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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.

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Union president against Clinton County’s hiring process

Click here for the Press-Republican story 

Mooers man charged with felony for copper theft

Click here for the Sun Community News story 

Local students shine at CVES Regional Spelling Bee

From Peru, Charlotte Isecke won Grade 8 Champion and Vincenzo Francesconi won Grade 7 Champion. Top honors by Beekmantown, Northeastern Clinton, Peru, Plattsburgh and Boquet Valley students

Click here for the Sun Community News story 

Community Bank donates $3,600 to CVPH Foundation

Click here for the Sun Community News story 

More concerts in Upstate NY: The Wallflowers, Jake Owen, Willie Nelson, Jimmy Eat World

Click here for the Syracuse.com story 

Homeless families spike to never-before numbers in Central New York: ‘It’s such a crisis’

Click here for the Syracuse.com story 

…WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 AM EDT WEDNESDAY…

National Weather Service, Burlington – 345 PM EDT Tue Mar 14 2023

…WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 AM EDT
WEDNESDAY…

* WHAT…Heavy wet snow. Additional snow accumulations of 2 to 6
inches for a storm total of 6 to 11 inches. Winds gusting as
high as 35 mph.

* WHERE…In New York, the Adirondacks and western Champlain
Valley. All of Vermont.

* WHEN…Until 8 AM EDT Wednesday.

* IMPACTS…Travel could be very difficult to near impossible. The
hazardous conditions could impact the evening commute.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS…Downed trees and powerlines are being
reports, and scattered to numerous power outages remain
possible, and may be exacerbated by increasing northerly wind gusts.
Blowing snow is also likely, and may create additional travel
impacts.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

If you must travel, keep an extra flashlight, food, and water in
your vehicle in case of an emergency.

Please allow extra time if travel is necessary.

World Water Day 30th Anniversary Celebration – Free Public Event, Saturday, March 18, 2023, 11 AM – 3 PM Champlain Centre Mall, Smithfield Boulevard, Plattsburgh, NY

The Lake Champlain Basin Program, Champlain Centre Mall and the Champlain Basin Education Initiative invite the public to participate in a World Water Day Celebration on Saturday, March 18th, beginning at 11 AM at the mall on Smithfield Blvd. Plattsburgh, NY. Mall guests may view student works about local water resources and interact with more than 20 organizations hosting exhibits and hands-on activities celebrating water resources.
“We’re excited to co-host this in-person World Water Day Celebration with a group of enthusiastic partners,” said Sue Hagar, Education and Outreach Steward for the Lake Champlain Basin Program. “The groups are hard at work daily to improve water resources for both drinking water and recreational uses, including boating, swimming, and fishing, all while encouraging folks to get involved in personal stewardship actions to improve the watershed.”
The United Nations initiated World Water Day in 1993 to draw attention to the issues and threats surrounding the world’s water resources. Ten years ago, the Champlain Basin Education Initiative hosted the first local student World Water Day Celebration to share student work about water resources from more than a dozen classrooms. This year the Champlain Centre Mall offered to help expand the event and bring it to Plattsburgh, inviting more public participation and partners into the celebration.
“Champlain Centre Mall is excited to share our retail space for this water-themed event,” said Emily Moosmann, Marketing Director for the Champlain Centre Mall. “Come meet the water resource specialists, and explore the thoughtful projects students complete. Join in some fun activities while learning about our amazing watershed.”
A special showing of No Other Lake, a locally produced 39-minute film, will air at Regal Cinemas at 11 AM. This event is FREE for the public and the film producer will be present to introduce the film and answer questions. Mall guests may also view water-themed window displays in several mall spaces and stores.
Mall visitors will be able to explore how river systems flow and how stream banks erode during flood events through a hands-on model, dive deeper into aquatic invasive species and learn why the round goby poses a threat to our ecosystem, participate in a youth art project, complete quests on a giant watershed map of the Lake Champlain basin, explore how scientists interpret science through art in the Wool and Water exhibit, learn how to protect drinking water supplies and extend the life of their septic systems through proper maintenance, explore new lawn care practices, learn about cyanobacteria, practice casting for fish, and more.
For further information about the event, contact Sue Hagar, Lake Champlain Basin Program at shagar@lcbp.org or call (802) 372-3213.
Additional Information

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Stefanik Cosponsors the Dairy Pride Act

Washington, D.C. – Congresswoman Elise Stefanik cosponsored the Dairy Pride Act of 2023 (H.R. 1462) to prohibit milk alternatives or plant-based products from being marketed or misbranded using terms commonly associated with dairy products.

