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Entries Tagged as 'News'

Area Students Advance to New York State History Day Contest

March 13th, 2012 · No Comments · Adirondack News

Ticonderoga, NY – Seventeen middle and high school students from the North Country won top prizes at North Country History Day on Saturday, March 12, at Fort Ticonderoga’s Deborah Clarke Mars Education Center. These students will advance to compete at New York State History Day in Cooperstown on April 23.

Courtney Wilbanks - 1st Prize“What a great day!” said Rich Strum, the Fort’s Director of Education, and also serves as North Country Regional Coordinator for New York State History Day. “Not only was it exciting to see student projects, but it was great to see students from throughout the region sharing with each other their common interest in history and what history can teach us about ourselves. Each and every student participant invested a great deal of time and energy in historical research and creating compelling projects reflecting this year’s them of ‘Revolution, Reform, Reaction in History.’”

A generous gift from Wal-Mart of Ticonderoga helped support the North Country History Day Regional Contest.

Winners in the North Country region include:

  • Jonathan Brassard, Cole Gaddor, Kyle Gifaldi, Megan Maloy, and Dylan Scozzafava, from Moriah Central School, took first place in the Senior Group Website category with their website “The Roman Revolution: Gateway to America.”
  • Taylor Morse, Jordan Pelkey, Emily Sipley, Darcy Smith, and Jamie Vogt, from Peru Middle School, took first place in the Junior Group Documentary category with their documentary “The Kalmar Union.”
  • Courtney Wilbanks, from Beekmantown Middle School, took first place in the Junior Individual Exhibit category with her exhibit “More than Just a Job!”
  • Emily Powers, from Ticonderoga Middle School, took second place in the Junior Individual Exhibit category with her exhibit “The Suffrage Movement: A Fight for Women’s Rights.”
  • Allison LaRock and Alexandria Whitney, from Beekmantown Middle School, took first place in the Junior Group Exhibit category with their exhibit “Titanic Mistakes: Lesson Learned.”
  • Makayla Holt and Amanda Hurlburt, from St. Mary’s School in Ticonderoga, took second place in the Junior Group Exhibit category with their exhibit “The Reform of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire.”
  • Nathan Wilhelm, from Edison Home School, took first place in the Junior Individual Website category with his website “How One Person Stirred the Conscience of America.”

National History Day is the nation’s leading program for history education in schools. The program annually engages 2 million people in 48 states, the District of Columbia, and Guam. Students research history topics of their choice related to an annual theme and create exhibits, documentaries, performances, research papers, and website designs. They may enter in competition at the regional, state, and national level. Participants include students in grades 6-8 in the Junior Division and grades 9-12 in the Senior Division. National History Day also provides educational services to students and teachers, including a summer internship program, curricular materials, internet resources, and annual teacher workshops and training institutes. Fort Ticonderoga hosts teacher workshops about History Day each fall in the North Country and Regional Coordinator Rich Strum is available to meet with teachers at their schools to introduce the program.

Teachers and students from Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and Warren counties interested in participating in North Country History Day during the 2012-13 school year should contact Rich Strum, North Country Regional Coordinator for New York State History Day, at rstrum@fort-ticonderoga.org or at (518) 585-6370.

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Deer Poachers Sentenced Jail Time in Town of Lyonsdale Court

March 9th, 2012 · No Comments · Adirondack News

NYSDEC LogoThree Port Leyden brothers who were arrested on November 8, 2011 for poaching deer at night have agreed to plea bargains in the Town of Lyonsdale Court, the Lewis County District Attorney’s Office and New York State Department of Environmental Conservation announced today. The Nagy brothers were facing up to one year in jail and up to $5,250.00 dollars in fines, had they elected to go to trial.

On February 1, 2012 two of the three Port Leyden brothers accepted plea bargains, offered by the Lewis County District Attorney Leanne Moser, to settle their outstanding Environmental Conservation Law charges:

  • Brain A. Nagy, age 21 – 90 days in the Lewis County Jail starting on February 3, 2012 – plus mandatory court surcharges
  • Robert K. Nagy, age 24 – $607.50 in penalties and mandatory court surcharges

On March 7, 2012 the third brother agreed to a plea bargain to settle his outstanding Environmental Conservation Law charges, offered by the Lewis County District Attorney:

  • Chase A. Nagy, age 25 – 60 days in the Lewis County Jail starting on March 7, 2012 – in addition to mandatory court surcharges.

These plea bargains close out a deer poaching case that was widely reported on in the North Country area.

