Representatives
oppose LDC closure
[FEB.
1, 2002] SPRINGFIELD
— Three area Republican representatives today urged Gov. George
Ryan to keep Lincoln Developmental Center open.
|
After
meeting with House Republican Leader Lee Daniels and discussing the
issue, Reps. Gwenn Klingler of Springfield, Bill Mitchell of Forsyth
and Jonathan Wright of Lincoln joined in writing a letter to the
governor strongly expressing their conviction that the center should
not be closed.
"I’ve
had so many calls on the possible closing of Lincoln Developmental
Center, and I’ve personally looked into the problems there,"
Klingler said. "While the problems are real, I believe the
center should stay open for the benefit of the residents and their
loved ones, who clearly do not want the center closed. I sincerely
believe the problems at Lincoln center can be solved and their
solution will benefit everyone."
Mitchell
said he too had been contacted about the possibility of the center’s
closing and was convinced that it would not be in the best interests
of the residents or their families.
"A recent survey indicates that Lincoln Developmental Center should
not be singled out for closure for residential abuse," Mitchell
said.
"There
are other facilities with far higher levels of abuse, and there have
been no calls for their closure. Furthermore, the economic and
social impact on the entire area is too great not to be considered.
The impact would be devastating to too many communities in central
Illinois. We need to keep Lincoln open."
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Wright
said the impact of the closure on his community was also a factor
that should not be minimized.
"Lincoln
Developmental Center is very much a part of the Lincoln
community," Wright said. "Closing it would not only have
serious economic ramifications for the entire area, it would result
in a loss of vital part of all of our lives here in Lincoln. For us,
the center is so much more than bricks and mortar. It is a vital,
living force that helps give life to our community."
In
their letter the representatives urged Gov. Ryan to find a solution
for the problems at the center by working with staff, residents and
families. All agreed that anyone found abusing should be immediately
fired, but none believed the entire staff at Lincoln center should
be assumed guilty because of the acts of a very few employees.
[News
release]
|
|
Text of letter to Gov. Ryan January
31, 2002
Honorable
George H. Ryan
Governor,
State of Illinois
207
State House.
Springfield,
IL 62706
|
Dear
Governor Ryan,
We
are writing in regards to the Lincoln Developmental Center and the
pending decision as to the fate of this facility. We would first
like to commend you on your involvement in this issue. We realize
that the situation at Lincoln represents a very difficult issue for
you that consequently bears a major impact, not only on those within
the facility, but also for the Lincoln community.
It
is due to this tenuous balance between the interests of the
residents, their families, employees, and the community involved
that we write to urge you to delay implementation of any further
plans for reduction or closure until the facility has ample time to
correct these problems. We believe it is only fair that the
determination on whether the facility should be allowed to continue
its receipt of Medicaid funds is made before you request the
Department to take further action. As representatives of the area,
we believe the Lincoln Developmental Center provides a vital
economic interest to the community of Lincoln and closure of this
facility would have ramifications well beyond the loss of jobs for
those employed directly by the facility. As a result of the facility
reductions made over the past few months, many area businesses have
already felt the pains of this loss. Thus, a complete closure of the
facility would inevitably prove devastating to the community.
This
is not to say, however, that the economic interests of the Lincoln
community come before the serious concerns that have ultimately led
the facility to the situation it now faces. The loss of Lincoln's
certification as a result of these cases of abuse and neglect is
inexcusable. The safety and welfare of the individuals residing at
the facility should be a priority for all members of the staff. The
few members of the staff that have chosen not to regard this as a
priority should be subjected to swift and appropriate consequences.
[to top of second
column in this letter]
|
Unfortunately,
it is because of these employees that the majority of the staff
members who have consistently held a high regard for the safety and
health of the residents are forced to suffer for the actions of
others. More importantly, the families and the individuals that
reside at Lincoln and wish to continue their care at this facility
may be unnecessarily subjected to an understandably upsetting
disruption in their lives. Furthermore, we believe it makes no sense
to transfer these residents to facilities, such as Jacksonville,
with higher incidents of abuse and neglect. Although none of us have
had personal experience with a developmentally disabled child, we
can only imagine the strain this would not only place on the
parents, but also the child who may be particularly sensitive to
such a drastic change in environment.
In
light of these concerns, we once again urge you to delay any
decision on the fate of the Lincoln Developmental Center. We also
encourage you to continue working with the Department to ensure
Lincoln has qualified staff and management in place to carry out
both the concerns and daily functions of the facility in a caring,
efficient and highly professional manner. Furthermore, we are also
committed to assisting the Department on developing measures to
prevent past problems at the facility from persisting in the future.
While we regret the situation at Lincoln has occurred, we believe
this situation affords us the opportunity to coordinate efforts to
make systemic improvements that protect individuals with
developmental disabilities and the interests of those individuals
and communities that care for them.
Again,
we would appreciate your careful consideration on the fate of the
Lincoln Developmental Center. Thank you for your time and attention
to this matter.
Sincerely,
Representative
Gwen Klingler
Representative
Bill Mitchell
Representative
Jonathan Wright
|
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New
stamp honors Langston Hughes
on his 100th birthday
[FEB.
1, 2002] A
new stamp being issued by the U.S. Postal Service honors poet and
author Langston Hughes, who wrote his first poem in 1916 as a
Central School student in Lincoln. The date of issue corresponds to
the 100th anniversary of Hughes birth on Feb. 1, 1902, in
Joplin, Mo.
|
The
stamp is the 25th in the Black Heritage series, with one
stamp brought out every January or February. Acting Lincoln
postmaster Jeff Poole said previous honorees include Martin Luther
King Jr., W.E.B. DuBois, Harriet Tubman, Jackie Robinson, Scott
Joplin and James Weldon Johnson. A poster displayed in the Lincoln
post office announces the stamp.
