Volume 143 No. 28
Friday, June 16, 2017
Single Copy Cost 50¢
Lostant wants your number By Zachary J. Pratt news@tonicanews.com
LOSTANT — A new village ordinance will require Lostant residents to clearly display their house number. “It would help police, UPS,” Lostant Village President Jack Immel said at the board meeting on June 12. “Friends, family — it would help a lot.” According to the ordinance, the house numbers should be a minimum of 4 inches in height and located in an easily visible area, such as near the main entrance or above a garage door.
Immel said this ordinance follows a ruling passed by the county, which the village had thus far been lenient on enforcing. “We’ve been a little lax here in town,” he said, but the ruling is now going to be enforced. Also at the meeting, Lostant is looking into the possibility of creating a franchise agreement with Frontier Communications. Lostant has agreements with cable companies, in which the village will get a percentage from the company for every customer. As a phone service, Frontier had not been subject to one of these agreements, but the company has expand-
ed, which has caused similarities to the companies which do have the agreements. “When it was just a phone service, it was a little different,” Immel said of Frontier. “Now they’re getting into Internet and TV. Maybe we should look into that.” He suggested the village attorney be consulted regarding the matter. In other business: • With an increase in rates, ComEd appears to be increasing its service beyond the street lights it owns.
Lostant Page 2
Spring Valley man victim of hit and run Oglesby man arrested By Tonica News Staff news@tonicanews.com.
Tonica News photo/Dave Cook
n June 8, local law enforcement officers joined with the thousands of others across the state as part of the annual Law Enforcement O Torch Run for Special Olympics. The run began at the LaSalle Fire Department, went along Route 6 and ended at Horizon House in Peru.
The bond between badge and athlete Special Olympics Torch Run travels through the Illinois Valley By Dave Cook news@bcrnews.com
PERU — As the torch-bearing runners followed their police escort, the bond between members of the law enforcement community and the Special Olympics was once again on proud display. On June 8, officers from the Peru Police Department and the Illinois State Police District 17 met at the LaSalle Fire Department for the annual Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics. The runners, including both officers and athletes, ran west along Route 6 to Peru. The run ended with a celebration at Horizon House, a non-profit organization providing an array of services to adults with disabilities including residential and day services ranging from full 24-hour care to intermittent in-home visits and employment support.. According to its website, Horizon House serves North Central Illinois with two administrative facilities in Peru and 12 small homes in LaSalle and Bureau counties.
Vol. 143 No. 28 One Section - 8 Pages
“It was a great time; our local law enforcement agencies are so important. They’ve supported our events by helping pass out awards, and they also help us with fundraising. Our partnership with them is so special to us, and the athletes love when the officers come in uniform to the events,” Allison Nichols, director of Special Olympics Area 16, said. The Law Enforcement Torch Run is the single largest year-round fundraising event benefiting Special Olympics Illinois. Over the past 31 years, it’s raised almost $43 million. The annual intrastate relay, along with other fundraising projects, have the goals of raising money and helping to increase the public’s awareness of the Special Olympics competitions and the accomplishments of the athletes. “This leg we ran today was just part of the many routes that have been being run from all over the state. They’ll end in Bloomington/ Normal at Illinois State University at our opening ceremony at Red Bird Arena on June 9,” Nichols said.
Summer fun in the sun. Does the AC still run.
Torch Page 3
PERU — Police say a 39-year-old Oglesby driver hit and killed a Spring Valley man before fleeing June 4. Luke T. Dobrich was in LaSalle County Jail on $100,000 bond Friday after he was charged with leaving the scene of a fatal accident, which carries 1 to 3 years in prison, in the Wyatt death of Wyatt Kenneth Wyatt Lyle Wyatt, 22. Wyatt’s body was found at 9:28 p.m. June 4 on 70 N. 2551st Road, just east of August Hills Winery and about a mile south of Peru. LaSalle County Sheriff’s deputies and Oglesby Ambulance arrived on the scene and found the man unresponsive. Luke Investigators from the Dobrich sheriff’s department and the Illinois State Police crime scene and accident reconstruction teams were on the scene throughout the night. Wyatt was born Feb. 26, 1995, in Sterling to Jolyn Wyatt, now of Browntown, Wis., and Tom Wyatt of Hennepin. He graduated from Princeton High School in 2013, and worked at various jobs, including Sisler’s Dairy in Ohio. Anyone with information regarding this incident should call the LaSalle County Sheriff’s Department at 815433-2161.
Police are looking for helping in this case; call 815-433-2161.
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