Craft
fair, car show, walking tour, souvenirs and class highlight history
[AUG.
18, 2001] At
Wednesday night’s meeting of the Looking for Lincoln Committee,
Thressia Usherwood, executive director of the local tourism bureau,
informed the committee of an 1800s craft fair planned in cooperation
with the Lincoln Art & Balloon Festival.
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The
craft fair is scheduled at the Postville Courthouse from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 26. Entertainment will include Lee Slider as
Professor Phineas Fairhead, practical phrenologist. A Civil
War-period dance demonstration will be from noon to 3 p.m. There
will also be traditional and folk music at various times.
Period
crafts will be demonstrated, such as flax to linen, "Great
Wheel," cabinetmaking, quilting, blacksmithing, basket making,
bobbin lace making and rope making. Admission is free and
refreshments are available. If you need additional information, call
(217) 732-8930.
Saturday,
Aug. 25, the Lincoln Trail Porsche Club Charity Car Show will also
be in progress at the Postville Courthouse, 914 Fifth St. The public
is invited to come and see vintage Porsches from the 356 to current
996.
Jan
Schumacher of the Looking for Lincoln Committee distributed copies
of the folder "Walking on the Path of Abraham Lincoln — A
Walking Tour of Historic Lincoln, Illinois." The folder has
been distributed to many businesses in the county. Copies may be
picked up at Main Street Lincoln, 303 S. Kickapoo St. The folder was
produced by J.R. Glenn and Angie Couch, Lincoln Community High
School students, and Ruth Sloot, instructor. The committee was very
pleased with the work they produced.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Linda
Churchill, owner of the Mustard Moon, showed the committee a sample
of glass sun- catchers picturing Postville Courthouse. She ordered
blue, green, amber and other colors. Of the purchase price, 20
percent will go to the Postville Courthouse. The Mustard Moon is at
1314 Fifth St.
Paul
Beaver, historian, reminded the committee members that Lincoln
College offers a semester course "Life of Lincoln and the Civil
War." The class meets from 6:30 to 9 p.m. once a week. Lincoln
College also publishes a Lincoln Newsletter four times a year.
Anyone interested should contact the Lincoln Museum for more
information.
The
next meeting of the Looking for Lincoln Committee is Wednesday,
Sept. 19, at 7 p.m. in the Union Planters Bank conference room.
[Kathleen
McCullough]
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Lincoln
Planning Commission
turns down Casey rezoning
[AUG.
17, 2001] By
a 6-3 vote, the Lincoln Planning Commission turned down a request to
change the zoning on property at 314 S. Jefferson St., across from
the Postville Courthouse, from R-2 (residential) to C-2 (commercial)
use. The zoning change was requested by the property owner, Larry
Riva, so a Casey General Store could be built on the site.
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Voting
in favor of denying the zoning change were commission members Ron
Fox, Scott Cooper, Bob Wood, Leon (Micky) Martin, Dave Klug and
Mayor Beth Davis. Voting not to deny the change were Don Miller,
Mike Miller and commission chair Betty Gehlbach. The Casey
corporation cannot build on that site without the zoning change.
The
commission’s recommendation will now go to the Lincoln City
Council. City Attorney William Bates, who was present at the
meeting, said it would be his guess the council will bring up the
issue at its next meeting on Monday, Aug. 20, even though it is not
on the agenda.
Bates
said the council would probably want to decide if they wished to let
the commission’s decision stand, because the issue is scheduled to
come before the Zoning Board of Appeals on Aug. 22. The Casey
corporation would need a variance in the setback requirements which
only the zoning appeals board can grant. If the council chooses not
to change the commission’s decision, the board of appeals meeting
will be canceled.
Before
taking the vote, the commission heard from about a dozen members of
the crowd that packed the council chamber. Some spoke in favor of
the zoning change and others spoke against it, and not always for
the same reasons.
Diane
Ahern, representative of the Casey company, told the commission that
the company would modify the appearance of the store to be more
compatible with the historic Postville Courthouse. However, the
company would not make a complete change in the store’s look
because its appearance identifies it to customers.
