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More About The Peru Gazette

The editor is John Ryan at email: perugazette@gmail.com. The Peru Gazette is a free community, education and information website. It is non-commercial and does not accept paid advertising.

Comment Policy

The Peru Gazette welcomes comments on posted stories. The author MUST include his/her first and last name. No  foul or libelous language permitted. The Peru Gazette reserves the right to not publish a comment.

Recent Comments

Peru faces a multi-million dollar price tag to replace its deteriorating culverts

Telegraph Rd. south of the Sullivan Rd. intersection

Temporary repairs on Cook Rd.

2019 Patent Rd.

Closed Telegraph Rd. Culvert

Telegraph Rd. culvert sink-hole

By John T Ryan 

Peru –  $5 million+ is a lot of money in a small town; however, that’s the approximate amount Peru incurred or will soon incur for its culvert replacement projects (not including any long-term borrowing costs). Town officials hoped that Peru would qualify for grants under the Bridge NY program; however, it doesn’t appear that will happen. Town Supervisor Brandy McDonald commented, “Like always, we are checking with Assemblyman Billy Jones to see if there is any chance of getting any funding from the State. We’re looking into anything possible for funding.” McDonald said the town would look at long-term borrowing if that effort fails. 

Highway Department Superintendent Michael Farrell recalls former Highway Department Superintendent Elmer Duprey telling him the culvert failures would happen under his watch. Duprey headed the department when the historic 1996 and 1998 floods washed out several culverts. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) declared Peru a disaster area and funded the replacement culverts. Elmer Duprey recalls, “I wanted to use concrete box culverts, not galvanized pipe, but FEMA said ‘no.’ They insisted that we use what had been in place before the flooding. I knew galvanized pipe had changed over the years. It doesn’t hold up like it once did.” 

Environmental stream quality and fish habitat laws and regulations laws have also changed. Today, the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) typically mandate that towns use box culverts.* While box culverts are guaranteed to last up to 100 years, they are costly. The town will pay $129,000 for the relatively small box culvert installed on Cook Rd. Culvert replacement projects also have design, engineering, and contracting costs. 

Recent and pending Peru projects: 

  • 2019 Patent Rd. $264,000 
  • 2022 Telegraph Rd. – Sullivan Road Intersection – Estimated $2 million 
  • 2024 (Pending) Telegraph Rd. – Estimated $1,500,000 
  • 2024 (Ongoing) Cook Rd. – $340,000
  • (Pending) Wescott Rd in Peasleeville, a larger culvert than the pending culvert on Telegraph Rd. 

*Thank you to the NYS DEC for the following information regarding culverts and streams. 

Stream crossing applications are individually reviewed against the standards in the applicable statutes and regulations such as Environmental Conservation Law section 15-0501 Protection of Streams, 6NYCRR Part 608 Use and Protection of Waters, Clean Water Act Section 401 Water Quality Certification, and the Community Risk and Resiliency Act. DEC’s stream crossing guidelines are outlined here: Stream Crossings – NYSDEC. Characteristics such as stream width and slope at the specific stream/crossing dictate the required structures. 

The statewide General Permit for stream activities also contains information on the types of culvert projects we recommend: General Permit For Stream Activities, GP-0-20-002 – NYSDEC. DEC’s Protection of Waters webpage provides additional information: Protection of Waters Program – NYSDEC.

3 arrested after drug bust in town of Plattsburgh, police say

Click here for the MYNBC5 story 

Assemblyman Billy Jones Announces 2024 Women of Distinction Awardees

            Assemblyman Billy Jones recently announced his 2024 Women of Distinction Awardees. There will be a ceremony on Thursday May 9 at 6pm at the Stafford Theater at Clinton Community College to celebrate these distinguished recipients.

            “Every year I am truly impressed by the hundreds of nominations you all submit, making it difficult to pick the final awardees. There are some amazing women in the North Country, and it is an honor to recognize them at the Women of Distinction ceremony every year.”

