ONE DAY ONLY - SUBPALOOZA- Friday, Nov. 27
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ONE DAY ONLY - SUBPALOOZA- Friday, Nov. 27
THE PIONEER ENTERPRISE Thursday, November 26 WWW.PIONEERENTERPRISE.COM VOL. 124 NO. 47 • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2015 SERVING CERRO GORDO COUNTY AND THE COMMUNITIES OF ROCKWELL, SWALEDALE, MESERVEY, THORNTON & DOUGHERTY Thornton merchants plan holiday activities The Thornton Merchants have been planning holiday activities. On Friday, Dec. 4, during business hours, the following businesses will host their Annual Holiday Open Houses. • First Gabrielson Insurance (911 a.m.) • First Security Bank & Trust (9 a.m.-5 p.m.) • Jaspersen Insurance & Real Estate (9 a.m.-4 p.m.) • K & H Classic Stop (6 a.m.-1 p.m.) The West Fork High School choir will be performing and strolling through the community center and local businesses during the morning hours. Saturday, Dec. 5, there will be a vendor show from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Thornton Community Center. In-home business and local vendors will be there to assist with your Christmas shopping. The Thornton Merchants Christmas Drawing will follow at 1 p.m. at the Thornton Fire Station. Everyone is welcome to this event, sponsored by local businesses and the Thornton Fire Department. Mark your calendar and plan to attend and enjoy refreshments, prizes and a visit from Santa Claus. December Franklin County ISU Extension calendar 1: Franklin County Extension Council workshop, 6 p.m., Ridge Stone Golf Club, Sheffield. 2: CPAT Pest Control CIC, 9 a.m., Franklin County Extension Office. 2 & 9: Afterschool Science Club, 2-4 p.m., Hampton-Dumont Middle School (Wednesdays). 3: Healthy Habits 3rd grade program, 8:30 a.m., Hampton-Dumont. 5: 4-H Club Officer training, 9-11 a.m., Franklin County Extension Office. 6: 4-H Youth Council, 1 p.m., Godfather’s Pizza, Hampton. 8: Healthy Habits 3rd Grade program, 8:30 a.m., Rockwell, 2:30 p.m., CAL. 9: PROSPER team meeting, noon, Hampton-Dumont Middle School; Creative Clovers 4-H meeting, 2:30-4 p.m., United Methodist Church, Hampton. 15: Manure applicator certification reshows, Franklin County Extension Office, 8:30 a.m., commercial and 1:30 p.m., confinement; H-D Clover Kids, 3:204:55 p.m., South Side Elementary, Hampton. 17: Private Pesticide Applicator CIC, 1:30-3:30 p.m., Hansell Community Center. 24-25: Christmas holiday, office closed. 28: 4-H/FFA Market Beef Weighin, 8 a.m., Hampton Vet Center (make-up date is Dec. 29). 30: North Iowa Crop Clinic, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m., Iowa Falls-Alden High School; Discover Your Clover Power workshop, 1-4 p.m., Dougherty. IN THIS ISSUE OPINION ..........................3 PUBLIC NOTICES ......... 5-6 CLASSIFIEDS ....................9 Welcome to the dollhouse “But when I saw [the molds], I just had to have them.” There is also a Princess Diana, Dutch kissing dolls, babies, dancers and many, many more. Each figurine goes through a multi-month process to be complete. To begin a doll, Roma puts a mask on for the dusty task of scrubbing off a chalky white greenware piece’s BY KELLY MCGOWAN Jim was from Iowa Falls and mold lines with a knife and sponge. On her next workday, she wakes Roma was from Sheffield. up early to fire the pieces in a “I was a good old farm boy,” Jim 1,700-degree kiln in her garage for Chantrill said. “And she plucked me 15-17 hours, which turns them to up.” translucent porcelain. They cool The Chantrills were married in throughout the next night. 1959. Senior pictures, wedding por“Then in the morning, I open it to traits and a 50th anniversary photo see if I goofed up on anything,” she are displayed on the “wedding wall” of the couple’s Chapin home, along said. Roma then rubs the pieces with with a menagerie of dolls dressed in mineral oil and paints on the skin wedding attire. tone china paint using cloth from a The dolls are a few of around 500 T-shirt. She fires the pieces again afthat Roma has accumulated, which ter each coat of paint. line the shelves, cabinets, counters When she is happy with the skin and corners of the home. She made tone, she carefully paints on the more than 30 of them, and has sewn nails, eyelashes and lip and cheek or crocheted outfits for many in her color and fi res it again. She places collection. the eyes inside the head using a speThree-foot-tall Pope John Paul cial tool. II and Mother Teresa stand in one When all the pieces are ready, corner cabinet. A gold cross hangs Roma has someone help her string in front of the pope doll’s white silk them together through the body form robe, which Roma sewed and had and the doll takes shape. Then comes specially embroidered. The Mother Teresa grasps a rosary in her folded her favorite part. “The dress ideas just come to hands. She wears the Catholic sister’s me,” she said. “I like thinking up the familiar white sari with blue stripes, designs.” which Roma sewed and painted. Some outfits are sewn and some “I’m not Catholic,” Roma said. are crocheted – like the set of coordinated outfits her Kennedy family dolls wear. Inspiration sometimes stems from pieces of fabric, like the doll pants she made out of her father-in-law’s old suit coat. Roma guesses she has made around 700 outfits to give as gifts and for her own dolls. The oldest in her collection is a baby doll from 1901 that Hand-painted porcelain likenesses of Pope she calls Margaret, after her John Paul II and Mother Teresa were major mom who owned it first. projects for Roma Chantrill. She fired and “They all have to have a painted the molds, assembled the dolls and name, you know,” she said. made their clothing to look authentic. KELLY Margaret wears a red dress MCGOWAN PHOTO • Chapin woman has made, collected close to 500 dolls $ 1 PER ISSUE West Fork to balance 3 years of overtaxing • Levy was mistakenly set 33 cents higher than state-approved amount BY KELLY MCGOWAN West Fork school board members approved a plan last week to pay back the nearly $340,000 that was mistakenly collected from district taxpayers during the last three budget years. Due to an error in the Department of Management database, the district had been assessing taxpayers $1 per $1,000 of property valuation for the Physical Plant and Equipment Levy (PPEL), 33 cents higher than the state-dictated 67 cents. “We certainly did not want to tax beyond our authority,” Superintendent Darrin Strike said. “And we wanted to fix it.” The error was in a spreadsheet cell amount that had carried over from when the SCMT and RockwellSwaledale districts reorganized as West Fork in 2011. Most Cerro Gordo taxpayers were overcharged $40 or less each fiscal Roma Chantrill, Chapin, stands among some of the pieces in her roughly year depending on their property’s 500-piece doll collection. Chantrill started working with porcelain in 1987 value, according to Cerro Gordo and has since made around 30 dolls. KELLY MCGOWAN PHOTO County Auditor Ken Kline. “We’re not talking a great deal of and has human hair. favorite as a child. impact to the individual taxpayer,” he “I loved that doll even when I was “She was just a cuddly size and I said. a kid,” she said. liked her,” she said. Board members approved reducThat and the ones she played with Though she has slowed down in as a child inspired her collection, she recent years, she has plenty of green- ing the levy for the next two budget said, and led her to start making ce- ware pieces to fire, paint and bring to years to even out the overcharge. Exactly how much the PPEL levy will ramic and porcelain dolls in 1987. life. “My mother likes dolls, and she “I have umpteen dozen dolls to decrease can’t be decided until valualways taught us to play with them,” put together,” she said. “I’ll never get ation reports come out. They are due Jan. 1. she said. them all done. But I find it fun.” PPEL funds are used for construcIt was very important for her and Roma’s husband has watched the her siblings to know whose dolls assortment of collected and hand- tion, repairs, technology and transwere whose and not to play with each made dolls grow through the years. portation. The West Fork Wellness other’s without asking. “I’m proud of her,” Jim said. “She Center was being funded through Phyllis, a baby doll, was Roma’s does good work.” Secure an Advanced Vision for Education (SAVE) tax funds, not through PPEL, but the mistake was discovered through the process of preparing financial documents for the center. Minneapolis-based investment banking company Piper Jaffray & Company examined the school’s finances for the project and helped officials understand how the mistake occurred. The fact that the district touches four counties that use different software programs made finding a consistent fix “exceedingly difficult,” Kline said. In the 2014 taxable year (the current year), 63.2 percent of the taxable property for the district is in Cerro Gordo County, 34.9 is in Franklin, 1.8 is in Hancock and .2 is in Wright, according to the Cerro Gordo county auditor. Cerro Gordo is the district’s control county, and one of few counFrom missing posters to yellow ribbons, multiple notices are located ties in the state that uses its own inthroughout Hampton reminding residents of Kazmerzak’s disappearance. house tax system. FILE PHOTO The Cerro Gordo County programmers spent weeks analyzing the peach-colored shorts and a white/teal problem and looking for a solution, printed shirt. He has a Grateful Dead said Franklin County Auditor’s Deptattoo on his upper left arm. uty Amy Holmgaard. Kazmerzak drives a silver 2006 More information about the The solution had to be consistent Volkswagen Jetta TDI with Iowa li$100,000 reward can be found in all four counties. The county atcense plate AUZ382. at www.hamptonia.us or www. torneys, treasurers and auditors met If you have any information about findethan.com. Search the with school officials to work it out. Kazmerzak’s whereabouts, please hashtag #findethankazmerzak “We came to the consensus that this call North Iowa Crime Stoppers at on social media. was the best approach,” Kline said. 800-383-0088 or the Hampton Police “As much as we would like to correct Department at 641-456-2527. Kazmerzak reward upped to $100K BY NICK PEDLEY but investigators received only a few A reward for information lead- weak leads before the reward expired ing to the whereabouts of missing on Dec. 2, 2013. Hampton man Ethan Kazmerzak was In March 2014, the $20,000 reincreased to $100,000 ward was renewed and Monday. has remained in place Kazmerzak was ever since. The same last seen at various logroup is responsible cal bars on the night of for the $100,000 reSept. 15, 2013. Invesward. tigators have followed Schaefer hoped up on numerous leads the larger amount since his disappearwould entice anyone ance and came up who might be withempty-handed in evholding information ery instance. Multiple about the circumaerial searches and stances surrounding KAZMERZAK ground investigations Kazmerzak’s disaphave been completed pearance. at area fields, lakes and ponds, but “I think seeing that $100,000 substantial evidence has been fleet- might give them more incentive and ing. possibly shake them loose to come Local officials hope the $100,000 forward with what they know,” he reward renews interest in the case said. and leads to new information. The last time anyone had commu“There really hasn’t been any- nication from Kazmerzak was something new or worthwhile happen with time around 12:30 a.m., on Sept. 15 it since the scuba divers checked the near the intersection of 190th Street ponds,” said Hampton Police Chief and Olive Avenue northwest of Bob Schaefer. “It’s been quiet.” Hampton. A group of anonymous residents Kazmerzak was 22 at the time pooled together a $20,000 reward in of his disappearance. He has dark late October 2013 for any informa- blonde hair, a beard and wears tion leading to Kazmerzak’s return. glasses with thick black frames. He The group hoped to have him home is 5-foot, 5-inches tall, about 185 safely by Thanksgiving of that year, pounds, and was last seen wearing OVERTAXING to page 2 ONE DAY ONLY - SUBPALOOZA - Friday, Nov. 27 Subscribe for one year at regular price and get the second year for just $15! (Day after Thanksgiving) ONE DAY ONLY Cash, check or card only. No rain-checks. 2nd year not transferrable. 0XVWFRPHLQRIÀFHDQGSD\ The Pioneer Enterprise Thursday, November 26, 2015 • Undocumented immigrant activist shares message in Hampton, urges citizens to “be my vote” Readiness concerns raised for Medicaid privatization BY TRAVIS FISCHER With the rollout of Iowa’s Medicaid Modernization plan just weeks away, unanswered questions about the state’s readiness continue to raise concerns among both Medicaid recipients and public officials. On Nov. 6, Timothy Hill, deputy director of the Center for Medicaid (CMS), sent a letter to Iowa’s Medicaid director, Mikki Stier, expressing concerns about the state’s readiness to shift control of Medicaid administration to private groups. Hill appreciated the state’s efforts to establish the new delivery system and conduct outreach to beneficiaries and providers, but he still held reservations. “CMS has significant concerns that the implementation timeframes for the transition to managed care may place access, continuity of care and quality of care for beneficiaries at risk,” he wrote. “We are also concerned about the extent to which managed care organizations (MCOs), providers and Medicaid beneficiaries are prepared for the transition.” Hill’s letter explained that CMS is still reviewing the state’s request for a waiver that would authorize the transition and reiterated that the agency has two sets of “readiness-review gates” that must be met before giving their approval. The first gate outlines eight conditions that must be met before the state can provide enrollment materials to beneficiaries. These conditions include signed contracts for the MCOs, documentation that the MCOs have hired 50 percent of their projected staff and contracted with 50 percent of their current fee-forservice providers, demonstrated readiness of a fully staffed enrollment broker and the establishment of new ombudsman. The state provided readiness materials to CMS on Oct. 27. As of the writing of Hill’s letter, those materi- What’s’ on the Wh h Warhawk Menu next week? MONDAY, Nov. 30 BREAKFAST WafÀes OR Cereal, Toast LUNCH Chicken/Cheese Crispito, String Cheese, Carrots, Peaches TUESDAY, Dec. 1 BREAKFAST Cheese Omelet OR Cereal, Biscuit LUNCH Pigs-in-a-Blanket, Hash Browns, Peas, Applesauce WEDNESDAY, Dec. 2 BREAKFAST Mini Pancakes OR Cereal, Toast LUNCH Beefburger, Sweet Potato Fries, Green Beans, Strawberries/Bananas THURSDAY, Dec. 3 als were still under review. Enrollment packages will need to be sent out soon if Medicaid’s 560,000 recipients are to make an informed decision about which MCO they will enroll with. Those that don’t select an MCO will be automatically enrolled in one on Dec. 17, although they will have free reign to choose a different one until March 18, 2016. The second gate covers areas of operational readiness and will include four days of on-site interviews to determine if all the necessary networks and systems are in place. The letter was considered to be validation by Democratic legislators who continue to oppose the overhaul. On Nov. 9, Sens. Brian Schoenjahn and Amanda Ragan hosted a public feedback meeting in Waverly, where a packed room of health care providers and Medicaid recipients expressed concerns about the plan’s rollout. Many remain unconvinced that the MCOs will be able to find the promised $51 million in savings without reducing reimbursement rates to providers or services to recipients. “I think it’s wonderful that people made their voices heard. It’s too fast, too much, and vulnerable Iowans will be affected,” said Schoenjahn. “I’m encouraged that they see that there are questions about the proposal and we would hope that answers will be forthcoming.” Ragan, along with state Sens. Liz Mathis and Pam Jochum, visited Washington D.C., last Wednesday to speak directly with federal officials on the matter. “Basically we relayed what we’ve been hearing from all the different meetings we’ve been attending,” said Ragan. Federal officials have yet to approve the state’s plan and will be sending on-site inspectors in early December. In spite of readiness concerns from CMS, the Iowa Department of Human Services is continuing on with the transition. The agency still expects to switch control of Medicaid administration to the four private companies on Jan. 1. “We continue working closely with our federal partners to demonstrate Iowa’s readiness for this new patient-centered program,” said DHS Spokeswoman Amy McCoy. “To ensure a smooth transition, the IA Health Link is being phased in. We are taking a proactive approach to improving quality and access to the Medicaid program now, and finding efficiencies that will help sustain this program long term.” CARLSON TREE FARM OPEN HOUSE Friday, Nov. 27 • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 28 • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 29 • Noon to 5 p.m. BREAKFAST FAMILY PHOTO STATIONS Yogurt OR Cereal, Muf¿n LUNCH FRIDAY, Dec. 4 Spruce, Pine and Fir Trees up to 12 ft tall and Flocked Trees, Roping & Wreaths BREAKFAST French Toast OR Cereal, Toast LUNCH Chicken Alfredo, Broccoli, French Bread, Mandarin Oranges Milk or Juice and Fruit served daily for Breakfast Milk and Salad Bar served daily for Lunch S = Shef¿eld Campus; R = Rockwell Campus Please leave your pets at home. Our farm animals love your attention! live in Iowa – would be “back in the shadows.” Members of the group have questioned presidential candidates and rallied for reform. “It’s constantly in the back of my mind that I could be deported from the only country I’ve ever called home,” she said. Lacking papers means living in hiding for most undocumented immigrants. Reyes’ mother was too old to have qualified for DACA, so she still ran the risk of deportation. “I basically lived my life in the shadows in constant fear of having my family ripped apart,” Reyes said. “Our rock, our foundation is my mom. And she has no legal protection from being deported.” DREAMIowa’s goal is to “put a face on immigration,” and the place to start is by sharing stories, Reyes said. Israel Rodriguez-Martinez, a former Hampton resident, shared his experience of being brought from Mexico at age 8 in the video. He said he wanted to impact other young people. “Just because you’re a different race from everybody, doesn’t make you any less,” he said in the video. Reyes said childhood experiences like pledging allegiance to the American flag, being surrounded by Cy-Hawk rivalry and considering America home make her and other immigrants American “in every way except on paper.” “This is the only country I’ve ever known,” she said. “When people say ‘get out of this country, you don’t belong,’ it does hurt.” Certain terminology – “anchor babies” to refer to citizen children of immigrants and “illegals” to refer to undocumented immigrants – is dehumanizing, Reyes said. “No human being is illegal,” she said. “Actions can be illegal, people can’t.” She and Gunda Brost, a Cedar Falls attorney who specializes in immigration law, sat on the stage following the documentary screening to answer questions from the audience. “Undocumented individuals are some of the hardest-working people I’ve met,” Brost said. Reyes shared some research on the economic impact of immigration, including a study published in April by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy that says the undocumented population contributed nearly $12 billion in state and local taxes in 2012. Many rural communities have been revived through immigration, they said, which was met with support from the audience. “DREAMers are absolute money makers,” one woman said. “How much we lose by being this way – it’s absolutely crazy.” Continuing to share stories of immigration is DREAMIowa’s goal. “A lot of immigrants that are here in our communities and in our lives have these amazing stories that need to be shared,” she said. “They’re very powerful and can change people’s minds.” When she was in middle school, Reyes said she planned to join the Navy or Air Force, but it wasn’t until two years later that she found out she couldn’t. “[Immigration reform] is not just economical and humane,” she said. “It just makes sense. You have this group of people who are willing to fight for the country that they have considered their home. I was willing to, and I still would be. This is the country I am devoted to.” Adelante, a Hampton-based community group that strives to “promote diversity proactively,” hosted the visit and screening. “Every Dreamer has a Story” can be viewed online at dreamia.org on the resources page. TREE FARM HOURS Saturday, December 5 • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, December 6 • Noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, December 12 • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, December 13 • Noon to 5 p.m. OPEN DURING THE WEEK BY APPOINTMENT (1 mile south of Coulter, then 1 1/4 miles East on 130 th St.) 641-866-6946 or 641-456-8173 www.carlsontreefarm.com caused its corrosion. Relining all 91 feet of the pipe at a cost of $23,327 was discussed, but the council later agreed to pay $10,875 to reline a 43.5-foot section that covers all of the problem areas. To do so, a pliable pipe will be pulled through the existing pipe, then a chemical will be poured through that causes the pipe to expand and cure in place. The council also discussed problems in the Linn Grove Swimming Pool piping. A broken spot in a pipe under the pool floor was found to be a cause of thousands of gallons of leaked water this summer. Council members hoped the city wouldn’t have to dig up the pool floor to make the repair. “It’s not good common sense to start digging at the bottom of the pool,” Mayor William Sheldon said. After many unplanned repairs since the pool’s 2010 opening, council members suggested more funds might need to be directed to the pool budget. An issue with the siphon in the city lagoon was pushed to the next meeting. City Clerk Lorna Weier also updated the council on the tentative plan to increase the security deposit on water accounts. Bills can range from $75-100, she said, so the increase from the current $50 deposit to $100 would prevent tenants from being able to leave while still owing the city money. The increase would require changing an ordinance in the city code, and council members agreed to take action on the issue in 2016. Sheldon later voiced concern over how to deal with the council seat that will become vacant once current Councilman Jim Bills becomes mayor in January. Seats up for vote in the Nov. 3 election were those of Larry Wentz and Mike Flatness. Wentz achieved re-election and Flatness ended his run on the council. Bryan Koob was elected to the other open seat. They discussed the vacant seat going to Andy Johnson, the third-highest recipient of votes, but no official decision can be made until the new council takes office. Drop box at First Security Bank & Trust, Thornton. Pick up is 5 p.m., Friday The Pioneer Enterprise (formerly the Southern County news) is a combination of the Thornton Enterprise and the Rockwell Tribune; dedicated to serving the communities of Thornton, Rockwell, Meservey, Swaledale, Dougherty, and Chapin. We reserve the right to edit any and all copy presented to our news department. We reserve the right to reject any advertising, request pre-payment and cancel at any time. Contract rates available on request. Quantity discounts available. Newsroom Editor/Photographer: Travis Fischer, 641-456-2585, ext. 129, or email t.k.fischer@hotmail.com. Use this contact for engagements, anniversaries, weddings, new arrivals, achievers, press releases, letters to the editor and other news items. Circulation & Subscriptions Deb Chaney, 1-800-558-1244, ext. 122 or email mapcirculation@iowaconnect.com, subscriptions and renewals can take up to two weeks to process, and may cause lags in service if not planned ahead. Didn’t Get Your Paper? 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Deadlines Legal Notices .................. 5 p.m., Friday Classified Ads ..............1 p.m., Monday Display Ads .................1 p.m., Monday Submitted News ..........1 p.m., Monday Obituaries .................. 10 a.m., Tuesday Breaking News ...........9 a.m., Monday* Event coverage requests .......... 24 hours *This news may not be published in the current issue. The Pioneer Enterprise Staff Regular employees in order of continuous years of service: Sue O’Brien, Correspondant; Ryan Harvey, Publisher, Ad Sales; Sandy Evans, Ad Sales; Sara Paulsen, Composition; Travis Fischer, News Editor, Photographer, Kelly McGowan News Editor, Photographer. Official Newspaper for Cerro Gordo County City of Rockwell City of Thornton City of Meservey City of Swaledale West Fork School District Member of Iowa Newspaper Assn. National Newspaper Assn. A Division of Mid-America Publishing Corp. P.O. Box 29 Hampton IA 50441 Ryan Harvey, President and CEO OVERTAXING this in the current year, we can’t.” So the conclusion to pay the amount back from future levies was the next best thing, he said. “There is no perfect answer,” he said. “It is just to do what is practical, reasonable and responsible.” The time of year of the discovery also added frustration to fixing this year’s overcharge. “If this happened in July or August and nobody had paid taxes, it would be doable,” Kline said. “But since people have paid portions or full taxes, it just becomes a nightmare, frankly.” West Fork was upfront about correcting the mistake, he said. “To their credit, they didn’t sweep it under the rug,” Kline said. “They came to us. They’re doing the right thing to take the initiative.” The situation was unique, Kline said, and he had never dealt with similar levy issues. “We don’t live in a perfect world,” he said. “We live in this world. And this is the best we can do. It would be great if they could fix it in a year, but that’s a big burden to bear for a school district.” Strike said it was a complicated issue for the board to work through. “Basically, we want to make it right with our taxpayers,” he said. “We will move forward to reduce [the levy] proportionately with the amount we overtaxed.” The cut to PPEL income due to the planned decrease will not have a huge effect on future district budgets, Strike said. “I don’t see a significant impact,” he said. “Obviously, it’s something we would have preferred to have not happened.” The Pioneer Enterprise is published weekly at 314 Main St. E., Rockwell, IA by Mid-America Publishing Corp. and Periodicals Postage paid at Rockwell, IA 50469. Postmaster: Send address changes to: The Pioneer Enterprise, P.O. Box 203, Rockwell, IA. 50469 USPS #505640 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH Tacos, Rice, Refried Beans, Pears, Cinnamon Puff 1-800-558-1244 toll-free 641-923-2685 fax www.pioneerenterprise.com PioneerEnterprise@qwestoffice.net Mailing Address: P.O Box 203 Rockwell, IA 50469 Office Location: 314 Main St. E Rockwell, IA Attorney Gunda Brost and political activist Monica Reyes sat on the stage of the Windsor Theatre Nov. 16 to answer questions from the audience following a screening of “Every Dreamer has a Story,” an 11-minute documentary about immigration. KELLY MCGOWAN PHOTO Rockwell council peers down sewer pipe BY KELLY MCGOWAN The Rockwell City Council, employees and a future councilman left the council chamber during the Nov. 18 meeting to gather around City Superintendent Jay Siefken’s desk. He sat with his computer screen facing the crowd while they watched video from the perspective of a mouse, and saw the inside of a damaged 91-foot-long sewer pipe that plugged last year below the library. The city investigated the plumbing problem by paying $1,200 to Central Iowa Televising for the inside look at the pipe. The recording continued as the camera snaked through puddled water that sat in sections of the pipe. Fourteen feet in, the clay pipe leads into four feet of PVC, followed by seven feet of corroded clay. Another stretch of good pipe leads into four feet of old iron pipe. A rush of water f lowed by the camera – someone had flushed. Council members suggested that someone pouring harsh chemicals or hot oil down the pipe might have ENTERPRISE 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH Sen. Amanda Ragan, pictured here at an October meeting addressing the Medicaid Modernization program, traveled to Washington D.C. last week to discuss the issue with federal officials. FILE PHOTO BY KELLY MCGOWAN One Iowa woman who has spent 21 years as an undocumented immigrant is stepping out of the shadows to share her story and urging others to do the same. Monica Reyes, co-founder of the political activist group DREAMIowa, visited the Windsor Theatre in Hampton Nov. 16 as part of the organization’s push for comprehensive immigration reform. About 25 audience members saw an airing of an 11-minute documentary called “Every Dreamer has a Story,” and stayed for a discussion. Following the showing, Reyes shared her own story. It starts with being driven from Mexico through a desert at age 3 with her mother and 14-month-old sister to escape an abusive biological father. It winds through undocumented life in California, Marshalltown, New Hampton and Waterloo. “My mom had to risk her life and mine to get here,” Reyes said. “If there had been a safe, legal pathway to do so, she would have definitely taken that option.” Her story’s most recent chapter is in Cedar Falls at the University of Northern Iowa, where Reyes is one of the state’s most well-known undocumented immigrants. She purposely shares her status and story to urge audience engagement. “Be my vote,” she said. Much of the conversation centered on DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals), a 2012 policy that exempts some immigrants who arrived before turning 16 from deportation and makes them eligible for renewable two-year work permits. It does not lead to a green card or citizenship. To many, it was an appreciated step, but not a final solution to what Reyes called America’s “broken immigration system.” “DACA is a Band-Aid over a gashing wound that is bleeding a lot,” Des Moines resident Hector Salamanca Arroyo said in the video. If the next president were to discontinue DACA and similar programs, Reyes said 11.4 million undocumented people – 37,000 of whom PIONEER THE Out from the shadows 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 2 The Pioneer Enterprise Thursday, November 26, 2015 3 Seven Or More Reasons It’s Dumb For Governors To Turn Away Syrian Refugees Syria, for those of you that need a refresher, has been locked in a civil war since 2011. It’s a seed of the Arab Spring that grew to be particularly thorny. While President Bashar alAssad was busy fighting against rebel forces, ISIS came in and laid claim to a big chunk of the country’s rural territory. Throw in a second rebellion from northern Kurdish groups and you’ve got 17 million people caught in the middle of a brutal four-way conflict. Syrian families live in danger of chemical weapons attacks from their president, beheadings from the terrorists that set up in their backyard, and forced recruitment of their children into one of the militia groups. Shockingly enough, some of them have opted to leave the country. Actually, a lot of them have. About four million or so. Some of those four million are coming here to the United States, which has apparently become a matter of controversy following ISIS’ recent attack on Paris. Thirty governors, including our own Terry Branstad, have loudly declared that they will not accept Syrian refugees into their states. Because obviously the best way to combat ISIS is to make it harder for the people they terrorize the most to escape them. (One) Yep. The last thing we would ever want to do is allow native Syrians with no love for any of the brutal monsters ruining their home to immerse themselves into our culture. It would be terrible if stability ever returned to the region, allowing those families to return to their homeland with fond memories of American hospitality. That certainly wouldn’t be a positive step for middle-east relations. In case it’s not apparent. That’s sarcasm. Fortunately, our governors are there to protect us from such an outcome. “The State of Texas will not accept any refugees from Syria in the wake of the deadly terrorist attack in Paris,” wrote Texas Governor Greg Abbot in a letter to the White House. Well, I suppose after such a tragedy that’s a reasonable response, at least until you realize that Governors don’t actually have the authority to prevent refugees from moving to their states. (Two) The authority to grant admission of refugees is explicitly given to the President and the 14th Amendment gives those refugees the same protections it does to everybody else. In their opposition to the President, these governors are disregarding the Constitution and overstepping their bounds. Wait, that sounds familiar… At the very most, Governors can direct state agencies to not work with refugees once they are admitted to the United States, which is little more than a token gesture of infantile petulance. But hey, anything to keep America safe. After all, the Paris attackers were Syrian refugees. Oh wait… no, that’s wrong. One of them got into the country on a stolen Syrian passport, but most of them were French nationals from elsewhere. (Three) Yes, the same thought process that gave us the Iraq War after 15 Saudi Arabians and a handful of other non- AGE OF THE GEEK Travis Fischer Iraqi hijacked planes on 9/11 is now back and dictating Republican refugee policy. Speaking of 9/11, the refugee admission program was retooled after the attack. In other words, Republicans are trying to convince people that the refugee screening policy created during the Bush Administration in the wake of 9/11 is hopelessly ineffective. (Four) That process, by the way, involves a referral from the United Nations, multiple security screenings, and takes at least a year. We aren’t talking about a boatload of random immigrants spilling into New York. Which brings us to the next level of absurdity about this entire situation. Protecting America by keeping out Syrian refugees is like protecting your house by locking a tiny window in your attic. Visas are still a thing and come in a wide variety of flavors. And that’s if you