Wright sworn in as new State Representative

[JUNE 23, 2001]  "This is your next state representative. He emerged from an outstanding field of candidates after a deliberate and thorough process. He is articulate, sincere, honest, intelligent, blessed with common sense and a strong work ethic."

With these words John Turner of Atlanta, for almost seven years the state representative from the 90th District, introduced his successor, Jonathan Wright. Turner, now a 4th District Appellate Court Justice, wore his robes as he administered the oath of office to Wright in a standing-room-only second-floor courtroom in the Logan County courthouse Friday afternoon. 

"You are embarked on a great journey. You will have good days and bad days. But the honor of representing the 105,000 people of this district is one you will never forget," Turner said. 

 

"I am honored and humbled to receive the appointment from among so many fine, strong candidates. I know it was a difficult decision," Wright told the crowd. "John Turner has been a fine representative for this district and set a high standard. I will try to meet it." 

Wright was chosen from a field of seven candidates by the chairmen of the Republican parties of the six counties which are in the 90th District. He will complete Turner's unexpired term and will run again for the seat in November of 2002. 

 

"We had a lot of good candidates. I think we made a good selection," said Ron Sparks, Logan County GOP chairman. 

"It was the right choice," affirmed Jered Hooker, DeWitt county GOP chairman and at one time a contender for the office. He and Sparks both said the six GOP chairmen, whose choice was unanimous, and the other candidates would support Wright in his election bid next fall.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

Wright said he would assume his new duties immediately, with a high priority on getting out into the district and getting to know his constituents. He said he has already informed Lincoln's mayor, Beth Davis, that he will be resigning as city attorney, although he will stay until the city finds a replacement. 

Asked if he would continue with a private law practice, Wright said he might practice some real estate law but would not be involved in litigation and would not serve as city attorney because of the time commitment necessary. 

Wright was appointed city attorney by former mayor Joan Ritter when she took office in 1997. Ritter attended the swearing-in ceremony along with a number of other city, county, and 90th District officials. 

"I think they selected a man of good character and morals. He's not abrasive, and he will do well serving the citizens of the 90th District," Ritter said. 

Turner resigned after his appointment to the Appellate Court, and the GOP chairmen of Logan, Mason, DeWitt, Tazewell, McLean and Piatt, which are all or in part in the 90th District, had the job of choosing a successor. 

No one knows whether or how much the upcoming redistricting will change the 90th District before Wright runs for the seat, according to Sparks. "The map has moved northward after the last census. The last two times they've remapped, the district has moved north," he said. A further move north might remove some of Logan County from the district. 

Although Wright himself has never run for political office, politics runs in the family. His father, Harold Wright, a former Wheaton, Illinois, high school teacher, was a precinct committeeman in Bloomingdale Township in the western suburbs of Chicago. 

"I've done my share of walking door to door, and Jon carried pamphlets, too," the elder Wright said. 

After retiring as a teacher, Harold Wright was appointed Regional Representative for the Department of Education for Region 5, which includes the states of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota. 

He later served as the Administrator of Management Services for the Department of Education during the Ronald Reagan administration, working under both Secretaries T. H. Bell and William Bennett. 

Wright's parents, his sister, his wife and three daughters, along with many friends, attended the ceremony.

 

[Joan Crabb]


 

In memory of Dan Bird

[JUNE 23, 2000]  A gentle soul, one who truly loved mankind, has slipped from our presence here on earth. Dan Bird passed away on Wednesday evening this past week.

Bird granted Lincoln Daily News an interview for our Thanksgiving issue last year. In his memory and in honor of his wife, Elaine, we offer this re-posting of that interview. Our condolences to the family of this wonderful man.

 


Feeling thankful? Or are you in too
big a hurry to get things done?

An interview with Dan Bird

[Originally posted NOV. 22, 2000]  Thanksgiving. We pause now to offer thanks. On the eve of that big thankful day of the year, what are your thoughts? Are you too preoccupied thinking of all there is to do for the holiday — all the shopping, fixing meals, taking care of kids, running around on errands, cleaning, company coming over — all the proverbial ups and downs of the holidays.

Whether you are simply wondering what someone else finds to be grateful for on this chilly day here in the heartland, or are on a quest to sort out your own thankfulness, you are sure to glean something from the insights gained by one local man’s experience. He shares from the heart his profound experience. He has boiled it down to the most important of the important.

Dan and Elaine Bird came to Lincoln four years ago for Dan to study at Lincoln Christian Seminary. He graduated in May with a master of arts in counseling ministry. The following is an account of his unique experience that brings him to say, "I’ve just got to be the most grateful person in Logan County."

