LDN
readers respond to the question, "What is your opinion
concerning this presidential election?"
[NOV.
11, 2000] The
following are responses to the question, "What is your opinion
concerning this presidential election?"
|
First of all Gore conceded
the election to Bush, then he takes it back. Now that is what we
call an indian giver. If you tell some body that you are the winner,
then how is it that can take it back. Now I hear that all counties
in Florida are in and Bush still leads in the count, but Gore says
Bush is not the winner. Sounds to me as if he is a sore loser. Win
or lose this is going to cause hard feelings for a long time. I
think its time to as they say drop the hatchet and get on with
business as usual.
George
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
I
check the news daily
To
see 'What's the score?'
Is it
George Bush,
Or
is it Al Gore?
No move here, and no
move there,
There's a lot
of similarity;
I guess we'll be slow
to move
'cause of too
much irregularity!
But I'm here to say,
This is no
laughing matter;
Sounds like the
progressive lawyer's
Pockets will get
fatter and fatter.
We are people who have
a choice,
Our nation
provides us that freedom;
We'll either be on the
losing side,
Or the side who
is sure to defeat 'em.
But whoever comes out
the winner;
Let's not
haggle and push,
But get behind our new
leader
Whether it's Al
Gore or President Bush.
Maxine
Seggelke
|
|
Local
responses to the election process
[NOV.
10, 2000]
LDN
asked several Lincoln residents about their opinion on the election
process.
|
Question: How do you
feel about the Florida election recount?
Ashley Steffens (freshman, LCHS): It's wrong.
It's been like this a long time. Everybody else did it right. They
should not be able to change their votes. You only get to vote once.
Mike Kruse (former Lincolnite, moving back):
They are trying to open it to controversy because it was so close.
Do we need to re-look at how we do this? Ya, I think we do!
I'm not taking sides for either candidate here.
We also need to rethink the votes coming from overseas. They have
a right to vote, but let's make them be turned in sooner.
I also think the press made this ugly."
|
Viola Rickey: It's not the first time we've
had problems in Florida (referring to election process). They
(officials) need to do something!
Anonymous woman: I suppose it was honest. They threw out
19,000 votes though. That's 19,000 people who are disenfranchised. I
would be mad … if it happened to me!
Ginger Musick: They need to finish. My kids ask me every
morning, "Do we have a new president?" I don't know what
to tell them.
No recount. There was a sample ballot in their paper. If they
didn't understand it, they should have asked questions before
voting. Why is it a problem now?
Gore should be a big guy and say, "You won," and step
down.
|
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Custom Cleaners
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5th
Street Wash House has closed and will soon reopen at the new
location.
Broadway
Cleaners remains open during this time. |
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|
City
will purchase
tax-delinquent property
[NOV.
9, 2000]
The
Lincoln City Council agreed to purchase a tax-delinquent property at
the corner of Tremont and Sherman streets for $1,127.85, in the hope
that it can recoup a lien it holds on the property. The city has
spent between $6,000 and $7,000 demolishing two houses, one facing
Tremont and one facing Sherman, that had been abandoned and were
falling apart.
|
Although
the law says any lien to a municipality must be paid before a deed
can be issued to a buyer at a tax sale, city attorney Jonathan
Wright said he did not believe any buyer would pay enough for the
property for the city to get its money back. The property would
probably sit vacant and the city would incur the cost of maintaining
it, he told the council.
Once
it owns the property, the city can sell it and put it back on the
tax rolls, Wright said, and will not have the expense of mowing it.
The council agreed unanimously to authorize the purchase.
The
council also accepted the low bid of $221,142.93 from R. A. Cullinan
and Son of Tremont to resurface Union Street from Woodlawn to Fourth
Street. This was $76,281 below the state engineer’s estimate. The
work, paid for by motor fuel tax funds, will begin next spring.
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
The
council heard a letter from Mary Haynes, city clerk of Peoria,
noting that Melanie Riggs, Lincoln’s deputy city clerk, has been
elected secretary of the Central Illinois Municipal Clerk’s
Organization (CIMCO). Citing Riggs’ leadership skills, Haynes said
the city of Lincoln was "fortunate to have her as its deputy
city clerk."