According
to window clerk Donnie Wolpert, first day issues are available on
Friday only in New York City, where Hughes owned a home and did much
of his writing. The stamp will be unveiled at New York’s Schomburg
Center for Research in Black Culture. Elsewhere the stamp is
available for sale starting Saturday, Feb. 2.
The
stamp reproduces a 1946 black-and-white photograph of Hughes taken
in New York City by Henri Bresson, a renowned photographer and
friend of Hughes.
Hughes,
best known as a poet, also wrote a long-running column for the
Chicago Defender, short stories, novels, plays, children’s books,
a hit Broadway revue, an opera, a movie and assorted nonfiction. He
took pride in being the first black American to support himself
wholly by writing. Many public readings of his works helped him
accomplish that feat.
An
Illinois State Historical Society marker erected at Central School
in 1998 memorializes the poet. It stands on the corner of Eighth
Street and Union.
Margaret
Peifer of rural Lincoln, chair of the marker committee, said that
when she first learned of Hughes’ Lincoln connection, she was
elated. "I’d been teaching Langston Hughes for years,"
she recalled. "I’ve always loved his poems, and kids loved
them too. He had a way of saying that didn’t offend but made
(racial interactions) real."
Peifer
noted that nearly everyone can relate to "Dreams," the
Hughes poem quoted on the marker. It says in part: "Hold fast
to dreams / For if dreams die / Life is a broken winged bird / That
cannot fly."
Raised
primarily by his grandmother in Lawrence, Kan., Hughes lived in
Lincoln for about a year in 1915-16 when his stepfather worked for
the railroad here. According to biographer Arnold Rampersad, Ethel
Welch, Hughes’ English teacher at Central School, reported that he
was one of the top three composition students in the class. In his
autobiography ‘The Big Sea," Hughes recalls being
unanimously elected class poet with the duty of writing the
graduation poem.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
He
recounts, "In the first half of the poem, I said that our
school had the finest teachers there ever were. And in the latter
half, I said our class was the greatest ever graduated. So, at
graduation, when I read the poem, naturally everybody applauded
loudly. That was the way I began to write poetry."
Dr.
Robert Goebel, president of the school board, presented Hughes with
his diploma. Shortly afterward, the family moved to Cleveland.
For
years after leaving Lincoln, Hughes corresponded occasionally with
Ethel Welch. He sent her three autographed volumes of poetry: his
first book, "The Weary Blues," published in 1929, plus two
from the late ’40s, "Fields of Wonder" and "One-Way
Ticket."
When
Welch died the volumes were given to her neighbor and friend
Charlene Boward. Almost 20 years ago Boward, in turn, saw that they
were passed on to Becky Thornton, an assistant in the Lincoln
Community High School instructional materials center. The LCHS IMC
displays the three autographed volumes in a case just inside the
entrance.
Among
the many public figures Hughes knew were two with area roots. In
1930 he and Reinhold Niebuhr both spoke at an interracial conference
at Riverside Church in Manhattan. Niebuhr, professor of applied
Christianity at Union Theological Seminary in New York City, also
graduated from Central School and also is memorialized by a
historical marker in Lincoln.
In
the mid-1920s, after winning an Opportunity magazine prize for
"The Weary Blues" but supporting himself as a busboy in
Washington, D.C., Hughes was "discovered" by poet Vachel
Lindsay, a Springfield native. Lindsay was there to give a public
reading, and when the busboy slipped him some of his poems Lindsay
included them in his performance.
Hughes
is known for incorporating the rhythms of jazz, blues and spirituals
into his poetry. His most famous prose character is Jesse B. Simple,
whom he introduced into his Chicago Defender column in 1944. Sitting
on a stool in Paddy’s Bar, in dialogue with the educated, somewhat
stuffy narrator, Simple dispenses his colloquial and often perverse
wisdom regarding his troubles with women, interactions between the
races and life in general.
Hughes
was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and the
first black member of PEN. He won the Springarn Medal for
contributions to the Negro race and was appointed as American
representative to the first World Federation of Negro Arts in Dakar,
Senegal. He died in 1967.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
Weather statement
As of 6:09 a.m. Jan. 31
[JAN.
31, 2002] Winter
storm warning continues for parts of central Illinois through
tonight.
|
A
stationary front located just south of the Ohio River will have a
series of low-pressure areas move along it today and tonight. As
these low-pressure areas move northeast, the southerly winds ahead
of the systems will bring plenty of moisture and warmer air into the
lower levels of the atmosphere. This will combine with the front to
produce showers and thunderstorms across the southern half of the
area.
|
Areas
further north, where the temperature remains around the freezing
mark, will experience periods of freezing rain or freezing drizzle
through tonight. Areas experiencing the freezing precipitation will
be along and north of a Rushville-to-Bloomington line. Areas further
north have already received heavy snowfall, over 6 inches, and ice
accumulations around one-half inch. Additional ice accumulations and
light snow tonight will make outside conditions much worse. Travel
is strongly discouraged in these areas today and tonight. However,
if you must go out, allow extra time to reach your destination.
[Weather
Underground]
To
keep updated, click on the weather report located under the date on
the front page of LDN.
|
|
New,
innovative prescription assistance program: Illinois SenioRx Care
[JAN.
31, 2002] SPRINGFIELD
— Gov. George Ryan detailed an innovative prescription assistance
program, Illinois SenioRx Care, approved Monday by President Bush
and the United States Department of Health and Human Services as a
new national model for providing assistance for all prescription
medication to low-income senior citizens.
|
"I
want to commend President Bush and Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy Thompson for working with us to provide relief to
our senior citizens. SenioRx Care is an innovative program that
dramatically expands our continuing efforts to make prescription
medication affordable for low-income seniors," said Gov. Ryan.
