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            [Click here for May 
            and June news] July 
            LDC supporters keep on fighting 
            On July 1, Logan County Circuit Judge 
            Donald Behle issued another temporary restraining order to keep the 
            state from moving any more residents from the Lincoln Developmental 
            Center until a permit has been granted by the Illinois Health 
            Facilities Planning Board. The board is not expected to meet until 
            Aug. 15 
            LDC supporters got a major setback when 
            the 4th District Appellate Court ruled 2-1 to reverse Judge Behle's 
            temporary restraining order and allow the Department of Human 
            Services to move the last 200 residents out of the 125-year-old 
            Lincoln facility. AFSCME, representing employees, plans to file an 
            appeal with the Illinois Supreme Court, but the court is not 
            obligated to hear the case and may reject the petition.  
            Parents and guardians expressed concern 
            about the placement of their loved ones, fearing they would be sent 
            to facilities such as group homes that could not give them adequate 
            care. At a public hearing before a representative of the Health 
            Facilities Planning Board at the Knights of Columbus Hall, a crowd 
            of at least 150 people turned out, almost all to urge the board to 
            deny the request for the permit to close LDC.  
            "No parent has asked for closure. LDC 
            has been set up to fail," said Robert Springer, parent of an LDC 
            resident. "DHS has not been committed to keeping it open. The 
            alleged failures are more due to management than to staff." 
            The good news was that on July 25 the 
            Illinois Supreme Court blocked any further involuntary moves, 
            pending its decision whether to hear the case.  City to 
            seek sales tax hike 
            The city of Lincoln made plans to ask 
            voters to approve a 0.5 percent sales tax increase to help the 
            city's budget crunch. The tax increase, which would be spent on 
            infrastructure, particularly street work, could bring as much as 
            $500,000 to the city. The city presently has no money in its budget 
            this year for street improvements. 
            The city also approved a contract with 
            the Fraternal Order of Police 208 that included a 9.75 percent raise 
            over a three-year period and will continue to pay 100 percent of 
            health insurance for police department employees. The council also 
            approved an early retirement incentive plan. 
              
      
       County 
            board news 
            Logan County revenues in July came more 
            nearly into line with budget projections, and expenditures are still 
            being held below expectations. County board finance committee member 
            Roger Bock reported July 16 that fees collected have jumped to reach 
            the 58 percent of budget expected after seven months. Income tax 
            numbers also rose but are still 4 percent, or $109,000, short of 
            budget projections. Worst on the revenue side is interest earned, 
            which is running at 32 percent of the amount budgeted for the year. 
            The result is that interest is $65,000 short of where it was 
            expected to be at this time. 
            Fortunately, expenses also fall short 
            of budget projections. Expenditures have been held to 46 percent of 
            the year's budget, according to Dale Voyles of the finance panel. 
            The result is that outgo is $250,000 less than expected for seven 
            months into the year. Officials are being asked to keep their 
            requests for fiscal year 2002-3 within their current budgets. 
            Hearings for the new budget begin Aug. 26. On the negative side for 
            next year, the Illinois Department of Revenue estimates that Logan 
            County will receive $210,000 in replacement tax during the fiscal 
            year that began July 1. This is $57,000 less than the $267,000 
            budgeted for replacement tax during 2001-2002.  
            In airport news, Damon Smith of Hanson 
            Professional Services discussed long-range plans covering "what the 
            county owns and would like to own and operate in 10 to 20 years." 
            Currently the airport has a 4,000-foot paved runway running 
            northeast-southwest and a 2,700-foot grass runway going 
            northwest-southeast. Smith showed sketches of three ways to build a 
            5,000-foot runway, needed by many corporate jets:  Schools 
            and colleges make news 
            The new Central School should be up and 
            ready sometime during the spring semester, but Superintendent Robert 
            Kidd said he did not plan to move Central School students to the new 
            Seventh Street building until the beginning of the fall semester. 
            Delays in construction have occurred because of the cost-cutting 
            that was necessary to keep construction costs within the $6 million 
            budget. The original schedule called for the school to be completed 
            by the end of this year. Board member Leta Herrington asked how the 
            district would make up the almost $500,000 the Central School 
            project is still over budget. Kidd said interest on money invested, 
            the working cash fund and some contingency money will help make up 
            the deficit. One change in the building's exterior will be a metal 
            roof instead of shingles. However, the exterior will still be all 
            brick, as originally planned.  
            District 27's Washington-Monroe School 
            was named a Golden Spike school, one which shows that students from 
            low-income families can close the "achievement gap." It was one of 
            only 59 of 921 schools in Illinois to receive the honor. Principal 
            Rebecca Cecil said 75 percent of the students met or exceeded the 
            state standards in reading and mathematics. 
