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Diamond Point woman charged with Potsdam aggravated DWI

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POTSDAM — Village police on May 17 charged Olivia A. Seamans, 22, Diamond Point, with aggravated driving while intoxicated. She was also cited with having an insufficient turn signal.

Police charge at 3:55 a.m. on Market Street in the village, after receiving a vehicle and traffic complaint on Cherry Street, they found Ms. Seamans failing to signal 100 feet before turning into the lot of a local business. Following a traffic stop she was determined to have a blood alcohol content of 0.29 percent. State law says a BAC of 0.08 percent or higher constitutes intoxication, while a BAC of 0.18 percent meets the threshold for aggravated DWI.

Ms. Seamans was issued tickets for Potsdam Town Court.


Norfolk man charged with contempt

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NORFOLK — St. Lawrence County sheriff’s deputies on May 16 charged Preston P. Mossow, 54, of 17½ W. Main St., with misdemeanor second-degree criminal contempt. He was also cited with second-degree harassment.

Deputies charge that Mossow was banging on the door of an unspecified residence on West Main Street, where the occupant had an active no-harass order of protection against him.

He was arraigned in Louisville Town Court and released under probation supervision. A new no-contact order of protection was issued in the alleged victim’s favor.

Bad weather and Trump’s trade war spawn U.S. farmer quandary

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Clay Govier reckons he’ll be kept out of his fields through the Memorial Day weekend as a torrent of rain drenches farms across the Midwest and Great Plains.

While that may give Govier an unwanted break from fieldwork, the U.S. farmer will be kept busy by a dilemma: He has to consider whether it would prove more profitable to grow corn or switch to soybean once the downpour abates. Or plant nothing at all and make an insurance claim for his troubles. Adding to the confusion is a lack of clarity over a government aid package for those hurt by the trade war with China.

“That is a bit of a conundrum right now,” Govier said in a telephone interview.

It’s a decision that American farmers will have to make in coming days, after storms battering their fields reduced the planting pace for corn to the slowest on record for this time of year. While the wet weather has pushed up prices of the grain in Chicago to the highest level in a year, that doesn’t mean there will necessarily be a rush of sowing as the sky clears.

The farmers risk missing deadlines specified in crop-insurance policies that pay them in the event of a drop in prices or crop failure. Delayed planting can also cut yields as key grain development phases are pushed into peak summer heat. There’s an old adage that says farmers lose a bushel of corn a day when planting after mid-May.

Michael Cordonnier, owner of Hinsdale, Illinois-based Soybean & Corn Advisor Inc., said it’s not quite so simple. From May 20 to May 25, losses in corn yield per acre could be only a third to a half bushel. From May 25 to May 30, the potential declines are three-quarters of a bushel. By June 1 to June 5, the declines jump to as much as 2 bushels per day. “The losses accelerate as you go forward,” he said by phone.

Another option for farmers is to instead make claims for so-called prevented planting, which pay out those who are unable to sow seeds due to extreme weather.

“The lowest percentage of corn planted for this period in our database since 1980, the wettest conditions in modern history and fears of increasing trade tension are strong incentives to just take the insurance money,” Bloomberg Intelligence commodity strategist Mike McGlone said.

That is if farmers don’t switch to soybeans, which typically have a shorter growing season that helps minimize the risk the crop won’t be harvested before winter hits. Though soy plantings have also been stalled by the rain, a decision to swap some corn acreage to the oilseed may hinge on the Trump administration’s plan to help farmers hurt by the trade war with China that’s roiled prices.

Government officials were considering payments of $2 per bushel to soybean farmers and 4 cents per bushel to corn farmers, according to two people familiar with the payment levels, who asked not to be identified because the aid plan hasn’t been made public. That could make a switch to the oilseed a good decision for farmers such as Govier.

The outlines of the plan still could change since President Donald Trump can make adjustments any time before it’s officially announced. “Details on the new trade mitigation program will be forthcoming shortly, but we want to be clear that the program is being designed to avoid skewing planting decisions one way or another,” the USDA said in an emailed statement.

