Healthy Communities commended
for working together

[JULY 1, 2000]  At the semiannual update meeting of the Healthy Communities Partnership (HCP) on Thursday, Lincoln and Logan County organizations got a pat on the back for their ability to work together to solve problems.

The commendations came from state officials representing the Capstone project and the keynote speaker, after the audience heard presentations from various Task Force leaders working with HCP.

Dr. David Williams, director of the Regional Institute for Community Policing, told the audience that the Capstone project was initiated two years ago to identify issues that were problems in the community and help find solutions. Lincoln was one of five Illinois communities in the project.

 


[Ron Sillings and Kristi Simpson , co-chairs of the Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drug Task Force, examine some of the items in the task force's display board on view at the Healthy Communities meeting.]

"Lincoln is a good community. It needed our help less than many others," Williams said. "We didn’t see the kinds of problems we usually come up against. Many were already being addressed; there was a good effort here by Healthy Communities Partnership. We shouldn’t reinvent the wheel. We should take people already involved and basically carry on what Healthy Communities is doing."

Keynote speaker Mark Schmidt, deputy director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, who spoke on the benefits of collaboration, commended the leadership in Lincoln. "I come away inspired. I hear of great things happening in Logan County. It can be a model for other communities in the state."

Those who attended the meeting at the Knights of Columbus Hall heard leaders of HCP’s various task forces give progress reports on the past six months’ activities.

 

 

Becky Sank of the Logan County Department of Human Services reported on projects of the Healthy Families Task Force. A job fair helped 20 high school juniors and seniors learn how to apply for a job. The Baby Think It Over project, which she hopes to expand, teaches youngsters the realities of parenthood by giving them a computerized "baby" which must be taken care of. Parent Education at Lincoln Community High School worked with 12 teen mothers and two teen fathers. Sank said she would like to see family education in the schools starting in the lower grades, teaching good morals, good manners, a work ethic and self-esteem.

 


[Among the 13 young people who will attend the Illinois Teen Institute at Wesleyan University in Bloomington are, left to right, Cara Brewer, Chris Allen, Elizabeth Carmitchel, Samantha Hudelson, Stephie Humble, Kyle Jackson, Dustin Knollenberg, Cara Slack 
and Bradley Stoll.]

Kristi Simpson of Logan-Mason Mental Health, co-chairman of the Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drug Task Force (ATOD), reported that a recent sting operation found only one of 14 businesses selling tobacco to a minor. She reported on ATOD’s victim impact panel, in which the audience hears the effect of drunk driving on a family who has lost a member or a person who has been injured. She said she is working with law enforcement agencies and the courts to make it mandatory for drivers who are involved in alcohol-related accidents to attend these panels. She also noted that two methamphetamine workshops helped to educate the community about the newest street drug.

 

 

She introduced some of the 13 young people from the Lincoln area who will be attending the Illinois Teen Institute, a week-long camp held at Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington. These teens will learn how to be peer leaders in preventing substance abuse, conflict resolution, anger management and sex education. They are Chris Allen, Laura Baker, Cara Brewer, Jamie Cavett, Eliabeth Carmitchel, Linsey Dirks, Samantha Hudelson, Stephie Humble, Kyle Jackson, Dustin Knollenberg, Cara Slack, Amanda Snyder and Bradley Stoll.

 

 

(To top of second column)

Ron Silling, co-chair of ATOD, said he would like to set up workshops to inform the community about another new drug, ecstasy, which has already caused deaths in the Chicago area. He also plans to set up dances at the Lincoln YMCA and post-prom activities for all Logan County schools to provide young people with "drug-free fun."

Marcia Dowling of the Logan County Health Department reported that there are now 10 completely smoke-free restaurants in Lincoln: Oasis at the Garden, Vintage Fare, Eckert’s Fine Dining, Burger King, Java Junction, Subway, Lunch Express, Taco Bell, Sorrento’s and Gleason’s Dairy Bar. The Logan County Health Department has also received a grant of $30,000 for the coming year for Illinois Tobacco-Free Communities. The money, from the tobacco settlement, will be used for education.

 

 

Tina Merchant spoke about the newest task force, the Domestic Abuse and Violence Task Force. Merchant, a domestic abuse survivor, said more people need to be involved helping victims and showing offenders that there is zero tolerance for domestic abuse. She reported that Curtis Sutterfield and Police Officer Diana Short will be taking a 40-hour training course to become advocates for abuse victims. She also praised the Lincoln Police Department, which she said "has been more than wonderful to me."

Dayle Eldredge, coordinator of HCP, reported on the mobile health van that visits rural communities in Logan county. The van provides 750 services per month, the most common being blood pressure screenings, vaccinations, flu shots, and school and sports physicals. She noted that HCP is setting up an endowment fund to keep the van on the road, as the grant which funded its operation runs out this year. Seed money of $1 million has already been raised by a grant from the Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital Foundation, but at least $3 million is needed.

 


[Becky Sank of the Department of Human Services and Marcia Dowling of the Logan County Health Department examine the computerized doll used in the Baby Think It Over program sponsored by the Healthy Families Task Force.]

She noted that a grant of $45,569 from the Illinois Department of Public Health will be renewed again this year. The grant has made it possible for the mobile unit to go to Greenview; has expanded the ATOD program to all junior high school classes, either public or parochial schools, who want to participate; and made possible a prostate cancer screening on the health van.