Wouldn’t we all like to say that? If we could take heed of the lessons he so graciously shares with us here, we could all be living much fuller lives.

Dan Bird begins telling his story

After about five years of battling prostate cancer we’d exhausted most of the traditional methods, and one year ago tomorrow, the day before Thanksgiving, I got the bad news that the cancer had spread from small spots on the bones to all over the bones from head to toe — from my skull to down near my ankles and all points in between, and, something it doesn’t normally do, it even went to the liver.

I was pretty shaken up. It was a rough Thanksgiving and a rough Christmas. At that point, since we had exhausted everything that is considered effective, my future was looking pretty bleak. Most people, including medical personnel, were pretty sure that it was going to be my last holiday last year, and anyone that knew my prognosis believed that that was going to be it! And I fell in line with them. I believed that they were correct.

I wrote a will, I planned a funeral. I called all the people I wanted to be pallbearers, the whole nine yards, so I could get that behind me and so that my wife wouldn’t have to deal with it. Anything else I felt like I needed bring to closure, I did! Any conversations I need to have, that kind of thing (I did).

But, it’s a year later and the next Thanksgiving is just one day away, and I’m here! 2000 was such a roller coaster I’m out of breath. We did some nontraditional therapy and chemotherapy, which is usually not very effective against prostate cancer. It has been moving the cancer back. At least at this moment that’s what’s been happening.

So, I’m looking forward to this Thanksgiving. This Thursday is going to be my best Thanksgiving. I’m going to my son’s house, and I am incredibly grateful. I am so, so, looking forward to Christmas!

Four little questions Bird agreed to answer

Q: What do you find to be thankful for this year?

A: Oh my — being here, this is a big thing for me! I am not taking it for granted, because I was so convinced I would not be alive for this coming Thanksgiving and Christmas. I had a lot of reasons to believe that.

I know it sounds trite to say I am grateful to be alive, but I guess you really have to experience having it taken away from you to really appreciate it. I guess it would be like someone having their sight restored or their hearing restored. I’m incredibly grateful just to be here this year.

I guess probably what really adds color to it all is how close I have gotten to so many people this last couple of years while I was dealing with cancer. This last year, particularly when people thought I was going to die, how deeply they would share with me, how much they would care for me. I am so grateful for the relationships that came out of my illness.

Q: You have had five different death sentences. Many people know the charged feelings we get after we have a close brush with death. Your experiences have not been mere brushes, but definite pronouncements made with certainty. Miraculously you are still here. Could you say a little more about what happens when you face and survive this repeatedly?

A: It wakes up your senses! It really, really does! What has happened with me, and I think this is choice because I have talked to other people who have faced these things — every one faces it a little differently — but what happened to me was it put everything in priority. The things that I used to think were important, the goals I set and raised, I found out that many of them were really secondary. What is happening (now) is that I’m enjoying life so much because I am finding the things that are really important. I focus and function on those, and probably that gets centered around people, not accomplishing my goals in life, and not bringing in income.

 

 

[to top of second column in this article]

My wife and I were pretty middle class before we moved to Lincoln. This illness has taken away much of our financial security, but it hasn’t robbed us of anything that’s important. Our love for each other has grown, and I’ve found out how much I can depend on Elaine. I had no idea how much I needed her. It spreads from there to how much I need other people and how much I want to be a part of other people’s lives.

When I thought I was going to die — and miraculous is the word — for whatever reason, God decided I needed to be here a little longer than what the doctors originally thought. I have (been forced) to look it over. I don’t say this every day, but I know I live it. All right, I’m alive now when I shouldn’t be. What am I supposed to do with that? Who am I supposed to talk to? What purpose am I here to fulfill? God has given me more time, and there is a reason for that! I usually find myself involved in someone else’s life when I follow that line of thinking.

Q: How do you stay focused on being thankful?

A: I guess I was struggling with this question until it hit me why! It was bothering me because I don’t always stay focused on being thankful. I’m taking chemotherapy every week, and I’m having a nasty reaction to it as far as being weak all week long. It’s not as bad as it could be, but it keeps me from being productive as I want to be. I can only work part time and that sort of drives me crazy because there’s so many things that I want to do that I can’t do. And it’s very easy to sink into despondency. It’s very easy to begin feeling sorry for myself.

In order to be thankful, it is a matter of focus: being thankful! I don’t make it (to being thankful) enough. This week has been easy. There was a great sermon at church, people are talking about being grateful for Thanksgiving, and I’ve just got to be the most grateful person in Logan County! There can’t be anyone more grateful for Thanksgiving than I am because I know that I dodged a bullet to be here, maybe more than one. But I want to make that decision, and when I make that decision, then it starts happening.