The White House will hold meetings on the farm aid on Thursday, according to Press Secretary Sarah Sanders. “We want to make sure that the farmers are being protected as we go through the process of negotiating new trade deals,” Sanders told reporters on Wednesday.

Robb Ewoldt, who farms corn and soybeans in eastern Iowa near the Mississippi River, has only planted 20% of his corn and 60% of his soybeans, some of which will need to be replanted. He’s never made a prevented-plant claim, nor has he been this late on his plantings. He’s considering all options.

Potential farm aid payments are “nothing to scoff at,” he said. “We have a lot of time to think about it because we have another week of rain. We’ll be running numbers.”

Karl Setzer, market analyst at Agrivisor in Bloomington, Illinois, said more details are needed, since no official government announcement has been made yet. “We do not know how payments will be based, so it remains a question if it will impact plantings or be based on last year’s production,” he said in an email.

University of Illinois Agricultural Economist Scott Irwin said that if the payments are tied to 2019 production, that could serve as an incentive to plant soybeans. “This would be exactly the opposite of what we need to be doing in the soybean market, which is badly oversupplied,” he said.

Govier too said it could be more profitable to make an insurance claim on acres he was unable to plant than to sow soybeans. For now, with the rain pouring down, he doesn’t think he’s going to get back into corn. “We might get this Memorial Day weekend off whether we want it or not,” he said.

Gouverneur man charged with theft and scheming against Kinneys

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GOUVERNEUR — Village police on May 11 charged Shaun C. Herbst, 27, with the misdemeanors of conspiracy, scheme to defraud, and three counts of petit larceny.

Police charge on several days in February, Mr. Herbst entered the Kinney Drugs store at 371 E. Main St. in the village, stole various merchandise and later used discarded purchase receipts he’d found as part of a refund scheme.

Mr. Herbst was arraigned in Town Court by Justice Stanley H. Young Jr. and was released.

Cape Vincent man charged with prison contraband promotion

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CAPE VINCENT — State police charged James H. Sharpe, 43, of Cape Vincent, with first-degree promotion of prison contraband and third-degree criminal possession of a weapon at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the state police barracks in Alexandria Bay.

Mr. Sharpe was held.

Further details were not provided by state police.

Farmers’ market returns in downtown Watertown

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The Watertown farmers’ market opened Wednesday for the first day of its 43rd season.

Survey finds almost half of Fort Drum families complain about housing condition

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FORT DRUM — A survey on privatized military housing nationwide found that nearly half of the Fort Drum military families complained about maintenance repairs where they live on post.

The nonprofit Military Family Advisory Network on Wednesday released a survey of 17,000 soldiers and their families living on 160 military installations throughout the United States.

The survey looked at what military families experience while living in privatized housing.

According to the survey, 45 percent of the 10th Mountain Division families reported that maintenance, repairs and remediation was their biggest concerns, followed by problems with mold at 41 percent.

Filth in homes when moving in and structural concerns also were high on their list of issues at 35 percent and 31 percent, respectively.

Housing issues at military installations became a national issue in February when the nonprofit group officials testified before the Senate Armed Forces Committee with initial results of the survey.

The issue also was the subject of town hall meetings at Fort Drum and military installations across the country in which soldiers and their families complained about housing conditions.

Shannon E. Razsadin, executive director of the Military Family Advisory Network, said she was surprised by the sheer numbers of families that responded to the survey, since it was completed in just a weeklong period in February.

“It became abundantly clear to us that we saw the scope of the issue with military families,” she said Wednesday.

The issues with maintenance repairs, mold and filth in homes also were the top complaints in the survey at the 160 military installations, she said.

The final survey contained more details from the organization’s initial report in February, she said,

At the town hall meeting in February, Fort Drum officials expressed outrage with the conditions that were found with privatized housing that existed at on post and promised that they would be immediately rectified.

