Looking back on 2012

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May 10: The Bureau County Board closes the door to a request to place a Ten Commandments monument on the Bureau County Courthouse lawn. Based on his research into Ten Commandments legal cases, State’s Attorney Patrick Herrmann recommends denying the proposal until a clearer ruling is made by the U.S. Supreme Court. Also, Herrmann says he has received a letter from the ACLU stating its objections to the proposed Bureau County monument, which means a possible lawsuit could be brought against the county.

May 12:The United States Postal Service announces a plan to save eight Bureau County post offices marked for possible extinction. But to keep those post offices open, they and 13 other Bureau County post offices will see their hours cut, some by as much as 75 percent. The change will affect every post office in Bureau County with the exceptions of Princeton, Spring Valley and Walnut. Community meetings will be conducted to review options in greater detail.

May 15: Andrea Anderson, director of the Zearing Child Enrichment Center (ZCEC), learns the Illinois Department of Human Services does not have enough money to pay for childcare services for the rest of the fiscal year ending June 30. The ZCEC receives about $12,000 a month from the state for the program. The center had been receiving state payments in a timely fashion, coming no more than a week or two late each month, Anderson says. The ZCEC Board will meet to talk about its options, she adds.

May 17: Although the land that comprises Bureau County has been around since the beginning of time, and men and women have walked its rolling hills and prairies for thousands of years, Bureau County as a county has only existed for 175 years. The county observes its anniversary with a look at its settlers and early communities.

May 19: Bureau County Sheriff’s Department Lt. Investigator Randy Hasbrook says a rash of burglaries has occurred recently in the Sheffield and Buda area. Most of the burglaries were in the daytime and were all non-forced entries, Some of the items stolen include medication, music equipment, electronic equipment and money. People need to keep the doors to their homes and vehicles locked, Hasbrook says.

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