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            September and October news] November 
            Election news 
            Voters in the Nov. 5 election found 
            many changes. Logan County has been divided into two representative 
            districts and two senatorial districts during the redistricting. The 
            87th and 88th representative districts now form the 44th Legislative 
            District, and the 99th and 100th representative districts create the 
            50th Legislative District. Most of the northern and southeastern 
            portions of Logan County are in the 87th Representative District and 
            44th Legislative District. The southwest portion of the county and 
            most of Lincoln are in the 100th Representative District and 50th 
            Legislative District. Logan County also has six new county board 
            districts. Voters recently opted to choose county board members from 
            districts instead of at-large, as they did formerly.  
            In the November general election, Logan 
            County voters said “no” to two proposed tax hikes and made a change 
            in the sheriff's office. The referendum for the city of Lincoln's 
            sales tax increase went down by a 2-1 majority, while the 
            Chester-East Lincoln education fund tax increase failed by a narrow 
            margin. Incumbent Sheriff Anthony “Tony” Soloman, one of the 
            county's few Democratic officeholders, was defeated by Republican 
            challenger Steven G. Nichols. In the new county board District 3, 
            the only district with a race, Republican incumbent Gloria Luster of 
            Mount Pulaski and Republican newcomer John Stewart, also of Mount 
            Pulaski, defeated Democrat Harold Dingman of Latham. The other 
            county board seats were decided in the March Republican primary. 
            Winning the House seat in the 87th 
            District without opposition was Republican Bill Mitchell of 
            Forsythe; the House seat in the 88th District went to Republican 
            Rich Brauer of Petersburg. Republican Bill Brady of Bloomington took 
            the 44th District Senate seat, and Republican Larry K Bomke of 
            Springfield won the 50th District seat.   
             
            Lincoln city news 
            On Nov. 1, a groundbreaking ceremony 
            marked the beginning of construction of the city's $9.8 million 
            sewer plant upgrade. City officials and officials from Environmental 
            Management Company, which operates the plant, attended. The work 
            will take about 18 months to complete. 
            Martha “Marty” Neitzel was appointed to 
            fill the city council seat left vacant by the recent death of 
            Alderman Joseph Stone. Neitzel was seated on Nov. 4. Her husband, 
            Arthur, is a former city council member. 
            The city council voted to try again to 
            pass the 0.5 percent sales tax that citizens turned down in the 
            November election. Alderman Steve Fuhrer said he did not believe the 
            council had worked hard enough to get out the message about the tax 
            and why it is needed. He pointed out that a person who spends $10 
            will pay only 5 cents more, and a person who spends $100 will pay 
            only 50 cents more. Verl Prather, finance chairman, said Lincoln 
            residents need to understand that without some new revenue there 
            will be no more street repair work. 
            The city also agreed to hire an 
            attorney to fight the 13.24 percent increase in water rates 
            requested by the Illinois-American Water Company. The rate increase 
            must be approved by the Illinois Commerce Commission and will not go 
            into effect until the summer of 2003. City Attorney Bill Bates 
            suggested they hire an attorney who has dealt with the ICC 
            previously. The increase will cost the average residential customer 
            about 12 cents a day, or $3.75 per month. School 
            and college news 
            Parents and staff members from 
            Washington-Monroe Elementary School were among teams from 15 schools 
            from across the state chosen to present their effective school 
            improvement strategies at the statewide "School-Family Partnerships 
            Make a Difference" conference in Naperville. The Washington-Monroe 
            team included Principal Rebecca Cecil, teachers Leslie Singleton and 
            Debbie Turner, and parents Crystal Alley, Dawn Frye and Candy Boulb. 
            The presenters showed their workshop participants how to organize 
            Family Reading Nights, Family Resource Libraries and out-of-school 
            opportunities for families to complement school instruction. 
            Washington-Monroe is also the winner of the Golden Spike Award for 
            raising test scores three years in a row. 
            Lenny Janet, former Central School 
            principal, was sworn in as the newest member of the District 27 
            school board in November, filling the vacancy left by the 
            resignation of Leta Herrington last month. Janet said he would run 
            for another four-year term in the April 1 election. The two other 
            board members whose terms expire, Shelly Allen and Joe Brewer, both 
            are considering running again. 
            Lincoln Christian College and Seminary 
            has achieved a record enrollment of 1,011 students for the fall 
            semester. This is the first time in the school's history that 
            enrollment has exceeded 1,000 students. Sandra Kellerstrass, a 
            nontraditional student in the LincUp program, was the 1,000th 
            student to register for classes at LCCS. 
