School board rejects tax request
Transcription
School board rejects tax request
CMYK ©2016 Malone Telegram (USPS - 326 - 840) Malone, New York 12953, Tuesday, October 25, 2016 Vol. 111 No. 268 Price $1.00 Winds slow progress on Jericho Rise n WEATHER FORECAST FOR MALONE TODAY TONIGHT WED GHD CONSULTING UPDATE: 21 of 37 planned turbines completed — eight in Bellmont, 13 in Chateaugay By FRANK DIFIORE An a.m. rain or snow shower A snow shower around Partly sunny and cold HIGH 41 LOW 25 37 15 Complete weather, A2 n SPORTS [email protected] CHATEAUGAY — Work continues on the Jericho Rise Wind Farm, with wind — ironically — causing an occasional slowing of construction. Sandy Sayyeau, an engineer from GHD Consulting, visited the Chateaugay Town Council Monday evening to provide an update on the progress of the wind farm project. GHD Consulting was hired by the towns of Bellmont and Chateaugay to provide technical expertise on the project. Twenty-one of the planned 37 wind turbines had been completed as of Monday, according to Sayyeau — all eight of the turbines in Bellmont, and 13 of the planned 29 turbines in Chateaugay. Work on raising the wind towers had been slowed recently, said Sayyeau, due to the high speed winds the area had been receiving lately. The winds made it unsafe to attempt to load the blades and other components into place. “They have cutoff points for placing certain components ... it’s really quite a process,” Sayyeau said. The project is still planned to be completed by the end of the year, but Sayyeau said that the exact date of completion has not yet been determined. The Jericho Rise wind farm project was first proposed roughly 15 years ago but had lain dormant from 2009, when then-developer Horizon Wind Energy of Houston put the project on hiatus. It was revived in late 2014, when Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced it was one of four renewable energy projects that would share in $206 million made available through the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority. In the interim, Horizon had been purchased by Energias de Portugal, which is developing the project through its EDP Renewables subsidiary. Within about seven months of the funding announcement, EDP had filed a notice of intent to move forward with the project, which had originally been proposed as a 53-turbine facility. Work on the project began in April, with the clearing of access roads and turbine sites. At the time, company officials said they hoped to have the turbines operational by No- vember, but a delay in the receipt of a required permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers forced the developers to suspend work for roughly a month. EDP Renewables signed a payment-in-lieu-of-taxes agreement with the Franklin County Industrial Development Agency last month that distributes about $310,000 per year among the towns, Franklin County and the Chateaugay Central School District. The towns would also split an additional “host community” payment of about $389,000 per year under the agreement. Dam razing surges SETTING UP FOR A SCARE Bulldogs advance PENOBSCOT RIVER: Fish return to Maine’s largest body of water Chateaugay’s Danielle Cook scored two goals to help advance to Wednesdays semifinal game at SUNY Canton. PAGE B1 New York Times News Service n STATE & NATION FRANK DIFIORE nTHE TELEGRAM Early voting underway David Robinson, 14, applies tape to a sheet of black plastic on the wall as part of the set up for the Greater Malone Area YMCA’s annual haunted house. He is assisted by Toby Jacobs, A decision to send special election observers to only four states on Election Day worries civil rights advocates. 3 candidates look ahead PAGE A2 n LOTTERIES Daily Numbers: Midday 5, 4, 3 Lucky Sum 12 Evening 7, 8, 3 Lucky Sum 18 WinFour: Midday 4, 1, 7, 8 Lucky Sum 20 Evening 9, 4, 0, 8 Lucky Sum 21 Pick 10: 3, 4, 10, 14, 17, 19, 22, 24, 29, 31, 34, 37, 39, 40, 47, 48, 57, 66, 73, 75 Take 5: 11, 15, 16, 18, 32 Cash 4 Life: 1, 2, 20, 40, 55 Cash Ball 4 n INDEX Obituaries A3 Editorial A4 Amazing World & Beyond A5 Dear Abby A6 Sports B1 Television B4 Classiied B5-B6 On the web www.mymalonetelegram.com Twitter Follow: @MaloneTelegram Facebook Browse to wdt.me/MTGnews 14, in green, as well as Alex Secore, 13, front, and Madison Norcross, 13. The haunted house will be held from 5 to 9 p.m. Friday at the Y on West Main Street. 21ST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT: Discuss nation’s military budget, future By BRIAN MOLONGOSKI [email protected] One of the most significant challenges facing the U.S. military, says U.S. Rep. Elise M. Stefanik, R-Willsboro, is the uncertain future of the nation’s defense budget. Stefanik, who is running for re-election to the 21st Congressional District seat, said the threat of federal sequestration budget cuts always looms, as they are expected to return in the 2018 fiscal year. Because of this, Stefanik said, it’s difficult to devise a long-term strategy. “Sequestration has had a negative impact on our military readiness and it hasn’t allowed the Department of Defense to plan on the long term,” she said. Last summer, Fort Drum avoided substantial troop cuts, which were part of an Army move to