Treasurer’s report for
city of Lincoln on public view

[OCT. 18, 2000]  The audit of the annual treasurer’s report for the city of Lincoln’s fiscal year ending April 30, has been completed, and the report will be published this week, according to Lester Plotner, city treasurer. The report is also available for the public to view at the offices of the city clerk and the Logan County treasurer.

The report lists a revenue summary, compensation summary, fire and police pension payments, expenditures summary, and a statement of condition for the fiscal year.

Plotner gave a brief summary of the report to the City Council at Monday night’s meeting, in which he provided comparisons of this year’s fund balances and expenditures to those of the two previous years, 1999 and 1998. He noted that expenditures increased 16.5 percent in 2000 to $10,140,811, compared to a total of $8,705,909 in 1999.

Much of the extra expenditure was due to improvements in the city’s infrastructure, the west side sewer project and the upgrading of city streets, according to Mayor Joan Ritter. The west side sewer project extends from Fifth Street to Woodlawn Road, under Woodlawn, over to Monroe Street on the north side and along Monroe to 21st Street. Road rehabilitation, which is still underway, includes Tremont, Ottawa, Wichita, Nicholson Road, State Street, and parts of Adams and Jackson streets. Curbs and gutters, and if necessary new sewers, are included in the road rehabilitation.

 

Some increase in salaries, from $2,669,462 in 1999 to $2,733,165 in 2000, and some increase in fire and police pensions, about $15,000 more each, also added to the expenditures.

Revenue also went up, from $9,089,539 in 1999 to $9,182,032 in 2000. In the revenue column, building permit fees jumped from $16,681 to $30,579. Les Last, building and safety commissioner, said the jump came because of big construction projects at Lincoln College and Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital, which are not in the enterprise zone. No building permit fees are collected for construction in an enterprise zone, and most real estate taxes are abated for the first five years, Last said.

 

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Other increases in revenue came from the Motor Fuel Tax Fund, from $368,117 to $414,556; from sales taxes, $1,919,109 in 1999 to $2,205,870 in 2000; from state income tax, $1,082,320 in 1999 to $1,146,530 in 2000; from bond revenue, zero in 1999 to $465,000 in 2000; and from the new telecommunication fees, $64,542 in 1999 to $76,770 in 2000.

Property taxes declined from $1,480,450 to $1,437,924, and interest on city funds declined from $1,101,824 to $968,724. Plotner said interest rates in the kinds of investments the city makes dropped last year, but have increased some this year. However, he added, market instability and the world global problems could cause rates to drop in the future. No grant funds were received in 2000, while the city had $6,658 in grant funds last year.

 

"As city treasurer, I believe the City Council operates within the framework of fiscally responsible perimeters which allows many services to be provided without undue stress on the taxpayers of Lincoln," Plotner said. "As most of you realize, you can’t be all things to all people when governing a city, but you can strive to serve the majority of the citizens in an efficient and reasonable manner."

He warned the council "to be careful not to abolish sources of revenue unless replacement revenues are in hand. You must think about tomorrow when making decisions today which affect the financial stability of the city of Lincoln."

 

 

[Joan Crabb]

 

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Tour of renovated Springfield school organized by citizens group

[OCT. 18, 2000]  The Save Our Schools Citizens Committee has arranged a tour of the renovated Feitshans School in Springfield on Sunday, Oct. 22, at 3 p.m.  

Chris Stahly, the principal at Feitshans, will conduct the tour, which is part of the Save Our Schools committee's ongoing effort to help Lincoln citizens be well informed on the viability of school renovation before voting on a Nov. 7 bond referendum, according to spokesman David Lanterman.

"This gives the public an opportunity to see a fine example of a renovated school. By seeing what can be achieved through renovation, they can choose to vote no on the referendum and require that the school board reconsider the renovation option. Or they can decide to permanently destroy the Central and Lincoln Junior High School buildings," Lanterman said.  

 

Feitshans School, located at 1101 S. 15th St. in Springfield, was constructed as a high school in 1920, with renovation completed in 1987, when it became a 550-student fifth- and sixth-grade center. Renovation provided total upgrades similar to those proposed for Lincoln's schools — new electrical and mechanical systems, redesigned ground floor, refurbished auditorium and an addition with new cafeteria and ramps for building accessibility.  

