DHS
mulling options on LDC downsizing
[APRIL
5, 2002] The
Department of Human Services is "evaluating the next course of
action" following an injunction against moving any more
residents from the Lincoln Developmental Center, according to DHS
spokesman Reginald Marsh.
|
"There
has not been a decision made," Marsh said. "We are working
with the attorney general’s office to see what our options
are." The attorney general’s office serves as legal counsel
for DHS.
On
March 27, Associate Judge Don Behle of the Circuit Court ruled on
the second count of a lawsuit brought by the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees, the union that represents LDC
employees and other plaintiffs. Judge Behle ruled that DHS must get
a permit from the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board before
moving any more residents from the facility.
A
spokesman for AFSCME said recently that among the options available
to the DHS were appealing the ruling or getting a permit from the
Health Planning Board for the transfer for residents. Getting the
permit requires a public hearing, at which parents, employees and
other interested parties could testify.
The
March 27 ruling effectively stopped the moving of residents from LDC
to other state-operated facilities or to group homes. As of now, 248
residents remain at the Lincoln facility, from a high of about 375
last October. The plan outlined by Gov. George Ryan was to downsize
LDC to 100 residents and cut the number of employees to 210.
Currently about 600 employees are still at LDC.
In
February, 372 employees were given notice that they would be laid
off as the downsizing continued. Notice of possible layoffs must be
given 60 days ahead of time. Layoffs were scheduled to start on
April 30.
Marsh
said he could not say at this time whether some staff would be let
go while DHS is determining its course of action. He did say LDC now
has the highest ratio of staff to residents of any of the 11
state-operated facilities for the developmentally disabled, but he
said the safety and health of the residents would be the first
consideration.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
"We’re
not going to lay off people to the point where we can’t run the
facility in a safe and appropriate manner," he told the Lincoln
Daily News.
Marsh
also said that of the 372 employees who received layoff notices, 60
had opted to take jobs at other state-run facilities. Those 60 were
scheduled to be transferred in April, the first wave on the 16th and
the rest April 30. However, because residents are not being moved,
the scheduled move of employees "may not happen," he
added.
He
also said the preliminary injunction against moving residents has
raised questions about keeping federal Medicaid funding for the
facility. Federal funding pays about one-half the cost of
maintaining the residents at LDC.
Federal
funding was discontinued last November when a survey by the
Department of Public Health showed the facility was in
"immediate jeopardy," but was reinstated in December when
reforms were ordered.
However,
Marsh said, the funding was to have ended March 21, but negotiations
that allow the funding to continue have been under way while DHS
works on the downsizing plan.
"The
preliminary injunction has called into question the state’s
ability to maintain federal funding. Negotiations have been
contingent on downsizing to 100 residents by June 30," Marsh
said.
In
either case, whether the Lincoln facility is maintained at 248
residents or is downsized to 100, it must still go through another
survey (an inspection to be sure it is meeting health and safety
requirements) in order to maintain federal funding, Marsh said.
"This
whole thing started because the facility was decertified because of
health and safety issues," Marsh said. "But we feel the
facility can pass a survey if it is downsized to 100 residents. That
is a controllable level."
The
situation at LDC is still "up in the air," Marsh added.
"We will have to wait for some clear-cut answers."
[Joan
Crabb]
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President
calls for an immediate
political settlement in Mideast
[APRIL
4, 2002] President
George Bush spoke to the nation at 10 a.m. (CST) about the situation
in the Mideast. He opened by saying that he had been monitoring the
situation but lost hope of a peaceable ending when terrorists
attacked a group of innocent people. In another event an 18-year-old
Palestinian girl took the life of an 17-year-old Israeli girl in a
suicide attack. He condemned a nation where parents sacrifice their
children’s lives
|
He
clearly stated, "Terrorism must be stopped. There is no way to
make peace with those whose only goal is death."
In
Israel’s defense he said, "Israel has the right to
exist." Israel has recognized the right of a Palestinian state.
Addressing
the nations, the president reiterated that every one must choose to
side with civilization or terrorists. "Middle East authorities
must also choose."
President
Bush said Palestinian Chairman Yasser Arafat must choose. He has
missed his opportunities. Attacks are only a temporary measure.
To
the Palestinian people and authority, he pronounced, "Blowing
yourself up does not help the Palestinian cause." To the
Palestinian authorities and all governments, he declared, "Stop
the terrorists. They are not martyrs. They are murderers."
"To
all who oppose peace process and seek the destruction Israel: Israel
has the right to exist! Accept them as a nation."
Palestinian
people deserve peace and prosperity. They deserve to have Israel as
a neighbor. They should seek peace and economic development. They
can be politically and economically viable. Occupation must stop.
They have the right to secure and recognized boundaries. The same as
between Israel and Syria, and Israel and Lebanon.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Israel
must show respect for Palestinians. They are and will be neighbors.
They should practice compassion at checkpoints. Israel should allow
people to go back to work.
"America
recognizes Israel’s right to defend itself," he said.
