HUGE SALE - DeWitt Media
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HUGE SALE - DeWitt Media
Messenger NOW ONLINE - www.DEWITTMEDIA.com COLFAX Volume 120, Issue 42 Colfax, Wisconsin 54730 • (715) 962-3535 7 18122 77225 4 1 $ 00 Wednesday, October 19, 2016 Elk Mound Village Board hears about proposed land development By Cara L. Dempski ELK MOUND — The Elk Mound Village Board learned during its October 12 meeting of a plan to develop land along Independence Drive for housing. Village Clerk Pat Hahn stated during the meeting that she and public works director Mark Levra had met with Len Schreiber of Cedar Corporation about the possibility of building up to 19 multifamily dwellings on the south side of Independence Drive. The meeting marked the third time the village has been approached in 2016 regarding a new housing development. The land Schreiber proposed for use is directly across from the building that formerly housed Marshfield Clinic’s Elk Mound office and is currently owned by Laverne Ausman. Developer Gene Caron is pursuing the land for the project. Schreiber’s proposal indicates three units facing Independence Drive will be built first because there is already utility access for those units. Schreiber and Caron will be coming to the Elk Mound Plan Commission with a rezoning request and certified survey map. The land in question is currently zoned for agricultural use. Schreiber and Caron are hoping to have the first three units in before the end of 2016, and potentially put in a further 16 units in the future. They will be asking the plan commission and village board to rezone the land as R4, meaning that the proposed units could house up to four families. “The first meeting in November is probably a possibility for the plan commission, and then the board will meet on it at the same time to rezone and approve the CSM,” Hahn stated. Schreiber, Caron and fellow developer Mike Ruwowski initially approached the village of Elk Mound in April 2016 about developing a parcel of land on the north side of University Street directly across from Mound View Elementary School. The plan was scrapped when it was determined it would cost the village $300,000 to install a loop from the water main for the development. The group then proposed changing zoning on the north side of Jersey Lane from single-family residential to two-family residential for a duplex rental property. The proposal was denied by the village during the June 1 regular meeting. The board also learned October 12 that the Mound View store ownership will transfer to Cenergy, LLC, the company which oversees the 25 Mega Holiday gas stations and stores in the Eau Claire area. The store will retain its current name and will still be a BP station. The employee relations committee and public works director Mark Levra presented two options for hiring two new public works crew members. Option one was to hire Kevin Garnett at the rate of $16/hour and with benefits listed in the employee handbook. The option includes Garnett being given the option of starting immediately or starting January 1, 2017. The second option was hiring Todd Steinhorst at the same rate with the same benefits, but with Steinhorst’s start date being whichever date Garnett does not choose. The board unanimously approved both options. In other business, the board: •Heard a brief presentation from Dunn County District Attorney candidate Holly Wood Webster. •Approved building permits for Big Dog Investments/Patrick Rebman (W300 Menomonie Street) for work on the kitchen and bathroom, and for James Comstock (209 North Holly Avenue) for roof work. •Learned the Dunn County Solid Waste and Recycling board has found a recycling source for plastic items such as “kiddie” pools and large plastic buckets. •Approved a class “A” retailer’s beer license for consumption off premise and a cigarette and tobacco product license for EM Village Please see page 2 EM man accused of OWI, hitting parked car, fleeing state patrol and ramming cruiser By LeAnn R. Ralph EAU CLAIRE — A 20-yearold man from Elk Mound has been arrested for Operating While Intoxicated after fleeing from a Wisconsin state trooper in Eau Claire, striking another vehicle and ramming the state patrol cruiser several times. Austin Hanson was arrested October 15 for OWI and eluding officers. According to a news release from the Wisconsin State Patrol Northwest Region, at about 2:52 a.m. Saturday, October 15, a state trooper attempted to stop a vehicle in the City of Eau Claire for vehicle light violations. The vehicle, a green Chevrolet Cavalier, failed to stop for the trooper and drove around the same city block twice at the posted speed limit before accelerating through two stop signs. As the subject attempted to make a right turn at a high rate of speed, the Cavalier sideswiped a parked vehicle that was occupied. The trooper pulled up behind the suspect vehicle, which went into reverse, rammed the state patrol cruiser and then fled, according to the news release. The state trooper made sure the occupants of the parked vehicle were not injured, and then the trooper continued pursuing the Cavalier. The state trooper followed the vehicle for several blocks. In an attempt to go around the state patrol cruiser, the suspect drove into