Community and school commitment results in governor’s award

[FEB. 12, 2001]  On Feb. 8, Lincoln Elementary School District 27 hosted the School Community Council banquet. The banquet at the Restaurant at the Depot was part of an ongoing work in which District 27 teachers, leaders and parents celebrated and were honored for their commitment as a community to education.

[Click here for photos]

 A new program began at the September 1998 Lincoln Elementary School board meeting with approval of a district improvement plan that includes a School Community Council as a site-based team at each school. Each council meets twice each month.

The principal, two teachers and four parents serve on each school's School Community Council. The council focuses on areas of overlapping responsibility between the school and the home in children's learning and character development. Establishing good reading and study habits and encouraging respectful and responsible behavior are typical goals the councils set for their teachers, students and parents.

 

Honorary keynote speaker for the banquet was Dr. Eunice Greer, division administrator for reading at the Illinois State Board of Education. Greer spoke on the necessity for parents to participate in their children's education. She quoted some interesting figures indicating that the parent who reads to a child during infancy for 30 minutes a day will have a child who has heard nearly 10,000 books by the time that child gets to kindergarten. If that is cut back to 30 minutes a week, the child will have heard under 1,500 books. In less than 30 minutes weekly, a child will have been read to nearly 60 hours and will have heard fewer than 600 books. When those children enter school, the child who has heard 10,000 books will have a distinct advantage over those who have received less parental attention.

Greer suggested that parents start in infancy to sing with their children, rhyme with their children, read with their children, write with their children, draw and talk, show and talk, share and talk, do and talk, go and talk. These are the parent behaviors that will create a literate child.

 

Washington-Monroe received certification as a School Community from the Alliance for Achievement Network. Washington-Monroe is the first school in District 27 to receive certification in the program. Principal Rebecca Cecil received a plaque commemorating that certification and a framed letter from Illinois Gov. George H. Ryan.

A copy of the letter is below:


OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR

207 STATE CAPITOL

SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS 62706

GEORGE H. RYAN, GOVERNOR

January 30, 2001

Washington-Monroe Elementary School

Lincoln, IL

Dear Mrs. Cecil,

Congratulations to Washington-Monroe Elementary School for its certification by the Alliance for Achievement Network as a school community. Your school is demonstrating that teachers, parents and students can work together to see that all children learn to read, to study, and to develop a sense of responsibility and respect. Functioning as a community with clear expectations of its members, a school best achieves its purpose.

My administration is committed to goals very similar to those of Washington-Monroe. Through Illinois Reads and other initiatives, we are providing children and their parents with the tools necessary to become successful readers. We are helping children come to school ready to learn and helping parents engage their children in reading and learning. We are challenging good citizens of many walks of life to do their part to provide all children a path for success. Our children are our most precious resource and they are our personal investment in the future of our state and nation. By making education a priority, we are giving our children the tools they need to be productive and successful.

Best wishes to you, your School Community Council, and your students, teachers and parents. Washington-Monroe is a wonderful example of a school that is also a place of community, where children succeed because their parents and teachers are full partners in their education.

Sincerely,

GEORGE H. RYAN, Governor

 

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[District 27 Superintendent Robert Kidd and Washington-Monroe Principal Becky Cecil receive plaque from Dr. Eunice Greer.]

2000-2001 School Community Council members

Adams/Central

Kristi Casper

Pat Colegrove

Steven Cosby

Joe Hackett

Leonard Janet

Lisa Montcalm

Stacy Plummer

Julie Rawlings

Jeanne Scheurer

Tracy Thomas

Amy Tippett

Northwest

Cindy Aussieker

Jennifer Bone

Eldon Broster

Karen Martinez

Michelle Venneire

Marla Williams

 

Jefferson

Eldon Broster

Sue Brummell

Kathy Hawkinson

Connie Hofer

Brenda Miller

Amy Williamson

Lincoln Junior High

Keith Backes

Laura Brewer

Chris Evans

Gil Gandenberger

Kathy Litherland

Joyce Metz

Curt Nettles

Marsha Perring

Washington-Monroe

Candy Boulb

Rebecca Cecil

Jeff Cooper

Kate Ewing

Dawn Fry

Kathy Papesch

Leslie Singleton

District 27 School Board members

Shelly Allen

William Bates

Joe Brewer

Bruce Carmitchel

Leta Herrington

Marilyn Montgomery

James Wilmert

Dr. Robert Kidd, superintendent

 

There are School Community Councils throughout the country, including others in Logan County. 

