NHECM’s Animals Important to Humanity

Press release from the US Army Corps of Engineers, Rend Lake Project Office

BENTON, IL – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Rend Lake will be hosting the Natural History Education Company as they present Animals Important to Humanity at the Rend Lake Project Office/Visitor Center on Saturday, August 26th, 2017. Some ways that animals are important may surprise you.

Join Bob Tarter of the NHECM as he entertains and educates the audience with his live animals! Animals Important to Humanity will take place on Saturday, August 26th at 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m.

Programs in our Environmental Science Series are free, open to the public, and suitable for all ages.

The 2017 Environmental Science Series will conclude on September 2nd with Ancient Survival Arts, presented by wilderness guide Mark Denzer of the Trails of Awareness Project. Learn how to select materials from nature to be used as food, shelter, primitive hunting, rope making, and much more! For more information about Rend Lake’s Environmental Science Series, please call the Rend Lake Project Office at 618-724-2493 or “like” our Facebook page Rend Lake Project Office/Visitor Center.

After viewing eclipse downstate, long trip back home anything but stellar

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-eclipse-traffic-delays-20170822-story.html

The photo of the Johnston City exit was shared on the Tribune headline story. (Scott Olson, Getty Images)

CHICAGO, IL  – (Nerida Moreno, Chicago Tribune.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below)

It took Ann McNamara nearly 15 hours to complete what is typically a five-hour trip from downstate Illinois to Chicago as thousands headed back home after the solar eclipse, clogging nearly every major highway.

McNamara, 56, of Irving Park, left Lake Egypt around 4:45 p.m. Monday but was trapped on I-57 in standstill traffic with her two young boys.

“It was the worst traffic I’ve ever seen, and I grew up in Chicago,” she said. “There were trucks pulled over on the exit ramps, on the shoulders of exit ramps, on the shoulders of the highway. A few times, I shut the car off for up to 40 minutes. So it was really bad.”

State Announces October 1 Start for Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program Enrollment

LIHEAP, PIPP applications available for seniors, people with disabilities beginning October 1

Press release from the department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity

SPRINGFIELD, IL – The Illinois Department of Commerce & Economic Opportunity’s Office of Community Assistance announced today that the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) will begin accepting applications for winter heating assistance for seniors and people with disabilities beginning October 1, 2017.

LIHEAP is a state and federally funded energy assistance program for low-income families, in which heating bill payments are made on behalf of households. Applications are processed through a network of 35 local administering agencies around the state. These agencies will begin accepting applications on a first-come, first-served basis from the elderly and people with disabilities starting on October 1, 2017.

Customers must bring all required documentation when applying for assistance including:

Proof of gross income from all household members for the 30-day income period beginning with the date of the application.
A copy of their current heat and electric bills issued within the last 30 days (if they pay for their energy directly).
A copy of their rental agreement (if they are renting) showing that utilities are included, the monthly rental amount and landlord contact information.
Proof of Social Security numbers for all household members.
Proof that their household received Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF); Aid to the Aged, Blind, or Disabled (AABD); or other benefits, such as Medical Eligibility or Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), if receiving assistance from the Illinois Department of Human Services.

A single-person household can qualify with a monthly income of up to $1,508; a two-person household up to $2,030; a family of three can earn up to $2,553; and a family of four can earn up to $3,075. Benefits are paid directly to energy vendors on behalf of eligible households. The exception is households whose heating costs are included in their rent. These households must provide proof that their rent is more than 30% of their income in order to qualify for LIHEAP benefits.

Disconnected households and families with children ages 5 or under (includes all children who are not yet 6 years old, that is, up to 5 years and 364 days old) can begin applying for LIHEAP assistance beginning November 1, 2017. Individuals not eligible for priority enrollment can apply beginning December 1, 2017.   LIHEAP applicants will be served on a first-come, first-served basis until May 31, 2018 or until funding is exhausted.

