Fund-raiser in progress

Safe House for women
to open in Lincoln

[NOV. 16, 2000]  A shelter for women who are victims of domestic violence will open in the Lincoln area on Dec. 1, according to Lincoln Police Officer Diana Short.  The For My Sister Safe House for Battered Women is a place where a woman can go to be protected, collect her thoughts and think about the next step she needs to take, Short said. The woman may stay at the Safe House several days or longer if necessary.

As a fund-raiser for the Safe House project, there will be a drawing on Nov. 30. Prize is an overnight stay at Jumer’s Chateau in Bloomington, complete with dinner and breakfast the next morning. Jumer’s has volunteered to donate the stay so that all funds from the drawing will go directly to the Safe House, Short said.

Tickets for the drawing can be purchased at Qik-N-Ez, Pete’s Hardware, Dick Logan’s Auto Care Center, Mitchell-Newhouse Lumber Company, Wilson Amish Furniture, Mustard Moon Gift Shop and from Mike Fak, 732-9561. Information on tickets is also available from members of the Lincoln Woman’s Club by calling Nancy Amberg, club president, at 732-7680, or Patricia Hart, chairman of the domestic violence committee, 732-5465.

 

Short has been working on getting a safe house set up for approximately six months. "Prior to this we haven’t had any place to send these women. We have had to rely on relatives, and the woman’s partner probably knows who they are."

Short said that after Dec. 1 any woman who feels that she is threatened by her partner can call the Lincoln Police Department and be helped to get to the Safe House. If she does not have transportation, the Police Department will make some arrangement to get her there. She may bring her children but may not bring pets.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

There will be an advocate on hand 24 hours a day while a woman is in the shelter, and counseling and a support group will be available to help her through this transition period.

Short, who has been a member of the Police Department for more than three years, said she saw the need for a shelter in Lincoln. Sojourn, a statewide organization, has shelters in Springfield, but often women have to be turned away because there is no room.

The present Safe House is operated entirely by funds raised by its board of directors, which include Diana and John Short, Tina Merchant, Steve Snodgrass, Curtis Sutterfield, Harlyene Callahan, Larry Adams and Dawn Wells. Short said many local organizations and individuals have helped with donations, and donations are always welcome.

 

She also said the Safe House is looking for advocates to come in and stay with the women who take shelter there. Advocates must be women without a criminal record who have transportation to get to the site. Each advocate will be on a roster and will know well ahead of time when she is needed, Short said.

[Joan Crabb]

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District 27 sets policy
for home-schooled students

[NOV. 16, 2000]  Should students who are home schooled be allowed to participate in extracurricular activities? That question occupied members of the School District 27 board at their regular meeting Wednesday evening. After some discussion, the board agreed that home-schooled students who also attend District 27 classes for half a day, not including lunch, will be eligible to participate in after-school activities, including athletics, music programs, scholastic bowl and drama.

Superintendent Robert Kidd said he does not believe the district can legally ban home-schooled students from these activities, but he would like to see them spend at least half their class time in a district school before allowing them to participate.

According to Curt Nettles, principal of Lincoln Junior High, who attended a seminar on home schooling recently, the Illinois Elementary School Association has recommended each school district develop its own policy on this question.

He said, however, that any home-schooled students would have to meet eligibility requirements just as full-time students do. They would have to be passing all District 27 classes as well as their home-school work before they could be allowed in the after-school programs. "We would have to approve the part of the curriculum they are not taking from us. It would be a lot of work," Nettles said.

"When the paperwork comes in, someone has to grade it," board member Marilyn Montgomery agreed.

Superintendent Kidd noted that today, "Public education is perceived as being a right."

Board member Joe Brewer pointed out, however, that, "To those attending school now, we’ve always viewed extracurricular activities as a privilege."

 

The board directed Superintendent Kidd to draft an addition to board policy requiring the half-time attendance and bring it back for approval at the Dec. 20 meeting.