            Cathy Hawkinson, a third-grade teacher 
            at Jefferson, has once again tapped into her passion for gardening 
            to promote children's reading. Her ideas began with a butterfly 
            garden put together by her 1999-2000 class. In 2001 her dream of an 
            1850s-style garden with book-themed plots landed the school a $6,800 
            grant from Barnes and Noble through the Illinois Literacy 
            Foundation. Now the garden, across Sixth Street from Jefferson 
            School, boasts several book-themed plots as well as a sunflower 
            house where classes gather for special outdoor book-readings, a 
            prairie garden, a butterfly bush, a rainbow garden and several 
            raised gardens. Also in the garden, a log cabin built by Pete 
            Fredericks houses the Tin Man from "The Wizard of Oz" and gardening 
            tools. For the supplies, Hawkinson found many generous donors within 
            the Lincoln community. She approached the Lincoln Public Library 
            about bringing their summer reading program to Jefferson School. As 
            a result, children and parents gather on Wednesday mornings to sit 
            and read for an hour in the shade of the garden. 
            Lincoln College President Jack Nutt 
            announced that $2 million in additional capital funding for the 
            college has been approved by the General Assembly. Nutt said he does 
            not know whether the grant is for the proposed museum, athletic 
            center or unspecified "capital construction," as in the case of two 
            previous Illinois FIRST grants totaling $1.1 million. 
            Once designed 
            as a single structure, the proposed Lincoln College athletic center 
            and museum now stand separate in architectural drawings. The 
            athletic and convocation center site is on Nicholson Road and 
            includes a multipurpose gymnasium with bleacher seating for 1,000, a 
            wrestling area, offices, locker rooms, a community fitness center, 
            hall of fame and training room. The proposed Lincoln College Museum 
            is located on the corner of Keokuk and Ottawa, across from the 
            college library, on the former site of the college tennis courts. 
            Though Nutt expects both structures to be built within a couple of 
            years, the athletic center will come first because it directly 
            affects the students. The construction budget for both projects 
            totals $6.5 million, with the athletic center accounting for $4.5 
            million. The college already had $4.5 million in May, Nutt said, but 
            some of it is designated for scholarships and restricted gifts. He 
            has asked for a federal grant to cover approximately half the $2 
            million cost of the museum. Other 
            July news  
            Mark Smith resigned as the economic 
            development director for Lincoln/Logan County, but the Economic 
            Development Council will continue to look for ways to stimulate the 
            local economy and will seek a new director, said Bobbi Abbot, head 
            of the Lincoln/Logan Chamber of Commerce. Smith will become director 
            of planning and development for Macon County, with headquarters in 
            Decatur. 
            Groundbreaking for the new American 
            Legion Post 263 home was scheduled for 2 p.m., Saturday, July 20. 
            The building will be constructed on the site of the previous post 
            home, 1740 Fifth Street Road, adjacent to Logan Lanes. The former 
            home was destroyed by fire Jan. 4 of this year. Post Commander David 
            Hennessey of Lincoln said about half the $630,000 projected cost of 
            the building has been raised. The 66th 
            annual Logan County Fair opened July 30 at the fairgrounds on Old 
            Route 66. Amy Rohrer of Lincoln was named 2002 fair queen, Angela 
            Balance of Emden was first runner-up and Kate Wrage of Emden was 
            second runner-up. Summer Johnson was voted Miss Congeniality by her 
            fellow competitors. Other candidates were Rebecca Ruben of 
            Hartsburg, Katherine Ogelsby of Lake Fork, Christy Peters of 
            Lincoln, Lisa Behle of Lincoln, Holly Ingram of Lincoln and Carrie 
            Hoffert of Lincoln. 
       August 
            LDC story reaches sad end 
            Although they carried the fight to the 
            bitter end, supporters of the embattled Lincoln Developmental Center 
            were unable to save it from closing, and the 125-year-old facility, 
            Logan County's largest employer, was finally shuttered on Aug. 31. 
            The first setback was the 
            recommendation of the Illinois Department of Public Health to the 
            Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board that LDC be closed. DPH 
            said citations that indicate quality-of-care issues, the state's 
            budget crisis and the fact DHS has other facilities that can take 
            care of LDC residents tip the balance toward closure. 
            According to the report, "It appears 
            that the harsh reality of the situation is that economics play the 
            deciding role in this application. It appears that while the parents 
            and employees would like to see this facility stay open, the lack of 
            funding for this facility in the state budget means that the only 
            way care can be maintained for these patients is to move them to 
            other facilities which have the necessary funding." 
            On Aug. 10, DHS sent layoff notices to 
            the 435 AFSCME members who were still working at LDC, a spokesman 
            said.   