            Lincoln College student groups once 
            again helped elderly Lincoln residents by donating time to rake 
            their leaves. This annual tradition is supported by members of the 
            Lincoln College Student Senate and the Lincoln College Admissions 
            Ambassadors. County 
            board news 
            The Logan County Board honored retiring 
            board members for their years of service: Rod White, 20 years; Doug 
            Dutz, 12 years; Clifford Sullivan, six years; Roger Bock, three 
            years; Jim Griffin, two years; and Tom Cash, one year. Dick Logan 
            received a gavel for his two-year service as board chair. 
            The board formally forgave a 1988 loan 
            to the Logan County Cemetery District for $100,000. The loan 
            consisted of tax money collected by the county to maintain county 
            cemeteries. When the cemetery district was formed in 1988 to take 
            over that function, the county gave it all maintenance equipment and 
            the loan as start-up money. The loan was later written off the 
            county books as uncollectible. However, it was not formally 
            forgiven. The cemetery district maintains 44 of the 60 cemeteries in 
            the county.  
            The board passed its fiscal 2003 budget 
            and set levies totaling $2,628,705. The 2003 budget contains a 
            general fund property tax increase of 1.6 percent and a deficit of 
            about $190,000 in the general fund. Levies for the ambulance service 
            and liability insurance funds were cut in order to shore up the 
            general fund.    
             Other 
            November news 
            Veterans from Logan County were honored 
            at a musical tribute Sunday evening and at the traditional 
            courthouse lawn ceremony Monday, Nov. 11. Nearly 150 veterans from 
            all branches of service filled the Lincoln Park District ballroom 
            Sunday evening for a dance and musical tribute honoring them. All 
            Logan County veterans were sent invitations to the first-time 
            special event hosted by the youth group of St. John United Church of 
            Christ.  
            Looking for Lincoln members are 
            planning for the premiere showing of the video "From Surveyor to 
            President; A. Lincoln in Logan County" on Jan. 11 at Lincoln 
            College. The screening is scheduled for 7 p.m. in Johnston Center 
            for the Performing Arts on the LC campus.  
            Record crowds thronged Lincoln downtown 
            for a Sunday “Tea at the Lincoln T,” an event organized by downtown 
            merchants. Refreshments, entertainment and friendly merchants made 
            it day local people remember as an old-fashioned good time. Sports 
            news 
            Lincoln Community High School's Lady Railer volleyball team faced off with the Taylorville Tornadoes. A 
            3-0 Taylorville run began Game 1. But that was it. The entire rest 
            of the match was dominated by Lincoln, as they went on to defeat 
            Taylorville 15-5, 15-4 and repeat as regional champions.  
            Lincoln (30-8) moved on to play 
            Champaign Central in the sectional semifinal match at Rantoul. The 
            Lady Railers showed the heart of champions as they once again 
            refused to let their season end. But not before they gave their 
            coaches and fans quite a scare. When it was over the box score 
            looked like this: 13-15, 15-11, 15-7; Railers win.  
            A fired-up and focused Lincoln 
            volleyball team took the floor at Rantoul High School with one 
            mission in mind: to be the team that moved on to the super-sectional 
            match. And that's exactly what they did. The Railers lived up to 
            their No. 1 seed, defeated Champaign Centennial, repeated as 
            sectional champions and moved on to be the only team played Normal 
            Community in the super-sectional contest Saturday. The final tally: 
            15-6, 13-15, 15-11. The Lady Railers finally lost to Normal 
            Community High School, 15-7, 15-1, but they never quit.   Mount 
            Pulaski's Lady Hilltoppers defeated Colchester (30-10) in the Class 
            A volleyball quarterfinals and defeated Lena (31-6) in the 
            semifinals in order to play against Wheaton-St. Francis (32-8) for 
            the state championship. The Mount Pulaski team took second place at 
            Redbird Arena in Normal.  
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            December 
            County board gets five new members 
            Five new Logan County Board members and 
            the county's new sheriff took office early in December. The new 
            sheriff is Republican Steve Nichols. New members are Mitch Brown of 
            rural Lincoln, Bob Farmer of rural Lincoln, Pat O'Neill of Lincoln, 
            Chuck Ruben of rural Hartsburg and John Stewart of Mount Pulaski. 