She
said Mayor Beth Davis, who wants a historic corridor along Fifth
Street from the Postville Courthouse to Postville Drive, had
approached her about making the building look like an old-time
country store.
The
Casey store would employ 12 to 14 people and probably pay a sales
tax of about $1,000 a month, Ahern said.
She
said Casey’s has been looking for a site in Lincoln for three
years, and if this one is not approved, the company will probably
not look for another location here.
Perry
Harris, who owns property in the area, spoke in favor of the
rezoning and allowing Casey’s to build.
"Lincoln
seems to be going out of its way to discourage business," he
said. He objected to making Casey’s conform to a historic pattern
because "There’s a mix of stores down here that don’t
conform to anything."
He
also pointed out that the Postville Courthouse is a replica and
therefore is not truly historic.
Cliff
McCumber, who with his mother Judy McCumber owns the 5th Street Food
Mart, a convenience store at 1302 Fifth St., objected to
"corporate USA coming in and taking over our towns.
"Small
businesses care about their communities. If the Little League comes
to me they will get a contribution. If they come to corporate
America they will get all sorts of red tape. I’ll cash people’s
checks. Corporate America won’t."
[to top of second column in
this article]
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He
said the Casey store would not pay good wages and would not really
bring new business to town but would take business away from
everyone else. "It’s like a pie. The more people you bring
in, the smaller the pieces."
"I
am here in support of our local convenience store, Cliff and his
family," Pete Fredericks of Pete’s Hardware told the
committee. "I think we as citizens of Lincoln should support
and lean on one another. I think we can have economic development,
but I don’t think Casey’s is the answer."
Larry
Goodman of V. Goodman Transfer and Excavating and former owner of
Riva’s lot, spoke to support bringing in the Casey store.
"We’re
trying to get the property back into production. It’s not like we’re
bringing in some sleaze store. This is a quality business. I don’t
see many other people willing to spend $750,000 [to develop the
property]. The jobs may be low-income jobs, but they’re better
than nothing."
Homeowner
Suella Tucker, who lives at 403 S. Madison, said she would like to
see business in Lincoln but did not want Casey’s to go into that
area. "I know it’s selfish, but I don’t want extra traffic,
extra lights and extra music."
Jan
Schumacher, a member of the Looking for Lincoln steering committee,
spoke to support the historic corridor. She passed out brochures for
the Postville Courthouse to commission members "as a reminder
of the important part tourism plays. Tourism brings economic
development. Other small towns are capitalizing on tourism and we
need to do this, too."
She
said Postville is open more days now that volunteers have been
recruited to help staff it. "It had 21 visitors yesterday.
Casey’s is not a complementary building. If you look out Postville
windows and see gas pumps, that’s not historic."
Before
the vote, Bates reminded the commission that they were there simply
to vote on the matter of rezoning, not for any specific business. If
the zoning is changed to C-2, any business permitted under the C-2
designation would be allowed on the site, he said.
"Is
the requested change of zoning in keeping with the comprehensive
plan of this community?" he asked.
Commission
members called for maps to check zoning in the area. Riva’s lot
has R-2 zoning on the north, east and west sides, and C-2 zoning
running west to Lincoln Parkway.
Several
commissioners said they had mixed feelings about the rezoning.
"I’m
really torn on this issue," Mike Miller said before the vote.
"I really think it should be commercial."
"I’m on the other
side of that," Klug said. "I’m for economic development,
and in a sense this tears me up. But I’m voting for my neighbors
and friends."
[Joan
Crabb]
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Board
discusses revenue, health coverage and golf course feasibility
[AUG.
17, 2001] Anticipated
decline in assessed valuation of land, clarification of who receives
health coverage and a feasibility study for an airport golf course
drew the most discussion at Thursday night’s work session of the
Logan County Board.