Fire
Chief Ken Ebelherr told the council that the mandatory probationary
period of one year for firefighter Chris Harding was completed and
that he was now a permanent member of the city’s fire department.
Prior
to the council’s regular meeting, the ordinance and zoning
committee completed their review of the city’s proposed new liquor
code. The number of categories for licenses has been expanded from
four to 11. Before approving the new code, the committee will send
copies to all 34 liquor license holders in the city and have a
meeting to hear their comments. The meeting is set for Thursday,
Dec. 7, at 6 p.m.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
Click
here for local figures on motor fuel taxes
|
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Mayor
Ritter will serve as circus ringmaster
[NOV.
9, 2000]
Lincoln
Mayor Joan Ritter may be "cracking the whip" at 3 p.m.
next Saturday, but not in the city of Lincoln. Instead she will be
serving as honorary ringmaster at the Ansar Shrine Circus to be at
the Prairie Capital Convention Center in Springfield. There will be
six performances, and the one on Saturday afternoon has been
designated as the city of Lincoln’s show.
The
Ansar Shrine 5631 of Springfield is staging the family-oriented
circus to help support the 19 Shriners Hospitals for Children and
their three Burn Institutes. The Shrine hospitals offer medical care
free of charge to children who need it.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
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Lincoln, IL
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Two
new schools in Lincoln’s future
District 27 voters approve
school referendum
[NOV.
8, 2000]
By
a comfortable margin, voters in Lincoln Elementary School District
27 approved building two new schools to replace Central School and
Lincoln Junior High School. The final tally in Tuesday’s election
was 3,677 for the proposition and 2,042 against. Passage of the
referendum, which called for issuing $4.1 in bonds and demolishing
the two existing schools, was required for the district to receive
an $8,318,181 state grant to complete the $12 million building
project.
|
The
battle over the issue of new schools versus restoration of the
existing ones has been evident in recent weeks, with signs
supporting both positions sprouting up in yards all over the
district and a barrage of articles and letters to the editors in
local news media.
A
citizens’ group called Save Our Schools (SOS) has opposed
demolition of the two buildings from the beginning, maintaining that
the schools should be preserved because they have historic value and
are part of the fabric of the community. The group supporting new
school buildings, which includes many teachers in the district,
pointed out the inadequacies of the present buildings and the
problems of restoring the schools, in particular what to do with
students during the renovation.
Even
after the school board voted to demolish the schools, the SOS group
continued to seek ways to save them, maintaining that the district
must have a review by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency
before the referendum.
District
27 Superintendent Robert Kidd, one of the many people who came to
the Logan County Courthouse to watch the returns come in, said he
was "very pleased" with the outcome. "A lot of people
put in a lot of their own time and money to assure quality buildings
for the children in Lincoln’s future."
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
Now
that the referendum has passed, the project will go into the actual
design phase, according to Superintendent Kidd. Architect Dave
Leonatti of Springfield will confer with teachers before coming up
with a floor plan for the new schools. Several field trips are being
planned to let teachers visit schools in the Illinois and Indiana
area that were designed by Leonatti’s firm and by another
well-known school construction firm. "Teachers can see what
actually exists in brand-new schools. We want to make sure the plan
we have is the best it can be," Kidd said.
Before
any demolition takes place, the district will build a replacement
for Central School on the Seventh Street side of the present site.
Construction will probably begin in the summer of 2001, with a
timetable of 18 months to two years.
When
that phase is finished, Central School students will be moved into
the new building, while Lincoln Junior High students will be moved
to Central. The present Junior High School will come down and a new
one will be built on the same site. The last phase of the
construction will be demolishing Central. The whole project will
take about four years, according to Superintendent Kidd.
When
the new buildings are completed, all students in the district in
grades six through eight will go to the junior high school, and all
elementary schools will be kindergarten through fifth grades.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
Lincoln
Ag Center
1441 State
Route 10 East
Lincoln, IL
217-732-7948
We
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Blue
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111 S. Sangamon
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Open
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Open for Dinner Tues.-Sat.