In response, Fort Drum purchased equipment that tests for mold and trained 16 people on post how to use it. A 24-hour hotline was established for tenants to call to complain about housing issues and problems.

Fort Drum has an office onpost that handles complaints from families about housing issues.

Fort Drum Mountain Community Homes — a partnership between developer Lendlease and the Department of the Army — manages 3,974 units at Fort Drum.

The survey found that housing concerns not only existed locally at military installations, but it’s a systemic problem that exists and needs to be resolved, Ms. Razsadin said.

She echoed Fort Drum officials’ reaction in February that soldiers and their families should not be exposed to such living conditions.

Soldiers also should not have to worry about their families while they are deployed, she said.

The town hall sessions were ordered by Secretary of the Army Mark Esper, who instructed military commanders to correct the problems.

Megan Klosner, Mountain Community Homes project director, didn’t return a reporter’s phone call for comment.

Watertown officials debate $1.3 million fire truck

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WATERTOWN — A heated debate on Wednesday night whether to purchase a new fire department ladder truck generated the only sparks for this spring’s city budget deliberations.

Fire Chief Dale C. Herman and City Manager Rick Finn got into a disagreement over purchasing a new aerial truck for $1.3 million that would replace a 1986 ladder truck or refurbishing the 2004 Pierce truck for $220,000.

Mr. Finn argued that the city could refurbish the 2004 ladder truck, keep it on the road for another five to seven years and then replace it.

In the end, council members decided to wait on a new ladder truck.

Mayor Joseph Butler Jr. warned council members that the city will be taking on too much debt for a new $2.4 million pool at Thompson Park, about $3.1 million in a court expansion and other planned projects, so he opposed purchasing a new truck now.

“You can’t buy a pool,” he said. “You can’t buy everything else.”

However, Chief Herman said the fire department needs two ladder trucks because it cannot rely on getting enough manpower from the town of Watertown to bring in an aerial truck to respond to city fires and the Fort Drum Fire Department is having its own repair issues with its ladder truck.

With the city’s financial constraints, Mr. Finn contended the city “cannot have the luxury of having” two ladder trucks.

Council members also agreed not to appropriate $50,000 for a pickup truck that the fire chief requested that would replace a 2006 Ford Taurus that’s having major repair issues.

Mr. Finn said it wasn’t needed.

“It’s inappropriate,” he said. “All of my years’ experience, to have a back fleet of this size as they have, it’s not normal.”

In its fleet, the fire department has a 2006 Silverado, a 2008 Durango, a 2008 Tahoe, five fire pump trucks, a rescue truck and a 2014 pickup that battalion chiefs use on calls.

During Wednesday’s 90-minute rancorous discussion of the fire department, council members also had a lengthy debate about staffing as the city and the firefighters’ union begin to wind down a nearly five-year contract dispute.

Once the contract stalemate ends, the city will decide on how to staff a fire education position, whether to bring back the fire prevention bureau and whether to re-establish fire inspections.

They also discussed the $576,000 that’s budgeted in overtime and how firefighters who are out with long-term injuries and illnesses and adding eight firefighters to the department through two federal grants will impact the next fiscal year.

No changes were made in the fire department Wednesday night, however.

Council members did agree to cut $5,000 for a dog park study and transfer another $5,000 from risk retention to add summer playgrounds at Academy and Portage streets.

The Parks and Recreation Department had planned to staff three summer playgrounds this summer, at Thompson Park, Alex T. Duffy Fairgrounds and North Elementary School.

Despite the contentious tone of Wednesday’s meeting, Councilwoman Lisa A. Ruggiero said she was pleased with the overall nature of this spring’s budget deliberations.

She noted that council held seven budget sessions last year that lasted as long as four hours, compared to only three meetings this year. The final session on Wednesday night ended before 8:30 p.m. and lasted less than 2½ hours.

She credited Mr. Finn for proposing a $44,198,031 spending plan that carries a 1.66 percent tax rate increase.

