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DUCHESSES LOSE CLASH WITH TITANS

The créme of the ’90s crop

DIXON HOLIDAY CLASSIC, B1

FOOD, A9-10

TELEGRAPH

Wednesday, December 28, 2016 n SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851

DIXON ONE | OFFICE SPACE

Closing in on the dotted line Group inching closer to having a home to call its own, as details of lease are worked out BY RACHEL RODGERS rrodgers@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5529 @rj_rodgers

DIXON – Dixon One is still a ways from becoming a central hub for city tourism, marketing and business outreach, but it is nearing closer to moving into its new home. That is, once a lease agreement is final-

ized between the group and the city. An advisory task force with a 6-month lifespan was formed a year ago to draft a plan to combine the city’s marketing, tourism, and business and economic development under one umbrella. After 8 months, the group presented the City Council with a plan in September to consolidate the Dixon Area Chamber of Commerce with Dixon Mainstreet, an

organization that would also encompass Dixon Tourism, the Riverfront Commission and a yet-to-be-formed Downtown Coalition of the Arts. The council signed off on the proposal and began discussing a lease agreement in October for Dixon One to move into 87 S. Hennepin Ave., the former Kenzley Title building that the city purchased for $245,000.

The goal was to have the Chamber and Main Street moved in on or before Jan. 1, but that date has been pushed back until a lease is finalized. Mayor Li Arellano Jr. said the city and Dixon One have negotiated a 5-year lease agreement, which is tentatively scheduled to appear before the council during its meeting Tuesday. DOTTED LINE continued on A54

WHITESIDE COUNTY

PATCHING THINGS UP IN STERLING

Taking a Clean break

Company puts power line project on hold in Iowa as it awaits Illinois decision BY PAM EGGEMEIER peggemeier@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5570 @pam_eggemeier

Photos by Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com

ABOVE: Bill Carson of the Sterling Public Works Department patches potholes on 16th Avenue on Tuesday afternoon. The past few days’ warmer, wet weather whisked away most of the snow and ice that had found a home in the Sauk Valley, giving crews an opening to fan out across town, clearing limbs and patching potholes. Winter is prime season for those vehicular nemeses that rattle our teeth and tax our axles. Potholes crop up when water seeps into openings in roads, then freezes and expands, pushing the pavement to its limits and beyond. Cracks are born that grow up into potholes, nurtured along by traffic, heavy snowplows and corrosive materials that some cities use on roads during the winter. RIGHT: Ben Burger of the Sterling Public Works Department uses a bucket truck to clear low hanging branches Tuesday afternoon.

Clean Line Energy has withdrawn pending applications in Iowa for approval of its planned project that runs through several counties in Iowa and Illinois. The project route was to begin in Iowa’s O’Brien County, enter Illinois between Cordova and Port Byron, continue through Whiteside County just southwest of Erie, through the entire north edge of Bureau County, and end in Grundy County. The company said Dec. 22 that its petitions for approval of its Rock Island Clean Line electric transmission project with the Iowa Utilities Board will be rescinded until pending legal proceedings in Illinois are resolved. The Houston-based company’s efforts to get the infrastructure project approved in Illinois have been a roller-coaster ride. An application to build the power line was unanimously approved by the Illinois Commerce Commission in 2014, but an Aug. 10 appellate court ruling reversed that decision. BREAK continued on A54

STERLING

Family meal left high and dry

Dynasty restaurant in Sterling will reopen today after a short closure for what turned out to be an apparent bit of cultural confusion. The restaurant was closed for the holiday because of fears of a potential health code violation – concerns that ultimately were shown to be unfounded.

Confusion over drying food closes restaurant for holiday ​BY KATHLEEN A. SCHULTZ kschultz@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5535 @KathleenSchul10

STERLING – Dynasty Chinese restaurant, traditionally one of the few, if not the only, restaurants in Sterling open on Christmas Day, was shuttered for the holiday this year because of fears of a potential health code violation – concerns that ultimately were shown to be unfounded.

The restaurant was inspected and will reopen today. According to the Whiteside County Health Department and Sterling Police, on Saturday morning, HVAC workers spotted “raw, unidentified meat” hanging from sawhorses on the restaurant’s roof at 110 W. Third St., in the County Market shopping center. RESTAURANT continued on A24 Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com

$1.00

TODAY’S EDITION: 20 PAGES 2 SECTIONS VOL. 166 ISSUE 168

INDEX

ABBY.................... A8 BEYOND TRIM.... A10 COMICS................ A7

CROSSWORD.......B9 LIFESTYLE............ A8 LOTTERY.............. A2

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

Today’s weather High 43. Low 30. More on A3.

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