Your source for community news and sports 7 days a week.
DIXON STUDENT KEEPS HER HEAD ABOVE WATER SWIMMING PREVIEW, B1
A poor man’s feast is rich in variety FOOD, A9, A11
TELEGRAPH
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851
ILLINOIS BUDGET BATTLE | PUBLIC SAFETY
Training derailed Area law enforcement loses out on training, and more classes could be facing cancellation BY ANGEL SIERRA asierra@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5695 @_angelsierra
DIXON – A police training organization that serves nearly 500 law enforcement personnel in six
northern Illinois counties is on the brink of closing, its director said this week. “It hurts all around,” said Director Doug Fargher, a former Doug Sterling police lieuFargher tenant who retired last year after 26 years with the department to run the Dixon-based Northwest Illinois Criminal Justice Commission, also
known as Mobile Team Unit 1. Approximately 87 percent of its $216,000 budget comes from the state, with the rest covered by membership fees participating agencies pay. Throughout the state, hundreds of classes are being canceled because of the budget impasse in Springfield, at a time of heightened tension between police and the communities they serve, law enforcement officials said. TRAINING CONTINUED ON A5
DIXON
Focusing on a new subject Randy Rambo of Princeton snaps a picture of Midland States Bank on Tuesday afternoon in downtown Dixon. Normally a nature photographer, Rambo switched gears and aimed his lens at some things man-made instead. He said he was excited to see the architecture Dixon has to offer.
VETERANS DAY
The guests of honor – at last Vietnam-era veterans now eligible for free flights to D.C. BY KATHLEEN A. SCHULTZ kschultz@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5535 @KathleenSchul10
Their time has come. And what better day for it to happen, on Veterans Day. Starting today, Honor Flight of the Quad Cities, the umbrella organization under which the Lee and Whiteside county chapters fly, will begin accepting applications from Vietnam-era veterans. “There is probably no group that deserves it more,” said Steve Garrington, Honor Flight board member and interim program director. You need not have actually served in Vietnam to qualify: Any military member from that era is eligible, no matter where they served, Garrington said. Inside He urges vets to A roundget their applicaup of area tions in, and to be Veterans Day patient. Organizevents and cerers are expecting emonies: A4 a flood of requests Local veterans from Vietnam-era tell their tales, military members, and you can and it might take read about them some time – maybe in an upcoming even a year or more book: A2 – for the all-volunteer staff to go through and organize them. In addition, World War II, Korean War and terminally ill veterans still are first in line, and the group still has about 100 applications from those vets pending. HONOR FLIGHT CONTINUED ON A2
Army veteran Delbert Schafer, 83, of Franklin Grove, traces John M. Babich’s name in May at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Babich was killed in the Vietnam War. The men’s mothers were first cousins, and Babich also farmed in Franklin Grove. Beginning today, Vietnam-era veterans will get a chance to take pencil in hand for their own ritual of reflection and reverence, thanks to efforts to include them on Honor Flights.
Photos by Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com
DIXON
They get help building a better code City officials reach out to region to revamp building guidelines BY BRENDEN WEST bwest@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5529 @BWest_SVM
DIXON – It’s been 12 years since the city last updated some of its building codes. Building official Paul Shiras and Fire Chief Tim Shipman are working to change that. Not only are Dixon’s current codes outdated, Shiras said, there’s an even more important reason for the proposed updates.
$1.00
TODAY’S EDITION: 24 PAGES 2 SECTIONS VOL. 164 ISSUE 137
“It all comes down to public safety,” he said. Working with other governments throughout northwest Illinois, the department heads are encouraging the city to adopt nine new codes – seven from the 2015 International Code Council, and one each from the 2014 National Electric Code and the 2014 Illinois Plumbing Code. They would affect commercial and residential buildings and
INDEX
ABBY ................... A8 BUSINESS ........... A7 COMICS ............. A10
fire safety protocol, among other things. The code Dixon would adopt is called the Northwest Illinois Regional Building Code. Shiras and Shipman have been meeting since March with officials from Lee, Ogle, Whiteside and Winnebago counties to create a combined regional code. Joining the group were architects, commercial and residential builders, trades unions and real estate agents. CODES CONTINUED ON A3
CROSSWORD....B12 LIFESTYLE .....A7, A8 LOTTERY ............. A2
FOOD ...........A9, A11 OBITUARIES ........ A4 OPINION .............. A6
Christopher Heimerman/cheimerman@saukvalley.com
Today’s weather High 59. Low 45. More on A3.
Need work? Check out your classifieds, B6.
TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE PAPER, CALL 815-284-2224 OR 800-798-4085