However, the president commanded that they should halt incursions of
Palestinian areas and withdraw from the areas they occupy.
He
declared that Syria must decide which side of the conflict it is on.
And
finally he announced that he is sending U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell to the area next week to implement an immediate
ceasefire.
He
concluded by saying, "The Middle East could have free trade,
economic development and democracy. This will only come in an
atmosphere of peace."
[Jan
Youngquist]
|
|
Lincoln
named Tree City USA
[APRIL
4, 2002] A
plaque and an official Tree City USA sign were presented to the
Lincoln City Council Monday evening, marking the first time the city
has won this national honor.
|
The
Tree City USA award is presented by the National Arbor Day
Association and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. The
award was presented to city officials last week by Ms. Reinee
Hildebrandt of the State Forester’s Office, at an awards luncheon
in Springfield.
Attending
the luncheon were Aldermen Dave Armbrust, George Mitchell and Glenn
Shelton, as well as Street Superintendent Donnie Osborne and the
sewer plant manager, Grant Eaton.
[Photos by
Joan Crabb]
[Donnie
Osborne, Lincoln’s street superintendent (left), and Alderman Dave
Armbrust, chairman of the forestry committee, present to Mayor
Beth Davis an official
sign and a plaque naming Lincoln a certified Tree City USA.]
The
city learned in February that it had been named a 2001 Tree City. A
letter from the National Arbor Day Foundation congratulated the city
on receiving recognition for its tree-care program.
The
letter said, in part, that communities are recognized when they have
proven their commitment to "an effective, ongoing community
forestry program, one marked by renewal and improvement.
"Trees
help clean our air and water, moderate heat and cold, and bring
warmth and grace to our homes," the letter said.
Alderman
Dave Armbrust, chairman of the forestry committee, presented the
plaque to Mayor Beth Davis, and Donnie Osborne, superintendent of
the city’s streets department, presented the official sign.
To
win the award, Osborne explained, a city must have a forestry
commission and a forestry ordinance, both of which Lincoln has. The
commission must show a budget item of at least $2 per capita; with a
budget of $78,000, Lincoln well exceeds that mark. The city also has
to have an Arbor Day declaration and observe Arbor Day.
The
city has observed Arbor Day with tree plantings at nursing homes and
other locations in recent years. The Lincoln Community High School’s
National Honor Society tree planting has also become a valuable part
of Arbor Day, Osborne said. First- graders from area schools also
help with the planting.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
Armbrust
thanked the Lincoln Rotary Club, Environmental Management
Corporation, the Lincoln Park District and CILCO for donations of
trees. He also thanked the Logan County Parks and Trails Foundation
and John Sutton, the Lincoln Community High School National Honor
Society, all area grade schools, the Logan County Soil and Water
Conservation District, Lincoln area nursing homes, Eric Jenkins,
Melanie Riggs, Dennis Hartman, the Illinois Department of Natural
Resources, and former District 27 Superintendent Les Plotner for
their help and participation in planting trees throughout the city.
Mayor
Davis said the biggest "thank you" should go to Donnie
Osborne and his staff.
"Don
has really been the arborist for the city. He has worked with the
schools, especially the high school Honor Society, to plant new
trees, and he has taken care of our trees, making sure the staff
keeps them trimmed and keeps our trees replenished. The plaque
really belongs to him."
Osborne,
however, maintains that the credit goes to many different people,
including LCHS teacher Judy Dopp and the National Honor Society,
which each year plants trees and involves first-graders from the
various schools in the activity. He also thanked city officials.
"Without the support of past and current mayors and administrations,
this couldn’t have been done," he added
"An
urban forest is a valuable and beautiful asset," Osborne said.
"We all take it for granted, but maintaining it is a
never-ending job."
Keeping
up the tradition, Osborne and the National Honor Society will again
be planting trees on Arbor Day, which in Lincoln is always the third
Wednesday in April, and again on Earth Day, April 22.
Osborne
said the city will eventually receive five official signs, which
will be posted at each major entrance to the city. And this year,
for the first time, a Tree City flag, a tree on a white background,
will fly at the Route 10 East gateway on Arbor Day.
[New Tree City USA signs will soon go up at all major entrances to
Lincoln.]
[Joan
Crabb]
For
more information on Tree City USA, see http://arborday.org/programs/treecityusa.html.
|
|
Legislators
urge Gov. Ryan
to stop LDC moves
[APRIL
3, 2002] Eighteen
Illinois legislators, most of whom were members of the committee
that heard testimony about closing or downsizing Lincoln
Developmental Center, have sent a letter to Gov. George Ryan asking
him not to downsize the institution until the "unanswered
questions" about the moves have been resolved.
|
The
letter, dated April 1, was signed by, among others, Sen. Larry K.
Bomke, R-Springfield; Sen. Claude U. Stone, R-Morton; Rep. Gwenn
Klingler, R-Springfield; Rep. Bill Mitchell, R-Forsythe; and Rep.