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Finance
Chairman Rod White said next year’s budget will be affected by a
significant drop in the assessed valuation of farmland. "The
farmland in this county will go down by a full 10 percent," he
said. "What I can’t tell you is what is happening to the rest
of the economy, the other 50 percent. We’re fortunate that we have
other sources of revenue," such as the sales tax, to take up
the slack."
A
proposal to extend health insurance coverage "to employees and
those eligible participants employed by entities created by county
resolution" was closely analyzed. The goal is to be sure that
Phil Mahler, new director of the Regional Planning Commission,
receives the same coverage as his predecessor. Mahler has recently
been determined not to be a county employee. White said he feared
excluding employees of bodies such as Job Training Partnership Act,
which were not created by board resolution. "We’re trying to
get somebody in but we may be excluding somebody," he said.
Insurance
Committee Chairman Dale Voyles said he would meet with insurance
carrier Roger Garrett and State’s Attorney Tim Huyett to clarify
wording and inclusiveness.
Airport
Committee Chairman Roger Bock presented a rough draft for an 18-hole
golf course at Logan County Airport, showing hole holes on property
not currently owned by the county. Bock acknowledged that a
nine-hole or executive course is more feasible. "In
reality," he said, "it’s probably going to be an
executive course. This is the biggest thing that would fit [assuming
land purchase]. It sucks up too much land."
Bock
recommended proceeding with a $9,350 economic study to see whether
an airport golf course could be supported by the county. The board
has already set aside $9,000 for such a study. Federal Aviation
Administration approval has not been applied for, but Bock noted
that the FAA has approved other airport golf courses.
He
said the Airport Committee is considering purchasing a credit
card-operated gas pump for use when no attendant is present. Though
the $2.55 price of aviation gas is lower than in surrounding cities,
especially Peoria, sales have dropped as hours have been cut back
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Logan
County Treasurer Mary Ellen Bruns asked for a tax-sale-in-error fee
of $40 to be assessed for every parcel sold in tax sales. State law
allows a fee up to $60 to cover costs incurred when tax sale
proceeds are refunded after a judge decides an anomaly has occurred.
Bruns said, "It’s advisable to have this so that we’re not
taking money away from the county" for expenses such as postage
and publication. She said larger counties have such a fee, and
smaller counties with few tax sales do not. Logan County had 141 tax
sales in 2000.
Dick
Logan asked anyone seeking the board seat vacated by the resignation
of Phil Mahler to contact him by Monday, Aug. 20.
White
reported that budget hearings begin Aug. 17 at 9 a.m. Requests from
senior citizens groups will be heard at 9:15, with all three who
received funds last year expected to be represented: Central
Illinois Economic Development Council, Healthy Partnership and
Senior Citizens of Logan County.
Roads
and Bridges Chairman Rod White reported that the work on Nicholson
Road will be completed within a week. At the request of residents,
the speed limit in the Oakwood West subdivision off Fifth Street
Road is being reduced to 25 mph.
Board
member Clifford Sullivan spoke in favor of erecting a marker along
Interstate 55 to astronaut Scott Altman, a Lincoln native. He cited
Altman’s many accomplishments, including stunt flying for the
movie "Top Gun."
Mark
Smith, director of economic development, urged those attending the
Lincoln Art & Balloon Festival to visit the hospitality chalet,
which is being used as a promotional tool to showcase Logan County.
"So far the response has been phenomenal," he said.
[Lynn
Spellman]
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Sewer
hookup decision near
for Campus View homes
[AUG.
16, 2001] Lincoln
Christian College has opened the way for the city to provide sewer
hookups for 12 residents living on the far end of Campus View Drive,
but the Lincoln City Council must now decide whether to foot the
$300,000 bill.
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Grant
Eaton, sewer plant manager, told the council at its work session
Aug. 14 that LCC has agreed to give the city an easement for the
sewer line if the city will take over the sewer hookup for the other
homes on Campus View Drive, estimated at about 20.
Although
the homes on Campus View Drive are officially in the city, the
street itself belongs to the college, and the city must have
permission to put in the sewer line. The 12 homes at the far end of
Campus View, which curves around the back of the college property
and then comes to a dead end, have septic systems. Two homeowners,
Kevin Bateman and Mike Robbins, have come to the council to complain
about problems with sewage backup, because their lots are not large
enough for an efficient septic system.
