Four
war veterans get LCHS diplomas
[APRIL
22, 2002] It
might be a little late — 61 years in one case — but on Sunday
Lincoln Community High School awarded diplomas to four former
students, men who left school before they graduated.
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Today’s
young people might think of these four men as dropouts, but in their
day they were heroes.
All
of them left school to enlist in the armed forces at a time when
America was engaged in conflict that threatened its very existence.
Two of Sunday’s graduates, Robert Ball and Edgar Logan, enlisted
to serve in the U.S. Navy in World War II. The other two, Richard
Montcalm and Jim Pinney, signed up to serve during the Korean War a
few years later.
In
those days, many young men saw it as their patriotic duty to join up
and serve their country.
[Robert Ball]
As
Robert Ball put it, "I couldn’t wait to get in." Ball
enlisted on Dec. 14, 1941, just a week after the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor. He served four years in the European Theater of
Operations, shipping out on destroyer escorts, ships that protected
convoys from enemy ships, especially German submarines, which were a
deadly menace in the Atlantic.
[Edgar Logan]
Edgar
L. Logan also wanted to join the Navy, not the Army, so he enlisted
in August of 1943. Instead of spending the next year as a high
school student, he was sent to New Caledonia, an island in the
Pacific, where he served as a carpenter’s mate, repairing ships.
[No photo
available of Richard Montcalm]
Richard
T. Montcalm joined the U.S. Army in February of 1951, when he was a
junior at Lincoln Community High School. He was only 17. At Fort
Bragg, North Carolina, he was trained as a paratrooper for the 82nd
Airborne Division and served for three years. Although he was
prepared to go, he was never sent to Korea. "They didn’t need
any more paratroopers, I guess," he said.
[Jim Pinney]
Jim
Pinney, an honor student at LCHS, wouldn’t have had to serve in
the Korean War at all. His only brother, Bill, had been killed in
World War II, so as the only surviving son he would not have been
drafted. His father, Earl Pinney, had also served in World War II in
the South Pacific and was among those who stormed the beach and
raised the American flag at Iwo Jima. But in October of 1950, Jim
signed up for active duty in Korea because he felt it was his
duty. Like Montcalm, Jim Pinney never went there. He was sent to
Austria instead, with the 350th Engineer Corps, where his unit lived
in tents until they could build their own barracks.
Now,
because of Public Law 92-446, all four veterans have diplomas from
Lincoln Community High School. This recently passed law says that if
a veteran of either war was enrolled in high school, if his high
school career was interrupted by service in the military, and if he
was honorably discharged, he may be given a diploma.
Robert
Meinershagen, president of the LCHS school board, who attended the
ceremony, explained the new law, and Joyce Hubbard, LCHS principal,
presented the diplomas.
The
veterans themselves heard about the new law in various ways.
Evelyn
Logan, Edgar’s wife, said she read an article in an out-of-town
paper that told about a veteran of World War II who had received his
high school diploma. She called Hubbard to see about getting her
husband a diploma. Hubbard was very helpful, Evelyn said. "I
know from my own personal experience she’s put a lot of time into
it.
"Edgar’s
wanted his diploma all this time. But when you get married and have
children, a diploma gets pushed into the background."
[Ceremony photos by
Dean
Langdon]
[LCHS principal Joyce
Hubbard presents a diploma to World War II veteran Edgar Logan, who
left school to enlist in the Navy.]
Edgar
was discharged on March 18, 1946. He and the former Evelyn Sloan,
were married on May 22, 1949.
Edgar
worked for 15 years as a cabinetmaker for Lincoln Store Fixture
Company, for 15 years as a foreman for Myers Industries, for four
years for Buch Realtors building houses and for 18 years as
maintenance supervisor at the Christian Village Nursing Home. He
retired from the nursing home on Aug. 18, 2000.
The
Logans have three sons, Lee, Roy and John, all living in central
Illinois, so they can visit often with their four grandchildren and
one great-grandchild. Edgar has served as co-president of the
Jefferson School PTA, Cubmaster for Jefferson school Cub Scouts,
deacon at Lincoln Christian Church and chaperone for the high school
choir of Lincoln Christian Church.
"When
he left Lincoln Community High School, he needed one class to
graduate, which he would have done in 1944. He had enough credits
but he hadn’t taken one test, in civics," his wife said.
"He’s
excited, like a little kid at the candy store. We’re going to have
a family party after the ceremony," she said.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Robert
G. Ball was born in Lincoln, where he attended Central School and
Lincoln High School. He left high school in 1941, and 61 years later
has now received his diploma.
[LCHS
principal Joyce Hubbard presents a diploma to World War II veteran
Robert Ball, 61 years after he left school to enlist in the Navy.]
In
high school Robert met Helen Campbell, who lived on a farm along
Primm Road. He married her in 1943, while he was still in the Navy.
His home port was New York, and when he was in port she would come
to New York to visit him. They have one son, Michael, two
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
After
his discharge from the Navy, Ball went to southern Illinois, where
he worked for three years at Wood River Oil Refinery, 17 years at
Sinclair Oil and 20 years for Olin Corporation. He retired from Olin
as maintenance supervisor and was a boilermaker by trade.
During
the years he lived in Bethalto, he was assistant chief of police,
civil defense director, a member of the park board and the police
commission. He was also active in Boy Scouts, earning his Eagle
Scout badge, and was a member of the Masonic Lodge 406 in Bethalto,
the Scottish Rite Valley of Southern Illinois and the Sahib Temple
in Sarasota, Fla., where he lived after he retired. In 2002 he and
Helen returned to Lincoln to live at the Christian Village.
He
attended New York City College while in the Navy and attained the
rank of petty officer first class.
Richard
Montcalm came home from the service in 1954 and married Beverly
Williams on June 5, 1955. He worked first at the State School fire department
(Lincoln Developmental Center), from May 1954 to December 1957. In
1958 he joined the Lincoln City Fire Department, retiring in
November of 1995 as assistant fire chief safety officer.
[LCHS
principal Joyce Hubbard presents a diploma to Korean War veteran
Richard Montcalm, who was trained as a paratrooper.]
He
and Beverly have three sons, Mark, Michael and Richard, all in the
area.
"It
was always a dream of his to have his diploma," Beverly said.
She heard about the new law on the news; then son Rich, Lincoln’s
police chief, heard about it at the high school. Rich told the
family LCHS was going to award diplomas and was looking for former
servicemen who qualified to receive them.
