Looking back on 2012

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April 28: The Princeton High School Board unanimously approves the hiring of current PHS Principal Barb Schmidt for the newly-created position of assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction for the new school year, a position which will be shared with the Princeton Elementary School District. Current PHS Assistant Principal Andy Berlinski will assume the PHS principal position. Both positions will take effect on July 1.

May 1: A committee in the Peoria Catholic Diocese recommends the merger of St. Patrick’s Church in Sheffield into St. Anthony’s Church in Atkinson, and the closure of the Sheffield church building by July 2014, though no final decision has been made. Parishes in the diocese are in the process of an eight-step restructuring process which began in August 2011. Three town hall meetings will be held to further explain the final recommendation and answer questions.

May 3: Winds and an electrical line fire knock out power for numerous customers in Bureau County. A thunderstorm moved through western Bureau County, knocking out power to about 2,100 customers in the Buda, Sheffield, Mineral and Wyanet areas. Ameren Illinois spokesperson Leigh Morris says apparently straight-line winds associated with the storm triggered relay switches which turned off the power. One day earlier, an electrical outage knocked out power in Princeton for about an hour.

May 5: The Hall High School Board meets in special session to consider a variety of options for dealing with the school’s aging facility, and all of the options are expensive. The average age of the school building is 75 years old, and half of the school is almost 100 years old. School officials are dealing with crumbling walls, leaking roofs and failing mechanical systems. Four options range from about $18 million to nearly $35 million. No decision is made.

May 8: Long-time Princeton resident Lou Brown is named grand marshal for this year’s Bureau County Homestead Festival parade. Though she said many people are more deserving than her, being named grand marshal is a special honor to her because she helped get the Homestead Festival organized, Brown says. Brown has also been involved in numerous community organizations and events. Brown and her husband, Paul, moved to Princeton in 1969 and owned and operated Princeton Crown Lanes.

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