Dr. Christine Todd, who has been medical director of the Rural Health Partnership, has accepted a position as an instructor at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine and will retire. Dr. Marcia Hauter will become the new medical director for the program.

 

 

Schmidt, the keynote speaker, defined "collaboration" as "when vision and mission are shared by everyone." In the Lincoln community, he said, collaboration is well developed.

 

[Joan Crabb]

 

ILLINI BANK
2201 Woodlawn Rd. in Lincoln
1-888-455-4641 or 735-5400
Ask for Terry Lock or Sharon Awe

Click here to learn more about our great home mortgage rate special.


Herrin Ltd.
FERTILIZERS AND FARM CHEMICALS

Mount Pulaski, IL
217-792-5048

Help

LincolnDailyNews.com

make your community a better place with this Community Builder Ad

217-732-7443


A drop at the gas pumps is expected

[JUNE 30, 2000]  Hang on to your gas money; a drop at the pumps is expected come Saturday morning. The General Assembly moved to stop collection of state’s sales tax on gasoline beginning July 1. The tax currently adds a five percent charge per gallon to your fill-up bill. Governor George Ryan signed the bill that proposes to lower the price of gas by cutting out the state’s sales tax between July 1 and Jan. 1. The cut will cost the state about $180 million, a figure which has government offices throughout the state adjusting their budgets.

Certainly, there are no guarantees that the savings will be passed on to the consumers. Some opponents to the bill believe that gas stations could raise prices prior to Saturday, and then only lower prices to their previous level. The governor, in order to guard against such price gouging, will ask employees of the state to watch the gas prices in Illinois. The public is also advised be on the lookout.

Illinois is the second state to suspend the state’s gas sales tax. Indiana Governor Frank O’Bannon signed a bill which suspended the Indiana state’s gas sales tax for 60 days last week.

[Trisha Youngquist]

 


Turn’er up

Breaking the bank to attend the gas price hearings

[JUNE 29, 2000]  Rep. John Turner from Lincoln paid a high gas price to attend a state hearing on the high price of gasoline that was held in Quincy on Monday night.

  Turner listened to retailers at the hearing say that the hike in the price of gas was not their fault. "I don’t want to speculate on why gas prices are as high as they are in Illinois until after we hear from the people doing the investigations into the matter," he said. "Many of my colleagues are conducting their own investigations along with the state and federal governments."

 

 

"I want to do my small part to bring prices down by participating in the hearings and by voting to repeal the gas tax," he added. If it is repealed, it would be for six months from July 1, 2000, to Jan. 1, 2001. The repeal would not effect the portion of the tax that goes to the counties and municipalities. The sales tax that the legislature is voting to eliminate goes into the state’s general revenue fund. Should the repeal pass, it would mean a savings of seven to 10 cents per gallon for the gas consumers.

 

 

Illinois has the highest gas taxes among all of the surrounding states. Turner said he will support the permanent repeal of this tax in the November veto session. "There are currently so many taxes on gas that it ends up being a tax on a tax. I feel this is at the very least wrong, and I’m surprised that no one has challenged this process of gasoline taxing in the courts," Turner said.

 

 

The representative said he hopes that the federal government will also eliminate their 18.4 percent federal gas tax. The elimination of this tax will not affect the road fund or the motor fuel tax.

 

 

(To top of second column in this article)

 

Turner puts part of the price hike’s blame on what he says is the Clinton administration’s lack of foreign policy. He said that the United States should be in a position to exert some influence on the OPEC countries that have received help from America over the years. He blames Clinton for not getting these countries to step up crude oil production and presidential candidate Al Gore for his support of the environment at the expense of higher gas taxes.

 

 

He said that because the federal regulations on reformulated gasoline (RFG) are new, the federal government will not ease off on the implementation of the EPA regulations even though there is a shortage of the gasoline base used to make RFG, a cleaner-burning fuel.

 

 

In 1980, the federal tax on gas was four cents per gallon; today it is 18.4 cents. The state tax was 7.5 cents; today it is 19 cents. Gas taxes have grown significantly in a 20-year period, according to information given at Monday’s hearing.

 

[Kym Ammons-Scott]

 


“It’s in the mail”

Tax bills sent out Wednesday

[JUNE 29, 2000]  Logan County Treasurer’s Office released yesterday that the long-awaited bad news is in the mail. The tax bills for the 1999 real estate taxes payable in 2000 were mailed June 28. The first installment will be due July 31, with a 1½ percent penalty being charged Aug. 1. The second installment is due Sept. 5, with a penalty being charged on Sept. 6. Taxes may not be paid at the participating banks after Sept. 5. Those wishing to use the new credit card payment options are asked to be sure to read all inserts that come with the bill, but to pay particular attention to the blue insert, as this has the touch-tone phone number as well as the Internet address and the jurisdiction code needed for either option. The touch-tone option should be available by July 15, according to the State Treasurer’s Office. The Internet site is being finalized, and those interested should check periodically for its availability.


Animals for adoption

[JUNE 29, 2000]  Animals are available for adoption at a nominal fee from Logan County Animal Control, 1515 N. Kickapoo in Lincoln. The fees are as follows: dogs $60 for males and $65 for females; cats $35 for males and $44 for females. The adoption fee includes neutering. The phone number for the animal control office is 735-3232.


[Many 6 to 8-week-old  kittens to choose from, all charming and delightful]


[Two of a litter of seven black Lab/golden retriever mix pups, males and females, absolutely cuddly]


["Charlie," a lovable, 8-year-old, housebroken cocker spaniel, needs a home]