To the editor: There are new street lights on the far end of Moody Pond, one at the Baker Mountain trailhead. Thankfully, they are not yet in use, but I am wo
To the editor: I write to enthusiastically support the proposed move of the Adirondack Park Agency (“APA”) to Saranac Lake’s downtown because it is: One
SARANAC LAKE Put on a set of stockings, warm up your shouting voice and get ready to be taken on a strange journey. Pendragon Theatre is putting on a pr
Kelly Brunette (Photo provided) SARANAC LAKE Kelly Brunette, the Democratic nominee for the March 16 Saranac Lake village board special election, has worked for the village before and believes it is her time to serve as an elected official in the community she has made her home. She believes the current village board is “strong” but that she could add a family-first mindset. “I represent a different constituency in the village that isn’t shown on the village board right now,” Brunette said. Brunette attended Paul Smith’s College in the 1990s, moving up here from Oswego. She left to attend the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse and “bounced around” before moving into the Saranac Lake community in 2004. Since then she has started a family.
acerbone@adirondackdailyenterprise.com
Kelly Brunette, who was nominated at a Democratic caucus Tuesday, Jan. 26, to run for an open Saranac Lake village board seat, speaks through a megaphone to a crowd of around 40 people at Berkeley Green.
(Enterprise photo â Aaron Cerbone) SARANAC LAKE It was 25 degrees and snowing in Berkeley Green Tuesday night when Kelly Brunette became the Democratic nominee for the March 16 village board election at an outdoor caucus. Currently, Brunette is the only candidate in the race, but the period for independent candidates has not occurred yet. Candidates can file independent nominating petitions starting on Feb. 2 and can collect signatures up until the petition deadline Feb. 9.