TEL_07022015

Page 1

Your source for community news and sports 7 days a week.

IT’S BEAUTIFUL OUT – MAKE PLANS! LOCAL EVENT LISTINGS, A9-11 FORECAST, A3

CROSS COUNTRY STARS STAY SHARP REAGAN RUN, B1

TELEGRAPH Thursday, July 2, 2015

SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851

NORTHLAND MALL | SEVERE WEATHER UPDATE

Three more stores reopen More appear to be close to getting back to business BY JERMAINE PIGEE jpigee@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5525 @JPigee84

STERLING – Three more stores have reopened at storm-damaged Northland Mall in Sterling.

GNC, Cost Cutters and Didoughs opened Monday morning, a week after a devastating storm swept through the area. As a result, more than 20 retail outlets at the mall were temporarily closed.

Amy Johnson, spokeswoman for J. Herzog & Sons Inc., the Denverbased company that owns the mall, said more stores will open next week, but did not say which ones. “The best place to get updated information is the Northland

Mall Facebook page,” Johnson said in an email. Bergner’s and J.C. Penney reopened for business late last week. MALL CONTINUED ON A4

PETUNIA COURT HELPS KICK OFF FESTIVITIES IN DIXON

SVM office to be closed Friday In observance of the July 4 holiday, the Sauk Valley Media office in Sterling will be closed Friday. SVM will publish a weekend paper July 4. For a listing of fireworks displays in the area over the weekend, check out Page A10.

ILLINOIS

House defeats 1-month budget Temporary fix still possible, as Senate OKs identical plan

Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com

Cayley (left), 4, and Carly Dallas, 5, pet Woody Wasson’s pet collie, Willow, who dropped by the Dixon Public Library on Wednesday morning for a special craft day. Petunia Queen Hannah Acker (far right), attendant Clara Thorpe and the rest of the Petunia Festival court stuck around to meet the kids and help them with their projects. For the complete Petunia Festival schedule, check out our local entertainment listings on pages A9-11. For more photos of the court’s visit to the library, see A3.

LEE COUNTY

Animal control adopts new home

BUDGET CONTINUED ON A4

NICIL: Budget woes force shutdown

Supervisor: Streamlined system will be beneficial BY CHRISTI WARREN cwarren@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5521 @SeaWarren

DIXON – For the first time in ... well, ever, Lee County Animal Control is getting its own building. And Wednesday was moving day for people and boxes and the one animal housed there – a black-and-white male pit bull terrier. Animal Control has been looking for a new space for years, said Teri Zimke, animal control supervisor. ANIMAL CONTINUED ON A3

See for yourself Lee County Animal Control, 280 E. Progress Drive in Dixon, will host an open house from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 13. Refreshments will be provided. Call 815284-3833 for more information.

$1.00

TODAY’S EDITION: 24 PAGES 2 SECTIONS VOL. 164 ISSUE 44

Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com

Lee County Animal Control supervisor Teri Zinke greets the county’s lone ward – a black-and-white pit bull – at the facility’s new location, 280 E. Progress Drive, Dixon.

INDEX

ABBY ................... A8 BUSINESS ........... A7 COMICS ...............B6

CROSSWORD....B11 LIFESTYLE ........... A8 LOTTERY ............. A2

OBITUARIES ........ A4 OPINION .............. A6 POLICE ................ A2

SPRINGFIELD (AP) – Another day, another defeat for a state budget. A spending plan allowing Illinois to limp through the month while a long-term budget battle rages failed in the House on Wednesday, and hopes for a temporary fix dimmed even before facing an almost certain veto by Gov. Bruce Rauner. The Democratic-controlled Legislature and the Republican governor have been have been unable to reach agreement on a budget for the new fiscal year that began Wednesday. So Democrats tried to keep “essential services” moving, such as operating veterans’ homes, child care and police protection, with a $2.3 billion, 1-month stopgap. The Senate endorsed the plan. In the House, it needed 71 votes and fell four short.

STERLING – The Northwestern Illinois Center for Independent Living closed Wednesday, thanks to budget wrangling in Springfield, its director said in a news release. NICIL, which provides services for the disabled and training for caregivers, “is forced to temporarily close our office and lay off our staff,” Michele Miller, executive director of NICIL, said in the release. She plans a news conference at the office, 412 Locust St., at 2 p.m. today to discuss the impact of budget negotiations on the agency. Phones are not being answered, but her email is director@nicil.org. Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner and legislative Democrats could not agree on a 2016 budget before the fiscal year started Wednesday. That has created concerns that some parts of the government could shut down. – SVM staff report

Today’s weather High 76. Low 55. More on A3.

Need work? Check out your classifieds, B7.

TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE PAPER, CALL 815-284-2224 OR 800-798-4085


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
TEL_07022015 by Shaw Media - Issuu