This year’s recipients are:

  • Carey Goyette — Education Award
  • Louise McNally — Community and Civic Affairs Award
  • Richelle Gregory — Healthcare Award
  • Carol Arnold — Volunteerism Award
  • Kelly Gonyo — Business Award
  • Jackie Douglass — Humanitarian Award
  • Lamiaa Aly-Elshafay — North Country Neighbor Award
  • Pauline Stone — Service to Hometown Heroes Award
  • Vivian Young Joo — Law Enforcement Award

‘We’ve drained our savings’: New York cannabis farmers struggling to stay afloat

Click here for the Syracuse.com story 

From acid rain to global warming: Adirondack research faces funding crunch

Excellent, extremely well-written story 

Click here for the Adirondack Explorer story 

Champlain Centre under new management

Pacific Retail Capital Partners brings fresh perspective to area shopping center

Click here for the Sun Community News story 

Participants, organizers gear up for 2nd year of Lake City Running Festival

The festival was established last year following the conclusion of the Plattsburgh Half-Marathon in 2019

Click here for the MYNBC5 story 

Event by Peru K-5 PTO, Paint Parties with Jessie 

PTO invites you to a Paint Party with artist Jessie Furnia on Saturday, May 11th, from 1-3 pm. This event is open to the public; all ages are welcome to paint with us! Please register to reserve your spot using the SignUp link, children must be registered as well. The cost is $30/painter. Cash, checks payable to Peru K-5 PTO, and credit cards will be accepted at the door. Proceeds to benefit the Peru K-5 PTO. The location is at the Primary Cafeteria in the Primary Building at the School. Parking will be at the Primary Parking Lot off Route 22B.

Free Rabies Vaccination Clinic in Peru on May 16

Peru, NY, May 6, 2024: The Clinton County Health Department (CCHD) is hosting a free Rabies Vaccination Clinic for dogs, cats, and ferrets. New York State law requires pets to have their first rabies vaccination by four months of age, but pets may be vaccinated as early as three months of age.
The event will be held on May 16, 2024, from 6 pm to 8:30 pm at the Peru Volunteer Fire Department building located at 753 Bear Swamp Road, Peru, NY. Interested residents should bring their pets on a leash or in a secure carrier. Pets that have received a previous rabies vaccination are eligible for a three-year certificate. Please bring your pet’s most recent rabies vaccination records (previous certificate). Otherwise, a one-year certificate will be provided.
CCHD asks those planning to attend the clinic to Pre-register for the event at www.clintonhealth.org/rabiesclinics. Residents can call CCHD at 518-565-4870 for assistance with the registration process. There is a limit of 3 animals per household. Remain in your car until your appointment time. Rabies is a fatal viral disease affecting all mammals, including humans and pets. Rabies is most often transmitted through the bite of a rabid animal.
Rabies can be prevented by vaccinating your pets. As a precaution, never pick up wildlife, including stray animals, and wear thick protective gloves when handling these animals. If you are bitten (teeth breaking the skin) by an animal, including domestic animals, seek medical attention and notify the CCHD.
“This is a great opportunity to save your pet’s life and prevent the spread of rabies”, states Amanda Masten, Senior Sanitarian for CCHD’s Division of Environmental Health & Safety. “This is an opportunity you don’t want to miss.” Donations are accepted and appreciated.
CCHD has scheduled five additional Rabies Vaccination Clinics at the following locations: 7/18/24—Dannemora Fire Department 8/8/24—Beekmantown Highway Garage 9/24/24—Rouses Point Volunteer Fire Department 10/8/24—Ellenburg Depot Fire Department 12/3/24—City of Plattsburgh Public Works.
For more information, including future clinic dates, visit www.clintonhealth.org/rabiesclinics or follow our social media pages. For more information on the rabies virus, visit the Center for Disease Control website at https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/index.html.

Babbie Museum opens May 18-19 with special programs

Peru, NY, May 7, 6:30 a.m. roadside scenes

Huge cache of ghost guns, parts and high-capacity magazines found in Cicero home; man charged

Click here for the Syracuse.com story 

Rove Cafe changes business hours and adds dinner hours

May 7, 2024 – A message from Crystal and Toni
We’ve been contemplating adding dinners at Rove Cafè for quite some time. With recent events in our lives giving us a huge reminder to take care of our family and health as well as our business and livelihood, we are updating our hours. We will now be open for Breakfast & Lunch Wednesday through Sunday from 7 am-2 pm and for Dinner Fridays & Saturdays 5 pm-9 pm,’
I think this is a great compromise offering us time to decompress and be with our kids, and offers you, our neighbors, community, and friends a great blend of all the culinary treats Toni and I have to share.
We absolutely love the cafe, and love being a part of such an amazing community here in the Morth Country.
For all those asking, we are OK. Toni had some cardiac issues that landed him in the Emergency room for a few hours, and we left with them unresolved. With the medication given, that issue has since been resolved, and we will be following up to see what the cause of it was/is. We have some thoughts, as suggested by the doctors, and are adjusting our lives and hours with our health and well-being in mind. We seem to have forgotten through it all to take care of ourselves as well.
We are so, so excited for dinners at Rove!! 🤗🥳😊
XO
Chrystal & Toni