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            A closing date was set for Aug. 31, 
            pending the Health Facilities Planning Board permit. On Aug. 13, 
            just two days before that board was due to make its decision on 
            LDC's fate, three members were asked to step down, and Gov. George 
            Ryan appointed three new members. Bomke said it was "suspect" that 
            Ryan appointed replacement members at this time. 
            On Aug. 15, in a unanimous decision, 
            the planning board voted to allow the Department of Human Services 
            to close the Lincoln Developmental Center. The decision was a bitter 
            disappointment to parents and guardians, employees, and members of 
            the Lincoln/Logan County community. The board also voted to close 
            two other health facilities slated by Gov. Ryan to be shuttered to 
            help balance the state's budget: Zeller Mental Health Center in 
            Peoria and Singer Developmental Center in Rockford. 
            AFSCME immediately appealed the 
            decision, but DHS began moving LDC residents out of the facility 
            quickly, before Judge Behle could issue another temporary 
            restraining order. A DHS spokesman said the moves were orderly and 
            had been planned well ahead of time. 
            On Aug. 22, Judge Behle said he would 
            have to study the issues before making a ruling, and on Aug. 24 he 
            said he could not find "good cause" to issue another temporary 
            restraining order. Time had run out for LDC supporters. 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, left the 125-year-old institution 
            forever. Its 80-acre campus is now empty.  
            No one has announced any specific plans 
            for the use of the Lincoln facility, but it will revert to the 
            jurisdiction of the Illinois Department of Central Management 
            Services now. 
            "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," an AFSCME spokesman 
            said. 
            School news 
            School District 27 Superintendent 
            Robert Kidd said the district continues to have more children 
            qualifying for free and reduced-price lunches, an indicator of the 
            growing number of children coming from low-income families. He said 
            he did not see the trend changing any time soon, especially with the 
            closing of the Lincoln Developmental Center. "Some youngsters in our 
            schools had both parents working there," he said. "Some of our 
            families may have to move." 
            County board news 
            The Logan County Board's finance 
            committee discussed hiring a county administrator and decided to 
            investigate the idea. Board members Dale Voyles and Dave Hepler will 
            draft a proposal specifying job description and chain of command. 
            Voyles said hiring a county manager or administrator would bring 
            several benefits. A manager could keep closer track of the yearly 
            schedule, standardize personnel practices, establish a safety 
            program and control losses. An administrator would also make the job 
            of the county board chair easier. Board members, including the 
            chair, have other employment or businesses to run. A full-time 
            manager would have more time to follow through on board decisions, 
            establish new programs and maintain schedules. "The way we're doing 
            business isn't the most efficient for the taxpayers," said Voyles.
             
            As hearings for the county's fiscal 
            year 2002-03 budget began, most early proposals were in line with or 
            even under the current budget. The one exception was a request from 
            the Economic Development Council for a loan of about $650,000 to 
            purchase land for a commercial park. Finance chair Rod White told 
            the Logan County Board Thursday night that budget requests were not 
            very different from entries in the 2001-02 budget. Some will 
            necessarily contain increases. For example, Sheriff Tony Soloman's 
            budget must accommodate the extra $26,746 negotiated for deputies' 
            salaries. 
            The county board added two properties 
            to the enterprise zone. Following the lead of the city council, the 
            board voted to include 4.77 acres on Fifth Street Road and Lincoln 
            Parkway in the Lincoln/Logan County Enterprise Zone. Logan Lanes and 
            American Legion Post 263 occupy the site. The enterprise zone is 
            intended to encourage job creation. The rebuilt American Legion Post 
            is expected to employ three people full time and five part time. 
            Logan Lanes representatives have said their planned expansion will 
            add two or three new employees.  
              
            
             Lincoln 
            city news 
            The Lincoln City Council took the first 
            step toward changing its housing ordinance and avoiding a federal 
            lawsuit by scheduling a public hearing on changing its R-1 zoning to 
            permit group homes for the developmentally disabled in areas zoned 
            R-1. The city's attorney, Bill Bates, said the new ordinance would 
            allow Community Integrated Living Arrangements "as a matter of 
            right" in residential districts that formerly prohibited them. 
            The move is a response to a lawsuit 
            brought by Charleston Transitional Facility, Inc., a not-for-profit 
            corporation that develops and operates group homes throughout the 
            state, after the city refused to issue a building permit for an R-1 
            zoned lot in Stonebridge subdivision on the west side of town. The 
            attorney who requested the building permit last March said the 
            city's ordinance was illegal because it violated the federal 
            Americans with Disabilities Act and the Fair Housing Act. If the 
            council revises its ordinance, the attorney said, the lawsuit would 
            be "amicably resolved." 