Q: If you could recommend one thing, what would you say we should all do this season?

A: That is probably the easiest question I have ever been asked. Now, if I had been asked that question five years ago I probably would have come up with something a little more along the lines with my profession. I would have probably tried to come up with something profound in a sermon or a lesson, but I’ll tell you what, this last year has been so experiential. This last year has made so clear to me my very favorite line in any movie or any book, from Charles Dickens in the "Christmas Story," when the ghost cries out, "Mankind was my business!"

I think about last Christmas and the people that came to my door. (They came doing) "The Twelve Days of Christmas." They came by every day doing another one every day for 12 days. It was hilarious, but it’s so vivid in my mind because people cared.

Some days at church I can’t make it up to greet people. I end up sitting in a pew. I can’t get up and go shake hands, but they come to me. And these people bring their hearts to me. They bring their lives to me. These are the things that keep me going.

It’s other people that drives me! My relationship with my boys; they’ve become my best friends. My relationship with my wife, the sweetest relationship on earth!

None of these are perfect, but if I were to recommend one thing, find a way to become involved in other people's lives. Do whatever it takes!

Dan and Elaine came here after 23 years of ministry in Clark County in southern Illinois. Both grew up in Michigan — Elaine (maiden name Telfer) in Lansing and Dan from Owosso. They have been married 32 years and have three sons. Brian, 29, and his wife, Jody, recently moved to Sarasota, Fla., with their daughters, Haley and Emily.  Aaron, 24, and wife Pandy live in Lincoln. Colin, 23, single, also lives here in Lincoln. Bird serves part-time as pastoral care minister at Jefferson Street Christian Church.

Happy Thanksgiving, Birds, and all Logan County!

[Jan Youngquist]

 

 

 

[Obituary: Dan Bird]


Lincoln man chosen as
new state representative

[JUNE 22, 2001]  Jonathan Wright, city attorney for Lincoln and Atlanta, was named yesterday to fill the 90th House District seat vacated by John Turner of Atlanta.

Wright was chosen Thursday afternoon when the six GOP county chairmen in the district met at a Lincoln restaurant to go over the field of candidates one last time.

"After a friendly discussion, we voted, and John Wright was unanimously chosen," said Mary Jane Jones, Mason County GOP chairman. "He has several attributes that are very appealing. He is young, ambitious, knowledgeable and has a good appearance.

"We thought he was right for the job and that he’ll do the district good. He’s deserving of it," she said.

 


[Jonathan Wright swears in Mayor Beth Davis]

"Jonathan Wright came over to all of us as an excellent candidate and a good person, similar to John Turner in political philosophy," said Tazewell County GOP Chairman Claude Stone. "He will do a good job replacing Mr. Turner." Turner was recently appointed to a seat on the 4th District Appellate Court.

While the state legislature will be the gainer, the city of Lincoln will lose a good attorney, said Juanita Josserand, Lincoln city clerk.

"We’re going to lose a really good Christian person and a person who’s done a great job for us. I think he’ll do an even better job as a state representative," she said.

"In one way it will be a loss, but I know he will work for Lincoln and Logan County, just as John Turner did," she added.

Lincoln Mayor Beth Davis also expressed regret that the city will be losing Wright’s services. "I think he is very qualified, and I wish him all success. I regret that we won’t have him as city attorney any longer, but I realize this is a great opportunity for him.

[to top of second column in this article]

"He is very thorough and also very congenial to work with. I look forward to working with him in his new capacity as state representative," she added.

Wright was chosen from a field of seven, four from Logan County. Also seeking the seat were John Guzzardo, former mayor of Lincoln; George Davis, retiring Lincoln nursing home supervisor; Dave Hawkinson of Lincoln; and Lois Olson of Elkhart. Others in the running were former LeRoy Mayor Jerry Davis and Tim Sickmeyer of Mason County.

Wright, a native of Carol Stream, a Chicago suburb, told the Lincoln Daily News in a recent interview that after living in Monmouth, where he graduated from Monmouth College, he made a conscious choice to live and work in a smaller community, rather than stay in the city or suburbs.

 

He received his law degree from Chicago-Kent College of Law, has practiced law in Monmouth and then worked for the attorney general’s office in Springfield. He has lived in Logan County since 1994.

He said if appointed he will run again, even though the upcoming redistricting may change the district’s borders. Turner’s term expires in January of 2003.

Wright is an active member of the Park Meadows Baptist Church in Lincoln and is married to the former Melanie Usherwood of Lincoln. They have three daughters, Kate, age 5, Alison, 3, and Melissa, 1.