want to get in legally. Sit down because this may shock you. A sizable chunk of people living in the USA today didn’t get into the country legally. (Five) If ISIS wants to get people into the country, there are far easier and more reliable ways to do it than getting in as a refugee. The 9/11 hijackers weren’t refugees. The Paris attackers weren’t even refugees. You know who else weren’t refugees? Adam Lanza, James Holmes, and Dylann Roof. (Six) Or did everybody just forget that we’ve had more than sixty of our own mass shootings in the United States since the year 2000? And that’s using the strictest definition I could find, with three or more killed. Stretch that definition to three or more injured, and there have been 325 shootings just this year, the latest of which happened in Des Moines. In a flash of brilliant lack of selfawareness, one Texas official warned that we shouldn’t allow refugees into the country because of how easy it is to get a gun. What exactly are we scared of? That our next mass shooting might not come at the hands of a red-blooded American? This column is getting a little long, so let’s wrap it up with a few more quick facts. * The United States has already admitted 1,800 refugees into the country, of which about 2% are single men of combat age. This means there could be as many as 36 people in the United States right now that… escaped from a war-torn country to seek out a better life. * This one will give the conspiracy nuts something to chew on. Obama is finishing out his last year in office by increasing the number of Syrian refugees to at least 10,000. Of course, that’s still just a fraction of the tens of thousands of refugees we bring in every year. The United States has an annual cap of 70,000 refugees, divided among regions across the world. President Obama plans on raising that cap to an even 100,000. * Among those refugees include about 40,000 from Iraq over the last three years. In case you’ve forgotten, Iraq is that other country ISIS has torn a big chunk out of. One would think that Iraqi refugees would pose the same risk of ISIS infiltration as Syrian refugees, yet nobody seems terribly concerned about them. * Speaking of refugees from other nations, the Tsarnaev brothers came to the U.S. from Kyrgyzstan after their father sought asylum in 2004. Here we actually do have an example of refugees committing an attack and yet I don’t recall any push to stop Kyrgyzstan immigration after the Boston Marathon bombing. * By the way, not that it’s a competition, but France will be accepting 30,000 more Syrian refugees over the next two years, and they are a fifth our size. Germany has already brought in more than 50,000. (Not that their motives are entirely pure. An influx of refugees may serve as a solution to the country’s impending demographic crisis.) The bottom line is this. The call to deny refugees is nothing more than an overreaction to score cheap political points. The humanitarian need is great and the threat is negligible. This opposition is nothing more than baseless political theater. At least I hope it is, because there are state senators out there suggesting we repeat atrocities not seen since World War II. A Tennessee state senator wants to send the National Guard to forcibly evict the thirty-some refugees from his state. Another in Rhode Island is suggesting refugees be segregated into interment camps. These horrific ideas will do nothing to keep us safe. They will, however, serve as great recruitment tools for ISIS. In case the word “terrorists” wasn’t obvious enough, ISIS wants to scare people. They want the world to be so afraid of Muslims that they have nowhere else to turn but their Caliphate. This kind of logic-free fear mongering does nothing but play directly into their hands. (Seven) Travis Fischer is a news writer for Mid-America Publishing and is not inclined to let terrorists win. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 121 2nd St., N., Rockwell Phone 822-4919 Pastor Ken Livingston Sundays 8:30 a.m. Worship 9:30 a.m. Coffee Time 10 a.m. Sunday School FIRST REFORMED CHURCH 620 2nd St., Meservey Phone 358-6151 Rev. Rodney Meester Sundays 9:30 a.m. Worship FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 404 Maple St., Thornton Phone 998-2004 Pars. 358-6107 The Rev. Crystal Oberheu Sundays 9 a.m. Worship Service 9:30 a.m. Sunday School Wednesdays 5:45 p.m. Confirmation HANFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH 12411 Spruce Ave, Mason City Phone 423-7376 641-822-4657 Pastor Scott Sokol Sundays 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:15 a.m. Sun. Worship HOLY NAME CHURCH 507 1st Ave NW, Rockford Phone 822-4950 Fr. Walter Brunkan Saturdays 5 p.m. Mass Franklin Chorale Christmas concert is Dec. 6 Under the direction of Jesse Bunge, the 26-member Franklin Chorale will present “Christmas with the Chorale” on Sunday, Dec. 6 at 2 p.m., in Hampton. Opening with the jubilant “Choral Fanfare for Christmas” by Ron Nelson, the program continues with John Rutter’s lovely “What Sweeter Music;” the familiar “For Unto Us A Child Is Born” from MESSIAH; and the wonder and mystery of Craig Courtney’s “Carol of the Birds.” The first half of the concert closes with the crisply rhythmical“Mary Sat ARockin’” by Greg Gilpin. The second half of the concert kicks off with a performance of “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing.” Another traditional Christmas carol, “Silent Night” will be sung with audience participation followed by the Chorale men singing a Chanticleer arrangement of “Ave Maria” by Franz Biebl. “Tomorrow Shall Be My Dancing Day,” a traditional English carol, will be sung by the Chorale women followed by another excerpt from MESSIAH, “Glory To God,” sung by the entire group. The Hampton-Dumont Chamber Choir will then join the group in singing “Hope For Resolution.” This festive piece is a unique juxtaposition of one of the great Latin Mass hymns “Corde Natus”(Of The Father’s Love Begotten) and the South African freedom song “Thula sizwe” (Nation, do not cry). Members of the 2015-16 Franklin Chorale include: Erin Bunge, Mary Mollenbeck, Dawn Groszkruger, Margaret Smith and Grace McElroy. Altos: Kendra Voss, Linda Kuehner, Deb Lukensmeyer, Sara Richter, Glenda Schwab, Morgan Katz, Diane Wills and Karen Ferris. Tenors: Linzy Collins, Moli Gerken, Jim Davies, Kim Wills, Carl Bollhagen, Paul Krull and Brett Ubben. Baritone/bass: Alan Ferris, Craig Semler, Brian Johnson, Zachary Voss, Omar Blanco-Valentin and Kent Mollenbeck. The First Congregational Church of Hampton is once again hosting the concert. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for students and children. They can be purchased at Center 1 in Hampton, from a Chorale member or at the door. NEW LYRIC THEATRE —BELMOND, IA Showing Nov. 27 - Dec. 3 Rated:G THE PEANUTS MOVIE News & Advertising Monday @ 1 p.m. The Pioneer Enterprise 1-800-558-1244 PRINCE OF PEACE LUTHERAN CHURCH, WELS 670 12th St. NE Mason City IA 50401 Phone: (641) 424-3503 Pastor Robert Harting Pastor’s cell: 641-455-3562 Sundays: Feb.-July - Worship: 11 a.m. Aug.-Jan. - Worship: 9 a.m. Wednesdays: Bible Study 7 p.m. RICHLAND LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELS 300 Elm St., Thornton Phone 998-2642 Pastor’s cell: 641-455-3562 www.richlandlutheran.com Pastor Robert Harting Sundays Feb.- July: Sunday School/ Bible Class: 8 a.m. Worship: 9 a.m. Aug.- Jan.: Worship: 11 a.m. Sunday School / Bible Class: 12 p.m. SACRED HEART CHURCH 305 Elm St., E., Rockwell Phone 822-4950 Fr. Rodney Allers Sundays 8 a.m. Mass SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 810 First St., Meservey Phone 358-6277 Pars. 358-6107 The Rev. Crystal Oberheu Sundays 9:15-10:15 a.m. Sun. School 9:45-10:15 a.m. Coffee 10:30 a.m. Worship Service Wednesdays 4:30 p.m. Confirmation ST. PATRICK CATHOLIC CHURCH 1001 9th Ave. S. Clear Lake Phone 357-3214 Msgr. Lilip Saturdays 4 p.m. Mass Sundays 9 a.m. Mass Snoopy embarks upon his greatest mission as he and his team take to the skies to pursue their arch-nemesis, while his best pal Charlie Brown begins his own epic quest back home. Showtimes Friday —Thursday 7:30 p.m. ST. PETER EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA 502 2nd St., S., Rockwell Phone 822-3101 Pastor Rhea Evanson Sundays 10:30 a.m Worship Service ST. PAUL EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH 400 Larch St., Thornton Phone 998-2632 Home 998-2631 Pastor Rhea Evanson Sundays 9 a.m. Worship Service SWALEDALE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Main St., Swaledale Phone 995-2252 Rev. Travis Stedick Sundays 8:10 a.m. Worship 10:15 a.m. Sunday School UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 303 Monroe St., Rockwell Phone 822-4833 Rev. Travis Stedick Sundays 9:15 a.m. Sunday School 10:25 a.m. Worship ZION REFORMED CHURCH 2029B Jonquil Ave. Sheffield Phone 579-6186 The Rev. Arthur Zewert Sundays 9:15 a.m. Worship 10:45 a.m. Sunday School Tuesdays 9 a.m. Sewing Group Thursdays 9 a.m. Bulletin Deadline Ticket Prices Adult - $3; 15 & Under - $2 The Pioneer Enterprise 4 College Singers Close Semester with Winter Concert and Prepare for Tour The North Iowa Area Community College (NIACC) Concert Choir and NIACC Singers Winter Concert will be held in the North Iowa Community Auditorium on Friday, Dec. 4 at 7:30 p.m. This year’s winter concert features a mixture of sacred and secular seasonal music, non-seasonal choral selections, and the “Rather Be” tour selections by the NIACC Singers. The group’s director Jayson Ryner said, “This group has been very focused and risen to every challenge. Our list of literature is long and impressive.” “We have a long list of staples of the collegiate choral repertoire including Hope, Faith, Life, Love by Eric Whitacre, Stars I Shall Find by David Dickau, and Let All the World in Every Corner Sing Hunters donate deer meat to Food Bank of Iowa Have an extra deer at the end of the hunt? Maybe you bought an extra tag to hunt longer? Consider donating to Iowa’s HUSH program. HUSH (Help Us Stop Hunger) works with 81 participating lockers to provide high quality meat to Iowans in need, through the Food Bank of Iowa. Field dressed deer are skinned, de-boned and ground into twopound packages and then distributed to local families. The program is funded by hunters, who pay a dollar surcharge with each deer tag purchase. In its second decade now, HUSH has provided meat from 63,000 deer to those who need it—3,300 last year. Processors receive $75 for their end of the work. The Food Bank of Iowa picks up $5, as it oversees distribution. Each locker will accept whole deer, asking the hunter to fill out a Hunter HUSH card. There is no fee paid at the locker. A list of participating lockers is available in the Iowa Hunting Regulations and online at www.iowahush.com. Lime Creek to allow snow bike use on trails Effective immediately, Lime Creek Conservation Area trails will allow Snow Bikes access to the Quarry Lake Loop and the Wild Turkey Loop during the snow/winter season. Snow bike users (tires greater than 3.5”) are restricted to the designated trails of Quarry Lake Loop and the Wild Turkey Loop. (CGC-7.2 Recreational Use: All recreational use other than foot traffic is restricted to designated trails on all county conservation board managed areas). Access to LCCA will be allowed from the south along the east/river side of the River Bluffs Trail and the Easy Access Trail during the snow/ winter season. Snow bike users must obey all signs and not travel in the groomed tracks set on the River Bluffs Trail section described above. If you have any questions regarding winter trail use or winter conditions contact the conservation office @ 423-5309 or visit our website at www.co.cerro-gordo.ia.us. by Ralph Vaughan Williams.” In January, NIACC Singers will travel on the Royal Caribbean Navigator of the Seas to Jamaica, Haiti, and the Cayman Islands. The singers will perform on the ship’s main stage throughout the cruise. Feature songs for that tour performed in this concert will include Pompeii by the Bastille, , MLK by U2, and Rather Be by Clean Bandit. Choreography for the performance was created by Tom Gerking and within the group itself. Seasonal flavor songs will compose the third portion of the concert. “The Singers Women will be singing and dancing to All I Want for Christmas is You and we will again sing our traditional Sending You a Little Christmas with dedication to our military personnel,” Ryner said. “We also have more holiday selections to round out the concert.” “The activities within the choral program are designed to give students a small private college vocal experience. By traveling to sing with other schools, using international travel, and community performances the students get a broad experience.” The Concert Choir and NIACC Singers have been active this semester by performing within the community at Trinity Lutheran Church, First United Methodist Church, Luther College, and singing the National Anthem at sporting events. This is the last opportunity for the community to see the group this semester. Lime Creek Conservation area trails closed Effective immediately, Lime Creek Conservation Area trails will be closed to all bikes and horses for the remainder of the winter/ski season. Trails will reopen to bikes and horses in the spring of 2016. Cerro Gordo County Conservation Board would like to inform all LCCA users of trail guidelines during the winter season. Lime Creek Conservation Area offers nearly eight miles of groomed trails to accommodate diagonal stride/traditional skiing and skate style skiing when snow conditions permit. An initial base of 6-8 inches of snowfall is required to cover all trail irregularities and provide a base for grooming activities. Normal grooming will typically follow any additional snowfall. If a dusting of snowfall is received it is recommended to simply ski over the existing groomed tracks. Hikers, dog walkers, and other winter trail users are encouraged to use either the Quarry Lake Loop or the Easy Access Trail. The Quarry Lake Loop is located on the west side of the area and is packed to facilitate a hard surfaced snow trail. The Easy Access Trail is located adjacent to the Nature Center and when conditions permit the trail is cleared of snow. If non-skiers and/or pets are to use any of the “groomed” cross county ski trails they are directed to walk to the far right of the groomed area and to not walk in the grooved channels set for the classical or diagonal stride skiers. Skiers with pets are also directed to keep pets from walking/running in groomed area. (All pets must be kept on a 6-foot leash) The ski season is very short in north Iowa and to maintain trail opportunities, it will take the cooperation of all park users. All motorized vehicle traffic is prohibited on all trails (i.e. ATVs, snowmobiles, etc). If you have any questions regarding winter trail use or winter conditions contact the conservation office @ 423-5309 or visit our website at www.co.cerro-gordo.ia.us. Mary Spitz chosen as inaugural SBDC Support Person of the Year America’s SBDC Iowa is pleased to announce that Mary Spitz, Administrative Assistant, North Iowa Area Community College Small Business Development Center (SBDC), Mason City, is the winner of the SBDC’s Support Person of the Year Award. This is the first year for this award, which recognizes the superior performance of a regional support staff member for exemplary service to America’s SBDC Iowa. Brook Boehmler, regional director of the North Iowa Area SBDC, who nominated Spitz for the award, says, “Mary has been the anchor for the North Iowa Area SBDC. She has made sure that every audit has always gone smoothly and that all national/state compliance is correct. Clients are assured that they are important. She does all of this while only working half-time for the SBDC.” The SBDC Support Person of the Year Award will be presented to Mary in Mason City by SBDC State Director Lisa Shimkat on Friday, November 20th. Mary has been with the SBDC for seven years. Previous to her work with the SBDC, Mary worked for eight years for Mitchell County Regional Health Center in Osage. The America’s SBDC Iowa program is an outreach program of Iowa State University’s College of Business. Funded in part through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration, the organization has 15 regional assistance centers located strategically across the state including a center at North Iowa Area Community College. Since program inception in 1981, the Center has helped hundreds of thousands of Iowa businesses and entrepreneurs through no cost, confidential, customized, professional business counseling and practical, affordable training. Thursday, November 26, 2015 Basic firearm rules are important for a safe hunt The first of Iowa’s two shotgun deer seasons opens on Dec. 5, and while optimism for a successful hunt is the primary focus, hunters are encouraged to brush up on safe hunting practices. Basic firearm rules are pretty straight forward: treat every firearm as though it were loaded; always point the muzzle in a safe direction; be sure of your target and what’s beyond it; keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot. “Our deer hunting tradition is shared with our friends and our