"A
dream come true," Beverly said.
Another
dream come true is the family’s first granddaughter, after five
grandsons.
"Impossible.
There’s never been a girl born in the Montcalm family
before," said Beverly. "She will be spoiled with
love."
Jim
Pinney’s children, especially his youngest daughter, Darla, and
his granddaughter Corrie, wanted him to have his high school diploma
at last.
Jim,
an honor student, left LCHS in the fall of his senior year. Joyce
Smith was only a freshman then, but she had a big crush on Jim.
"I
just thought he was the cutest thing in the whole wide world. I was
really sweet on him," she said.
She
wrote to him every day and can still recite, without hesitation, the
number she had to write on the envelope, RA17291847. They got
engaged by mail. Jim had his older sister buy Joyce a ring and give
it to her. He came home Sept. 23, 1953, and they were married five
days later. Their four children are Debbie, Jim, Bill and Darla;
they have eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
A
talented mechanic, Jim’s first job was with Hake Oldsmobile. He
started on the grease rack and ended as service manager. After 40
years with Oldsmobile dealerships, he opened his own business, Jim
Pinney’s Auto Service, on Kickapoo Street across from Latham Park.
He retired in 2000.
Somewhere
along the line he also found time to teach for Lincoln College,
setting up all the mechanics courses the college was offering at the
Logan Correctional Center. He taught all the mechanics courses at
the Logan prison and also set up classes at the Pontiac Correctional
Center. During his four years as a teacher in the prison system, he
placed 34 former inmates in jobs as mechanics. Many of them have
kept in touch with him, Joyce said.
Since
his retirement he’s built a garage for his tools, a place where
his old cronies can come to drink coffee. He’s helping his son,
Jim Pinney, the Atlanta police chief, build a log home, and each day
he picks up great-granddaughter Emily from pre-school and
granddaughter Corrie from LCHS. He’s even found time to develop a
new passion, making his own fishing poles and lures, Joyce reports.
Wayne
Schrader, finance officer of American Legion Logan Post 263, who was
speaker at the ceremony, congratulated the veterans on the
"belated honors" given them. In a few short words, he
summed up the reasons the four men enlisted.
"When
a disaster takes place, the only thing we can think about is helping
out. When war breaks out, the only thing we think about is that our
country needs us," he said.
"These
men had their lives put on hold. They went to war as kids and came
back as men."
[Joan
Crabb]
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Relay
for Life raises $60,510
for American Cancer Society
[APRIL
22, 2002] An
arch of purple balloons . . . a crowd of walkers passing underneath
. . . Tim Searby singing "Wind Beneath My Wings" — these
elements merged into one of the most moving moments at the April
19-20 Relay for Life, a benefit for the American Cancer Society.
[Click here to see
more photos]
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The
people circling the oval track at the Recreation Center were
survivors of cancer — men and women, old and young, each carrying
a red carnation. Leading them were event co-chairs Kathy Blaum and
Mary Ellen Martin, honorary chairs and cancer survivors Elizabeth
Brooks and Ray Leesman, all of Lincoln, and young survivors Tabatha
Weidhuner, 7, of Middletown and Kayla Rae Meister, 8, of Sherman.
[Photos by Bob Frank]
Sixty-two
teams represented families, businesses and organizations, with
several organizations fielding two or even three teams. Each team
was responsible for having at least one walker doing laps at all
times, so there were always over 50 making the circuit and sometimes
many more. One group, however, was excused from walking — the
Christian Village Rockers teams 1 and 2 rocked continuously instead.
Together
the relay teams plus silent auction, food and relay gear sales
raised $60,510.50 by the end of the day, according to co-chair Mary
Ellen Martin, who expected final proceeds to reach the goal of
$63,000. Goods for the silent auction were donated, with the largest
share of items from Lee’s Home Furnishings.
Ethel’s
Angels 2 from Eaton Corporation Cutler-Hammer was the winning team,
raising $4,635.50. Together with Ethel’s Angels 1, both named for
retired employee Ethel Buchanan, the corporation accounted for
$5,761.50. Other teams credited with $1,500 or more were Investor
Steppers, Jigglers (Breast Cancer Support Group), MII Boomerangs,
Angels All Around (Lessen family) and Lincoln Woman’s Club. Anna
Bunner of Lincoln was the top individual fund-raiser.
Honorary
chair Elizabeth Brooks also captained the three National Honor
Society teams from Lincoln Community High School. Together they
raised over $1,000. At the time Brooks contracted cancer she was a
student at Chester-East Lincoln, which that year fielded a team in
her honor.
Ray
Leesman of Lincoln, the other honorary chair, began driving cancer
patients to Springfield for radiation treatments in 1987, nine years
before he himself developed colon cancer. The shuttle service is
provided through the American Cancer Society and is provided by a
team of drivers, each taking a different day of the week. Dick Eimer
(732-8338) is the driver coordinator. Leesman has been a regular for
10 years and drove occasionally for five years before that.
Leesman,
who retired in 1982 after 30 years as purchasing agent for
Pittsburgh Plate Glass, has walked the survivor lap for each of the
five years of the local Relay for Life. His own experience with
cancer took place in 1996, when doctors found a malignant polyp and
removed 18 inches of his colon. He said he has had no problems
since.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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The
fact that cancer can be survived was a major theme of the event.
Steve Anderson, American Cancer Society field representative, said
the chance of surviving cancer was 15 percent in 1900 but improved
to 60 percent by 2000. The organization has set a goal of raising
the rate to 80 percent by 2015.
The
walk began with opening ceremonies at 8 p.m. Friday. A group of over
50 teenagers walked laps all night, with sometimes a single person
on the track, according to event co-chair Kathy Blaum.
Saturday’s
atmosphere was anything but static, with lively music keeping feet
moving and DJ Jim Newsome occasionally calling for a reverse of
direction. Other entertainment was provided by vocalist Tim Searby,
the St. John United Church of Christ adult chimes choir and Flying
Feet Cloggers from Audra’s Dance Studio.
Shelby
Lessen, at 7 one of the youngest walkers, cut her long blonde hair
to donate for a wig for a child with cancer. When her mother, Sarah
Lessen, shared an article from Redbook magazine about giving hair,
Shelby said, "I would do that." She was especially touched
by the fact that with wigs of real hair children can swim and engage
in other vigorous activities that might be impossible with
artificial hair. Mrs. Lessen’s mother, Wanda Isbell, died of
cancer when Sarah was 18, and Shelby’s other grandmother, Fran
Lessen, has also contracted the disease.