"This program is the first of its kind across the nation, due
in large part to the success we have had with the state’s Circuit
Breaker program. We hope other states will join us so that all
seniors can receive the assistance they need to care for their
health."
"Gov.
George Ryan deserves credit for his efforts to improve access to
affordable prescription drugs for Illinois seniors," U.S.
Department of Heath and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson
said. "Illinois now can use federal Medicaid dollars to extend
prescription drug coverage to some 368,000 seniors."
The
proposed program is modeled on the state’s existing Circuit
Breaker/Pharmaceutical Assistance program, administered by the
Department of Revenue. Once enrolled, an individual would remain
eligible for 12 months, and participants will have similar
cost-sharing responsibilities. The current Illinois Circuit Breaker
program will continue to serve eligible seniors earning between 200
and 250 percent of the federal poverty level, as well as disabled
citizens.
"The
state’s innovative approach pools federal and state Medicaid
dollars to help those seniors most in need. We also will make it
easier financially and administratively for other states to quickly
follow Illinois’ lead," Secretary Thompson added.
Gov.
Ryan first presented his concept for this innovative prescription
drug plan to Secretary Thompson during a meeting last April in
Chicago. The proposal has been under preliminary review by the
federal government since Illinois submitted its plan to the federal
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on July 31, 2001.
"The
lack of access to prescription drugs for the elderly is one of the
most significant issues confronting our national health care
system," Gov. Ryan said. "This progressive initiative will
provide an immediate benefit to Illinois seniors."
The
new program will provide a broad pharmaceutical benefit to eligible
low-income Illinois seniors age 65 and older. Those with annual
incomes up to about $17,200 for a single person and $23,220 for a
couple will qualify without being subject to an asset test. The
program is scheduled to begin June 1.
Participants
will pay a nominal co-pay averaging $3 per prescription. When an
individual’s pharmaceutical costs exceed $1,750, SenioRx Care will
pay about 80 percent of the cost of additional prescriptions, while
enrollees will pay the remaining 20 percent plus the co-pay. The
state does not plan to charge an annual enrollment fee for the
program.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
"Because
the new program will cover such a broad range of drugs, it will
benefit significantly more seniors," Gov. Ryan added. "The
increased cost of the program will be offset by federal matching
funds, cost-sharing features and drug manufacturer rebates paid to
the state."
The
new program will include a full range of drugs, including
antibiotic, gastrointestinal, anti-anxiety, antihistamine and
antidepressant therapies. The waiver program also will make diabetic
testing supplies, hypodermic syringes, ostomy supplies and selected
over-the-counter medications available to eligible seniors.
By
providing seniors with affordable prescription drug, savings will be
achieved by helping prevent costly institutional Medicaid care.
Funding will be provided by state funds, federal matching funds,
cost-sharing features and drug manufacturer rebates paid to the
state and federal governments.
"This
program will provide a significant benefit for seniors taking
prescription drugs," said Public
Aid Director Jackie Garner. "For example, if a senior is
taking three drugs which cost $50 per prescription per month, the
total annual cost is $1,800. Under SenioRx Care, that same person
would save about $1,700 a year by paying about $100 for an average
$3 co-pay for a prescription," Garner said.
To
encourage seniors to keep any private insurance coverage for
prescription drugs, the program will allow individuals the option of
receiving monthly rebate checks to help cover out-of-pocket
expenses, including premiums, deductibles and co-payments for
pharmaceuticals.
Highlights
of the Illinois SenioRx Care program, to begin June 1, are:
• Eligibility level — 65 and over, 200 percent of the federal poverty
level.
• Coverage for up to 368,000 seniors.
• Seniors already enrolled in the Circuit Breaker/PA program who are
below 200 percent of federal poverty level will be automatically
enrolled in Illinois SenioRx Care and have a complete prescription
formulary available to them.
• Pays for over 90 percent of average eligible senior’s drug cost.
• No asset test or "spend down" requirements, as with
traditional Medicaid.
[News
release from the Illinois governor’s office]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Thursday,
Jan. 31
The
31st day of the year
|
Quotes
"Writing
books is the closest men ever come to childbearing." — Norman
Mailer
"A
desperate disease requires a dangerous remedy." — Guy Fawkes
Birthdays
1734
— Robert Morris, merchant (signed Declaration of Independence)
1797
— Franz Peter Schubert, Lichtenthal, Austria, composer
("Unfinished Symphony")
1872
— Zane Grey, American West novelist ("Riders of the Purple
Sage")
1919
— Jackie Robinson, Georgia, first black major league baseball
player (Dodgers)
1923
— Norman Mailer, New Jersey, New York City mayoral candidate and
novelist ("The Naked and the Dead")
1931
— Ernie Banks, "Mr. Cub," Chicago Cubs, Hall-of-Famer
(first baseman)
1937
— Suzanne Pleshette, New York City, actress ("The Birds,"
Emily in "The Bob Newhart Show")
1947
— Nolan Ryan, pitcher (Mets, Angels, Astros) (seven no-hitters,
5,714 K’s)
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1606
— Guy Fawkes, convicted in the "Gunpowder Plot,"
executed at 35
1788
— Charles E. Stuart, English pretender to the throne, dies at 67
1842
— John Tyler’s daughter Elizabeth marries in White House
1851
— Gail Borden announces invention of evaporated milk
1865
— Gen. Robert E. Lee named commander-in-chief of Confederate
Armies
1874
— Jesse James gang robs train at Gads Hill, Mo.
1905
— First auto to exceed 100 mph (161 kph), driven by A.G.