Spring has arrived, especially at Sweet Treat

Photo – Bridget Molloy with her children Ella and Winnie and friend Aya. And canine friend Stewie.

Peru, NY, May 5, 2024—It wasn’t difficult to predict that this evening’s beautiful weather would attract Sweet Treat lovers. Vehicles filled the Sweet Treat’s parking lot, and customers lined up to enjoy their favorite treats.

Bernie Sanders is running for reelection to the U.S. Senate T

The 82-year-old progressive firebrand from Vermont announced Monday that he is seeking a fourth term this year.

Click here for the Vtdigger story 

Can the New York State Fair pay for itself? For now, it still needs a boost from taxpayers

Click here for the Syracuse.com story 

St. Augustine’s Soup Kitchen Menu for Wednesday, May 8, 2024 

Chili
Vegetable
Bread
Dessert
Served 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at St. Augustine’s Parish Center, 3030 Main St., Peru, NY 12972
All are invited and welcome!

Ronnie’s Michigan Stand celebrates 65 Years of business in West Plattsburgh

Click here for the MYNBC5 News 

New home, name for Ausable River Association

Click here for the Adirondack Explorer story 

Elmore SPCA hoping to adopt out rest of ‘Gem’ dogs

Click here for the Press-Republican story 

A Canine Gem operator facing more charges

Click here for the Press-Republican story 

Alan Blackman Jazz Performs Award-Winning “Coastal Suite” 

May 19 at the Strand

The Coastal Suite stands as a significant achievement in the notable career of composer-pianist Alan Blackman. A New Jazz Works commission by Chamber Music America with funding awarded by the Doris Duke Foundation, the full-length, multi-media work was premiered live in Baltimore and New York in 2014 and featured on NPR’s JazzSet with Dee Dee Bridgewater. Performances of The Coastal Suite have met with widespread acclaim by audiences and jazz pundits alike. “There is something here, a beauty, that is captivating,” said renowned jazz artist Joe Locke. “An absolutely gorgeous album, which communicates its waterside vision with stunning resonance,” said Dave Sumner from Bird is the Worm.com.

Alan Blackman has created an evocative concept piece that explores a 24-hour tidal cycle from pre-dawn through the night at a remote ocean beach. Highly programmatic, The Coastal Suite conjures the sound universe of the seashore as the musicians create nautical sounds through extended techniques, expanding the vocabulary of their instruments’ sonic capabilities. Augmenting Blackman’s regular Baltimore-based trio of bassist Max Murray and drummer Frank Russo are Canadian saxophonist Jeff Antoniuk and Brazilian percussionist Rogerio Boccato.  

Alan Blackman Jazz performs The Coastal Suite on Sunday, May 19 at 3:00 pm at the historic Strand Theater in Plattsburgh, New York.  Tickets are available online at strandcenter.org/theatre-events  and also at the Strand Arts Center during their regular business hours. For further information, telephone 518-293-7613, e-mail ambrown.hillholl@gmail.com or visit hillandhollowmusic.org Read more »

Historical Society has several May events

May 6th, 5:30 pm, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak Street, Plattsburgh. The History of the Lozier Marine Engines and the Plattsburgh Boat House – from construction to demolition. with transportation historian Richard Soper. After selling his bicycle business, Henry Lozier
moved to Plattsburgh in 1900 to manufacture boats and marine engines. Learn the very early history of the Lozier company with rare inside photos of the boathouse. Lozier history is an exciting part of Plattsburgh’s rich past.

May 11 – 10 am to 3 pm, Clinton County Historical Association Museum. Celebrating National Train Day. CCHA will be celebrating National Train Day at the Museum with a one-day-only exhibit of trains of all sizes – N scale, G Scale, O scale, and HO scale.  Plus a special showing of Gary Brandstetter’s HO scale train dioramas. Also available will be a selection of books on the Rutland and D&H Railroads donated by Lawrence Duffina’s estate and a map of the United States showing all the railroads that existed in 1861.

