Looking for a job? Gov.-elect Rauner wants to talk with you

Gov.-elect Bruce Rauner has hung out a “help wanted” sign with a website to solicit resumes from people who want a job in state government once he takes office.

The site has a list of 20 categories of “interest” on the job application page, among them legislative, environmental, state police and infrastructure.

Other application questions include “Is there anything in your personal or professional life that would cause controversy for you or the governor during a public review of your candidacy or your service as a gubernatorial appointee?”

In a “voluntary information” section, the site explains that Rauner wants “a diverse pool of candidates,” and asks applicants whether they are U.S. citizens, whether they are disabled, and to provide their ethnic group and country of birth.

The website also includes a section for people to contribute to Rauner’s transition committee, with suggested donations of between $25 and $5,000.

Rauner and Lt. Gov.-elect Evelyn Sanguinetti will take office in January. Sanguinetti is heading Rauner’s transition committee.

jebyrne@tribune.com

Rauner solicits resumes for state work

Gov.-elect Bruce Rauner has hung out a “help wanted” sign with a website to solicit resumes from people who want a job in state government once he takes office.

Here’s the link to the story in the Chicago Tribune.

 

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Obituary – Eva J. (Phillips) Basso – Sesser

SESSER – Eva J. (Phillips) Basso passed away peacefully Saturday, November 15, 2014.

Services will be at 1 p.m. Monday in Brayfield-Gilbert Funeral Home in Sesser. Burial will be in Maple Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. Memorials may be made to the Wounded Warrior Program or to the Sesser-Valier Lifeline FoodPantry.

Eva was born October 5, 1912, the daughter of John G. and Beulah (Hutson) Phillips.

She spent more than forty years working as a secretary for Slankard Publishing Company.

Survivors include, son Ditto and Marla Basso, grandchildren Amanda Basso and Chip and Erin Basso, and great-grandchildren Mitchell, Gracie, Reid, and Reagan.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Eugene Basso Junior; her parents; two brothers, Paul and John Junior Phillips; two sisters, Dolly Phillips and Madge Lovin.

She was a member of Horse Prairie Baptist Church in Sesser.

Free cardiac risk screening from Prairie Heart Institute

Space still available for Prairie Power Check at University Mall

(CARBONDALE, IL) Appointments are still available for the fourth and final Prairie Power Check of 2014 at SIH The Place at University Mall. The Prairie Power Check involves a series of free screenings and cardiac risk assessments for residents of southern Illinois. The last Prairie Power Check for the year is scheduled for Saturday, November 22 from 8:00 am until noon at SIH The Place at University Mall.

Prairie Heart Institute Southern Illinois Healthcare encourages women over the age of 45 and men over the age of 35 to be screened for cholesterol, blood pressure and glucose. Participants can also register for an individualized cardiac risk assessment and walk through the mall with leading cardiologists for personal insights on heart health. Those with a family history of heart disease are especially encouraged to attend.
“Your genes, lifestyle and what you eat all play a role in your cardiac health, but there is a comprehensive way to assess your risk for heart disease. While heredity and age are large contributors to heart disease, there are other risk factors that you have the power to change to improve your heart health, and we all could use answers,” said Firas al-Badarin, MD, a cardiologist with Prairie Cardiovascular in Carbondale.
For accurate results, some of the screenings require a fasting period of nine to 12 hours prior to screening.
To register, please call the SIH Call Center at 866-744-2468.

West Frankfort to start assessing fines on landlords in violation of city ordinance

Making good on a promise he made prior to Election Day, Mayor Tom Jordan said Wednesday night that the City of West Frankfort will be taking action against landlords who do not comply with the city’s Non-Owner Occupied Housing Ordinance in the new year.

Former Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne dies at age 81

Former Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne died Friday morning at the age of 81.

Here’s a link to the story in the Chicago Tribune.

Franklin County Farm Bureau News

Gay Bowlin, Manager

Temperatures have reached the lowest of the season and the National Weather Service states that these cold temps will be the norm for most of the winter months.

