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For Illinois Schools, wait for needed funds continues

June 7, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

http://www.wpsdlocal6.com/story/35605010/for-illinois-schools-wait-for-needed-funds-continues?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook_WPSD-TV

MURPHYSBORO, IL (Rachel Krause, WPSD-TV.  Click on the link above for the full story and video.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Murphysboro superintendent Chris Grode and school board president Rick Runge talk about the financial situation in their district. The full story features the specifics facing their district. (WPSD-TV photo)

Students are home for the summer, but schools in Illinois still need to be paid in part for the school year that just ended. Districts are waiting on more than $16 million in unpaid categorical funds from the state.

Categorical funds are used for things such as bus transportation, free and reduced lunches, and special education personnel. The programs and amounts are specific to each district, but all districts are supposed to receive four categorical payments each school year.

This past school year, lawmakers ended the years-long process of proration, a practice that cut state aid to all districts by the same percentage when funds were short. Lawmakers’ claim that they’re fully funding districts this school year refers to the end of proration and fully funding districts at the full general state aid level. But districts said the money they weren’t receiving from the state through proration doesn’t even come close to making up for what they’re not being paid in categorical funds.

As the state has had no budget in place for two years, the state comptroller’s office must wait to process the payments until it’s reached from the bottom of the stack to the top of the payment list. Representatives with the Illinois comptroller’s office said the payments for school districts from September 2016 were distributed once the full $425 million was available to be dispersed at once. That payment came for districts in April 2017.

The story breaks down what the state owes each district.  Here is the breakdown for Franklin County:

Benton CCSD 47 – $313,300.72

Akin CCSD 91 – $22,979.02

Christopher USD 99 – $224,596.08

Benton Cons HSD 103 – $205,438.24

Ewing Northern CCSD 115 – $69,470.02

Frankfort CUSD 168 – $505,881.63

Thompsonville CUSD 174 – $74,195.08

Zeiger-Royalton CUSD 188 – $224,894.66

Sesser-Valier CUSD 196 – $219,298.24

TOTAL: $1,860,053.69

Page 2 of 3

Page 3 of 3

Extra Districts as listed on the ISBE state directory:

Special Education District

– Department of Corrections school district in Harrisburg – 60105428030 – owed $187,697

Special Ed/Private: (no reports listed)

Brehm Preparatory School (Jackson)

The Mentor Network (Jackson)

VoTech

Williamson County CTE System – $283,084.00

Five County Regional Voc Center 30002748040 – no report listed

Five County Regional Voc Center 30002748045 – $227,520.00

TOTAL: $510,604

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Filed Under: Breaking News, Franklin Co. News, Slider, State News

Illinois gas prices lowest in 12 years for start of summer road trip season

June 6, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment
read:http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-illinois-summer-gas-prices-0606-biz-20170605-story.html

CHICAGO – (Ally Marotti, Chicago Tribune. Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt.)

Travelers in Illinois are starting summer road trip season with the lowest gas prices for this time of year
in more than a decade.
At $2.40 per gallon, the Illinois average for regular unleaded gas was about 2 cents higher than the national average Monday but about 13 cents lower than a year ago, according to AAA numbers.

Gas prices typically rise as the summer beats on, peaking around the Fourth of July, Mosher said, but prices this summer are expected to remain tame.

A concoction of low demand and generally more mild prices that have stuck around for a couple of years helped with that, Mosher said. Plus, springtime refinery issues that often hit Illinois and push up prices didn’t happen this year.

 

 

Filed Under: Breaking News, Slider, State News

Police on the lookout for two armed and dangerous Harrisburg men

June 6, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

http://www.dailyregister.com/news/20170605/police-seeking-armed-and-dangerous-harrisburg-men

Law enforcement officials have gotten some leads, but the search for two Harrisburg men considered armed and dangerous goes on, Harrisburg Police Chief David Morris said Monday.

The men are Xzavier Burnell Gibbs, 19, of 612 S. Jackson St., and Jarred R. Crawford, 30, of 314 N. Land St. Both are wanted on no-bond warrants for aggravated battery.

Because both men are considered by law enforcement to be armed and dangerous, neither should be approached, Morris said.

