"We are going to pick up where he left
off. It’s like a ball team; we’ll put another player in his place,"
county board chairman Dick Logan said.
"The EDC will not disband," said Bobbi
Abbott, head of the Lincoln/Logan Chamber of Commerce. "We are right
now open to ideas from the city, the county and the chamber board
about regrouping and rehiring. We are considering several different
ways to reorganize the office.
[Bobbi Abbott]
"We will continue to look for ways to
stimulate the economy and to keep LDC open," she added.
Smith’s resignation is effective at the
close of the business day Aug. 2. He will become director of
planning and development for Macon County, with headquarters in
Decatur.
"It was an offer I couldn’t refuse,"
Smith said of the new appointment. He has served as director of the
Lincoln EDC for three years and two months and helped develop the
plan for a new commercial and industrial park on the north side of
town.
The commercial park plan calls for the
county to purchase 63.5 acres of land north of town for about
$800,000 and for the city to run a sewer line to the property at a
cost of about $1.1 million. Neither the city council nor the county
board has as yet made a financial commitment to the project.
"His resignation was definitely a
surprise," Abbott said. "We are disappointed he wasn’t able to stay
to see the commercial park through to completion, but we understand
if he got a better job offer he must think about himself and his
family.
"My phone has been ringing constantly
with calls from people encouraging us to continue and
recommendations for filling the position," she said.
Logan said he thought EDC should hire a
new director, but he would consider some changes in the position.
"The county has been looking at hiring
a grant writer. There might be a way to combine positions. We are
open to various ideas," he said.
Steve Fuhrer, city alderman and EDC
member, said he believed the EDC would continue to pursue the
commercial park plan. He also said the city has already identified
some funds that could be used for the project but has not made a
decision about allocating them.
"We are waiting on answers from
financial adviser Andrew Hamilton out of Springfield," he said.
Fuhrer has supported the idea of the north-side commercial park at
city council sessions.
County board member Terry "T.W." Werth
said the EDC has already talked about a couple of potential new
directors.
"We intend to continue with plans for
the commercial park project we have been working on until the city
and county tell us no," he said. The north-side park has recently
had a letter of intent from one potential tenant, he added.
Werth said he campaigned for his seat
on the board on only one issue, the north-side commercial/industrial
park, and he will continue to work for it. Unless new jobs are
created, Lincoln young people will not be able to stay in the area,
he said.
He said he has seen communities that
have done very well after establishing industrial parks, such as
Danville.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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"Alcoa Aluminum came in after looking
at 300 different cities. They chose Danville because it was ready.
If we’re not ready, we don’t ever get the chance for new industries.
We’ve got to be committed."
He said he hoped the threatened closing
of Lincoln Developmental Center, with the loss of another 400 to 500
jobs, would wake up the community to the need to support new ideas
for economic development.
"In the midst of adversity, good ideas
come out," he said.
"Smith did a very good job with the
industrial park in the time he was here," said EDC member John
Dreusicke. "Hopefully we will continue where he left off."
The
nine-member Industrial Development Commission is made up of two
members each from the city, the county and the chamber of commerce,
and three members at large. City representatives are Fuhrer and
Mayor Beth Davis. Logan and Werth represent the county, and Todd
Lowman and Abbott represent the chamber. At-large members are
Dreusicke, John White and Jerry Johnson of Atlanta.
[Joan
Crabb]
Tuesday, July 30
6:00 pm
- Luehr's Ideal Rides Bargain
Night
--All rides take
1 ticket
- Veterans Pass in Review - (Grandstand)
7:30 pm
- Logan County
Queen Pageant
Wednesday, July 31
9:00 am
- Open Horse Show
7:30 pm
- Talent Contest
Thursday, August 1
1:30 pm
- Harness Racing
6:00 pm - closing
- Luehr's
Ideal Rides Ride-A-Thon Night
6:30 pm
- Tractor Pull
Friday, August 2
1:30 pm
- Harness Racing
- Senior Citizens Day
7:30 pm
- 4-H Night-- Calf,
Pig, Chicken & Goat Scrambles
Saturday, August 3
8:00 am
- 3 on 3 Basketball
- Chili Cook-off
1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
- Carnival Opens--"Kids Bargain Afternoon"
1:00 pm
- Kids Day--South end of Fairgrounds,
Special
Events Building
- Harness Racing
7:00 pm
- Country Music
Show--Wade Dooley
Sunday, August 4
1:00 pm
- Harness Racing--Downstate Classic Day
- Luehr's Ideal Rides
Family Day
--All rides take 1 ticket
2:00 pm
- 4-H Livestock Auction
6:00 pm
- Demolition
Derby
To order reserved Box &
Track seats, call 217-732-3311
Illinois' Cleanest & Finest
County Fair |
|
"Something’s got to
be done," Prather told the council at its work session Tuesday. "We
are down on revenue."