At present the school has three students who are primarily home schooled but are attending one class per day in the district. One student attends an art class, another is in band and a third takes physical education. The new policy will not affect them unless they wish to participate in extracurricular activities.

 

In other business, the board heard that the estimated tax levy this year will be $2,558,885, which allows for this year’s annual rate of inflation of 2.7 percent plus estimated taxes on $659,000 of new property in the district. A public hearing on the proposed levy will be held immediately before the regular Dec. 20 board meeting.

Elaine Knight, school district librarian, gave a presentation to the board about the State School Library Grant, which comes from the secretary of state’s office and will bring the district about $900 this year.

"Each year we identify something that needs beefing up," she said. "This year we are going to purchase science trade books." Trade books, she pointed out, are books that can be bought in a bookstore, not textbooks. "We are going through trade book lists and selecting books from each grade level. We will also use some of the district budget to purchase the science books."

 

[to top of second column in this article]

The board learned that 29 district students took part in the state speech contest Nov. 22, and 19 of them received first-place ratings.

Board member Bruce Carmitchel suggesting moving the starting time for sports events to 4:45 p.m.. Games now sometimes start at 6 or 6:30 p.m., making a very late evening for students who have homework, he noted. Curt Nettles, athletic director, said he would look into the matter to see if there would be a problem getting officials and report back to the board.

Nettles said the district is dropping out of the Mid-State Conference next year because of the distance Lincoln students would have to travel to play some of the schools that have been recently added to the conference, such as Sullivan and Shelbyville.

"We will still be competing with some of the same towns, and we can still play in that state regional and sectional tournaments. We will just have to make up our own schedule," he said.

The board also directed Superintendent Kidd to initiate the review by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency (IHPA), which is mandated by the state of Illinois before Central School and Lincoln Junior High School can be torn down and replaced with new buildings. Superintendent Kidd will direct district architect Dave Leonatti to contact the IHPA.

 

Superintendent Kidd also announced that the first of at least three field trips for District 27 teachers to view newly constructed schools has been set for Dec. 9. Teachers will tour Peoria Heights Elementary School, which was built by the Springfield firm that has been hired by the district: Melotte, Morse and Leonatti. Teachers are invited to provide input to the architect about what they want in the new schools that were approved by district voters on Nov. 7.

 

The board also approved the resignation of Darryl Davis as a teacher of behavior-disorder students at Lincoln Junior High School (LJHS), hired Tina Dale as bus monitor through the end of the school year, hired Bev Wunderlin as sixth-grade teacher at Washington-Monroe effective Jan. 2, 2001, hired Ashley Conrady as head volleyball coach at LJHS, hired Courtney Rehmann as assistant volleyball coach at LJHS, and hired Jeff Wunderlin as timer for girls and boys basketball.

[Joan Crabb]

Robert Prunty
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City Council is told
recycling costs are up

[NOV. 15, 2000]  The cost of recycling in Logan County may going up, Kenneth Schwab, director of the Logan County Joint Solid Waste Management Agency, told the Lincoln City Council at its work session Tuesday. The company that takes the county’s recycled material, Lake Area Recycling Services of Springfield, is charging dumping fees for the first time, which will add about $10,000 to the yearly expense.

Schwab said the new charges have been added because "the recycling economy is in bad shape right now." As of Nov. 1, Lake Area Recycling began charging $75 per dump of compartmented boxes, and as of Jan. 1, 2001, will charge $25 per dump of other material (co-mingled plastic, tin, aluminum and newspapers).

Schwab said the Solid Waste Management Agency has a surplus of at least $10,000, which will carry it through the coming year, but he wanted to give the council "fair warning" of what the situation is.

"We started with Lake Area because they were not charging dumping fees," Schwab said, "but we were just living on borrowed time." However, Lake Area prices are still a lot less than those of other companies which accept recycled material, he told the board.