Jonathan Wright, R-Hartsburg.
The
committee, headed by Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie, had four sessions
during which it heard testimony from the Department of Human
Services, which oversees LDC and other facilities for the
developmentally disabled; the American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees, the union which represents workers at LDC;
members of the developmentally disabled community; and parents of
the residents of LDC.
The
letter sent to Gov. Ryan noted that family members of LDC residents
"remain firmly supportive of the facility and wish their loved
ones to stay there." Because of the family’s opposition to
closing LDC, the letter said, "We have real doubt as to whether
the DHS plan to downsize is in the best interests of residents"
and asked that DHS halt the movement of any further residents until
the General Assembly has an opportunity "fully review the
situation."
[to top of second
column in this section]
|
Other
moves to keep the 125-year-old facility open include an injunction
issued by Associate Judge Don Behle of the Circuit Court in Logan County to
cease moving residents until further notice. The injunction was a
result of a lawsuit filed by AFSCME, Sen. Bomke and parents of LDC
residents.
A
bill introduced into the House of Representatives by Reps. Wright
and Mitchell also seeks to keep LDC at 240 residents, with about 480
employees. Gov. Ryan’s plan has been to downsize LDC to 100
residents with about 210 employees.
The
complete letter appears below.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
April
1, 2002
The
Honorable George Ryan
Governor
– State of Illinois
Room
207 – State Capitol
Springfield, IL
62706
Dear
Governor Ryan:
As
participants in hearings held jointly by the Mental Health
and Patient Abuse and Disabled Community committees and
other interested legislators, we have serious concerns about
your announced plan to downsize the Lincoln Developmental
Center. We are writing to urge you to halt any movement of
residents from Lincoln at this time. There are many
unanswered questions about the downsizing and the best way
to protect the individuals who reside there. In fact, those
of us who submitted questions to the Department of Human
Services in conjunction with the hearings are still awaiting
responses, and we may well need to conduct further hearings
or investigations related to this matter once the
information is provided to us.
Our
concerns arose from the testimony provided by several
parties including representatives of DHS. Of the most
immediate concerns is the plan to move 159 residents from
Lincoln in less than five months. Family members of Lincoln
residents remain firmly supportive of the facility, and wish
their loved ones to stay there. They are deeply concerned
about the lack of appropriate alternative placements that
would also be geographically accessible to them.
You
have repeatedly stated that your actions regarding LDC stem
from your concerns for the residents. Surely LDC family
members have the interests of their loved ones as their
primary concern. Given their opposition to this plan, we
have real doubt as to whether the DHS plan to downsize is in
the best interests of residents. Therefore, we believe you
should direct DHS to halt the movement of residents until
those of us in the General Assembly have an opportunity to
fully review the situation and express the legislature’s
will on this matter.
Sincerely,
Larry K.
Bomke |
Walter Dudycz |
Adeline J.
Geo-Karis |
State Senator |
State Senator |
State Senator |
50th
District |
7th
District |
31st
District |
John Maitland |
Judy Myers |
Duane Noland |
State Senator |
State Senator |
State Senator |
44th
District |
53rd
District |
51st
District |
Patrick J. O’Malley |
Claude U.
Stone |
Thomas J,
Walsh |
State Senator |
State Senator |
State Senator |
18th
District |
45th
District |
22nd
District |
Annazette
Collins |
Maggie Crotty |
Mary Flowers |
State
Representative |
State
Representative |
State
Representative |
10th
District |
35th
District |
21st
District |
Gwenn
Klingler |
Lou Lang |
Bill Mitchell |
State
Representative |
State
Representative |
State
Representative |
100th
District |
16th
District |
102nd
District |
Mary K. O’Brien |
Bob Ryan |
Jonathan
Wright |
State
Representative |
State
Representative |
State
Representative |
75th District |
79th District |
90th District |
|
|
|
Know
where you are
Emergency
cell phone use
[APRIL
3, 2002] There
is no doubt that technology has given us a better, easier, higher
quality of life. But if you’re working in a field that relies on
technology, the rapid rate of development can cause more than a few
headaches on an ordinary day. As director of the Emergency Services
Disaster Agency, Dan Fulscher takes advantage of all that modern
technology has to offer, including advanced communication systems.
He also oversees the E911 system. He will tell you, "As
technology has grown, problems have increased."
|
In
1993, when the 911 service began, there were 239 calls the first
month. That was thought to be a lot of calls. Now 1,600-1,800
land-based calls and 600-800 cell calls are received each month.
This constitutes an increase to12 times as many calls as in the beginning. This
increase is not due to an increase in crime or fire but rather
because people are more aware of how to call, and they use it like a
security blanket. The goal of a simple number to call for help has
been achieved.
To
illustrate his point, Fulscher said that a recent Police Magazine
article on domestic violence said that most victims used to say,
"I’m going to call the police." They now say, "I’m
going to call 911."
