Below Zero wind chills again overnight….wintry mix Sunday afternoon and evening
SIH temporarily restricting patient visitation
CARBONDALE – Due to increased flu activity, visitation to SIH hospitals is temporarily limited to individuals 18 years of age or older and a maximum of two visitors per patient at a time. Possible exceptions include, but are not limited to, end-of-life care. If you have any questions, please reach out to the hospital’s infection prevention department and/or ask to speak with the house supervisor.
SIH hospitals in the region include, Herrin Hospital, Memorial Hospital of Carbondale and St. Jospeh’s Hospital of Murphysboro.
ISP District 13 Announces 2017 Activity and Enforcement
DuQuoin, IL – Illinois State Police District 13 / 22 Interim Commander, Lieutenant Michael Alvey, announced today activity and enforcement figures for calendar year 2017 for Illinois State Police District 13. Troopers in District 13, which includes Randolph, Washington, Jefferson, Perry, Franklin, Jackson, and Williamson Counties, recorded 31,187 incidents during the year.
In addition, enforcement figures totaled 10,532 citations and 19,346 written warnings, including 4,829 speeding citations, 105 DUIs, 1 Zero Tolerance, 66 Underage Drinking arrests, 965 occupant restraint citations, 5,796 written warnings for speeding, 226 Distracted Driving citations, and 256 criminal arrests. Troopers also assisted 2,903 motorists, conducted 5,746 Motor Carrier Safety Inspections, and investigated 1,471 traffic crashes. Of those crashes, 54 were fatal traffic crashes resulting in 57 fatalities.
Spring trainings in handgun safety, Concealed Carry licensure set at RLC
By ReAnne Palmer
INA, IL – Whether you’re interested in becoming concealed carry or hunting certified, or want to brush up on your handgun skills, Rend Lake College has five different trainings set for the Spring 2018 semester. Each different class offers participants new and exciting practices by trained instructors.
Classes for Illinois Concealed Carry licensure, handgun training, hunter safety and licensure, basic reloading, and Active Shooter training are set through May to accommodate all individuals and schedules.
To learn more about or to register for any of the trainings, call RLC’s Community and Corporate Education Division at 618-437-5321, Ext. 1714. Pre-registration may be required, and can be done in person, via phone call, or by emailing commcorped@rlc.edu.
Concealed Carry
Four Illinois Concealed Carry classes are returning to the RLC campus by popular demand. Locals have numerous opportunities to apply for their state permit by completing the two-day program, set for the following dates: 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 20 and Sunday, Jan. 21; 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 10 and Sunday, Feb. 11; women only from 4 – 10 p.m. Friday, March 16 and 8 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. Saturday, March 17; and 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Saturday, May 19 and Sunday, May 20.
All classes will meet instructors Ron Meek, RLC Criminal Justice Associate Professor, and Jeff Bullard, Detective Captain of the Mt. Vernon Police Department, in the Applied Science Center, Room 102, on the Ina campus.

Participants take aim on the RLC Shooting Range during the live fire qualification portion of the Concealed Carry training course.
(RLC Public Information)
During the first day, participants will prepare to get on the range with a firearms safety and marksmanship lecture, focusing on safety, the principles of marksmanship, loading and unloading, cleaning, and state and federal laws relating to firearms and force. Firearms and ammunition are not to be brought to this class.
Day two will include the live fire practice and qualification on the RLC Shooting Range, plus additional classroom discussions regarding interaction with law enforcement, recognition of risk factors and situational awareness, identification of threats, and education about range rules and procedures. Participants should bring their firearm with 100 rounds of ammunition to be inspected by course instructors.
To qualify for the Illinois permit, participants must complete 30 rounds at 5, 7, and 10 yards with at least 70 percent accuracy. A qualifying shot consists of a shot placed inside the 7 ring of a B-27 target.
Participants who complete RLC’s Concealed Carry training course are eligible to apply for Illinois and Florida Concealed Weapons licenses. A valid FOID card and a driver’s license must be brought to class. Students must attend the entire 16 hours of training, no exemptions will be given. Participants must be at least 21 years old. The cost of the training is $150 for in-state residents and $250 for out-of-state residents.