a residential driveway and became hung up on some landscaping. When the trooper attempted to block the Cavalier with his cruiser, the suspect once again rammed the cruiser and then fled, according to the news release. The suspect’s vehicle eventually drove onto a dead-end road, entered a driveway and struck a tree stump. After the vehicle was disabled, the suspect fled on foot. The Eau Claire Police Department established a perimeter, but the Cavalier’s driver was not located. More than an hour later, at 4:41 a.m., the Eau Claire County dispatch center received a call from someone claiming to be the driver of the vehicle and gave the address of his current location. Officers from the Eau Claire Police Department, along with the state patrol trooper, arrived at the residence and then arrested the 20-year-old driver, Austin Hanson of Elk Mound, for OWI first offense and eluding officers, according to the news release. The news release indicated that other charges are pending and that the investigation is continuing. THIRD AVE. PROGRESS — Work on Third Avenue in Colfax was progressing well the second week in October. Haas Sons had already poured the curb and gutter, and crews were working on pouring other concrete while they were in the area. —photo by LeAnn R. Ralph EAST VIEW — This was the view from the East View housing development in Colfax on a sunny October afternoon when the leaves were starting to turn colors. —photo by LeAnn R. Ralph Colfax school district referendum: what is included in $2.2 million of infrastructure? By LeAnn R. Ralph COLFAX — Part of the $7.2 million referendum that will be on the ballot for residents in the Colfax school district on November 8 is $2.2 million for infrastructure. But what does that mean — infrastructure? Infrastructure is defined as the basic facilities or components needed to operate a particular facility or enterprise. Infrastructure, said Bill Yingst, Colfax school district administrator, are those components you cannot see but if you do not have them up-to-date and well-maintained, the school buildings do not operate very well. Some of the items on the infrastructure list came from the energy efficiency project from three years ago, Yingst said. The Colfax Board of Education selected the projects that they thought the school district could afford at that time, “but the needs don’t go away,” he said. The school district had a zero mill rate impact at the time the energy efficiency projects were completed, Yingst noted. Infrastructure items on the energy efficiency list include new heating and ventilation equipment for the middle school and high school with new digital controls; re-piping the boiler room hot water supply system; and three energy recovery ventilators to pre-treat fresh air. Other items include a fire alarm panel upgrade; security system upgrade including roll down doors; domestic water conservation updates; exterior building repairs; and additional technology updates. The list also includes replacing three rubberized roofs; replace carpeting in 20 classrooms (average age of 16 years); hall locker replacement; and parking lot maintenance. “This is the internal stuff that’s not very fun. People don’t really walk through your boiler room. The big air handlers. They are high dollar replacement items,” Yingst said. “We are talking about going from pneumatic controls to digital controls and to be computerized. The way they are now, they are almost considered to be stand alone systems (among the elementary, middle and high school). You are dealing with a wrench to try to set those old pneumatic controls. This way, you would be dealing with one computer. You can see the whole system and see HUGE SALE on Pre-Owned Ford Fusions & Focuses 415 Cedar Ave. W. Menomonie, WI 54751 (715) 232-6353 • (800) 525-7724 Choose from 25 in-stock late models including 2015s with Low Mileage and in Great Shape. Check them out at NorthTownFord.com what is working and what is not working,” he said. The problem with the Colfax school building is that there is a 1954-55 section, a 1977 section, a 1963 section, and a 1996 section, Yingst said, and they were built as separate heating plants. The two big air handlers that are above the balcony in the gymnasium have 1977 stamped right on them, he noted. “They are 39 years old. I don’t know how much longer we can expect them to last. We have maintained them. And knock on wood, they haven’t died on us yet. But they could stop anytime. You don’t have any choice when they go. You have to replace them. The same with boilers. When they go, and if they are $50,000 each, and that does not include not installation, but you have to have them,” Yingst said. Proprietary Many of the components of the heating and ventilation system are “proprietary” which means they are unique to a particular company and are not standard across the industry. “If you work with Trane or another company, all of their (components) are proprietary. If you installed a Trane 20 years ago, and 40 years ago you had some other company’s proprietary parts there — well, they don’t all talk to each other. So then you’re trying to tie systems together. It’s not just the boiler, because then you’ve got the proprietary pieces, the controls that you have to get tied