family,” said Megan Wisecup, hunter education administrator for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. “Practicing safe hunting techniques is important to make sure we all get home at the end of the day.” An estimated 125,000 hunters are expected to take to the timber during Iowa’s two shotgun deer seasons and Wisecup said self inflicted injuries and property damage continue to be prominent. “Those incidents could be avoided by simply following the basic rules of firearm safety and ensuring there is a safe backdrop prior to taking a shot. Hunters need to remember that it is illegal to discharge a firearm within 200 yards of a building inhabited by people or livestock or a feedlot unless the owner or tenant has given their consent. It is also illegal to discharge a shotgun shooting slugs or a pistol or revolver on or over a public roadway,” she said. “Hunters tend to get fixated on their target and when a deer is running, they forget about their surroundings. Look beyond your target and clearly identify the target before taking the shot,” Wisecup said. “You must be certain you have a clear, safe shot. Never point your firearm at anything you do not want to shoot.” That advice can help to prevent self inflicted wounds as well. Wisecup encouraged hunters to wear plenty of blaze orange and to discuss the hunting plan with everyone in the group. “You want to be seen from all sides in the woods,” she said. “It is also important to discuss the hunting plan that will outline the role for each person and where they will be during the hunt. Plan your hunt and hunt your plan. It is critical to communicate with your hunting partners to ensure everyone knows where each other is at all times.” In 2014, there were 14 deer hunting related incidents in Iowa during the two shotgun seasons: two personal injuries and 12 property damage. Hunting Safety Tips · Treat every firearm as if it were loaded · Always keep the muzzle pointed in a safe direction · Be sure of the target and what is beyond it · Keep finger off the trigger until ready to fire · Keep the barrel clear and choose the proper ammunition. Winter Weather Factors · Unload the firearm and open the action when crossing obstacles – if snow and ice is on the ground, the risk of slipping or falling dramatically increases · Visibility – put the hunt on hold if visibility is poor due to fog and/or snowy conditions · Bundled up – keeping your finger off the trigger and muzzle control are both extremely important as bulky coats and gloves increases chances of an accidental discharge Hunter Visibility · Wear plenty of blaze orange. Hunters want to be seen from all sides in the woods and fields · Discuss the hunting plan with everyone in the group. Outline the role for each person and where they will be throughout the hunt. Plan your hunt and hunt your plan. Communication is critical to ensure everyone knows where each other is at all times. Ultimate Goal · Everyone gets home safely Iowa’s 2015 shotgun deer season preview Iowa’s shotgun deer season is still a few weeks away, leaving time for hunters to contact landowners, sight in shotguns and tend to all the details before getting out and enjoying Iowa’s outdoors with friends and family. Expect about 75,000 hunters across Iowa in the first shotgun season, Dec. 5-9, and then another 50,000 to head out Dec. 12-20, during the second gun season. Each contingent will also pack along thousands of antlerless tags, to extend their prospects. If you are a fan of cold weather and have a muzzleloader, that December 21-Jan. 10 late season attracts hunters holding about 30,000 tags. That number likely will drop, though, with fewer snapping up county antlerless tags. Iowa’s shotgun seasons allow for group drives; drivers pushing deer toward blockers. Anyone in the group may tag a downed deer with their own tag. That stands in contrast to other states and even Iowa’s more solitary muzzleloader and bow sea- sons. However, it has proven to be an efficient method for taking deer, since modern deer hunting was introduced here in the early 50s. Whatever the season, any deer must be tagged before it is moved or within 15 minutes, whichever comes first. It also holds the potential for danger, as drivers move closer to, or across, their friends on a drive. “That’s why wearing solid blaze orange is mandatory. At least the minimum (torso covered). More is better,” said DNR recreation safety officer Pat Jorgensen. “Our No. 1 cause of deer hunting incidents involves a hunter shooting at a running deer with someone in the area. Recognize what stands in front of and behind the target.” For several years, deer hunters have noticed fewer whitetails than in the early 2000s. That is by design. A decade ago, state lawmakers instructed the DNR to reduce the deer population, after steady growth through the previous few decades. With addition of county and season specific antlerless tags, generous quotas, and a couple extra seasons, near Thanksgiving and during January, hunters responded. Adaptive regulation changes have lowered the deer herd to mid-90s target levels, in all but a handful of counties. Hunters in 27 north central and northwest counties have no county antlerless tags and may take only antlered deer during the first shotgun season. Iowa’s overall deer harvest across all seasons last year was 101,569 – down 39 percent from the peak – and the 2015 harvest should be similar. “Now is a good time for the DNR to work with hunters and landowners to help develop a better understanding of proper deer management; including the benefits of harvesting does and keeping deer numbers at ecologically acceptable levels,” said DNR wildlife management biologist Terry Haindfield. “Hunters working with landowners at the local level are the best and most efficient way to keep deer numbers acceptable and provide a high quality deer herd.” Area fishing report for north central Iowa The Iowa Department of Natural Resources’ weekly fishing report is compiled from information gathered from local bait shops, angler creel surveys, and county and state parks staff. For current information, contact the Clear Lake Fish and Wildlife office at (641) 357-3517. Clear Lake: Docks at the city ramp, McIntosh State Park and Ventura are out for the season. The fish cleaning station is closed. Yellow bass, good: Angler activity is slowing but boat or shore anglers may still have good success until the lake is frozen. Shore anglers should target the MacIntosh or Ventura boat accesses where there is deeper water to cast to. Walleye, no report. S h e l l Ro c k R i ve r (a b ove Greene): Smallmouth bass, no re- port. Use a slower presentation as it gets colder. East Fork Des Moines (Algona to Humboldt): Walleye, good. Anglers have had good action the last few weeks. Try minnows on a light jig or twister tails in deeper holes. $36 for 1 year $29 for 9 months $21 for 6 months 1-800-558-1244 • PioneerEnterprise@questoffice.net 304 Main Street - P.O. Box 203, Rockwell, Iowa 50469 (641) 822-3193 • email: ThePioneerEnt@netins.net The Pioneer Enterprise Thursday, November 26, 2015 5 PUBLIC NOTICE West Fork Community School District PUBLIC NOTICE Cerro Gordo County Annual Financial Report NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING SPECIFICATIONS- WEST FORK COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT INDOOR FITNESS CENTER – ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT AND FLOORING 435 N 5th Street, Sheffield, IA 50475 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING & ADVERTISEMENTS FOR BIDS FOR THE PROPOSED WEST FORK COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT AND FLOORING FOR THE INDOOR FITNESS CENTER Notice is hereby given that the West Fork Community School Board will meet in the West Fork Community School District board room located at 210 2nd Street South, Rockwell, Iowa on December 14, 2015, at 5:00 p.m. at which time and place a hearing will be held on the proposed DRAWINGS, SPECIFICATIONS, form of CONTRACT for the Athletic Equipment and Flooring for the INDOOR FITNESS CENTER. Any interested party may appear to be heard. At the said time and place, the West Fork Community School Board will also receive and consider BIDS for said construction. The proposed project consists of a new indoor fitness center with new parking lots located at 435 North 5th Street, Sheffield, Iowa. The work to be done is as follows: Work consists of supplying and installing Athletic flooring, basketball hoops, volleyball standards, scoreboards, dividing curtains, controllers and wall padding into a new athletic center currently under construction. Lump sum bids for athletic equipment and sport flooring will be received for the work. The West Fork Community School Board will receive bids before December 3rd, 2015 at 11:00 am. Bids received after this time will not be accepted. Bids will be opened and publicly read aloud immediately after specified closing time. All bids must be filed at the West Fork Community School District Central Office, located at 435 N 5th Street, Sheffield, Iowa, on or before the time herein set. All paper confirmations of the bids shall be on the form provided in the specifications. Each bid shall be accompanied by a bid bond, certified check, cashier’s check or credit union certified share draft, in a separate sealed envelope in an amount equal to five percent (5%) of the total amount of the bid. If bid bond is submitted, it must be on an approved AIA bid bond form. The certified check or cashier’s check shall be drawn on a bank in Iowa or a bank chartered under the laws of the United States of America; certified share draft shall be drawn on a credit union chartered under the laws of the United States. Bid security should be made payable to the West Fork Community School District as security that if awarded a contract the bidder will enter into a contract at the prices bid and furnish the required Contractor’s Bonds and Certificate of Insurance. The certified check, cashier’s check, or certified share draft may be cashed, or the Bid Bond forfeited, and the proceeds retained as liquidated damages if the Bidder fails to execute a contract and file acceptable Certificate of Insurance within ten (10) days after the acceptance of the proposal by the West Fork Community School District. No bidder may withdraw a proposal within forty-five (45) days after the date set for opening bids. Payment to the Contractor will be made in monthly estimates and one final payment. Monthly estimates will be equivalent to ninetyfive percent (95%) of the contract value of the work completed during the preceding calendar month. Such payments will in no way be construed as an act of acceptance for any of the work partially or totally completed. Published in The Pioneer Enterprise on Thursday, November 26, 2015 Final payment to Contractor will be made no earlier than forty-five (45) days from and after final acceptance of work by the West Fork Community School District, subject to the contract conditions and in accordance with the provisions of Iowa Code chapters 26 and 573. Payment of the cost of said project will be made in cash used for said purposes. The work under the contract shall commence on or before the date specified in the written ‘Notice of Proceed’ and shall be fully completed and ready for acceptance no later than the date specified by the Contractor on the proposal form. By virtue of statutory authority, preference will be given to products and provisions grown and produced within the State of Iowa and to Iowa domestic labor. SPECIFICATIONS- West Fork Community School District Indoor Fitness Center – Athletic Equipment and Flooring 435 N 5th Street, Sheffield, IA 50475 The successful bidder shall be required to furnish a Contractor’s Performance and Labor and Material Payment Bond on an approved AIA form in an amount equal to one hundred percent (100%) of the contract price. The bonds are to be issued by responsible surety, approved by the West Fork Community School District, and shall guarantee the faithful performance of the contract and the terms and conditions therein contained and shall guarantee the prompt payment for and of all materials and protect and save harmless the School District from all claims and damages of any kind caused by the operation of the Contractor, and shall guarantee the work contracted for a period of one (1) year from the date of final acceptance of the improvements by the School Board. Plans and specifications governing construction of the proposed project have been prepared by Martin Gardner Architecture PC., Marion, Iowa. All materials and procedures shall be in strict accordance with said plans and specifications referred to and defining said proposed improvements and are hereby made a part of this Advertisement and of the proposed contract by reference, and that the contract shall be executed in compliance therewith. Plans and specifications and proposed contract documents may be examined at the offices of the Architect, and other locations as outlined in the Construction Documents. Copies of the plans and specifications, form of contract and bid form may be obtained from Martin Gardner Architecture, P.C., 700 11th Street, Suite 200, Marion, IA 52302 or 11502 390th Street, Strawberry Point, IA 52076, 319-377-7604. The Architect's office will issue plans to all Contractors. The drawings and specifications are available at the architect’s website www.MartinGardnerArch. com. Plans and specifications to be viewed are in Adobe .pdf format and may be downloaded and printed. Be aware that no warranty as to the compatibility of your computer software or hardware with the files provided is made. Variations between the printed files provided above by the Architect and these electronic files may exist. In the event that a conflict does exist, the printed documents issued by the Architect will take precedence over the downloaded files. The West Fork Community School District hereby reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities and irregularities and to accept the lowest responsive and responsible bid. Published upon order of the West Fork Community School District Lacey Weier, Board Secretary, West Fork Community School District Published in The Pioneer Enterprise on Thursday, November 26, 2015 Your Custom Printing Specialists BUSINESS & PERSONAL PRINTING 9Business Cards 9Letterhead 9Envelopes 9Newsletters 9Wide Format Banners & Posters Lisa Flack, Custom Print Manager 641.456.2585, ext. 113 LisaFlack.MAP@gmail.com www.MidAmPublishing.com FREE No-Obligation Quotes Jackie Wenzel, Custom Printing 641.456.2585, ext. 111 CustomPrinting.MAP@gmail.com 9Photo Printing 9Business Forms 9Brochures & Flyers 9Custom Invitations 9Graphic Design Services 9Print Marketing FREE Local Delivery FAST Service Call Us Today! 800.558.1244 The Pioneer Enterprise 6 Thursday, November 26, 2015 Reporting from the Cerro Gordo County Courthouse Marriage License Gretchen Thomas, 23, Clear Lake to Justin Small, 34, Clear Lake. Catherine Holland, 32, Rockwell to Roger Berk, 43, Rockwell. Civil Court The court handled five child support matters. Converging Capital LLC vs. Michael Gossman. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $27,135.46 with 2.37% interest from November 16. Schukei Chevrolet vs. Marlys Petersen. Case dismissed with prejudice on November 16. District Court The court handled seven probation revocations and three cases of contempt. Roney Laine, 70, Mason City, received a deferred judgment on November 16 to Harassment in the Second Degree (from Assault Use of a Weapon). Laine was placed on one year probation, assessed a $315 civil penalty, and $140 in costs. An additional charge of Assault While Displaying A Dangerous Weapon were dismissed. George Harrington, 63, Mason City, pled guilty on November 16 to Animal Torture. Harrington was sentenced to 60 days in jail (58 days suspended), placed on two years probation, fined $625 plus 35% surcharge (suspended), and $180 in costs. Albert Struecker, 50, Titonka, pled guilty on November 16 to Prostitution. Struecker was sentenced to two years in prison (suspended), placed on 25 years probation, 180 days in a residential facility, fined $625 plus 35% surcharge, and $140 in costs. Earl Mines, 27, Mason City, pled guilty on November 17 to Domestic Abuse Assault Injury or Mental Illness (pled from Domestic Abuse Assault Impeding Flow of Air/Blood) and Contempt - Violation of No Contact Protective Order. Mines was sentenced to one year and seven days in jail (363 days suspended), placed on one year probation, fined $315 plus 35% surcharge, and $336.50 in costs. Jon Reed, 61, Mason City, pled guilty on November 16 to Domestic Abuse Assault or use of Weapon First Offense. Reed was sentenced to two years in prison (suspended), placed on two years probation, fined $1,250 plus 35% surcharge (suspended), and $550.50 in costs. Two additional charges of Domestic Abuse Assault Impeding Flow of Air/Blood were PUBLIC HEARING City of Thornton PUBLIC HEARING CITY OF THORNTON Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Thornton, Iowa, will conduct a public hearing on the proposal to adopt the Thornton Code of Ordinances 2015. A copy of the Thornton Code of Ordinances 2015 is now on file at Thornton City Hall, 404 Main Street, PO Box 88, Thornton, IA, 50479, and available for public inspection. Said hearing will be held December 7, 2015, at 7:10 P.M. at the Thornton City Hall, Thornton, Iowa, at which times arguments for or against adopting said Code of Ordinances as proposed will be heard and considered. Comments, oral, or written may be submitted to the City Clerk prior to the public hearings. Any comments received will be included in the minutes of the public hearing as part of the permanent record. ATTEST Michelle Duff, Thornton City Clerk Published in The Pioneer Enterprise on Thursday, November 26, 2015 OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS CITY OF THORNTON OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS CITY OF THORNTON NOVEMBER 16, 2015 The Thornton City Council met in special session on the above date and time with Mayor Brian Crowell calling the meeting to order. Council members present: Betty Jensen, Michael Younge, Randall Bohman and Shelby Steenhard. Absent: Barry Groh. Also present Tom Janeka. Jensen made a motion to approve the agenda with the addition of the City siren. Bohman seconded, motion carried. Janeka reported that contractors have found the issue with well house #2. The soft start, starter was found not be working in the control box and needs to be replaced. The starter is the original from 1989. Mike Jensen present at 6:04 p.m. Bids to replace the existing soft start starter were received from Packard Electric - $5702.39, L.M. Pump Service - $3166.00 and Jensen Electric - $5600.00. Both Packard Electric and Jensen Electric submitted proposals to replace the existing Allen Bradley with another Allen Bradley 3 phase soft start starter. L.M. Pump’s proposal didn’t specify the name brand. Mike Jensen left the meeting at 6:30 p.m. After much discussion, Younge made a motion to accept the bid from Jensen Electric. Steenhard seconded. Younge aye, Steenhard aye, Bohman aye, Jensen abstained. Motion carried. Mayor Crowell reported that Electronic Specialties was to come and reprogram the City’s siren to sound once per month as approved at the September 9th City Council meeting. They reported they are short staffed and for the City to hire a local electrician to re-program the siren. Janeka reported that Wayne Koehler with Koehler Electronics disconnected the siren from the current program, but now the siren can’t be manually sounded. All agreed that the siren is very important for public safety and to have the siren re-connected as soon as possible. Steenhard motioned to adjourn. Bohman seconded, motion carried. ATTEST Michelle Duff Thornton City Clerk Published in The Pioneer Enterprise on Thursday, November 26, 2015 dismissed. Dustin Hekel, 35, Charles City, pled guilty on November 17 to Driving While Barred. Hekel was sentenced to seven days in jail, fined $625 plus 35% surcharge, and $100 in costs. Chad Betts, 41, Marshalltown, pled guilty on November 16 to Possession of a Controlled substance 2nd Offense (pled from Possession of Controlled Substance 3rd or Subsequent Offense) and OWI First Offense. Betts was sentenced to two years in prison (suspended), 30 days in jail, placed on one year probation, fined $1,875 plus 35% surcharge ($625 suspended), $125 Law Enforcement Initiative, $20 DARE, and $220 in costs. Jason Keys, 32, Mason City, was found guilty on November 16 to Controlled Substance Violation. Keys was sentenced to 15 years in prison, $125 Law Enforcement Initiative, $10 DARE, $130 in restitution, and $1,177.75 in costs. Johnny Hovenga, 22, Mason City, pled guilty on November 16 to Interference With Official Acts Dangerous Weapon. Hovenga was sentenced to five years in prison, fined $750 plus 35% surcharge (suspended), and $320 in costs. Amber Ward, 31, Clear Lake, pled guilty on November 16 to Domestic Abuse Assault Display or Use of Weapon (first Offense). Ward was sentenced to 63 days in jail, fined $625 plus 35% surcharge (suspended), and $176.50 in costs. Additional charges of Willful Injury - Causing Bodily Injury and Contempt were dismissed. Richard Thompson, 34, Thornton, pled guilty on November 17 to Theft in the Third Degree (pled from Theft in the Second Degree). Thompson was sentenced to 45 days in jail, fined $625 plus 35% surcharge, $125 plus 35% surcharge, and $120 in costs. Gregory Kolb, 63, Thornton, pled guilty on November 13 to OWI First Offense. Kolb was sentenced to five days in jail, fined $1,250 plus 35% surcharge, $10 DARE, and $100 in costs. Vern Freese, 61, Ostrander, MN, pled guilty on November 12 to OWI First Offense. Freese was sentenced to two days in jail, fined $1,250 plus 35% surcharge, $10 DARE, and $100 in costs. Atul Buhla, 28, Charlotte, NC, received a deferred judgment on November 13 to OWI First Offense. Buhla was placed on one year probation, assessed a $1,250 civil penalty, and $100 in costs. Brendon Campbell, 23, Dubuque, received a deferred judgment on OWI First Offense. Campbell was placed on one year probation, assessed a $1,250 civil penalty, and $220 in costs. Small Claims Pebble Creek Associates LP vs. Patricia Oliver, Des Moines. Case dismissed without prejudice on November 11. Kazuo Onoo, Mason City vs. Rufus Manuel, Mason City. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 17 in the amount of $5,000 with 2.37% interest from September 9. Matthew Nepstad, Plymouth, MN vs. Nathanial Windelow, Clear Lake. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $4,351.91 with 2.37% interest from October 2. Capital One Bank vs. Christina Trebil, Mason City. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $1,089.74 with 2.37% interest from October 10. H&R Accounts vs. Jody and Billie Farris, Mason City. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $1,640.57 with 2.37% interest from November 10. Stacey Strilchuk, Garner vs. Christina Jung, Mason City. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $535 with 2.37% interest from October 14. Capital One Bank vs. Alyssa Olsen, Mason City. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $2,990.94. Hardy Rentals vs. Ann and Cody Rose, Mason City. Judgment for the plaintiff on November 16 in the amount of $4,418 with 2.37% interest from October 28. Property Transfer DWDJ: Janet Burnett to Theodore and Marylin Sammis; Warner’s 3rd Add Lot 7; $112,500; 2015-7079. DCD: Leonard Servidio Conservatorship and Rosetta Waychus Conservator to Russell Hardy; Felt’s, Paul, Plat of Mason City Blk 4 Lot 3 MC Part of; $2,000; 2015-7072. DWDJ: Joseph, Krista, Charles, and Jenna Dickman to Kent Goates and Tammie Manley; Meservey (Original Town) Blk 20 Lot 7, Blk 20 Lot 8, Blk 20 Lot 9 MV S 12 1/2’ of Lot 9 Fulfillment of Cont B14 P1049; $25,000; 2015-7071. DAFF: Donald Esser and Marilyn Schmidt Life Estate to Tammy Millard and Judith Spear; Fairview Add Blk 1 Lot 12 MC; 2015-7070. DWDJ: John Groninga to Mark and Shannon Dodd; 3-96-20 Sub. Of NW1/4 Lot 30 A Tract of Land in; Decker’s Add Lot Outlot B MC Portion of; $279,000; 2015-7063. DAFF: Sharon and Robert Deed, Robert Dee Clear Lake Qualified Personal Residence Trust, Sharon OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS City of Rockwell OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS CITY OF ROCKWELL NOVEMBER 18, 2015 Mayor Sheldon called to order the regular meeting of the Rockwell City Council at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 18, 2015. All Council members were present. Also present were Brain Koob, Kelly McGowan, Tom Hensley, Jay Siefken and Chief Whitney. Flatness moved to approve the minutes of the previous meeting as presented. Motion seconded by Worley, carried unanimously. The Library report was tabled until the next meeting. Weier noted that the water deposit is stated in the City Code and felt the change previously discussed could be visited with code updates. Siefken told the Council he had pricing from Visu-Sewer for the last of the televising to the Lagoon. Siefken also stated he had videos and cost for work on the Library sewer line repair. Siefken showed the Council the televised sewer line and the approximate locations that may need attention. Council discussed the options and cost given for the repairs and funds to pay for them. Brown asked if there would be any guarantee on the work. Siefken will check into this. Flatness moved to repair the sewer line at the quoted cost of $10,875 for the forty-three feet that the Council discussed and felt warranted repair. Motion seconded by Bills, carried unanimously. Siefken will get more information on pricing from Visu-Sewer to televise and clean lines to the lagoon for the next meeting. Siefken reported that the State will not approve for the pool to cap the lines as we have discussed and will require having the flooring dug up and fixed as the Engineer plans show for the circulation of water. Siefken would like to do more research on this. Worley noted that we will need to budget more funds to the pool, as stated before, the painting will need to be done and other upkeep will be coming into play. Brown asked about the software for the utility billing and financials and if the computer will work for this. Weier stated that they had just downloaded everything on the computer this morning. Flatness reported on the Landfill meeting, noting Rockwell was second place for the hazardous waste collection this year. Flatness noted it has been a pleasure to be on the landfill board and watch the improvements there. Mayor Sheldon noted that when the time comes January first, he has talked with Andy Johnson, and he would accept the council position if the Council so chooses to appoint him, as he was the next with votes for the candidates on the ballet, when Bills vacates his Council position. With no further business, Wentz moved to adjourn the meeting. Motion seconded by Bills, carried unanimously. ATTEST William Sheldon, Mayor Lorna Weier, City Clerk Published in The Pioneer Enterprise on Thursday, November 26, 2015 Dee Trustee, Robert Dee Trustee, and Ronni Begleiter Attorney in Fact to Sharon Dee; Dodge’s Point Park Blk 10 Lot 19 Und 10% Interest; 2015-7062. DCD: Ralph Smith Estate and Ann Papouchis Executor to River City Rentals LLC; Parker’s 5th Add Blk A Lot 10 MC; $31,500; 20157059. DWD: Lewerke Real Estate LLC to Navratil Excavating Inc; Village Green Industrial Park 1st Sub., The Blk 1 Lot 1 MC Part of as Desc in Survey B07 P1332 (Containing 326787 SQ FT); $125,000; 20157056. DAD: Dale and Bonnie Klunder to Richard Boehmer to Mariah Cary; Brice & Ong Land Co.’s Street Railway Add., Aud Plat of Lots 1 & 2 Blk 14 Lot 13 MC Assigns Contract Rec B13 P2827; $36,464; 2015-7048. DWD: Charles Walker to Charles Walker Trustee and Charles Walker Revocable Trust; Young’s, R.S., North Shore Sub of Lots 1 & 2 1496-22 Lot 67, Lot 68 CL; 2015-7032. DWDJ: Daniel and Linda Kennedy to Kent and Ann Orchard; Sandpiper Condominium Bldg Garage 7 Unit Garage 23; $20,000; 20157031. DWD: Lois and Gene Schwade to Susan Byrne; River Heights Add Lot 9 MC; $46,000; 2015-7027. DAJT: Lois Schwade to Margaret Moon to Lois Schwade; River Heights Add Lot 9 MC; 2015-7026. DQC: Lyle Abbas to Lyle Abbas Trustee and Lyle Abbas Revocable Trust; Pine Tree Park Add Lot 9 CL; 07-94-21 NW NE, SW NE, NE NE Parcel In W/2 NE/4 Contianing 139.75 Acres; Parcel in NE NE Containing 9.9 Acres; 2015-7024. DQC: Lyle Abbas to Lyle Abbas Trustee and Lyle Abbas Revocable Trust; 13-96-22 Sub. Of NE1/4 Lot 4 Part of S 65’; 2015-7019. DQC: CAM Tax Liens Fund IV LLC to CAM Property Holdings LLC; Kirtland (Original Town) Blk 3 Lot 8, Blk 3 Lot 9 RW W 1/2 Lot 9; 2015-7018. DWDJ: Larry and Sharon Anderson to Stacy and Jessica Schroeder; 16-96-21 NW SW Parcel “C” in part as Desc in survey B06 P10134 (Cont 12.86 Acres); $400,000; 2015-7013. DWD: Mark and Lori Haaf to Robert Carrott; North Hill Add Lot 2 CL; $93,500; 2015-7010. DWD: Tamara and Brian Randall to Habitat for Humanity of North Central Iowa; Youngblood’s Add Blk 1 Lot 6 MC; $5,000; 2015-7009. REPORTING to page 9 PUBLIC NOTICE West Fork Community School District OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS WEST FORK BOARD OF EDUCATION UNAPPROVED MINUTES NOVEMBER 16, 2015 The West Fork Board of Education met for its regular meeting in the Superintendent’s Office in Rockwell. The meeting was called to order at 5:00 PM by Board President, Jim Tuttle. Board members present: Mary Schlichting, Mary Beth Sukup, and Roger Witte. Absent: Rob Heimbuch. Also present were Superintendent Darrin Strike, Middle School Principal Tracy Peterson and West Fork Board Secretary Lacey Weier. Visitors: Travis Fisher, Paul Pruin, Terri Anderson, Mya Mathias, Mackenzie Ames, Joshua Despenas, Emma McKee, Delany Christenson, Mia Braun, Jason Meier, Hailey McCoy-Munger, Rachel Hubka, Caleb Jones, Keanna Peterson, Dusty Foster After discussion, Sukup moved to approve the Agenda, Minutes from October 19th, bills from November, and October Financial Statements; seconded by Schlichting. Motion carried 4-0. Terri Anderson and students from 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th grade shared with the board about what they have been working on in her Social Science classes. Schlichitng moved to approve the resignation of para educator, Noel Marzen; seconded by Witte. Motion carried 4-0. After discussion, Sukup moved to approve a Baseball fundraiser as presented; seconded by Schlichting. Motion carried 4-0. Superintendent Strike presented the board with a resolution for the PPEL tax levy reduction adjustment. After discussion, Sukup moved to approve the resolution as follows; seconded by Schlichting. Ayes: Witte, Tuttle, Sukup, Schlichting. Motion carried 4-0. Whereas, the West Fork Community School District recently discovered that an error occurred in the budgeting process of the District beginning in FY 13-14 and has continued through the current year, FY 15-16, involving a voter approved physical plant and equipment levy (VPPEL) in excess of our legal authority. This property tax levy has been certified at $1 per one thousand dollars of assessed valuation exceeding its true maximum authority of 67 cents per one thousand dollars during those three years, and Whereas, the Superintendent and the Board of the West Fork Community School District have taken prompt action upon discovery of the error to notify relevant authorities and have sought a solution to the issue, and Whereas, the Superintendent and the Board believe that taxpayers collectively should be compensated in a way that is the most feasible, practical and equitable, and Whereas, the District has been working with Cerro Gordo County officials, the control County for its budget, and through them with officials of the three other Counties that have lands that are part of the West Fork CSD and with Iowa Department of Management officials, and Whereas, the District understands that the four Counties have determined that it is not feasible to make adjustments to the tax statements of taxpayers payable in the current year, and Whereas, the District believes that the Resolution set out below is an appropriate and respon- sible way to address this issue and the District understands that relevant officials of all of the District’s affected Counties and appropriate personnel of the Iowa Department of Management approve of the approach incorporated in this resolution. BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED AS FOLLOWS: That the Board of Directors of the West Fork Community School District per recommendation of its Superintendent hereby states its intention to adjust its prospective VPPEL property tax levy in such a way that excess monies collected in the past and to be collected as part of its VPPEL levy in fiscal years 2014, 2015 and 2016 will be returned collectively to the taxpayers of the District. The District intends that this will be accomplished by reducing its VPPEL property tax levy below its normal maximum authority of 67 cents per thousand dollars of assessed valuation by an amount to be calculated yearly in order to generate tax savings to District tax payers collectively to match, in an equivalent amount, excess tax monies earlier collected. It is intended that this will be accomplished as part of the District’s budgeting process for two years, i.e. for property taxes levied and to be collected for tax years 2016-17 and 2017-18. This adjustment will be affirmatively and transparently presented during budget certification for fiscal years 2017 and 2018 and calculations relevant thereto may be independently examined upon request by any District taxpayer. This Resolution passed and approved this 16th day of November, 2015. Superintendent Strike presented the sports equipment and flooring bid package for the West Fork Wellness center. Sukup moved to approve the bid package as presented prior to the release of the bidding; seconded by Schlichting. Motion carried 4-0. Bids will be accepted at the December 14th board meeting. Principal’s report was given by Mrs. Peterson: 1. Iowa Assessments are complete 2. Veterans Day program was wonderful 3. Great Middle School Concert last Thursday Superintendent’s report was given by Mr. Strike: 1. Great job students on the Middle School Concert, Musical and Veterans Day programs 2. School Board Conference is Wednesday and Thursday in Des Moines 3. HS Fall Play is November 20th at 7pm 4. No school November 25th-27th for Thanksgiving break 5. December 3rd K-1 Concert 6. December 14th 2nd-4th Concert 7. December 17th HS Concert 8. Thank You to the Rockwell Lions Club for the $2,000 donation to the After School Program 9. Thank You to the Foster and Evelyn Barkema Trust for the $15,000 donation for the Cardio Equipment in the New Wellness Center 10. Iowa Drainage will provide snow removal support and hauling 11. Bond Documents were delivered to 9 banks in the area, they are due back December 3rd Rob Heimbuch joined the meeting at 5:52pm. Heimbuch made a motion to adjourn the meeting at 6:00 p.m.; seconded by Sukup. Motion carried 5-0. ATTEST: Board President – Jim Tuttle Board Secretary – Lacey Weier GENERAL FUND AEA 267, Supplies/Registration...........