[Joan Crabb]

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Board divides county into six
districts, approves new member

[JUNE 22, 2001]  Logan County Board members huddled around the massive library table before last night’s meeting. Strewn about the table were the maps showing the options available for changing the voting landscape of the county from at-large to district representation.

The board members were seeking last-minute individual observations before deciding the representative direction of Logan County for at least the next 10 years.

As the meeting began, Dale Voyles made the motion to accept a new proposal that split the county into six districts with two representatives each.

 

Phil Mahler, concerned that a 12-member board could lead to deadlock, made a motion to amend to include a board chairman elected at large. This position would be nonvoting except to break a tie. Roger Bock, against the idea, pointed out that it would take seven votes to pass a resolution, whether the board consisted of 12 or 13 members. Mahler came back that a margin of 7-to-5 is much more difficult to attain than 7-6. When the question was called to a vote, an at-large chairman was voted down 7-4.

The discussion then moved back to the original motion of accepting the six-district, 12-representative plan motioned by Voyles. Using their last opportunity to place their comments on the record, both Paul Gleason and Griffin restated their concerns that district representation would take away from a board member feeling a responsibility to the entire community. Voyles answered that there are $10 million reasons (the county budget) for all board members to be accountable to the entire area. When the question was called to a vote, the motion carried by a 10-1 margin, with Mahler, who preferred the option of five districts with three representatives each, being the only dissenting vote.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

In other business Chairman Dick Logan brought up his recommendation of Gloria Luster to replace Beth Davis, Lincoln’s new mayor, on the board. Luster, a 48-year resident in the Mount Pulaski area and a payroll administrator at Lincoln Developmental Center, was one of only three candidates offered to the board for interviews.

Both Paul Gleason and Lloyd Hellman expressed disappointment that the board was not given the opportunity to interview all the candidates who applied for the position. Logan explained that the amount of time required to do so would be enormous, and, as a point of law, it was the county chairman’s right to nominate a candidate to the board and have that individual either approved or rejected. Doug Dutz then made the statement that, law or not, Logan’s actions were "dictatorial." Logan then commented that he had made a promise to the people of Mount Pulaski to give them a representative, and he was simply attempting to make good on his word.

 

As either a clarification or an attempt to compromise, Rod White then asked Logan if the next board appointee, to fill the place of Phil Mahler moving to regional planning commissioner, would be from a field of new candidates or those who wish to resubmit their names, with the board being more active in the decision process. Logan said White was correct in his read on the next appointment.

Luster’s appointment was then approved by a 6-4 margin. Approving the chairman’s recommendation were Logan, Hepler, Voyles, Mahler, Bock and White. Opposed were Werth, Griffin, Hellman and Dutz, with Gleason voting present. Within a few minutes, Luster was sworn in as the new board member. The meeting was then adjourned.

[Mike Fak]


State’s attorney reports on Williams case

[JUNE 22, 2001]  On June 20 a Logan County grand jury indicted Kimberly D. Williams, 20, for the alleged murder of her 11-month-old daughter, Daneysia Williams. Daneysia died May 27 as a result of blunt force trauma that caused laceration of the child’s liver, leading to death by internal bleeding.

Williams was charged in a six-count indictment alleging the different mental states applicable to the child’s death.

Later the same day as the indictment, Williams was arrested on a Logan County warrant at a residence near Kankakee. Bond in the amount of $1 million was set by Circuit Judge David Coogan. Williams appeared in court June 21, where she indicated she will hire private counsel. The matter was set for June 26 for the appearance of Williams with her attorney. No attorney has entered an appearance at this point.

If convicted, Williams faces a sentence of anywhere from 20 years to natural life in prison.

Logan County State’s Attorney Tim Huyett indicated that the investigation into the child’s death continues and that further action in the matter is anticipated in the near future.

[News release]

 


Downtown office store is closing its doors

[JUNE 21, 2001]  In the ongoing battle between corporate interests and the convenience of small-town America, small-town America has lost again.

As of June 30, Lincoln will no longer have a downtown office store, a handy place where somebody who just ran out of copy paper or ink cartridges can run over and stock up. June 29 is the last day the U.S. Office Products store on the corner of Broadway and Chicago Streets will be open for business.

 


[Outside shot of U.S. Office Products store, which is closing June 29.]


[Nina Westen of A.G. Edwards and Dennis Schrader of Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home chat while being waited on. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Peters, newcomers to Lincoln, are in the background.]

U.S. Office Products was recently sold to Corporate Express, which does not cater to retail traffic and does not keep retail outlets open.

"This had nothing to do with our location or the amount of business transacted here. It is just a corporate business decision to close all retail stores," said Gail Rawlins, manager of the Lincoln store.