The
Lessen family has taken up the cause of hair and wigs for
chemotherapy patients. Sarah Lessen sent flyers to beauty salons and
health-care offices asking for wigs and hair. At Relay for Life she
displayed eight wigs to be donated to the Logan County Wig Bank,
located at Fabulous Hairstyles & Tanning, 108 S. Chicago,
Lincoln (735-1453). Two volunteers said they would cut their hair to
donate to Wigs for Kids, a not-for-profit organization in Rocky
River, Ohio. Hair must be at least 12 inches long, non-permed and
non-colored.
Each
team of walkers decorated its rest area, and the sites were judged.
Winners were Northwest (School) Wildcat Walkers, first place;
Jigglers, second place; Angels All Around, third place; and Charron’s
Auto Repair, honorable mention.
Inner
and outer edges of the track were defined by over 850 luminaria,
each given in honor of a cancer victim or survivor. At 12:30 p.m.
Saturday the luminaria were lit with glow sticks, and Judy Awe of
Lincoln read the names of all donors and honorees in a nearly
hour-long ceremony. Joye Anderson sang "Amazing Grace,"
and committee members joined in a final lap.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
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Gov.
Ryan’s Commission on Capital Punishment completes comprehensive
review of Illinois system
Final
recommendations delivered to governor
[APRIL
20, 2002] CHICAGO
— Gov. George Ryan recently received the report from his
Commission on Capital Punishment, which makes more than 80
recommendations for change in the capital punishment system in
Illinois. The recommendations include the creation of a statewide
panel to review prosecutors’ request for the death penalty,
banning death sentences on the mentally retarded, significantly
reducing the number of death eligibility factors, videotaping
interrogations of homicide suspects, and controlling the use of
testimony by jailhouse informants.
|
The
commission’s
report is the product of two years of extensive research and
analysis of Illinois’ capital punishment system, from initial
police investigation through trial, appeal and post-conviction
review. After considering all of their proposed reforms, a majority
of the commission would favor that the death penalty be abolished in
Illinois. The commission concluded, however, that if capital
punishment is to be retained as a lawful penalty, reform of the
present capital punishment system is important to better ensure that
it is fair, just and accurate. The commission also concluded that
Gov. Ryan and the next governor should consider the reforms that
need to be made to the capital punishment system when considering
clemency applications in capital cases.
"It
is entirely appropriate to consider how those changes might have
made a difference to defendants when reaching determinations about
whether or not a death sentence should be upheld on the merits or
whether mercy should be extended in light of all the
circumstances."
Gov.
Ryan said he will carefully study the report and deliberate on its
recommendations. "I owe it to everyone who believes in justice
and to everyone touched by our legal system to reflect upon this
commission’s findings," Gov. Ryan said. "There are some
who will be impatient, who will demand quick solutions, now that I
have this report. But, our experience in Illinois with the capital
punishment system has gained worldwide attention. What we do from
this point forward may be an example to the rest of the country and
the world.
"I
want to thank each of the commission members for donating their time
and extraordinary efforts to the public good. Their hard work and
comprehensive study of this difficult issue is appreciated by all of
us as citizens of this great state."
Gov.
Ryan appointed the commission
in March 2000 after declaring the moratorium
on Jan. 31, 2000. At the time he said, "Until I can be sure
that no innocent man or woman is facing lethal injection, no one
will meet that fate." The vast majority of the commission’s
recommendations and proposed reforms were reached by unanimous
decision of the commission members. Other recommendations were
reached by majority vote, and in some of those cases alternative
proposals were suggested by the minority. The recommendations taken
as a whole, if implemented, represent essential reforms to Illinois’
capital punishment system.
Some
of the recommendations include:
• Creating a statewide review panel to conduct a pre-trial review of
prosecutorial decisions to seek capital punishment. The panel would
be comprised of four prosecutors and a retired judge.
• Significantly reducing the current list of death eligibility factors
from 20 to five including murder of a peace officer or firefighter,
murder in a correctional facility, the murder of two or more people,
the intentional murder of a person involving torture, and any murder
committed by a suspected felon in order to obstruct the justice
system.
• Banning the imposition of the death penalty for defendants found to be
mentally retarded.
• No person may be sentenced to death based solely on uncorroborated
single eyewitness or accomplice testimony or the uncorroborated
testimony of jailhouse informants.
• Recommending other reforms concerning the use of jailhouse informants
who purport to have information about the case or statements
allegedly made by the defendant, including requiring a preliminary
hearing to be conducted by the court as to the reliability of such
witnesses and their proposed testimony, full disclosure of benefits
conferred for such testimony, early disclosure to the defense about
the background of such witnesses, and special cautionary
instructions to the jury.
• Videotaping the entire interrogation of homicide suspects at a police
station and not merely the confession.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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• Allowing trial judges to concur or reverse a jury’s death sentence
verdict. This will allow the trial judge to take into account
potential improper influences, such as passion and prejudice, that
may have influenced a jury’s verdict; to consider potential
residual doubt about the defendant’s absolute guilt; and to
consider trial strategies of counsel, credibility of witnesses and
the actual presentation of evidence, which may differ from what was
anticipated in making pre-trial rulings in either admitting or
excluding evidence.
• The Illinois Supreme Court should review all death sentences to
determine if the sentence is excessive or disproportionate to the
penalty imposed in similar cases, if death was the appropriate
sentence given aggravating and mitigating factors, and whether the
sentence was imposed due to some arbitrary factor.
The
report contains six recommendations relating to eyewitness
identification for procedures that should be required when police
conduct a "lineup" or "photospread." These
recommendations include:
• Having someone who is unaware of the suspect’s identity conduct the
lineup. Having police tell the eyewitness that the suspected
perpetrator may not be in the lineup or photospread.
• Taking a clear written statement of any statements made by
eyewitnesses as to the level of confidence they have in identifying
a suspect.
• When possible, videotaping both the lineup procedures and the
witnesses’ confidence statements.
• Adequate funding to eliminate backlogs and expand DNA testing and
evaluation, including continued support for a more comprehensive DNA
database.
• Support the Supreme Court’s recommendation for a capital case trial
bar and requiring judges to be pre-certified before presiding over
capital cases. As part of regular training for judges and counsel,
as suggested by the Supreme Court and the commission, improvements
must be made in disseminating information and creating manuals and
checklists to be used by counsel and the courts. There must also be
better reporting of information concerning capital cases so that the
fairness and accuracy of the capital punishment system can be
adequately assessed.
