Posts Tagged ‘st. lawrence valley’

Hacketts shutters last store

It’s been a long, slow, painful death for the once-thriving Hacketts chain. The company filed for bankruptcy protection last year. Its stores have been closing one by one for a few years.

Last week, Hacketts closed its last remaining store, an outlet center in Ogdensburg. According to the Watertown Daily Times, that came after the federal bankruptcy judge converted the case from Chapter 11 protection – the kind of bankruptcy companies reorganize and emerge from – to Chapter 7, where the company is prepared to be liquidated.

The case is a thicket of debt and creditors, but it seems to come down to the plan to emerge from bankruptcy put forth by Thomas Scozzafava, the CEO of Hacketts parent company, Seaway Valley. In a nutshell, the creditors don’t buy it. Here’s the Times treatment:

KeyBank, to which Hacketts owes $423,000 on a consolidated promissory note, counters that it is too late in the bankruptcy process for Hacketts to shift its strategy away from “speculative” funding and offer a plan that will be funded solely from operations and the sale of assets.

KeyBank claims, among other things, that the first rejected statement showed Hacketts would operate at a loss for at least six months out of every year of its proposed plan.

Mr. Scozzafava had a different opinion.

“After numerous complaints, we tried to keep the company bigger, but that depended on monies coming into the company, and the biggest complaint literally was the source of our funding is speculative, and not a sure thing,” he said. “I said, ‘OK, then let’s take the speculation out of it, and we’ll just show you what we can do without that coming in,’ because they were attacking the feasibility of the plan.”

The “speculative” funding referred to seems to be Seaway Valley’s pile of complex debt instruments that have amassed over three years.  Check out my 2009 report on Seaway Valley for the details.

Should good behavior count in school?

Potsdam high school showed up in a New York Times article this weekend. It’s about revising grading formulas to measure actual knowledge rather than the ability to pay attention in class, hand in homework on time, and bring your pencil to class.

The superintendent in Potsdam, Patrick Brady, who has been rolling out a revamped grading system this fall in his 1,450-student district, said it would allow teachers to recognize academic strengths where they often are not discovered — among minority students, or students from poorer families, or boys — subgroups whose members may be unable or unwilling to fit in easily to the culture of school.

“We are getting rid of grade fog,” Mr. Brady said. “We need to stop overlooking kids who can do the work and falsely inflate grades of kids who can’t but who look good. We think this will be good for everyone.”

Potsdam parent and literacy professor at SUNY Potsdam was also quoted in the story, saying the new system punishes the so-called good kids:

“Does the old system reward compliance? Yes,” she said. “Do those who fit in the box of school do better? Yes. But to revamp the policy in a way that could be of detriment to the kids who do well is not the answer.” In the real world, she points out, attitude counts.

I remember at several points in my schooling we actually got graded on how neat our folders were kept.

Do you think organization, preparation, behavior matter in school?  Or is it just the final result – at the end of the day, what did my child actually learn?

Morning Read: Changing politics for the St. Lawrence Seaway

The Watertown Daily Times is reporting that last week’s election could change the way Washington looks at the St. Lawrence Seaway.

Rep. Marcy Kaptur, the Ohio Democrat who raised eyebrows along the St. Lawrence River last year when she appeared to advocate for expanded shipping on the St. Lawrence Seaway, soon may have a greater voice on the Great Lakes.

The big loss, according to the newspaper, was Rep. James L. Oberstar (D-Minn.), one of the rural Democrats who was defeated this month.

Oberstar was viewed as highly knowledgeable about shipping and environmental concerns.  Read the full article here.

Morning Read: Cost of social services strain Franklin County

This from the Plattsburgh Press-Republican’s Denise Raymo:

It will cost about $2.6 million more in 2011 to fund Department of Social Services programs in Franklin County.

That expense alone would translate into about a 24-percent tax-levy increase if left untouched during budget talks, since every $112,000 spent equals 1 percent on the amount to be raised by taxes.

Franklin County officials are looking to make targeted cuts.  Read the full article here.

St Regis Mohawks get $10.5 million in federal stimulus funds

U.S. agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack announced today the money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act would be used to connect the northern New York reservation to the Internet via high-speed broadband.

The money comes from the $787 billion stimulus act approved by Congress shortly after President Barack Obama took office in 2009.

According to the U.S. government’s website—recovery.gov—the federal money will be used by the St Regis Mohawks to link approximately 68 miles of fiber network to other broadband networks funded by the Recovery Act.

In other numbers from the web site: Nearly 4,000 people, 200 businesses and 42 community institutions will benefit from this new, high-speed Internet connection.

It’s also estimated that more than 784 jobs will be created.

North Country border stop sparks ACLU lawsuit

The American Civil Liberties Union is suing the Federal government over a border stop last May at the Champlain border crossing north of Plattsburgh.

According to Pascal Abidor, a 26-year-old American citizen who studies at McGill University, he was traveling on Amtrak from Montreal to New York City, when Homeland Security agents demanded that he let them review contents of his laptop computer.