Council members plan to adopt the budget Wednesday night.


St. Lawrence County’s fund balance grows to $22.6 million; several reasons cited

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CANTON — St. Lawrence County’s financial picture continued to improve in 2018, thanks to several factors such as declining health insurance expenses, reduced spending by some departments and higher sales tax revenues, according to data presented Monday night.

County Treasurer Renee M. Cole told the county’s Finance Committee that the county’s general fund balance increased by $7.3 million between 2017 and 2018, from $15.3 million to $22.6 million, based on an unaudited review.

The unreserved, unappropriated portion of that fund balance grew by roughly $6.8 million between those years, from $13.6 million to $20.4 million, she said.

Cash revenue has increased by 23 percent and a greater percentage of property owners are paying their school and property taxes, she said. The county makes school districts whole by paying them for unpaid school taxes.

Legislature Chairman Joseph R. Lightfoot, R-Ogdensburg, said during the past four years the county has dug its way out of a financial mess that forced the Legislature to borrow between $5 million and $12 million a year between 2011 and 2017 to cover cash flow shortages.

That scenario cost the county roughly $100,000 a year in interest payments, with the amount varying depending on how much was borrowed. Last year, for the first time since 2011, the county did not borrow money. Although the success has been touted as a bipartisan effort, the turnaround started in 2015 when Republicans took majority control of the Legislature from Democrats.

“In four short years we’ve taken a negative fund balance and brought it to where we are today,” Mr. Lightfoot said Wednesday. “It’s been a combination of factors. Economic conditions have improved and we have some very competent department heads.”

Mrs. Cole, a Democrat who took over as county treasurer after winning the 2016 election, said several factors worked in the county’s favor last year, including some departments spending less than they had budgeted.

The Public Health Department’s expenses were $770,000 under budget, while the Sheriff’s Department spent $750,000 less than expected.

Also, $2.7 million from the county’s contingency account was not spent.

“That was a big positive on the fund balance,” Mrs. Cole said.

In her office, she said sales tax revenues came in $1.8 million over the $57.1 million budgeted for 2018.

The amount the county allocated for fringe benefits paid to employees came in $1 million under budget, including $800,000 million less than expected on health insurance expenses, Mrs. Cole said.

In the Highway Department, the county roads fund balance increased by $227,000 while the road machinery fund balance increased by $191,000.

Mrs. Cole said the county’s Solid Waste Department is showing a $773,000 increase in its fund balance, but she said that will likely be reduced significantly.

“These are unaudited and our auditors give us some adjustments that will affect solid waste, such as other post employment benefit expenses and pension liabilities. Last year, those totalled about $500,000 so this will go down quite a bit,” Mrs. Cole said.

The fund balance in the worker’s compensation fund increased by $752,000 compared to last year because fewer claim payments were made, she said.

The county’s liability and casualty fund saw its fund balance decrease from $3 million to $2.7 million, largely due to settlements the county agreed to pay, Mrs. Cole said.

Accountants from the firm Drescher & Malecki LLP, Buffalo, are expected to be in Canton between June 10-17 to conduct their annual audit of the county’s finances.

Brick path is latest addition to Veterans Park in Brasher Falls (VIDEO)

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BRASHER — The veterans memorial on the banks of the St. Regis River in Brasher Falls is slowly becoming a must-see for anyone interested in honoring the men and women from St. Lawrence County who have served the country.

American Legion Post 514 Commander James A. Stickney and a crew of volunteers gathered Saturday in the shadow of the A-4 Skyhawk Vietnam-era fighter plane that was installed upon a Clarkson University-designed pedestal in 2016, to produce the newest addition to the monument.

By the end of the day, a path consisting of 1,374 engraved bricks and hundreds of accent bricks was well on its way to completion.

The bricks honor local veterans from the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812 and up to today.

Mr. Stickney gathered the names for the bricks by scouring local cemeteries, looking in libraries and asking people to share their family histories.