Morris said anyone with information can also leave a confidential message with the Saline County Sheriff’s Department at (618) 252-8661.

Filed Under: Breaking News, Slider, Thompsonville News

Two Sesser residents arrested for stealing from Consol

June 6, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

http://www.wsiltv.com/story/35594451/two-sesser-residents-arrested-for-stealing-from-coal-mine

(From WSIL-TV.  Please click on the link for the full story above.  Here is an excerpt below.

SCHELLER, IL — After a lengthy investigation, two people are in jail for stealing from a local coal mine.

Robert and Jennifer Gifford, of Sesser, were arrested late last week for stealing from Consolidated Coal Company on Emerson City Road in Scheller.

Filed Under: Breaking News, Franklin Co. News, Sesser News, Slider

Lack of budget hurting families relying on local food pantries

June 6, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

WSIL Photo

http://www.wsiltv.com/story/35594832/lack-of-budget-hurting-families-relying-on-local-food-pantries

CHRISTOPHER, IL – (Sean Conway, WSIL-TV.  Please click on the link above to read the full story and watch the video.  Here is an excerpt below.)

As we near closer to the summer season, many area food pantries find it harder to keep the shelves stocked each month.

Pantries like the Ministry For The Broken Hearted in Christopher have been struggling to make ends meet for the hungry lately.

A recent cut in funding by a local church has led the pantry to make cuts of their own, making it harder to feed the 300 families they serve each month.

 

Filed Under: Breaking News, Christopher News, Franklin Co. News, Slider

Former RLC Board Chair Eric Black honored for service

June 6, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

INA, Ill. (June 6, 2017) – Eric Black, CENTER, former Chair of the Rend Lake College Board of Trustees and current Board Secretary, was honored during the regular board meeting Tuesday evening for his years of service. Black served as chair from 2013-2017. He was replaced by Randy Rubenacker, LEFT, during the May meeting. Also pictured is RLC President Terry Wilkerson, RIGHT.
(ReAnne Palmer / RLC Public Information)

Filed Under: Breaking News, Slider

50 Influencers of Rend Lake College: Congressman Ken Gray, The road to Rend Lake

June 5, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

Reece Rutland – Rend Lake College Public Information

There are many names that dot the history of Rend Lake College. Some of those names have lent themselves to buildings on campus, others to classrooms. But, only one name literally leads every visitor right to the doors of RLC, Kenneth J. Gray.

The late congressman Ken Gray (D-West Frankfort) Photos provided by RLC Public Information

Gray, a former United States Rep. who represented Southern Illinois in Congress between 1954-74 and 1985-89, is cemented in the history of the college and the surrounding area via Ken Gray Parkway, the road that the Ina campus proudly calls home

His initiatives while in office delivered $7 billion in regional projects to the area. Initiatives like Interstates 57, 24 and 64, the Marion Federal Penitentiary, opening the Kaskaskia River to barge traffic and the construction of Rend Lake were all made possible through Gray’s work.

Known for his colorful demeanor as much as his politics, Gray is credited by RLC’s founding fathers as “being instrumental in creating the statewide community college system and Rend Lake College.” For his efforts, the Rep. was the one of the keynote speakers at RLC’s Dedication ceremony on Sept. 26, 1971, and received the first honorary degree awarded by the college.

At the time, Dr. Allen Y. Baker, Vice Chairman of the College Board of Trustees, lauded Gray for his “many fine contributions” to the college.

He credited Gray with “giving us hope and confidence in ourselves.”

Gray, in turn, called his honorary degree from Rend Lake College “the finest single honor I received during two decades in Congress.”

Dr. James Snyder, then president of RLC, speculated, “It probably is the first honorary degree to be granted by a community college in the State of Illinois.”

Ken Gray speaking at RLC’s Dedication ceremony on Sept. 26, 1971.

As for the road that carries Gray’s name, there’s a funny story there too.

Initially dubbed “Ken Gray Boulevard,” a critic argued that the name “sounds too much like something metropolitan.” The Trustees agreed, and during a June 18, 1974, meeting voted to change it to the “Ken Gray Parkway” we know today.

It’s hard to imagine Rend Lake College without Rend Lake

Dubbed the “Prince of Pork,” Gray was widely criticized by his opposition for his pork barrel politics, but the desperate need for water in Southern Illinois for decades had the area in dire straits. A three-year drought in the 1950s finally sparked talks about building a reservoir in the area.