The Percentage of Income Payment Plan (PIPP) program is a similar bill-payment assistance program and applications will be accepted starting October 1, 2017 for LIHEAP eligible households who are customers of one of the following utilities: Ameren Illinois, ComEd, Nicor Gas, and Peoples Gas/North Shore Gas utilities. Under PIPP, eligible households pay a percentage of their income towards their utility bill, supplemented by a monthly state benefit. Participating households are eligible for a reduction in outstanding bills for every on-time payment they make.  PIPP applicants will be served on a first-come, first-served basis until December 31, 2017 or until funding is exhausted.

For a complete listing of LIHEAP’s local administering agencies and additional information about the program, go to www.liheapIllinois.com.  

 

WSIL Preview: Red Devils hopeful for consecutive playoff appearances

http://www.wsiltv.com/story/36170010/red-devils-hopeful-for-consecutive-playoff-appearances

SESSER, IL-  (Sean Conway, WSIL-TV.  Please click on the link for the full story and video.  Here is an excerpt below)

WSIL photo

With preseason practices coming to a close, many high school football teams have their eyes set on the regular season and dreams of playoff contention.

Last season, the team made their first playoff appearance in four years, before an early first round exit.

“I think our biggest challenge is us stopping ourselves, and not being able to finish games. Because last year we had problems with that. Some games we weren’t able to finish. We had good leads on teams and we just let it slip. So I think the problem is us holding ourselves against each other,” said Red Devil fullback/linebacker Jayon Malone.

 

Piscotty sticks with the Cardinals – Luke Voit optioned to Memphis

by Steve Dunford

Several media outlets have shared this, and I have been waiting for a press release from the team.  Since it is three hours before game time, I will go ahead and share.

Stephen Piscotty, who started the year as the teams cleanup hitter, will stay with the Cardinals. The struggling outfielder who was optioned to Memphis at the beginning of the month, was added as the 26th player in the game against the Pirates in Williamsport PA, as part of the Little League World Series festivities.

Voit has been a successful pinch hitter for the Cardinals.  He only has 23 at bats in 18 games for the Cardinals.  He will likely be recalled on September 1, or when Memphis finishes their season.

The Eclipse in Nature

by Steve Dunford

I was curious yesterday how the eclipse would affect wildlife, animals and the temperature change in general.

At my vantage point in West Frankfort, I noticed around 12:50 p.m. the cicadas and crickets began to holler and chirp.  The birds were going to their nests.  A few minutes the wind began to pick up, then there was a stillness like nightfall.

The Lake of Egypt before totality yesterday. (Photo from Bob Wilson, co-owner of Wilson McRenyolds Funeral Home in Marion, and Stone Funeral Home in West Frankfort)

I wrote a piece yesterday discussing some things that I thought would be really cool to experience during the event.  One of those was to be on a local lake.  At one time, I used to   I have read several accounts on social media that stated that fish began to feed and flop like they do in the evening before dark.  They began to jump close to and during totality, after the eclipse, the fish calmed down.

In the building that I live in, there are some people that have service dogs.  There is one that I pay close attention to is a black and white Shih Tzu.  At one time I had a dog like that.  I know they are very smart and sense things.

Around 1:00 p.m., I noticed that it was running in circles.  The other dogs seemed slightly agitated and a little nervous.  Close to totality they became very calm.

Jagger’s Doggie Day Care in Mt. Vernon is a sponsor of this page.  They committed to keep the dogs indoors during the eclipse.  I talked with Connie Olson, owner and operator with her husband Randy this afternoon.  She said on a normal day there are a lot of dogs that sleep in the afternoon because they play hard in the morning.  Yesterday, because they were thinking it was nightfall, 95% were asleep.

I mentioned that I would love to been on a farm, to see how the livestock acted.  Even though I grew up on Main Street in Thompsonville, our neighbor across the road that lived there until I was about 14, Gene Lager,  had cattle.

When there was a bad storm or other changes in nature, I always would remember they would act strange.  I would have liked to compare notes from my childhood or the times I have helped farmers out from time to time as a teenager in what I noticed.

