| 
            "Exactly 698.5," corrected local AFSCME 
            executive board member Susan Ogden. "We had one part-time person."
             
              
      
       
            About 500 of those 698.5 employees 
            belonged to AFSCME. The rest were management and members of the 
            Teamsters union, trade unions and a union that represents security 
            personnel. 
            Last year at this time, too, about 375 
            developmentally disabled individuals made their homes in the Lincoln 
            institution operated by the Department of Human Services. 
            As of Saturday, Aug. 31, at 2:30 p.m., 
            everybody who once worked and lived at LDC, with the exception of a 
            few maintenance workers needed to keep the power plant running, will 
            leave the 125-year-old institution forever. Its 80-acre campus will 
            be empty.  
            After a long and bitter battle, DHS and 
            Gov. George Ryan have met their goal of closing Logan County’s 
            largest employer, charging that the facility was endangering the 
            health and safety of its residents because of instances of abuse and 
            neglect on the part of the staff. 
              
      
       
            AFSCME and others countered the charges 
            and took the battle to the courts, but LDC supporters were finally 
            defeated last Friday, when Logan County Circuit Judge Donald Behle 
            said he could not issue another temporary restraining order to keep 
            the last few residents on the campus. 
            No one has announced any specific plans 
            for the use of the Lincoln facility, but according to testimony 
            given at the hearing before the Illinois Health Facilities Planning 
            Board, it will revert to the jurisdiction of the Illinois Department 
            of Central Management Services.  
            Some of the approximately 300 AFSCME 
            employees who had not already left during the first round of layoffs 
            in April had to make important decisions recently — whether they 
            would move to another location to take a job with DHS or take early 
            retirement. 
              
        
         
            Some, however, had no options at all. 
            If they haven’t started already, they are "on the street" looking 
            for new jobs. AFSCME officials estimate that at least 250 employees, 
            both AFSCME and non-AFSCME members, are job hunting. 
            Dan Senters, AFSCME local spokesman, 
            said 435 members got layoff notices in early August, and employee 
            meetings were held in mid-month to see if other state jobs would be 
            available. Also, representatives of the Illinois Employment and 
            Training Center have been on the LDC campus to talk to employees 
            about unemployment compensation. 
            About 100 AFSCME members have taken 
            jobs with DHS in other parts of the state, Ogden said. Twenty-one 
            left in April after the first layoff notices went out, and another 
            80 are leaving now.   
            [to top of second column in
this article] | 
             
            Another 160 are eligible for early 
            retirement, according to Don Todd, president of AFSCME Local 425. 
            Todd doesn’t know right now how many will eventually retire, but as 
            of this week he could count 72. 
            Ogden was fortunate and got a job with 
            DHS in Springfield. She and her husband, Joe, were both LDC 
            employees. In April, Joe took the opportunity offered by the state 
            and accepted a job at the Jacksonville Developmental Center. The 
            Ogdens will sell their home in Mason City and buy another somewhere 
            in between their two jobs, Susan said. 
            Carl Twente, a 13-year LDC employee, 
            will be moving even farther. He took a job at Choate Developmental 
            Center in Anna, in southern Illinois, more than 200 miles away. 
            He’ll be selling his house in Lincoln. 
              
            
             
            "It was either move or be unemployed," 
            Twente said. "I have too much time invested working for the state to 
            let it go." 
            Amber Senters, a third-generation LDC 
            employee, was offered a job at Fox Developmental Center in Dwight, 
            but she’ll soon be reading the want ads. Her roots are in the 
            Lincoln area, and she chose to stay. She doesn’t think she can make 
            a 180-mile daily commute. 
            Even those who are eligible for early 
            retirement because of the state law passed recently will face 
            problems. Charles Sanders, vice president of the local union, must 
            find a way to "buy" five extra retirement years at a cost of $6,000 
            and then will have to wait until July of 2003 for his first 
            retirement check. He will also have to figure out how to provide 
            health insurance for his family, which includes five children still 
            at home. 
            "I could have taken another state job 
            and moved away from Lincoln, but it didn’t seem worth it. I didn’t 
            want to uproot my family," he said. 
              