            Circuit Judge Dave Coogan and Associate 
            Circuit Judge Don Behle conducted the swearing-in ceremony before a 
            crowd of about 100 people in the third-floor courtroom of the Logan 
            County Courthouse. Also sworn in were returning Logan County 
            Treasurer Mary Bruns, County Clerk and Recorder Sally Litterly, and 
            six county board members. Those returning to the board are Paul 
            Gleason, Lloyd Hellman, Dave Hepler, Dick Logan, Gloria Luster, Dale 
            Voyles and Terry Werth. Hellman could not attend the ceremony 
            because of illness. The term of the newly elected regional 
            superintendent of schools, Jean Anderson, begins July 1, 2003. 
            At an organizational meeting the new 
            board members received committee assignments and their term of 
            office. Because of the county going to district rather than at-large 
            representation, board members drew numbers for two- and four-year 
            terms. For each district, one name got a four-year and the other got 
            a two-year term. This will protect each district from starting with 
            all-new representation at each election. Drawing two-year terms were 
            Mitch Brown, Lloyd Hellman, David Hepler, Dick Logan, Gloria Luster 
            and Patrick O'Neill. Drawing four-year terms were Robert Farmer, 
            Paul Gleason, Charles Ruben, John Stewart, Dale Voyles and Terry 
            Werth. Voyles is the new county board chairman. 
            The board's animal control committee, 
            with new chairman Pat O'Neill, held its first meeting and heard a 
            list of complaints citizens said they would like to see the 
            corrected.  
            The newly reorganized board heard plans 
            to ask for federal funding to improve Fifth Street Road, the No. 1 
            priority on the county's five-year road plan. County engineer Tom 
            Hickman said the project won't be carried out until funds are in 
            place. He is drafting a letter to Sen. Peter Fitzgerald asking for 
            federal funding. Voyles and Lincoln Mayor Beth Davis will also sign 
            the letter. 
            In other business at Thursday night's 
            board-of-the-whole meeting, Sheriff Steve Nichols said an audit in 
            progress found doors and locking mechanisms on two cellblocks in 
            need of replacement. The sheriff is also taking applications to 
            replace correctional officers who have resigned or been terminated.
             
            The board also voted to direct its 
            finance committee to write a resolution and set the rate for a tax 
            referendum to support economic development. If passed at the January 
            board meeting, the resolution will go before voters in April. The 
            money would be earmarked for economic development of the whole 
            county, not for land for a commerce park or any other specific 
            project. If passed, the new economic development tax would replace 
            current county and city funding for the Economic Development 
            Council. Finance committee member Dick Logan said one argument in 
            favor of the tax is that it would give the EDC a steady, predictable 
            income and "stop the begging" each year at budget-writing time. He 
            and board member Terry Werth explained that one problem in filling 
            the director of economic development position is the low salary and 
            inability to commit to more than one year's pay. They said at least 
            $55,000 a year for three years is needed to attract a strong 
            candidate. 
            Lincoln city news 
            Lincoln aldermen continued discussing 
            ways to persuade voters to pass the 0.5 percent sales tax increase 
            that was turned down in November. City Treasurer Les Plotner gave 
            his financial report for the first six months of the current fiscal 
            year, showing how the city's income from various sources has dropped 
            this year compared with previous years. The most startling news was 
            the difference between the funds the city expected to earn from its 
            investments and the amount it is actually earning: $18,203, only 
            21.4 percent of the estimated $84,950. 
            The council also announced plans to 
            resurface the streets around the courthouse square using accumulated 
            Federal Aid-Urban funds. Streets that meet federal designation as 
            collector streets are Broadway from Hamilton to Union, Pulaski from 
            Hamilton to Logan, and Kickapoo from Broadway to Clinton. To get the 
            $528,000 from the FAU funds, the city must pay 20 percent of the 
            cost of the total project, about $132,000.  
            Bill Melton, a 21-year veteran of the 
            city council and the sole Democrat, has announced that he will not 
            run for his Ward 4 seat next year because he is moving out of his 
            home to rural Lincoln. Running for the Ward 4 seat is Orville “Buzz” 
            Busby, who previously served as alderman in Ward 4. In Ward 1, 
            incumbent Pat Madigan will face Anthony “T.J.” Swarts in the 
            February Primary. In Ward 2, incumbent Steve Fuhrer will face former 
            alderman Stephan A. Mesner. The winner of the primary will face Leo 
            Logan, who has filed as a Democrat, in the April 1 general election. 
            In Ward 3, incumbent George Mitchell will faces Jonette “Jonie” 
            Tibbs in the primary, and in Ward 5, newly appointed Martha “Marty” 
            Neitzel will face a challenge from Derrick Crane.   
      
       School 
            news 
            Partitions are up in the new Central 
            School classroom wing, and it is becoming possible to imagine parts 
            of the completed building. Rick Spahn, project manager for S.M. 