$264.64 Becker, Lynda, Reimburse ....................$39.99 Bell Piano Service, Tune Piano ...........$170.00 Blick Art Materials, Art Supplies ...........$443.60 Cartersville Elevator, Gas/Diesel ......$5,873.90 Cengage Learning, Business Class Workbooks .................................................$223.30 City Of Rockwell, Utilities..................$1,987.30 City Of Sheffield, Utilities .....................$531.24 Continuum Retail Energy Services, LLC, Natural Gas ...............................................$284.32 Country Designs, Memorial ...................$25.00 Crescent Electric Supply Company, Maint. Supplies....................................................$688.25 Culligan, Softner Salt ...........................$222.55 Decker Equipment, Maint. Supplies ....$241.75 Department Of Education, Bus Inspection ........ ...........................................................$760.00 Diamond-Vogel Paints, Field Paint ......$876.75 Don’s Auto Service, Vehicle Repairs ................. ........................................................ $1,118.11 Dugan’s Supermarket - Rockwell, FCS ...$3.40 Dugan’s Supermarket, FCS.................$397.94 Engel Law Office, Legal Services .....$2,082.50 Floyd & Leonard Auto Electric, Inc., Transportation Supplies ......................................$198.39 Follett School Solutions, Inc., Library Books ..... ...........................................................$480.69 Fullerton, Wendy, Reimburse ................$66.14 Ginther, Gabrielle, Travel .......................$66.47 Glen & Kaci Harper, Reimburse ............$24.71 Gophermods Education, LLC, iPad Cases ........ ...........................................................$198.00 Graham Tire, Vehicle Repairs..............$432.55 Hampton-Dumont Community School, Open Enrollment 1st Quarter ..................$14,800.95 Harold’s Garage, Tire Repair .................$20.00 Heart Rate Monitors USA, Inc., MS Supplies .... ...........................................................$120.00 Huber Supply Co., Industrial Tech Supplies ...... ...........................................................$134.82 Humboldt Music Boosters, Honor Band ............ .............................................................$10.00 Interstate Motor Trucks, Inc., Bus Repairs ........ ...........................................................$427.13 Iowa Choral Directors Assoc., Membership....... ...........................................................$123.00 Iowa Department Of Human Services, Medicaid ...................................................$1,120.26 Iowa Division Of Criminal Investigation, Fingerprints ....................................................$78.00 Iowa Office Supply, Inc., Printer Supplies.......... .............................................................$68.39 J.W. Pepper & Son. Inc., Choir Supplies ........... ...........................................................$122.54 Johnson Sanitary Products, Inc., Maint. Supplies....................................................$555.66 Knudson, Jennifer, Reimburse ............$175.50 Lance Thompson, Reimburse ...............$21.38 Lea Mobile Glass, Inc., Vehicle Repairs ............ ...........................................................$235.00 Lowe, Hannah, After School Program Help ....... ...........................................................$117.81 M & N Heating And Cooling, Building Repairs... ...........................................................$353.80 Martin Bros., Supplies .........................$625.72 Mcgraw-Hill School Education Holding, Textbooks .................................................$209.65 Menards - Mason City, Industrial Tech Supplies ...........................................................$191.56 Meyer, Randy, Sporting Event Help.......$50.00 Midamerican Energy, Electricity/Gas ................. ........................................................$3,940.59 Midwest Technology, Industrial Tech Supplies... ...........................................................$517.55 Minorites & Success, Human Resources .......... ........................................................$2,195.00 Murphy’s Heating & Plumbing, Inc., Repairs ..... ...........................................................$386.87 Napa, Transportation Supplies ..............$25.67 NCIBA, Registration Choir .....................$20.00 NIACC, Cpr Training .........................$1,179.00 NIVC Services, Inc., Sped Services ....$475.86 NWEA, Testing Supplies...................$8,862.50 O’Reilly Automotive, Inc., Transportation Supplies......................................................$15.96 Overhead Door, Repairs - Shop Door ............... ...........................................................$154.00 Plank Road Publishing, Inc., Choir Supplies ..... ...........................................................$137.45 Plumb Supply Company, Maint. Supplies.......... .............................................................$51.92 Postmaster, PO Box Fees .....................$90.00 Randy Bohman, Sporting Event Help ..$140.00 Rieman Music, Band Supplies...............$68.98 Rockwell Cooperative Telephone, Telephone .... ...........................................................$477.86 Rod Fleshner, Sporting Event Help .......$50.00 Rudd-Rockford-Marble Rock CSD, Open Enrollment 1st Quarter ......................$15,915.00 School Specialty/Classroom Direct, Art Supplies.................................................$2,433.09 Shelley Sheppard, Reimburse ...............$11.00 Software Unlimited, Inc., Software Updates ...... ...........................................................$241.08 Staples Credit Plan, Elem Supplies .......$11.20 Strike, Darrin, Travel ............................$253.00 Tony Laudner, Sporting Event Help .......$50.00 Walmart Community/Gemb, Sped Supplies ...... .............................................................$58.44 William V. Macgill & Co., Nurse Supplies .......... .............................................................$65.17 Wilson Language Training Corp, Sped Supplies....................................................$414.72 AEA 267, Registration Professional Development ...................................................$420.00 All Star Pest Control, Pest Control ........$75.00 Bell Piano Service, Tune Piano .............$85.00 Bev Bohach, Accompanist ...................$100.00 CAL Community School, Open Enrollment 1st Quarter ............................................$1,591.50 Card Services, Travel/Supplies/Registration ..... ........................................................$4,044.53 Central Lock & Key Inc., Keys .................$1.93 D & L Sanitation, Inc., Garbage ...........$765.00 Frontier Communications, Telephone ..$631.95 Iowa Association Of School Boards, Background Checks And Registration .......$344.00 Iowa Communications Network, ICN Service .... ........................................................$1,582.68 K&H Coop Oil Co., Gas/Diesel .........$1,908.14 Mason City Community School District, Open Enrollment 1st Quarter ..................$17,506.50 Menards - Mason City, Maint. Supplies ............. ...........................................................$176.20 Mid-America Publishing Corporation, Board Publications.....................................$1,059.70 MidAmerican Energy, Electricity/Gas ..$467.73 Nancy Retz, Accompanist....................$100.00 NIACC, Bus Training Class .................$475.00 Plank Road Publishing, Inc., Choir Supplies ..... .............................................................$37.61 Registration Services, MS At Risk Fieldtrip ....... ...........................................................$285.00 Scholastic Book Fairs - 08, Book Fair ............... ........................................................$3,064.97 School Administrators Of Iowa, Conference Peterson.............................................$500.00 School Bus Sales Co., Bus Repairs ....$313.16 Schukei Chevrolet, Suburban Repairs .............. ...........................................................$203.00 Shelley Sheppard, Reimburse ...............$45.85 Staples Advantage, Office/Classroom Supplies ...........................................................$964.72 Fleet Farm, Transportation Supplies ...$100.77 University Of Northern Iowa, Elem/Ms Classroom Supplies ....................................$150.00 Belmond-Klemme Community School, Open Enrollment 1st Quarter ....................$9,594.00 Central Iowa Distributing, Inc., Maint. Supplies . ........................................................$1,071.80 Eric Burt, Reimburse ........................... $111.30 Follett School Solutions, Inc., Library Books ..... .............................................................$71.74 Garner-Hayfield-Ventura Community, Open Enrollment 1st Quarter ........................$9,549.00 Iowa High School Music Assoc., All State Registration ................................................$16.00 Pellets, Inc., Tag Supplies .....................$18.50 TOTAL ..........................................$132,936.85 Capital Projects Apple Inc, Instructional Technology .....$758.00 CDW Government, Inc., Chromebooks ............. ........................................................$8,085.90 Martin Gardner Architecture, Wellness Center .. ........................................................$4,224.60 Shawver Well Company, Inc., Wellness Center ....................................................$101,920.00 TOTAL ..........................................$114,988.50 Physical Plant And Equipment C. H. Mcguiness Co., Inc., Boiler Repairs ......... ...........................................................$700.00 FIALA Office Products, Ltd., Copier Lease ........ ........................................................$4,902.52 Interstate Motor Trucks, Inc., Bus Repairs ........ ........................................................$4,678.65 FIALA Office Products, Ltd., Copier Lease ........ ........................................................$3,002.93 Interstate Motor Trucks, Inc., Bus Repairs ........ ........................................................$2,298.19 Next Generation Technologies, Technology Maint/Support..................................$2,804.71 Schumacher Elevator Company, Elevator Inspection..............................................$554.13 LMC, Desks/Chairs...........................$6,350.85 Hot Lunch Dugan’s Supermarket - Rockwell, Food ............ .............................................................$77.40 Ems Detergent Services, Cleaning Supplies ..... .............................................................$67.95 Keck, Inc., Commodities ...................$1,004.13 Martin Bros., Food ............................$9,599.58 Anderson Erickson Dairy, Milk ..........$3,222.63 Earthgrains Baking Companies, Inc., Bread...... ...........................................................$772.47 Keck, Inc., Commodities ...................$1,071.27 Martin Bros., Food ............................$7,029.47 TOTAL ............................................$22,844.90 Trust & Agency Nelson, Madelynn, Scholarships .........$250.00 TOTAL .................................................$250.00 Activity Fund Ames, Christian, FFA Fair Premium ......$33.76 Arbegast, Jeana, Reimburse Freshmen Homecoming .................................................$24.86 Belle Plaine Nursery, Jr Class Fundraiser ......... ........................................................$1,547.01 Brian Pearce, Ref ..................................$70.00 Chuck Stetzel, Ref .................................$90.00 Cody Grant, FFA Fair Premium .............$28.76 Decker Sporting Goods, Booster Club/Football/ Basketball .......................................$6,521.00 Dennis Dingel, Ref.................................$70.00 Dingman, Stacie, Ref.............................$70.00 Enchanted Acres, Field Trip.................$200.00 Eric Burt, Reimburse Travel...................$40.56 Ethan Meints, FFA Fair Premium...........$28.09 Follett School Solutions, Inc., Boxtop Books ..... ...........................................................$799.48 Great Ammerican Opportunities, MS Fundraiser ........................................................$714.70 Ihsbca, Baseball Coach Membership ....$30.00 Iowa State Center, MS Fieldtrip .............$28.00 Jay Grabinoski, Ref ...............................$90.00 Joel Grabinoski, Ref ..............................$90.00 John OErtel, Ref ....................................$70.00 Jostens, Inc., HS Yearbook ..............$5,463.77 Kailey Uhde, FFA Fair Premium ............$21.76 Ken Sabin, Ref ....................................$115.00 Kevin Wegner, Ref.................................$90.00 Kurt Walderbach, Ref ............................$70.00 Lance Thompson, Reimburse ...............$75.60 Madison Steenhard, FFA Fair Premium ............ .............................................................$46.76 Matt Starr, FFA Fair Premium ................$13.76 Meints, Collin, FFA Fair Premium ..........$44.09 Menards - Mason City, FFA Supplies - FFA Barn ...................................................$124.12 Molly Dhondt, FFA Fair Premium...........$19.76 Precision Athletic Wear, Dance Team Resale ... ........................................................$1,737.40 Start Up Cash, Gate Money .............$1,150.00 Steenhard, Mariah, FFA Fair Premium ..$40.76 Steenhard, Morgan, FFA Fair Premium ............. .............................................................$35.76 Sukup Manufacturing, FFA Barn Lease ............. ...........................................................$300.00 Tony Dahle, Ref .....................................$70.00 Trewin, Emily, Reimburse Freshmen Homecoming .................................................$16.15 Trophies Plus, Medals/Trophies ..........$510.80 X-Grain Sportswear, Booster Club ...$1,625.00 Yohn Co Inc., Cement - FFA Barn .......$660.02 Belle Plaine Nursery, Jr Class Fundraiser ......... ........................................................$2,382.96 Card Services, Travel/Dance Team/Musical ...... ........................................................$2,423.17 Coca-Cola Refreshments, MS Concession Stand..................................................$278.76 Decker Sporting Goods, Booster Club/Football/ Basketball .......................................$4,222.50 FFA Association, Annual Membership FFA........ ........................................................$1,385.00 Great Ammerican Opportunities, MS Fundraiser ..........................................................$76.35 Iowa State Center, MS Fieldtrip ...............$2.00 On Deck Sports, Baseball ...............$1,404.99 VanHorn, Brenda, Reimburse - Musical ..$72.47 Decker Sporting Goods, Basketball Shoes ....... ...........................................................$199.00 TOTAL ............................................$35,223.93 Published in The Pioneer Enterprise on Thursday, November 26, 2015 :HG7KXUV1RY MID AMERICA MARKETPLACE %XIIDOR &HQWHU 7ULEXQH %XWOHU &RXQW\ 7ULEXQH-RXUQDO &ODUNVYLOOH 6WDU 7KH &RQUDG 5HFRUG (DJOH *URYH (DJOH 7KH /HDGHU *UXQG\ 5HJLVWHU +DPSWRQ &KURQLFOH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 6KHIILHOG 3UHVV :ULJKW &RXQW\ 0RQLWRU (OGRUD +HUDOG/HGJHU /LNHWUXFNGULYLQJ GULYLQJ EXWWLUHGRIYYDQIUHLJKW" YDQIUHLJK K EXWWLUHGRIYDQIUHLJKW" CONTRACT SALESPERSON: Selling aerial photography of farms on commission basis. ¿UVW PRQWK JXDUDQWHH $3,000 weekly proven earnings. 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Light brown 41. Roman judge 43. Sonny & Cher classic 45. Chopped mixture for VWXI¿QJ 48. Am. Nobel physicist Isodor 49. Maya __ of Vietnam Veterans Memorial 50. Expressed pleasure 55. In bed 56. Finnish 8:MRGEF ALL BUILDINGS SALL SIZE SIZES ES ON SALE NOW! &SWI7IEXW ;IIOP](MVIGX (ITSWMXTE]VSPP 7EJIX]&SRYW O'S1EXGL 40 x 60 x 12 $23,722* 24 x 32 x 10 $10,450* 2QH¶(QWU\'RRU 7ZR[2YHUKHDG'RRUV 7ZR2YHUKHDG'RRUV 2QH¶(QWU\'RRU Call a Recruiter today: 1-800-333-9291 or apply online www.veriha.com 57. Canacol Energy stock symbol 59. Leather strap for hawks 60. UA fraternity est. 3-91856 61. Low, sideless cart 62. They __ 6LQJOH/HQV5HÀH[ 64. Point that is midway between N and NE CLUES DOWN 1. Murrow, Sullivan & Koch 2. Carrying bag 3. Countess of Grantham 4. Key fruit 5. One kept in readiness 6. Bring back to normal 7. Avid 8. Lots of 9. Formal close (music) 11. Dad’s partner 13. Point that is one point E of SE 15. Myself 19. Minor disagreement 23. Promotional materials 24. Bahama capital 25. Rudiments of a subject 26. Bleat 27. Right linebacker 28. Flower petals 29. Early culture of Gr. Britain 34. Worldwide internet 35. 