Of the engraved bricks, 1,345 have names on them. He expects to have about 1,000 more names once people learn of the project.

The next 500 names submitted will be included for free.

Information desired for the bricks includes full name, rank, branch, if drafted, primary duty station, any medals and years of service. The bricks have a maximum of four lines, 20 characters per line. Requests can be emailed to winthroplegion@yahoo.com or mailed to PO Box 128, Winthrop.

In addition to the brick pathway, Mr. Stickney will have a bronze plaque added to the plane’s pedestal by Memorial Day.

The plaque will be engraved with the names of veterans who served in Vietnam or assisted in other countries or waters.

The plaque will have 84 names including one person killed in action and 18 who died from exposure to Agent Orange or post-traumatic stress disorder, according to Mr. Stickney.

Mr. Stickney said a $50,000 anonymous gift is paying for the improvements to the Veterans Park, which will include lighting when completed.

On Memorial Day, Post 514 will hold several ceremonies at local cemeteries.

They will be at the Winthrop Cemetery at 9 a.m., Fairview Cemetery at 9:20 a.m., Veterans Park in Lawrenceville at 10 a.m., St. Lawrence Cemetery at 10:20 a.m., St. Patrick’s Cemetery at 11 a.m. and the Veterans Park in Brasher Falls at noon.

If you go

Upcoming Memorial Day ceremonies:

n OGDENSBURG: Vietnam Veterans Memorial at 9 a.m.; Parade on State Street at 10 a.m. followed by ceremony at 11 a.m. at Ogdensburg Cemetery.

n POTSDAM: A service will be held at 9 a.m. Memorial Day, May 27, at Ives Park.

n CAPE VINCENT: Memorial Day observances: 6 a.m.; parade, 11 a.m. Monday, John C. Londraville American Legion Post 832, at 248 E. Broadway. Services at cemeteries and Chaumont monument, 9 a.m.

n LOWVILLE: Memorial Day parade and military honors: Parade, 11 a.m. Monday, through village of Lowville. Military honors follow at Veterans Park.

n MORRISTOWN: Memorial Day service: 10 a.m. Monday, Chapman Park, 406 Morris St. In case of rain, at Morristown Fire Station.

Local couple set to retire from Watertown Food4Families program

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WATERTOWN — Dressed in nearly-identical orange Hawaiian shirts and black pants, Gervin C. and Linda L. Friedrich began their weekly duties on Wednesday afternoon with the Watertown City School District’s Food4Families program.

“Normally our shirts are matching...she makes them,” Mr. Friedrich said, nodding to his wife.

The duo have been volunteering with the pantry since it began, after a former pastor of their church encouraged them.

However, Mr. and Mrs. Friedrich, 75 and 73, respectively, are set to retire at the end of the academic year. Though they plan to continue volunteering at the pantry on occasion, it’s time for them to take a step back.

“We are getting older and I’m not as strong as I used to be,” she said, laughing.

The program, launched in 2016, is an in-school pantry serving students and their families, giving qualifying students a bag full of nutritious food each Friday.

Located in the basement of the Massey Street Learning Center, the pantry’s tables are stacked high with nonperishables. The couple are responsible for taking inventory, stocking shelves, verifying food orders with the Food Bank of Central New York and making sure the bags of food are properly delivered.

This weeks’ bags ­are each filled with one box of cereal, one box of pasta, one can of spaghetti sauce, one can of fruit and one can of vegetables, Mrs. Friedrich said. Once the 116 bags are packed, they are brought up to the school for students to pick up.

Stacey J. Eger, assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction, said the Friedrichs have been instrumental in the program.

“Without Linda and Gervin, we wouldn’t have the program we do,” Ms. Eger said. “I don’t think they’ve ever missed a day of packing, they are always on top of inventory for us and they are always looking for new ways to get the community involved.”

For their service, Ms. Eger said it was fitting for the district to recognize the Friedrichs. They received a certificate on Wednesday night during the Board of Education meeting.

