Wednesday, July 28, 2010
 
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CITY BRIEFS

More downtown parking, sweeps at the fairgrounds, downtown streetscape project and more

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[July 28, 2010]  Tuesday evening, in addition to discussing how to control spending by city departments, the Lincoln City Council, led by Buzz Busby as mayor pro tem, took on a few other topics, including increased parking in the downtown area, disposal of lawn waste by contractors and a puzzling second-mortgage situation involving the city and a local business.

Downtown area to gain four new parking spaces

When the parking spaces for the downtown area of Lincoln were originally laid out, there was a gas station on the northeast corner of the intersection of McLean and Pulaski streets. Motorists could gain access to the station from McLean on the north side of the intersection and from Pulaski just east of the intersection.

Today that area is an office complex that houses, among others, Country Companies Insurance and the Forman Law Office. The driveway is a parking lot for those businesses, and on the south side, facing Pulaski, there are parking blocks that have effectively closed the driveway to traffic.

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City engineer Mark Mathon said he had received an e-mail suggesting that the city could stripe parking spaces into that area. Mathon said that doing so would involve re-striping the traffic lanes on the east side of the intersection, but if the city would do so, indeed they could gain possibly four parking spaces there.

City attorney Bill Bates did some quick research to determine if that area had ever been officially designated as "no parking" and found that it had not. Because of that, no ordinance is required to establish the new spaces.

Tracy Jackson, superintendent of streets and alleys, told the council that special equipment will have to be rented at a cost of just under $600 in order to mark the spaces and re-stripe the traffic lanes.

Logan County Fair offers to pay for street sweeping

Alderman Marty Neitzel, who chairs the street and alley committee, announced that she had an offer from the Logan County Fair board to pay for street sweeping services at the fair next week. The offer is in the amount of $436.14 and will pay for services beginning Aug. 4 and running through Aug. 9.

Busby asked whether that was a sufficient amount and Jackson said that it covered man-hours, equipment and travel time.

Busby asked about disposal of the waste, and Jackson said that they would add it to the already established pile.

Busby explained this, saying the public may not know that street sweepings are considered hazardous waste and cannot be deposited in the city landfill.

Permission to submit grant applications for downtown streetscape projects

Neitzel said she had received an e-mail from Mayor Keith Snyder, who is on vacation, asking that permission to apply for two grants be placed on the voting agenda.

The grants include one for $675,000 through the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and another from the Illinois Department of Transportation in the amount of $1,875,000, which if awarded, would be used for the downtown streetscape plan that was unveiled earlier this year by the mayor and Wanda Lee Rohlfs of Main Street Lincoln.

Bates told the council that there would be a cost involved in applying for the grants, amounting to about $2,000 per application. He said that one of these $2,000 fees has already been covered by a private donor, and Snyder is hoping that the second one will be covered in a similar manner.

Alderwoman Melody Anderson, who chairs the finance committee, also noted that if no donor comes forward for the second application fee, there is money in the mayor's budget to cover this.

Hulett expands on comments by assistant fire chief

In recent meetings Busby has publicly voiced concerns about the Lincoln Fire Department's budget and what he perceived as being excess spending.

During a somewhat heated discussion two weeks ago, he suggested that perhaps one solution to the problem would be to order the fire department to stop responding to emergency calls with the Logan County Paramedic Association.

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Since that time, the fire department, through Assistant Chief Steve Dahm, who acted on behalf of the vacationing Chief Kent Hulett, has noted to the council the importance of their EMT services to the citizens of the city.

At last week's meeting Dahm recounted that the fire department had resuscitated three individuals in the previous week.

Tuesday evening, Hulett expanded a bit on that report. He said that being able to resuscitate a patient on the scene is very unusual and that statistically only 10 percent of such patients survive. Hulett said that of the three patients, two survived. (Due to Illinois privacy laws, no further information can be given.)

He said that this level of success was achieved through a cooperative effort, with the fire department being first on the scene, the Logan County Paramedics responding quickly and then the efforts of the emergency service providers at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital.

When Hulett finished speaking, Busby said, "If you're wondering why the fire department was the only ones there, the three units of the EMT were in Springfield, so our fire department is the only backup this city has."

Bates explains a situation with a second mortgage on a business property

In the mid-1980s the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity awarded grants to municipalities for the purpose of investing in their local businesses, either through new business startup or existing business expansion.

The grant allowed the city to issue loans to business owners with a payback contract typical of a mortgage or second mortgage.

Tuesday evening Bates discussed a problem with one of these loans.

Being careful not to use a name, he said that in 1986 the city had made a loan to two individuals for the expansion of their business. The city had then acquired a second mortgage on a piece of business property as collateral. The business is now closing and the property in question is for sale.

The owners have discovered that the city of Lincoln still holds the second mortgage. Bates said he has done a great deal of searching on this and can find no record of the loan being paid back. He also noted that he can find nothing that indicates the loan was not paid back.

Furthermore, the current owner of the property cannot produce proof one way or the other.

Jackson said that there are boxes of documents from the city warehoused in one of the street department buildings. He and Bates have done some checking there and will continue going through the boxes on Wednesday with the hopes of finding some documentation regarding this situation.

Bates also noted that if the note has not been paid, there will be very little if anything the city can do about it.

[By NILA SMITH]

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