      
       
            Sanders has his real estate license and 
            will be going to work selling houses. He finds it ironic that he 
            could be selling the homes of some of his former fellow workers. 
            Right now local AFSCME officials aren’t 
            sure exactly how many of their members got other state jobs, how 
            many will retire, and how many had to hit the streets, Sanders said, 
            but they are in the process of compiling a complete list. 
            "Any way you look at it, a year ago 
            this county had 698.5 more jobs than it does now," Ogden said. "If the 
            agency [DHS] had put as much energy into making LDC work as they did 
            in taking it apart, it would still be a model facility for the 
            country," Corvin-Blackburn added.   
            [Joan
Crabb] | 
        
            | 
            In November 2000, at the governor’s 
            direction, Illinois Commerce and Community Affairs Director Pam 
            McDonough sent a letter to Mr. Lamping stating the governor’s 
            support, interest and enthusiasm for helping the team relocate to 
            Illinois in the Metro East area. 
              
             
            The governor met with Lamping last 
            spring as the Cardinals began surveying potential locations for 
            building a new stadium and relocating the baseball franchise. After 
            the meeting, the governor directed McDonough and Illinois Department 
            of Transportation Secretary Kirk Brown to provide information and 
            assistance in site selection. Four Illinois Metro East locations — 
            Dupo, Madison, Fairmont and the East St. Louis riverfront — are 
            still being considered by the team. 
            Wednesday’s meeting, which the governor 
            convened with Lamping, McDonough and Brown, was to ensure that the 
            team has received all of the information it needs in advance of the 
            Illinois General Assembly’s fall veto session. If the Cardinals 
            decide to relocate to Illinois, the project may need legislative 
            approval to create a sports authority to assist with building the 
            new stadium. 
            "Illinois is a champ when it comes to 
            economic development, and we know how to work with the Illinois 
            General Assembly on creative programs to win business investment and 
            major tourist attractions," said Gov. Ryan. "Like the Cardinals on 
            the field, we have the talent and the tools — including our Illinois 
            FIRST program and our EDGE tax credit — to win that title." 
               [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
 
            "If the Cardinals were to play their 
            home games in a stadium on the Illinois side of the Mississippi 
            River, the communities surrounding the new facility would reap 
            significant economic benefits from the creation of a new hospitality 
            industry in the region that would serve visitors attending baseball 
            games and other events at the facility," Gov. Ryan said. 
            "DCCA stands ready to assist those 
            Metro East communities that are still under consideration by the 
            Cardinals," said McDonough. "We’re encouraged that the Cardinals 
            have started a serious dialogue with several communities in 
            Illinois." 
            The Cardinals have indicated that easy 
            access to interstate highways and public transportation are 
            important factors in its site selection process. "IDOT has 
            been assessing the transportation infrastructure needs of the 
            Cardinals and will continue to assist the team as it continues to 
            collect data," added Brown. 
         [Illinois 
            Government News Networkpress release]
 | 
        
            | 
            "The toll-free number directly connects 
            you with a qualified consultant who can answer your insurance 
            questions or send you free educational materials," said Bomke. "If 
            you are confused or want unbiased information from someone other 
            than your insurance agent, the hot line can offer this information." 
            Bomke says the hot line does not sell 
            insurance, but provides unbiased information to help consumers make 
            educated decisions about insurance issues. 
            The hot line is an easy resource for 
            insurance questions. Common questions answered by the hot line 
            include ratings and complaints for specific insurance companies, 
            whether you need replacement coverage on your home and belongings, 
            required auto liability limits, options when a policy is not 
            renewed, and information about health insurance following a layoff. The hot line 
            is an industry-sponsored service operated by the Illinois Insurance 
            Information Service since 1990, helping an estimated 10,000 
            consumers each year. The toll-free number, 1 (800) 444-3338, is 
            available from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. 
            [News release] | 
              
              
            Thank You 
            To Lincoln Developmental Center 
            employees: 
            The Lincoln Parents' 
            Association would like to express our sincere appreciation for the 
            excellent care you have given our loved ones over the years. You 
            chose to make a career in caring for the most fragile of individuals 
            with disabilities. For this, we are most grateful.  
            The 
            stress of this past year has been almost unbearable for you and for 
            us. In spite of poor management, politics and constant scrutiny, you 
            have maintained your excellent level of care. There are not enough 
            words to express our thanks. 
            Sincerely,Members of the
 Lincoln Parents' Association
 
              |