"I
don’t think it’s a bad deal. It’s fair to the city and fair to
the college," Eaton said, in regard to the easement the college
is willing to grant. The other homes on Campus View Drive presently
connect to the LCC waste disposal system.
Eaton
suggested just running a line that would serve the existing homes,
rather than a line that would allow for future growth. He said the
existing line serving the other homes line is shallow and will
require a lift station with a standby power system.
The
question now is whether the council will decide to spend the
$300,000 necessary to provide the hookup for the 12 homes,
especially as City Attorney William B. Bates gave it as his opinion
that the city is not legally required to offer the hookups.
Bateman
said the way he read the ordinance, the city has an obligation to
offer sewer hookups to an existing neighborhood with septic systems
within seven years.
Bates,
however, said the way he interpreted the ordinance is that
homeowners who have septic systems but who have a city sewer line
within reach have an obligation to connect to the city system.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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"If
that’s the way you read it, I don’t know how you people are
going to vote to spend $300,000 for 12 homes," Bateman said.
"I
know I speak for all 12 homeowners, that not a soul in this town is
going to buy any property out there the way it is," he added.
William
Melton, chairman of the sewage and drainage committee, asked where
funding might come from.
Eaton
answered that the money is not available now but will be when money
comes in for the sewer plant upgrade. He said more and more people
are asking to be connected to the city sewer plant and that the
council needs to consider raising rates to pay for this work and for
the sewer plant upgrade loan from the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency.
He
also told Bateman and Robbins that even if the council approves the
expenditure, it could take as long as six months before all
paperwork is done and the IEPA approves the project.
Melton
asked that the proposal be put on the agenda for a vote at the next
regular council meeting Aug. 20. "We’ve waited as long as we
can," he said.
In
other business, Street Superintendent Donnie Osborne said he would
like to go back to the original plan for work on the Hamilton Street
garage. Rather than put up a new building, he said he would request
the city to put a new roof on the present structure.
Alderman Glenn Shelton
reported that many residents are concerned that the Illinois
Department of Transportation is planning to wait until next year to
upgrade railroad crossings at Tremont, Pekin and Broadway streets.
He complimented Osborne on following up his request to contact IDOT
to urge them to move more quickly on the upgrades.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
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Two
District 27 schools
may get academic warning
[AUG.
16, 2001] Two
District 27 schools, Jefferson and Northwest, will probably be on
the State Board of Education’s Early Academic Warning List this
year, Superintendent Robert Kidd told school board members at their
meeting Aug. 15.
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"This
is a result of not having done as well on the ISAT (Illinois
Standards Assessment Test) as we had hoped over a two-year time
period," Dr. Kidd told the board.
At
Jefferson the test results are for reading, writing and math at the
third-grade level, and at Northwest for reading, writing, and math
at the third- and fifth-grade levels, as well as social science and
science at the fourth-grade level.
"This
is not a shock," Kidd told the board. "We know that test
scores correlate with income level, which we know by the free and
reduced lunch numbers. We know Jefferson has 60 to 70 percent free
and reduced lunch numbers, depending on the time of year, and
Northwest always has 50 percent or greater," he said.
"This
is not an excuse, but it is a challenge," he added.
Official
results and actual tests scores have not yet been sent to District
27, Kidd said. "Until we get the actual scores we won’t know
where the problem really is. Then we will try to come up with
something more effective.
"We
have never made this list before, but being on the warning list may
allow us to get some funds to expand our summer school
program," he added.
The
ISAT tests have replaced the Illinois Goal Assessment Program tests
formerly given to elementary school students. The reading, writing
and math tests are being given for the third year, and the science
and social studies for the second year.
Students
in the district have not done as well on state standardized tests
since the change from IGAP to ISAT, Kidd said. He said it takes a
while for both teachers and students to "catch up" to the
demands of a new test.