At present, the city of Lincoln and all other municipalities in Logan County are paying $1.50 per capita twice yearly for the recycling services, based on 1990 census figures. For the city, that amounts to $11,563.50 twice yearly. If the fee were raised to $2, the city’s share would be $15,418. The budget of the Solid Waste Management Agency is about $53,000, of which 20 percent will be the new dumping costs, Schwab said.

 

 

[to top of second column in this article]

"I’m proud to say that every community in Logan County has recycling going on, even unincorporated areas," Schwab told the board. The recycling program is mandated by the state of Illinois.

A meeting of the Solid Waste Management Agency will be tonight at 7 at City Hall, and a discussion of the new fees is on the agenda. The agency consists of representatives of the participating Logan County communities, which include, along with the city of Lincoln and Logan County, Atlanta, Emden, Broadwell, Elkhart, Hartsburg, Latham, Middletown, Mount Pulaski, New Holland and San Jose.

Meetings are on the third Wednesday of every month.

[Joan Crabb]

Robert Prunty
Local cruise and travel consultant

A member of the
American Society of Travel Agents

509 Woodlawn Road Lincoln
217-732-3486

Click here to e-mail Robert Prunty

ABE LINCOLN

PHARMACY

Just inside the ALMH front door

Jim White, R.Ph.

"We Answer Your Medication Questions."

Click here to visit our website

Tell a friend
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Parking bans, stop signs
recommended to council

[NOV. 15, 2000]  Now that street renovation work in the city of Lincoln is nearly finished for the year, new parking restrictions and placement of stop signs will be reviewed by the City Council. Police Chief Richard Ludolph and Mark Mathon, city engineer, made several recommendations at last night’s council work session.

Mathon recommended that parking be restricted on some city streets because, with the addition of curbs, the streets are now too narrow. He recommended not allowing parking on the west side of Gavin Street and on the north side of North Street. On Tremont Street, because of the number of entrances on the north side, he suggested allowing parking on the south side only.

 

He recommended a complete parking ban on Jackson Street between Fifth and Sixth streets, the location of Jefferson School. He also suggested restricting parking on either side of State Street between Sixth and Seventh streets north of the alley. On State Street between Fifth and Sixth streets, he recommended a parking ban on the west side. He also recommended restricting parking completely on Wichita Street east of the alley to Kankakee Street.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

Mathon, Chief Ludolph, and Donnie Osborne, street superintendent, all recommended a four-way stop instead of the present two-way stop at Eighth and State streets because of the amount of traffic at that intersection and a jog on Eighth Street that makes it hard to see oncoming traffic.

Police Chief Richard Ludolph said he recommended keeping State Street south from Fifth to Fourth streets one way, as it is now, because the street is too narrow for two-way traffic.

He also recommended signs on intersecting streets so that State is a through street from Sixth to Eighth and also from Eighth to Eleventh.

No recommendation was made about a solution to traffic problems at the intersection of Union Street and Lincoln Avenue. Chief Ludolph said he would like to do more research before making a suggestion.

[Joan Crabb]


A thief in the night

[NOV. 15, 2000]  This morning at 4:19, police received a call that the Sheley Truck Wash at 2821 Woodlawn had been robbed. The window in the door was broken to gain entry into the building. According to the owner, a cash drawer is missing that contained $425 dollars. There are no suspects at this time.


Bates won’t run again
for District 27 board

[NOV. 14, 2000]  Lincoln attorney William Bates, current president of the board of Elementary School District 27, has announced that he does not intend to run for another term at the April 2001 election. "It’s time for new blood. I don’t want to monopolize the market," he said.

He said his decision has been "relatively firm" for some time and is not related to the successful referendum Nov. 7 to build two new schools. "The vote has nothing to do with the reason I am not going to seek another term," he said. "It’s a coincidence that I am leaving at this time."

The referendum to issue $4.1 million in bonds to secure $8.3 million in state funds to replace Central School and Lincoln Junior High School was opposed by preservationists who wanted to see the two schools renovated instead of demolished. The vote to build new schools passed 3,677 to 2,042.