Following recently released draft guidance from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that allows plant-based products the freedom to use dairy terms despite having none of the nutritional value of milk products, not coming from an animal, nor containing milk as a primary ingredient, the DAIRY PRIDE Act would require the FDA to take enforcement action against manufacturers labeling dairy imitators as milk.

“Our dairy farmers in Upstate New York and the North Country work hard to produce nutritious milk for our communities, and falsely labeling vegan juice as milk is a slap in the face to their hard work,” Stefanik said. “I’m proud to support the integrity of real dairy products by holding the FDA accountable to making sure dairy imitators are not falsely labelled as milk. This will ensure our dairy industry remains strong, and that consumers know the truth about the nutritional value of the products they buy.”

DEC Announces 2022 Bear Harvest Totals

Overall Harvest Declined Slightly; Harvest Density Greatest in Catskills

Click here for the DEC story 

South Burlington man sentenced to one year, plus one day for Paycheck Protection Plan fraud

Dennis Duffy secured pandemic loan after forging documents

Click here for the MYNBC5 story 

Essex supervisor seeks to head off rail disasters

Click here for the Press-Republican story 

Burlington clears out homeless encampments near vacant building

Click here for the WCAX story 

URGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE National Weather Service Burlington VT 324 AM EDT Tue Mar 14 2023

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Calvin Castine reports on a Mooers, NY border crossing incident

Paul Smith’s Nordic skier wins top honors at nationals

Click here for the NCPR story 

New technology and regulations to help workers facing layoffs

Part of N.Y. Department of Labor’s four-year technology implementation plan

Click here for the Sun Community News story 

Rents are still rising in Syracuse and other NY metro areas

Click here for the Syracuse.com story 

Peru Library closed between 1:30 and 2:30 this week.

Peru Highway Department seeks cost savings and a cleaner environment

Mike Farrell & Tyler Jarvis and the town’s two brine storage tanks

The Brine Truck

Inside a plow truck. Looks more like an airplane cockpit.

Live Edge Plow Blades with independent suspension

Plow Crew L-R Adam Archer, Tom Rock, Michael Farrell, Tyler Jarvis, Wayne Wells, Andrew McLaughlin

By Marque Moffett

What do you get when you mix some elbow grease, lunchtime Googling sessions, science, ingenuity, math, and a few training workshops? According to Peru Highway Superintendent Mike Farrell, when the mix happens at Peru’s Highway Department, you get considerable savings to taxpayers and significant environmental gains.  

Mike Farrell and Deputy Superintendent Tyler Jarvis shared the full story of their new winter road care procedures at this month’s Community Learning Series event. Using a combination of four new technologies: salt brine, live edge plow blades, salt trackers, and temperature sensors, the Town Highway Department has been able to cut salt use dramatically and is on track to save taxpayers $70,000 – $73,000 in this, the first year of using the new system.

At the fundamental level, salt brine and road salt work similarly; they lower water’s freezing point, making it stay liquid at colder temperatures. Salt brine, however, has a few advantages that are of value for use on winter roads. Because brine is sprayed as a dilute solution, it is more targeted; it spreads out more evenly than rock salt and melts ice and snow more consistently. 

So far this year, Peru’s highway crew has outfitted one plow truck with a brine sprayer. You can spot it easily, as it has a bright orange tank in the truck box. That truck uses brine to pretreat all the 55 mph roads and the streets in the village. Pretreating helps minimize ice formation on roadways and makes it easier for plows to clear roads during storms.

The highway crew has also made important upgrades to the town’s other plows, including installing sensors that display air temperature, road temperature, and salt use for the plow driver, as well as a new type of leading edge for the plow blades. The new edge, called a live edge, consists of short carbide steel blades that can move up and down, following the road’s contours. The blades enable the plow to do a much better job clearing pavement than a traditional solid straight-edge plow blade.