together. Otherwise you have a web of a mess,” Yingst said. “And then it’s very hard to control. This area is cold and this area isn’t. And you’re down there tweaking separate systems. With a digital control you can adjust and make it so that it is a consistent heat,” he said. The school district’s maintenance people are all extremely good at what they do but there is only so much they can do with the old and outdated heating and ventilation system, Yingst said. A new heating and ventilation system that covers all of the different sections of the building and ties them together will be much more energy efficient, he said. Fire alarm The fire alarm system is tied into the security system update that would be part of the projects covered by the $2.2 million in infrastructure for the referendum. “We’ve got one project in the referendum we call safety and security … (that is) tied it in with the drop roll down doors,” Yingst said. The school building has several areas where a drop-down door can prevent access to the rest of the building. When there is a basketball game, for example, the drop-down doors can keep people in the gymnasium area of the building and prevent access to the halls in the other parts of the building. “The problem is, you can’t make (the drop down doors) lockable unless the fire system is tied into it. You could pull it down and lock it, but then people can’t get out of the building (if there’s a fire). It’s a fire safety code issue,” Yingst said. The drop-down doors must be tied “to the fire alarm, and if those are down, they go up automatically if there’s a fire alarm. It has to be automated,” he said. The drop-down doors are essential for safety and security in the school building. If there was an intruder who meant do harm to students and staff, the drop-down doors could keep that person in a certain section of the building until law enforcement arrived. “If you had a safety issue, and you wanted to cordon off certain sections, you could drop those, and you could keep someone who was here to do harm at bay and not let them get into the rest of the building at certain intersections,” Yingst said. Water conservation In recent years, more and more high capacity wells have been put on-line for irrigating farm fields, for operating the large dairies and to process sand excavated from sand mines. Part of the $2.2 million in infrastructure updates that would be part of the November 8 referendum question would deal with water conservation. “We are talking about replacing high flow toilets at 3.5 gallons per flush with high efficiency that is down to 1.28 (gallons per flush),” Yingst said. “You would cut your water usage down to about half. You have just about thousand people in here, students and staff, and that is a lot of water. We pay quite a bit for water every quarter. And that would be a savings for the taxpayer,” Yingst said. If a thousand people flush a toilet once per day, it would amount to a savings of 2,200 gallons per day, or 44,000 gallons per month Colfax Referendum Please see page 10 Page 2 • Colfax Messenger Letters to the Editor To The Editor: I am supporting and will vote for current Assistant District Attorney Holly Wood Webster to be Dunn County’s next District Attorney. I believe that I have a unique perspective on this issue that may assist Dunn County voters. Until my retirement in May, 2016, I had been chief prosecutor for the City of Menomonie for 39 years. I worked closely with Holly for many years. She is an excellent prosecutor. In addition, I have always been impressed by how well Holly has worked, out of court, with those associated with the Dunn County judicial system. Holly has never short-changed or let down the people of Dunn County. Unfortunately, I do not believe that the same can be said for interim District Attorney Andrea Nodolf. (After the election of Judge Peterson in the Spring of 2014, the position of District Attorney became vacant. Governor Walker could appoint an interim District Attorney. Governor Walker chose to seek out and import Ms. Nodolf from Rusk County.) One example of Ms. Nodolf ’s exercise of poor judgment was her campaign to prevent the addition of a third judge for Dunn County. Objective evidence compiled state-wide has shown that Dunn County is and has been in the top three of all counties in the State of Wisconsin in terms of Judge workload overload. Requests for help from the State had fallen on deaf ears. Finally, a bill to fund an additional Judgeship for Dunn County began to move through the legislature. This bill had received full support from the Dunn County Board of Supervisors. What did Ms. Nodolf do? She used her appointed position to urge the legislature to kill the bill. The bill died. Dunn County citizens deserve better than this. Please vote Holly Wood Webster for Dunn County District Attorney. Ken Schofield Menomonie, Wisconsin Hi, Carlton, I think you’re wrong. Wisconsin will vote for Trump. I can’t believe the majority of people could be that out of touch with reality. Hillary is a known commodity, open borders, higher taxes, more Muslims that place shaira law before the constitution (goodbye to womens rights). Nothing will change in the inner city – more death, more division, more uneducated. Social Security will