 

"It’s an important project," Bates said. "A part of me says, ‘Yes, I’d like to see this through.’ It’s tempting to stay on through the building process, but that would be another three or four years. It’s time for other people to become involved."

Bates began serving on the board more than 15 years ago, to replace Bill Gossett. "We’ve had a lot of good board members over the years," Bates commented. He has served as board president for the past seven years.

"Bill Bates has been a very valuable board member during the seven years I’ve been here," said District Superintendent Robert Kidd. "But I understand why, his children being gone from the district, he might look for another avenue of public service."

 

Though Bates is an attorney, Superintendent Kidd noted that he has "never tried to practice school law while on the board."

The three other board members whose terms will be up next year have all taken out petitions to run again. They are Bruce Carmitchel, Marilyn Montgomery and James Wilmert. Both Montgomery and Wilmert said they want to help oversee the new building project. "I feel that we were in on the beginning of the new school project and I want to be here to be involved in its completion," Montgomery said. She is finishing her first four-year term on the board.

 

 

[to top of second column in this article]

Wilmert, who has served on the District 27 board for at least 16 years and prior to that served eight years on the board of Lincoln Community High School, told Lincoln Daily News that this will "absolutely be my last term. I’ve said that before, but this time I mean it.

"I’d like to be here to see the projects get off to a good start," he said. "I don’t think they will be completed in four years. I’m hopeful it may be done, but I’d rather we take the time to do it right," he said.

Carmitchel has served for three years, having been appointed to fill an unexpired term and then elected for a two-year term. He is also expected to run again, according to Superintendent Kidd.

A fourth candidate, Steven Rohrer, has also taken out petitions and told Lincoln Daily News he plans to run. Rohrer, who is director of network and communication services for the University of Illinois and has an office on the Springfield campus, grew up on a farm near Lincoln and has lived in town since 1991.

 

At this time, no other candidates have taken out petitions. Petitions must be filed between Tuesday, Jan. 16, and Tuesday, Jan. 23, at 5 p.m. They are available at the district office at 100 S. Maple St.

This year’s election will be unusual in that new board members elected in April of 2001 will not take office until the following November. This is due to a change in state law to avoid multiple elections and allow school board members to be elected at the same time as municipal officials instead of in a separate election in November. In subsequent years, however, school board members will be elected in April and seated on the board in the same month.

[Joan Crabb]

Lincoln Ag Center
1441 State Route 10 East
Lincoln, IL
217-732-7948

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Open for Dinner  Tues.-Sat.

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'Did my vote get counted?'

[NOV. 14, 2000]  Has the thought crossed your mind, "How would I feel if my vote had been cast in Florida or one of those areas where so many spoiled ballots were thrown out — where I wasn’t sure if my vote was counted." With this in mind, Lincoln Daily News contacted Sally Litterly, Logan County clerk and recorder, and asked a few simple questions. Litterly happily reported the following:

Q: In light of recent election difficulties, were there any discrepancies in Logan County or have there been any questions about our election results?

A: None!

Q: Were our ballots state or county issued?

A: Our ballots are approved by the State of Board of Elections. We have used the same type here for 15 years.

Q: Are there any improvements or changes planned before our next election?

A: No. I took this same ballot to all the schools in Logan County with third grades. The third graders used this system and had no problems with it.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

What voters need to know is that it is OK to ask for help no matter where they are voting. They can make a mistake on their voting ballot, say to themselves and the election judges, "Oops, I goofed. I need another one." The spoiled ballot is then thrown away and they are given a new one.

If voters have any questions, there are people there to demonstrate how to use the ballot. There are sample ballots designed for demonstration purposes (you vote for George Washington, etc.). All people need to do is say, "Show me how to do this." This can be done right at the polling place. There are people there just to demonstrate.

Above all, Sally emphasizes, "Ask questions!"

[LDN]


Announcements

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.

 

Lincoln Ag Center
1441 State Route 10 East
Lincoln, IL
217-732-7948

We support Lincolndailynews.com!

Click here to visit our website!!!

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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