LINGERING FOG AND DRIZZLE AND POTENTIAL FOR FREEZING TEMPERATURES OVERNIGHT

Special Weather Statement

WITH FOG AND DRIZZLE LINGERING IN PATCHES ACROSS THE AREA, THIS
IS A POTENTIAL HAZARD FOR DRIVERS OVERNIGHT AS TEMPERATURES COOL
BELOW FREEZING.

ANY WET SPOTS ON ROAD SURFACES MAY BECOME SLICK OR ICY.
TEMPERATURES WILL BE ABOVE FREEZING TODAY, SO THIS WILL BE MAINLY
A NIGHT TIME HAZARD ONLY, WHEN TEMPERATURES COOL TO BELOW
FREEZING AND ICY PATCHES MAY BE HARD TO SEE IN THE DARK OF NIGHT.
WALKWAYS MIGHT ALSO BE SLICK AT TIMES FOR THE EARLY START OF THE
SCHOOL DAY.

TRAVEL CAUTION IS ADVISED TONIGHT AND EARLY TUESDAY MORNING.
TEMPERATURES SHOULD WARM ABOVE FREEZING AGAIN BY MID MORNING
TUESDAY, BUT BRIDGES AND OVERPASSES, AS USUAL, MAY TAKE A LITTLE
LONGER AND SHOULD BE TRAVELED WITH CAUTION.

Hazardous Weather Outlook

.DAY ONE…This Afternoon and Tonight

Low cloud, fog, or drizzle, that occurs tonight, may translate to
a slick patch or two on area roads and walkways, as temperatures
drop to freezing. See the Special Weather Statement for details.

.DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN…Tuesday through Sunday

The potential exists for accumulating wintry precipitation across
our region late in the week, mainly late Thursday night, Friday, and
Friday night. The track of the storm system will determine exactly
where the swath of heaviest wintry precipitation occurs. The storm
system will be followed by another Arctic air mass this weekend.

.Controlled Pheasant Seasons Extended at Wayne Fitzgerell State Park

SPRINGFIELD, IL – The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) is extending controlled pheasant hunting seasons at three IDNR sites. Hunters can make reservations now for additional hunting opportunities.

The three sites with additional controlled pheasant hunting are Eldon Hazlet State Recreation Area in Clinton County, Jim Edgar Panther Creek State Fish and Wildlife Area in Cass County, and Wayne Fitzgerrell State Recreation Area in Franklin and Jefferson Counties. The controlled pheasant hunting season at each site has been extended through January 28.

Hunters are encouraged to use the online Controlled Pheasant Hunting Reservation System at www.dnr.illinois.gov to obtain permits for these additional hunt dates. Reserved permits ensure hunters will have the opportunity to hunt. Hunters using reserved permits also ensure that site staff on these sites can release two pheasants per hunter each day, which is the Department’s objective for pheasants released on each hunt date. Standby permits are also available at the sites, although standby hunting opportunities may be limited or unavailable if the hunter quota for a hunt date is filled by reserved permit hunters.

To access the reservation system:
1. Click on “Hunt/Trap” on the toolbar on the IDNR Home Page
2. Then click on “Upland Game”
3. Then click on “Controlled Pheasant Hunting Permits, Hunting Areas, Regs, etc.” under the “Licenses and permits” heading.

Hunters are reminded that the daily permit fee for controlled pheasant hunting is $30 for resident hunters and $35 for nonresident hunters. The daily permit fee applies to each hunter. Reserved Permits are paid for via credit card during the application process. Completing a permit reservation online can be accomplished as late as 24 hours before an available hunt date, and securing a permit takes less than five minutes. Standby hunters pay daily permit fees at the site hunter check station on the hunt date. Standby hunters need to be prepared to pay permit fees with cash.

 

Bost Nominates Southern Illinois Students to U.S. Service Academies

Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S Representative Mike Bost (R-Murphysboro ) released the list of 21 Southern Illinois students who he has nominated to the United States service academies, including the U.S. Air Force Academy, the U.S. Naval Academy, and the U.S. Military Academy. A congressional nomination is the first step in a process toward the students’ acceptance into a military academy.