"Corporate Express has every intention to continue to fully serve its commercial accounts," she added. Customers can continue to order supplies indefinitely, either in person while the store is open or by calling the local number, 732-3645, or 1-800-793-0606. Customers may also order by fax or the Internet.

 

Rawlins said corporate accounts have received a mailing letting them know about the new arrangements. She also said many customers are not happy about the loss of the retail outlet.

"Customers have been calling us, very surprised and very upset at not having a place to walk in and buy office supplies," she said.

The employees, three full-time and one part-time, will have to move on to other jobs, she added.

 

 

 

[to top of second column in this article]

"We have enjoyed our customers, and serving them in person and talking to them on the phone is something we’re all going to miss. We are all sorry to see the store close, and we know this is going to be a loss for the community as well as for us."

She noted that there has been an office supply store somewhere in Lincoln for 66 years, since 1935.

Nina Westen, with A.G. Edwards, is one commercial customer who is sorry to see the change.

"We’ve been loyal to this store because it is the Lincoln store and they have always been good about meeting national prices. I don’t know that we’ll be as loyal now that they’ve closed the retail outlets."

"Unfortunately, another store around the square is closing," said Dennis Schrader, of Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home. "It’s very sad. We’ve bought a lot of things here over the years. If they didn’t have what you wanted when you went in, they’d have it the next day."

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Peters, who relocated to Lincoln a few months ago, were also sorry to learn they will not have the convenience of an office supply store in their new hometown.

U.S. Office Products bought the store from Lincoln Office in 1996. For a while the name was B.A.T. Office Products, even though the store was owned by U.S. Office Products at the time, Rawlins said. She said the building is now up for sale.

[Joan Crabb]


[Customer Laura Lee from Mount Pulaski makes a purchase from Barb Peddicord at the U.S. Office Products store, which is soon to close.  Manager Gail Rawlins is in the background.]


[Nina Westen of A.G. Edwards looks over items on sale before the store closes June 29.]


Grand jury passes indictment

[JUNE 21, 2001]  Logan County State’s Attorney Tim Huyett took evidences about the death of a baby to a grand jury Wednesday.

The baby, 11-month-old Daneysia Williams, was taken to the hospital on May 27 by her mother, Kimberly Williams, 20, of 1202 Kankakee St. Attempts by hospital personnel to revive the baby failed.

Autopsy results revealed a lacerated liver caused by blunt trauma to her right side.

The grand jury found enough evidence to call for an indictment of the mother, and a warrant for the arrest of Kimberly Williams was issued. She was arrested in Kankakee and has been transferred to Logan County Jail.

[LDN]


Board tables pay issue, accepts bid for renovation, prepares to vote on districts

[JUNE 20, 2001]  By a vote of 11-1, the Logan County Board decided to table a motion to increase their pay. The raise, which would have been effective December of 2002, called for an increase from $35 per committee meeting to $50 and from $50 to $75 for each general board meeting.

Discussion prior to the vote indicated board members wanted to wait until current discussions on redistricting are finalized and the number of board members is determined.

Dick Logan, board chairman, told members that if the increase is eventually approved, other measures could be looked at to keep these costs down.

"The size of some of the committees could be reduced," Logan said.

"For instance, the liquor committee has six members. This could be reduced to three members including the committee chairman, another board member and the board chairman. Our final cost for these meetings could be a wash," he added.

 

The board also voted 9-3 to accept the only bid, $32,500 from Bassi Construction, to renovate the John Logan building, which was acquired to provide more space for courthouse services.

Those voting against the measure were concerned that the figures were too high based upon the work that was to be done.

In other action, a motion to forgive the past debt of Don Otte of several thousands of dollars in back rent due from farming operations at the airport failed by a 9-3 vote. The motion, made by Roger Bock, chairman of the airport committee, was based upon the unavailability of any documentation that specified terms of the agreement the board had with Otte.

The last documentation was in the minutes of the 1990 airport committee and indicated, through a "gentlemen’s agreement," that Otte would pay $100 per acre per year for the 3.75 acres of farm ground adjacent to the airport.

 

 

[to top of second column in this article]

Tim Huyett, state’s attorney, will send Otte a letter asking for payment prior to any litigation the county may bring against him.

Bill Martin addressed the board about redistricting plans. Martin is a member of the redistricting committee established by Dick Logan following overwhelming support of the referendum to change from at-large elections to district representation. Martin presented three plans for the board to look at and to vote on at a special session Thursday night. Other plans can also be presented at that meeting.

