Looking back on 2012

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April 17: The Princeton Park Board votes unanimously to discontinue electricity at the Alexander Park skate park, due to repeated vandalism. Superintendent of Parks Keith Scherer tells the board his staff discovered a broken electric meter early last week at the skate park. Elaine Russell, director of the Princeton Park District, says this isn’t the first time the electric meter has been vandalized. The location of the skate park has made it easier for vandals to strike, Russell says.

April 19: The Bureau County Board decides if members don’t attend their meetings, they won’t get paid. The board approves a motion to pay board members $25 per assigned committee meeting and $75 for full board meetings, with no pay for missed meetings. The vice chairman is given the same compensation as the other regular board members, with authorization given to attend all committee meetings. The board chairman’s annual salary is increased from $5,000 to $8,000. Compensation changes begin with the new fiscal year, starting Dec. 1.

April 21: The Bureau County Board could be dealing with God at its next meeting, or at least with His Ten Commandments. Buildings and Grounds Committee Chairman Kristi Warren presents a proposal from retired minister David Beck of Malden, who along with a group of sponsors, wants to install a Ten Commandments monument on the Bureau County Courthouse lawn. The board asks State’s Attorney Patrick Herrmann to look into the legality of the proposal.

April 24: Love Holy Trinity Blessed Mission is the new owner of the former Orchard View Rehabilitation and Healthcare facility, formerly the county-owned Prairie View Nursing Home. The new buyer, officially listed at the Bureau County Courthouse as Chicago Title and Trust, purchased the property on Feb. 17, 2012. Jan Imhof of Dubuque, Iowa, a spokesperson for the mission, confirms the religious organization is the new owner. The mission originated in Chicago with ties to Madison, Wis. and Dubuque, Iowa.

April 26: Princeton Elementary School students are getting a good, basic education, but nothing fancy, according to Superintendent Tim Smith. The superintendent says he’d love to provide more for the students, but the district just doesn’t have the money to do it. The biggest problem is the lack of revenue from the state, which has cut funding and is consistently late on its payments of what funding is still there, he said.

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