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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Police
Department K-9s check around at LCHS
[OCT.
27, 2000]
Rumors
have been flying around that there was a big drug bust at the Lincoln Community
High School yesterday and that even a teacher was arrested. Be assured that this
is NOT true. Pat Zurkammer, secretary to the principal, summed up the situation,
"They’re rumors; basically that’s it. They’re rumors."
Lincoln
Daily News spoke with the city police chief this morning. He
explained that the Lincoln Police Department did walk K-9s through
the building and the parking lot. Fifteen cars were searched, but no
arrests were made.
[Jean
Ann Carnley]
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The
Graffs built the world's largest
political sign
[OCT.
26, 2000]
Logan
County can now lay claim to having the world's largest political sign.
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Middletown
farmers Bill and Judi Graff spent all day Wednesday creating a 40-acre
"Bush 2000" sign in one of their soybean fields. It took them four
hours to flag out the design and three hours to chisel plow. Because of its
immense size, it is difficult to make out what the sign says from the road. But
the avid Republicans hope that passengers on flights from St. Louis to Chicago
and Springfield to Chicago will get the message and vote for George W. Bush on
Nov. 7.
[The entire Graff family helps out in the Bush Campaign
effort. From left are Isabella, Zadok, Bill, Judi and Theo Graff.]
Bill
Graff and a fellow "Illinois Farmer for Bush," Pete Shynk of Peoria
County, crafted the idea for the land-based sign earlier this year.
"Four-foot by 5-foot political signs are really hard to come by, and there
is a lot of trouble with vandalism of political signs in some areas," says
Graff. "By plowing these signs along flight paths, we can reach a lot of
voters and don’t have to worry about them being destroyed."
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Pete
Shynk completed a 10-acre sign near the Peoria airport last week. Graff thinks
that there might be another massive "Bush 2000" sign created somewhere
in Texas this week.
The
local sign, which is located on the Logan-Menard County Line blacktop southeast
of Middletown, has already attracted the attention of many passersby. Mark Hayes
was moving a combine today and strained to read what the letters spelled.
"Do I have to rent a plane to read it or can I just ask?" joked Hayes
as he jumped out of his combine to inquire further.
[It takes a plane ride to fully see this 40-acre political sign.]
The dimensions
of the Logan County sign total 1,600 feet by 1,040 feet. Each of the eight
letters is about the size of a city block. Bill carved the message in land that
has been in his family since 1837.
[Marty
Ahrends]
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Ecstasy:
More than a warm
and fuzzy feeling
An illegal street drug
[OCT.
26, 2000]
An
educational seminar on the street drug most commonly called ecstasy was
conducted Tuesday evening at the Lincoln Recreation Center. The seminar was
sponsored by the Logan-Mason County Mental Health Department and the Alcohol,
Tobacco and other Drug Task Force of the Health Communities Partnership as a
part of their Red Ribbon Week.
|
J.
Randall Webber, the director of training and publications for the Chestnut
Health Systems (CHS) in Bloomington, facilitated the seminar. CHS provides
behavioral health care in Illinois. Webber, a recovered drug abuser, in his own
words said, "I came to tell the truth."
Today’s
youth are starting to experiment with drugs at younger ages. The use of ecstasy
has increased from 6 percent in 1998 to 8 percent in 1999. Youth believe it is a
dangerous drug but use it anyway. He continued, "Young people don’t
believe they are going to die." He said his aim was not to tell the group
not to use drugs, even though he hoped they would not. Instead he wanted them to
be knowledgeable about drugs and to make informed decisions about drug use.
Sixty-six
percent of all street drugs are not what users thought they were buying. Street
drugs are more often than not "cut" with additives that are sometimes
much more dangerous than the drug itself. This is also true of people who buy
ecstasy. They don’t know what they’re getting. It could be something that is
as benign as flour made to look like an ecstasy pill or it could be rat poison
or something worse. You can’t tell what it is by looking at it, and that is
part of the problem, Webber told the crowd of participants.
In
addition, it is not possible to predict the effects of a drug without first
identifying the dosage. Combining drugs greatly increases the risk of physical
and psychological problems, and, according to Webber, "It’s an easy way
to end up dead." Of the people who die from drug use, 75 percent of the
deaths are a result of simultaneously using more than one drug, including
alcohol.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Webber
likened drug use to a rubber band. Your brain is like a rubber band. Sometimes
you can stretch it and it will come back, but if it is stretched too much it may
never come back. "No one takes drugs thinking that they are going to become
addicted, and everyone starts the same way just by trying it. You never know
when you start how things are going to turn out," he added.
Some
side effects of ecstasy use are dilated pupils, dizziness, nausea and excessive
sweating due to an increased heart rate. Ecstasy users experience a rush of
energy and strong and intense moods. After the intoxicating effects wear off,
drowsiness follows. Webber asked, what if it wears off on your way home from a
party and you’re behind the wheel of a car?