• Revise Illinois’ complicated and confusing statute so that juries
can understand simply that they must determine, in light of all the
evidence and the mitigating and aggravating circumstances, whether
the death penalty is the appropriate sentence.
• To eliminate confusion and improper speculation, juries should be
instructed as to all the possible sentencing alternatives before
they consider the appropriateness of imposing a death sentence.
• Like defendants in any other criminal case, capital defendants should
be afforded the opportunity to make a statement to those who will be
deciding whether to impose the ultimate punishment allowed by the
state, a sentence of death.
• Leaders in both the executive and legislative branches should
significantly improve the resources available to the criminal
justice system in order to permit the meaningful implementation of
reforms.
With
these and many other suggested reforms, the commission believes that
Illinois’ capital punishment system would be more just and better
enabled to ensure fair and accurate results. However, the report
recognizes that "no system, given human nature and frailties,
could ever be devised or constructed that would work perfectly and
guarantee absolutely that no innocent person is ever again sentenced
to death." This report represents the commission’s best
efforts to ensure that we strive for perfection and a more just,
fair and accurate criminal justice system.
The
governor’s Commission on Capital Punishment’s full report is
available online at http://www.idoc.state.il.us/ccp/ccp/reports/
commission_reports.html.
[Press
release]
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First
19 employees moved from LDC
[APRIL
19, 2002] In
the first of a series of staff cutbacks aimed at downsizing the
facility, 19 Lincoln Developmental Center employees left as of
Tuesday, April 16, to take positions in other state-operated centers
for the developmentally disabled.
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These
were the first of 60 employees who chose to accept transfers to
other locations rather than be laid off by the Department of Human
Services, according to Dan Senters, spokesman for the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the union that
represents most LDC staff members. The employees went to the Fox
Developmental Center in Dwight, the Shapiro Developmental Center in
Kankakee and the Jacksonville facility.
In
February of this year layoff notices were given to 372 employees,
part of Gov. George Ryan’s plan to downsize the facility to 100
residents and 210 employees by the end of the state’s fiscal year
June 30. Employees were given the option of applying for positions
in other facilities for the developmentally disabled at that time.
The
plan by the Governor’s Task Force calls for layoffs of 128 people
on April 30 and another 180 by June 30. According to the original
plan, LDC residents would be moving out of the facility at the same
time. The transfers and layoffs of employees were timed to coincide
with the transfer of LDC residents to other state-operated
facilities or in some cases to group homes.
However,
an injunction handed down on March 27 by Associate Judge Don Behle
of the Circuit Court in Logan County prevents the Department of
Human Services, which oversees the state’s 11 facilities for the
developmentally disabled, from moving any more of LDC’s current
248 residents.
Senters
said AFSCME’s concern at this time is that DHS will continue the
layoffs of employees even though the planned move of residents has
not taken place.
"Management
at LDC has told us their plans included continuing with the layoffs
of employees as scheduled and complying with the court order by not
moving any more residents," he said. "They tell us they
contact their superiors regularly for directions on layoffs and to
date have had no response about changing the layoff plan."
Senters
said the transfers are already jeopardizing patient care and are
costing the state money. He said LDC is short of technicians —
those who give direct, hands-on personal care to the residents —
and the transfer of the 19 employees makes that shortage even worse.
As of now, he said, the 248 residents have only 239 hands-on
caregivers, not even a 1-1 ratio.
"We
need 315 technicians to maintain a minimum safety level and meet the
required staff levels management wants, and we have only 239,"
Senters said.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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However,
Reginald Marsh, spokesman for DHS, said the Lincoln center has the
highest ratio of staff to residents of any of the state operated
facilities. Lincoln’s staff ratio is 2.5 staff to residents,
higher than the 2-1 ratio most other facilities have. He also said
LDC still has 255 technicians, a ratio of 1.03 staff members to
residents.
Senters
said the 255 technicians include employees who are on administrative
leave or on light duty because of injuries. They are still on the
payroll, he said, but are not presently working with residents. He
said the 239 figure comes from the day-to-day work schedule.
The
555 employees now at LDC include support staff, such as dietary and
housekeeping staff, nurses, psychologists, educators, engineers,
carpenters, electricians and other maintenance personnel, and
several new management positions created by the Governor’s Task
Force, Senters said.
He
also said moving the 19 employees is creating an unnecessary
expense, because they are being paid a salary to work at other
facilities, while those replacing them at LDC are being paid
time-and-a-half for overtime.
"Over
the next two-week period, we will have to have 428 extra shifts, or
3,424 hours of overtime for technicians, which will cost the state
about $47,000," Senters said.
Marsh
said money has never been the issue at LDC, as the state’s main
concern has always been the safety of the residents.
"Unfortunately
the consequences of the injunction means management does have to
spend a lot of its time figuring out staffing problems and does have
to pay overtime," he said. "This diverts attention from
making quality improvements."
"Right
now if the injunction remains in place until the end of the month,
we will have to do an assessment of the staff-to-resident ratio to
see about layoffs. At this time we have not planned to stop the
layoffs. However, we will not reduce the number of staff to the
level where residents are not being cared for properly or are not in
a safe environment," he said.
In
September of 2001, LDC had 373 residents and 689 employees, Senters
said. Later that year, after inspections by the Illinois Department
of Public Health brought charges of abuse and neglect at the
125-year-old facility, the Governor’s Task Force began
transferring residents from the facility.
[Joan
Crabb]
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Looking
for Lincoln video shoot delayed
[APRIL
19, 2002] Looking
for Lincoln officers announced at the group’s April 17 meeting
that the grant to fund the Abraham Lincoln video has been delayed
but not canceled, so shooting must be postponed from early June to
late summer or early fall.
|
Paul
Beaver, Logan County chair of Looking for Lincoln, said Illinois
Sen. Bob Madigan and Rep. John Turner assured him in the fall of
2001 that $20,000 in state funds had been earmarked for the video
project. He said the money would come from a members initiative
grant. Despite the assurance he was given, there is a series of
steps that must be followed, beginning with approval by a grant
manager and ending with signing of the grant agreement.
"There’s
no problem with the application or use of the money," said Jan
Schumacher, president of the Main Street Lincoln board. She said
signing might occur in midsummer, but the grant manager cannot
commit to a date. "At least we’re in the bureaucratic
mix," Beaver commented.