Adirondack White Tail Deer“Deer poaching is a serious offense and is not something taken lightly,” Judy Drabicki, DEC Regional Director said. “People who choose to disobey the Fish and Wildlife Law and take game illegally deprive law-abiding citizens of fair chase hunting opportunities.”

“As sentences of incarceration tend to be more infrequent in Fish and Wildlife Law offenses, both the Environmental Conservation Police and myself believe that the sentences received in these cases reflect the seriousness with which Deer Poaching is being addressed in our community and will continue to be addressed should other individuals attempt this same crime”, stated District Attorney Moser.

Violators also face the possibility of fines, mandatory court surcharges, the suspension and/or revocation of their hunting privileges, forfeiture of their firearms and even jail time, a point reinforced by the outcome of this case.

The Nagy brothers were arrested for their part in the deer jacking (taking deer at night by use of a light) on River Road in the Town of Lyonsdale in Lewis County. ECOs arrested the brothers, all residing on North Pearl Street in Port Leyden. Each were charged under with three misdemeanors: 1) Illegally taking a deer not as permitted, 2) Taking a Deer with the Aid of Artificial Light and 3) Possessing an Unsecured Firearm while using Artificial Light on lands inhabited by deer. All three brothers were also charged with the violation of Taking Wildlife with the Aid of a Motor Vehicle.

ECOs reported the three Nagy brothers entered a private meadow on the River Road in the Town of Lyonsdale around 9:20 PM, in a pickup truck and intentionally ran down two deer with the vehicle in the field. One of the injured deer was then shot with a 20-gauge shotgun slug and then finished off with a knife. That deer was transported back to their Port Leyden residence before the brothers returned to the same field to recover the second deer. That’s when ECO Eric Roderick spotted their vehicle in the field and confronted the three brothers.

A single shot 20-gauge shotgun was recovered at the scene, along with a large sheath knife. ECO Fay Fuerch, recovered the first deer from the suspect’s Port Leyden residence. ECOs were assisted at the crime scene by Lewis County Sheriff’s Deputy Brett Cronizer. The Officers returned to the crime scene the next morning and recovered the second deer and other evidence with the assistance of K-9 Handler ECO Corey Schoonover and K-9 Griz.

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Long Lake acquires land from The Nature Conservancy

March 6th, 2012 · No Comments · Adirondack News

Community and conservation goals advance together

Long Lake, NY – The Town of Long Lake and The Nature Conservancy’s Adirondack Chapter on March 1, 2012 completed a 46-acre land sale from the Conservancy to the town for $36,720. The transaction consummates a good faith commitment initiated by both parties several years ago.

We are working to keep the Adirondack region protected for nature and for people.

The Tarbell Hill Road tract was originally part of The Nature Conservancy’s 2007 purchase of 161,000 acres touching 27 towns in six counties in the Adirondacks. It is among a selection of “community enhancement” parcels included in a broad conservation plan under way that balances economic development, community sustainability, public recreation opportunities and ecological protections.

Initially Long Lake was interested in the parcel as a potential well site as part of a major water system upgrade. The Conservancy allowed the town to test for groundwater in 2009. Those tests, however, did not find sufficient volumes of groundwater to meet community needs. The town has other potential uses in mind—from gravel excavation to timber harvesting to nature trails.

“We appreciate this opportunity and believe it is a good investment for the town. It keeps our options open. ” Long Lake Supervisor, Clark Seaman, said.

“We listened hard to town officials’ interests and are delighted to have reached another key milestone in this historic conservation project,” said Michael Carr, executive director of the Conservancy’s Adirondack Chapter.

The Tarbell Hill Road parcel has good road access and was subdivided from an adjacent 14,400-acre block of commercial working forest protected by a conservation easement. Both tracts fit into a larger conservation plan that preserves more than 92,000 acres of commercial timberlands, secures snowmobile connector trails in nearly a dozen communities (including Long Lake), calls for 65,000 acres to be transferred in the coming years to the state to become Forest Preserve and available to all for outdoor recreation, and sets aside more than 1,000 acres for community purposes in three rural towns.

The lands in the overall plan collectively feature 16,000 acres of wetlands, 300 lakes and ponds, 90 mountain peaks, 415 miles of rivers and streams, and provide vital habitat for wildlife.

“The conservation plan does more than represent our collective commitment to clean air, clean water and healthy forests for current and future generations,” added Carr. “It meets the needs of loggers, business owners, wildlife, and the tens of thousands of local residents and millions of visitors who use Adirondack forests for recreation.”

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