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SUNY Plattsburgh celebrates international education, awareness
<i>Eastern Wind</i> dancers at last year's
Eastern Wind dancers at last year's "Night of Nations" in Plattsburgh.
(11/16/11) SUNY Plattsburgh is celebrating International Education Week with a series of workshops, lectures, debates and the "Night of Nations" cultural showcase on Saturday. Todd Moe talks with Student Association president, PJ Shah, an international student from Nepal, about the lure of attending college in Plattsburgh.

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A village school in the Adirondacks goes global to survive
Newcomb's high school and middle school eats lunch together(Photos:  Brian Mann)
Newcomb's high school and middle school eats lunch together(Photos: Brian Mann)
Skip Hults hangs a new flag for each country that sends a student to Newcomb school
Skip Hults hangs a new flag for each country that sends a student to Newcomb school
(11/24/10) Public schools in the North Country have been closing one-by-one for decades. It's a heartbreaking event for small towns.

But dwindling populations and rising costs have forced districts to consolidate and bus their kids long distances to bigger schools.

Incoming Governor Andrew Cuomo has indicated that he wants more districts to merge, and the state has already cut education funding.

The entire Newcomb school district has fewer than a hundred kids.

But as Brian Mann reports, the community is fighting for survival by trying to attract international students to fill its empty classrooms. more

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Citizenship questions far from the border
Border Patrol vehicles await the bus in Canton.
Border Patrol vehicles await the bus in Canton.
(09/17/10) Across the North Country, border patrol road checkpoints where agents stop cars and ask passengers their citizenship have become a part of daily life. Today we have a story about another step in the creeping influence of homeland security inside the border.

It's now become commonplace for federal agents to board buses and trains across Upstate New York and ask passengers for proof of citizenship. The checks are sweeping up some drugs and illegal immigrants, but also people who are here legally. David Sommerstein reports. more

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Immigration bureaucracy lands legal residents in detention
Immigration lawyer Hilary Fraser
Immigration lawyer Hilary Fraser
(09/17/10) One wrinkle in the immigration picture has been particularly difficult for foreign students and professionals working in the U.S.

There are two agencies within Homeland Security that handle visas. The one that issues them is U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. It says a foreign national may reapply or change a visa status "in a timely manner" before its expiration date. The visa itself may take weeks or months to process. The U.S. Border Patrol however, only looks at the expiration date.

If a person's visa has expired, that person is subject to detention. Immigration lawyer Hilary Fraser of Ithaca has defended clients caught between these two interpretations of the law. She told David Sommerstein one was a Filipino national living in Watertown.

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SUNY Plattsburgh celebrates global diversity
(11/11/09) International Education Week kicks off Monday at SUNY-Plattsburgh. The week's activities include lectures, music, films, literature and food. Jackie Vogl, Director of the International Student Services Office at SUNY-Plattsburgh, tells Todd Moe that the events help foreign students share their cultures with the local community. It's also part of Plattsburgh's long tradition as an international gateway for trade, immigrants, visitors and ideas.

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Newcomb looks to foreign students to boost school numbers
(10/17/08) School officials in a small town in the Adirondacks are pushing for a change in federal law that could help to stem the tide of declining student enrollment. The Newcomb Central School district, with an enrollment of about 70 students, wants to bring in international students for longer periods of time than the current one year allowed under federal law. The district is asking the New York State School Boards Association to support a change in federal law that would give public schools the same right to international students as private schools. As Chris Knight reports, several school districts in the North Country are backing the proposal.

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Federal farm visa program brings Jamaican workers to North Country orchards
(10/06/08) Last week, we reported on efforts to expand the agricultural visa program known as H2A. The federal system offers migrant workers from outside the U.S. a chance to earn decent wages on farms, without the complications and dangers of working illegally. Dairy farmers in the North Country hope H2A can be modified to better serve their industry, which faces chronic labor shortages. The program has already put a new face on the region's apple industry. Brian Mann has our story from Peru, in the Champlain valley.

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Lake George tourism businesses fined $120,000 for labor violations
(11/07/07) Tourist businesses in the Lake George area have been fined more than $120,000 for allegedly cheating their foreign workers. An investigation by New York's Labor Department found that hotels and restaurants were denying wages and violating child labor laws. Labor Department spokesman Chris Perham told the Associated Press that many of the workers were foreign students involved in a work-exchange program. "Some weren't being paid properly," Perham said. "I understand some of them weren't being paid at all." Ramada Express and the Quality Inn and Econo Lodge in Queensbury were among the businesses that agreed to pay the fines. Lake George Mayor Robert Blais, who co-founded a worker support program called The Student Connection, told Brian Mann that the enforcement case began after a worker approached him with a complaint. State officials say much of the 120 thousand dollars in fines will be used to reimburse employees who have returned to their home countries. The tourism businesses affected by the penalty have not returned reporters' calls asking for comment.

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Heard Up North: Watching the World Cup
(06/13/06) Yesterday was a grim debut for Team USA in the World Cup in Germany. The Americans had little to surprise heavily favored Czech Republic in their 0-3 loss. According to an ESPN poll, most Americans didn't adjust their routines to watch the noontime match. A couple dozen mostly international students took in the game in Clarkson University's student center in Potsdam. It was a far cry from thousands of chanting fans filling squares in other countries. But hey...it's something. David Sommerstein sent this audio montage.

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The View From India: The Adirondacks As A Model?
Stream audio (broadband). Launch in player | Download audio (dial-up). Right-click to save target as. Download audio (2:23)
Aditi Kaur
Aditi Kaur
(10/23/02) Each year, people come from around the world to study the Adirondack Park. Environmentalists see this region's mix of wilderness and small communities as a model for conservation - especially in the developing world. Usually, these groups meet with scientists and park officials. But this month, a group called "Future Generations" has been meeting with shop owners and home makers and factory workers. Brian Mann spoke with Aditi Kaur, an activist visiting from India.
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Trinity Episcopal Church Hall seen from Ives Park. Photo: Du'Shawn Williams, Potsdam NY.
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