper Lake- incoming Mayor Mary Fontana and outgoing Mayor Paul Maroun- presented Senator Schumer with a birthday cake during his visit here last week. Wild Center leader Hillary Dechene had the knife for the cutting.

by Dan McClelland”

Mayor Paul Maroun, his successor Mary Fontana and other community officials were on hand last week to welcome U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to the Wild Center.

Sen. Schumer, New York’s senior senator, makes it a point to visit every county in the state once a year, and over the Thanksgiving holiday he made a number of stops in this region, including in Lake Placid, here and others, the mayor explained this week of the informal visit.

“He loves the Wild Center...he and his family really do,” noted the mayor, who also serves on the board of directors of the natural history museum. The U.S. senator has made several visits to the facility in past years.

“He praised the work of the board chair, Karen Thomas, and her board for its direction” of this major tourism venue.

“I introduced Sen. Schumer to the group and told the guests there were three things I wanted to say about him.

“First, it’s always an honor to have a United States senator here, but Sen. Schumer is one of the three most powerful people in the nation as U.S. Senate leader.

“When he was younger, he and I and his kids would go to the Tail of the Pup and get all greasy. We’d go to Donnelly’s too because he loves ice cream.

“The second thing I said was that the Wild Center is always on the cutting edge of science and exploration. With Jen Kretser and the work of the people behind the Youth Climate Summits, we are the first official group to wish Senator Schumer a happy birthday.”

His birthday was on Thanksgiving Day.

“I told the story that when you enter the state assembly when you go in the main door, one of two guards opens the door for you.”

He said the time was when he worked in 1974 for Assemblyman Glenn Harris, Mr. Schumer had just been elected to that body of state government. “He was a freshman assemblyman that year.”

“That day there were no guards at the door and I was walking in to see Glenn about something. So this guy behind me opens the door, and we walk down the aisle together, chatting a bit about where we were each from.

“So I said to Glenn: who is that guy. He just opened the door for me. He was a nice young man.

“Glen told me he was the new guy from Brooklyn and his name was Chucky Schumer.”

“So I tell the story...it’s not about politics or religion. You can tell the quality of a person by their actions. It’s not about what’s written about them in the media or what they may have done one way or another.

“From the day on I always thought of Chuck Schumer as a friend and we became friends after that and we’ve been friends for more than 50 years.”

Mr. Schumer, who started as an assemblyman, was elected to Congress and finally was elected as a U.S. senator, after he defeated Republican incumbent Al D’Amato.

“The last thing I said in the introduction is that Senator Schumer is of the Jewish religion and from the New York City area. I said the mayor of Tupper Lake is Lebanese. If the two of us can be friends for 50 years, there’s hope for peace in the Middle East!”

“He thought that was a great comment and told me he was going to use that line in the future!” the mayor concluded.