The roosters did crow.  At first I said I was more interested in the things of nature.  However,  “God’s Light Show” was the greatest thing I ever experienced.

Recap of the IHSA board of directors meeting: 8/21/17

Press release from Matt Troha, Assistant Executive Director of the Illinois High School Association

The IHSA Board of Directors met for their regularly scheduled meeting at the IHSA office in Bloomington on Monday, August 21, 2017 where the Board announced that Hoffman Estates High School will serve as the new host of the IHSA Boys Gymnastics State Finals.

Hoffman Estates will host the state finals for the first time this May, and will also be the state championship venue in 2019 and 2020. Hoffman Estates has hosted the IHSA Boys Volleyball State Finals since 1995, as well as the IHSA Class 2A & 3A Boys Soccer State Finals since 2013.

“Hoffman Estates High School is thrilled to continue our partnership with the IHSA by hosting the Boys Gymnastics State Finals,” said Hoffman Estates Athletic Director Steve Lacni. “We look forward to showcasing the best boys’ gymnasts in the state, while continuing to promote the great sport of gymnastics. I want to thank the Township High School D211 Board of Education, administration, and the IHSA for supporting us in this endeavor.”

Hinsdale Central hosted the IHSA Boys Gymnastics State Finals the past four years.

“We are excited about the next chapter of the IHSA Boys Gymnastics State Finals at Hoffman Estates High School,” said IHSA Executive Director Craig Anderson. “Hoffman Estates has shown tremendous pride in their efforts to put on first-class IHSA state final events, and we know that boys’ gymnastics will be the next IHSA sports to benefit from their passion. We also want to recognize and thank Athletic Director Dan Jones and the entire Hinsdale Central community for all they have done in hosting the past four years.”

 

ACTION ITEMS
1.The Board approved the Program for International Students at Arlington Heights (St. Viator).

2. The Board approved a recommendation to allow winners in the IHSA Music Sweepstakes contest the ability to purchase an IHSA medallion, in addition to the IHSA pin they are awarded in the contest.

3. The Board approved updates to the IHSA’s Document Retention Policy.

4. The Board approved the IHSA’s Personnel Policies for the 2017-18 school year.

 

DISCUSSION ITEMS
At each meeting of the Board of Directors, there are certain items the Board discusses, but upon which no action is taken. The following is a report of those items from the August 21, 2017, agenda:

1. Don Sebestyen, the Chairperson for the Illinois Council of Private Schools, presented data to the Board about the IHSA’s multiplier and success formula.

2. The Board heard a report from Assistant Executive Director Sam Knox on the 2017 IHSA Officials Conference, which was attended by over 600 officials in East Peoria on July 21-22.

3. The Board heard a report from Associate Executive Director Kurt Gibson on the 2017 IHSA All-School Mailing.

4. The Board heard a report on the IADA’s New Athletic Directors Workshop co-hosted by the IHSA in July.

5. The Board heard a report on member school financial aid information.

6. The Board heard a report from the staff on its staff retreat discussion, including future ideas to be presented on classifications and state series structure.

7. The Board heard a report on IHSA staff goals for the 2017-18 school year.

 

In the future Emergency Alert Days will be declared on the website

by Steve Dunford

Yesterday we witnessed an unprecedented event.  Every north-south thoroughfare in the county was tied up with people heading home after the eclipse, from several locations across Southern Illinois that experienced totality.

The average post during the traffic was reaching between 1,500 and 2,000 people.  During the flood and other severe weather events, there have been posts that have reached over 10,000 people.

This morning I went through and cleaned out several posts dealing with traffic.  During that, I was thinking other media outlets use words to key people in on what is happening.  For instance, KFVS issues a First Alert storm day.

On my walk today, I came up with a criteria to issue Emergency Alerts on the website.