“I can remember seeing a horse pulling a wagon with water on it and could name 50 communities around here that had to haul water. Lakes had dried up and cities and towns had to haul water. Even in larger towns, the lakes would dry up and towns couldn’t get water,” Gray said in the book “Pass the Plate: The Legend and Legacy of United States Congressman Kenneth J. Gray.”

In 1973, thanks largely to Gray’s work in Washington, the Big Muddy River was dammed, and the lake was filled. Historical accounts say the impact was immediate with new housing and businesses popping up where drought had ravaged for years.

It is estimated that the lake provides for 35 towns and 1,200 retail customers over seven counties.

While it was originally constructed to bring water into the area, the lake has also saved the area from flood damage by regulating the water level.

A closeup of Ken Gray at the dedication of Rend Lake College in 1971

“They call Rend Lake pork,” Mr. Gray said in a 2008 interview with The Southern Illinoisan, referring to one of the projects he had supported, a reservoir created when the Army Corps of Engineers dammed the Big Muddy River. “Yet the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, six years ago when there was tremendous flooding, said that because of Rend Lake holding the water back, more than $100 million worth of property downstream was saved.”

“If that is pork, pass me the plate, because I’ll take another heaping serving.”

Born in the Franklin County town of West Frankfort in 1924, he graduated from Frankfort High School and served in the Army Air Corps during World War II.

In 2008, a portion of Interstate 57, between Mile Post 0 at the Illinois State Line and Mile Post 106 at the Marion/Jefferson County Line, was named the Ken Gray Expressway. Mr. Gray had helped write the Interstate Highway Act, which President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed in 1956.

A state of Illinois news release announcing the expressway naming at the time said Gray brought seven presidents to southern Illinois. The statement said Gray “was known for his flamboyant wardrobe, humor, amicability and a fierce passion for bringing federal funds to southern Illinois.”

He died on July 12, 2014, in Herrin at the age of 89, after a long battle with illness.

In addition to the two stretches of road, Gray is also memorialized with the Kenneth Gray Federal Building in Benton and the post office in West Frankfort carrying his name.

Outside of politics, Gray served in World War II as part of the Army Air Forces, earning three bronze stars for his service. He served as an aircraft crew chief and attained the rank of first sergeant before being discharged in 1945.

According to a news piece written after his death, Gray started wheeling and dealing early, opening his own business, Gray’s Roller Rink in West Frankfort, at the tender age of 13. He became an auctioneer at 16, and bought Gray Motors Car Dealership at 18, a business that he operated until 1954. He also operated an air service out of Benton Airport following the war.

Filed Under: Featured, Slider

Miners Sweep CornBelters With Record-Setting Performance

June 5, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

The Southern Illinois Miners erupted for a Frontier League-record 15 runs in the top of the fourth inning and finished just one run shy of tying a team record for most runs in a game, pounding out 22 total hits in a 21-4 victory over the Normal CornBelters on Sunday night at The Corn Crib to complete a road sweep with their third consecutive win.

Normal scored first in the game on an RBI fielder’s choice by Nolan Meadows in the first inning, but Tyler Stubblefield (1-1) limited the damage by inducing an inning-ending double-play off the bat of Diego Cedeno. Meanwhile, the Miners were held to no runs on two hits by Bob Wheatley (2-2) through the first three innings.

Miners 2B Craig Massey went 3-6 and drove in four runs in yesterdays game at Normal. (Southern Illinois Miners photo)

In the top of the fourth, however, the Miners would explode and set a Frontier League record for most runs in an inning. Two singles and a walk to begin the inning loaded the bases, and after a strikeout for the first out, London Lindley‘s RBI single tied the game at 1-1. Craig Massey then reached on an error, with the Miners taking a 2-1 lead as all runners were safe on the play. Nolan Earley then singled home two runs and went to third base thanks to another error, scoring Massey and making it 5-1. Ryan Lashley kept the rally going, smacking an RBI single to make it 6-1 and chase Wheatley, but the Miners weren’t done. Two batters later, Willi Martin doubled home a run, and Justin Chigbogu singled home another for an 8-1 Miners lead. Culver Plant‘s first professional hit, an RBI double, continued the inning and made it 9-1, while Lindley followed with a two-run single to extend the lead to 11-1.