MacDonald, Daytona Beach
1928
— Scotch tape first marketed by 3M company
1929
— Leon Trotsky expelled from Russia to Turkey
1955
— John R. Mott, U.S. theologian and founder of YMCA (Nobel 1946),
dies at 89
1990
— First McDonald’s in Russia opens in Moscow, world’s biggest
McDonald’s
1992
— Sportscaster Howard Cosell retires
|
|
Approval
of sewer update design hinges on 56 comments from Illinois EPA
[JAN.
30, 2002] Fifty-six
"comments" from a reviewer at the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency must be addressed before the design for the
Lincoln sewage treatment plant upgrade can win final approval.
|
Joe
Miller of Environmental Management Corporation told the Lincoln City
Council Tuesday night that the sewage plant design could be approved
immediately if the city were to accept all 56 suggested changes.
However, since some changes would add substantial expense, Miller
plans to discuss those issues with the IEPA to find the most
cost-effective design.
Treatment
plant manager Grant Eaton said past comments have been successfully
addressed and he expects the same with these new issues. Miller said
EMC representatives have met with the reviewer and his supervisor
before and will probably do so again. A written response to the 56
comments has already been submitted.
Miller
said he hopes for final design approval by mid-March so bidding can
be conducted in April and May and ground broken in June. A timely
approval is important for two reasons: First, money is waiting in
the form of a 2.7 percent IEPA loan; Lincoln is approved to receive
the loan, but the money is awarded on a first-come, first-served
basis and could conceivably dry up until October. Second, interest
rates are favorable now.
Miller
commented that it is not a question of the submitted design failing
to meet regulations, but there is more than one right way to
accomplish the goal, and the reviewer prefers some methods that are
more expensive.
For
example, Eaton said, the design calls for using an existing
clarifier splitter box that has proved effective. The city does not
want to replace a structure that is well designed and has given no
trouble.
Miller
said he has met with prison officials to discuss their paying a
share of the sewage treatment plant cost proportionate to their
usage. He reported general agreement on 22.4 percent as an
appropriate amount. Eaton said prison officials have agreed to
reduce their loadings of BODs (biological oxygen demand) to 300
milligrams per liter and suspended solids to 350 milligrams per
liter. He said EMC would test three days a week to monitor these
levels.
The
prisons have made a number of changes to meet these standards,
according to Miller. Exceeding them would limit the city’s
potential growth, so significant penalties and fines would be
imposed for violations.
In
other business, Chief of Police Rich Montcalm submitted a report
breaking down arrest statistics by race, sex and age. For example,
last year the 28 arrests for transportation of alcohol involved one
adult black female, one adult Hispanic female, three juvenile white
males, 21 adult white males and two adult white females. For a
number of crimes, such as leaving the scene of an accident (14
arrests) and residential burglary (four), all those arrested were
white. Both people charged with first-degree murder and both
arrested for robbery were black. But for the majority of crimes most
people arrested were white.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Police
Committee chair Verl Prather said there have been no formal
complaints of racial profiling in Lincoln. Mayor Beth Davis
emphasized that she does not want profiling in this community and
that any related issues should be brought to the Mayor’s
Commission on Disabilities, Minorities, Seniors, Veterans and Youth.
Montcalm
said diversity training is being offered to all members of the
Police Department. Prather said eight officers have already
completed the training.
Fire,
Water and ESDA Committee chair Benny Huskins announced the
resignation of Assistant Fire Chief Don Fulk effective Feb. 15. Next
on the list and his apparent successor is Clint Warnisher.
Steve
Fuhrer, chair of the Finance, Policy and Procedures Committee, asked
department heads to carry over as much money as possible into the
next fiscal year. "Next year will be tough," he said.
In
a committee meeting preceding the council meeting, Tom Lally of
Edward Jones discussed the investment banking firm’s policies for
tax-exempt municipal bonds. Although the city expects to finance the
$9 million sewage treatment plant upgrade with an IEPA loan, Lally
said bonds could be issued if costs exceed the estimate. He claimed
that although his firm charges a higher-than-average underwriting
fee, a lower interest rate tied to a national index results in the
lowest overall cost.
Jim
Senica of the Illinois Development Finance Authority said if the
city issues bonds through his agency, purchasers are exempt from
both federal and state income tax on the interest.
Bids
for a police car were opened from three local dealerships:
•
Row Motor Sales, $19,704 for a Dodge Intrepid.
•
Graue Chevrolet-Buick-Oldsmobile-Pontiac-Cadillac, $18,669.35 for a
Chevrolet Impala.
•
Xamis Ford-Lincoln-Mercury, $20,850 for a Crown Victoria.
The
bids will be considered at a later meeting.
Mayor
Beth Davis defended herself against a recent Courier editorial
criticizing her for having her sister deliver Lincoln Developmental
Center petitions to the governor. Davis was hospitalized for
emergency surgery. She asked George Mitchell, the mayor pro tem, and
two aldermen to represent the city. When none of them could be
present, her sister filled in.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Wednesday,
Jan. 30
The
30th day of the year
|
Quotes
"Yesterday,
December 7, 1941 — a date that will live in infamy — the United
States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval
and air forces of the Empire of Japan." — Franklin D.
