PLR 12-31-2015

Page 1

THURSDAY

December 31, 2015 • 75¢

BIG RALLY

Plano boys score 29 points in 4th to beat Indian Creek / 12 KendallCountyNow.com

SERVING PLANO AND KENDALL COUNTY FOR MORE THAN 40 YEARS

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New laws range from DUI to pie New Year brings state regulations that start Jan. 1 By MATT SCHURY mschury@shawmedia.com With the calendar turning over its final page of the old year and a new one beginning, it’s time to look at the new laws going on the books in Illinois starting Jan. 1. Below is a very abbreviated list of some of the 237 new laws set to go into effect over the next 12 months. For the full list, courtesy of the Communications and Public Affairs of the Illinois Senate Republican Caucus, visit www. senategop.state.il.us. The new laws impact almost every aspect of life for citizens in Illinois and range from changes to DUI laws to naming a state pie.

DUI laws:

Senate Bill 627 allows offenders caught driving under the influence to apply for a monitoring device driving permit with a breath alcohol ignition interlock device. The new law removes a provision that prohibits driving relief for DUI offenders. It also requires any offender with two or more DUIs or reckless homicide convictions to install

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LEFT: An addition to the Bobcat Hunting Act allows for the feline to be hunted to control overpopulation. The hunting season for bobcats is set from Nov. 1 to Feb. 15. ABOVE: Pumpkin pie has been declared the official state pie of Illinois.

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the BAIID as a condition of a restricted driving permit, as well as if the offender is convicted of DUI involving death, great bodily harm or permanent disability or disfigurement to another. House Bill 3533 requires those convicted of a subsequent DUI offense to have the BAIID installed on their vehicle for a minimum of five years. Another change to DUI laws will let four-time DUI convicts now keep their licenses. House Bill 1446 allows those offenders to obtain a restricted driving

permit after five years if the person shows a minimum three years of uninterrupted sobriety and successful completion of all of the recommended rehabilitation activity.

Law enforcement and emergency responders:

Illinois also will regulate police officers who wear body cameras. Senate Bill 1304 does not require officers to use body cameras, but officers who do wear the cameras must keep them on when

conducting official law enforcement actives. According to the law, officers would be allowed to turn the camera off when talking to a confidential informant or at the request of a victim or witness. Officers must let people know when they are recording if they enter a residence and videos will be kept for 90 days unless flagged. The cameras and training will be paid for by grants from a $5 fee increase for each $40 on criminal and traffic offenses, according to the legislation.

See NEW LAWS, page 3

Aspiring firefighter a real lifesaver Teen aids choking man at restaurant By MATT SCHURY mschury@kendallcountynow.com Eric Biegalski was in the right place at the right time and that meant everything to one diner at an area restaurant. Biegalski, 17, is a senior at Yorkville High School and takes classes in fire science through the Indian Valley Vocational Center. He learns rescue techniques and gets to train with the tools of the trade such as the ax and Halligan bar. But it was a simple technique he learned that proved to be the

difference between life and death. Biegalski was dining with his girlfriend, Danielle ­deWaard, at a Sugar Grove restaurant when a man tapped him on the shoulder. He turned around and saw the man grabbing at his throat and turning bright red. The Montgomery resident said he didn’t think or hesitate – he immediately jumped into action. “I dropped everything and I stood up, I spun him around and I just started doing the Heimlich [maneuver] on him and he spit out a chunk of broccoli and then we sat back down and we started talking,” Biegalski said. “I made sure he was all right. He ended up buying dinner for us.” Biegalski, an Eagle Scout, said

Eric Biegalski, 17, is a senior at Yorkville High School and takes classes in fire science through the Indian Valley Vocational Center. His goal is to one day serve as a firefighter with the Montgomery and Countryside Fire Protection District.

he learned the Heimlich maneuver in Boy Scouts while earning his lifesaving merit badge. “A lot of people ask me – ‘Where did you learn to do the Heimlich?’ and I tell them Scouting,” he said. Biegalski was wearing his fire science sweatshirt while he was at the restaurant and he said he isn’t sure if the gentleman, whose name he didn’t recall, saw that and thought he was a firefighter or if he was just the first person he could reach while he was choking. Biegalski will be graduating from high school in the spring and he plans to attend Waubonsee Community College next fall

Photo provided

See LIFESAVER, page 7

REFLECTIONS

LOCAL NEWS

WHERE IT’S AT

Clang, clang, clang!

Middle school project

Only scant reminders remain from Kendall County’s interurban trolley era / 4

Plano School Board seeking bids for HVAC renovations; could cost $2 million / 3

Forum................................................ 5 Fire calls......................................... 10 Local news...................................2-11 Opinion.............................................. 4 Police reports.............................9-10 Sports...............................................12

Joe MacDonald Pastor

CHURCH Church

701 Lions Road Sandwich, IL 60548

(at the east end of the high school) Discover The Joys Of Attending Church! pastor@EmmanuelChurchSandwich.com Millions of People Can’t Be Wrong! www.EmmanuelChurchSandwich.com Isn’t It About Time You Attend Church With The Whole Family? Begin the New Year RightNew Guests Are Welcome Each Week At Emmanuel! “The Church That Cares About Everyday People... Every Day!”

• 815-786-2400

Vol. 40, No. 53 3 sections


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