            Wilson, said 95 percent of the steel structure is in place, although 
            roof framing remains to be done. The classroom wing is close to 
            weather-tight, and interior work is progressing on both floors. The 
            District 27 school board unanimously passed a 2003-4 tax levy of 
            $3.17 million, including bonds. This reflects a tax rate of $3.0356 
            per $100 of assessed valuation and is based on an estimated assessed 
            valuation of $104.5 million.  
            Washington-Monroe, Northwest and 
            Jefferson schools have received a windfall in the form of increased 
            Title I funds. Rebecca Cecil, principal at Washington-Monroe and 
            Title I director, said in October 2002 she learned that an 
            additional $89,739 would be granted to the three schools. 
            Washington-Monroe, with the most qualifying students, gets the most 
            dollars. In the past much of this money has been used to buy 
            educational materials and technology. This year Cecil said the 
            Washington-Monroe teachers felt they could help students more by 
            hiring a teacher to work with small groups of children.  
            The ag issues team and the food science 
            and technology team of the Hartsburg-Emden FFA chapter were selected 
            as state winners in recent competition. The five members of the ag 
            issues team, Matthew Wrage, Nick Alberts, Brittney Kavanaugh, Kyle 
            Hoerbert and Kory Leesman, presented pros and cons on the topic of 
            "Upgrading the Locks and Dams on the Illinois and Mississippi 
            Rivers." As state winners, the team will now represent the Illinois 
            FFA Association at the 2003 National FFA Convention. This is the 
            third state-winning team competing in the Ag Issues Career 
            Development Event for the Hartsburg-Emden FFA chapter.  
            Lincoln Community High School got a 
            good report from the North Central Association accreditation 
            committee in December. Committee chair Colleen Legge was impressed 
            with the “continual commitment to school improvement that LCHS has 
            shown” as well as its commitment to students. LCHS juniors made 
            dramatic increases in reading and writing skills on the Prairie 
            State Achievement Exam this year.   
             Other 
            December events  
            The Lincoln Public Library District has 
            received two new grants from the office of Secretary of State and 
            State Librarian Jesse White. The Dream Again grant entitled "Great 
            Books, Great Films" will be used to purchase classic movies in the 
            DVD format and great works of literature in the CD format. The 
            library will also receive a new DVD player and public performance 
            movie licensing rights for one year. This will allow the library to 
            host a series of public programs with the new DVD movie titles. 
            Lincoln will share this $32,100 grant with the public libraries in 
            Chatham, Rochester, Clinton, Effingham, Mount Zion and Taylorville. 
            The Opportunity Knocks grant entitled "Terry Turtle's Teaching 
            Totes" will be used to purchase tote bags for the youth services 
            department at the library.  
            An Air Evac Lifeteam explained their 
            emergency-based services to members of the Local Emergency Planning 
            Committee this month. The privately owned service can dramatically 
            shorten the time needed to transport critically ill or injured 
            patients. It is most valuable when there is a significant distance 
            to travel to a hospital. 
            Christmas shopping got a lot easier for 
            Nancy Moore of Lincoln. Her name was drawn as the winner of the 
            Santa Shopping Spree, which means she had $1,000 in shopping spree 
            bucks to spend at participating Lincoln businesses. Her entry was 
            from The Mustard Moon 
            The Lincoln/Logan County Chamber of 
            Commerce's annual Christmas parade. included 100 contest entries, 
            three marching bands, color guards, commercial vehicles, horses, 
            candy, and Santa and Mrs. Claus on a beautiful sleigh. This year's 
            theme was "Let Your Spirits Soar." Perry Grieme of Parker-Grieme 
            Insurance, the chamber's Member of the Year for 2002, is this year's 
            grand marshal. The only complaint was the cold weather, which caused 
            some band instruments to freeze up. But even the cold could not keep 
            the city from enjoying the beautiful colors and lights decorating 
            downtown. 
             Five inches of snow blanketed Lincoln 
            and the surrounding areas on Christmas Eve. Businesses reopening 
            Thursday morning had the chore of clearing walks and pathways to 
            their doors. Sports 
            news 
            On Dec. 10 LDN has learned that Brian 
            Cook was chosen Big 10 Player of the Week. Cook led the Illini to 
            victories over No. 12 North Carolina (82-65) and over Arkansas 
            (62-58). He averaged over 20 points, 5.5 rebounds and dished off 4.5 
            assists. According to Illinois coach Bill Self, Brian did the job 
            against the best competition the Illini has faced. Cook was 
            previously selected as a weekly Big Ten winner in December of 2000, 
            during his sophomore season.  
            [Joan Crabb] |