Roosevelt
"Among
the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look
upon the act of depriving a whole nation of arms as the
blackest." — Mahatma Gandhi
Birthdays
1882
— Franklin Delano Roosevelt, New Hyde Park, N.Y., 32nd president
(D) (1933-1945)
1922
— Dick Martin, Detroit, Mich., actor and comedian
("Laugh-In," "Carbon Copy")
1927
— Olof Palme, Stockholm, prime minister of Sweden (1969-76,
1982-86) assassinated
1931
— Gene Hackman, California, actor ("Bonnie and Clyde,"
"Under Fire," "Superman")
1933
— Louis Rukeyser, financial whiz (Wall Street Week)
1937
— Boris Spassky, U.S.S.R., world chess champion (1969-72)
1941
— Dick Cheney, representative, R-Wyo., Bush’s secretary of
defense (1989-93), vice president
1951
— Phil Collins, England, singer and drummer (Genesis;
"Against All Odds")
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1487
— Bell chimes invented
1649
— Charles I, king of Great Britain (1625-49), beheaded for treason
1730
— Peter II Alekseyevitch, emperor of Russia (1727-30), dies at 14
1800
— U.S. population: 5,308,483; black population 1,002,037 (18.9
percent)
1838
— Osceola, chief of Seminole Indians, dies in jail
1862
— U.S. Navy’s first ironclad warship (Monitor) launched
1937
— Second of Stalin’s purge trials; Pyatakov and 16 others
sentenced to death
1939
— Hitler calls for extermination of European Jews
1946
— First issue of Franklin Roosevelt dime
1948
— Mahatma Ghandi murdered by Hindu extremists in India
1948
— Orville Wright, U.S. aviation pioneer, dies at 76
1951
— Ferdinand Porsche, German car inventor (Porsche), dies at 75
1956
— Martin Luther King Jr.’s home bombed
1995
— Car bomb explodes in Algiers; 42 killed, 296 injured
|
|
Part
2
Experts
lend experience, vision to Logan County Regional Planning
Commission
[JAN.
29, 2002] The
two men in charge of planning and zoning for Logan County began
their jobs on the same day, share an office and have both served on
the county board. Phil Mahler works full time as director of the
Logan County Regional Planning Commission, while Walter D.
"Bud" Miller has a part-time position as zoning
enforcement officer. But the two must work together for Mahler to
achieve the three goals he has set.
|
[Click
here for Part 1, posted Jan. 28]
Mahler
also serves as an ex officio member of the Economic Development
Council. He said he works closely with EDC Director Mark Smith, who
has experience as zoning officer of DeWitt County. As Mahler defines
it, Smith’s job is to attract business to the county; Mahler’s
is to have the zoning prepared properly and a plan set for new
growth in both business and housing.
[Bud Miller (left) and Phil Mahler;
photo by Lynn Shearer Spellman]
Mahler’s
office serves as a collection point for various types of information
that citizens and public bodies may need. He receives census
information on the county and the country as a whole. He also has
maps depicting the 100-year flood plain, the location of former and
current mines and the county enterprise zone.
Flood
plain information is used in issuing building permits because no
permanent structure can be built on the flood plain.
Similarly,
anyone obtaining a building permit within the enterprise zone for
construction that will create new jobs receives a certificate to
avoid sales tax on building materials bought within the zone. In
addition, property taxes levied by five bodies are abated for
qualifying enterprise zone structures. The five taxing bodies are
Lincoln Elementary School District 27, High School District 404, the
city of Lincoln, Logan County and the park district. For qualifying
structures, property taxes levied by these bodies are abated 100
percent in the first five years and 50 percent in years six to 10.
Locations
of the seven former mines are important to people considering buying
mine subsidence insurance. As a former insurance agent, Mahler
recommends that anyone living in a mined area or within a few blocks
of one buy subsidence insurance. He said the vein was generally 5½
feet thick and 280 to 300 feet beneath the surface. Although neither
Mahler nor Miller knows of any case of significant mine subsidence
in the county, it has occurred in nearby areas and could here.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Mahler’s
office also administers CDAP grants. These grants loan $10,000 per
employee at 4 percent interest to companies hiring 51 percent or
more people of low to moderate income. State monies for the loans
come through the city of Lincoln. The regional planning office
receives updated figures defining low to moderate income for various
size families. At present, the cap is an annual income of $29,700
for a single person or $33,900 for a family of two. Miller
is responsible for assigning all 911 addresses in unincorporated
areas in the county and in a few incorporated areas as well. The 911
address is issued along with the building permit, and CILCO and GTE
will not hook up to a building without one. In the county, street
addresses denote east-west roads, avenues are north-south roads, and
a few boulevards run diagonally.
Mahler’s
and Miller’s desks sit side by side on the second floor of the
Logan County Highway Department building at 529 S. McLean. Miller
works 9-12 and 1-4 on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Mahler’s hours are
8:30-12 and 1-4:30 daily.
Mahler
graduated from Murray State University with a bachelor’s degree in
mathematics with minors in physics and military science. He served
two years in Germany in the 32nd Army Air Defense Command
and 28 years as a district agent for Prudential Insurance. Mahler
was elected to the county board in 1994 and served until July 1,
2001, when he resigned to accept his current position. Bob Menzies
preceded him as director of the Regional Planning Commission.
Mahler’s
wife, Linda, is principal of Carroll Catholic School. They have
three daughters: Erica (wife of Brad) Boss, an accountant in Fort
Campbell, Ken.; Annie (wife of Bob) Evers, a special education
teacher at Lincoln Community High School; and Emily, a sophomore
marketing major at Eastern Illinois University.
Miller
also officially began work on July 1, 2001, although he had been
zoning enforcement officer on a temporary basis since the preceding
May. He followed Harold Jouett in the position. Miller is a retired
state parole officer. He served as East Lincoln Township supervisor
for 18 years and on the county board for almost six.