Gay Bowlin

Gay Bowlin

We should not expect anything much warmer than the low 40s through midweek next week.

The fruit prices were incorrect in last week’s article – here are the correct prices listed below
We are taking orders for fruit again this year – the prices are as follows
Grapefruit – 4/5 bushel – $25    2/5 bushel – $15

Oranges – 4/5 bushel – $26       2/5 bushel – $16

Tangelos – 4/5 bushel – $25      2/5 bushel – $15The fruit orders must be received no later than November 24 and will be delivered the week of December 15.

Pecans sell for $9.00 1 lb bag and chocolate covered pecans are $8.00 for 12 oz – they will be available for pick up before Thanksgiving and we are taking orders.  Call the office at 435-3616.

Attention all Franklin County Farm Bureau Members – take the time to mark your calendars for Monday December 1 and to call the office to make your reservations for our County Annual Meeting.  The meeting will be at the Benton Civic Center with food served at 6:15 p.m. There will be a Silent Auction and this year we are pleased to announce that Magician Chris Egelston will be this year’s entertainment.  Call the office at 435-3616 by November 21 to make your reservations.

Drive through rural parts of Illinois and you’ll see them everywhere … on farms and at grain elevators. Piles of corn. Lots of them. Huge piles. Never before has this much corn been harvested in the U.S. In fact, the 2014 growing season was so successful that state officials have approved temporary storage for 107 million bushels of grain (hence the corn piles) because of the likelihood that storage silos will be full both on farms and at grain elevators.

Those piles of corn are symbolic of many things.

They symbolize farmers’ resilience. Just two short years ago, much of the nation’s corn crop burned up in the field as the country’s midsection experienced a punishing drought.

They symbolize farmers’ productivity. This year’s U.S. harvest will set a new record – in excess of 14 billion bushels of corn. For years there has been a trend away from making goods and toward service-industry jobs in this country. Yet farmers have never stopped delivering a tangible product.

They symbolize ingenuity and resourcefulness. Those kernels of corn will become food ingredients both here and abroad. They’ll feed livestock, ultimately nourishing populations around the world that are becoming more prosperous and desiring higher-quality protein. They’ll be converted into fuel in the form of ethanol, which provides jobs for American workers, is better for our environment and moves the U.S. closer to energy independence.

In this crop is food, feed, fuel and fiber. Produced humbly and quietly by farmers who, for generations, have done the same. Benjamin Franklin said, “Then plough deep while sluggards sleep, and you shall have corn to sell and to keep.” All these years later, his words are true at a magnitude he surely never imagined.

With more corn in the U.S. this does not necessarily mean that farmers are making more money – the price of corn per bushel has fallen from over $7 per bushel in 2012 to just over $3 per bushel today. The price to grow corn has not fallen just the selling price. Farmers are not making more money just because they are growing more corn.

American consumers are putting together more meals at home — though not necessarily cooked meals — and eating fewer meals out, according to an a new study by the research firm NPD Group.

This makes for one of the biggest changes in eating patterns of Americans over the past five years, concludes the comprehensive study of more than 7,000 consumers, the 29th Annual Eating Patterns in America Report.

Visit us at www/fcfbil.org.

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

Franklin County Farm Bureau News – UPDATED FRUIT PRICES

Gay Bowlin, Manager

Temperatures have reached the lowest of the season and the National Weather Service states that these cold temps will be the norm for most of the winter months.

Gay Bowlin

Gay Bowlin

We should not expect anything much warmer than the low 40s through midweek next week.
The fruit prices were incorrect in last week’s article – here are the correct prices listed below
We are taking orders for fruit again this year – the prices are as follows
Grapefruit – 4/5 bushel – $25    2/5 bushel – $15

Oranges – 4/5 bushel – $26       2/5 bushel – $16

Tangelos – 4/5 bushel – $25      2/5 bushel – $15The fruit orders must be received no later than November 24 and will be delivered the week of December 15.

