Tag Archives: Letters to the Editor

An open letter to the Community Billy’s dinner to benefit Mary Russell fund

To the Community:

Billy’s Restaurant will host a fund raising dinner on Thursday, May 30. The proceeds of the dinner will benefit the Mary Russell Continuing Education Scholarship presented by the Covey Pashley Unit #893 of the American Legion Auxiliary.

Named for one of our deceased members, Mary Russell, our scholarship benefits a student who has plans to continue on past their first year of college. Mary believed wholeheartedly in the value of higher education; be it college, technology school, graduate school, or other training. Whenever possible, Mary encouraged any young person she knew to continue their education, and the auxiliary proudly carries on Mary’s legacy.

The auxiliary is currently accepting applications for this year’s scholarship. Any person who has completed at least one year of post-high school education and plans to continue his or her studies in the fall may apply. Those interested may contact me at (315) 369-2206 for more information. The deadline for applications is June 14, 2013.

Please plan to attend dinner at Billy’s Restaurant on May 30th and help the American Legion Auxiliary continue funding the Mary Russell Continuing Education Scholarship.  Thank you to Billy Burns and his staff for offering this fund raising opportunity.  We hope to see you there!

Judy Ehrensbeck, Old Forge

Member Covey Pashley Unit #893 American Legion Auxiliary

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Letter to the Editor Band students appreciate Mr. Clark

Dear Editor:

I am writing in response to a little piece of news I’ve been informed of. On Wednesday, May 22, towards the end of the school day, the Town of Webb Senior Band was practicing marching around town for the Memorial Day parade. Upon returning to the school, band teacher Mr. Clark congratulated us for our good efforts at marching under the hot sun that afternoon.

Afterward, he asked us to gather around for a minute before going inside. He had some unpleasant news for us. Mr. Clark told us that he will not be here next year as our band teacher. As soon as those words left his mouth, jaws dropped and my heart sank.

Now, the official papers will say that Mr. Clark resigned. But we band students know that isn’t the truth…he was forced to resign. We’ve been told that it is because some of the higher-ups of the school do not like his way of teaching, but I am writing to defend Mr. Clark’s way of going about educating us.

How many teachers in our school teach kids, not to just want to improve, but empower their passions? How many teachers in our school not only try to teach us to put full effort into everything, but to also be kind, considerate human beings?  Continue reading

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Letter to the Editor: Why stop at guns, so many dangers exist?

To the Editor:

This is a response to the article, “How best to protect ourselves, our loved ones, and others’ loved ones” that appeared in the issue of March 7, 2013.

How to protect the lives of those who enjoy our winter trails. Let’s apply the thinking of gun control to winter snowmobile trail safety.

Unfortunately, snowmobile violent trail deaths have occurred in our state from a yearly maximum of 26 deaths to an average rate of over 17 trail deaths per year from 2000 to 2010. Forty-three percent of them are related to excessive alcohol consumption and 57% to excessive speed.

The victims are normally the owners of the sleds. The maximum sled speed in New York state is 55 mph while a standard sled can max out at between 90 and 105 mph.

The Town of Webb will issue in excess of 12,000 trail permits this season. Almost 90,000 snowmobiles were registered in New York State last year. Approximately a dozen people will die this season.

A typical New York State anti-gun mentality legislature would recommend the following to prevent these violent deaths: Continue reading

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LETTER: Criss taps into sentiments of founder Thomas Jefferson

To the Editor:

I was very much impressed by Colin Criss’ article on gun safety.

I understand well the attachment of many to the hunting tradition. My husband and I spent many an enjoyable fall with friends and family engaging in pheasant hunting in northern New Jersey. They are some of our fondest memories of our former home.

We also engaged in target shooting and trap shooting in non-hunting season. But in all that time we never considered the use of an “assault rifle” as an appropriate weapon for such activity.

The very name of the weapon denotes its function. Clearly the framers of the Constitution did not intend or envision such weapons when crafting the document, and in fact the very language of the Second Amendment does not suggest that individuals have an unfettered right to bear arms.

The purpose of the Amendment was to maintain a militia at a time when there was no standing army for the defense of the states; it reads, in its entirety: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

The Supreme Court has in recent years ruled that this ensures an individual right to gun ownership, but not without reasonable restrictions for the public safety.

Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1816, “Some men look at the Constitutions with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the ark of the covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond amendment. I knew that age well: I belonged to it, and labored with it. It deserved well of its country. It was very like the present, but without the experience of the present: and 40 years of experience in government is worth a century of book-reading: and this they would say themselves, were they to rise from the dead. I am certainly not an advocate for frequent and untried changes in laws and constitutions…but I know also that laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy, as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.”

In retirement he further wrote: “When I contemplate the immense advances in science, and discoveries in the arts which have been made within the period of my life, I look forward with confidence to equal advances by the present generation; and have no doubt they will consequently be as much wiser than we have been, as we than our fathers were, and they than the burners of witches.”*

I guess he was imagining young men like Colin.

Hazel Dellavia, Old Forge

*

Thomas Jefferson the Art of Power, pg.467,468.

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LETTER: Honored to receive Gateway to Wilderness award

To the Editor:

Last fall I was a recipient of the “Gateway to Wilderness” award, given by Adirondack Wild. I was honored and humbled to receive this award, along with Sheila and Ron Cuccaro.

This award was also especially meaningful because one of the founding partners of Adirondack Wild, David Gibson, has been very helpful to me in dealing with sensitive Adirondack issues for many years.

David, along with Dan Plumley, was very helpful to all of us in White Lake in saving our trees along the Route 28 Corridor.

David Gibson was Executive Director for 23 years of the “Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks.”

The late Barbara McMartin wrote in her book “Perspectives on the Adirondacks” about David, “He is a consensus builder capable of working with other groups.”

This is an expertise that is truly an asset for the Park.

In the summer of 2010, David Gibson, Dave Plumley, Ken Rimany and Peter Brinkley partnered to form a new environmental group “Adirondack Wild: Friends of the Forest Preserve.”

Last September Adirondack Wild held their fall meeting at View, at which time I was fortunate to also meet partners Ken Rimany and Peter Brinkley.

They all work together as one. It is really great to see.

Paul Schaefer, who started “Friends of the Forest Preserve” in the 1940’s (a hero for everyone who loves the Park), mentored Gibson, Plumley and Rimany.

Paul Schaefer has left us, but his legacy lives on in the partners of the Adirondack Wild.

One important focus of the group is to mentor young people, to train college students on different aspects of the wilderness including advocating for it, a very worthwhile endeavor as the young, and generations to come, will be at the heart of preserving the Park.

Adirondack Wild is on the front line in a quiet and persuasive way for continued Park preservation.

Thank you, Adirondack Wild, from all of us who cherish this treasure. You have done Paul Schaefer proud.

Shirley Cornish, Old Forge

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Letter to the Editor Ad’k Railroad’s presence of historic value

To the Editor:

The Adirondack Railroad is more than a toy train. Some people called Dr. Webb’s dream a fairy-tale railroad. One local legend claimed it never made any money even when it took great loads of ice and logs to market.

Today, the railroad could be used to fight forest fires at remote places of the woods. It could carry firemen, equipment and water to places where there are no roads.

Also, it could be used for mass evacuations should the need arise.

So much for the safety argument.

The railroad has historic value. Historic tourism is a piece of the economic pie in the Town of Webb.

Narrated trips to remote and isolated—almost ghost town—stations would help to enlarge that piece of the pie.

One of the first things you see when you enter the Town of Webb is Thendara Station. It has great historic value and could be enhanced by replacing the old water tower and repainting the station its original gray color.

As my wife Barb says, “There are hundreds of miles of hiking trails in the Adirondacks, but only one railroad.”

Reed Proper, Thendara

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LETTER: Forestport Bridges press on

To the Editor:

Congratulations Forestport! We will be building the new Twin Bridges.

The Town Supervisor, last night, signed the amendment to the contract to proceed with the engineering and design work. That will allow us to get the bridges out for bid in early March.

I am very happy for our town and I hope this will end the rancor and divisions.

The new Twin Bridges will have a 15-foot, 7-inch roadway and a full 5-foot, 6-inch raised sidewalk on the falls’ side.

These new bridges will be the centerpiece of the recreational area surrounding the falls and provide much needed traffic flow through the hamlet.

The estimated price for the project is $495,000.

Thank you for your support. We will work to keep the cost down to the taxpayers.

Thank You,

Parker SneadForestport 

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