Miller’s
wife is the former Sue Ellen Franklin. His son Mike (husband of Jean
Ann) Miller works for Roger Webster Construction, and his daughter
Beth (wife of Darwin) Hoffert for Insight Communications. His two
stepsons live in Arkansas; Sam Franklin is a buyer for Wal-Mart and
D.J. Franklin is a police officer.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Tuesday,
Jan. 29
The
29th day of the year
|
Quotes
"My
country is the world, and my religion is to do good." —
Thomas Paine
"For
the salvation of his soul the Muslim digs a well. It would be a fine
thing if each of us were to leave behind a school, or a well, or
something of the sort, so that life would not pass by and retreat
into eternity without a trace." — Anton Chekhov
"Two
roads diverged in a wood and I — I took the one less traveled by,
and that has made all the difference." — Robert Frost
Birthdays
1737
— Thomas Paine, political essayist ("Common Sense,"
"The Age of Reason")
1756
— Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee, governor of Virginia
(R) and general
1843
— William McKinley, Niles, Ohio, (R) 25th president (1897-1901)
1860
— Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Tagarov, Russia, playwright
("The Cherry Orchard")
1874
— John David Rockefeller Jr., Cleveland, Ohio, philanthropist
1880
— W.C. Fields [William Claude Dukenfield], Philadelphia, actor
("The Bank Dick")
1908
— Adam Clayton Powell, representative, D-N.Y. (1945-70)
1954
— Oprah Winfrey, Mississippi, actress and TV host ("The Color
Purple," "Oprah")
1960
— Gregory Efthimos Louganis, San Diego, Calif., diver (Olympic
gold, 1984, ’88)
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1613
— Galileo observes Neptune but fails to recognize what he sees
1676
— Fjodor Aleksejevitsj becomes czar of Russia
1696
— Ivan V, co-tsar of Russia (1682-89), dies
1837
— Aleksandr Pushkin, poet and novelist ("The Golden Cockeral"),
killed in a duel
1839
— Charles Darwin marries Emma Wedgwood
1845
— Edgar Allen Poe’s "The Raven" first published (New York
City)
1919
— Secretary of state proclaims 18th amendment (Prohibition)
1920
— Walt Disney starts first job as an artist: $40 week with KC
Slide Co.
1936
— First players elected to Baseball Hall of Fame: Ty Cobb, Babe
Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson and Walter Johnson
1956
— H[enry] L[ouis] Mencken, US essayist and critic ("Smart
Set"), dies at 75
1963
— Robert Lee Frost, U.S. poet, (New Hampshire, four Pulitzers),
dies at 88
|
|
Part
1
Mahler
plans to review
county zoning ordinance
[JAN.
28, 2002] The
two men in charge of planning and zoning for Logan County began
their jobs on the same day, share an office and have both served on
the county board. Phil Mahler works full time as director of the
Logan County Regional Planning Commission, while Walter D.
"Bud" Miller has a part-time position as zoning
enforcement officer. But the two must work together for Mahler to
achieve the three goals he has set.
|
Mahler’s
first goal is to clean up the county by removing junk vehicles and
mobile homes. Miller is one of several officials charged with
enforcing the various nuisance ordinances, which include junk cars.
He said he works closely with the Logan County Health Department and
county deputies on enforcement.
Mahler’s
other two goals both involve zoning. He wants to revisit the country
homes issue and to tighten up the way the county zoning ordinance
deals with manufactured homes.
Currently,
the ordinance allows a one-acre lot to be separated from a farm and
rezoned from agricultural to country homes use, provided it has 100
feet of frontage on county, township or state roads. Two recent
cases have come before the regional planning commission, the Logan
County Zoning Board of Appeals and the Logan County Board, where
each case was approved after vigorous discussion.
Perhaps
as a result of the two cases, Mahler and Miller said they have
recently had a rush of interest in country homes zoning. One day
they had so many phone calls they needed to eat out of the office to
have an uninterrupted lunch break.
Mahler
is forming a committee to review the 31-year-old county zoning
ordinance. In effect since Jan. 1, 1971, it has had only "two
or three small revisions, nothing real big," according to
Miller. Miller sat on the county board when the original zoning
ordinance was passed. He was elected to the Board of Supervisors in
1969 and served until December 1974, by which time the group had
become the county board to comply with the one-man, one-vote ruling.
Miller will serve on Mahler’s committee.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Other
members so far include county engineer Tom Hickman, Director of
Economic Development Mark Smith, county board members Dave Hepler
and Terry Werth, Health Department director Lloyd Evans and
environmental health director Kathy Waldo, Lincoln City Safety
Inspector Les Last, Atlanta Mayor Bill Martin, Logan County Farm
Bureau board president Kent Paulus, Farm Bureau manager Jim Drew,
East Lincoln Township road commissioner Dale Steffens, 30-year
planning commission member Delmar Veech, and Henry Spellman, owner
of Tremont Park. Mahler invited any county resident interested in
joining the committee to phone him at 732-8835 or 737-9765.
Mahler
said he hopes to incorporate in county zoning a concept he sees in
Lincoln: placing industrial zones behind commercial ones. "It’s
dumb to have a housing addition right across the street from
industrial," he said. He emphasized, however, that any changes
must first pass the committee and then be approved by the county
board.
Another
issue to be addressed in the zoning review is what the ordinance
terms a "mobile home." The more current terms
"manufactured home" and "modular home" will need
to be defined and their use regulated.
The
city of Lincoln’s comprehensive land use plan is quite recent,
having been updated in 2000, but Mahler wants to update it again at
the next planning commission meeting. Part of his job is to serve as
executive secretary of the 17-member commission.
Another
part is to be zoning officer for Atlanta and Elkhart. Recently
Elkhart Mayor Dayle Eldredge asked him to prepare a fee structure
proposal for building permits for large installations. If the
current fee of $1 per $1,000 were applied to the planned $140
million Corn Belt Energy plant, the cost would be prohibitive.
(To
be continued)
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
[Click
here for Part 2]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Monday,
Jan. 28
The
28th day of the year
|
Quotes
"Bums
are the well-to-do of this day. They didn’t have as far to
fall." — Jackson Pollock
"Pastime
with good company
I
love and shall, until I die.