He
also noted that the number of special education students at
Jefferson, which is a small school, may have skewed tests results
there as well.
Kidd
also reported on the success of this year’s summer school. Of the
44 students mandated to attend summer school if they wished to be
promoted to the next grade, 36 passed; five failed either for work,
discipline or attendance; and three chose not to come to summer
school.
Of the
79 students recommended, but not mandated, to attend, 62 completed
the summer school program, Kidd said.
The
board also heard the progress of improvements to the ball diamond at
Ralph Gale Field. Kidd credited baseball coach Darrick Reiley and
the crew of volunteers working with him for many of the
improvements.
This
year, dirt was added to the field so it drains better. New bleachers
have arrived and are being assembled, and a new scoreboard, batting
cage and dugouts have been added. New lights will also be installed.
Kidd
said the hollow tree at the corner of Kankakee and Broadway has to
be removed, but he hopes to move some smaller trees from the Central
School grounds to Ralph Gale Field to provide shade for spectators.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Board
president Bruce Carmitchell also reported on the agreement with the
Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. The IHPA wants to be sure the
school district properly recognizes the historic significance of the
buildings that will be demolished. The district has agreed to
document the old buildings with photographs and videotape and to
include in its curriculum information about the structures that were
formerly there.
Architect
Dave Leonatti and construction manager Bill Ahal reported that the
design development for the new Central School is completed and the
development of final documents needed before construction begins is
10 percent completed.
Construction
drawings are scheduled to be finished by Oct. 20 so bids can be let.
The project will be assembled in "bid packages," with
foundation work being the first to be let.
Both
Leonatti and Ahal said they hoped to see ground broken before the
end of the year. The building program is behind schedule because of
the extra time needed to bring the cost of the two new schools,
Central and a new junior high school, in line with the funds
available. Total square footage of the new Central School will be
47,375, slightly smaller than the original plans, and the cost
estimates are in the range of $119 to $125 per square foot.
Ahal
reported that the sewer line on the Central School grounds will have
to be moved, as right now it runs under the site of the new
building. However, he said that was "not a major problem."
Leonatti
said that as work progresses it may be necessary to call special
meetings of the board or the construction committee to approve plans
as they are completed and expedite the bidding process. Board
president Bruce Carmitchell said the board would be ready to act
whenever it was necessary.
Both
Leonatti and Ahal said the timing is right for the district to
realize some cost savings. Contractors are finishing jobs on
existing schools in time to meet fall school schedules and are
looking for new projects, they said.
"The
later in the year, the better off we’ll be as far as the
market," Ahal said. "This has been true in all my 24 years
of experience. I am seeing much more availability of
materials."
Leonatti said he has had a
larger than usual number of contractors bidding on projects right
now.
[Joan
Crabb]
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City
historic preservation
ordinance put on hold
[AUG.
15, 2001] If
the city of Lincoln is going to have a historic preservation
ordinance, it won’t be soon.
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"This
is not going to be a quick procedure," said Pat Madigan, vice
chairman of the city council’s ordinance committee, reporting on
the proposed ordinance which council members received a week ago.
"There are a lot of things to be ironed out before we are done.
"I
don’t think we can resolve this in a couple of meetings and push
it through," he added.
Madigan’s
assessment of the 13-page document, which was shared by other
members of the committee present, sounded like good news to a group
of citizens who came to the committee meeting, most of them property
owners on or near the Fifth Street corridor which Mayor Beth Davis
has said she would like to see as a historic preservation district.
Larry
Goodman, who owns V. Goodman Transfer, a trucking and excavating
company at 1202 Fifth St., said he was relieved to hear the council’s
consensus.
"I
have a little more confidence since I’ve heard you speak that this
will not be railroaded through," he told the ordinance
committee. He said he had been wondering if he would be able to pass
on his property to his children, so they could run the family
business as the fourth generation.
Also
he questioned whether there was anything historical in the proposed
Fifth Street corridor.
"We’ve
been on that corner since 1926. If there was any history there, I
think I’d have been aware of it."