Handgun Training
Build on your handgun skills with three trainings this spring. Participants are invited to learn new techniques in Basic, Advanced, and Low-Light Engagement handgun training classes with instructor Bullard.
Understand the types of handguns, ammunition, and laws pertaining to civilian use of force during Basic Handgun Training. Bullard will cover proper stance, gripping, loading, unloading, clearing malfunctions, and firing a handgun before participants practice those techniques at the RLC Range. The class costs $65 and meets from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, March 31 or Saturday, April 28, all in the Applied Science Center, Room 102, on the Ina campus.
After completing the Basic class, enroll in Advanced Handgun Training to improve upon and learn new skills. The classroom portion of this class includes in-depth looks at the laws of civilian use of force, weak-hand shooting, one-hand shooting, one-hand reloading, shooting on the move, and range rules. On the RLC Range, participants will be tested on their marksmanship using techniques in the class. The class costs $65 and meets from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, April 21 in the Applied Science Center, Room 102, on the Ina campus.
After mastering the Advanced class, register for Low Light Engagement Handgun Training to learn how to shoot in a low-light setting. Spring dates will be set upon request.
Participants can also register for the range-only portion of a class, if they have successfully passed the class previously. Range portions are as follows: noon – 4 p.m. for Basic Handgun ($35), 9:30 a.m. – 4 p.m. for Advanced Handgun ($40), and 6 – 10 p.m. for Low Light Engagement ($35).
Participants should wear old clothes suitable for multiple shooting positions, and bring eye and ear protection, their own handgun, ammunition (150 rounds), and a valid FOID card. Extra magazines and speed loaders for reloading and malfunction drills are also suggested.
Hunter Safety
Participation in Hunter Safety is a requirement in State statute for hunters born on or after January 1, 1980, when applying for a hunting license. This course, taught by Sam Settle of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, includes topics in wildlife management, firearms safety, hunter ethics, game identification, first aid, survival techniques, and state regulations.
The training is free of charge; however, pre-registration is required due to limited space. Must attend both sessions and bring a pen or pencil. The class meets 6 – 9 p.m. Friday, March 9 and 8 a.m. – 4 p.m. Saturday, March 10, both at the RLC MarketPlace, Room 354A, Mt. Vernon.
Basic Reloading 101
Basic Reloading 101 is a beginner class that will focus on learning how to reload ammunition for a handgun. During this class, instructor Michael Dollins will teach participants how to utilize the various equipment needed for reloading, plus he will provide step-by-step instruction about the reloading process.
The class costs $15, plus a $5 supply fee to the instructor. The training meets from 6 – 9 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 8; Monday, Feb. 12; Monday, March 5; Monday, April 9; or Monday, May 14 – all in the Historic Schoolhouse on the Ina campus. No live primers or gun powder, or live ammunition will be used in this class. Alternatives will be used to ensure safety. Participants must be at least 16 years old.
Active Shooter Training

Ron Meek, RIGHT, RLC Criminal Justice Associate Professor, addresses educators between scenario-based sessions during an Active Shooter Training last year. After each scenario, the group discussed positive and negative outcomes with Meek and Jeff Bullard, LEFT, Detective Captain of the Mt. Vernon Police Department.
(ReAnne Palmer / RLC Public Information)
Local educators and businesspeople are encouraged to prepare and learn how to react during an active shooter scenario with RLC’s new Active Shooter Training program. Designed specifically for school and business professionals, the trainings will be offered to those interested in learning how to proactively handle an attack or intruder.
RLC has ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, Evacuate) certified instructors who will teach three sections of Active Shooter Training classes at 8-hour, 4-hour, or 2-hour time spans. The trainings can take place on campus, or be scheduled off-campus at schools or businesses to focus on specific building layouts.