be out. Single payer will take the place of Obamacare (rationing and death panels). The police will continue to be vilified. The Supreme Court will be stacked with activist judges. Amnesty will be given to all illegals and will vote in 2020. The country will be lost. Gun rights and religious rights will disappear. If you have a Biblical view on morality and you state it publicly it will be considered hate speech and you could be jailed and if you are a church leader you will lose your tax exempt status. Trump is totally opposite in all these topics. There is no other choice! America lives or dies - you choose! Lewis P. Norman Colfax I have grabbled over all the Republican presidential candidates, having to change my choice numerous times. I still want to back a candidate that will give me peace of mind about the security that should be guaranteed for all Americans. Our rights and freedom our forefathers fought for and our Constitution should be upheld and protected. This is the Country that so many want to immigrate to, described as “That shining city on a hill”. Our citizens are losing ground on our inalienable rights. Our professional long-termed politicians’ are doing us an injustice by only being concerned about their own reelections and not concentrating on the good of the people. The appointing of Supreme Court Judges can have serious consequences and generational affects for this land. I feel this is the determining factor in my selection of Donald Trump for President. He has named some good choices with conservative leanings. They will follow the Constitution and not call it outdated and interrupt it to their radical thinking. Another quote from one of our greatest presidents, Ronald Reagan, “There are no easy answers, but there are simple answers. We must have the courage to do what we know is morally right. Please vote your faith! Charlene Kervina Bloomer EM Village Continued from page 1 the new owners of Mound’s View Store. • Approved resolution 16-2 regarding the 2016-2020 Dunn County outdoor recreation plan. •Approved a contract with the Dunn County Humane Society for animal control services with a per capita rate of $1.63. Closed Session The village board met in closed session during the October 12 meeting to discuss the employee relations committee’s recommendations for the 2017 wages and benefits for the public works and clerk’s offices. During the session, the employee relations committee recommended: •A three-percent wage increase for both offices. •Increasing the monthly insurance stipend to $1,200. • Adding longevity pay of $1.00 per month, per years of service after five years. •Increasing the attendance stipend for board members seated on committees from $10 to $20 per committee meeting. •Increasing the attendance stipend for board members and citizen members of the plan commission from $15 to $20 per plan commission meeting. • The board reopened the session and voted to accept all the measures presented while the session was closed. MESSENGER COLFAX U.S.P.S. 121-240 Phone (715) 962-3535 Fax (715) 704-6079 website: www.DeWittMedia.com e-mail: messenger@dewittmedia.com 511 East Railroad Ave • PO Box 517 Colfax, Wisconsin 54730-0517 Periodical Postage Paid at Colfax, Wisconsin 54730 Postmasters please send address corrections to: P.O. Box 38, Glenwood City, WI 54013-0038 Subscription rates (Payable in advance) Zip codes beginning in 547: $30 per year All other zip codes: $35 per year Carlton DeWitt…………………………………… Publisher and Editor Shawn DeWitt……………………………………… Advertising Manager LeAnn Ralph……………………………………………… Staff Reporter Messenger Office Hours: Monday - Friday 10:00 am to Noon and 1:00 to 3:00 pm If the office is closed and you need assistance, please call 715-265-4646. The Colfax Messenger is a member of the National Newspaper Assn. and the Wisconsin Newspaper Assn. NEWS Wednesday, October 19, 2016 State Capitol Newsletter Off the Publisher's Desk By Matt Pommer DISCLAIMER: The content in this column does not reflect the views or opinions of the Wisconsin Newspaper Association or its member newspapers. Public Notice Practices By Matt Pommer An expert is warning that proposed changes in the state’s public notice law come with perils to open government. At issue is a push by municipal governments for an option to only place public notices on the web. Currently the public notices are published in newspapers, and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association also maintains a web site for all public notices. Avoiding newspaper publication is touted as saving government money. A Legislative Council is studying the issue and its recommendations will go to the next Legislature. Mark W.C. Stodder of Shorewood, a committee member, says that any change must result in improved access and delivery of government activity to the public. Stodder, a public member of the committee, is president of Xcential Legislative Technologies and a former Wisconsin newspaper publisher. He served as president of the Public Notice Resource Center from 2005 to 2012. That is a national nonprofit foundation which examines and tracks the development of public notice law throughout the country. He recommends four elements to be considered, and they favor continued newspaper publication of public notices. Item one is that the public notice be published by an independent body. “Unfortunately, government cannot always be depended upon to provide transparency into its operation,” he wrote. Wisconsin has both a tradition of open government but “it also has many examples of public officials choosing to reduce visibility into their plans and activities.’’ Stodder cites last year’s efforts by legislative leaders to weaken the state’s open records law. Letting governmental units avoid newspaper publications, could create less visibility, he said “In Wisconsin local community newspapers provide that ‘watchdog’ function -- both in print and via their mobile platforms and a statewide public notice website,” he wrote. Other issues in the four to be considered are whether public notices are archivable, accessible and verifiable, he said. The public and the source of the public notice must be able to verify the notice that was published was not changed once it was published. “Today, the means of verifying that content on a website has not been electronically altered -- hacked in some way -- remain sketchy, said Stodder. “Technology to do so continues to evolve and remains highly complex and costly,” he added. The federal government has been developing a system to verify online documents “but that system is expensive and not 100 percent accurate and likely well beyond the means of a local Wisconsin government or web-only provider.” “Today the only fully verifiable notice is in a local newspaper,” he said, citing the statutorily required publisher affidavit. “The committee would be failing in its duty if we make it harder for citizens to become aware of the activities of their government,” he wrote in a letter to the committee. Most computer users would also concede that finding and reading a public notice is easier in the community newspaper than in the flood of available web information. Have you voted already? Have you voted in the allowed early voting or maybe you have filed an absentee ballot with your local clerk. Most voters have by now made up their minds on which of the presidential candidates they are going to vote for. Polls over the weekend show a close race between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Only about five percent have yet to decide whom they are going to vote for according to one poll that I seen. During the primary election process, Senator Bernie Sanders questioned the fairness of our election procedures. Sunday on CNN Rudy Giuliani said he “believed elections in some big cities could be rigged, some with dead Democratic voters, obviously harming Republican Donald Trump.” He continued, “You want me to say that I think the election in Philadelphia and Chicago is going to be fair? I would have to be a moron to say that.” I remember that a number of years ago a couple of people were convicted of voting more than once in an eastern Wisconsin city. That is why I am in favor of some sort of voter identification at the polling place. I urge everyone to make sure they have registered with their local clerk so you can vote on November 8th. It’s your duty to vote, so please do. Last week I suggested that Clinton would win the State of Wisconsin in November. Several people challenged me on that. See the letters to the editor column as to what one of our readers has to say about Clinton winning in Wisconsin. A couple of other comments I got reminded me that if Hillary wins, and serves two terms (eight years) she will have the opportunity to nominate at least four Supreme Court Justices. If she wins and gets to appoint new justices, her liberal minded appointees, will decimate the first and second amendments of the United States Constitution, I have been lead to believe. The First Amendment of the Constitution contains the five basic Freedoms, which, we enjoy as American Citizens. Do you know what they are? The Second Amendment is our right to keep and bear arms. If you are interested in keeping these freedoms, I suggest that you vote for Donald Trump for president. Thanks for reading! ~Carlton Colfax PD reports 50 calls for service in September COLFAX — The Colfax Police Department has reported 50 calls for service in September. The following report was included with the Colfax Village Board packet for the October 10 meeting. • Assist other agency — 3 (Animal carcass in road; suicidal subject in the area; Barron County assist on subject’s whereabouts). •Fireworks — 1 (Subjects in vehicle shot off fireworks on Dunn Street near Fifth Avenue). • Ambulance assist — 3. • Parking ticket — 1. •Information — 1 (Elderly male with early stages of dementia/Alzheimer’s). •Suspicious person/car — 1 (Intoxicated male laying on sidewalk on Main Street). •Check welfare — 1 (Intoxicated male, different one than above, received injuries to his facial area when he fell. Male went home, and we were asked to check on him.) • Noise complaint — 1 (Gathering/party at residence.) • Juvenile complaint — 3 (Juvenile runaway, juvenile traffic complaint, juveniles playing in the road; two juvenile sexual assaults). • Alarm — 1 (Business alarm, accidental set-off). • Assist citizen — 1 (Disabled vehicle on STH 40). • Area watch — 1 (Suspicious juveniles in the alley behind Buck Snort on two different