They did so without a warrant. Here’s the ACLU’s video about the encounter:

According to the Civil Liberties Union, this kind of warrantless search is common:

Documents obtained by the ACLU in response to a separate Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit for records related to the DHS policy reveal that more than 6,600 travelers, nearly half of whom are American citizens, were subjected to electronic device searches at the border between October 1, 2008 and June 2, 2010.

One wrinkle in this case — as discussed over the weekend during NPR’s “On the Media” program — is the fact that Homeland Security considers a 100-mile area south of the US-Canada border to be part of its border zone.

This means that, in theory, Homeland Security agents conducting traffic stops on North Country roads could demand to review the contents of private electronic devices without a warrant.

This latest case comes at a time when questions are already being raised in the North Country about DHS’s ability to manage free and appropriate travel across the US-Canada border without undue interference with privacy and commerce.

So what do you think?  Should laptops, cell-phones and PDAs be fair game for warrantless searches at the border — and potentially across the North Country?

Comments welcome below.

Civility in our town hall meetings

I was in Fort Covington last night for a town meeting about the recent dam removal on the Salmon River.

More about the substance of that debate on Monday morning’s newscast.

But I wanted to make a comment or two about the tone of last night’s meeting.

Local government has always been a rough-and-tumble business. Small town folks take their politics seriously.

The intimate private relationships in our North Country villages can make for complicated and tangled public debates.

But my sense is that the tone and civility of these meetings is on the decline — and that’s both sad and unacceptable.

At last night’s meeting, people used profanity, they shouted each other down, and there was a fair amount of mockery.

When someone scored a particularly nasty point, there was sometimes cheering and clapping.

Not everyone joined in. Kudos to the folks who tried to keep the meeting neighborly.

But the uglier aspects of last night’s session aren’t unique.

I’ve been to a number of local government meetings in the last year that had a similar tone — in Peru, for example, and Fort Edward.

For more evidence of North Country locals behaving badly, check out this Youtube video recorded in Cape Vincent.

At a time when town hall meetings on healthcare have turned into confrontational spectacles, this is a trend that we in the North Country should resist.

I’m not suggesting that people shouldn’t be passionate. There are times when anger is appropriate.

But in communities where our children share the same classrooms and we see each other in the grocery aisle and the pews of our churches, the angry rhetoric of cable-TV news is a poor fit.

The person you shout down today is the person who will be volunteering on the fire squad that comes to your home tomorrow.

The “enemy” that you mock in public will be the teacher caring for your kid, or the nurse caring for your parents.

Frankly, I think we should be setting the tone for the national debate.

We should prove in our small towns that it’s possible to argue and debate and find good solutions to problems, without tearing each other down.

Malone’s Flanagan Hotel on the stimulus list

This morning, when we reported that some North Country communities would get shares of $153 million dollars of federal stimulus money under the state Restore new York Initiative, we left out an important project. An alert listener tells us Malone will receive $2.1 million to restore the Flanagan Hotel, long in decline after being the grand anchor of the village downtown.

"Our" astronmer in the NY Times today

This just in, from SLU physicist Aileen O’Donoghue. She’s been on sabbatical this year, but has been a semi-regular during the 8 O’clock Hour for years:

Hi,
When I was observing at the Vatican Advanced Technology Telescope in March, George Johnson spent an evening with us and his article is in tomorrow’s NY Times Science section.
Cheers,
Aileen

Actually, now TODAY’s NYT. Here’s a nice quote from Aileen:

“It’s the real sky that matters,” she says. She describes how she makes her undergraduate students go outside and look at the Big Dipper at different times of the night. “They come back and say, ‘It moves!’ ” — words Galileo legendarily muttered after he was forced to recant. “You can tell students that the Earth rotates, but until they see that with their eyeballs, they’re not doing science,” she said. “You might as well be teaching theology and Scripture.”

And the Times gives Aileen’s memoir, “The Sky Is Not a Ceiling: An Astronomer’s Faith,” a nice plug too. As do we here in The Inbox.

Looking for Seaway testimonials


The St. Lawrence Seaway officially turns 50 in a couple weeks. The agencies that runs it, and the communities that host it – are planning myriad festivities on both sides of the border. Check out this site and this one for details.

The Seaway is in the eye of the beholder. It’s brought us Alcoa, Reynolds, and General Motors (jobs), the zebra mussel (invasive species), PCBs (from aforementioned factories), Lost Villages (flooded behind the dam), the Moses-Saunders power dam (cheap electricity), oil spills (the Slick of ’76), and the always fascinating sight of huge freighters slipping through the American narrows. I’m sure there’s lots more.

I’m interested in talking with people who have first-hand accounts of the birth of this engineering marvel that forever changed the North Country. Did you or a family member work on its construction? Was your home relocated? Did you house or serve food to the workers? Did you go watch the construction on the weekends?

Send me an e-mail at david-at-ncpr-dot-org. Thanks!