Dawn
Edwards, author of other period dramatizations, has completed the
script for the video, which will depict Abraham Lincoln in
significant events that took place in Logan County. Locales include
Atlanta, Middletown, Mount Pulaski, Lincoln and the Cornland-Elkhart
area. Cinematographer Dean Williams is contracted to shoot and edit
the footage. If shooting takes place in early fall, he expects to
complete the video by January 2003.
Beaver
said September is an appropriate date for shooting because the
Lincoln town christening and many other scenes to be included
occurred near that time. However, shooting cannot be put off beyond
Oct. 15 and still take place in 2002, he said.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Plans
are to give copies of the Abraham Lincoln video to schools, museums
and libraries and to sell it to individuals and organizations at
cost of duplication. Darrell Knauer of Mount Pulaski, a new
representative to Looking for Lincoln, suggested making excerpts of
the video available for use on bus tours of Logan County. Thressia
Usherwood of the Abraham Lincoln Tourism Bureau of Logan County and
Gillette Ransom of Elkhart recently promoted the county to 200
Chicago tour bus drivers.
In
an effort to add to known Lincoln sites in the city, Beaver said he
is searching old Lincoln Herald files to locate where on the square
the law office of Samuel Parks was located. Abraham Lincoln always
visited the office when in town and often collaborated with Parks on
legal cases, Beaver said.
Shirley
Bartelmay of Lincoln reported that Postville Courthouse is now on
summer hours of noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Twenty-four
volunteer guides put in 120 hours in March, but additional
volunteers are still being sought, especially those willing to fill
in for others at varying times. The Postville Cluster hopes to
decorate the courthouse for Christmas and include it in a tour of
homes.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
District
27 halts construction,
cuts costs on Central School
[APRIL
18, 2002] Construction
work on Lincoln Elementary School District 27’s new Central School
will resume on April 29, after a series of changes to bring costs
into line. On that date work will begin on piping and electrical
work — everything that goes under the slab — Bill Ahal of the
S.M. Wilson firm, construction manager for the building project,
told the school board Wednesday evening.
|
Work
on the Seventh Street site stopped on April 3 while the school
board, architect Dave Leonatti and the Wilson firm looked for
alternative systems that would bring the costs down. The halt in
construction was necessary because in February, when bids were
opened, the board found costs were almost $800,000 more than
estimated.
"Work
stopped because we had gone as far as we could go," Leonatti
said. Otherwise, costs would have gone beyond the approximately $6
million budgeted to build the 47,000-square-foot elementary school.
In
November of 2000, district voters approved a referendum to issue
$4.1 million in bonds to build a new Central School and a new junior
high school building. The district received an $8,318,181 state
construction grant to complete the more than $12 million building
project.
To
date, according to school board president Bruce Carmitchel, almost
$500,000 has been pared from construction costs by a process called
"value engineering," making changes that will cost less
but produce the same results. Most of the changes have been in the
type of materials to be used.
For
example, he said, the board cut $131,762 by agreeing to use
pre-engineered structural steel instead of stick-built steel. This
will make it necessary to use a metal roof for the building instead
of asphalt shingles, but Carmitchel said the metal roof will be
attractive and also much more durable than the shingles.
Pre-engineered steel would be a disadvantage only if the district
wanted to add on to the building at a later date, but that will be
unlikely, he said.
Another
cost saving will come from using a synthetic material on part of the
building’s exterior. Originally designed with an all-brick
exterior, the building will have brick on a little over 60 percent
and a synthetic cement-type material coated with stucco on the rest
of the exterior. The synthetic material can be finished in any
desired color and will be low maintenance, Carmitchel said.
On
Wednesday evening, the board cut another $15,000 to $20,000 by
agreeing to install only three high-efficiency boilers rather than
four.
"The
system will not change, but it has eliminated the redundancy,"
Ahal said. "If everything is running, you will not know the
difference."
The
downside of this move is that if one boiler malfunctions and is not
running, the building might not be heated adequately if the outdoor
temperature drops to 20 degrees below zero, Carmitchel said.
Changing
the color of the gymnasium floor also saved money. "We went to
No. 3 maple, which is darker in color but has the same warranty as
our original choice. The original bid was for No. 1 maple, the
standard light color. Some people think No. 3 is not as pretty, but
it saved the district $3,500," Carmitchel said.
Superintendent
Robert Kidd said a number of minor changes have been made that can
add up to substantial savings, such as purchasing unassembled
library shelving and asking for volunteers to put the shelves
together. Another cost savings was using vinyl tile instead of
ceramic on the bathrooms floors.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Both
Carmitchel and Ahal emphasized that the quality of the building will
not be compromised by the changes. "I can say without
hesitation there is no question of compromising the quality,"
Carmitchel said.
Ahal
also said the costs would stay within the budget. "Our charge
from the school district always has been and remains staying within
the budget," he said.
"We
will get the prices down to where we can pay for the building
comfortably and not get into money set aside to build the junior
high," Carmitchel said. The board plans to cut at least another
$200,000.
Kidd
and Carmitchel said that while they must make some changes, they are
saying no to others.
"We
have been very careful to hold onto what will make it a nice
building," Kidd said. "We didn’t eliminate the front
dormer, because it fits well into the neighborhood and creates an
atrium effect inside. It looks nice outside and inside."
Carmitchel
said it would have been cheaper to go with all synthetic material on
the building’s exterior. "But we didn’t want to do that. We
don’t think it’s appropriate for the neighborhood," he
said. The synthetic material will be put at higher levels of the
building, where it will not be so likely to be damaged, he added.
He
said the board also kept the four-pipe heating and cooling system
instead of going to a cheaper two-pipe system. The four-pipe system
will keep the building much more comfortable, give it more
flexibility and provide better air quality, he said.
Kidd
said bids for foundation work came in close to what was estimated,
but the bids for work above the foundation were well beyond the
prices estimated by the architect and the construction engineers.
"They
worked hard at it. They did their job. They, too, were very
surprised when the bids were opened," Kidd said. He said the
problem was not a lack of bidders but higher than expected costs for
materials.
Ahal
conceded that the building schedule has "slipped a little"
because of the delay, but he said the structure will be up and the
roof on by mid to late fall. Kidd said he thought the building would
still be ready for occupancy by January of 2003.
Local
firms have been invited to bid on the school construction project,
Kidd noted. Eaton Corporation Cutler Hammer is providing a lot of
the electrical equipment, and Myers Industries is bidding on
cabinetry.