No
one should take street drugs, but there are people who should be sure they never
try it: nonadults, people with personal or a family history of mental illness,
anyone on medication, people with medical problems or anyone experiencing a
crisis or under stress. Drug use magnifies these problems.
Ecstasy, liquid
ecstasy and herbal ecstasy are on the streets of central Illinois, and it doesn’t
matter whether a drug is organic or synthetic — either can be deadly, Webber
concluded.
[Kym
Ammons-Scott]
|
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Pre-election
forum set for Thursday
[OCT.
25, 2000]
A
Meet the Candidates forum will be
Thursday, Oct. 26, at 7 p.m. at Adams School, 1311 Nicholson Road in Lincoln.
Candidates
for the 18th Congressional District and the Logan County Board will make
position statements and answer questions.
There
will representatives of groups in favor of and opposed to the District 27
referendum present to debate that issue.
Refreshments
will be served.
The
public is invited to attend.
The event is
sponsored by the Logan County Voters Association and the Logan County Farm
Bureau Women's Committee.
[Logan
County Voters Association news release]
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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. |
|
|
|
Maxwell
biographer to lecture at LC
[OCT.
25, 2000]
William
Maxwell biographer Barbara Burkhardt will be the keynote speaker for the third
presentation in the Ralph G. Newman Lecture Series at Lincoln College. Burkhardt’s
presentation will be at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 2, at Johnston Center for
Performing Arts on the college campus. The lecture is free and open to the
public.
Burkhardt will
speak on her experiences working with a literary master and how the late Maxwell’s
historical connection to Lincoln has influenced her as well as American
literature. Burkhardt recently completed a book titled "William Maxwell: a
Critical Biography."
[Lincoln
College news release]
|
|
Oasis
presentation provides
medication education
[OCT.
24, 2000]
This
week is National Pharmacy Week, and the theme is "Educate Before You
Medicate." That is exactly what pharmacist Jim White of Abraham Lincoln
Memorial Hospital stressed when he visited the Oasis Senior Center this morning.
White began his presentation by reminding those at the Oasis Center that the
present political debate over prescription drugs is not new. The first time a
prescription drug plan was proposed for legislation was around the time of
Watergate. The second proposal was only four years ago.
|
White
discussed generic drugs, natural or herbal products and drug interactions. He
also answered the attendees’ questions. His general advice concerning all
drugs, over-the-counter medicines, vitamins and natural herbs is (1) read labels
and pay attention to all the detail and (2) ask your doctor or pharmacist any
time you have questions.
In
his presentation on generic drugs, White gave an overview of the process of
developing a drug and making the generic equivalent. He explained that generic
drugs must meet the same FDA approval as the brand-name drugs. The average
brand-name drug costs a company $500 million from the time of its development
until it is approved for the market. The developing company receives a 17-year
patent and revenue of approximately one billion dollars a year from a successful
drug. White admits that the prices are very high and asks if the company must
cover all of its expenditures in the first year. He says, however, that for
every drug that is so successful, the drug companies begin or fully develop
drugs that are not successful.
A
year or two before a drug’s patent expires, generic drug manufacturers begin
developing a generic equivalent. White emphasized that the generic drug
companies must submit the same documentation that the brand-name company
originally submitted. This proves to the FDA that the generic drug is a genuine
equivalent to the brand name. Also about this time, the brand-name company works
to improve their original drug, so as to stay in competition with the generic
drug.
White’s
advice about generic and brand-name drugs is to know what you take, why you take
it and the dosage that you take. In comparing generic and brand-name drugs, ask
the pharmacist if the generic is AB rated, that is, does it receive the FDA’s
highest rating of drugs. White says that most generic drugs are AB rated, but
some are not.
Next,
White turned to natural or herbal products. Often he hears the argument that
herbs are natural products and will not harm you. His response is, "Well,
arsenic is a natural product." White does not dismiss herbal products but
reminds those who purchase them that they are unregulated. Herbal products may
make any claims, but there is no one to research or check the claims. A retired
doctor in the audience said that much of the proof for natural products is
anecdotal, such as, "My uncle said …." Also, herbs are known to
interact with prescription medicine, so watch for problems and talk to your
doctor or pharmacist before you begin using them.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
White
suggests and uses "The Honest Herbal" by Yarro E. Tyler of Purdue
University. He says that Tyler gives an overview of many herbs and specifically
states if they are known to meet their claims or if they do not work.
If
you take herbs and a doctor or pharmacist asks what medicines you take, include
all prescription medicines, regular over-the-counter medicines and the herbal
products you take. Do not forget to list the herbs, because they do often
interact with or inhibit certain drugs.
The
question-and-answer time focused on vitamins. White said that taking 1200 to
1500 mg a day of calcium supplements around and after menopause is generally a
good idea, but always weigh the risks and benefits with your doctor. He admits
that this and other supplements may be expensive, but preventative measures
almost always save money and pain down the road.
