MALONE — Franklin County 2010 budget deliberations are thorny because no one knows how much more the state will force localities to pay for programs and services.
"We have no idea what the hell is happening in Albany," said County Legislature Finance Committee Chairman Earl Lavoie (D-Malone).
"It's a big question mark," he said. "The budget comes out April 1, and there will be some drastic cuts. We've been living beyond our means for a long time."
His comments came during a budget public hearing Thursday where officials with the Cornell Cooperative Extension came to ask that its 10-percent budget cut be restored.
All service contracts were cut by the same amount across the board to reduce the county's tentative tax-levy increase from a projected 18.1 percent to the current 4.23 percent.
Lavoie said the North Country is a tourism destination, "but they don't like to pay taxes" by purchasing homes that provide a steady flow of tax dollars as property owners.
"Our people are older, and the young people are leaving," Lavoie said. "In five or 10 years, senior citizens will be telling us they can't afford to live in Franklin County, and we're worried about that."
Extension Director Carl Tillinghast and Board of Directors President Andrew Schrader said the agency's programming is an economic-development engine in these tough times.
"Everything that Cornell Cooperative Extension does contributes to trying to halt the flow of young folks from the county and bring business people into the county," Schrader said.
Tillinghast explained that small farms have increased in the past five years and that extension has not only kept 4-H Camp Overlook open during lean times but has expanded the amenities and is preparing to promote and market itself as a four-season destination by the end of the year.
He said 814 children attended camp in 2009 and another 113 young adults worked as counselors-in-training.
But, in the past 10 years, his agency's budget has increased an average of just 2 percent a year.
"We're looking to sustain and grow, not go back," Tillinghast said.
Lavoie said he understands the problem, but there is only so much legislators can do until it knows more from downstate.
"We have to answer to the public," he said, adding that there will be more budget discussions before it is adopted. "Everyone asked for an increase.
"We're stuck," Lavoie said. "And we have very stagnant assessing in Franklin County. Fifty percent of the Village of Malone is non-taxable. It leaves us in a crisis."
Schrader said Cooperative Extension can eke out its programs and services at the lower level, but there is only enough money in a small reserve fund to do it for a year.
E-mail Denise A. Raymo at: draymo@pressrepublican.com
Local News
Cuts blamed on unknowns in Albany
<img src="/homepage/images_image_276103054" alt="•"> Franklin County trimming contracts by 10 percent
- Breaking News
-
-
Fire ravages Stonehelm
Volunteers from 10 fire departments respond.
-
Fire ravages Stonehelm
- Local News
-
-
Peebles Department Store coming to Ti
It will take space vacated by Tops Market in the shopping plaza at routes 9N and 74; will hire manager soon.
-
Teen faces arson charge
Plattsburgh City Police arrested the youth in connection with the May 18 fire at the home of Dr. Ronald and Lee Ann Malseptic at 2 Flaglar Drive.
-
Florida man sentenced for rape
Daniel Stahl was found guilty of sexual crimes against an incapacitated woman in Lake Placid.
-
Elizabethtown considers wastewater options
There's no money for such projects, Town Supervisor Margaret Bartley said.
-
Chamber division to exhibit at Montreal trade show
The Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau will promote the region at the Travel and Outdoor Festival in Parc Jean Drapeau on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
-
School making effort to attract foreign students
Keene Central School hopes to have six young people from six different countries joining the student body in September.
-
PSU team places third in investment competition
Members of the Student-Managed Investment Portfolio Club and Stock Market Club managed a hypothetical $1 million in portfolios of small-cap stocks.
-
Valcour once alive with summer camps
Roger Harwood has spent the past several years researching the history of the island and gave a talk about it recently at the Clinton County Museum in Plattsburgh.
-
Of Interest: May 23, 2012
PSU rummage sale to benefit needy; Section of Barney Downs Road in Peru closed today; Village dissolution study ready for reaction; City hydrant flushing continues; City Schools to present amended budget; Emergency work on Lower Locks today in Saranac Lake; Ti seeks input on town's needs; Franklin Co. Solid Waste Authority to consider buying land; Moriah Central sets special meeting; Matching funds available to libraries for technology; Keeseville to wrap up fiscal year.
-
Life a home run for Plattsburgh man
After playing professional baseball for the Brooklyn Dodgers, surviving a major attack in the Korean War and working hard in the construction business, Lester Fessette has lived what many would consider an extraordinary life.
- May 22, 2012
-
Peebles Department Store coming to Ti
It will take space vacated by Tops Market in the shopping plaza at routes 9N and 74; will hire manager soon.
-
Florida man sentenced for rape
Daniel Stahl was found guilty of sexual crimes against an incapacitated woman in Lake Placid.
-
Teen faces arson charge
Plattsburgh City Police arrested the youth in connection with the May 18 fire at the home of Dr. Ronald and Lee Ann Malseptic at 2 Flaglar Drive.
-
Valcour once alive with summer camps
Roger Harwood has spent the past several years researching the history of the island and gave a talk about it recently at the Clinton County Museum in Plattsburgh.
-
PenAir to base operations in Plattsburgh
Sixteen jobs to be created to start.
-
Jay tax collector dies from crash injuries
June Taylor remembered as kind, accurate, professional.
-
Essex Old County Courthouse pillars could fall
Supervisors OK'd spending the money to replace the decayed and dangerous roof supports for the Old Essex County Courthouse.
-
Essex Co. lawmakers question inmate cost
Sheriff Richard Cutting says the daily price tag is $7.92; some say it's more because not all costs are factored into the equation.
-
Peebles Department Store coming to Ti
- Recent Article Comments