“They’re just a perfect example of community and school coming together. It’s devastating to see them leave,” Ms. Eger said. Ms. Eger said when the program began, the district never imagined someone would spear-head the program with so much passion.

There have been multiple occasions, Ms. Eger recalled, when if the food bank was out of an item, Mr. and Mrs. Friedrich would go from grocery store to grocery store negotiating prices and, eventually, getting the item for that week’s bags.

But Ms. Eger said there will be a smooth transition once they retire.

One-year volunteer Randy J. Elie has volunteered to take over, with experience also with Meals on Wheels and the Watertown Urban Mission.

“He started this year full-fledge volunteering and we were so happy about it,” Ms. Eger said. “He has been really helpful with filling volunteer gaps.”

As for the Friedrichs’ plans for the future, Mrs. Friedrich will be focused on working with their church as the nursery director and Mr. Friedrich will continue being a self-proclaimed “Mr. Fix It” for friends and family.

“We’ve really enjoyed it here,” Mrs. Friedrich said.

Canton woman gets trapped after her car backs over her

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CANTON — A Woods Road woman was hospitalized last week after her vehicle backed over her.

Village police responded on May 16 to the 32 Woods Road home of Breyne Moskowitz, 72, after receiving a 911 call that Ms. Moskowitz had been trapped under the vehicle after it rolled backward over her.

Police were assisted by St. Lawrence County sheriff’s deputies and members of Canton Volunteer Rescue Squad in freeing the woman.

How the car ran her over was not reported.

Ms. Moskowitz was taken to Canton-Potsdam Hospital where she was treated for her injuries.

Cranberry Lake pair charged with burglary at community center

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CRANBERRY LAKE — Two Cranberry Lake residents were charged by state police on May 3 with felony third-degree burglary.

Stanley D. Stewart, 26, and Danielle J. LaFrance, 24, both of of 7191 State Route 3, were charged following an incident at 12:23 p.m. on Jan. 31. State troopers allegedly found Mr. Stewwart and Ms. LaFrance at the Town of Clifton Community Center, trying to enter the building by cutting a padlock. The pair also allegedly stole two 3-by-5 black commercial rugs and 10 boxes of snack cakes.

Ms. LaFrance was arraigned in Fine Town Court and was released on her own recognizance.

Mr. Stewart was arraigned in Rossie Town Court and was remanded to St. Lawrence County Jail, Canton, on $1,500 cash bail or $3,000 bond.

Democratic rule change allows registration closer to presidential primary

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A proposal to make it easier for voters in New York to vote in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary passed the state Democratic Committee unanimously on Wednesday.

Under the old rules, voters had to register as Democrats in October to vote in the June primary. The new rules would allow people currently enrolled in another party — Republican, Green, Libertarian, Conservative — to register 60 days before the April 28 primary and people registered with no party to register 25 days before.

“I was not expecting unanimous,” said Patrick F. Nelson, a former Democratic congressional candidate in NY-21 and of 16 state committee members to sponsor the proposal.

Mr. Nelson said the state committee received between 900 and 1,000 comments on the proposal, 95 percent of them in support of shortening the deadline. The split deadlines was a compromise proposal, which then gained unanimous support.

On a state level, however, party changes are not implemented until the next general election. According to Mr. Nelson, Supreme Court decisions have held that parties can regulate who can vote in their primaries, but the Democratic Party will not be out of step with other New York state parties, which follow the October deadline.

“I have it on good authority, and Supreme Court authority, that (the Board of Elections) will have to comply,” Mr. Nelson said. “We’ve just created a patchwork, messy situation.

Mr. Nelson hopes that the state Legislature will take action before the end of the session in June to amend state law and eliminate the patchwork. For the moment, the change applies only to the presidential primary, so in the future Mr. Nelson hopes the rules will cover all primaries.

There is still one remaining issue — how long people must stay with the party once they shift their registration. Mr. Nelson thinks one year — to avoid people voting in both a Democratic and a Republican primary — makes sense, but some members of the party would like to see voters have to wait as long as four years before changing parties again.