Cell
phone calls started showing up the first year 911 was in place and
are rapidly on the increase. Chicago’s 911 system now logs 35
percent cell calls. Logan County calls monitored over the last two
months indicate that 30.5 percent — nearly one-third — of the
911 calls are from cell phones.
It
used to be that a person could expect to make two to four emergency
phone calls in a lifetime. Now, that number has doubled, and a
person will make eight to 20 calls. Part of that is due to the
availability of a phone while traveling, in addition to increased
time spent in the car. At one time we traveled 15,000 miles per
year, including special trips as a family. Now the average on-the-go
working family drives twice that in everyday driving, plus special
trips and vacations.
It
is the good fortune of Logan County that, through vision and hard
work, we have a fully completed and operational enhanced 911 system,
E911. When you call from a land-based phone, your call shows
enhanced caller ID information, the e-mapping system instantly shows
where the call is coming from, the destination is mapped and
coordinated, and the information received is disseminated quickly to
all emergency services needed via a dispatcher.
OK,
so what is the problem today?
"E911
is what America thinks is available nationwide. It is not,"
Fulscher says.
Callers
need to be aware that there are 911 systems without enhanced
features and that those calls and cell phone calls will take a
little longer than a land-based call to an E911 system. The
dispatcher will need to know who the callers are, where they are and
possibly what services need to be called. Remember, it takes more
time to process a cell phone call since the automated features of
E911 are not enacted.
The
dilemma
The
growth of cell phone use has reduced the efficiency of the E911
system. The E911 system is driven by the information provided by
their enhanced caller ID system. Cell phone calls do not provide any
usable caller ID information beyond the cell phone number that the
call is coming from. A cell phone call could be made from any
location.
(For
those who may be wondering, cordless phones are considered
land-based.)
When
you dial 911 on your cell phone, it connects you to the closest 911
dispatch in Illinois. If you are in Logan County, it connects to the
Lincoln dispatch center. Other than the phone number being displayed
on the caller ID, the E911 service provides no more benefit.
What
we are about to tell you could simply save your life or aid someone
in an emergency
Tips
for calling 911 from a cell phone:
1.
When using cell 911, look at your surroundings as you are traveling;
periodically check road coordinates, route signs and towns just
passed.
[Photos by Bob Frank]
2.
If you are carrying a cell phone, get used to looking at addresses
before going into a home or business. When at a social or
recreational event, note the town, a building name, an address if
possible, and note where you are specifically located in a building
or town. A constant check on your surroundings could speed up rescue
and make the difference in life-saving measures.
3.
Leave your cell phone on after making a call.
4.
Do not make other calls, in case dispatch needs to call you back for
more information or clarification.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Please
remember that terrorism and domestic violence are on the rise.
Although you may not be a target, you could happen upon an incident
as it occurs. Remember
to speak clearly and slowly because the dispatch will have to
document information instead of simply typing it into a computer.
Since location information is not automated as with a land-based
call, be aware that gathering information could take from one to two
minutes. You can help speed this process by being prepared to answer
any other questions dispatch may ask.
Many
calls are made when an accident is witnessed on an interstate
highway. If you can be specific about location, your call will be
most helpful. The following are some recent bad examples of calls
from highway drivers trying to report an accident: "I’m about
1½ hours south of Chicago"; another driver reported, "I’m
on Route 136, between Havana and McLean."
Keep
in mind that in Logan County there is Interstate 55 (I-55) and there
is Interstate 155 (I-155). Be clear about which highway you are on.
The mile markers for the two interstates are slightly different,
with I-55 having the higher numbers. The problem of similar highway
numbers that are easily confused exists elsewhere as well.
Tips
from the driving pros
James
Courtwright of American Freightways in Lincoln said that most of
their drivers have been driving a long time and generally drive the
same daily routes. The drivers keep aware of the following
information as they travel:
1.
Major highway arteries: i.e., I-55 and Route 136.
2.
Mile marker numbers
3.
Exit numbers
4.
Proximity to towns: north, south, east or west
5.
Direction of travel
6.
Landmarks
7.
Other tangible information
Giving
directions
Use
right, left, straight; not north, south, east or west. You may start
out indicating a geographical direction, but the remainder of your
coordinates should be provided as "right,"
"left" or "straight" terminology.
Example:
Go north on Nicholson Road from Business 55, turn right
at Krueger Road, go straight about two miles and look for the
grain elevator on the left at the end of the road just over
the tracks.
The
future of cell phone E911
While
there are many cellular phone companies to choose from in Logan
County, there is only one land-based phone service. E911 services
must be coordinated with the phone system to provide enhanced
services. Cellular coordination will require not only development of
technologies, but also daily updating with all telecommunications
systems.
At
the Logan County E911 site, office manager Dianne Ruff communicates
with our only land-based phone provider, Verizon, keeping our
land-based phone information current. Weekly she manually processes
125 changes related to location moves and phone number changes.
At
present, surcharges added to telephone bills support our E911
system: 85 cents per month on land-based and 43 cents per month on
cell phone bills. These fees pay for technical improvements. The
Logan County 911 board is assessing the effects that increased cell
phone use is having and is monitoring finances while looking to the
future.