“Southern Illinoisans should be proud of each one of these students who represent the best our state has to offer,” said Rep. Bost. “I was honored to personally notify each and every one of these exceptional students this past week. I’m proud that Southern Illinois produces some of the brightest young people in this country to lead a new generation. Because of the commitment they have already shown, I thank them for their patriotism and leadership in the years to come.”

A reception will be hosted by Rep. Bost’s office in the coming weeks in honor of the nominees.

The following students were nominated by Rep. Bost based on their academic performance, extracurricular activity in their communities and personal recommendations:

St. Clair County

Kersten Douglas of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Military Academy.
Gavin Green of Belleville has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
Jared Dalanzo of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
Samuel Kelly of Mascoutah has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Clayton Bonitati of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Connor Gaby of Freeburg has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
Stephanie Jacobs of Belleville has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
Ryan Culley of Swansea has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
Christopher Wu of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Nathan Burton of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
John Leshikar of Shiloh has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Grant Engel of Swansea has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Grant Appel of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Joel Lindsey of O’Fallon has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Madison County

Zachary Kincade of Wood River has been nominated to the U.S. Military Academy.

Jackson County

Joshua Loyd of Carbondale has been nominated to the U.S. Military Academy.
Connor Rogers of Carbondale has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Williamson County

Malachi Williams of Marion has been nominated to the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Victoria Mueller of Johnston City has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
Sean Spoerre of Carterville has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.

Jefferson County

Kadin Asbery of Mount Vernon has been nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy.
# # #

Doris Steckenrider-Christopher

 

Doris Steckenrider, 101, of Christopher passed away on Sunday January 7, 2018 at Aviston Countryside Manor.

Doris was born on November 3, 1916 in DuQuoin, IL to Jack Edward and Martha (Rushing) Greenwood.  She married John D, Steckenrider and he preceded her in death on February 1, 1982.

Survivors include her children Charles “Chip” (Robbeye) Steckenrider of Benton and Virginia “Gingy” Steckenrider of Belleville; her primary caregiver granddaughter Lauri (Eric) Kirkpatrick of Shiloh; 8 grandchildren; 22 great grandchildren and 1 great great grandchild; and one sister Betty Kimmel of Freeburg.

She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, one son John Steckenrider, one sister and three brothers.

A funeral service for Doris will be on Saturday January 13, 2018 at 1:00 PM at the Gilbert Funeral Home in Christopher with Pastor Ron Cremeens officiating.  Visitation will be on Saturday from 11:00 AM until 1:00 PM at the funeral home.  Burial will be at Mulkeytown Cemetery in Mulkeytown.

In lieu of flowers donations can be made to Aviston Countryside Manor and will be accepted at the funeral home.

Former Cardinals Jason Isringhausen and Ryan Ludwick named to minor league coaching staff

ST. LOUIS, MO – The St. Louis Cardinals announced today their 2018 minor league coaching staffs for their affiliate teams in addition to their player development personnel for the upcoming season. The Cardinals Farm System finished 4th among all teams in overall winning pct. (.546; 410-341) in 2017, winning league titles at Memphis (Pacific Coast League) and Palm Beach (co-winner in Florida State League).

The Cardinals have retained the incumbent managers for seven of their minor league affiliates, but there will be new pitching coaches at six of their affiliates. In addition, the team has announced seven new hitting coach assignments for 2018.

Stubby Clapp, the Baseball America Manager of the Year for 2017, returns for his second season at Memphis (AAA), while Johnny Rodriguez (Springfield -AA), Dann Bilardello (Palm Beach –A), Chris Swauger (Peoria — A), Joe Kruzel (State College — A), Roberto Espinosa (Johnson City — R) and Fray Peniche (Dominican Summer League 1) also return to pilot their respective teams.

Several of the team’s Field Instructors have been retained, however Randy Niemann will move into a new role as Minor League Pitching Instructor, Steve Turco will serve as Minor League Roving Instructor and former Cardinals All-Stars Ryan Ludwick (Minor League Hitting Instructor) and Jason Isringhausen (Minor League Pitching Instructor) have joined the Field Staff for 2018.

The Cardinals also announced that Melody Yount is joining the Baseball Operations staff as Manager of Player Communications, and that Jennifer Long has been named Baseball Developer and Javier Duren will serve as a Baseball Operations Fellow.