Mayor
Davis assured him that the council had no intention of
"railroading" the ordinance through. She said she saw it
as a way to help property owners get grants to restore and maintain
historic structures. She said she had also hoped to have several
other historic sites on Fifth Street, a facade of the old Deskins
Tavern where Abraham Lincoln stayed and some replicas of early homes
in the nearby park.
Perry
Harris, also a Fifth Street property owner, said it appeared that
the ordinance was created to stop the Casey General Store from
building a facility on Fifth Street.
"The
speed this appeared before the council is troubling. It seems like
the ordinance was created to stop Casey’s," he said.
The
Casey corporation has been negotiating with Larry Riva, who owns a
Fifth Street lot just west of the Postville Courthouse, to buy Riva’s
property to put up a convenience store. A representative of Casey’s
was present at Tuesday night’s meeting but did not speak.
"Why
not table the ordinance until the Casey’s issue has been
settled?" Harris asked.
David
Morrow told the committee that the proposed ordinance for Lincoln
was more sweeping and more restrictive than the requirements for
getting a structure on the National Historic Register and should not
be passed in its present form.
"A
lot of businesses on Fifth Street are worried about it. They couldn’t
even change colors on their buildings under this ordinance. The
majority of people have no idea what this ordinance does.
"I
can’t emphasize how much trouble this [type of ordinance] does in
other communities. It enslaves the property of the citizens of
Lincoln."
Under
the proposed ordinance, if a property has a historic designation,
changes to the outside or demolition of the property would have to
have the approval of the historic preservation committee.
City
Attorney William B. Bates pointed out that the ordinance had not
been created by the council but by Main Street Lincoln. Wendy Bell,
Main Street Lincoln coordinator, said the organization realized that
the ordinance was just a "starting point."
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Outlining
the problems he found with the proposed ordinance, Madigan cited the
"power and autonomy" granted to the 11 members of the
historic preservation committee, who would be appointed by the
mayor.
"How
much power do we want to give 11 people not even elected by the
community? We may end up with a specialized committee that will have
an over-zealous view."
He
also objected to the power given the council. As the document is
written, a simple majority would be able to ratify a decision made
by the historic preservation committee. Madigan said he believed any
such decision made by the council should be either a two-thirds
majority or a unanimous vote.
David
Armbrust disagreed with the provision that the committee would be
able to nominate and vote on making a structure a historic landmark
without the consent of the owner.
"It
is the owner who should be asking [for the historic designation],
not just someone who drives by," he said.
"If
the owner doesn’t want to have the historic landmark designation,
he shouldn’t be forced. He should be able to modify his home as he
wants," Madigan agreed.
Armbrust
and Madigan also agreed that they did not like the provision that
one-third of the people in an area could nominate it as a historic
district. "I’d hate to think one-third of the people in a
given area could dictate to the others," Armbrust said.
Both
also found the appeal process unsatisfactory. As it is presently
written, a property owner can appeal a ruling on his property only
to the commission, the same body that made the ruling in the first
place.
"There
is very little recourse for those that fall within the
district," Madigan said.
Another
objection Madigan cited was the "what if" criterion for
historic designation. He cited one example from the proposed
ordinance: "An area that has yielded or may be likely to yield,
information important in history or prehistory."
"If
we are going to designate a landmark, we need hard evidence. We can’t
say ‘what if’ or ‘This is going to be an important site
someday.’"
In
spite of his objections, however, Madigan described the document as
a "framework" that could be formulated to fit the city of
Lincoln.
"Each
page will have to be addressed," he said. "We need a
better system of checks and balances. There are a lot of holes in
this ordinance that we are not going to be able to patch up on a
short-term basis."
Madigan, who took over for
ordinance committee chairman Michael Montcalm, who is on vacation,
did not schedule a future meeting for the committee. In the
meantime, Riva will appear before the planning commission on Aug. 16
to ask for a rezoning of his lot from R-2 (residential) to C-4
(commercial), so that the Casey corporation could put up the
convenience store. If the planning commission agrees to the zoning
change, he will appear before the zoning board of appeals on Aug.