  • If there is a watch or warning issued by the Storm Prediction Center or National Weather Service in Paducah.  This goes for all products issued with watch or warning in the title.  This will not be issued for advisories.
  • If there is a slight risk of severe weather (level 2 of 5 on the day of the event, or any forecast by the Storm Prediction Center, that has the region under an Elevated (level three of 5) Moderate (level 4 of 5) or High (Level 5 of 5) risk of severe weather.
  • If there is a situation like yesterday, where roads are jammed or to avoid a stretch of highway in the county.
  • If there would be an area that will be without utility service for an extended period of time.
  • If there is a situation in the county that will affect a multiple number of people, for example, when the bomb threat was called in at Franklin Hospital.

I, or if staff is added someone else,  will make a post with this clipart to the left, explain the emergency why an alert is issued, and the main focus of coverage during the duration will focus around why the alert was issued.  There could be other news, sports, and weather posted during the duration.  Yesterday it was hard keeping up with the traffic alerts.

During severe weather events, Channel 3 Meteorologist Jim Rasor uses the phrase he is not trying to make anyone afraid but aware.  I know the words “Emergency Alert” sounds strong, but when I use them, it is not for drama, but awareness.

In events like this, I encourage you to have at least two ways to receive information.  One media outlet might have some information that I might not have or visa versa.

I keep either directly or indirectly with emergency officials in the county.  Thank you for the trust you shown in me yesterday, I hope I can continue to keep that trust, and earn more citizens of Franklin and surrounding counties in the future.

Zeigler Firefighters- Mayor Dennis Mitchell to host pancake and sausage breakfast on Saturday

ZEIGLER, IL –  The Zeigler Fire Department and Mayor Dennis  will host a pancake and sausage breakfast on Saturday, August 26., at the fire station.

They will be serving between 7:00 to 11:00 a.m.  The cost is $7.00 for adults, and children under 12, $5.00.

Proceeds will go toward the homecoming fireworks fund.  Donations are welcome.

 

ANNOUNCING THE 2017 DU QUOIN STATE FAIR GRAND MARSHAL

Dinger Bats co-owners, Kyle & Randy Drone of Ridgway, will lead the Twilight Parade

Press Release from the Illinois Department of Agriculture

DU QUOIN, IL – The Du Quoin State Fair is happy to announce Dinger Bats co-owners, Kyle & Randy Drone of Ridgway, as the Grand Marshals of the 2017 Twilight Parade.

“We are thrilled to have Dinger Bats as part of the 2017 Du Quoin State Fair Twilight Parade,” says Tibretta Reiman, Du Quoin State Fair Manager, “They are making a huge splash in Major League Baseball and we proud to say they are made right here in southern Illinois.”

Baseball isn’t just a sport to Kyle and his family, it’s a way of life. Kyle’s dad, Randy Drone, also helps in the shop and many of the employees are family members. After playing college baseball, Kyle moved back home and founded Dinger Bats alongside his father with the idea making quality and affordable professional grade wood baseball bats.

As with any new business, things started slow, but have now exploded for this small-town company. Dinger Bats now provides bats for a slew of Major League Baseball players, most notably Kyle Schwarber of the Chicago Cubs. Other players include Jason Heyward, also of the Chicago Cubs, Starling Marte and Sean Rodriguez of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Matt Adams of the Atlanta Braves, and many more!

The Drone’s also knows the importance of giving back to the community. Dinger Charitable Group is dedicated to helping provide equipment and funding to community baseball teams. They hold auctions on their eBay page of various items, many of which clients donate.

The Du Quoin State Fair Twilight Parade will begin at 6 pm on Friday, August 25. Admission to the fair is $2 for all adults while kids 12 and under are free. Friday, August 25 is College Night and anyone with a current student ID will also receive free admission.

A FREE concert by the Chicago 6 will be held at the Grandstand at 8 pm, following the parade. Three members of the ’85 Chicago Bears defensive line formed The Chicago 6 in 2012 and now travel the state performing.

The 2017 Du Quoin State Fair will take place August 25 – September 4 in Du Quoin, IL. Plan your visit today by going to our website at www.duquoinstatefair.net.

 

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News