Bureau County’s top stories of 2009

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Workers at the ArcelorMittal steel plant in Hennepin didn't take the company owners' decision to close the plant lying down. However, despite ongoing informational picket lines and rallies, the owners did not change their minds, and dismantling of the plant began in July.

The changing and challenging weather

• In early January, Barto Landing in Spring Valley is flooded when the Illinois River begins its descent from a high water mark of 29.44 feet, almost 10 feet above flood stage. Water poured into the river from weekend rains and melting snow.

• Also in January, Bureau County receives another 6 inches of snow, with temperatures bottoming out at about 18 degrees below zero. Area schools canceled classes for two days in a row.

• In late July, a tornado strikes south and east of Princeton, heavily hitting the farm property owned by Buster and Kay Taylor and destroying a barn, downing numerous trees and branches and sending a grain bin across Route 26. The southeast quadrant of Princeton is also heavily damaged.

• Bureau County residents join all of Illinois in experiencing the coldest July on record, according to state climatologist Jim Angel.

• Weather trends change as Bureau County residents experience the seventh warmest November since records started being kept in 1895.

• Bureau County and the Quad Cities area experience a record-breaking decade of weather, with 26 monthly records established since January 2000, according to WQAD meteorologist Anthony Peoples.

• Bureau County farmers struggle to harvest their crops, after a very wet spring, cool summer and a wet fall. Many farmers still had corn standing in the field with snow on the ground.

• Bureau County buckles under the force of two major snow falls in December, with blowing snow and icy roads, school and road closures.

The economy

• The ArcelorMittal steel plant in Hennepin is closed, and 285 employees lost their jobs. The closing was first announced in December 2008, but local steelworkers work during much of 2009 to come up with other alternatives to closing the plant. However, the final dismantling of the plant begins in mid-July.

• LCN Closers announces the lay-off of 44 people in July, followed by another 47 employees in October.

• In August, Spring Valley’s Honeywell Sensing and Controls Business, better known as Hobbs, announces the plant will close and move operations to Mexico.

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