Looking back on 2012

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Nov. 10: Sullivan’s Foods owner Scott Sullivan confirms his company is looking at the former Bassicks Co. site in Spring Valley as a possible site for a new grocery store. Whether its three months, six months or 18 months, the company is wanting and willing to move forward, Sullivan says. A store in Spring Valley would bring Sullivan’s Foods number to 12, already doing business in Princeton, Kewanee, Morrison, Freeport, Lena, Mendota, Mount Morris, Rochelle, Savanna, Stockton and Winnebago.

Nov. 13: Bureau County Circuit Judge Marc Bernabei and Circuit Clerk Laurie Abrahams announce the opening of a new online Bureau County Legal Self-Help Center. The free online center will provide legal information for lower income residents who cannot find or afford an attorney to represent them in court, or who are looking for information on topics such as Social Security, Medicare, unemployment compensation, powers of attorney and marriage dissolutions. The self-help center is a good thing for the community, Bernabei says.

Nov. 15: The Bureau County Board says no to a conditional use permit for a private residential care institution near Tiskilwa. At Tuesday’s meeting, the county board hears from neighbors opposed to the proposed Seed of Hope residential care institution, which would have been built on a 28-acre property located on the Tiskilwa Bottom Road. Project developer Steve Graham of Tiskilwa does not make it to the board meeting in time to make a presentation on the proposed residential care institution, hear the neighbors’ concerns or talk about any details concerning the facility.

Nov. 17: It’s official. The Hall High School Board will ask voters in Spring Valley, Ladd, Cherry, Dalzell, Seatonville, Hollowayville and Bureau to approve borrowing $32 million for a new high school. The board unanimously approves moving forward with the project and putting the referendum on the April 9, 2013, ballot. The school board hired an architect earlier this year to do an assessment of the existing high school building. In September, the board approved building a new school and demolishing all of the current buildings. The alternative would be $18 million in required renovations.

Nov. 20: Mosquito surveillance for the 2012 West Nile Virus season ends in Bureau and Putnam counties with 1,830 mosquitoes sampled and ultimately testing negative for the disease. Bureau/Putnam County Health Department Director Diana Rawlings says the local health department collected four dead birds in each county for testing this year, with only one blue jay, collected in the Princeton area, testing positive.

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