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            Shirley Bartelmay of Lincoln, scheduler 
            for the Postville volunteers, said she has all January slots filled 
            but one. The site is open noon to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. 
            Schachtsiek had manned the site on Fridays and Saturdays before his 
            retirement. 
            He will be missed. Thressia Usherwood, 
            executive director of Abraham Lincoln Tourism Bureau of Logan 
            County, said Schachtsiek was "wonderful to work with; very, very 
            supportive; very tourism-minded"; and she added, "I'm going to miss 
            him terribly." 
            "Oh, he was great because he helped 
            with everything," Bartelmay agreed. She explained that Schachtsiek 
            knew the answers to a great variety of questions and was "an 
            excellent training person." 
              
             [Photos by Lynn Spellman]
 [Shirley Bartlemay explains a display at the 
            Postville Courthouse to new volunteers Stuart Churchill, Ruthetta 
            Getchel and Judy Alberts.]
 
            A volunteer herself, Bartelmay 
            conducted a training session for three new volunteers recently, using 
            materials compiled by Schachtsiek. Those trained were Judy Alberts, 
            Stuart Churchill and Ruthetta Getchel, all of Lincoln. Two others 
            are in line for orientation in the near future.  
            Bartelmay said the 32 volunteers 
            already in place "really stepped forward" and were very cooperative 
            about helping to fill the void left by Schachtsiek's departure. The 
            volunteers were organized in March 2000, and most of the first 
            participants are still active. The corps comprises both retired and 
            working people. 
              
       
            Mount Pulaski Courthouse is being kept 
            open the same hours, noon to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, by 
            its corps of volunteers. In Mount Pulaski the city clerk's office 
            handles the scheduling. Maintenance duties at both sites have been 
            assigned to two New Salem workers. But Mount Pulaski is experiencing 
            less change than Lincoln because Schachtsiek did not keep regular 
            hours there; he came instead for special events. 
            On Dec. 1, 1992, under threat of being 
            closed by the state, the Mount Pulaski Courthouse became the only 
            historic site in Illinois kept open entirely by volunteers. 
            Schachtsiek supplied historical training for the volunteers, and 
            Wally Kautz of Mount Pulaski acted as model for a day of on-the-job 
            instruction. Kautz said the program has worked well, and he believes 
            all the volunteers have enjoyed the experience.   [to top of second column in
this article]
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            Schachtsiek trained two Mount Pulaski 
            volunteers in December. Kautz surmised that, if new volunteers step 
            forward before a site director is named, he will train them. There 
            are currently just under 30 Mount Pulaski volunteers. Each works one 
            day per month. 
            Robert J. Coomer, superintendent of the 
            Historic Sites Division of the Illinois Historic Preservation 
            Agency, spoke to Postville volunteers in December. He has submitted 
            a letter to his director requesting an exemption to fill the site 
            director post. Ultimately, the decision will be made by the Illinois 
            Bureau of the Budget. Coomer said he is optimistic that the position 
            will be filled. If approved, it will take at least 60 days to post 
            the opening and interview applicants. The state considers Postville 
            Courthouse and Mount Pulaski Courthouse to be one site requiring one 
            curator. 
              
             [Judy Alberts and Ashley, Jackson and Ruthetta 
            Getchel listen to volunteer instruction from Shirley Bartelmay.]
 
            Bartelmay said it is important to keep 
            the courthouse sites open because of the tourists and dollars they 
            draw to the county. Postville recorded 1,610 visitors in 2002, an 
            increase from the previous year. If three-fourths of those visitors 
            came from out of town, and they bought gas, food and other items and 
            many stayed overnight, they spent over $100,000 in the county, she 
            calculated.  
            Records show that last year's Postville 
            visitors came from 33 states and the District of Columbia plus 11 
            foreign countries. Asian tourists are especially intrigued by 
            Abraham Lincoln and tend to be already well informed when they 
            arrive, Bartelmay noted. Volunteers 
            at each site direct tourists to other area attractions, including 
            Lincoln College Museum and Under the Prairie Frontier Archaeological 
            Museum in Elkhart.  [Lynn
Spellman] | 
        
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            "This is not a 
            constitutional change," said Mitchell. "This bill puts in place 
            guidelines or procedures that future governors must follow before 
            making these critical life-or-death decisions -- with the hope being 
            that they give prosecutors and victims an opportunity to voice their 
            opinions before making a final decision."  
            
            House Bill 191 
            requires the following procedures to be followed by future governors 
            in making final clemency decisions, including: 
            
            * Preventing the 
            governor from granting clemency without a full hearing and report 
            from the Prison Review Board. 
            
            * Requiring the 
            Prison Review Board to notify the victim of the crime and the 
            state's attorney prior to any hearing on a petition for clemency.   
             
            [to top of second column in
this article] | 
 
            
            * Requiring the 
            Prison Review Board to conduct a comprehensive hearing on the merits 
            of each petition including materials submitted by victims and 
            survivors. 
            
            * Requiring the 
            board to submit an open report to the governor for his 
            consideration. 
            
            "We all agree 
            that we need to look at our death penalty system in Illinois. No one 
            wants to execute an innocent person. However, it is apparent that 
            Governor George Ryan abused his constitutional authority, and we 
            must also reform the way executive pardons and commutations 
            decisions are made," said Mitchell. [News 
            release] |