 

 

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The Feitshans tour was organized by the Save Our Schools group in response to comments at last week's renovation workshop featuring Bill Latoza, principal architect for the Chicago Public Schools' $2.4 billion capital renovation program started in 1996.  

Calling on his experience with Chicago's 557 schools, Latoza noted that school renovation costs are, on average, 20 percent less than new construction, renovated buildings are more energy efficient than new ones and are expected to have a life span as long as a new building. Latoza also noted that the renovation projects met all the education goals of the school district, with over 98 percent completed without relocating any students.  

Springfield's Feitshans School can be reached by the South Grand exit off Interstate 55, proceeding to 15th Street and turning right. The school is two blocks ahead on the left side, and the tour will begin at the main entrance. Those who wish to join a car pool from Lincoln should meet in front of Central School at 2 p.m. on Sunday.  

[Save Our Schools Citizens Committee news release]


Looking for Lincoln sets master plan
to boost tourism

[OCT. 17, 2000]  A 10-point project to boost tourism in the Lincoln area has been announced by Main Street Lincoln, the group that is administering the Looking for Lincoln project. One project, making a historical documentary video, already has funding promised, Main Street Director Wendy Bell told the Lincoln City Council Monday evening. State Sen. Robert Madigan (R-Lincoln) and state Rep. John Turner (R-Atlanta) have promised $20,000 for the video from member initiative funds, she reported.

The video will have a number of uses, Bell said. It will serve as an introduction to the Abraham Lincoln sites in Lincoln and Logan County and will be shown in the Visitor’s Center that is also part of the overall plan. It can be used in schools throughout the state, shown on public television and sold to tourists to help fund the Looking for Lincoln program.

Bell said the group will not receive the funds to make the video until the spring of 2001 and will probably not have it completed until December of next year.

The building of the Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield, for which federal funding has already been approved, is expected to bring about 500,000 people to the area each year, according to the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. Bell said that if only five percent of these tourists make a stop in Lincoln and Logan County, it would mean 25,000 new visitors to the area.

"These visitors could generate hundreds of thousands of dollars for the local economy," said Jan Schumacher, a member of the Main Street Lincoln board.

 

The most expensive item on the master plan is a Visitor’s Center, with an estimated price tag of $500,000. The center would have small exhibits and sell gifts, but its focus would be to point the way to other Lincoln sites, such as the Lincoln Museum at Lincoln College and the Postville and Mount Pulaski courthouses. Bell said she thought the best location for the Visitor’s Center would be on the west side of Lincoln, near the major highway exits, where it would be easy for tourists to find.

She hopes to find grants or state funds to help construct the center, and possibly use funds from the local hotel-motel tax, which is not fully levied.

Two equally high priorities, according to Bell and Schumacher, are highway signs letting tourists know about the Lincoln sites and full-time staffing at the Postville and Mount Pulaski courthouses. The Mount Pulaski Courthouse is largely staffed by volunteers, and a group headed by Shirley Bartelmay is working on providing volunteers for Postville when it reopens later this fall. Funds for paid staff are also being sought.

 

 

 

[to top of second column in this article]

Bell pointed out that it is crucial to have highway signs directing tourists to the sites. She reports that the Illinois Department of Transportation says obtaining state highway signs would not be a problem. To obtain signs on an interstate highway, a site must have 200,000 visitors per year, but Bell’s report notes that there are other tourist sites with interstate signs that do not meet that requirement, and the group will seek more information about getting the interstate highway signs.

Other projects in the overall plan include signs and exhibits in each town or significant Lincoln site throughout Logan County, which would include the history of the site, Lloyd Ostendorf artwork and maps to other locations. These signs would be similar to the one to be erected later this month near the city’s christening site at the Amtrak depot. Projected cost is $150,000.

A guidebook with chapters that correspond to the signage and maps is also part of the plan. Cost for the initial printing of 25,000 copies is estimated at $50,000. "Self-serve" tourist information centers in Elkhart, Atlanta and downtown Lincoln, with brochures available, are on the list, at a projected cost of $3,000. A parking lot and picnic area next to Postville Courthouse is also in the plan, with a projected cost of $75,000. "Overlay" streetscapes in downtown Lincoln, which would show visitors how the street looked in Lincoln’s day, are projected at $175,000.

 

A focal point for visitors would be an Abraham Lincoln statue at a site yet to be determined. The statue would be "interactive," so visitors could sit next to it and have their pictures taken.