7th Greek letter 36. When born (abbr.) 37. Before 39. Existing forever 40. About name 41. Myanmar monetary unit 42. Island north of Guam 44. Soft 45. __ Castell, makers of pens 46. Excessively fat 47. Eliminates 48. A Hindu prince or king in India 51. Carrier’s invention 52. Possessed 53. Deserve through action 54. Doyen 58. A way to change color LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 3ULFHGRHVQRWLQFOXGHZLQGRZVJXWWHUV x How You Can Avoid 7 Costly Mistakes if +XUWDW:RUN MISSOURI x KANSAS x IOWA x NEBRASKA 800-374-6988 www.qualitystructures.com Each year thousands of Iowans are hurt at work, but many fail to learn the Injured Workers Bill of Rights which includes: 1. Payment of Mileage at $.56 per mile 2. Money for Permanent Disability 3. 2nd Medical Opinion in Admitted Claims. . . . 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To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 PXVW ÀOO HDFK URZ FROXPQDQGER[(DFKQXPEHUFDQDSSHDURQO\RQFH LQ HDFK URZ FROXPQ DQG ER[ <RX FDQ ÀJXUH RXW WKH RUGHU LQ ZKLFK WKH QXPEHUV ZLOO DSSHDU E\ XVLQJ WKH QXPHULF FOXHV DOUHDG\ SURYLGHG LQ WKH boxes. The more numbers \RX QDPH WKH HDVLHU LW gets to solve the puzzle! LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS ´VRIILWZDLQVFRWQRWLQFOXGHGLQSULFH Price Includes Delivery & Installation On Your Level Site. Travel Charges May Apply MID AMERICA MARKETPLACE :HG7KXUV1RY %XIIDOR &HQWHU 7ULEXQH %XWOHU &RXQW\ 7ULEXQH-RXUQDO &ODUNVYLOOH 6WDU 7KH &RQUDG 5HFRUG (DJOH *URYH (DJOH 7KH /HDGHU *UXQG\ 5HJLVWHU +DPSWRQ &KURQLFOH 3LRQHHU (QWHUSULVH 7KH 6KHIILHOG 3UHVV :ULJKW &RXQW\ 0RQLWRU (OGRUD +HUDOG/HGJHU Food Safety Tips for Healthy Holidays P arties, family dinners, and other gatherings where food is served are all part of the holiday cheer. But the merriment can change to misery if food makes you or others ill. Typical symptoms of foodborne illness are vomiting, diarrhea, and flu-like symptoms, which can start anywhere from hours to days after contaminated food or drinks are consumed. The symptoms usually are not longlasting in healthy people—a few hours or a few days—and usually go away without medical treatment. But foodborne illness can be severe and even life-threatening to anyone, especially those most at risk: tPMEFSBEVMUT tJ OGBOUTBOEZPVOHDIJMESFO tQSFHOBOUXPNFO tQFPQMF XJUI )*7"*%4 DBODFS PS any condition that weakens their immune system tQFPQMFXIPUBLFNFEJDJOFTUIBUTVQpress the immune system; for example, some medicines for rheumatoid arthritis Combating bacteria, viruses, parasites, and other contaminants in our food supply is a high priority for the 'PPE BOE %SVH "ENJOJTUSBUJPO #VU consumers have a role to play, too, especially when it comes to safe food handling practices in the home. “The good news is that practicing four basic food safety measures can t3 JOTF GSVJUT BOE WFHFUBCMFT UIPSoughly under cool running water and use a produce brush to remove surface dirt. t%POPUSJOTFSBXNFBUBOEQPVMUSZ CFGPSFDPPLJOHi8BTIJOHUIFTFGPPET makes it more likely for bacteria to spread to areas around the sink and DPVOUFSUPQTwTBZT%BWJETPO 1. Clean: VEXMSR 8LI¿VWXVYPISJWEJIJSSHTVITE 7ITEVEXI (SR·XKMZIFEGXIVMEXLISTTSVXY RMX]XSWTVIEH 'SSO /MPPLEVQJYPFEGXIVME 'LMPP 6IJVMKIVEXIJSSHWUYMGOP] help prevent foodborne illness,” says .BSKPSJF%BWJETPOBDPOTVNFSFEVDBUPSBU'%" 1. Clean: The first rule of safe food preparation in the home is to keep everything clean. t8BTI IBOET XJUI XBSN XBUFS BOE soap for 20 seconds before and after handling any food. “For children, this means the time it takes to sing A)BQQZ#JSUIEBZUXJDFwTBZT%BWJEson. t8BTIGPPEDPOUBDUTVSGBDFTDVUUJOH boards, dishes, utensils, countertops) with hot, soapy water after preparing each food item and before going on to the next item. 2. Separate: %POU HJWF CBDUFSJB UIF opportunity to spread from one food UPBOPUIFSDSPTTDPOUBNJOBUJPO t,FFQ SBX FHHT NFBU QPVMUSZ TFBfood, and their juices away from GPPETUIBUXPOUCFDPPLFE5BLFUIJT precaution while shopping in the store, when storing in the refrigerator at home, and while preparing meals. t$ POTJEFS VTJOH POF DVUUJOH CPBSE only for foods that will be cooked TVDIBTSBXNFBUQPVMUSZBOETFBfood) and another one for those that XJMMOPUTVDIBTSBXGSVJUTBOEWFHetables). t,FFQGSVJUTBOEWFHFUBCMFTUIBUXJMM be eaten raw separate from other foods such as raw meat, poultry, or seafood—and from kitchen utensils used for those products. t%POPUQVUDPPLFENFBUPSPUIFSGPPE that is ready to eat on an unwashed plate that has held any raw eggs, meat, poultry, seafood, or their juices. t 8IFUIFS JU JT DPPLFE JOTJEF PS PVUBSF GJSN 8IFO NBLJOH your own eggnog or other recipe callside the bird, all stuffing and dressing for raw eggs, use pasteurized shell ing must be cooked to a minimum eggs, liquid or frozen pasteurized egg temperature of 165 °F. For optimum products, or powdered egg whites. safety, cooking your stuffing in a cast%POU FBU VODPPLFE DPPLJF EPVHI serole dish is recommended. which may contain raw eggs. t 4UVGGJOH TIPVME CF QSFQBSFE BOE stuffed into the turkey immediately 4. Chill: 3FGSJHFSBUF GPPET RVJDLMZ CFGPSFJUTQMBDFEJOUIFPWFO because harmful bacteria grow rapidly t Mix wet and dry ingredients for the at room temperature. stuffing separately and combine just t3 FGSJHFSBUF MFGUPWFST BOE UBLFPVU before using foods—and any type of food that t The turkey should be stuffed loosely, BCPVUDVQTUVGmOHQFSQPVOEPG should be refrigerated—within two turkey hours. That includes pumpkin pie! t4FUZPVSSFGSJHFSBUPSBUPSCFMPX' t "OZFYUSBTUVGmOHTIPVMECFCBLFEJO a greased casserole dish and the freezer at 0ºF. Check both periodically with an appliance ther5IF64%FQBSUNFOUPG"HSJDVMUVSF mometer. t/FWFSEFGSPTUGPPEBUSPPNUFNQFSB- offers more information on stuffing ture. Food can be defrosted safely in TBGFUZBUJUT5VSLFZ#BTJDT8FCQBHF the refrigerator, under cold running www.fsis.usda.gov/fact_sheets/Turkey_ water, or in the microwave. Food Basics_Stuffing/index.asp). 3. Cook: Food is safely cooked when thawed in cold water or in the microit reaches a high enough internal wave should be cooked immediately. *OGPSNBUJPOPOGPPETBGFUZJT temperature to kill harmful bacteria. t"MMPXUIFDPSSFDUBNPVOUPGUJNFUP available by phone at: ti$PMPS JT OPU B SFMJBCMF JOEJDBUPS PG properly thaw food. For example, EPOFOFTTwTBZT%BWJETPO6TFBGPPE a 20-pound turkey needs four to 5IF'%"'PPE*OGPSNBUJPO-JOF thermometer to make sure meat, five days to thaw completely when 4"'&'00% poultry, and fish are cooked to a safe thawed in the refrigerator. internal temperature. To check a tur- t%POUUBTUFGPPEUIBUMPPLTPSTNFMMT 5IF64%".FBUBOE1PVMUSZ)PUMJOF key for safety, insert a food thermomRVFTUJPOBCMF%BWJETPOTBZTi"HPPE .1)PUMJOF eter into the innermost part of the rule to follow is, when in doubt, 55: thigh and wing and the thickest part throw it out.” of the breast. The turkey is safe when t-FGUPWFSTTIPVMECFVTFEXJUIJOUISFF Find this and other Consumer UIFUFNQFSBUVSFSFBDIFT'*GUIF to four days. Updates at www.fda.gov/ turkey is stuffed, the temperature of ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates UIFTUVGmOHTIPVMECF'1MFBTF Use care with stuffing *O JUT )PMJEBZ 'PPE 4BGFUZ 4VDDFTT read on for more on stuffing.) Sign up for free e-mail t#SJOHTBVDFTTPVQTBOEHSBWJFTUPB ,JU UIF 1BSUOFSTIJQ GPS 'PPE 4BGFUZ subscriptions at www.fda.gov/ &EVDBUJPO BU HolidayFoodSafety.org) rolling boil when reheating. consumer/consumerenews.html t$PPLFHHTVOUJMUIFZPMLBOEXIJUF recommends: Turkey Fundamentals: Leftovers The Sad Case of the Leftover Thanksgiving Doggy Bag THE PEANUTS MOVIE G SHOWTIMES SP1LJKWO\ŘCLOSED MONDAY 1 p.m. Sunday Matinée AN OLD TIME COUNTRY HOEDOWN December 7th 6-9 p.m. SING-ALONG December 13th 4:00 p.m. UPCOMING MOVIES '(&ŘSPECTRE Ř3* '(&ŘHUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 2 Ř3* '(&ŘLOVE THE COOPERS Ř3* '(&ŘTHE GOOD DINOSAUR Ř3* FOR MORE INFO: WWW.WINDSORTHEATRE.COM OR FIND US ON FACEBOOK AT WINDSOR HAMPTON GUIDE 3000+ Quality Toys 300 Starring: Charlie Brown and Snoopy TICKET PRICES $'8/76Ř678'(176 Tues. & Thurs. ALL $2 SENIOR SUNDAYS $2 (50 & up) Area Restaurant NEW STORE OPENING! NOV. 27 - DEC. 3 **Sunday Nov. 29 at 1 p.m. Any child that brings a food item will get into the movie for FREE.** containers. A big pot of soup, for ex- erator for three to four days or frozen ample, will take a long time to cool, for three to four months. Although inviting bacteria to multiply and increasing the danger of foodborne illness. t$VUMBSHFJUFNTPGGPPEJOUPTNBMMer portions to cool. For whole roasts, turkey or hams, slice or cut them into smaller parts. t)PUGPPEDBOCFQMBDFEEJSFDUMZJO the refrigerator, or it can be rapidly chilled in an ice or cold water bath Tall Corn Café before refrigerating. )8//0(1863(&,$/6 t$PWFSMFęPWFSTXSBQUIFNJOBJS%UHDNIDVWDQG/XQFK DPSP_0RQGD\)ULGD\ tight packaging, or seal them in stor1RUWK0DLQ6W.DQDZKD age containers. These practices help keep bacteria out, retain moisture, and prevent leftovers from picking Old Bank Winery up odors from other food in the re2SHQWR7XHV6DW frigerator. Immediately refrigerate or /RFDWHGLQ'RZQWRZQ.DQDZKD freeze the wrapped leftovers for rap)UHHZLQHWDVWLQJ id cooling. %BWJE/BODZ-JUDIt Reheating Safely Stored Leftovers t-FęPWFSTDBOCFLFQUJOUIFSFGSJH- Items for all ages and budgets Ite Special Holiday Hours: Are you a print subscriber already? Our print subscriptions include access to the e-edition at no extra cost. If you are a print subscriber and would like access to the e-edition, Please call our circulation department at 1-800-558-1244 ext 122 or email at mapcirculation@ iowaconnect.com. t"OZMFęPWFSiMFęPWFSTwUIBXFECZ the cold water method or in the microwave should be reheated to 165 °F before refreezing. t*OBSFBMIVSSZ *UJTTBGFUPSFIFBU frozen leftovers without thawing, either in a saucepan or microwave (in the case of a soup or stew) or in the oven or microwave (for example, casseroles and combination meals). Reheating will take longer than if the food is thawed first, but it is safe to do when time is short. If you have any questions about turkeys and Thanksgiving, feel free to contact us at the Hotline (1-888674-6854 toll-free) or online at AskKaren.gov. Tues - Wed 10am - 5 pm Thurs Noon - 7 Fri Noon - 5 Sat 10am - 3pm Convenient online ordering orderin delivered to your door 563-423-5128 Dining guide spots are $5 per week, doublespots for $7.50 per week or 4 spots for $15 per week, prepaid. Spots are booked with a 13-week commitment. Let us cater your Holiday gatherings and events! Big Brad’s BBQ Kanawha, Iowa 641-762-3541 or 515-293-0791 (leave a message) $SOLQJWRQ +RXUV7XHVGD\)ULGD\ DPSPSP 6DWXUGD\DPSP /RXQJH+RXUVSP&ORVH /XQFK(YHQLQJ :HHNHQG6SHFLDOV 6HQLRU0HDOVXQWLOSP WAPSIE PINES TREE FARM SINCE 1936 A MUST-DO FAMILY OUTING! Create aQUALITY new family tradition! 30,000+ Growing Trees on Over 25 Acres FIVE BEAUTIFUL VARIETIES Fraser & Canaan Firs plus Scotch, White & Red Pines Choose from over 3000 quality pre-priced trees 4-10+ feet tall *VIWLLSQIQEHI[VIEXLWVSTMRKW[EKWHSSVEVGLIWGVSWWIW TSVGLPMKLXSVQEMPFS\GSZIVWERHFSYKLFYRHPIW 'VEJXWLSTMRGPYHMRKGYWXSQLERHTEMRXIHSVREQIRX Worth the drive! 8VIIWXERHWHMWTSWEPFEKW SXLIVLSPMHE]HIGSV 3 mile W. &.5 Miles ;EVQMRKWLIHW[*VII6IJVIWLQIRXW 7%28%XSS N. of Fairbank, IA 'YX]SYVS[RSV[I[MPPLIPT 7E[WTVSZMHIH [I[MPPWLEOIRIXERHPSEH]SYVXVII HOURS: Open Friday, Nov. 27 9 AM - 5 PM plus Weekends 9-5 & Weekdays 1-5 through Dec. 13 All major Credit/Debit Cards Accepted 319-638-7931 811 Gunder Estates Blvd Clermont, IA 52135 www.AgFarmToys.com 2778 Whitetail Ave., Fairbank www.wapsiepinestreefarm.com email: AgFarmToys.com@AgFarmToys.com Present this coupon for $1 off Tree! (One per tree) Check us out on Facebook at Wapsie Pines Christmas Tree Farm at Fairbank INAN By Diane Van, Food Safety Education Staff Deputy Director, USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service www.foodsafety.gov “Would you like a doggy bag to handle the bonus meal safely? First take home?” asks the waiter. “That of all, take the restaurant leftovers would be great” says the diner. Near- straight home – no running errands ly half of her dinner remains on the or visiting friends. Within 2 hours plate and will make a quick second of being served, the leftovers should meal for another day. be safely tucked away at home in the But wait. Here’s the same diner refrigerator where they can safely recalling the U.S. Department of Ag- main for three to four days. riculture (USDA) Meat and Poultry Leaving food out at an unsafe temHotline the following day. “I put a perature is one of the main causes of restaurant doggy bag in the back seat foodborne illness. Safe handling of of my car last night, and when I came leftovers is very important to reducout to drive to work, there it sat. Is it ing foodborne illness. Follow these safe if I heat it up again?” USDA recommendations for hanSadly, no. The food safety expert at dling leftovers safely – whether from USDA explains that bacteria in food a restaurant or home cooked. left out for more than two hours t#BDUFSJB HSPX SBQJEMZ CFUXFFO double in number every 20 minutes, the temperatures of 40° F and 140° F. and some bacteria make a poison or After food is safely cooked, leftovers toxin that can make you ill, hence the must be refrigerated within twoterm “food poisoning.” hours. Even if you were able to heat the tćSPX BXBZ BOZ IPU PS DPME MFęfood and destroy the thousands of overs that have been left out for more bacteria present in the backseat dog- than two hours at room temperature gy bag, the toxin can make you ill. (one hour when the temperature is It’s a lose-lose proposition. Toss that above 90 °F, such as at an outdoor “puppy” out! event). Handling Leftovers Safely t5P QSFWFOU CBDUFSJBM HSPXUI JUT How could the doggy-bag owner important to cool hot food rapidly to the safe refrigerator-storage tem CLIP & SAVE perature of 40° F. To do this, divide large amounts of food into shallow safe indefinitely, frozen leftovers can lose moisture and flavor when stored for longer times in the freezer. t8IFOSFIFBUJOHMFęPWFSTCFTVSF they reach 165° F. Use a food thermometer to check the internal temperature of the food. Reheat sauces, soups and gravies by bringing them UP B SPMMJOH CPJM $PWFS MFęPWFST UP reheat. This retains moisture and ensures that food will heat all the way through. tćBXGSP[FOMFęPWFSTTBGFMZJOUIF refrigerator, cold water or the microwave oven. When thawing leftovers in a microwave, continue to heat it until it reaches 165 °F as measured with a food thermometer. The Pioneer Enterprise Thursday, November 26, 2015 &ODVVLÀHGV *(75(68/76 :LWKD&ODVVLÀHG$G '($'/,1()25$//$'6,630021'$< IRUZRUGVSHUZRUGWKHUHDIWHU &ODVVL¿HGVDUHSDLGLQDGYDQFHFKDUJHIRUELOOLQJ TULL’S NEW & USED STORE Nurse or Medical Assistant Full Time. Patient Care and Interaction. Clerical Duties. Four Days per week. Send Resume to: West Fork Family Medicine 705 Elm St. East. Rockwell, IA 50469 Email: westforkmedicine@yahoo.com FULL-TIME PROTEIN TRANSPORT IN ELDORA: Class CDL-A Tanker Endorsement. Earn up to $45,000 or more a year. Home almost every night and very few weekends. Pre-Drug Test. Call Dave at the office (641)868-2049 or (641)485-5867. thru 48p 6725$*(81,76 )255(17 NEW Recliners............. $269.95 & Up thru 47p XQLWVRI YDULRXVVL]HV -U(GJLQJWRQ2ZQHU Are you a print subscriber already? Our print subscriptions include access to the e-edition at no extra cost. If you are a print subscriber and would like access to the e-edition, please call our circulation department at 1-800-558-1244 ext 122 or email at mapcirculation@iowaconnect.com /RFDWHGRQWKHZHVWURDG LQ6KHI¿HOG RU The www.pioneerenterprise.com Touch Lamps ...$29.95 & $34.95 Child’s Rocker & Recliner USED Holiday Tins • Lots of Jewelry Bed Frames .....$49.95 & $59.95 Metal Wardrobe New & Used Christmas Merchandise OPEN SATURDAYS 9a-2p UNTIL CHRISTMAS Wednesday, Thursday and Friday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. PHONE: 641-892-4137 113 EAST STREET SHEFFIELD, IOWA 50475 5HDVRQDEO\3ULFHG HOME FOR SALE: 204 QUINCE AVENUE, NEW PROVIDENCE, $69,500. Call Hatch Real Estate 641-750-0301 9 Thank You For Your Business! JOIN OUR TEAM Become a “Trusted Healthcare Partner for Life” with Franklin General Hospital! Are you looking for a great supportive team to work with? Franklin General Hospital may be the place you are looking for. Our goal as health professionals is to ensure a positive environment for our community. Housekeeper: Part-time 24 hours a week and a part-time 32 hours a week. We are looking for motivated, detail - oriented individuals for our housekeeping department. Day hours and alternating weekends and holidays. &HUWLÀHG 1XUVH$LGH Weekend only. Baylor Country View Nursing Home. Part-time, 24 hours a week, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Works 5 weekends out of 6 and DOWHUQDWLQJKROLGD\V7KLVSDUWWLPHSRVLWLRQUHFHLYHVEHQHÀWVLQFOXGLQJ372 &RPSHWLWLYHZDJHV,I\RXDUHLQWHUHVWHGLQDWWDLQLQJ\RXUFHUWLÀHGQXUVHDLGH FHUWLÀFDWLRQDQGKDYHHQUROOHGLQDFODVVZHKDYHDQRQFHUWLÀHGDLGHSRVLWLRQ DYDLODEOH 1XUVH$LGH Weekends only. Country View Nursing Home. 16 hours a week, 2nd shift. Works every other weekend and alternating holidays. This position GRHVQRWUHFHLYHEHQHÀWV&RPSHWLWLYHZDJHV,I\RXDUHLQWHUHVWHGLQDWWDLQLQJ \RXUFHUWLÀHGQXUVHDLGHFHUWLÀFDWLRQDQGKDYHHQUROOHGLQDFODVVZHKDYHDQRQ FHUWLÀHGDLGHSRVLWLRQDYDLODEOH Information Technology Nurse: This position will be full-time and work DSSUR[GD\VDZHHNDVWKH,QIR7HFK1XUVHDQGGD\V0HG6XUJ(50D\ DOVREHUHTXLUHGWRZRUNZHHNHQGVKROLGD\VDQGRWKHUVKLIWVDVQHHGHG0XVW EH SURÀFLHQW LQ 3RZHUFKDUW DQG )LUVW1HW (OHFWURQLF +HDOWK 5HFRUG 6HH PRUH details online. 