22. After that, plans for the Casey General Store will have to be
approved by the full council.
[Joan
Crabb]
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Real
estate taxes come due
[AUG.
14, 2001] The
Logan County treasurer’s office announces the following dates:
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Sept.
5 — Final day to pay the second installment of real estate taxes
without a penalty.
Sept.
6 — A penalty of 1½ percent will be charged on any unpaid second
installment of taxes. A penalty of 4½ percent will be charged on
any unpaid first installment of taxes.
Sept.
20 — Warning letters for any unpaid taxes will be mailed.
Oct.
4 — Certified letters will be mailed.
Oct.
15 — Listings of any unpaid tax will be published.
The
Logan County treasurer’s office has been notified that E-Pay, the
credit card option established by the state treasurer’s office for
public fund treasurers, will not be available until Jan. 1, 2002.
The local office had hoped this option would be available in time
for the second installment; however, due to legislative action, the
effective date was changed. The Logan County treasurer’s office
has, however, installed a debit card scanner for all debit cards and
ATM cards.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Effective
Aug. 17, the county treasurer’s office will be able to accept the
Discover card. The Discover card company has a program for county
treasurers that has been in place in larger counties for some time.
County treasurers collect a user free from taxpayers who use the
Discover card to pay their taxes, thereby creating no additional
expense for the county.
As
in the past, the county treasurer’s office is asking that banks do
not collect any real estate tax after their close of business on
Sept. 5. The banks will again collect taxes for the 2002 fiscal year
tax cycle as they have every year.
Taxpayers are reminded of the
drop box in the city parking lot on North Kickapoo Street.
Taxpayers
having any questions are asked to call 732-3761 between 8:30 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m.
[News
release]
|
|
ALMH
women’s health and family
birthing facilities ready for use
[AUG.
13, 2001] The
community was invited to Sunday afternoon’s ribbon-cutting,
dedication and tours at ALMH. Lincoln/Logan County Chamber of
Commerce ambassadors, ALMH medical and nursing staff and
administrators gathered to celebrate newly completely renovation.
[click
here to view photos of the Women's Health Unit]
|
ALMH
President and CEO Woody Hester spoke saying, "On this, the 12th
day of August, on behalf of — and in honor of — all of you and
all of those before us, I dedicate the Women’s Health Unit and
Family Maternity Suites to those we serve."
In
describing the completeness of the transformation, Hester said the
third floor went out the window, literally. A chute was placed at a
window and all the debris was sent down it. The entire third floor
was stripped down to the exterior brick. All that was left was the
walls and floor.
Hester
thanked the medical staff for handling the transition so well. For
eight months they were temporarily located on the second floor. He
was also thankful for all the community support. This kind of
commitment means women will not need to go to Bloomington or
Springfield for high-quality health care and child delivery.
Those
touring the facility marveled at how much change has taken place
from the old rooms to the new, higher-tech, more private and
personable rooms. The nursing staff was even more enthusiastic. They
were particularly pleased with the effective layout that has the
nursing station centrally located to all the different sections:
nursery, maternity suites, gynecology suites, surgery.
A
lovely stained glass work depicting a mother and child highlights
the center of the new Women’s Health Unit. The window was donated
by Dr. Don Sielaff and his wife, Jan.
The
new Women's Health Unit and Family Maternity Suites reflect Abraham
Lincoln Memorial Hospital's (ALMH) continued commitment to
recognizing and responding to the needs of patients, families and
physicians, as well as the dynamic health care changes in the 21st
century.
These
state-of-the-art facilities are tremendous accomplishments for this
community. ALMH has been dedicated to improving the health and
well-being of the community through advanced technology, keeping
patient comfort as a priority. The Women's Health Unit and Family
Maternity Suites ensure that the hospital continues to provide
excellence in health care to those it serves.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Facts
about the new Women's Health Unit include:
•
Construction began Jan. 3, 2001
•
Will begin seeing patients on the new unit
today, Monday, Aug. 13
•
Five private rooms, each with private
restrooms
•
New nurses’ station
•
Focuses on women’s inpatient gynecological
surgical procedures
•
Women’s Health Unit is designed to:
•
Provide individualized care in a comfortable
setting.