The following is a complete listing of the Cardinals 2018 Minor League Staffs and Player Development assignments:

Memphis (AAA) — Stubby Clapp* — Dernier Orozco^ — Mark Budaska
Springfield (AA) — Johnny Rodriguez* — Darwin Marrero^ — Jimenez*
Palm Beach (A) — Dann Bilardello* — Will Ohman — Brandon Allen^
Peoria (A) — Chris Swauger* — Cale Johnson^ — Russ Chambliss
State College (A) — Joe Kruzel* — Adrian Martin^ — Roger LaFrancois^
Johnson City (R) — Roberto Espinoza* — Rick Harig — Cody Gabella^
GCL Cardinals (R) — Erick Almonte^ — Giovanni Carrara* — Joshua Lopez
DSL Cardinals 1 — Fray Peniche* — Billy Villanueva* — Jose Leon
DSL Cardinals 2 — John Matos^ — TBD — Nabo Martinez
2018 Cardinals Minor League Field Instructors
Field Coordinator — Mark DeJohn*
Assistant Field Coordinator — Ron “Pop” Warner*
Dominican Republic Field Coordinator — Jose Leger
Senior Pitching Coordinator — Tim Leveque*
Minor League Offensive Strategist — George Greer*
Manager/Pitching Analytics — Paul Davis^
Minor League Pitching Instructor — Randy Niemann^
Minor League Roving Instructor — Steve Turco^
Minor League Infield Coordinator — Luis Aguayo^
Minor League Catching Instructor — Travis Tartamella*
Minor League Hitting Instructor — Ryan Ludwick^
Minor League Pitching Instructor — Jason Isringhausen^
*-Returning Manager/Coach
^-Returning Manager/Coach with new assignment

WSIL UNSUNG HERO: 10-year-old raises money for families in need

Lilyanne Cooksey (WSIL-TV)

WEST FRANKFORT – The holiday’s may be over, but one Franklin County girl is already making plans for the next Christmas. For the past two-years, 10-year-old Lilyanne Cooksey has helped give presents to families in need. Lily was determined to earn her money, not have it given to her.

They say, grandma’s house is where memories are made.

“It’s pretty fun because it’s Grandma,” said Lily. The kitchen is where Lily spent most of her days leading up to Christmas.

Please click on the link below from Evie Allen of WSIL-TV.

http://www.wsiltv.com/story/37214703/unsung-hero-10-year-old-raises-money-for-families-in-need

2017 Hamilton County Tentative Multiplier Announced

SPRINGFIELD, IL, Hamilton County has been issued a tentative property assessment equalization factor of 1.0000, according to Constance Beard, Director of the Illinois Department of Revenue.

The property assessment equalization factor, often called the “multiplier”, is the method used to achieve uniform property assessments among counties, as required by law. This equalization is particularly important because some of the state’s 6,600 local taxing districts overlap into two or more counties (e.g. school districts, junior college districts, fire protection districts). If there were no equalization among counties, substantial inequities among taxpayers with comparable properties would result.

State law requires property in Illinois to be assessed at one-third (1/3) of its market value. Farm property is assessed differently, with farm homesites and dwellings subject to regular assessing and equalization procedures, but with farmland and farm buildings assessed according to standards based on productivity.

The equalization factor is determined annually for each county by comparing the sales price of individual properties sold over the past three years to the assessed value placed on those properties by the county supervisor of assessments/county assessor.

If this three-year average level of assessment is one-third of market value, the equalization factor will be one (1). If the average level of assessment is greater than one-third of market value, the equalization factor will be less than one (1). And if the average level of assessment is less than one-third of market value, the equalization factor will be greater than one (1).

Assessments in Hamilton County are at 33.25 percent of market value, based on sales of properties in 2014, 2015, and 2016.
The equalization factor currently being assigned is for 2017 taxes, payable in 2018.

Last year’s equalization factor for the county was 1.0000.

The tentative factor is subject to change (1) if the County Board of Review takes actions which significantly affect the county assessments or (2) if local officials or others can present data showing that the Department of Revenue’s estimates of the average level of assessments in the county should be adjusted. A public hearing on the tentative multiplier will be held between 20 and 30 days after the tentative factor is published in a newspaper of general circulation within the county.