Before installing all this equipment on our plows, our trucks spread 600+ pounds of salt per mile. In perspective, that would be fifteen 5-gallon buckets of salt on every mile of town road. Now, after working carefully to calibrate everything over the winter season, our trucks have reduced their salt use to 215 pounds per mile. That’s only a little more than five 5-gallon buckets per mile. 

These remarkable savings are due to the teamwork of Peru’s Town Highway crew. Mike says his current crew is relatively young and has fully embraced the challenge of getting this program up and running. Together, they have attended training sessions, learned a lot of new science and math, and learned how to install new equipment. The highway crew takes pride in doing an excellent job for the town and doing their best to save the community money despite the continuous increase in costs their department faces every season.

As Mike and his crew work to improve this system, they will be looking to expand their capability to store salt brine by purchasing a larger storage tank. Doing so will enable them to expand salt brine into more of their range, cutting back even further on rock salt. They will also install solar-powered sensors on their plow routes’ remote stretches. Those sensors, already in the hands of the highway crew, will send road and air temperatures and air moisture data to the department employees, enabling more efficient use of highway department resources. Mike Farrell will discuss his plans at upcoming Peru Town Board meetings.

The Community Learning Series is a monthly event organized by the Peru Democratic Committee. Events focus on “under the hood” information about how our town works and are open to everyone, regardless of voter registration and town residence.

Sit down, relax and let the Knights make you dinner

Enjoy Thursday’s St. Pat’s Dinner and Irsh Dancers at the Peru VFW

Vermont car crash fatalities hit a 10-year high in 2022

Click here for the VTDigger story 

DiNapoli: Federal Data Shows New York’s Losses in Fourth Grade Math and Reading Scores are Double National Average

March 13, 2023

New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli today released a review of recent federal data about how the pandemic negatively affected student performance in New York. In response, he urged New York school districts to assess their plans for spending federal pandemic funds and to target funds towards children most in need.

New York was allocated over $15 billion in emergency education aid during the pandemic from the federal government, with $14 billion from three rounds of the Elementary and Secondary School Relief Fund (ESSER) assistance. This aid was aimed at elementary and secondary schools and must be obligated by September 2024. Based on data from DiNapoli’s COVID-19 Relief Program Tracker, through Jan. 31 New York’s school districts have spent roughly 40% of ESSER funds.

“The classroom disruptions caused by the pandemic have hurt New York’s students. Academic losses were greater for younger students, with fourth grade scores dropping more than the national average,” DiNapoli said. “School districts must act quickly to take full advantage of available resources to help students that are most in need get caught up, before time runs out.”

Recent data from The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) shows student performance dropped significantly in 2022 from 2019. New York’s average score remained steady for eighth grade reading but declined in eighth grade math (down 6 points). Over this time, New York’s losses in fourth grade math and reading scores were double the national average and exceeded 45 other states in math and 38 other states in reading. The average drop for fourth grade math scores (10 points) was so severe that McKinsey & Company estimated this learning loss to be the equivalent of nearly an entire school year.

Over the same time frame, fourth grade math proficiency rates declined across all gender, racial and ethnic groups, and the decline was steepest for Asian and Pacific Islander students, at 14 percentage points. Students from low-income households also experienced steep declines in fourth grade math proficiency rates from 24% to 18%.

The Executive Budget proposes $42.1 billion in combined state and federal education aid for the upcoming state fiscal year (SFY) 2023-24; however, that total is projected to decline, as the balance of federal pandemic relief funds must be obligated by September 2024. This could be problematic if a significant portion of the relief funds is left unspent or is dedicated to programs with recurring expenses or if significant progress in academic recovery has not occurred.

DiNapoli urged the State Education Department to provide school districts with guidance on best practices for spending of funds and encouraged school districts to ensure funds are being used for evidence-based practices for students most in need.

Report
“Nation’s Report Card” Underscores New York’s Need for Academic Recovery


 

‘We have a safe airport.’ No threat found after massive police response Sunday at Burlington

Airport All 65 passengers on United Airlines flight 3613 were reported safe

Click here for the NBC5 story