Serving Ogle County since 1851
OREGON Republican Reporter
June 29, 2017 Volume 167, Number 30 - $1.00
Drum Corps
Farm Heritage
Driver Dies in Race
An elite drum corps will march onto the OHS practice fields next week. A9
Families share their history & art emerges from old machinery. Insert
An Ohio man was killed when the dragster he was driving crashed at the Byron Dragway. B4
Two no votes stop closure of street for jail By Vinde Wells vwells@oglecountynews.com The Ogle County Board’s request for a street closure for a new jail was denied Tuesday even though a majority of the Oregon City Council voted yes. Mayor Ken Williams declared the defeat of the request because although the city council voted 3-2 in favor of it, a super majority of four yes votes was required to pass it. Williams and commissioners
Terry Schuster and Kurt Wilson voted yes, but commissioners Jim Barnes and Tom Izer voted no. In discussion preceding the vote, Barnes called the new jail the “county’s pipe dream.” He said he has a better plan — to locate the new jail on Pines Road and put a courtroom in it to eliminate the need for transporting prisoners. “The judges can come there. They can take turns,” he said. He also told Ogle County Board Chairman Kim Gouker, Byron,
that his desire to construct the new jail at that location could cost him his county board seat in the next election. “Don’t take that as a threat because it’s a promise,” Barnes said. “Oregon is a beautiful place in the country and we intend to keep it that way.” Izer said property that the county owns both in the downtown and other areas of the city is off the tax rolls because government bodies do not pay real estate taxes. He also held up a petition that
he said had hundreds of signatures opposing the current jail plan. “My answer is no, no, no,” he said. The county board had asked the city council to vacate the 100 block of South Sixth Street to allow them to connect the proposed new jail to the judicial center via a sally port across what is now the street. The county’s plan calls for a 180bed jail, costing an estimated $28 million, to be built on the property it already owns in the block of South Sixth.
The project will be paid for from the host fees paid by garbagehaulers when they dispose of refuse at landfills within the county. Gouker said after the meeting he was disappointed with the outcome and that the county board will now consider its options, which he declined to specify. “We felt this was the most efficient design and maximized public safety,” he said. In a guest column in last week’s papers, Gouker said the board Turn to A2
LFR festival coming
Perfect temps for KB Tough Run
Fireworks set for Tuesday, July 4 By Vinde Wells vwells@oglecounty news.com
By Zach Arbogast zarbogast@oglecounty news.com
Blue and sunny skies paired with relatively cool temperatures to create the perfect day for the community to come together to “kick butt” to assist those with serious medical issues. Each year, the KB committee hosts a Tough Run fundraising event at the White Pines Ranch, featuring a 5k run, a trail hike, and kid sprint. Alongside the physical events were a Kid Zone game area, Horsey Bingo, a prize wheel, photo booth, and 5050 raffle. Concessions were also available, with pork chop sandwiches served by the Ogle County Pork Producers and craft beer from Rockford’s Prairie Street Brewing Company. The event originally began six years ago, after April Roos, an Oregon resident, was diagnosed with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma in February 2012. Borrowing a phrase from her childhood sports days, KB stands for “Kick Butt”, and Roos says she was determined to kick cancer’s butt. As it turns out, friends and family were eager to help her, establishing a fund raising 5k event to help with
Runners take off at the start of the KB Tough Run held on June 24 at the White Pines Ranch. Photo by Zach Arbogast
the financial hardship. It was so successful, and meant so much to Roos, that the event continues on each year - no longer focusing on her, but anyone in the community needing to “KB.” This year, the event was dedicated in memory of Angie Daub-Bergstrom, who died Feb. 10 after battling breast cancer. “Angie has always been a special friend, and she has been a part of the KB team since the beginning,” said Roos. “KB is what Angie was all about; she walked last year’s trail with a cane.” Angela Collins, Mt. Morris, has been a KB committee member since the beginning. She said she first met Daub-Bergstrom during her first battle with cancer. “She had the most wonderful personality, and I fell in love with what a great person she was,” said Collins.