[LDN/news release]


Women get their stripes at
Lincoln Correctional Center

[FEB. 9, 2001]  Lincoln Correctional Center was the epicenter of the Illinois Department of Corrections’ largest exodus of inmates, on Oct. 7. Over 600 male inmates were moved to other correctional facilities and 746 female inmates were moved into Lincoln Correctional Center in one day, bringing an end to the era of coed correctional facilities at Logan and Dixon Correctional Centers.

"Planning was the key to making the transition the success that it was," said Lincoln Correctional Center’s Warden Augustus Scott Jr.

"Our staff put one population to bed, and the next day they woke up to a totally new population. This was something that had never been done before in the state of Illinois. We did everything we had to do to ensure the continuous operation of the facility from one day to the next," he continued.

"I was pleased with the professionalism of my staff. I believe Lincoln was partly chosen due to the availability of space, the stability of its staff and the professionalism the staff has shown in handling many of the department’s other initiatives. They did extremely well with the transition," he added.

Scott also credited IDOC’s Director Donnie Synder’s dedication to this project for the smooth transition. "He ensured adequate training for his staff. This reflects the director’s commitment to the program. The director’s ideal is to cluster all of the female institutions in the central Illinois area, from intake, to programming to parole. Lincoln is a direct link to Chicago and to the other female institutions in the state like Decatur, Dwight and Kankakee. Lincoln has now been added as a link to that chain and, in the future, Hopkins Park."

Jerry Sternes, warden at Dixon Correctional Center in Dixon, said, "This initiative allows us to provide more programming options to the inmates. Isolating the two populations gives us an opportunity to provide better, more in-depth and comprehensive programming. This way we can develop our resources.

 

 

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"The inmates see the move as a positive one. As for the staff, they know that it is much easier to supervise one population," Sternes added.

Inmates perform most of the manual tasks that are needed to keep the correctional center physically operational. Both wardens agreed that the women have an opportunity to learn some real skills because they will be responsible for doing all of the jobs necessary for helping to run the institution.

Warden Scott explained that even in corrections, women have different issues than men.

He said, "When a male goes to prison there is usually a female left behind to take care of his children. When women go prison, more often than not, there is no one left behind to care for her children. Therefore there are issues of foster care, guardianship and possibly adoption that must be addressed while women are incarcerated. As a result, advocacy services had to be increased."

Other changes were those made in the visiting room to make it more child-friendly. The facility has seen an increase in volunteer services, since more women attend religious services than men. The staff has had to plan activities that women are interested in, since their statistics showed that women are less physically active than their male counterparts. They had to be more creative with activities that were geared toward women.

As a result of the transition, the Lincoln Correctional Center’s Work Camp in Springfield was reassigned to Logan Correctional Center so that it could continue to serve a male population.

[Kym C. Ammons-Scott]

 


Estimated $9 million
sewer plant upgrade planned

[FEB. 8, 2001]  Plans are moving along for the projected upgrade of Lincoln’s wastewater treatment plant, members of the Lincoln City Council learned Monday evening, when Carl Alsbach of Environmental Management Corporation (EMC) presented a progress report to the sewer treatment plant committee. EMC operates the Lincoln wastewater treatment plant, along with 22 others in Illinois.

Alsbach said that by the first week in March his firm would be able to give the city an "accurate guaranteed price" for the upgrade. The cost has been estimated at about $9 million, to be financed by a loan from the Illinois State Revolving Loan Fund. The loan will be repaid over a period of 20 years by revenue from the sewer plant.