Sesser-Valier Students attend assembly on internet safety
Warmer weather in sight
Special weather statement from the NWS regarding sub zero wind chills
…Wind Chills Will Drop Below Zero Again Tonight…
A fresh surge of Arctic air will overspread the region tonight
resulting in low temperatures in the single digits above zero.
Northwest winds will persist and may even become gusty at times
tonight. The result will take wind chills down below zero for much
of the night. The coldest wind chills are expected near sunrise
when they will range from 10 below zero near Interstate 64 in
southern Illinois and southwest Indiana to near 5 below zero over
much of west Kentucky and southeast Missouri.
Those waiting for busses in the morning and others who must be
outside should bundle up as much as possible and limit their time
outdoors. In addition, make sure outdoor pets have adequate
shelter from the cold.
A decade of giving – Sesser business giving back to community
By Jim Muir
Very quietly during the past decade the Double R Bar in Sesser has given back to the community in a big and lasting way.
This weekend – January 6, 2018 – will mark the 10th Anniversary of the Willard & Brandon Dame Hunt that will take place at Wayne Fitzgerrell State Park. Since its inception the annual event has raised more than $75,000 that has been donated to fund scholarships for Sesser-Valier High School students and to provide much-needed help to local people facing difficult medical conditions.
Charles Pool, manager of the bar, said the annual hunt has ‘grown by leaps and bounds’ in both money raised and participants. Pool said the amazing thing is that the event has not been highly publicized or promoted.

Double R Bar manager Charles Pool, left, presents a check to former Sesser-Valier High School student Luke Thompson from money raised through the annual Willard & Brandon Dame Hunt.
(Photo provided)
“This little bar has been a part of the community for a long, long time,” Pool said. “This event is just a way for us to give something back. The bar keeps none of the money raised.”
The day of the hunt will be a jam-packed marathon for the many volunteers who donate their time and resources and will include three meals – the Double R kicks the event off with a hearty breakfast prior to the hunt. All the hunters involved each pay $30 to participate. After the ‘before-daylight’ breakfast at Double R the hunt is held and then lunch is served again at the bar. Gutzler said vendors from throughout Southern Illinois donate items to be raffled off during the daylong event, including three new guns this year. Pool said each year the hunt draws 60-80 hunters. Other sponsors donate money and items that are auctioned during the daylong event.
Willard Dame and his son Brandon loved to hunt and loved the outdoors and the camaraderie with fellow hunters that go along with the sport. But tragedy struck the Dame family on December 28, 1994 when 16-year-old Brandon was critically injured in a two-car crash south of Sesser. He died the following day in a Cape Girardeau hospital. Willard died on January 26, 2007 at the relatively young age of 59.
And it’s that knowledge that spurred Double R co-owner Randy Gutzler to initiate the annual event to honor the memory of father and son while at the same time helping a local student through a scholarship fund.
Gutzler said the ‘why’ involved with the start of the yearly hunt is two-fold.
“Willard loved to hunt and Brandon started hunting with him when he was really young,” said Gutzler. “We think this is a good way to keep their memory alive and also help a deserving student continue their education.”
Pool said a portion of the money raised is donated each year to the Sesser-Valier High School Outdoorsman Club – a group that has received statewide recognition for its annual handicap deer hunt and other community-oriented programs. In recent years, Pool said, money has also been donated to local residents fighting mounting medical and travel expenses from cancer.
‘We’ve also donated more than $5,000 to St. Judes Children’s Hospital,” said Pool. “We have also helped three or four people right here in Sesser who were battling cancer.”
Chrissie (Dame) Vickers, Willard’s daughter and Brandon’s sister, gave high marks for the effort by Gutzler and Pool and the host of people that help to make the event a success. Despite his youth Vickers said her brother was an avid hunter and was also proud of his association with the popular Outdoorsman Club at S-V High School.
“I think it’s tremendous what they have accomplished with this event,” said Vickers. “As the years go by this is a way to keep my dad and my brother’s memory alive and at the same time help a young person with their education.”
She recalled that the November deer season of 1994 – only a few weeks before her brother was fatally injured – found Brandon torn about a tough decision.