Still the Miners were not finished in the frame. Massey scored Lindley with an RBI double for a 12-1 advantage, and after Earley walked, Lashley blasted a three-run home run to cap the single-frame onslaught at 15 runs, breaking the previous Miners record of 11 runs in a single inning and surpassing the previous Frontier League record of 12 runs in an inning.

Southern Illinois added on four more runs to their lead in the fifth inning thanks to a double by Lindley and home runs by Ben Moore and Massey, extending the lead out to 19-1 at its largest. After Normal got three runs in the bottom of the fifth, Chigbogu cranked a two-run home run to center field in the sixth inning to complete to scoring.

Every one of the Miners’ starters in the game had multiple runs scored and multiple hits in the game, with Massey and Lindley each going 3-for-6 with three runs scored and four RBIs. Six other Miners had two runs scored each, and Lashley finished with four RBIs while Chigbogu drove in three. The 21 runs scored by the Miners were one away from tying a franchise record, while their 22 hits were three away from tying the team’s all-time best.

The Miners continue their road trip on Tuesday night in Avon, Ohio against the Lake Erie Crushers at Sprenger Stadium, with the first pitch of game one of the three-game midweek series at 6:05 p.m. Corey Sessions will pitch for the Miners against Lake Erie right-hander Jordan Kurokawa.

BOX SCORE

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS

# Batter P AB R H RBI BB SO AVG
23 Massey, C 2B 6 3 3 4 1 0 .297
15 Earley, N RF 5 2 2 2 2 1 .253
19 Lashley, R 3B 5 2 2 4 1 0 .243
27 Flores, M LF 6 2 2 0 0 3 .267
25 Martin, W DH 6 2 3 1 0 0 .350
41 Chigbogu, J 1B 5 3 2 3 1 1 .247
7 Moore, B C 4 2 2 1 1 0 .200
30   Germaine, B C
PH
1 0 0 0 0 0 .292
26 Plant, C SS 5 2 3 1 1 1 .429
2 Lindley, L CF 6 3 3 4 0 0 .289
49 21 22 20 7 6
2B: C.Massey (3), W.Martin (2), C.Plant 2 (2), L.Lindley (4).
HR: C.Massey (1), R.Lashley (2), J.Chigbogu (3), B.Moore (1).
RBI: C.Massey 4 (10), N.Earley 2 (10), R.Lashley 4 (16), W.Martin (5), J.Chigbogu 3 (15), B.Moore (4), C.Plant (1), L.Lindley 4 (4).
Team LOB: 8. 2B: C.Massey (3), W.Martin (2), C.Plant 2 (2), L.Lindley (4).
HR: C.Massey (1), R.Lashley (2), J.Chigbogu (3), B.Moore (1).
RBI: C.Massey 4 (10), N.Earley 2 (10), R.Lashley 4 (16), W.Martin (5), J.Chigbogu 3 (15), B.Moore (4), C.Plant (1), L.Lindley 4 (4).
Team LOB: 8.
# Pitcher IP H R ER BB SO ERA
38   Stubblefield, T 5.0 9 4 4 3 1 5.40
10 Lollar, J 2.0 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
1 Palacios, N 1.0 2 0 0 0 1 5.56
12 DeBoo, C 1.0 0 0 0 1 1 5.69
9 12 4 4 4
Pitching
BF: T.Stubblefield 25, J.Lollar 7, N.Palacios 5, C.DeBoo 4.
P-S: T.Stubblefield 101-58, J.Lollar 25-15, N.Palacios 13-11, C.DeBoo 16-8.
NORMAL
# Batter P AB R H RBI BB SO AVG
10 Ruiz, Y DH 4 2 2 0 1 0 .357
12 Chirino, S SS 5 0 1 0 0 0 .329
5 Meadows, N 1B
RF
5 1 1 2 0 1 .278
7 Dudley, A 1B 3 0 2 1 1 0 .366
9   Carter, K RF 0 0 0 0 1 0 .286
24 Torres, M 3B 4 0 1 1 1 0 .258
13 Cedeno, D CF 4 0 1 0 0 1 .233
28 Lepre, C C 2 0 1 0 0 0 .292
18   Hakes, B C 2 0 1 0 0 0 .214
11 Fletcher, J 2B 4 0 1 0 0 1 .259
3 Morris, T LF 3 1 1 0 0 0 .237
31   Middleton, J LF
PH
1 0 0 0 0 0 .231
37 4 12 4 4 3
Batting
2B: A.Dudley (8).
RBI: N.Meadows 2 (14), A.Dudley (18), M.Torres (8).
Team LOB: 10.
Normal
# Pitcher IP H R ER BB SO ERA
25 Losing Pitcher  Wheatley, B 3.1 7 7 6 4 2 5.30
35 Maddern, B 0.0 3 3 3 0 0 17.18
16 Fishberg, A 0.2 4 5 5 1 1 15.75
15 Long, C 0.2 3 4 4 1 0 11.57
34 Hasenbeck, M 1.1 3 2 2 1 0 4.50
8 Mejia, R 1.0 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
19 Blackwell, S 2.0 2 0 0 0 2 1.93
9 22 21 20 7 6
Pitching
BF: B.Wheatley 21, B.Maddern 3, A.Fishberg 7, C.Long 6, M.Hasenbeck 8, R.Mejia 3, S.Blackwell 8.
P-S: B.Wheatley 80-43, B.Maddern 9-6, A.Fishberg 27-14, C.Long 27-13, M.Hasenbeck 27-15, R.Mejia 13-8, S.Blackwell 23-17.
WP: B.Wheatley (1).
LINE SCORE:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
S Illinois 0 0 0 15 4 2 0 0 0 21 22 0
Normal 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 4 12 2
Filed Under: Slider, Sports

