Thursday, June 13
|
Newly reconstructed for your
convenience!
|
Bomke: LDC,
education topped priorities
[JUNE 13, 2002]
SPRINGFIELD — Budget cuts will hit local areas hard,
according to Sen. Larry Bomke, R-Springfield. Bomke fought to
restore cuts directly affecting local counties — such as the closing
of LDC and cuts to education.
|
"Closing LDC was
vindictive on the part of the governor," said Bomke. "He’s targeted
this facility all along and saw these reductions as his way to close
the facility once and for all without any regard to the Lincoln
community or the residents and their families."
Bomke voted to
override the motion, which failed despite his urging the facility be
kept open. Seventeen Republican Senators and only four Democrats
voted in favor of keeping LDC open.
Education was another
area targeted for cuts in the governor’s vetoes. Bomke fought to
override many of these because the additional funding will greatly
benefit local school districts.
"Our local schools
are already stretching to make ends meet. Cutting these programs
will negatively impact the quality of education our children
receive, and none of us want to see that happen," Bomke said.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
The Senate restored
many of the cuts to education lines, including general state aid to
school districts ($31 million); education assistance funding known
as EAF — funded by riverboat taxes — to state universities ($5.8
million), including nearly $3 million for the three University of
Illinois campuses; mandated categorical grants to schools ($8.8
million) that provide reimbursements for programs like
transportation and special education; and early childhood
development programs ($6.2 million).
The House of
Representatives will now consider the budget override motions, which
gained approval in the Senate. Those that failed will stand with the
governor’s changes. Both chambers must vote to override for the
budget lines to be restored.
Bomke also supported the Senate’s
override of a total veto on House Bill 3714, which would have
prohibited the Department of Corrections from privatizing food
services at Illinois correctional facilities. The motion failed by a
narrow margin (33-19-3) Tuesday; 36 votes were needed to override.
[News
release] |
|
State representative candidate Rich Brauer disappointed with closure
of LDC
[JUNE
13, 2002]
SPRINGFIELD —Rich Brauer, Republican candidate for state
representative, expressed his disappointment over the looming
closure of the Lincoln Developmental Center.
|
Brauer praised the
work of state Reps. Bill Mitchell, R-Forsyth, and Jonathan Wright,
R-Lincoln, and Sen. Larry Bomke, R-Springfield, who all continuously
fought for funding to keep the facility open. He commended Sen.
Bomke for voting to override the governor’s proposed cut.
"These three
legislators repeatedly called for funding in the FY03 budget for the
Lincoln Developmental Center," Brauer said. "I am disappointed about
this closure, as I am sure they are. LDC is an important part of our
community, and it is also important to our local economy. Not only
will the residents of LDC be impacted, but the loss of jobs will be
devastating."
"The House
Republicans found more areas that could have been scaled back in
order to restore funding to the Lincoln Developmental Center. It is
a shame that the cuts were not overridden in the Senate," Brauer
said. "The state should have used its current assets during this
financial emergency, so that the closure of LDC and many other
facilities could have been avoided."
Rich Brauer is the Republican candidate
for state representative in Illinois’ new 100th District.
[News
release]
|
|
|
Middle-of-the-night severe weather strikes Logan County
[JUNE 13, 2002]
Severe weather snuck into Logan County under the cloak of
night about 2 a.m. Thursday. A tornado warning was issued at 1:30
a.m. Doppler radar indicted a severe storm with a possible tornado.
A confirmed wall cloud was identified stretching from New Holland to
San Jose, moving southeast. The storm did dissipate some as it
entered the county.
|
Heavy winds and up to
1.6 inches rain accompanied the storm. According to Dan Fulscher the
most dangerous aspect of the storm was lightning. Lightning struck
the hospital, taking out their radio communications, and the weather
station had some problems.
Area creeks are near
flood stage. Sugar Creek is 2 feet from the banks and will crest in
about 30 hours. Salt Creek is at its banks.
City crews are out picking up limbs and
storm debris.
[Jan
Youngquist] |
|
|
Articles from the past week |
Wednesday:
-
DHS needs looking into, says
Mitchell
-
Sept. 1
target date for final LDC closing
-
Senate upholds governor’s cuts; AFSCME charges ‘reckless
indifference’ to human needs
Tuesday:
-
Ryan to close LDC; union says set up to
fail -
Mitchell
upset by LDC funding veto -
LDC residents
get loving care -
Safety concerns force closure of Lincoln Developmental Center
Monday:
|
Saturday:
-
Crime Stoppers donates funds for new ERT vests
-
Teachers retiring in Lincoln area
-
Department of Public Health cites LDC
-
Mount Pulaski death under investigation
-
Illinois Senate week in review
-
Senate prescription drug plan awaits action by
the governor
Friday:
-
Logan-Mason Rehabilitation Center helps the disabled meet their
goals (Part 2)
-
Wednesday seminar focuses on assisting domestic violence victims
in the workplace
Thursday:
|
|
Back
to top
|
News
| Sports
| Business
| Rural
Review |
Teaching
& Learning |
Home
and Family |
Tourism
| Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives |
Law
& Courts |
Leisure Time |
Spiritual
Life | Health
& Fitness |
Calendar
Letters
to the Editor
|