The plant upgrade is necessary to keep the city in compliance with Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) recommendations, Alsbach said. The plant was built in the 1930s and has not had a major renovation since 1972.

At this time, the treatment plant has a waste load coming in that is "considerably higher than the plant was designed to handle," Alsbach said, although so far it is remaining in compliance with discharge limits. For example, one measure of capacity, the three-month low flow, came in at 81.88 percent of load in 1999 and even higher in 2000, he said. According to the IEPA, if the load for the three low-flow months is greater than 80 percent of design capacity, additional sewer permits could be restricted.

Although at present the treatment plant is in compliance, there is no excess capacity, Alsbach said, and if a problem did come up, it could result in a violation. A violation could mean the IEPA would say the plant cannot add any additional sewers, and growth in Lincoln would be limited.

With the upgrade, the capacity of the plant will be increased from 3.35 million gallons per day to 4.3 million gallons, according to Grant Eaton, plant manager. This will allow the plant to operate for another 20 years, based on a growth in population of one-half percent per year, he said. As much of the old plant as possible will be utilized in the upgrade.

 

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The plant upgrade has been in the works since last May, when the city submitted preliminary plans to the IEPA. Plans were resubmitted in November after corrections were made to account for the higher prison load, which is a little under 500,000 gallons per day.

If the city agrees to the guaranteed maximum price, the final design of the plant will be completed in May and submitted to the IEPA. Eaton said he hopes to be able to go out for bids early this fall and get started on construction yet this year. The actual construction will take about a year to18 months to complete, he said.

In other business, the council approved a request for repair of a brick sidewalk at 229 Peoria St., with the stipulation that the repaired area would be concrete, not brick. They also approved the petition for a handicapped parking space on the west side of 200 N. Chicago St. for Lincoln Medical Equipment. A petition for installation of curb and gutter on the north side of Second Street between South State and Jackson was tabled until the next meeting, pending further investigation.

A resolution was approved honoring Captain Roger Adams, who is retiring after serving 25 years with the Lincoln Fire Department.

[Joan Crabb]


Children invited to a party
at the courthouse

[FEB. 8, 2001]  Children are invited to the Logan County Courthouse on Saturday, Feb. 10, at 10 a.m. to attend a birthday party honoring Abraham Lincoln. They may come dressed as Abe or Mary Lincoln. Scheduled activities include meeting Mr. Lincoln, free cake and ice cream, music by the Second Baptist Church Choir, and a performance by the Interveterans Council color guard and firing squad. A program will be presented by Ron Keller from the Lincoln College Museum. This event is being sponsored by the Abraham Lincoln Railsplitting Association.


Lincoln-born Scott Altman to be
'cap com' for next crew

[FEB. 7, 2001]  Lincoln-born astronaut Scott Altman will be the "cap com" for the next space shuttle, scheduled to launch tonight at 5:11 CST. As cap com, Lt. Cmdr. Altman will be keeping his feet planted on the earth and communicating with the astronauts going into space. To learn more about this Pekin-raised local celebrity, go here: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/archives/sts-90/crew/altman.html.

Atlantis set to deliver International Space Station's Destiny

NASA begins its 2001 science odyssey with the launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis, now scheduled for liftoff at 6:11 p.m. EST, Feb. 7. The STS-98 mission will carry the first laboratory to the International Space Station. The American-made Destiny Laboratory Module is the cornerstone for space-based research aboard the orbiting platform.

[NASA]

 

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You can watch the launch at this address:

http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/video/
shuttle/sts-98/html/fd1.html

You can learn more about the mission here:

http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/

http://www.shuttlepresskit.com/STS-98/media.htm


LCCS group attends March for Life

[FEB. 7, 2001]  On Jan. 22, 44 people (33 women, 11 men), including six faculty and staff members, from Lincoln Christian College and Seminary traveled to Washington, D.C. to participate in the 28th annual March for Life.