While
enhanced cellular 911 is on its way, it will probably be many years
before it has the capacity of the current land-based enhanced 911
system.
"It
will take as many years as it did to develop from what we had at
first in 1993 to what it is in 2002," says Fulscher. "It
will be great when it gets here, but in the meantime we need to do
our part in being prepared to supply good directions when making
emergency calls."
[Jan
Youngquist]
|
|
City
budget cut will raise water bills
[APRIL
2, 2002] In
its efforts to cut about $1 million from next year’s budget, the
Lincoln City Council has decided it must pass the fire hydrant
service fees back to water company customers.
|
The
move, passed unanimously by council members at the April 1 meeting,
will save the city about $212,000 annually and will add
approximately $5 to city residents’ bimonthly water bills.
The
change will not take effect until about the end of June, however,
because it must go through the Illinois Commerce Commission, so the
city will need to put some money in the 2002-2003 fiscal year budget
for the hydrant fees, finance chairman Steve Fuhrer said.
Three
years ago the council decided to pay the annual fee to cover the
local water company’s charges on fire hydrants. Previously,
American Water added those costs to customers’ monthly bills.
Now,
however, with falling sales tax revenues and a historically low rate
of return on its investments keeping the city strapped for revenue,
the council has reluctantly decided it must pass the charge back to
the water customers.
"We
looked everywhere possible for dollars before we decided we had to
do this," Fuhrer said.
Other
cuts the city has made so far are wage freezes for department heads,
hiring freezes, elimination of new vehicles for the police and the
city zoning office, and cuts in funding for the Elm Street
improvement project between Fifth and West Kickapoo streets.
Even
these cuts are not deep enough to balance the city’s budget for
the new fiscal year that begins May 1, Fuhrer said. Projections show
that the city can expect about $4 million in revenue next year, and
the original budget projections came to almost $5 million. To
balance the budget, he said recently, the finance committee must
whittle away at least another $200,000. He said he hopes to do that
without layoffs, but he cannot rule them out. Another meeting of the
committee is scheduled for April 8.
In
other business, the council tabled a motion to accept a small
building from West Lincoln Township. The building, at Fifth and
Adams streets, has been used as a polling place for many years.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Mayor
Beth Davis believes the building has "definite historic
value" and has said she would like to move it to the Postville
Courthouse historic site. She said local historian Paul Beaver is
having the building dated and believes it was constructed before
1888, the date for which the first title was found.
Two
members of the city’s historic preservation commission, chair
Betty York and member Georgia Vinson, attended the council meeting.
The
council also voted to allow the sale of a vacant lot at 1305 Tremont
St. and to share the proceeds with Logan County. The city has a
demolition lien of $5,900 on the lot, as well as mowing costs, and
the county is owed back taxes of $15,000 on the property. The city
voted to accept one-third of the proceeds of the sale, giving the
rest to the county.
[Photo by Joan Crabb]
[Fire Chief Bucky Washam
(left) presents awards to two brothers who recently retired from the
Lincoln City Fire Department. Assistant Chief Don Fulk (center)
retired Feb. 15 after almost 33 years, and Assistant Chief Larry
Fulk retired in June of last year after 27 years of service.]
Two retired assistant
fire chiefs, brothers Don and Larry Fulk, received trophies from
Chief Bucky Washam commemorating their years of service to the
Lincoln City Fire Department. Don served the city for nearly 33
years, retiring in February. Larry served for 27 years and retired
in June of 2001.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Sixteen-year-old
loses life in accident
[APRIL
1, 2002] Daniel
J. Logan, 16, of Lincoln was pronounced dead at 9:44 p.m. Saturday
after the car he was driving failed to negotiate a curve on Route
121-Limit Street.
|
The
car was traveling southbound when it moved into the northbound lane
and off the road into a ditch. The car overturned and the driver was
thrown from the vehicle. He was pronounced dead at the scene by
Logan County Deputy Coroner Warren Rogers. There were no other
passengers in the car.
|
The
accident occurred just south of Keokuk Street at 8:56 p.m. It is
under investigation by the Lincoln City Police and the coroner’s
office. An autopsy was performed this morning, but the report has
not yet been issued.
Daniel
Logan is the son of the local county board chairman, Dick Logan.
[Gina
Sennett]
[See
obituary]
|
|
Truck
theft
[APRIL
1, 2002] Kevin
Johnson, 31, was arrested Thursday after he was spotted driving a
stolen pickup truck in the Big R parking lot. The owner of the truck
reported the vehicle stolen at 4:30 p.m. from the 300 block of
Keokuk. Officer Raymond spotted the vehicle in the Big R parking lot
at 5 p.m. Shortly after, Johnson exited the store and left the lot,
driving that vehicle. Police arrested him at a roadblock.
|
Johnson
is charged with motor vehicle theft, trespass to a vehicle and
retail theft ($9 worth of merchandise from Big R). He is being held
for court appearance.