[Editor’s note: The three plans Martin presented are listed in an article posted in LDN on June 19. "In one proposal, a county of 12 ‘one person’ districts is offered. In another, three districts represented by five members each is subject to approval. In the third offering, a system of five districts with three board members each can be authorized." — from "Logan County Board districts and salaries," by Mike Fak]

 If the board cannot agree upon a plan by July, the question then goes to the Illinois Attorney General’s Office to appoint a committee to resolve the issue.

The referendum earlier this year was approved by the voters by a 3-1 margin.

[Fuzz Werth]


Ludolph, former police chief, accepts new position with state court system

[JUNE 20, 2001]  Rich Ludolph, former Lincoln police chief, announced today that he will be joining the staff of the Supreme Court at the Administrative Office of Illinois Courts.

He has been offered and accepted a position as a court reporting services field manager, working out of the Springfield office. He begins his new duties on Monday, June 25. He will work with numerous judges and court reporters throughout the state under a new program for court reporting management and implementation of digital recording of court hearings.

 

"I wish to thank former Mayor Joan Ritter for the opportunity to serve as Lincoln’s chief of police for four years. It has been an honor and a privilege to serve the citizens of Lincoln and Logan County as a deputy sheriff, probation officer and chief of police over the last 26 years," Ludolph said.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

Ludolph characterized his new position as "an exciting opportunity that will put me in an environment with which I am familiar but one that will bring new challenges and a new direction to my career."

"I have always enjoyed working within the court system, and I look forward to the future challenges it brings to my professional career," he said.

[News release]

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Lincoln City Council news

Grant may restore well Lincoln drank from

Fire Department promotions, new committee assignments

[JUNE 20, 2001]  Restoration of the well Abraham Lincoln drank from, which is in front of the present VFW Post at 915 Fifth St., may be financed by an Illinois FIRST grant, according to Alderman Patrick Madigan.

"Based on a conversation with our state senator, the committee on the well will apply for an Illinois FIRST grant to get the entire sum needed for the restoration," he told the Lincoln City Council. Patrick Madigan is the son of state Sen. Robert Madigan.

The well, originally part of the Deskins Tavern property, is across from the Postville Courthouse State Historic Site. Traveling lawyers, including Lincoln, stayed at the tavern while on the 8th Judicial Circuit. They routinely drank from the well.

The well was recently reopened and is part of Logan County’s Looking for Lincoln project. The Looking for Lincoln Committee hopes to restore the well and sell water from it as souvenirs to tourists visiting Lincoln sites in the area. The well will have both an electric pump and a hand-held pump that visitors can use.

 

Chuck Jolly of Reynolds Drilling Company in Springfield appeared before the council to ask if the city had questions about his proposal to upgrade the well to meet the state code. He noted that there are issues "that might require a variance from the Health Department," but did not elaborate.

The council voted not to finance any participation in the well project, pending the approve of the Illinois FIRST grant. Mayor Beth Davis has agreed to pay the $195 fee for opening the well from the mayor’s budget.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

In other business, the city heard a report from treasurer Les Plotner noting that the Lincoln Police Department and Lincoln Fire Department have hired an actuary to study the health of their retirement funds.

Three promotions and one new hire were announced for the Fire Department. Mark Miller has been promoted to assistant chief, Jeff Singleton has been promoted to captain, and Larry Spurling has been promoted to lieutenant. Todd Koehler will be hired as a member of the department as of June 20.

Mayor Davis announced several changes in committee assignments. Steve Fuhrer has been named to the Abraham Lincoln Statue Committee, and Paul Gleason, local historian, and Ron Keller, curator of the museum at Lincoln College, have been added to the city’s Sesquicentennial Celebration Committee.

[Joan Crabb]


East Park subdivision comes to a stop

[JUNE 19, 2001]  Plans for the proposed 16-home East Park subdivision, which have been under discussion by developer Rodney White and the Lincoln City Council for several months, came to a halt Monday evening over who will foot the bill for upgrading a city street.

In a surprise move, the ordinance and zoning committee agreed to approve the plat for the 16 houses facing Sherman Street only if White agrees to pay the full costs of putting in curbs and gutters and upgrading the southeast half of the city street that will serve his development.

When the vote came before the full council, all nine members present supported the committee’s decision. Alderman Glenn Shelton was absent.

"I think at this time it is not feasible for me to develop the 16 lots and upgrade the entire street," White told the council after the vote. "Thank you for your time and consideration." White and his wife, Paula, then left the council chamber with no further discussion.

Before the vote, Mayor Beth Davis tried to mobilize support for White’s latest plan. "I’d like to say that people have tried to start building in Lincoln to make it grow. I am behind this plan, but it is up to the council."

The sticking point for the ordinance committee appeared to be the provision in the city code that a developer must bring a street up to city code before dedicating it to the city, including installing curbs and gutters. While that provision always applies to a road constructed by the developer, there is some question about how it applies to a road already owned by the city.