“It kind of turns the party into Hotel California, ‘you can check out any time you like, but you can never leave,’” Mr. Nelson said.

For the moment, though, Mr. Nelson is celebrating the victory.

“I am really proud to be a Democrat today, I’m really proud of our party,” he said.

Legal battle opens possibility for rehiring radio hosts

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WATERTOWN — Local radio hosts contending that the owner of Classic Hits Z93 and Froggy 97 wrongfully terminated their employment may get their jobs back when the matter is taken to court.

The National Labor Relations Board found Stephens Media Group had committed 10 violations in December after investigating the layoff of multiple radio personalities from its Watertown stations and firing of David Romigh from 1340 WMSA, Massena. As a result of the violations, the board demanded that the company rehire affected workers and provide back pay, said Dianne D. Chase, president of the Local 51024 chapter of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians-Communications Workers of America. The union represents the affected workers and filed charges against Stephens Media with the labor board, prompting the investigation and interviews with both parties.

Some examples of the labor board’s allegations against Stephens Media pertain to contract violations, including the discharging of workers, failure to bargain in good faith and repudiation or modification of a contract.

Stephens Media, however, refuted the violations a week later, forcing the labor board to take the issue to court, Ms. Chase said. A hearing is scheduled for June 25 in Watertown.

Neither the labor board nor Stephens Media returned requests for comment.

“I’m hopeful because it’s in the hands of” the court,” Ms. Chase said.

Stephens Media, which also owns stations in Ogdensburg and Rochester, laid off full- and part-time workers from its Watertown stations after its contract with the union expired, negotiations stalled and the company decided to restructure with voice tracking and other new technolgy. The firm, however, rehired Michael Stoffel, known as Webb Foote on Froggy 97, and later brought back Brian Best as a news director.Ms. Chase said the company’s actions affected four full-time positions and five to six part-time workers, adding that she believed it tried to remove the union from its workforce.

“I do believe that, or they would have negotiated in good faith,” she said. “When all of this is done, I hope we can get started back on the contracts again.”

Prior to the Watertown layoffs, Stephens Media fired Mr. Romigh from 1340 WMSA by phone in June, citing insubordination as the reason. The union’s investigation into the matter, however, found no evidence of insubordination.

Stephens Media purchased its north country radio stations in 2008. It laid off three employees in 2013: two in Watertown and one in Massena.


Developer of Watertown’s Autumn Ridge indicted on bank fraud, money laundering counts

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WATERTOWN — The principal developer of the Autumn Ridge townhouse complex in the town of Watertown was indicted Wednesday on federal charges alleging bank and wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy.

Robert C. Morgan, 62, founder and CEO of Morgan Management, was indicted in U.S. District Court, Buffalo, along with his son Todd Morgan, real estate broker Frank Giacobbe and Frank Tremiti, a former director of finance at Morgan Management. Two other people, Mr. Morgan’s nephew Kevin Morgan and Morgan Management’s former Chief Operating Officer Scott Creswell, have previously pleaded guilty to federal charges in connection with the company’s activities.

There are no allegations of wrongdoing in connection with the Watertown project contained in the indictments handed up Wednesday. However, prosecutors are seeking the forfeiture of $237 million from Morgan Management in connection with multiple other projects, primarily in Western New York. Liens have been imposed to secure those properties, although the indictment makes no mention of any liens being placed on Autumn Ridge, a 394-unit townhouse project on County Route 202.

The 57-page indictment alleges that the company defrauded financial institutions by providing false and inflated financial information to secure mortgages for projects.

In a separate action brought Wednesday, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission alleges that Mr. Morgan and two of his companies “operated in a Ponzi scheme-like manner” by using investor funds to make interest and principal redemption payments back to prior investors and to cover up other mortgage fraud-related conduct. The SEC’s complaint claims that investors are owed $63 million, although the company has insufficient assets to repay the investments. The SEC has moved to freeze all of Mr. Morgan’s assets while its action is pending.