Click
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menu and gift items |
25
Cents per
Gallon
Self-vendored
reverse osmosis water
The
Culligan
Fresh Water Station
318
N. Chicago St., Lincoln |
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|
Voyles,
Griffin win County Board seats
[NOV.
8, 2000]
Two
new members will take their seats on the Logan County Board in
December to replace two who stepped down this year, but neither will
be a Democrat. Jim Griffin and Dale A. Voyles, both of Lincoln and
both listed as Republicans, along with five incumbents also listed
as Republicans, edged out Democratic contender Daniel W. White of
Beason.
|
White
and incumbent Clifford "Sonny" Sullivan of Lincoln were in
a close race during much of the evening, with White sometimes
pulling ahead. But the final tally put Sullivan back on the board
with 8,007 votes to White’s 7,943, a margin of only 64 votes.
Leading
vote-getter was Lloyd Hellman of rural Emden, polling 8,856. Roger
W. Bock of rural Williamsville came in second with 8,793, closely
followed by newcomer Voyles with 8,765. Paul E. Gleason of Lincoln
drew 8,552 votes; David Hepler of Lincoln garnered 8,477; and
newcomer Griffin won 8,045 votes.
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
The
two board members who will step down next month are Darrell Deverman
of Atlanta, who is the present board chairman, and Richard A. Hurley
of Lincoln. The board will hold its reorganization meeting on Dec.
4. Traditionally, new members are sworn in at that meeting. Also, the
board will elect a new chairman and vice-chairman and assign new
committee appointments.
The
present board will have two more meetings: its work session on Nov.
16 and its official meeting Nov. 21, when it must vote final
approval of the 2001 budget.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
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#5 Arcade Building, Lincoln |
Claire's
Needleworks
and Frame Shop
"We
Frame It All"
On the square
in downtown Lincoln
217-732-8811
M-F 10-5 Sat 10-4
cmstitches@aol.com |
Family
Custom Cleaners
is now open
at 621 Woodlawn.
5th
Street Wash House has closed and will soon reopen at the new
location.
Broadway
Cleaners remains open during this time. |
|
|
Election
brings folks out
to courthouse rotunda
[NOV.
8, 2000]
In
spite of the news of a presidential election "too close to
call" breaking minute by minute on national television, an
estimated 600 to 700 Logan County folks found the time to come to
the courthouse to see what was happening in two local races. They
thronged the rotunda watching runners post results on a huge
blackboard, visiting with friends, and watching their children and
grandchildren get acquainted with the local election process.
|
Many
students from area schools were in evidence, most with pencil and
paper getting autographs of local politicians, even those not on the
ballot in this election. Mayor Joan Ritter, Sheriff Anthony Soloman,
and other officials were signing their names along with the Logan
County Board members who were running for office.
[District 27 Superintendent Robert Kidd speaks
with Jim Ash on Media One when a sure "yes" vote in favor of proposed
referendum was in.]
Among
them were fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth graders from Zion
Lutheran School earning extra credit, along with many students in
Joe Hackett’s fifth grade class at Central School.
"I
told them we would cut down on assignments Tuesday and Wednesday if
they would come up here and get the feel of the political
process," Hackett said. "I wanted them to get the
autographs of our local politicians as a way to get involved in the
process."
Sheriff
Soloman, who gave young visitors to his office plastic
"badges," whistles and refrigerator magnets, said,
"It’s good for kids to get out and see how the process
works."
Other
young people were involved in the process, too, serving as
"runners" for County Clerk Sally Litterly as votes from
the 44 precincts came in. Autumn Feldman, now a student at Western
Illinois State University, who has worked summers for Litterly, was
one of three carrying ballots from the first-floor room where votes
were being counted to the county clerk’s office on the second
floor, as well as posting results on the blackboard. Also helping out
were Megan Sullivan, a student at Lincoln Community High School, and
Kelsey O’Donahue, an eighth grader at Carroll Catholic School.
[Media One production crew members Celeste Rogers, Beth
Hoffert and Bill White wait patiently as election results dwindle
down around 11 p.m.]