"Curbs and gutters must be put in for a roadway going into a development," Grant Eaton, sewer plant manager, told the council, "but I don’t know how you would classify this road."

Eaton said the curbs and gutters could be put in now, "but we’d have to do road work and fill in the ditch first." He also said if White puts in part of the street now, "we’re going to have to tear out most of what he does" when it is time to put in sewer connections.

White has maintained that he did not want the city to upgrade Sherman Street until at least half the lots have been sold, so it would not have to be torn up again to put in sewer and utility lines.

City Attorney Jonathan Wright told the aldermen they have the authority to require a developer to upgrade a road if they wish to do so, even if it is a city street and not a new one. He also suggested the council ask for a letter of credit, which would assure that funds provided by the developer were on hand to put in the required improvements.

 

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White had originally proposed that he would develop the 16 lots along Sherman Street, donating one to the Lincoln Community High School’s Technical Education Center for its building trades project, allowing Lincoln Christian College an easement for a water main and dedicating a space for a street in case the land behind the 16 lots was developed. He said he wanted to sell the lots for about $10,000 and allow local builders to put up homes costing $80,000 to $90,000. He asked the city to upgrade Sherman Street, at the city’s expense, some time after sewer and utility hookups were in place, a cost estimated at about $230,000. He also estimated the development would bring in revenue of $90,000 to the city over 10 years’ time.

White came to Monday night’s council meeting with a new proposal, to pay for the curbs and gutters, about $25,000 to $30,000, and install additional fire hydrants. However, Alderman Michael Montcalm, chairman of the ordinance and zoning committee, proposed that White also pay for upgrading the side of the street abutting the property, because curbs and gutters cannot be installed without preliminary work.

Aldermen also expressed concerns about "doing this right," according to the ordinance, so they would not set a precedent that would have to be followed for other developers.

"In our code it’s always been developers who put in curbs and gutters," Alderman Steve Fuhrer said.

"Whatever we do, let’s do it correctly," Alderman Bill Melton added. "I’ve had several phone calls on this." He said that other developers were watching the council’s decision.

"We are walking a fine line," Alderman Patrick Madigan said. "I’d love to be able to do this [allow the development], but we are getting away from the ordinance. What are we going to do down the road for other developers?"

Mayor Davis said after the meeting that she hoped the city could still work with White on the development. She said it might be necessary to change the city ordinance if it is prohibiting development of new homes in the city.

White has had support for his development from Lincoln Community High School officials, School District 27 and local building supply companies. Cindy Olmstead, director of the Lincolnland Technical education Center, appeared at Monday’s meeting to urge approval of the new subdivision. She said the school has difficulty finding lots that students in the building trades program can use and would like to buy at least three lots from White.

[Joan Crabb]


Announcement
County office open for tax payments Saturday morning

[JUNE 19, 2001]  The Logan County Treasurer’s Office announces the office will be open from 8:30 a.m. to noon on Saturday, June 23. The first installment of real estate taxes will be due without a penalty on Friday, June 29. Beginning July 2, a 1½ percent penalty will be charged on the first installment. The second installment is due without a penalty on Sept. 5. A penalty of 1½ percent will be charged on the second installment beginning Sept. 6. The annual tax sale of all property with unpaid taxes will be at 10 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 29, in the first floor courtroom of the Logan County Courthouse. Taxpayers are reminded of the new drop box for the Logan County treasurer. The box for payments is in the city parking lot on North Kickapoo Street.


Sunny skies, shady breezes and bluegrass tunes draw crowd for
Mount Pulaski Heritage Days

[JUNE 18, 2001]  Hundreds of visitors made the courthouse square in Mount Pulaski a busy place on Friday evening and Saturday, when the community sponsored its Heritage Days and Bluegrass Festival.

[Click here to see photos from Heritage Days]

The picture-perfect weather blue skies, a refreshing breeze and the shady courthouse lawn brought many folks out with their lawn chairs Saturday afternoon to enjoy a varied program of bluegrass and other old-time music. The audience included both young and old, as well as a few family pets. Some people brought their own coolers, but most took advantage of the refreshments being sold across the street, including cold drinks and pork chop sandwiches and dinners.

Keeping the crowd entertained were a number of area music groups: the Sherri Farley Trio, McGee Creek, Marcus and Megan Mullins, Farmer’s Daughter, Long Creek Bluegrass and Rod Nicholson.

People also visited the museum and toured the historic courthouse, one of only two surviving courthouses where Abraham Lincoln practiced law on the 8th Judicial Circuit. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, it is the only one restored and furnished as a operating 1850s courthouse.