0HG6XUJ&1$)XOOWLPHKUVKLIWVDOWHUQDWLQJZHHNHQGVDQGKROLGD\V &HUWLÀHG1XUVH$LGHFHUWLÀFDWLRQUHTXLUHG 0HG6XUJ 51 )XOOWLPH KUV D ZHHN KU VKLIWV ZRUNV HYHU\ WKLUG ZHHNHQG,RZD1XUVLQJOLFHQVH$&/6%/6 5DGLRORJLF7HFKQRORJLVW - Part time positions, working 24 hours a week and HDUQEHQHÀWV:HRIIHUWKHRSSRUWXQLW\WRVWD\FXUUHQWLQDYDULHW\RIUDGLRORJ\ services. Call is one night a week, every 4th weekend call rotation and alternating KROLGD\FDOO0XVWKDYHFXUUHQW,RZD6WDWH3HUPLWWRSUDFWLFHZLWKLQWHQWLRQVWR EHFRPH$557FHUWLÀHGLQUDGLRORJ\1HZJUDGVZHOFRPHWRDSSO\ )UDQNOLQ*HQHUDO+RVSLWDORIIHUVDQH[FHOOHQWEHQH¿WSDFNDJHLQFOXGLQJ,3(56 +HDOWKDQG'HQWDO,QVXUDQFH3DLG7LPH2II/LIH,QVXUDQFHÀH[LEOHVSHQGLQJ DFFRXQWVDQGDFREE single membership to the Franklin Wellness Center. ,ILQWHUHVWHG¿OORXWDQDSSOLFDWLRQDWWKHKRVSLWDORUSULQWDQDSSOLFDWLRQRQOLQH at www.franklingeneral.comDQGVHQGLWWR HUMAN RESOURCES, FRANKLIN GENERAL HOSPITAL 1720 Central Avenue East - Hampton, IA 50441 Franklin General Hospital recognizes the 1DWLRQDO&DUHHU5HDGLQHVV&HUWL¿FDWH For information on how to obtain the NCRC, contact IowaWORKS at (641)422-1524 x44521 EOE COLORED BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY envelopes 15¢ ea. multi-purpose paper 10¢ ea. card stock 15¢ ea. 9 2ND ST. NW, HAMPTON • 641-456-2585 REPORTING DWDJ: Florence Larson to Michael and Paula Robinson; Southland 1st Add Lot 2 CL; $149,000; 2015-7005. DAJT: Bill, Robert, and Florence Larson to Florence Larson; Southland 1st Add Lot 2 CL; 2015-7004. DWD: Timothy and Kristine Latham and Joseph Paulsen to TDK Real Estate LLC; Brice & Ong Land Co.’s Street Railway Add Blk 15 Lot 5 MC; Railroad Add MC Blk 35 Lot 19, Blk 35 Lot 20 MC; East Park Place Add Blk 10 Lot 5, Blk 10 Lot 6, Blk 10 Lot 7 MC; Parker, A.T., Place Blk 7 Lot 12 MC; $275,725; 2015-7000. DWDJ: Hilda Kruger Trustee and Hilda Kruger Trust to Timothy and Kristine Latham and Joseph Paulsen; Parker, A.T., Place Blk 7 Lot 12 MC Fulfill Cont B13 P3561 Latham-Undiv 1/2 Int & Paulsen-Undiv 1/2 Int; $40,000; 2015-6999. DWD: Brian and Jennifer Riggle to Dennis Purviance; 10-96-20 Sub. Of NE1/4 NW1/4 Lot 12, Lot 14 MC N 5 Rods in Width of Lot 12 & Lot 14 Exc the Street; $10,000; 2015-6997. DWDJ: David and Kathleen Quinlan to Mack and Cynthia Gabrielson; North Shore Add., Auditor’s Replat of Blks. 1 & 2 Blk 1 Lot 46, Blk 1 Lot 47, Blk 1 Lot 48 CL Wly 1/2 of Lot 46; $1,250,000; 2015-6996. DWD: Timothy and Kristine Latham to TDK Real Estate LLC; College Add Blk 19 Lot 5 MC; $60,000; 2015-6995. DWD: Paul and Laura Beatty to Stephen Thompson Trustee and Stephen Thompson Trust; Dickirson & Hays’ Add Blk 1 Lot 2 CL S 76’ Exc E 10’; $88,000; 2015-6994. DWDJ: Cynthia and Mack Gabrielson to David and Kathleen Quinlan; Redstone Condominium Bldg Unit 401 4E CL; $700,000; 2015-6993. DWD: Jason Scott to Josie Harmon; Sampson’s E.H., Sub of Portion of Lot 2 in SW/4 SW/4 7-96-21 Blk 1 Lot 13, Blk 1 Lot 12 W 55’ of Lot 13; & W 55’ of N1/2 of Lot 12; $74,500; 2015-6991. DSD: Cerro Gordo County, Cerro Gordo County Sheriff, Steven and Lisa Tiedman, Capital One Bank, and Asset Acceptance LLC to Federal National Mortgage Association; Beck-Walker 1st Add Lot 5, Lot 6 MC; 2015-6990. DSD: Cerro Gordo County, Cerro Gordo County Sheriff, Kevin, Leon, Gina, and Mary Blake, State of Iowa, and Iowa Department of Human Services to US Bank; Young’s Sub of Lots 3, 6, 9 & 10 & pt of Lots 1 & 2 11-96-20 Blk 13 Lot 11 MC; 20156988. DWDJ: Sharon Albers Trustee and Sharon Albers Revocable Trust to Wallace and Molly Hobbs; Clear Lake Camp Meeting Association Grounds, Plat of Blks. 21 thru 30 Blk 23 Lot 21, Blk 23 Lot 23, Blk 23 Lot 22 CL Part of Lots 22 & 23; 2015-6985. DWDJ: Timothy and Kristine Latham to Kirk Johnson and Kathleen Graves; Emsley & Adam’s Sub., Sub of Pt. Lot 8 NW1/4 SE1/4 Sec. 9-9620 Lot 1; Emsley & Adam’s Sub. Of NW1/4 SE1/4 Sec 9-96-20 Lot 7 N 8 Rods of W 12 Rods Exc W 16’ & Exc Parcel; Portion of S Quincy Ave; $220,000; 2015-6978. DWDJ: Bruce Angell to Bruce, Gregory, and Ronald Angell; Brookside Add Blk 3 Lot 2, Blk 3 Lot 3 MC Exc N 6.1’ of Lot 2 & N 11.8’ of Lot 3; 2015-6976. DWD: James and Rosemary Kruger to JRK Development LLC; 2-9620 Sub. Of Lot 4 S1/2 NE1/4 & SE1/4 Lot 2 E 314.40’ of Lot 2 (Containing 10.00 Acres); 2015-6966. DWD: Dennis and Patsy Largent to Nicholas Largent; Highlands, The Blk 16 Lot 11 MC; $125,000; 20156964. DWDJ: Patricia Hasel, Bonni Bohl Attorney in Fact, and Paul Hasel to Kirk and Dana Findley; Ventura Heights Blk 8 Lot 4, Blk 8 Lot 5, Blk 8 Lot 6, Blk 8 Lot 7, Blk 8 Lot 23, Blk 8 Lot 33, Blk 8 Lot 24, Blk 8 Lot 35 VT & Portion of Lake Front Bounded By Portion of Lots; Exc Nwly 3’ of Lots 4 & 35; $365,000; 2015-6960. DWD: Tanya Wendel and Thomas Norris to Tanya Wendel Trustee and Tanya Wendel Revocable Living Trust; Winnebago Oaks First Subdivision Cerro Gordo County Iowa Lot 3; 2015-6958. DWD: Steve Winders, Judith Dymond, and Elizabeth Winders to Beth Benesh; 13-96-22 Sub. Of Lot 8 NE1/4 Lot 4, Lot 5 Sely 21.02’ of Lot 4 & NWLY 21.02’ of Lot 5; $140,000; 2015-6951. DWD: Del and Vicky Ginder to Timothy Culler; Midland Heights 1st Add Lot 559 MC; $40,500; 20156949. DWDJ: William and Jennifer Heller to William and Jennifer Heller; Richards & Burden’s Add Lot 12 CL N 195.8’ of E 1/2; 2015-6948. DWD: Forrest and Norma Schmitz to Thomas Schmitz, Diane Woodman, Randall Schmitz, Michael Schmitz, Forest Schmitz Life Estate, and Norma Schmitz Life Estate; College Add Blk 9 Lot 7 MC; 2015-6947. DWD: William and Laureen Jellema to Jelemma Properties LLC; Forest Park Add Lo t107 MC; 20156946. DQC: Ronald and Kathleen Lievrouw to Deborah Veatch, Sheila Kramer, Ronald Lievrouw Life Estate and Kathleen Lievrouw Life Estate; Fairview Add Blk 4 Lot 16 MC; 2015-6945. DWD: Nichard and Sharon Peterson to Terry Reams; Rolling Acres 3rd Add Blk 7 Lot 17 MC; $112,500; 2015-6943. DWDJ: Joy Warner, Carol Kennedy, Joanna and Kevin Lien, Larry and Vicki Warner, and Cathy and Paul Burtness to Theodore and Linda Wisman; 34-97-20 Sub. Of NW1/4 SE1/4 Lot 1 Part of Exc S 110’ of W 990’ (Containing 2.5 Acres); $125,000; 2015-6937. DWDJ: Michael, Daniel, Chad, Amanda, Elissa, Daniel, Michael, and Amanda Berding and BCS to Brian McPhail and Carrie Berding; 8-97-19 Auditor’s Plat of NW1/4 NW1/4 Lot 3; $25,600; 2015-6936. DQC: Lyndi Gabrielson to Daniel Gabrielson; Clear Lake Industrial Park 3rd Add., Replat of Lots 4 & 5 Lot 4 CL; 2015-6935. MCON: Russell and JoAnn Hardy to Dale and Bonnie Klunder; South Mason City (Original Town) Blk 26 Lot 5 MC W 55’; $66,000; 20157051. CRAIGHTON ELECTRIC A Handy Reference For Your Information Kevin Craighton, Owner THORNTON City Clerk 998-2415 Library 998-2416 MESERVEY City Clerk 358-6408 Library 358-6274 ROCKWELL City Clerk 822-4906 Library 822-3268 SWALEDALE City Clerk 995-2360 Library 995-2352 Licensed & Insured Residential, Ag & Commerical Installation & Repair 1446 220th Street SHEFFIELD, IA 50475 Phone: 641-892-8038 Cell Phone: 641-425-2606 ERIC J. WAGNER, D.D.S. 213 Gilman, P.O. Box 40 SHEFFIELD, IA 50475 (641)892-4898 Tue. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 12 p.m., 1- 4 p.m. MERCY FAMILY Clinic-Sheffield Family Practice 203 South 2nd Street SHEFFIELD, Iowa 50475 Phone (641) 892-4495 William B. Paltzer, M.D. Daphne K. Landers - ARNP Elementary 822-3233 Middle School 822-3234 High School 892-4461 Retz Funeral Home Serving Since 1902 Sheffield • 892-4241 Thornton • 998-2311 Meservey • 358-6105 retzfuneralhome@frontiernet.net ERMER R Insurance & Financial Services, Inc. Auto • Home • Commercial • Farm Crop Hail • Life • Health Retirement Planning K & H CO-OPERATIVE OIL CO. Box 188 • Wesley, IA 50483 515-679-4212 Toll Free 1-800-244-6691 This space is reserved for your business! Call to reserve it today: 641-892-4636 HUNTBATCH HI INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE, LTD. All lines of insurance, including Crop, Hail and All-Risk Crop Insurance. For all your insurance needs, stop by the office. 312 Main St. • Rockwell, IA Office: 822-3215 • Home: 822-3298 “For all your insurance and real estate needs, stop in or give us a call.” 503 Adams Street East Industrial Park, Rockwell Free Estimates Fully Insured 641-892-4279 or 641-580-0452 Sheffield Suds & Storage Laundry & Car Wash Open: 24/7 121 N. 1st Street 113 N. Federal, Mason City (641) 423-1805 Home: (641) 822-4945 641-892-4284 “Where Community-Owned Truly Makes a Difference” Short-Term Post Hospital Stays Long-Term Care Outpatient Rehabilitation Meals on Wheels 707 Elm Street, Rockwell, IA Phone: 641-822-3203 rockwellnursing home.com * Motor Oil * Paint J & K Storage, LLC Bob Ermer, Agent Rick Ermer, Agent ROCKWELL COMMUNITY NURSING and REHAB * Petrolium * LP Gas This space is reserved for your business! Call to reserve it today: 641-892-4636 641-425-5475 For all your storage needs ROONEY ELECTRIC,, LLC Jeff Rooney Farm & Commercial Wiring Trenching & Overhead Work Residential Wiring & Lighting 641-892-4528 1708 Nettle Ave., Sheffield, IA 50475 Jaspersen INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE, LTD. “The Little Shop With The Big Service” Gene Christianson Tom Christianson Tim Christianson Joey Dickman 641-998-2724 641-444-7163 641-892-4949 641-998-2724 301 Main St. • Thornton, IA • 641-998-2724 The Pioneer Enterprise 10 Thursday, November 26, 2015 Buckle up this Thanksgiving weekend Register your harvest Thanksgiving weekend (6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25 – 6 a.m. Monday, Nov. 30) is the busiest travel time of the year for American motorists. Unfortunately, more motorists on the roads increase the likelihood of traffic crashes. Wearing a seat belt is the single most effective way to prevent injury or death in a crash. The risk of a fatal injury goes down by 45 percent when seat-belted in a passenger car and 60 percent when in a light truck. During the 2013, 301 people nationwide died on roadways (two in Iowa), in which a staggering 58 percent were not wearing seat belts. Preliminary numbers indicate that there were three fatalities in Iowa during the same period in 2014. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), approximately 12,584 lives were saved by seat belts in 2013 and an additional 2,800 more could have been saved if everyone had worn seat belts. Iowa has one of the highest seat belt compliance rates in the nation at 92.96 percent, but the unbuckled 7.04 percent represent 46 percent of Your deer is down, tagged and on its way to the truck. Your harvest is not complete, though, until you register it either online, over the phone or at a license vendor. For hunters who have registered deer for years, there is no change. It takes just a couple minutes online. Go to www.iowadnr.gov and click on the ‘Hunting’ tab, then on ‘Reporting Your Harvest’ and follow instructions. Be ready to enter your tag’s nine-digit harvest report number. the fatalities. The Iowa DPS and the Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau reminds you that whether you are traveling near or far, take a moment to simply buckle your seat belt. The Iowa 4-H Foundation has announced applications are now available for its 4-H scholarship program. Approximately 82 scholarship opportunities valued at over $75,350 will be awarded. The various scholarship awards range in amounts from $500 to $3,500. Some of the scholarships are open to students pursuing any field of study, while others are open to students pursuing degrees in agriculture, food and nutrition, ag business, animal science or journalism. Former and current 4-H members graduating from high school or currently attending college are eligible applicants. While a majority of the 4-H scholarship opportunities are available for students attending Iowa State University, scholarships are available to students planning to attend an Iowa Regent university, Iowa private college, Iowa community college, or any land-grant university. Iowa 4-H members are eligible to apply for 4-H scholarships if they meet individual scholarship requirements, as determined by the scholarship donors. Applicants must enroll as a full-time student to receive scholarship awards. Information and applications for the 4-H Scholarships are now available online through the Iowa 4-H Foundation at www.iowa4hfoundation.org/scholarships. Applications must be submitted online no later than 11:59 PM, Feb. 1 for consideration. Only one application form is needed for all Iowa 4-H Foundation Scholarships. Eligible students may apply for more than one scholarship; however, only one scholarship per individual will be awarded per academic year. Bring your family for cookies & cider! The national NACCE Innovation Award-winning NIACC John Pappajohn Entrepreneurial Center provides college level courses and degree programs in entrepreneurship, as well as comprehensive consulting services for business start-ups, existing industries and owner transitions in the North Iowa region. Space is available for start-up businesses in the North Iowa Business Incubator. For more information, contact the NIACC Pappajohn Center at 641422-4111. Greenery • Stands Bags • Wreaths • Swags • Roping Free Shaking & Netting Open Daily beginning November 28 Nov. 27 Nov. 28 Nov. 29 Call for Appointment 641-425-7717 Doug & Cyndi Miller 3 miles N. on 65 to 180th St. - Go E. 2 miles to Raven - On Southside Corner • Hampton, IA Spreading Holiday CHEER! Now, until December 9, if you withdraw cash at any of our four ATM locations you may just get a one-hundred dollar bill in place of a twenty. Stop by and test your luck - you may end up tickled green! ATM LOCATIONS: Alden8%7&2I¿FH(914 Main St) Dows8%7&2I¿FH(101 W Ellsworth St) Hampton8%7&2I¿FH(400 Central Ave E) 6KHI¿HOG8%7&2I¿FH(202 Gilman St) If you don’t have an ATM or debit card, apply for one today! This is a weekly feature highlighting some of Iowa’s unsolved homicides in the hopes that it will lead to new tips and potentially help solve cases. The project is a partnership between this newspaper and other members of the Iowa Newspaper Association. Trolley Trail Closing Effective immediately, the Trolley Trail located between Mason City and Clear Lake along county road B-35 is officially closed for the season. Motorized vehicles are prohibited on the trail throughout the year, including snowmobiles during the winter season. If you have any questions please contact Cerro Gordo County Conservation Board at 4235309. CHRISTMAS TREES FOR SALE Check out our HUGE Selection of trees! Local 4-H’ers NIACC Marketplace encouraged to apply is open to the public for scholarships The public is invited to attend the annual NIACC Marketplace from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. on Friday, November 20 in the NIACC Activity Center. Marketplace features merchandise for sale (tax free) by small business entrepreneurs who are NIACC students, staff, alumni and faculty. There will be several vendors with a variety of merchandise such as art work, jewelry, photographs, books, cupcakes, and Christmas cookies and much, much more. By phone? Call 800-771-4692. The deer should be reported by the hunter whose name is on the tag. It must come before midnight, the day after the deer is tagged. The harvest reporting system provides information much faster, and with more detail, than the previous postcard survey. This leads to more responsive management of deer populations like adjusting county by county tags or special zone hunt allotments. Scott M. Tompkins MEMBER FDIC www.ubtc.net No banking relationship necessary to win. An account with United Bank & Trust Company will not increase your chances of winning. Promotion period starts 11/25/2015 and ends 12/09/2015. Scott M. Tompkins, 23, was shot Nov. ZKLOHVWRSSHGWR¿[KLVZLQGshield wipers at the intersection of Park Avenue and Harrison Street in Muscatine. Tompkins was found wounded at 9:43 p.m. only blocks from the Hardee’s restaurant where he worked as the assistant manager. His coworkers described him as a nice young man without an enemy in the world. Investiga- tors said the homicide was not related to Tompkins’ job. Tompkins’ mother stated her son wasn’t happy with the increased gang presence in Muscatine and that he was stalked prior to his murder. In February 2010, Muscatine Police said they hoped new technology would provide the key to charging someone with Tompkins’ murder. HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSES FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4 United Bank & Trust Company Holiday Open Houses have all the right ingredients - be sure to pick up goodies when you stop in for refreshments! Join us: Scott M. Tompkins | Age: 23 Died: Nov. 29, 1995 Hometown: Muscatine Find out more about this and other unsolved homicides at www.IowaColdCases.org. 9:00 am - 4:00 pm Alden, Dows, Hampton & Sheffield MEMBER FDIC www.ubtc.net Anyone with information about Scott Tompkins’ unsolved murder please contact the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation at (515) 725-6010, e-mail dciinfo@dps.state.ia.us, or contact the Muscatine Police Department at 563-263-9922.