After making deep
cuts and transferring money from set-aside funds, the city passed a
deficit budget in April in which spending was about $270,000 more
than estimated revenue. Steve Fuhrer, then finance chairman, urged
the council to look for ways to boost the city’s income over the
long term.
Prather also
suggested the city might look at utility tax increases but said he
would prefer the sales tax hike.
According to Fuhrer
and City Clerk Juanita Josserand, the proposed increase might bring
the city between $400,000 and $500,000 annually, if spending remains
at last year’s level. However, Josserand said, people may not spend
as much on big-ticket items in the current economic downturn. In the
last fiscal year, the city received almost $2 million in sales tax
revenue, she said.
The present city
sales tax is 6.25 percent. With the increase, it would become 6.75
percent, which Prather said was less than the sales tax in
Springfield or Bloomington. The city gets back 1 percent of all
sales tax money sent to the state, Josserand said.
Any sales tax
increase would have to be approved by voters in November, and the
referendum must be filed with the county clerk by September 3.
Before that date the city must pass a resolution approving the
referendum.
"We’ve got to educate
the public and let them know we need this. We can’t let too many
police or firemen go off the payroll," Prather said. "Also, there is
no money in the budget for road repairs this year."
The sales tax
increase, if approved, would not help the fiscal 2002-2003 budget
but would put more money in the city’s treasury the following year,
he said. The city treasurer, Les Plotner, said he would work with
the finance committee to put together a report for the council.
Prather also said he
was working with Kevin Heid of First Midstate on another general
obligation bond issue. The last payment on the present issue will be
made in October, and it is time to start renewing, he said.
Options include a
three-year bond issue that would give the city between $490,000 and
$510,000, or a four-year bond that would bring in about $620,000.
Prather said Heid would attend a committee meeting Aug. 27 to
further explain the bond issue.
Funds from the sales
tax increase and the bonds would probably be used to maintain the
city’s infrastructure, he said. Major street repair work was cut
from the present fiscal year budget because of lack of funds.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
In other business,
Mayor Beth Davis announced that Economic Development Director Mark
Smith has resigned and asked the city how they wanted to proceed.
She said she believed
the city should continue working on plans for economic development.
Fuhrer, a member of
the Economic Development Council, asked if the city was going to
back the EDC in its plans for attracting new industries.
"A lot of information
has been brought up, and nothing has been acted upon at all," he
said. "We have to make a commitment and stand behind it. We have to
work for what’s best for Logan County and Lincoln. I hate to sit
here and spin our wheels and not do anything the committee asks us
to do."
The EDC has come up
with a plan to develop a 64-acre commercial/industrial park north of
the city and has suggested the city contribute about $1.1 million to
extend a sewer line to the property at Kruger Road and Interstate
55.
The council also has
asked the Logan County Board to purchase the property for about
$800,000. Neither body has as yet made a definite financial
commitment.
"The city won’t move
until the county moves, and the county won’t move until the city
moves," Davis said. "We’ve been talking about an industrial park for
20 years and still haven’t done anything." She suggested the EDC
come and speak to both the county and city again.
"There are too many
overlapping agencies — the EDC, Main Street Lincoln, the chamber,
the Regional Planning Board. What direction do we want to take?"
Fuhrer asked.
He also said he did
not think the city should buy property on the west side, because
that property was already owned by developers.
Alderman Pat Madigan
asked if the city really wanted to hire another economic developer
at this time.
"Maybe it’s time just
to draw back in for a year. We are stretched thin. We should get a
better idea of what’s going to happen."
Grant Eaton, sewer
plant manager, said he would like any future economic development
director to work more closely with the city’s engineers to be sure
the sewer system could handle the proposed project.
A number of items were put on the agenda
for the Aug. 5 regular meeting, including opening bids for work on
the sewer plant upgrade and a discussion of "bird bangers," loud
explosive devices used to frighten large flocks of birds away from
residential areas.
[Joan
Crabb]
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