Posts Tagged ‘fishing’

Fri news roundup: border fee, WIC, heroic dogs

Photo: Ivan Walsh, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Photo: Ivan Walsh, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Good Friday to you! (It’s not actually Good Friday, but I hope you’re having a good one.)

Today in the news, North Country Congressman Bill Owens’ amendment to the $38.9 billion Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill for next year is moving forward on the House floor. That amendment basically blocks a study that would look at a border-crossing fee on land between the US and Canada. The possibility of that fee aroused the ire of Owens and Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy, who both argued it would seriously hurt businesses in our border region. In a press release yesterday, Owens said the fee wouldn’t do the government much good either:

Adding a fee to cross the border would cause tremendous damage for the businesses that depend on cross-border tourism and commerce, while doing little to raise revenue for the government.

Owens says he’ll keep fighting against the fee.

In positive news for pregnant ladies and parents of young children, the New York State Department of Health has updated the income guidelines for the federal Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (that’s WIC to you), so that a family of four whose gross annual income is just over $43,500 now qualifies for the federal aid program (here are the new guidelines). That’s according to North Country Now. The program provides vouchers that help families by healthy foods, along with formula, cereal and baby food for families with infants. It also provides nutrition education and breastfeeding support.

And in the world of heroic animals, the Watertown Daily Times reports today that the North Country Kennel Club (which is based in Sandy Creek) is looking to raise $2,800 to outfit area police dogs with bulletproof vests. The vests would go to Watertown’s Police Department, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department, and the Fulton PD. The idea was a response to the shooting death of a police German Shepherd in March’s standoff in Herkimer (four people were killed in the shooting.)

In our newsroom today, Brian Mann reports on the state’s plans to take another look at the Adirondack rail corridor. Fans of the seasonal tourism railroad aren’t happy; fans of the idea of remaking the rail trail for various year-round uses, are. And we look at how a proposed two percent cap in state tax assessment increases for agricultural land (follow me?) could impact people in the North Country who aren’t farmers.

Also, we get leisurely with David Sommerstein’s report on his bass fishing expedition; and it’s safe to assume Hammond’s Joyce Wood will be doing a lot of getting leisurely after winning $2 million in the New York Lottery.

And finally,  Colton’s museum starts of its exhibit on the 1940s with an evening of music and stories from that decade. Cool!

Have a wonderful weekend, and as they say, may the good news be yours.

Thurs news roundup: FEMA buyouts, economic development, fishing

Photo: Drake Goodman, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Photo: Drake Goodman, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Hello hello hello! A lot from our newsroom this morning. Julie Grant reports on the ongoing questions about the St. Lawrence Psychiatric Center in Ogdensburg: At a forum yesterday at the center, Acting Director of the New York State Office of Mental Health Kristin Woodlock said the state’s moving away from inpatient care. It seems likely that at least some of New York’s 24 psychiatric hospitals will close; Woodlock says the state won’t be making announcements about which ones until early next week.

In Essex County, FEMA is granting about $3.5 million to buy out people whose homes were substantially damaged by Tropical Storm Irene in 2011. A New York prosecutor says Assemblyman Vito Lopez’ alleged sexual harassment of several female staff members, while “alarming”, wasn’t a crime.

And if you love flea markets (I know I do!), you’ll be pleased to know that a third opened yesterday in the Canton-Potsdam area. This one’s in the old Jubilee Plaza off Main Street in Canton. Our own cub reporter-slash-intern Josh Cameron was there and filed a lovely Heard Up North.

In other news today, the co-chairs of the North Country Regional Economic Development Council were in Albany yesterday for the beginning of the next round of competition for economic development funding from the state. As North Country Now reports, our region’s done well in the first two rounds of REDC giving, with almost $200 million going to the region for various economic development projects.

And in the world of leisure, in preparation for this summer’s Bassmaster Elite Series Evan Williams Bourbon Showdown August 8-11 in Waddington (and breathe…), the St. Lawrence County Chamber of Commerce is holding a couple informational sessions:

On June 4, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. at the community room at Potsdam town Hall, people interested in going to the tournament, sponsoring, vending, advertising, or volunteering can find out more about that (RSVP at (315) 274-9000). On June 12 at the community room in the Village of Potsdam, a marketing specialist will lead a three-hour session (starting at 1 p.m.) called “The Business of Bassmaster,” for business owners who’ll be dealing with visiting anglers. That class is limited to 25 people, and it’s free. Register at (315) 386-4000.

Adirondack stream produces NY’s biggest trout

William Altman with his prize brook trout (Source: NYS DEC)

State environment officials say the biggest brook trout in New York state history was hauled in in the West Canada Lake Wilderness Area in Hamilton County last month.

The trout caught by William Altman weighed in at 5 pounts 14 ounces.This from DEC:

The record breaking fish was stocked as a fingerling by DEC’s Rome Fish Hatchery and is considered a Temiscamie hybrid, a cross between a domestic brook trout and a wild Temiscamie (Canadian-strain) brook trout. These hybrids are stocked because they have a better survival rate than other strains of brook trout in some of the more acidic waters of the Adirondacks.

New record brook trout caught in Adirondacks

State officials say a Forestport man named Dan Germain has set a new official record for landing a whopper brook trout in New York waters.

Germain was fishing June 15th in South Lake in Herkimer County in the southwest Adirondacks when he took the fish on a Lake Clear Wabbler and a worm.

The trout measured 22 inches and weighed five pounds, 8 ounces, beating the 2009 record by 3.5 ounces.  That’s quite a brookie.