Morgan Management had planned to construct an additional 359-unit townhouse project across the road from Autumn Ridge on County Route 202, but the project never materialized after enough rental housing was built in the region for returning Fort Drum soldiers. A company owned by Mr. Morgan also owns 217 Arsenal St., site of a former tire store that was at one time a city fire station. Another Morgan company owns a retail plaza at County Route 202 and Route 3.

Volunteers needed in Ogdensburg to place flags in advance of Memorial Day

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OGDENSBURG — Flags already mark the graves of veterans in St. Mary’s Cemetery. Now Alan Mooney is looking for a little help to finish the job at the Ogdensburg Cemetery and Notre Dame Cemetery.

Mr. Mooney has been coordinating this effort for decades, but his experience does not make the job less daunting.

There are 2,000 flags that need to be placed, he said.

“It’s a monumental task,” Mr. Mooney said with a laugh.

But numbers can make a big difference.

“Last year we had 20 or 30 people,” he said. “It didn’t even take two hours.”

The flags are being sponsored by VFW Post 2936 and American Legion Post 69.

Mr. Mooney said volunteers will be gathering at 9:30 a.m., Saturday by the flagpole at Notre Dame Cemetery to place the flags.

If anybody has any questions about how they can help, they can always contact Mr. Mooney at 315-393-7904.

Observance of Memorial Day in Ogdensburg this year will begin with the ceremonial tossing of a wreath into the St. Lawrence River at 7:30 a.m., to be followed by a 9 a.m. ceremony in front of the Vietnam Memorial at the far end of the parking lot near Northern Physical Therapy.

A parade will begin at 10 a.m. beginning at Library Park, proceeding to the Ogdensburgh Cemetery. An 11 a.m. remembrance ceremony will be held at the cemetery, according to Mr. Mooney.

Soup and sandwiches will be served at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2936 on Champlain Street.

Winthrop woman gets probation for cashing forged checks

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CANTON — A Winthrop woman who was involved in the forging of more than $3,000 in checks belonging to a Gouverneur real estate agency was sentenced to probation Monday with a warning that she needed to return the money.

Sherry L. Kinney, 39, of 831 Buckton Road, was sentenced in St. Lawrence County Court to three years of probation for her March 20, 2018, guilty plea to felony second-degree attempted criminal possession of a forged instrument in a plea deal with the district attorney’s office.

At 3:13 p.m. on Oct. 23, 2017 in the village of Massena, she and Joshua P. White, were in possession of, and cashed, a forged NBT check belonging to Byrns Realty. Ms. Kinney told the court there were other checks as well.

It was previously reported by the district attorney’s office that the incident took place on Nov. 23, 2017. The court documents were amended Monday to reflect the correct date and time.

On March 27, 2018, Mr. White, 37, of 831 Buckton Road, Winthrop, pleaded guilty to felony second-degree attempted criminal possession of a forged instrument and was later placed on one year of interim probation to earn the opportunity to vacate his felony plea and plead to a misdemeanor.

On May 13, Judge Jerome J. Richards extended Mr. White’s interim probation another year to give him the opportunity to comply with the terms and conditions so he could benefit from his original plea deal. He had tested positive in drug and alcohol tests and recorded 10 violations of his interim probation.

Moreover, Mr. White was required to pay $3,498 restitution to Byrns Realty but only paid $130.

Similarly, Ms. Kinney was said to have only paid $130 toward that restitution; however, Judge Richards allowed her to vacate her felony plea and plead to the misdemeanor of third-degree criminal possession of a forged instrument and was not given credit for the one year of interim probation she served.

He told her that she needed to comply with her probation conditions, which includes paying the required restitution. If she doesn’t it would be considered a violation and she could face a year in the St. Lawrence County jail on the new misdemeanor charge, whereas Mr. White faces up to four years in prison.

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