Pecans sell for $9.00 1 lb bag and chocolate covered pecans are $8.00 for 12 oz – they will be available for pick up before Thanksgiving and we are taking orders.  Call the office at 435-3616.

Attention all Franklin County Farm Bureau Members – take the time to mark your calendars for Monday December 1 and to call the office to make your reservations for our County Annual Meeting.  The meeting will be at the Benton Civic Center with food served at 6:15 p.m. There will be a Silent Auction and this year we are pleased to announce that Magician Chris Egelston will be this year’s entertainment.  Call the office at 435-3616 by November 21 to make your reservations.

Drive through rural parts of Illinois and you’ll see them everywhere … on farms and at grain elevators. Piles of corn. Lots of them. Huge piles. Never before has this much corn been harvested in the U.S. In fact, the 2014 growing season was so successful that state officials have approved temporary storage for 107 million bushels of grain (hence the corn piles) because of the likelihood that storage silos will be full both on farms and at grain elevators.

Those piles of corn are symbolic of many things.

They symbolize farmers’ resilience. Just two short years ago, much of the nation’s corn crop burned up in the field as the country’s midsection experienced a punishing drought.

They symbolize farmers’ productivity. This year’s U.S. harvest will set a new record – in excess of 14 billion bushels of corn. For years there has been a trend away from making goods and toward service-industry jobs in this country. Yet farmers have never stopped delivering a tangible product.

They symbolize ingenuity and resourcefulness. Those kernels of corn will become food ingredients both here and abroad. They’ll feed livestock, ultimately nourishing populations around the world that are becoming more prosperous and desiring higher-quality protein. They’ll be converted into fuel in the form of ethanol, which provides jobs for American workers, is better for our environment and moves the U.S. closer to energy independence.

In this crop is food, feed, fuel and fiber. Produced humbly and quietly by farmers who, for generations, have done the same. Benjamin Franklin said, “Then plough deep while sluggards sleep, and you shall have corn to sell and to keep.” All these years later, his words are true at a magnitude he surely never imagined.

With more corn in the U.S. this does not necessarily mean that farmers are making more money – the price of corn per bushel has fallen from over $7 per bushel in 2012 to just over $3 per bushel today. The price to grow corn has not fallen just the selling price. Farmers are not making more money just because they are growing more corn.

American consumers are putting together more meals at home — though not necessarily cooked meals — and eating fewer meals out, according to an a new study by the research firm NPD Group.

This makes for one of the biggest changes in eating patterns of Americans over the past five years, concludes the comprehensive study of more than 7,000 consumers, the 29th Annual Eating Patterns in America Report.

Visit us at www/fcfbil.org.

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

How much did a vote cost in Illinois gubernatorial race

Pat Quinn and Bruce Rauner shattered campaign spending records on the 2014 governor’s race. We crunched the numbers to figure out what each candidate paid per vote. Money well spent?

Here’s a link to the story in Reboot Illinois.

Lady Warriors Basketball falls to Jefferson College

HILLSBORO, Mo. – The Rend Lake College Lady Warriors Basketball team fell 64-76 last night to Jefferson College of Hillsboro, Mo.

Leading RLC was freshman Jordan Bruenton (Cincinnati, Ohio) with a double-double for the night at 11 points and 11 rebounds. Freshmen Brianna Hawkins (Louisville, Ky.) and Jasmine Washington (Evansville, Ind.) also scored in double digits with 17 and 12 points respectively. Other lead scorers were Valencia Chandler (Joliet) with nine points, Savannah Enlow (Corydon, Ind.) with seven points, and Mykhaela Tolds (Pearland, Texas) with seven points.

The Lady Warriors are now 1-2 for the season. They will play Shawnee College in Ullin on Nov. 22 before returning home Nov. 25 to take on Southwestern Illinois, their first GRAC conference match-up. For all things athletic at The Lake, visit www.rlc.edu/warriors.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News