A change in the equalization factor does not mean total property tax bills will increase or decrease. Tax bills are determined by local taxing bodies when they request money each year to provide services to local citizens. If the amount requested by local taxing districts is not greater than the amount received in the previous year, then total property taxes will not increase even if assessments may have increased.

The assessed value of an individual property determines what portion of the tax burden a specific taxpayer will assume. That individual’s portion of tax responsibility is not changed by the multiplier.

Fowler Week in review: January 1-5, 2018

HARRISBURG – According to State Senator Dale Fowler (R-Harrisburg), the start of the New Year is bringing promising beginnings for development of a river port in Alexander County. Sen. Fowler also began 2018 by preparing for the start of scheduled spring session, coordinating with local mayors throughout the 59th District to meet before lawmakers return to Springfield at the end of January and joining the students of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic School for their first day in their newly constructed school facility.

In an encouraging demonstration of support for the development of a port terminal in Alexander County, Sen. Fowler had the honor of presenting the Alexander-Cairo Port District a $100,000 contribution from the Rauner Family Foundation to begin making headway on the port project. The money will go toward soft costs for the project, which includes marketing costs and identifying companies that will benefit from the development of the river port terminal.

Sen. Fowler has been a vocal advocate of the port’s development, pushing for economic growth throughout the region and encouraging investors and businesses to see the potential of a port authority in Cairo. Sen. Fowler is confident that Cairo’s location – at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio River – is ideally situated for the development of a successful river port and argues that Southern Illinois’ potential is worth the investment.

Underscoring the need for economic development in the region is Illinois’ continued decline in population, which has resulted in the state falling from the fifth most populous state in 2016 to the sixth in 2017, according to recently released data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Sen. Fowler contends that the continued outmigration of Illinois residents highlights the importance of bringing opportunities, jobs and tourism to the state and the region through projects like the river port and the Sahara Woods off-highway vehicle park project announced late last year.

Among other New Year beginnings, Sen. Fowler is gearing up for the start of a new spring legislative session. Preparing for the return to the State House, Sen. Fowler is coordinating meetings with local mayors to get some final feedback on the needs, concerns and developments within the communities of the 59th District.

Also this week, Sen. Fowler was invited to Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic School in Herrin for the first day of classes in their new regional Catholic school facility. Sen. Fowler joined the parade of students and administrators as they walked from the old campus to their newly constructed school building to begin their day in the classroom.

In other news, as the cold weather continues to bear down throughout the state, Sen. Fowler is echoing the calls from the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) to “resolve to be prepared” in 2018. As part of its initiative, IEMA and local emergency management agencies will be providing information on safety and preparedness topics each month throughout the year, including tips on winter weather readiness.

Fire breaks out on roof of Trump Tower

Provided to the NY Daily News by NBC.

NEW YORK, NY – A small fire broke out on the roof of Trump Tower on Monday morning, officials said.

Smoke was seen billowing off the top of the Manhattan skyscraper, carrying for several blocks.

Firefighters were called to the Fifth Ave. skyscraper, located at East 56thSt., at about 7:20 Monday morning.

Please click on this link the link for the developing story from the New York Daily News.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/manhattan/fire-breaks-trump-tower-roof-article-1.3744249

 

ILLINOIS LEGENDS: Zeigler, Illinois – A Breath Away From Being the Nation’s Capitol

ZEIGLER – Nestled away in the rolling hills of the Franklin County area of southern Illinois lays the forgotten town that in 1904 was only a breath away from being the nation’s capitol. It was here that in 1901 a Chicago multi-millionaire named Levi Zeigler Leiter, and his son Joseph brought the family fortune and began building a small empire. After buying 8000 acres of land, Joseph began sinking the coal mine that would become the original headquarters for the nationally known Zeigler Coal Company. 

Arial shot of Zeigler (Legends of America photo)

Leiter was so sure that his mine would be the largest and the most modern, he used champagne instead of water to mix the cornerstone concrete with. For good measure he threw in a couple expensive diamond rings and his gold watch into the mix. Engraved in the cornerstone was the date of 2004, because Leiter claimed his mine modernization would be a hundred years ahead of its time.

Please click on the link below from  Raymond D. Null of Legends of America. 

https://www.legendsofamerica.com/il-zeigler.html

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News