reduce 490,000 active soldiers to 450,000 by the 2017 fiscal year, while other military bases across the nation lost several hundred troops. Stefanik had worked with members of the New York delegation to keep Fort Drum cuts at bay. In the end, it lost only 28 troops. But it doesn’t mean the base is out of the woods yet. Stefanik said she is focused on ensuring a new round of Base Realignment and Closure does not come to fruition. The Department of Defense said in an April report that it has approximately 22 percent excess infrastructure, primarily within the Army and the Air Force. Plattsburgh Air Force base was closed in the previous BRAC round, in 2005. A member of the House Armed Services Committee, Stefanik has remained close to defense policy in her first term. She incorporated language in the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act that requires the U.S. Department of Defense to develop strategies to prevent social media use in the recruitment of violent extremists. The act also contained a provision she sponsored in March that will increase joint research efforts by the United States and Israel to detect and destroy ballistic missiles. Within that realm, a missile defense site for the north country has been high on her wish list, as Fort Drum remains a highly considered site for an East Coast missile defense system. According to military research, the creation of a missile site at Fort Drum, near Route 3A, would provide about 650 to 850 jobs and an estimated sales tax boost of $1.65 million annually. The region would see a $27 million increase in economic value annually and about 340 jobs would be indirectly created. Overall, construction would increase the region’s value by $190 million and create 1,836 indirect jobs. Retired Army Col. William “Mike” Derrick, the Democratic candidate for the seat, also has his eyes on that plan. He said he would support a missile defense site at Fort Drum, citing his familiarity with the topic — he worked in missile defense for the last five years of his military career, working with allies in the Pacific and in the Middle East. He noted that while the missile defense technology is, in essence, still in its research and development phase, Fort Drum would be an ideal site because it already has the infrastructure to reduce costs and make it sustainable over time. If elected, Derrick said he would want to serve on the House Armed Services Committee, like Stefanik. Asked how he would be able to top her first term on the committee, he said his military career See 21ST A8 BANGOR, Maine — Joseph Zydlewski, a research biologist with the Maine Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit of the U.S. Geological Survey, drifted in a boat on the Penobscot River, listening to a crackling radio receiver. The staccato clicks told him that one of the shad that his team had outfitted with a transmitter was swimming somewhere below. Shad, alewives, blueback herring and other migratory fish once were plentiful on the Penobscot. “Seven thousand shad and one hundred barrels of alewives were taken at one haul of the seine,” in May 1827, according to one historian. Three enormous dams erected in the Penobscot, starting in the 1830s, changed all that, preventing migratory fish from reaching their breeding grounds. The populations See DAMS A7 Health care costs to increase 25% AFFORDABLE CARE ACT: With open enrollment beginning Nov. 1, some states will have fewer insurers; Obama says other options available By ROBERT PEAR The New York Times News Service WASHINGTON — Premiums for midlevel health plans under the Affordable Care Act will increase by an average of 25 percent next year, while consumers in some states will find significantly fewer insurance companies offering coverage, the federal government said Monday. But the Obama administration said three-fourths of consumers would still be able to find plans for less than $100 a month, with the help of federal subsidies. The open enrollment period under President Barack Obama’s signature health law begins on Nov. 1, but consumers got their first look at their options on Monday. Consumers who go without insurance next year could face possible tax penalties of $700 a person or more. In many parts of the country, the available options are sure to become part of the political conversation in the election season’s closing days. And the rising costs and shrinking options all but ensure that the next president will need to make significant adjustments to the health law, something both Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump have promised. The average increase of 25 percent in benchmark premiums on the federal exchange compares with increases of 2 percent in 2015 and 7 percent this year. Major insurers have pulled out of the public marketplace in many states, citing multimillion-dollar losses, and state officials have approved rate increases of 25-50 percent or more for some insurers that remain. One in 5 consumers on the federal health insurance website HealthCare.gov will find only one insurer with offerings next year, the administration said. For a 27-year-old consumer, in the prime age group sought by insurers, the average monthly premium for See HEALTH A7