Though
police do not suspect that this incident has any connection to
the recent rash of vehicle thefts, the Lincoln City Police
Department continues to urge citizens to never leave their keys in
their vehicles.
|
If
anyone has any information concerning the recent vehicle thefts,
please contact Detective John Bunner at the Lincoln City Police
Department, 732-2151.
[Gina
Sennett]
|
|
Corrections
officials claim
system can handle budget cuts
[APRIL
1, 2002] SPRINGFIELD
— Illinois Department of Corrections officials today released
information regarding the impact of cost-cutting measures proposed
by Gov. George Ryan’s administration. They are providing the
information in response to charges by AFSCME that the cuts will
create more dangerous conditions in state prisons.
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Corrections
Director Donald N. Snyder Jr. provided security staff-to-inmate
projections showing a minimal impact by moves to close correctional
facilities. Corrections administrators also stressed that reforming
the system from top to bottom for the last three years will have a
profound impact on the continued safety of state prisons.
"Our
prisons are safer today than they were three years ago because
correctional officers and prison managers now assign inmates to the
jobs, cell houses, visitation schedules and recreation times that
the administration determines. In previous years, gang leaders or
others with influence in the system could make these decisions, and
that was dangerous," said Snyder.
"Cell
houses are easier to search and monitor because the property inmates
keep in their cells has been significantly reduced. Movement to work
assignments, meals and recreation yards now occurs in smaller
groups, with more supervision. Gang intelligence officers monitor
troublesome inmates and hold them to a higher standard of discipline
than before," said Snyder.
Snyder
also noted disciplinary sanctions for misbehavior and assaults are
strictly enforced. Segregation space to house offenders under
punishment for rule violations has been increased. Assaults on
officers and inmates have dropped significantly under these new
conditions.
Closing
Vienna Correctional Center, and possibly other prisons, can be
absorbed safely by Illinois Corrections for other reasons. The new
Lawrence Correctional Center has 1,600 beds open. These beds are
more than enough to hold the 1,200 inmates that will need to be
moved as a result of closing Vienna Correctional Center.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Earlier,
Gov. Ryan asked corrections administrators to calculate any change
in security staff-to-inmate ratios as a result of facility closings.
A slight increase from the 1-4.12 ratio present in the system today
to one staff person to 4.32 inmates after the closing of the
facilities was calculated by the agency. Three years ago the ratio
was 1-to-4.43.
"We
need to remember that there are also about 2,600 fewer inmates in
the system today than a year ago," said Snyder. "With the
more efficient design at the Lawrence prison and the new Kewanee
youth center, we will replace 40-year-old, staff-intensive design
with state-of-the art buildings requiring fewer staff to operate
safely," he said.
Corrections
officials added that closing an additional prison could still be
within the safety zone needed for the system. Depending on possible
increases in the prison population in the coming year, a capacity
window of more than 3,000 inmates is still open for consideration.
Filling all 3,000 beds with inmates from existing prisons would put
the system at the same level of crowding faced one year ago. Opening
the new reception and classification prison at Stateville
Correctional Center in Joliet is also planned in the last half of
the next fiscal year. This facility will also consist of
state-of-the art, efficient designs and will have a capacity of
1,800 beds. This addition increases the capacity window by an
additional 60 percent.
"In
tough economic times, tough decisions must be made. But, we will
never jeopardize the safety and security of our prison system while
making those decisions. These numbers should shed some light into
the debate regarding the continued safety of the Illinois prison
system," Snyder added.
[Illinois
Department of Corrections news release] |
|
Labor board issues
complaint against governor over AFSCME negotiation
[MARCH
30, 2002] CHICAGO
— For the eighth time in recent months, the union
representing state workers has prevailed in its legal battles with
Gov. George Ryan. The Illinois State Labor Relations Board has
issued a complaint against the Ryan administration in response to an
unfair labor practice charge filed by Council 31 of the American
Federation of State County and Municipal Employees.
|
"The Ryan administration has been trying to deflect blame for the
crisis it has created," said Mike Newman, associate director of
AFSCME Council 31. "But once again a tribunal has pointed the finger
back at him."
The union charges that Ryan has
repeatedly taken actions that violate state law or the union’s
contract. "We’re very pleased that in every single instance in which
we’ve sought to block his illegal actions in the courts or before
the labor board, our position has been affirmed," said Newman.
The complaint for hearing issued
today by the state labor board came in response to charges that
AFSCME filed after the Ryan administration abruptly broke off
negotiations over a proposed furlough program. The union’s contract
requires that any such program must first be negotiated.
In listing grounds for proceeding
with the hearing, the labor board said that the administration
"maintained an inflexible position on its bargaining proposal for a
statewide furlough program" during the negotiations and that it then
acted unilaterally to implement a furlough program.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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"Most significantly the complaint
states that the administration refused to bargain in good faith,"
said Newman.