 

 

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A special exhibit of almost 50 quilts, some old and some very new, brought visitors upstairs to see the courtroom and view the quilts. The courtroom still has the original floor, so visitors were standing on the floorboards where Lincoln once stood.

The colorful entrants in the children’s art contest were displayed in store windows around the square.

The event was a benefit for the Mount Pulaski Tourism Committee and Historical Society.

[Joan Crabb]

 


Turner replacement not picked yet

[JUNE 18, 2001]  The replacement for John Turner as state representative, expected to be chosen this weekend, has still not been named, according to Mason County GOP Chairman Mary Jane Jones.

"There were a couple of latecomers we didn’t get a complete background check on," Jones told the Lincoln Daily News. She said she believed the choice would be made on Thursday at an undisclosed time and location. The GOP chairmen of the six counties that are in the 90th District, all or in part, will choose Turner’s successor.

Seven candidates remain in the race to fill Turner’s unexpired term, four of them from Lincoln, one from Elkhart and one from Mason County. Lincoln candidates are Jonathan Wright, currently the city attorney; Dave Hawkinson, director of marketing and public affairs at Corn Belt Energy Corp.; John Guzzardo, mayor of Lincoln for eight years; and George Davis, retiring supervisor of St. Clara’s Manor nursing home.

 

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The other three are Lois Olson of Elkhart, who is employed by the Illinois Department of Financial Institutions; Jerry Davis, former mayor of Leroy; and Tim Sickmeyer of Kilbourne, in Mason County, with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.

Guzzardo and Davis announced last week that they were seeking the appointment, shortly before the Wednesday deadline.

The candidate chosen will fill out Turner’s term, which expires in January of 2003. Most candidates have said they would run for another term if they were named to fill the seat. Turner resigned to accept a seat on the 4th District Appellate Court.

[Joan Crabb]


Lincoln Daily News Archives
now available
[JUNE 16, 2001]  Monday, Aug. 4, 2000. It was the opening day of the Logan County Fair. At Lincoln Daily News we were preparing for our first year at the fair. Anxiety, tensions and excitement were riding high. We had been preparing for weeks, but in reality we had no idea what we were doing or how it would go. We were going to the fair to let people know about Lincoln Daily News and to provide county fair coverage in the newspaper.

We look back and wonder now if anyone would have bothered showing up for work at all on Monday morning if we had known in advance what we would face that week . You may remember that on Sunday afternoon, an accident caused a power outage in Lincoln. That power outage crashed the LDN server, seriously damaging all our data files. In simple English, we lost everything that was related to Lincoln Daily News, and LDN on the Net was gone, really gone! Talk about stress!

We worked through the morning not knowing if we would be able to publish that day or any day soon or if we might actually be done for good. There we were at the fair, and there wasn't any Lincoln Daily News for the day to show anyone.

The tech guys tried to sort out what remained of the LDN website. A couple minutes before noon we received word that we could post on another server from a different site for that day. Readers had no idea how close it was that we even had a publication, nor was it readily obvious that we were not on our usual site. It was only on closer inspection it could be noticed that there were a number of oddities. There were articles on the inside pages that were ages old. More recent articles were gone. It was a little like being in a nightmare lots of big and little things just weren't quite right.

 

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All the damages were not apparent immediately. LDN was hosted on the temporary site for weeks before new equipment replaced some of the damaged old equipment. The biggest loss was our recently completed archives. We had worked all summer to catalog the articles for complete and simple reference. Archives were now inaccessible, and the damages have kept them unavailable until today.

We have worked hard in recent months, and what is left of the archives is now accessible again to the public. You can find them at http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/.

You will notice that some entire issues are missing, others have pictures missing, links broken, and other anomalies. But for the most part, our publishing history and the stories about our community are now once again preserved and ready for your perusal.

The newly restored archives will allow you to go back through LDN and read past articles and view pictures. In about a week, our search engine will be in place and you will be able to search for specific articles, words, names, etc.

We thank you for your patience, and we bid you welcome to the newly reopened archives.

[LDN]

 


North Kickapoo Street temporarily closed at tracks

[JUNE 14, 2001]  The railroad crossing on North Kickapoo Street, near the Dollar Store and Michelle’s Garden Shop, will be closed starting Monday, June 18, and reopen at 7 a.m. Monday, June 25. Automobile and single-axle truck traffic can detour to McLean or Hamilton streets, but tractor-trailers will be routed completely around Kickapoo Street onto Lincoln Parkway. The railroad will be installing a new concrete crossing to replace the old rubber crossing, according to Donnie Osborne, Lincoln street superintendent.


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