Bids
have not yet been awarded for kitchen equipment, glass, drywall and
educational casework and cabinetry, Carmitchel said.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Sesquicentennial
committee urges city council to
preserve polling place building
[APRIL
18, 2002] An
1860s-style baseball game, a video of events from 1953 and
national-grade entertainment — all these are planned for the party
the city of Lincoln throws to celebrate its 150th birthday.
|
The
sesquicentennial celebration, set for Aug. 21-31, 2003, is taking
shape thanks to a committee chaired by Mayor Beth Davis and
including 24 subcommittees. The annual Lincoln Art Fair and Balloon
Festival will be incorporated into the city’s birthday party.
Meeting
on April 17, the sesquicentennial committee voted to urge the
Lincoln City Council to accept the polling place building at Adams
and Fifth streets for use at Postville Park for historical purposes,
including the sesquicentennial. Mayor Beth Davis said the council
will vote soon on the fate of the polling place building. "If
you have input, call them," she said. The committee is not
asking the city for money, and the city will still own the lot after
the building is removed, committee members emphasized.
Postville
Cluster chair Shirley Bartelmay said she envisions a small group of
chautauqua houses at Postville Park, surrounded by period flowers
and other plantings. The buildings could be open for special
occasions.
Several
sources are being pursued in an effort to date the polling place
building. It is known to predate 1925 but may be substantially
older.
In
a request to the public, the sesquicentennial committee is seeking 8
mm or 16 mm millimeter movies ("super 8 movies") of the
Lincoln centennial parade and celebration in 1953, plus good, clear
snapshots from that time period to be reproduced in a videotape.
People are asked to bring photos and movies to the mayor’s office
at City Hall. A receipt will be issued, and the items will be
returned following duplication.
Committee
treasurer Paul Short announced that, thanks to a donation from State
Bank of Lincoln, the sesquicentennial committee now has $2,500.
Davis said the city of Lincoln would give $1,000 on May 1 and
appropriate $50,000 for the next fiscal year.
Technical
systems co-chair Greg Pelc has gathered price quotes for several
stages. The largest stage will be set up downtown, approximately
midway between activities in Scully and Latham parks, and will
require a 30-by-50-foot space. This stage will be the venue for a
national band or other national-grade acts. Other stages have been
requested for the Depot, where a re-enactment of the town
christening will be staged, Postville Park and possibly Memorial
Park for the Sunday nondenominational church service.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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As
music co-chair, Pelc is also researching bands from the ’50s to
’70s that are currently active and still have some of the original
members. He is studying 1830s-1850s entertainment for inclusion as
well.
Among
historical activities during the celebration, history co-chair Paul
Beaver will speak on Abraham Lincoln’s activities in the city of
Lincoln and Logan County. Following the speech a panel of historians
will field questions on the life of Lincoln. Besides himself and
co-chair Paul Gleason, Beaver will invite Cullom Davis, former
professor of history at University of Illinois-Springfield and head
of the Lincoln Legal Project at Illinois State Historical Library,
and Mark Plummer, history department chair at Illinois State
University.
Other
activities in the planning stages include an 1860s baseball game, a
period farm exhibit, dedication of the restored Abraham Lincoln
well, a queen contest and a parade covering a route well over two
miles, passing Postville Park and Courthouse and circling the
present courthouse. Projected displays and publications include an
Art Fair section of historical paintings of the city of Lincoln,
Underground Railroad displays in the courthouse rotunda and at
Layman Gallery at Lincoln College, a reprint of the 1853 centennial
book plus a supplement covering the last 50 years, and food stands
and displays representing the different ethnic groups involved in
the growth of Lincoln.
Many
souvenirs will bear the sesquicentennial logo designed by Ken
Bottrell of Lincoln. Souvenir chair Sharon Awe said she hopes to
begin taking orders for T-shirts and perhaps Christmas ornaments by
this fall. Other mementos will include license plates and a copy of
the original charter of the city of Lincoln. Awe is seeking
information on souvenirs from the Lincoln centennial and other past
celebrations.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
County
general fund
dropped $239,000 in 2001
[APRIL
17, 2002] The
Logan County Board learned from its accountant Tuesday night that
its general fund decreased by $239,103 during 2001 because of overly
optimistic income projections. In the first third of 2002 revenue is
also below budget.
|
On
a 10-2 vote with one abstention the board voted to "renew by
continuance" the county health insurance policy with Health
Alliance of Champaign for one year. And it unanimously voted to
establish immediately a committee composed of township, city and
county officials to discuss the north-side commerce park proposal,
with the possibility of including other development options as well.
Andy
Lascody, of Sikisch Gardner & Co., presented tentative results
of his audit of county books for fiscal year 2001, ending Nov. 30.
To become final the audit must pass internal review within the
accounting firm. The report shows that revenues from fines, personal
property replacement tax, 1 percent sales tax, state income tax and
interest income were all low, totaling $328,327 short of budget
expectations. Lascody attributed some of the shortfall to the
weakened national economy, resulting in lower sales tax income and
interest rates. He said fines, such as traffic fines, are variable
and difficult to estimate.
The
shortfall was apparently not caused by out-of-line expenditures.
"All departments stayed pretty well within what they were
allotted," said finance chair Rod White. Lascody explained that
most apparent exceptions were offset by grants or other
considerations. For example, the sheriff’s department appears to
have overspent by $107,000. However, the department received a grant
for $102,000 for a defibrillator, which does not appear on the
audit.
Similarly,
the Health Department’s $327,353 over budget includes extra
payment on principal when refinancing a mortgage note and $170,000
for vouchers for the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women,
Infants and Children, paid for by a grant of the same amount. White
pointed out that the Health Department has a separate governing
board to oversee expenditures. "We don’t have direct
control" over them, he said. County board member Dave Hepler
sits on the Health Department board.
Lascody
said four funds had deficit balances on Nov. 30: the drug
investigation fund, the sheriff’s drug forfeiture fund, the senior
citizens tax fund and the Grid Information System fund. White said
the finance committee will review GIS, a Global Positioning
System-like mapping system, and has taken action to bring the other
three out of deficit.
Roger
Bock, a member of the finance committee, reported that a third of
the way through the 2002 fiscal year revenue sources fall short of
the expected 33 percent of budget: Personal property replacement tax
is at 23 percent, 1 percent sales tax at 27 percent, one-fourth
percent sales tax at 29 percent, interest income at 28 percent, and
fines are at 31 percent.