Each year Imago Dei, the student pro-life group at LCCS, sponsors student, faculty and staff participation in the March for Life. Since 1989, the group has carried the March for Life flags near the head of the march. This year an estimated 150,000 pro-life supporters from every state and many faith-based and non-faith-based groups attended the march.

Imago Dei was begun by LCCS alumnus and former congressman Bill Redmond while he was a student at LCCS.

For the past 12 years, Bob Rea, professor of church history at Lincoln Christian Seminary, has led the group in the Washington, D.C. march. He explains that the March for Life is a "legal and peaceful opportunity for concerned Americans to ask our nation's leaders to stop the legalized termination of innocent human beings."

 

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He adds, "Being opposed to abortion is a by-product of our real concern — saving the lives of mothers and babies. What we want is to stop the deaths of mothers and babies, because we believe both mothers and babies are equally valuable and should be equally protected."

March for Life is a "non-profit, non-partisan, non-sectarian organization, which seeks to assure that our laws protect the right to life of each human being."

For more information, log onto www.marchforlife.org/. 

[LCCS news release]


Fire chief expresses appreciation; firemen awarded

[FEB. 6, 2001]  At Monday night’s council meeting, Lincoln Fire Chief Ken Ebelherr read a letter of thanks to all those who helped the Fire Department fight the Scully Building fire, and he presented letters of recognition to the Department’s C shift members, who were on duty when the fire broke out.

The letter read:

"On behalf of the Mayor, the members of the Lincoln City Council, the members of the Lincoln Fire Department and the people of Lincoln, I would like to extend my sincere thanks to the following organizations and individuals that provided us with assistance on January 16 and 17 at the fire at the Scully Building:

"The Lincoln Rural Fire Protection District for their aid at the scene of the fire; the Atlanta Fire Department for providing an engine and personnel at our station to ensure the rest of the city had fire protection while we were at the scene of the Scully Building; the Lincoln Police Department, Logan County Sheriff’s Department, officers and dispatchers who worked throughout the night and into the morning ensuring the safety of bystanders, handling traffic and answering our radio requests; the Lincoln Street Department for providing sand for the icy streets caused by the water runoff and barricades to reroute traffic safely from the area; the Logan County Paramedic Association for providing paramedics and ambulance service at the scene to treat injuries and provide a rehabilitation area for firefighters; the local Emergency Services and Disaster Agency and Red Cross for food and drinks that they provided; Cilco and Illinois American Water Companies who had crews and representatives at the scene to provide services as needed; Jim Oliver, an investigator with the Illinois State Fire Marshall who has worked with us in the past and has provided invaluable assistance on this fire; Sorrento’s Pizza for providing us with food and drinks the night of the fire; Randy Heinzel of Heinzel Trucking for his help in maintaining the vehicles at the scene of the fire; Skip Baker from Farm Services for providing fuel for the vehicles at the scene of the fire.

 

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"For a number of days after the fire I was made aware from various people of the number of prayer groups who, aware of the fire that night, had called each other or who had gathered to pray for the safety of the firefighters. Standing here representing all the fire fighters involved that evening, I can only say thank you, though a simple thank you seems inadequate for the care and kindness you have shown us.

"I apologize if I have failed to remember and recognize anyone. I know that everyone who helped us that evening, whether an organization or an individual, did so not because they sought recognition, but because of their sincere desire to help when help is needed."

Chief Ebelherr then presented a letter of recognition honoring the C shift who responded to the fire, made sure all residents of the apartments on the upper floors were out of the building, and then remained in the building fighting the fire until the fire went through the roof and it was no longer safe for them to be inside.

 


Asst. Ch. Don Fulk

Lt. Bob Dunovsky

Jason Van Winkle

Jake Lessen

Chris Harding

Kendall Fitzpatrick

[These firefighters laid their lives on the line going inside the building to check for tenants and then fighting the fire from the inside for a time.]

Those named were Assistant Chief Don Fulk, Lt. Bob Dunovsky, and firemen Jason Van Winkle, Jake Lessen, Chris Harding and Kendall Fitzpatrick.

[Joan Crabb]


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