White
has seen the medical community swing from negating the usefulness of vitamins to
overemphasizing the use of vitamins. Now the medical community has taken a
moderate position. He believes that multivitamins are sufficient unless you have
a specific deficiency. He recommends a product with vitamins and minerals that
is produced by a brand name. Again, talk to your doctor or pharmacist first.
White is reserving judgment on the multivitamin-herbal supplement mixes. He sees
the companies combining two popular markets into one, but he does not believe
that he has enough information yet to make a decision.
At the meeting,
White handed out brief articles listing what he believed to be good advice for
anyone taking medication. The information originally came from the
September/October 2000 issue of Illinois Pharmacist. Please take the
time to read those recommendations below.
Click
here for "Tips for choosing a pharmacist."
Click
here for "Safety tips from your pharmacist."
[Jean
Ann Carnley]
|
|
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Tips
for choosing a pharmacist
[OCT.
24, 2000]
When
choosing a pharmacist, many people simply look for a pharmacy that is
convenient, either close to home or work. But location is only one of the things
to consider in choosing a pharmacist who is the right match for you and your
family.
|
Your
pharmacist should be someone you know and trust. You should give as much
consideration to choosing your pharmacist as you do to choosing a doctor.
Pharmacists are health-care professionals specializing in medicines and their
appropriate use. Because of this, your pharmacist plays an important role in
your personal health care.
To
help you select the one that is right for you, consider the following tips:
Review
your options.
Stop
by several pharmacies and speak with the pharmacist. Ask about the services
offered, their expertise in disease management and any special needs you may
have.
Consider
your entire family’s pharmacy needs.
Often
a pharmacist may help you with special circumstances, such as when you are
taking care of an elderly relative. If you have aging parents that live nearby,
you might ask, for example, if it is possible to deliver prescriptions to their
home and send the bill to you.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Ask
about payment options.
Will
the pharmacy accept your insurance coverage? Does the pharmacy accept your
credit cards? Is it possible to set up an account?
Access
the level of personal service.
How
accessible is the pharmacist? Is he or she easy to talk to and willing to hear
your concerns? During what hours is the pharmacist available to answer your
questions?
It is important
to choose one pharmacist with whom you can establish an ongoing relationship.
Also, by choosing one pharmacy, a complete record of the medicines you take is
in one place, making them easier to coordinate and manage. Your pharmacist can
alert you to possible drug interactions, particularly if you take a number of
different medications; help you track refills on important prescriptions; and
provide necessary detail on short notice.
[from
the September/October 2000
issue of Illinois Pharmacist]
|
|
Safety
tips from your pharmacist
[OCT.
24, 2000]
The
American Pharmaceutical Association, representing the nation’s pharmacists,
suggests the following guidelines to prevent medicine mix-ups:
|
- Be sure that your name is on every
container of medication. If the drug is for a child, be sure that the
pharmacy puts the child’s name on the label.
- Never take a medication out of its
original container to store it.
- Highlight the patient’s name and
the expiration date with a marker so that they can be easily seen. Use a
different color marker for each member of the family
- Read the entire label every time you
take medication yourself or give it to a family member.
- Don’t take medication in the dark,
and wear your glasses.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
- If you have stopped taking a
particular medicine but have some left, check with your pharmacist or
doctor. Many medications should be taken until they are all gone, and having
leftovers could indicate that the medication was not taken properly.
- Throw away any medicine that has not
been used in six months.
- Do not share medicines. Only the
patient for whom it was prescribed should take medication.
- Keep a permanent list of all
medications taken by each family member.
[from
the September/October 2000
issue of Illinois Pharmacist]
|
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Red Ribbon
Week is observed
[OCT.
23, 2000]
Red
Ribbon Week was established in memory of a local narcotics officer who fell in
the line of duty. It is intended to bring awareness of drug and alcohol issues,
particularly targeting our youth.
|
Schedule
for Red Ribbon Week
Tuesday,
Oct. 24
Wednesday,
Oct. 25
Thursday,
Oct. 26
Friday,
Oct. 27
-
HYPE car wash at
Kroger, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
-
Logan County Snowball
event at Lincoln Community High School
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Grim
Reaper Day
Every
15 minutes, a person is killed in a drinking and driving accident. Grim Reaper
Day is a day to show the effects of drinking and driving on our society. HYPE
members have signed up to represent a person who will be killed due to the
effects of alcohol on drivers.
Every
15 minutes a HYPE member will be pulled from his/her class by the Grim Reaper.
They will have their face painted white, they will dress in black or dark
colored clothing and will not be allowed to speak the rest of the day. HYPE
member have been told that if they are called on in class, they must
participate.
Taps
will be played before each class period and a list of those who "died"
will be read.
[News
release from Kristi Simpson,
prevention specialist]
|
|
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.
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|
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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|
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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