“He loved the Outdoorsman Club and the handicapped deer hunt,” said Vickers. “He wanted to go to that but he really wanted to hunt with my dad. In the end he went with my dad to hunt and it was the last time they hunted together.”
Gutzler said there are certain criteria that must be met each year to qualify for the scholarship.
“The scholarship must go to a member of the Outdoorsman Club and also to a student that has a financial need,” said Gutzler. “And the scholarship has to go through Rend Lake College.”
Gutzler said he believes the event will continue to grow each year.
“We’re happy to do it each year,” said Gutzler. “To raise more than $75,000 in a little bar in a little town is a pretty good sum of money and of course it all goes for a great cause.”
Studio RLC offering free haircuts for National Law Enforcement Day
By ReAnne Palmer
INA, IL – Rend Lake College students enrolled in the Barber and Cosmetology programs are inviting all local law enforcement to stop by Studio RLC in Mt. Vernon for free haircuts on Tuesday, Jan. 9 for National Law Enforcement Appreciation Day.
Police and corrections officers, agents, investigators and the dozens of other professions in law enforcement can receive a free haircut and style from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. and 5 – 8 p.m. next Tuesday.
Daphne Mitchell, Cosmetology Associate Professor, said, while the day is about giving back to those who support our communities, it is also a chance for RLC students to hone their skills.
“To every police and law enforcement officer out there, thank you for everything you do. Thank you for making that choice to protect and serve, and for keeping us safe. It’s the least we could do to provide free haircuts to show our appreciation,” said Mitchell. “Our students are looking forward to giving back to those who are sworn to serve us while practicing their techniques learned in the classroom.”
Appointments and walk-ins are welcome. All law enforcement will need to show identification. For more information, contact Studio RLC at 618-242-8459.
Bryant E News – End of Year Review 2017
Dear Friend,
We have now come to the final edition of the Bryant E-News for 2017! What a year it has been in Illinois politics. This week I will share information on more than 200 new laws that will be on the books as of January 1, 2018. Please take the time to get informed on new laws for the New Year.
I also share links to all 34 previous Bryant E News editions from this year. It is truly an honor to serve as your State Representative in Springfield. Your readership of this online newsletter has exploded in the last two years. Since I first took office in 2015, press releases, pictures, video reactions, articles, and editions of Bryant E News, have been viewed over 150,000 times. (153,155) as of this morning to be exact!
I want my constituents to be informed on the major issues facing the State of Illinois. I am thrilled at the growth in our email newsletter list and the continued readership from so many of you. I pledge to continue keeping you up to date on all the happenings as the new legislative Session begins in January 2018.
To all my friends, family, and constituents, and to everyone in Illinois and across America, I wish you a safe, Happy, and healthy New Year!
NEW YEAR NEW LAWS – Get informed for 2018!
With the arrival of the new year comes a series of new laws enacted by the State of Illinois. This year, over 200 new laws will take effect on January 1. These include bills for small technical corrections as well as major pieces of legislation. Follow the link below for a recap of the new laws that will be on the books next year.
NEW YEAR NEW LAWS RECAP – Illinois House Republican Blog
For more information on all the bills in the General Assembly, please visit www.ilga.gov
There is one law in particular this year that I was the chief sponsor of that was signed into law that I want to highlight. That bill is HB 771, and you can find a synopsis and a record of action on the bill by following this link.

Rep. Bryant and Sen. Schimpf were named
“Honorary Fire Chiefs” in 2017 (From State Represenative Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro)
In Illinois, 70 percent of all firefighters are volunteers. This new law will allow a volunteer firefighter to purchase one set of tires for their vehicle every three years at a reduced price per the fire district’s joint purchasing agreement. The goal is to provide a little bit of help to the folks that volunteer to fight fires and keep us safe.
I’m particularly thankful to Senator Paul Schimpf for his advocacy and for sponsoring this bill in the Senate. This law is different than the others that are highlighted above because it became effective on September 8 of this year, the day it was signed by Governor Rauner.