•
Promote the lifelong good health of women.
•
Provide the balance between a warm, caring
environment and the most advanced technology.
•
Make women's health one of ALMH’s top
priorities.
•
Provide quality care for women in any stage in
their life.
Facts
about the new Family Maternity Suites include:
•
Construction began Jan. 3, 2001
•
Will begin seeing patients on Aug. 13
•
Four single-family maternity suites and two
private postpartum rooms
•
Surgery suite for Caesarean sections
•
State-of-the-art nursery
•
New suites feature:
•
Labor, delivery, recovery and postpartum care
all in a spacious single room — no need for an uncomfortable move
to another room after delivery.
•
Private bath and hand-held massage showers.
•
Color television, VCR and phone.
•
Homelike furnishings, including a sleep chair.
•
24-hour visitation for fathers or support
persons.
In a time when small
community hospitals are getting out of child delivery, Hester says
he is proud of the hospital board and foundation in allowing these
major renovations.
[LDN
and news
release]
|
|
Big
Brother isn’t watching you,
he’s just moving traffic
[AUG.
13, 2001] You
may not even have noticed the four inconspicuous cylindrical cameras
perched on top of the light fixtures at the intersection of Keokuk
and Woodlawn streets in Lincoln. But if you have, don’t worry. Big
Brother isn’t watching you. Nor is the police department trying to
clock you to see if you are speeding.
|
The
high-tech cameras are simply the newest technology for activating
traffic signals, according to Bill Davison, traffic signal
supervisor of District 6 of the Illinois Department of
Transportation. The computer-like cameras scan the roadway and read
the number of vehicles approaching the intersection. If no traffic
is coming either way, the lights won’t change. If traffic is
coming, the lights will change to accommodate it.
They
were put in place Aug. 8 and 9 by a Decatur firm, Bodine Electric,
and are now fully operational.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
The
cameras are passive devices, Davison said, not taking pictures and
certainly not able to clock your speed or read your license place.
They are doing nothing but controlling traffic, he explained.
"We
could set them up to count cars if we wanted to record that data,
but mainly they are just there to move traffic," Davison said.
The
cameras replace wire loops embedded in the pavement and are more
efficient in detecting oncoming vehicles. Another advantage is that
the pavement doesn’t have to be sawed open to install them. They
will eventually replace the loops in most areas, although they are
not appropriate for traffic lights on some hills or on streets with
a lot of trees, he said.
The cameras at Keokuk and
Logan are the first to be installed in Lincoln, although IDOT has
been using them for the past eight years in the 15-county area that
makes up District 6. Davison said the same devices may be installed
when IDOT improves the roadway at Kickapoo and Keokuk next year.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Logan
County Board sets budget review
The
Logan County Board started its FY 2002 budget review hearings Friday
morning, Aug. 17. Sessions will continue
Wednesday, Aug. 22, from 8 a.m. to noon; Thursday, Aug. 23, from 1
to 4 p.m.; and Friday, Aug. 24, possibly beginning at 8:30 a.m.
When
all hearings are completed, the information will be assembled for
analysis. After that the auditors will schedule and make a
presentation to the full board.
All
meetings are in the third-floor jury room at the Logan County
Courthouse and are open to the public.
[News
release]
|
|
Weather
warning
It’s too
hot!
During
the summer months, heat waves can occur anywhere in Illinois and
affect anyone. Young children, elderly people and people with health
problems are most likely to be affected. This is a reminder to
everyone.
-
Plan
to check on the elderly and those with health problems at least
once a day during hot weather.
-
Don’t
leave children in a parked car.
-
Make
sure you drink plenty of liquids during hot weather.
Doing
small things can make a big difference.
This
public service announcement is brought to you by Lincoln Daily
News and the Logan County Health Department.
[News
release]
|
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