On
the plus side Dale Voyles, also on the finance committee, said that
in the first third of the year officeholder and departmental
expenses are 3.3 percent under budget. The two exceptions he
mentioned were county development fund at 5.5 percent and the
coroner’s office at 4.2 percent over for March. In the county
development fund nothing has been budgeted for waste management
salary, so White said the problem might be a bookkeeping error.
In
an issue that has occasioned vigorous discussion, Voyles, chair of
the insurance committee, made a motion to continue the county health
insurance policy with Health Alliance of Champaign, saying that the
renewal is for one year only and that the committee expects to begin
checking other options in January or February 2003. At that time, he
said, issues such as deductibles and cost sharing will be discussed
in an effort to control costs.
The
Health Alliance renewal raises premiums 23 percent, for an
additional cost of $71,000. At the board-of-the-whole meeting on
April 11 Sara Heidbreder of R.W. Garrett Insurance Agency in
Lincoln, the agent for Health Alliance, told the board that claims
during the first year of coverage have been unusually high,
exceeding premiums by $158,000.
Jim
Griffin and Cliff Sullivan opposed renewing the policy; Dave Hepler
abstained. Besides questioning the availability of deductibles,
Griffin said he believes a contract worth over $10,000 should be bid
out.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Voyles
also made the motion to form a development committee consisting of
Beth Davis, Lincoln mayor; Dick Logan, county board chair; Steve
Fuhrer, Lincoln City Council finance chair; Rod White, county board
finance chair; Rodney Alberts, East Lincoln township supervisor;
Gary Long, West Lincoln township supervisor; Tom Hickman, county
highway engineer; and Mark Smith, director of economic development.
Originally,
the motion included improvement of Fifth Street Road west from the
Lincoln city limit as well as the commerce park proposed for a
63-acre tract near Kruger elevator. However, after Griffin and Doug
Dutz questioned how the projects are connected and whether they
would be voted on separately, White moved to delete Fifth Street
Road from the motion. Still, he made it clear that the committee’s
topics could include any development issue, including Fifth Street
Road. Both the amendment and the motion passed unanimously, though
Dutz and Griffin said they opposed the commerce park.
Voyles
said the purpose of the committee would be "to see if it is
feasible for the city and county to work together to try to do
something very positive for the county" in financing the
commerce park.
In
another matter Dutz, chair of the law enforcement committee, said a
tentative agreement has been reached in contract negotiations with
the sheriff’s deputies’ union, and it appears that arbitration
will not be needed.
Community
Action committee member Gloria Luster reported attending a National
Community Action Foundation convention in Washington, D.C. Focus of
the meeting was on the weatherization program for needy families.
In
other business the county board voted to:
• Rezone two acres on Lazy Row Road near Atlanta from agricultural to
country homes use at the request of Merlin Willmert, who plans to
give it to his granddaughter to build a home. The Logan County
Regional Planning Commission had approved the request 15-0, and the
county appeals board had approved it 4-1. White voted against the
measure.
• Award the bid for re-roofing the Broadwell Highway Department garage
to Tremont Roofing. The $10,450 bid specifies a rubber roof and a
10-year warranty.
• Award the bid for painting the state’s attorney’s office to Mike
Simonson Painting for $3,790.
• Honor the Hartsburg-Emden and Mount Pulaski junior-high girls
volleyball teams for their "dedication, hard work, sacrifice
and spirit" shown in winning the seventh- and eighth-grade
Class A state championships, respectively. The Hartem team attended
the board meeting. The Mount Pulaski resolution will be presented at
a school assembly.
• Appoint the following members of fire protection districts: Richard L.
McKown, Atlanta; Gary Jackson, Latham; Brent E. Hellman, Emden;
James Graff, Middletown; Stanley L. Anderson Sr., Elkhart; Nicholous
Tibbs, New Holland; Scott Behrends, Hartsburg; Marvin VanHorn,
Beason; William W. Zimmer, San Jose; Kurt Walker, Armington; and
Lynn Haseley, Lincoln Rural.
• Appoint Bunnie L. Murphy and Dwain Marten to the Beason-Chestnut water
district.
• Appoint Kathy Sommers, Gail Apel-Sasse and Charles Ott to the Abraham
Lincoln Tourism Bureau of Logan County.
• Encourage citizens to participate in the Logan County Heritage &
Treasures festival on June 15-16. At the April 11 board meeting Don
Ritchhart of Lincoln spoke in favor of the event, which will feature
vendors, tourism information and entertainment throughout the
county. The board resolution, written by board historian Paul
Gleason, said the towns of Logan County are "rich in heritage
and treasures."
• Allow a farmers’ market at Latham Park on Wednesdays and Saturdays
from 7 a.m. to noon from May 4 through the end of October.
• Permit Lincoln Christian Church to use the courthouse rotunda May 2
from noon to1 p.m. for a National Day of Prayer observance.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
World
War II and Korean War veterans sought for graduation honors
[APRIL
17, 2002] The
General Assembly amended the school code to say that school
districts shall award diplomas to veterans of World War II and the
Korean War who have an honorable discharge and left high school to
serve their country before receiving their diploma.
Local
qualified veterans will be honored on Sunday, April 21, at 3 p.m. in
the LCHS auditorium. Family and friends are cordially invited to
attend this ceremony.
Wayne
Schrader from the American Legion will be the guest speaker.
Several
local veterans are already on the roster for Sunday’s ceremony. If
there are other veterans of World War II and the Korean War who
would like to receive a diploma, please call the high school at
732-4131, Ext. 226.
[LDN]
|
|
City
ready to adopt deficit budget
[APRIL
16, 2002] In
spite of deep cuts, the city of Lincoln is looking at a working
budget with spending estimated at about $270,000 more than revenue
for the next fiscal year. Estimated revenues in the general fund are
$3,995,004 for fiscal year 2002-2003, while estimated expenditures
add up to $4,292,053. Most of the payroll and other day-to-day
expenses are paid from the general fund
|
[The city council at work.]
The
difference will be made up by transferring money from set-aside
funds that may not be needed in the near future and from an unused
working cash fund.
Even
though the transfers come close to balancing income and
expenditures, they do not increase the city’s revenue, Juanita
Josserand, city clerk, pointed out, but simply shrink the city’s
overall bank balance. "It’s like spending your paycheck and
digging into your saving account to meet daily operating
expenses," she said.