"I think these 10 projects should be accomplished in the next three to five years," Bell said. "Our goal is to bring more visitors to Lincoln. It is an investment in our community."

Main Street Lincoln was selected to administer Looking for Lincoln in the city of Lincoln because the program dovetails with its current mission of economic restructuring, promotion, organization and design. The group has identified three "cluster committees": the Postville, the downtown Lincoln and the Lincoln College clusters.

[Joan Crabb]

 


Announcements

Landfill to be open extended hours for leaf disposal

[OCT. 11, 2000]  Beginning Monday, Oct. 16, the Lincoln City Landfill will be open extended hours to allow residents to dispose of leaves and yard waste, according to Donnie Osborne, street superintendent. The landfill will open at 8 a.m. and remain open until 4 p.m. seven days a week, probably until mid-December, he said. Residents may bring in leaves any way they like in bags, boxes or pickup trucks but they must take the leaves out of the containers and take the containers back home with them.


Public notice

Filing dates for nomination petitions for city offices

[OCT. 10, 2000]  The office of the city clerk in Lincoln will be open for filing petitions for nomination for the Feb. 27, 2001, consolidated primary election, with petitions accepted from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 18.

Petitions will be accepted for the following city offices:

  • Mayor
  • City treasurer
  • City clerk
  • Alderman Ward 1
  • Alderman Ward 2
  • Alderman Ward 3
  • Alderman Ward 4
  • Alderman Ward 5

No petitions will be accepted before 9 a.m. or after 5 p.m.

[Juanita Josserand, city clerk]


Notice to absentee voters

[OCT. 9, 2000]  Registered voters expecting to be absent from the county on the Nov. 7 election day may vote in person at the Logan County Clerk’s Office, second floor, Courthouse, Room 20, Lincoln, from now until Nov. 6.

Registered voters expecting to be absent from the county on election day or those who are permanently disabled or incapacitated may now make application by mail to vote absentee. Applications will be received by the county clerk until Nov. 2. No ballots will be sent by mail after Nov. 2, as provided by law.

Sally J. Litterly

Logan County Clerk

Election Authority

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Logan County FY2001 budget

Totals of requested increases

[OCT. 7, 2000]  Following is a list of budget requests that were heard by the Logan County Board Finance Committee on Aug. 11, 16 and 17. These requests will be compiled by the auditor and matched with the anticipated revenue for the 2001 fiscal year (Dec. 1). The finance committee will then review these numbers, make necessary adjustments and prepare a recommendation to the entire County Board in the next month. There will be a public meeting entirely devoted to budget matters in the future.

Rod White, finance chairman, 732-4793

* Senior requests and Oasis, $80,956; CIEDC, $45,000; Rural Health Partnership, $25,000 = total of $150,000 requested; approximately $70,000 available.

* Non-mandated (County Farm Fund): Main Street Lincoln, $10,000; economic development, $25,000; soil and water, $4,000; Teen Court, $3,500 = total of $42,500 requested; approximately $16,000 available.

* Court security (open another door at courthouse): one employee, $16,640; plus metal detector, $10,000 = total of $26,640 requested

* Court request: new microphone, $1,000; increase in bailiff pay, $2,000; new judge support, $4,500 = total of $7,500 requested

* Sheriff’s Department: one additional deputy; one additional car= $120,000; parking lot resurface, $20,000

* Paramedics: new ambulance, $90,000

 

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* Superintendent of schools: if office is moved, the county will have to provide all of the rental money, $20,000

* Building and grounds: for possible new building or additional space for offices, $100,000

* Coroner: unable to work plan with paramedics or ESDA office; will house coroner’s office in funeral home until office is found elsewhere, $ ?

* Public defender: public defender’s salary, $32,422 (increased by $13,000; law says salary must be 40 percent of state's attorney’s salary, which went up this year and is expected to go up for four years); additional assistant, $15,000

* Animal control: to replace old animal-transport unit on truck, $10,000

Approximate total: $600,000

 

 


County Board committee meeting dates for October 2000

Committee

Location

Date

Time

Board of Whole Courthouse Thursday, Oct. 12 7 p.m.
Finance Courthouse Friday, Oct. 13 8 a.m.
Adjourned Board Courthouse Tuesday, Oct. 17 7 p.m.
Joint Solid Waste City Hall Wednesday, Oct. 18  7 p.m.
Special Adjourned Board Courthouse Thursday, Oct. 19 7 p.m.


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