AFSCME has consistently said that it
was willing to negotiate over how to structure an effective
voluntary furlough program and had called on Ryan to return to
negotiations over such a program. The union, however, has also
repeatedly stressed that a furlough program cannot address the state’s budget crisis and has helped develop, and has advocated for,
a range of alternatives to furloughs and layoffs.
The governor’s repeated contention
that a furlough program would avert layoffs was also addressed.
Included in the complaint is the charge that the administration was
unwilling to even discuss using the savings from a furlough to
preserve jobs.
[AFSCME
Council 31]
|
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Former
Lincoln Tomb manager’s collection donated to Illinois
State Historical Library
[MARCH
30, 2002] SPRINGFIELD
— Gov. George Ryan has announced that a collection of rare
newspapers, political memorabilia, photographs and Lincoln-related
material, all amassed by former Lincoln Tomb manager Herbert Wells
Fay, has been donated to the Illinois State Historical Library. The
donation was made by Phillis Kelley, DeKalb County historian, who
acquired the material from the family of the late Paul Nehring, who
purchased the Fay collection in the 1950s.
|
"This
unique collection will be a valuable supplement to many of the
Historical Library’s holdings," said Gov. Ryan. "These
items can also be showcased at the new Abraham Lincoln Presidential
Library and Museum being built in downtown Springfield." The
State Historical Library and its collections will move to the Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum once construction is
complete.
Fay
was custodian of Lincoln Tomb from 1920 to 1948, where he had access
to the elite in both the political world and in Lincoln scholarship.
Fay was an avid Lincoln collector and constantly tried to find and
record Lincoln artifacts and images. He maintained correspondence
with anyone he felt could help him in his quest for new and unusual
Lincoln items.
Fay
was also an accomplished and well-traveled photographer, and his
images feature many one-of-a-kind views of historic buildings and
events.
Fay’s
collection of images relating to Abraham Lincoln includes 14 images
of New Salem village shortly after its reconstruction in the 1930s;
a rare lithographic print of the Emancipation Proclamation, done in
1888; and a rare contemporary print of President Lincoln’s funeral
service at Columbus, Ohio, on April 29, 1865.
The
collection includes manuscript correspondence about Lincoln from
1880 to 1949 with such people as Illinois politician Paul Powell,
Lincoln scholar William Dodd Chenery and artist Wallace Nutting.
There are also letters from Mrs. Emma Weaver Hoge of Walnut, Ill.,
whose father, Perry A. Weaver, was present at Ford’s Theatre the
night Lincoln was assassinated.
The
collection also includes a near-complete run of Fay’s Springfield
newspaper column, "Lincoln Tomb Notes," a weekly
recounting of the events and people surrounding Lincoln
Tomb.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Fay
was noted for his Illinois photographs — many of interest to
central Illinois and Springfield. They include a 1930s aerial view
of the Illinois State Fairgrounds, local celebrities of note and the
celebration of Mass at the new cathedral in Springfield in April
1929.
Fay
also took a series of photos while traveling in the West, and the
collection includes views of the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake.
Political
memorabilia from Illinois includes a rare 1912 statewide
presidential ballot and a broadside used by U.S. Sen. Shelby M.
Cullom for his 1912 primary race.
The
Fay collection includes rare newspaper imprints from the Illinois
State Chronicle, an African-American paper from Springfield; the Log
Cabin, an 1840 campaign paper for William Henry Harrison, published
by Horace Greeley; and the Chicago Evening Journal with its detailed
account of "‘About the Barb City,’ Largest Factory of its
size in the west," concerning DeKalb and its notable
businessmen.
The
donated collection includes more than 300 letters; 40 broadsides and
posters; 150 photographs and images, including some of Lincoln; more
than a dozen books and pamphlets; and more than 1,000 newspaper
clippings.
The
Illinois State Historical Library is the state’s chief historical
and genealogical research facility. Its holdings include 175,531
books, 391,207 audiovisual materials, 86,572 reels of microfilm, and
10.4 million manuscript items contained in 6,200 collections. The
library’s 40,000-item Henry Horner Lincoln Collection features
more than 1,500 manuscripts written or signed by the 16th president.
The library is located beneath the Old State Capitol State Historic
Site in downtown Springfield.
[Illinois
Government News Network press release] |
|
Miss Heart
of Illinois pageant coming up
[MARCH
30, 2002] The
Miss Heart of Illinois scholarship program pageant is set for
Saturday, April 6, at 7:30 at the Bertha Frank Performing Arts
Center in Morton.
|
The
show this year will feature Miss HOI 2001 Alyssa Gunderson
(pictured) and the Gina Kennedy Dance Company. Other performers are
Elite Force, Cathy Black and Bruce Colligan.
[Miss HOI ’01
Alyssa Gunderson is crowned by Miss HOI 2000 Bethany Von Behren of
Peoria. Jenny Powers, Miss Illinois, helps with crowning
duties.]
Last year’s pageant, with the theme
"Celebrate America," won the "Best Production"
award from the Miss Illinois scholarship program.