            Bates said the new ordinance was "not 
            just drafted to make the lawsuit go away, but to be in compliance 
            with the Fair Housing Act." 
            The council also voted to put a 
            referendum on the Nov. 5 ballot, asking for a sales tax increase of 
            0.5 percent. If approved, the increase would boost the city's sales 
            tax from 6.25 percent to 6.75 percent, bringing the city between 
            $400,000 and $570,000 more each year. The need for additional 
            revenue became evident last April when the council had to borrow 
            from set-aside funds to make up the deficit in its working budget 
            for the 2002-2003 fiscal year, even after making deep cuts in 
            expenditures. The new tax would not include vehicles licensed or 
            titled by the state, such as cars and trucks, or food items and 
            prescription drugs, which are taxed at only 1 percent. 
            The council also debated rezoning two 
            lots facing Fifth Street to C-2 instead of the present R-2 to allow 
            Cynthia Goodman to build a flower shop on the site. The lots are 
            across from the new Casey's General Store. The planning commission 
            did not recommend rezoning the lots C-2. 
              
      
       Other 
            August news 
            For the 66th year, the Logan County 
            Fair filled the fairgrounds on historic Route 66 with fun, food, 
            contests, exhibitions and entertainment. In the young people's 
            talent contest, a third-grader from Mazon, Lizzie Mladic, a little 
            girl with a big voice and a lot of stage presence, took first place. 
            Her mother said Lizzie has been singing since age 3. In the senior 
            division, Rebecca Ruben, one of the 10 queen contestants and a 
            Lincoln College graduate who plans to major in music at Millikin 
            University this fall, took first place with the song "Maybe This 
            Time." Both Lizzie and Rebecca won $100 and the chance to compete 
            with other winners at the Illinois State Fair.  
            The annual balloon fest and art fair 
            took place Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 24 and 25, with 80 juried 
            artists exhibiting in Latham Park and 46 hot-air balloons going up 
            at the fairgrounds. Other entertainment included an Adventure Zone 
            for the kids, a flea market, a craft sale, a doll exhibit, an 
            antique car exhibit, soap box races and a historic homes tour. 
            Weather was delightful for the balloon liftoffs.  
            Logan County was doing its best to 
            fight the West Nile virus. The Health Department encouraged people 
            to help control the mosquito population by draining standing water 
            in which mosquitoes may lay their larvae. Health officials also 
            recommended avoiding mosquito bites by wearing long-sleeve shirts 
            and pants and mosquito repellent. Lincoln's street department helped 
            to control the mosquito population by spraying with mosquito adulticide once every two weeks as well as putting larvacide in 
            standing water, such as in storm drains and ditches. 
            In Elkhart, two new attractions are the 
            Bluestem Bake Shop and the Under the Prairie Frontier Archaeological 
            Museum. The bake shop, owned by Cynthia Hinton, offers a variety of 
            pastries as well as sandwiches, soup and a garden salad. The museum, 
            run by Hinton's husband, Robert Mazrim, is next door to the bakery, 
            in the 100 block of Elkhart's main drag, directly across from the 
            war memorial. The museum is operated by the Sangamo Archaeological 
            Center, which has offices, an archaeological laboratory and 
            curatorial facility in the building. 
            Writer William Maxwell, a Lincoln 
            native and winner of the American Book Award in 1980, will be 
            honored with a historical marker to be dedicated at 11 a.m., 
            Saturday, Aug. 24. Maxwell's boyhood home at 184 Ninth St. is the 
            site for the marker, and the ceremony will take place there. David 
            Welch of Lincoln, who did all the research and fund-raising, 
            explained, "I always liked Maxwell's writing and thought he was 
            deserving of this. He put Lincoln on the literary map."  
            Jonathan Wright, Logan County's current 
            state representative, begins a new job as a Logan County assistant 
            state's attorney on Sept. 16. He was appointed by State's Attorney 
            Tim Huyett after a former assistant, Michael Risinger, left the 
            position. Wright was also recently named deputy state central 
            committeeman for the 18th District of the Illinois Republican Party. 
            He will close his law office at 503 
            Broadway but will keep his district office at 407 Keokuk open at 
            least through the November veto session and probably until the new 
            legislators are seated in January, he said. 
            He has been serving as state 
            representative for the 90th District since June of 2001, when he was 
            appointed to fill the seat vacated by John Turner, who became an 
            appellate court judge. After the redistricting, which divided Logan 
            County into two representative districts, Wright chose not to run in 
            the November election for another term in the House. His term 
            expires in January of 2003.  However, he 
            said he will remain active in Republican politics because of the 
            appointment as a deputy committeeman. He was asked to fill the 
            position by State Central Committeewoman MaryAlice Erickson, Peoria.
             
            [Joan Crabb] |