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
[Students from Zion Lutheran School were among
those at the courthouse last night watching election returns. Here
Allicent Pech, Charles Johnson, teacher Steve Schumacher, Nikki
Richards and Amy Schumacher take a break from watching the board.]
Soloman
estimated the crowd, at its peak, was six to seven hundred, but
noted that it began melting away after the vote tallies showed the
results of the District 27 referendum. "When they found out how
lopsided the vote was, they started going home." The vote to
pass a $4.1 million bond issue to build two new schools passed 3,677
to 2,042, and totals posted during the evening showed the
"yes" votes in each precinct comfortably leading the
"no" votes. School district officials and teachers were
among those who watched anxiously as the referendum votes were
tallied.
"I’m
glad to see such a big turnout for an election which was mostly
uncontested," Soloman said. For many of the races, including
state senator, state representative, circuit clerk, state’s
attorney and coroner, there were no Democratic candidates on the
ballot.
[Mike Fak and Jim Ash provide live coverage of
the Logan County election over Media One.]
The
one contested race, for seven seats on the Logan County Board,
listed eight candidates. The first seven on the ballot, all
Republicans, won over the lone Democrat, whose name was at the
bottom. Several County Board members stayed until the last ballots
had been counted at about 11:30 p.m. By that time, the number of
people watching the tally had dwindled to 20 or so, and yawning
deputies were patiently waiting to see them out and lock the doors.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
National
election results
Click
here for state-by-state results
(as posted by LDN on
Thursday, Nov. 9)
|
|
Election
results in Logan County
Posted Wednesday, Nov. 8, with all
precincts reporting
Click
here
|
|
Announcements
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Notice
of Open Burn Code released
by Fire Department
Open Burning
code for the City of Lincoln
BOCA National
Fire Prevention Code 1996 Chapter 4 City Code Book Fire Regulations Chapter 3
BOCA
F-403.4.3 OPEN
BURNING PROHIBITED: The code official shall prohibit open burning that will
be offensive or objectionable due to smoke or odor emissions when atmospheric
conditions or local circumstances make such fires hazardous. The code official
shall order the extinguishments, by the land owner or the fire department, of
any open burning that creates or adds to a hazardous or objectionable situation.
F-403.5
LOCATION OF OPEN BURNING: Shall not be less than 50 feet from any structure.
F-403.7
ATTENDANCE: Any open burning shall be constantly attended until the fire is
extinguished. A water supply such as buckets of water or a connected and charged
garden hose shall be available for immediate utilization.
CITY CODE BOOK
Chapter 3 Fire regulations
5-3-2 FIRE ON
PAVEMENTS: Fires are not allowed on blacktop streets, alleys or concrete
sidewalks ($25 fine)
5-3-4 BURNING
IN THE CITY: E-1 recreational fires shall contact the Lincoln Fire
Department and notify them of the date and time of the wiener roast. No garbage
shall be burned and burning must be consistent with other laws.
E-2: From
October 2 through May 31 between 7:00 A.M . and 5: 00 P.M. residents are
allowed to burn landscape waste only. (Leaves, trees, tree trimmings, branches,
stumps, brush, weeds, grass, grass and yard trimmings only)
Fines for
violations of the following codes are a minimum of $15 issued by fire crews
handling complaints and illegal fires.
Persons
complaining about fires must sign a complaint with the Fire Department before
extinguishments of legal fires is carried out. No fines will be issued to
persons burning with in the boundaries of the code. The persons burning will be
advised of the signed complaint and asked to extinguish the fire or the Fire
Department will extinguish the fire.
|
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Ag Center
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Route 10 East
Lincoln, IL
217-732-7948
We
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Click
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Blue
Dog Inn
111 S. Sangamon
217-735-1743
Open
for Lunch Mon.-Sat.
Open for Dinner Tues.-Sat.
Click
here to view our
menu and gift items |
25
Cents per
Gallon
Self-vendored
reverse osmosis water
The
Culligan
Fresh Water Station
318
N. Chicago St., Lincoln |
|
|
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]
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