In a fitting tribute to his sister’s hike with a cane, Dan Daub hiked this year’s Angie Daub-Bergstrom Memorial Trail in a full neck brace. Daub serves as an Ogle County Sheriff’s Deputy, usually working as court security at the Ogle County Judicial Center, but has been on medical leave for three weeks after undergoing a full disc replacement surgery. “I’m still restricted in what I can do, but this is such a great cause, and it’s in memory of my sister,” said Daub. “I needed to be here.” The cause in question is the fund raising aspect; while originally established in 2012 to benefit the Roos family, KB now uses each year’s funds to give to the community. “People came out to support me and my family during a hard time, and now that support continues on Turn to B1
A total disc replacement surgery wasn’t enough to keep Ogle County Sheriff Deputy and Court Security Dan Daub from walking the memorial hike in honor of his sister, Angie Daub-Bergstrom. Photo by Zach Arbogast.
Mt. Morris is pulling out all the stops to celebrate “Red, White and YOU” over this weekend through the Fourth of July. Events include music, art, fireworks, food, and family entertainment beginning June 28 with the coronation of the 2017 Let Freedom Ring Queen Rebecca Hough. “We have a lot planned and now all we need is for the weather to cooperate,” said longtime LFR Committee Member Jan Hough. “This will be a great opportunity for families to have some fun and celebrate the Fourth.” She said a daughter and granddaughter of the late Sandy Sandstrom, one of the festival’s organizers for many years, will be attending this year’s festival. Mt. Morris residents Gene McGee and Marv Miller will be the marshals for the Grand Parade. These men were members of the group that constructed the bell tower that h o l d s the Official Illinois State Freedom Bell on the historic Mt. Morris Campus on Wesley Avenue. At the April 29, 1966 special Let Freedom Ring, Inc. meeting the committee voted to construct a bell tower and place it 30 feet north of and even with the band shell. With Sandstrom as viceTurn to A2
County hires company for economic development By Vinde Wells vwells@oglecounty news.com The Ogle County Board took a step last week to attract businesses to the county. The board unanimously approved an economic development services contract with HopkinsManheim Solutions, Inc.
June 20 to map a plan for the county and its municipalities at a maximum cost of $4,000 per month. County board chairman Kim Gouker said Tuesday that hiring the company came in conjunction with forming the Lee-Ogle County Enterprise Zone in January. “We want to have a plan for communities that want to
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do economic development,” he said. “They [HopkinsManheim] will put together a framework for applying for grants and other financial opportunities. Eventually we hope to have a private and public partnership similar to GREDCO (Greater Rochelle Development Corporation). We want an organization that can raise funds itself and not depend on tax dollars.”
Business Brief, A7 Church News, A5 Classifieds, B6-B10 Entertainment, A6 Fines, B5
Finance Committee Chairman Greg Sparrow, Rochelle, told the county board June 20 that villages and cities will be invited to join in the 18-month contract with Hopkins-Manheim to share the cost as well as the benefits. According to the resolution approved by the board, the contract will be initiated after at least three
Library News, A3 Marriage Licenses, A4 Oregon Police, B3 Public Voice, A7 Property Transfers, B5
Sheriff’s Arrests, B3 Social News, A4 Sports, B2 State’s Attorney, B5
municipalities have agreed to participate. Board member Skip Kenney, Rochelle, said he was in favor of hiring Hopkins-Manheim. “We’ve got to have growth in this county. We need good jobs,” he said. “We need somebody dedicated to making that happen.” The first phase of the process will be offering the
plan to village boards and city councils. Gouker said the Stillman Valley Village Board approved it Monday evening. Sparrow was scheduled to present the idea to the Mt. Morris Village Board Tuesday. Gouker said several other communities have expressed interest. Turn to A2
Deaths, B4 Cletus D. Bauer, Eugene R. “Chico” King, Dr. Ronald J. Messer, Linda A. Perrine
Published every Thursday by Ogle County Newspapers, a division of Shaw Media • www.oglecountynews.com