Grudge
who list, but none deny!
So
God be pleased, thus live will I."
—
Henry VIII
Birthdays
1457
— Henry VII, Pembroke Castle, first Tudor king of England
(1485-1509)
1775
— Peter the Great, Russia
1825
— George Edward Pickett, major general (Confederate Army)
1909
— Lionel KP "Buster" Crabb, British diver (World War II,
George Medal)
1912
— Jackson Pollock, Cody, Wyo., expressionist painter
("Lavender Mist")
1936
— Alan Alda [Alphonso D’Abruzzo], New York City, actor (Hawkeye
Pierce in "M*A*S*H")
Events
??
— Charlemagne, German emperor and Roman emperor (800-814), dies at
71
1099
— First Crusaders begin siege of Hosn-el-Akrad, Syria
1495
— Pope gives his son Cesare Borgia as hostage to Charles VIII of
France
1547
— 9-year-old Edward VI succeeds Henry VIII as king of England
1547
— Henry VIII, king of England (1509-47), dies at 55
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
1595
— Francis Drake, English pirate (Porto Bello, West Indies), dies
at 50
1725
— Peter I "the Great" Romanov, czar of Russia, dies at
52
1807
— London’s Pall Mall is first street lit by gaslight
1829
— William Burke, murderer and body snatcher, executed in Edinburgh
1858
— John Brown organized raid on Arsenal at Harper’s Ferry
1878
— Yale Daily News published; first college daily newspaper
1939
— William Butler Yeats, Irish poet (Nobel), dies in France at 73
1980
— Jimmy Durante, New York City, comedian ("Jimmy Durante
Show"), dies at 86
1986
— Christa McAuliffe, astronaut, dies in Challenger disaster
1986
— Ellison S. Onizuka, Hawaii, USAF, Mir astronaut, dies in
Challenger disaster
1986
— Francis R. Scobee, Washington, USAF, astronaut, dies in
Challenger disaster
1986
— Judith Arlene Resnik, Akron, Ohio, astronaut, dies in Challenger
disaster
1986
— Michael J. Smith, Beaufort, N.C., USN commander, astronaut, dies
in Challenger disaster
1986
— Ronald E. McNair, Lake City, S.C., astronaut, dies in Challenger
disaster
|
|
Gov.
Ryan returns to Cuba
on humanitarian mission
Leads
pharmaceutical firms for potential humanitarian medical trade
[JAN.
26, 2002] HAVANA,
Cuba — Gov. George Ryan arrived in Havana, Cuba, on Thursday to
meet with Illinois pharmaceutical firms willing to sell medicines
and medical supplies that are badly needed in the wake of last
November’s hurricane.
|
"By
reaching out to our neighbors, we are further extending a bridge of
understanding and goodwill," said Gov. Ryan. "We’re
exploring a market for Illinois businesses and farmers with a
neighbor, just 90 miles from U.S. shores. The people of Illinois are
ready, willing and able to provide help to the people of Cuba in
their time of need."
The
governor and Mrs. Ryan were greeted at the Havana airport by Cuban
officials. Later, the governor and representatives from the Illinois
businesses met with officials from the Cuban Ministries of Public
Health and Foreign Affairs and MediCuba, the purchasing arm of the
Ministry of Public Health.
"In
the two years since I first brought a delegation of Illinois
government and business leaders here, we have worked together to
solve problems that face all of us and have established strong
relationships that I know will endure for years to come. And just as
we have made headway in the sale of food products to Cuba, now we
must make the same headway in the humanitarian sale of other
products," Gov. Ryan said.
The
firms meeting with the governor and Cuban officials included Ferris
Manufacturing, of Burr Ridge; Medline, Mundelein; DMS
Pharmaceutical, Park Ridge; JLR International, Chicago; and 21st
Century Healthcare, Woodridge.
The
Illinois Trade Office contacted the state’s pharmaceutical firms
last month, after the Cuban Interest Section in Washington asked for
assistance. The request was in response to depleted medical supplies
due to the devastating hurricane.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
While
in Cuba, Gov. Ryan was to address the International Congress on
Diagnostic Imaging on Friday at the invitation of Dr. Robert
Brossard, chair of medical imaging at the Methodist Hospital of
Chicago and a participant in the congress.
Also
on Friday, the governor expected to tour the National Oncology and
Radiology Institute and present donations from the Illinois
companies to the Cuban people. Mrs. Ryan planned to present teddy
bears to the children in the hospital wards. The donations include
medical supplies sought after by the Cuban government such as blood
pressure kits, surgical instruments, wound dressings, thermometers
and stethoscopes.
Gov.
Ryan and the Illinois business delegation traveled to Cuba under the
humanitarian license of the New York-based organization
"Americans for Humanitarian Trade with Cuba." The group is
scheduled to return on Saturday, Jan. 26.
In
December, Gov. Ryan joined agribusiness firm Archer Daniels Midland
in sending the first grain shipment to Cuba since 1962. That
shipment was also a response to Cuba’s needs after Hurricane
Michelle.
In
October of 1999, Gov. Ryan was the first U.S. governor to lead a
humanitarian mission to Cuba in nearly 40 years. The trip was an
effort to build a bridge of good will with the people of Cuba and to
offer humanitarian aid and cultural exchanges.
Since
1962, the U.S. government has had an economic embargo against Cuba
under the regime of Fidel Castro. The sale of American medicines to
Cuba was always exempted. In 2000, President Clinton signed into law
a congressional package that allowed for cash transactions for U.S.
agricultural products.