The
Miss HOI program is also a two-time award winner for
"Outstanding Pageant of the Year" among Illinois’ Miss
America preliminaries.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Miss HOI has awarded $27,900 in
scholarship dollars to area women in the past four years. It
was reborn in 1998 with a new local volunteer committee, but its
history in the greater-Peoria area dates back to the 1950s.
For
more information on becoming a volunteer or sponsor for Miss HOI, go
to misshoi.homestead.com.
Central
Illinois will also be home to two more Miss Illinois preliminaries,
Miss Central and Miss Prairie State. They will take place in Morton
on April 20, and contestant entries are still being accepted.
Call
(309) 263-5950 for more information or e-mail misshoi@hotmail.com
[Miss
HOI news release]
|
|
Military
addresses sought
It
is a year like no other. Since Sept. 11 we are a changed nation.
Individually, our daily sensitivity toward whom and what we have in
our lives has been heightened. We are more conscious and
appreciative, first about those we love and see everyday. Next, we
have a newfound appreciation for those who risk their lives every
day as rescue workers and protectors of life and property in our
communities. We also now think more about our military men and women
who are committed to serve and protect our country. Many are away
engaged in battle, some are in waiting to go, all are ready to lay
their lives on the line in defense of our freedom.
|
Lincoln
Daily News is
seeking the names and addresses, including e-mail addresses, of
friends and relatives who are serving in the armed forces. They need
not be from here in Logan County. If you know someone serving,
please send the information to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com.
A complete list will be made available and kept updated through the
site so we might all hold them in our thoughts, prayers and well
wishes.
[Click
here for names available now.]
|
Name
of person in military:
Branch
of service:
Current
location of service:
Postal
address:
E-mail
address:
Relationship to LDN reader
sending information (optional):
[LDN]
|
|
Are
we prepared for terrorism
in Logan County?
It’s
on the radio, TV, in all the media. You hear it in the office, on
the street and maybe at home — threats of terrorism. America is on
high alert. Here in central Illinois, away from any supposed
practical target areas, perhaps we feel a little less threatened,
but we are still concerned. So how concerned should we be, and how
prepared are we for the types of situations that could occur?
|
Whether
the threat is domestic or foreign, violent, biological or chemical,
our public health and rescue agencies have been preparing to respond
to the situations. Lincoln Daily News has been at meetings where all
the agencies gather together as the Logan County Emergency Planning
Committee to strategize for just such a time. Our reports have not
even provided every detail that every agency has reported; i.e., a
number of representatives from differing agencies such as the health
and fire departments, CILCO and ESDA went to a bioterrorism and
hazmat (hazardous materials) seminar this past August.
Here
are some of the articles that LDN has posted pre- and post-Tuesday,
Sept. 11. Hopefully you will see in them that WE ARE WELL PREPARED.
At least as much as any area can be. Every agency has been planning,
training, submitting for grants to buy equipment long before Sept.
11. We can be thankful for all of the dedicated, insightful leaders
we have in this community.
[to top of second column in
this section]
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The
day after ‘Attack on America’
Area leaders respond to national tragedy
ESDA
and LEPC conduct successful hazardous materials exercise at water
treatment plant
Logan
County ready for action if terrorist event occurs - Part 1
Logan
County ready for action if terrorist event occurs – Part 2
Clinton
nuclear power plant safety measures in place
Logan
County agencies meet to discuss protocol for suspicious mail
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America
strikes back
As
promised, the United States led an attack on Afghanistan. The attack
began Sunday, Oct. 7. American and British military forces made 30 hits on
air defenses, military airfields and terrorist training camps,
destroying aircraft and radar systems. The strike was made targeting
only terrorists.
|
More
than 40 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle East have
pledged their cooperation and support the U.S. initiative.
Online
news links
Other
countries
Afghanistan
http://www.afghandaily.com/
http://www.myafghan.com/
http://www.afghan-web.com/aop/
China
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/
http://www1.chinadaily.com.cn/
Germany
http://www.faz.com/
India
http://www.dailypioneer.com/
http://www.hindustantimes.com/
http://www.timesofindia.com/
Israel
http://www.jpost.com/
http://www.haaretzdaily.com/
England
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/
Pakistan
http://www.dawn.com/
http://frontierpost.com.pk/
Russia
http://english.pravda.ru/
http://www.sptimesrussia.com/
Saudi Arabia
http://www.arabnews.com/
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
United
States
Illinois
http://www.suntimes.com/index/
http://www.chicagotribune.com/
http://www.pantagraph.com/
http://www.qconline.com/
http://www.pjstar.com/
http://www.sj-r.com/
http://www.herald-review.com/
http://www.southernillinoisan.com/
New
York
http://www.nypost.com/
http://www.nytimes.com/
Stars
and Stripes
(serving the U.S.
military community)
http://www.estripes.com/
Washington,
D.C.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
http://www.washtimes.com/
More
newspaper links
http://www.thepaperboy.com/
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