May 14 – 2:30 pm, Meadowbrook Healthcare, 154 Prospect Avenue, Plattsburgh. Early Tourists Visiting the North Country in style. Photos of the grand hotels, the recreational venues and the modes of transportation used by the early tourists to Clinton County. 

May 17 – 12:30 pm, Plattsburgh Senior Center, 5139 North Catherine Street, Plattsburgh. Portraits from the turn of the 19th century and the stories they might tell with CCHA Director Helen Nerska. CCHA has 17,000 portraits in their collection, and some of the most unusual and interesting will be shared along with the known and/or speculated background behind the photo.

May 21 – 6:45 pm, Lake Forest Retirement Community, 8 Lake Forest Drive, Plattsburgh. . The Golden Age of the Cigar Trade in Downtown Plattsburgh with CCHA Director Helen Nerska. For over 75 years thousands of cigars were produced in downtown Plattsburgh. Hear the story of our own flourishing cigar industry and the families that managed it using photos and artifacts from the CCHA Collection. 

May 23 – 6:30 pm, CCHA, 98 Ohio Avenue, Plattsburgh. The History of Railroads in Clinton County – Part 1 with Transportation Historian Dick Soper.  Inspired by CCHA photo albums of early area trains and the recently acquired collection of rail enthusiast Lawrence Duffina, Transportation Historian Dick Soper will begin to share the history of rail development which opened up Clinton County to new markets and eventually to new tourism and a past we now take for granted. The multi-part series will span the period from 1833 to present and include photographs, newspaper articles, and information from our large collection of railroad books recently added to our research library.

May 28 – 2:30 pm, Meadowbrook Healthcare, 154 Prospect Avenue, Plattsburgh. Discovering the Town of Peru with CCHA Director and Peru Historian Helen Nerska. First settled by Europeans in 1772 and established as a town in 1792, Peru’s history timeline reflects how small north country towns were created and developed into thriving villages. 

AGENDA – Zoning Board of Appeals, WEDNESDAY May 15, 2024@ 7:00 PM TOWN OF PERU

  1. CALL MEETING TO ORDER
  2. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
  3. ROLL CALL
  4. APPROVAL of April 17, 2024 minutes
  5. OPEN FLOOR to public hearing 
  6. APPLICATIONS:
        1. Z2024-009 Area Variance;  for placement of car chargers

                                    Tesla Corp

      280.1-9-21.2

      2997 Main St

                                                          

        1. Z2024-091  Area Variance for construction of garage

       Blakely and Rubin Remillard

        279.-3-7

        2 Pinewood Drive

                     

        1. Z2024-092 Area Variance for construction of garage

        Karl Costin

        280.-1-37

        2714 State Rt 22

  1. AN FURTHER BUSINESS               
  2. CEO REPORT
  3. ADJOURNMENT

 

AGENDA- Planning Board, WEDNESDAY May 08, 2024 @ 6:00 PM, TOWN OF PERU

CALL MEETING TO ORDER
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
ROLL CALL
APPROVAL April 10, 2024 minutes
OPEN FLOOR to public hearing

APPLICATIONS:

P2024-004 Site Plan Approval with SEQRA, Keystone Novelties
280.-1-30.11
729 Bear Swamp Rd

P2024-005 Site Plan Approval with SEQRA
Jake Menard
258.-2-8.2
3999 US Route 9

P2024-006 Site Plan Approval with SEQRA, Peru Community Church
280.1-8-61, 13 Elm St

P2024-007 Site Plan Review-Sign
Peru Memorial Post 309
256.-5-5.5-1
710 Route 22B

P2024-008 2-Lot Minor Subdivision with SEQRA,
Bonner Tree Farm and Nursery
291.-2-1
599 Calkins Rd

6. P2024-009 Merge, Bonner Tree Farm and Nursery 291.-2-1 & 291.-3-2-3
Calkins Rd

7. P2024-010 Merge, Joseph Stemper, 280.-1-61.1 & 280.-1-61.3, 662 Union Rd

ANY FURTHER BUSINESS
CEO REPORT
ADJOURNMENT