[News
release]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Saturday,
Jan. 26
The
26th day of the year
Quotes
"They
died hard, those savage men — like wounded wolves at bay. They
were filthy, and they were lousy, and they stunk. And I loved
them." — Douglas MacArthur
"You
can fool some of the people some of the time and all of the people
some of the time, but you can’t fool all of the people all of the
time." — Abraham Lincoln
Birthdays
1715
— Claude Helvetius, Paris, France, philosopher
1786
— Benjamin Robert Haydon, Plymouth, painter ("Waiting for The
Times")
1819
— Abner Doubleday, Union major general and inventor (baseball) [or
June 26]
1880
— Douglas MacArthur, Little Rock, Ark., general (World War II)
1925
— Paul Newman, Cleve, racer, popcorn mogul, actor ("Hud,"
"Hombre," "The Hustler")
1933
— Angela Davis, black revolutionary
1935
— Bob Uecker, Milwaukee, Wis., catcher and actor ("Mr.
Belvedere")
1961
— Wayne Gretzky, Brantford, Ontario, NHL great scorer
Events
1784
— Ben Franklin expresses unhappiness over eagle as America’s
symbol
1795
— Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach, composer, dies at 62
1837
— Michigan admitted as 26th U.S. state
1838
— Tennessee becomes first state to prohibit alcohol
1862
— Lincoln issues General War Order 1, calling for a Union
offensive; McClellan ignores order
1893
— Abner Doubleday, credited with inventing baseball, dies on 74th
birthday
1913
— Jim Thorpe relinquishes his 1912 Olympic medals for being a
professional.
1940
— Nazis forbid Polish Jews to travel on trains
1942
— First U.S. forces in Europe during World War II go ashore in
Northern Ireland
1942
— Italian supreme command demands dismissal of German marshal
Rommel
1945
— Soviet forces reach Auschwitz concentration camp
1954
— Ground breaking begins on Disneyland
1962
— Charles "Lucky" Luciano, New York City Mafia gangster,
dies at 65
1973
— Edward G. Robinson [Goldenberg], actor ("Little
Caesar"), dies at 79
1983
— Paul "Bear" Bryant, college football coach (Alabama),
dies at 69
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Sunday,
Jan. 27
The
27th day of the year
Quotes
"A
politician will do anything to keep his job — even become a
patriot." — William Randolph Hearst
"Abandon
all hope, you who enter here!" — Dante Aligheri
Birthdays
1756
— Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Austria, musical prodigy and composer
1832
— Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], author ("Alice in
Wonderland")
1834
— Dmitri Mendeleev, chemist (invented periodic table of the
elements)
1850
— Samuel Gompers, Dutch-American, first president of American
Federation of Labor
1900
— Hyman G. Rickover, U.S. admiral (father of modern nuclear navy)
1901
— Art Rooney, NFL team owner (Pittsburgh Steelers)
1908
— William Randolph Hearst Jr., newspaper publisher (Hearst
Publishing)
1948
— Mikhail Baryshnikov, Riga, Latvia, ballet dancer ("That’s
Dancing")
Events
1302
— Dante becomes a Florentine political exile
1671
— Pirate Henry Morgen lands at Panama City
1710
— Czar Peter the Great sets first Russian state budget
1851
— John James Audubon, conservationist (Audubon Society), dies at
65
1901
— Giuseppe Verdi, Italian composer ("Rigoletto,"
"La Traviata," "Aida"), dies at 87
1918
— "Tarzan of the Apes," first Tarzan film, premieres at
Broadway Theater
1924
— Lenin placed in mausoleum in Red Square
1926
— First public demonstration of television
1927
— Harlem Globetrotters play their first game
1944
— Leningrad liberated from Germany in 880 days with 600,000 killed
1967
— Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom, astronaut, dies at 40 in
Apollo I fire
1969
— 14 spies hung in Baghdad
1969
— Nine Jews publicly executed in Damascus, Syria
1973
— UCLA’s basketball team wins 61st consecutive game (NCAA
record)
1973
— United States and Vietnam sign cease-fire, ending longest U.S.
war and military draft
1986
— L. Ron Hubbard, novelist and founder of Church of Scientology,
dies at 74
1993
— Andre "the Giant" Roussimoff, WWF wrestler, dies of
heart attack at 49
|
|
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]
|
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
|
|
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/
|
|
Announcements
|
Voter
registration for disabled
March
19 general primary election notice to the elderly and people with
disabilities
[JAN.
15, 2002] Citizens
who are not registered to vote and cannot leave their home,
hospital, nursing home or other institution because of a permanent
physical disability can arrange for voter registration by contacting
a deputy registrar or the county clerk’s office.
Voter
registration will close on Feb. 19 for the March 19 general primary
election.
If
you are physically able, you may register to vote by going to the
county clerk’s office, Room 20 in the Logan County Courthouse, 601
Broadway in Lincoln. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday. You will need to show two forms of identification, one with
your current address on it.
For
people with physical disabilities and the elderly, election judges
will be available at the polling place on election day to assist
voters when a friend or relative is unable to help.
Handicapped-voter booths will be available for your convenience.
Physically impaired or elderly persons may be eligible to vote
absentee. Please contact the Logan County clerk’s office for
information.
For
any information concerning voter registration or voting for the
elderly or disabled, please call the Logan County clerk’s office
at (217) 732-4148.
[Sally
J. Litterly, Logan County clerk]
|
|
Time
to register to vote
[JAN.
3, 2002] Are
you registered to vote?
The
March 19 primary is rapidly approaching. The close of registration
is Feb. 19. If you have moved, or if you have married and changed
your name, it is necessary that you change your voter registration
with our office in order to cast your vote in the election.
If
you have questions about your voting eligibility, please contact
our office at (217) 732-4148.
[Sally
J. Litterly, Logan County clerk]
|
|
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