Franklin County SIU graduates for the spring semester

June 5, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

Southern Illinois University Carbondale held its Spring 2017 commencement activities, May 13.   They are listed below according to the town they reside in.

BENTON:

Brock C. Britton, BFA, art

Savanah J. Bullock, MSW, social work

Benjamin S. Dawson, BS, engineering technology

Raven C. Denbow, BS, animal science

Michaela L. Dollins, BS, civil engineering

Natasha K. Hammonds, BS, social work

Makennah M. Miller, BS, elementary education

Cassidy R. Neal, BS, accounting

Ethan M. Overturf, BS, special education

Jessa M. Thomas, BS, social work

Katie L. Williams, BS, elementary education

CHRISTOPHER:

Brenna L. Johnston, BS, social work

Jill A. Logan, MSW, social work

SESSER:

Cody A. Lingle, BS, information systems technologies

THOMPSONVILLE:

Charles J. Eaton, BS, information systems technologies

Cletus E. Price, JD, law

WEST FRANKFORT:

Ellen S. Beasley, BS, health care management

Devin Blackledge, BS, information systems technologies

Christi J. Bromley, BS, communication disorders and sciences

Micah D. Broy, BS, social work

Adam L. Dutton, BS, accounting

Heather M. Milligan, BS, social work

John C. Nolen, BA, computer science

Melanie S. Stoner, BS, paralegal studies

Jacob A. Wiegand, BS, journalism

Filed Under: Benton News, Breaking News, Christopher News, Franklin Co. News, Slider, Thompsonville News, West Frankfort News

All Clear Given at Franklin Hospital

June 5, 2017 By Jim Muir Leave a Comment

http://www.bentongazette.com/news/all-clear-given-at-franklin-hospital/article_ec8d335e-49a3-11e7-b05e-0314ab6fc289.html

BENTON, IL – (William McPherson – The Benton Gazette.  Please Click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

The Gazette just confirmed over the phone with the Benton Fire Department that the situation at Franklin Hospital has been secured.

A bomb squad had been called in to perform a sweep of both Franklin Hospital and Healia Healthcare. The bomb squad, which was equipped with a bomb-sniffing dog, drove in from the Springfield area according to Benton Fire Chief Shane Cockrum.

Franklin Hospital and Helia Healthcare have been given the all clear. Patients and staff are being returned to their facilities. Franklin County Hospital’s ER is now reopen as well.

 

Filed Under: Benton News, Breaking News, Franklin Co. News, Slider
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