The
coming fiscal year, which begins May 1, will see the city starting
out with a $781,294 bank balance, but the projected year-end balance
will be only $487,245. The city must start out with a substantial
bank balance because tax money does not start coming in until July,
well after the fiscal year begins.
The
council approved several fund transfers at its meeting Monday
evening, moving $103,147.16 from the fund for funeral expenses for
police and fire personnel and $118,184.44 from the fund for a
proposed fire station on the west side.
The
city still has $85,000 in the funeral expense fund, which would
provide benefits for 10 people, and $50,000 in the fire station
fund, which could be used to purchase a site for the proposed
station. Alderman Benny Huskins, who has previously opposed taking
money from the fire station fund, and Alderman Joe Stone voted
against the transfer.
Alderman
Steve Fuhrer, finance committee chairman, said the fund for the
proposed station was one of the last places the budget committee
looked for extra funds. "I don’t like to take money out of a
fund that has been building up for years, but we only have one
option, spend what we have," he said.
The
council also voted to abolish the working cash fund, which has not
been levied for many years, and transfer the $45,000 balance to the
general fund.
[Cindy McLaughlin, new Main
Street Lincoln program coordinator .
McLaughlin started work a week ago. She said she had
an "exciting first week and is ready to hit the second week with a
smile."]
Budget
cuts have included a moratorium on purchases of new vehicles for the
police and for the zoning, building and safety office; a wage freeze
for all department heads; a hiring freeze in all departments; and
cutbacks in funds for alderman to attend conferences and seminars.
The
council agreed last night that the hiring freeze would have to be
looked at on a case-by-case basis, as some key employees may have to
be replaced. One exception may be in the city police department,
where Faye Huneke is retiring May 31 as secretary, and no other
employee is available to take over those duties.
Finance
chairman Steve Fuhrer outlined some of the cuts made over the last
month to try to balance the budget. The building and zoning
department started out with a budget of $105,000 but was cut to
$71,000; funds for schools and conferences were cut from $20,000 to
$5,000; the mayor’s office budget was cut by $7,500; the public
grounds and buildings department started at $180,000 and is now
$114,000, cutting out funds for demolition of buildings; the Elm
Street and West Kickapoo road rehabilitation project was cut from
$218,000 to zero. The city attorney, Bill Bates, also took a wage
freeze; his salary remains $64,200, not the $65,800 he requested.
In
another budget-cutting move, the city recently voted to stop paying
fees for hydrant maintenance and pass those fees along to water
customers, saving about $212,000 annually and adding about $5 to the
average bimonthly water bill.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Fuhrer
has said he would like to avoid layoffs of city employees if at all
possible.
To
add to the budget woes, some expenses have gone up and others may do
so later in the year. Alderman Glenn Shelton reported that the city
has a 15 percent increase in the cost for health insurance because
of the increase in claims filed by city employees, several of which
were very high.
In
addition, negotiations with all four unions that represent city
workers are or soon will be under way this year, and union members
are expected to ask for raises in pay.
City
treasurer Les Plotner has been warning the council that its income
is declining because of a drop in tax revenues and drastic cuts in
interest rates on the city’s investments. At Monday night’s
council meeting, Plotner continued reporting bad news on the revenue
front, with sales taxes for the current year $104,978 short of what
was projected, and other taxes, including income taxes, also
$110,183 short of projections.
Plotner
did say he had changed his opinion on offering early retirement
incentives to longtime city employees. He said there were sufficient
funds in the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund to offer early
retirement this fiscal year. Early retirement saves money over time
because highly paid employees leave and, if they are replaced, are
replaced by those lower on the salary scale.
In
other business, Steven Aughenbaugh, president of the State Bank of
Lincoln, announced that the bank was contributing $2,500 for the
sesquicentennial celebration, set for Aug. 25-31 next year. Mayor
Beth Davis is working with a committee to plan the celebration for
the city’s 150th anniversary.
[Mayor Beth Davis]
Jan
Schumacher, president of the Main Street Lincoln board, introduced
the new program manager, Cindy McLaughlin. McLaughlin is replacing
Wendy Bell, who is now working for the Illinois Main Street program.
Rachael
Liesman, a member of the Lincoln Community High School National
Honor Society, accepted the Arbor Day award for the society and its
sponsors, teachers Judy Dopp and Debbie Schweitzer. The city’s
street department and the Honor Society students will be planting
trees tomorrow and again on April 29 in the Lincoln area.
[Rachael Liesman, member of the Lincoln
Community High School Honor Society,
accepts
the Arbor Day award for helping with the tree-planting around
Lincoln. Presenting the award was Alderman Dave Armbrust.]
Bates
reported that the fee quoted by attorney Tom Kelty of Springfield
for reviewing, analyzing and, if necessary, rewriting the city code
would be $3,500. A Charleston firm which builds community group
homes for the developmentally disabled has purchased a lot in an R-1
zoned community and plans to build there. The present city zoning
code prohibits such homes in R-1 zoning, but the attorney for the
Charleston firm says the city’s code is illegal.
The
council turned down a petition for installing curbs and gutters at
1316 Delavan St. at city expense, citing the tight budget and the
probability that other residents without curbs and gutters would
also ask the city to provide them. The council did agree to install
handrails at the curb at 410 Broadway in front of Dean Leith
Plumbing and Heating Service.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Man
barricades himself in house
[APRIL
16, 2002] Lincoln
Police Department officers were doing a routine follow-up call at
4:58 p.m. Monday when they encountered a man attempting suicide.
Officers went to a residence in the 400 block of South Kickapoo
Street to check on the man, who had a violation of an order of
protection placed against him. The distraught 20-year-old male would
not allow police inside the house. He had filled the house with
natural gas and was threatening to blow himself up.
|
Police
negotiators and the Emergency Response Team were called out. The
neighborhood was blocked off from traffic, and three nearby homes
were evacuated until the threat of explosion was eliminated.
CILCO
was contacted, and gas and power to the house were shut off.
|
The
man threatened to kill himself with a knife.
At
11:40 p.m., after five hours of attempted negotiations, the Lincoln
ERT used less than lethal force to subdue the man so that he did not
follow through with his intentions. They shot him with a special gun
that fires a beanbag. He was taken to ALMH for treatment.
LPD
was assisted in the situation with support from the Sheriff’s
Department, Lincoln Fire Department, Sheriff’s Auxiliary,
Lincoln/Logan Paramedics, Red Cross and the city street department.
[Jan
Youngquist]
|
|
Military
addresses sought
It
is a time 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]
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|
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]
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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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