occasions). • 911 Hangup/misdial — 3. • Property damage — 1 (Tires slashed on two vehicles.) • Animal complaint — 3 (Barking dogs, lost cat). •Disorderly conduct — 1 (Intoxicated male at fairgrounds in altercation with people). • Civil — 1 (Property line dispute; personal property dispute). • Theft — 1 (Reported theft of medication; unfounded). •Miscellaneous — 1 (Report of possible theft; not a theft. Questionable behavior by neighbors adjoining property.) •Traffic accident — 2 (Car struck Dollar General. Hit and run to road signs. Mailbox on CTH BB coming into the village.) •Domestic — 1 (Argument between wife and husband; anger issues and family. Subjects counseled.) •Warrant — 1 (Attempt to locate subject with several outstanding warrants.) •Fraud — 1 (Stolen checks cashed at gas station). • Worthless check — 1. • Utility — 2 (Flag on ground; detour signs knocked over). • Community service — 1 (Officer spoke with young children in regards to law enforcement). Americans for Limited Government is a non- partisan, nationwide network committed to advancing free market reforms,private property rights and core American liberties. For more information on ALG please call us at 703383-0880 or visit our website at www.GetLiberty.org. T R O P D P L SUUMMERFIE S Rob Summerfield Like most farmers in the 67th Assembly District, Rob brings common sense solutions for very big issues facing the state. BETTER ROADS BETTER BROADBAND BETTER RURAL ECONOMY Vote Rob Summerfield on November 8th Paid for by Volunteers for Agriculture, Jeff Fuller Treasurer. Not authorized by any candidate, candidate’s agent or committee. FRIENDS & NEIGHBORS Wednesday, October 19 2016 Out of the Past 10 years ago October 18, 2006 Colfax FFA was the winner of the Tri-County Soil Judging Contest hosted by Dunn County October 4. Team members included Sophia Secraw, Mark Tuschl, Travis Berge and Trystan Beyrer. The Colfax Fire Board approved a budget of $111,817 for 2007, representing a $10,000 increase over the 2006 budget. Following the discussion of a new fire hall, the fire board decided to have the fire hall lot surveyed to determine the exact locations of the property lines. The Colfax Village Board directed John Jahr, clerk, to contact Ayres Associates to invite a representative to make a proposal for a concept and budget plan for improvements to the Cenex building. The building is expected to house the street maintenance shop, the rescue squad and the police department. At the June 12 meeting, the village board approved borrowing $275,000 to purchase the Cenex warehouse. The village has $120,000 saved for building a new maintenance shop. 25 years ago October 17, 1991 Ida Jessel celebrated her 100th birthday at Area Nursing Home October 8. Colfax FFA members participated in judging contests at World Dairy Expo in Madison October 4. They included Jason Winget, Jim Lathrop, Heather Dobbs, Amy Ewings, Krome Burke-Scoll, Jason Hagberg, Wayne Tuschl, Justin Albricht, Marty Harmon and Jessy Hill. A disaster drill was held in Colfax October 12. About 34 different agencies from Dunn County, Eau Claire County and Chippewa County participated. Events centered around a simulated chemical spill at the Cenex fertilizer plant on East Railroad Colfax Messenger • Page 3 Colfax Health & Rehab News Avenue. 35 years ago October 22, 1981 John Ackerlund, Colfax High School freshman, tied for second place in Midwest dairy cattle judging at World Dairy Expo in Madison October 3. Ackerlund was the individual winner in Holstein judging. The Colfax FFA team ranked 31st out of 145 entries. Additional team members were Bob Higbie, Russ Burton and Julie Bates. Colfax OK Hardware will be sponsoring a welding clinic November 16 at 8:30 p.m. Learn five ways to weld. A Halloween Party with music by Midnight Rhythm Band will be held Saturday, October 31, at the Colfax Fire Hall from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Prizes for costumes. 50 years ago October 20, 1966 Cited for conducting the most outstanding child welfare program in the 10th District of the American Legion, the American Legion of Wisconsin RussellToycen Post No. 131 has been recognized with an award from the national Organization of the Legion. Postmaster A. Ruth Anderson urged all those who have not done so yet to send in their “ZIPA-LIST” forms to add ZIP Codes to personal mailing lists. Every household in the nation has received the forms with blanks for addresses to which residents wish the post office to add the five number codes. Late Saturday night, Roland Breezee was returning to his home in Otter Creek when just past Art Johnson’s driveway, a wolf dashed in front of his car and was killed. 65 years ago October 18, 1951 A quota of 240 blood donors has been set for Colfax and six townships in the area for the Red Cross blood drive November 5 in the Colfax auditorium. An army recruiter recently returned from Korea said there is a “real war” going on over there and blood is given in only almost-sure survival cases. Two of the Middle Border top football teams will battle it out Friday when Colfax plays Menomonie at the Menomonie Indians’ homecoming. D.J. Toycen won two tickets for the Wisconsin-Indiana football game at Madison November 3. Toycen was one of two high-point agents in Wisconsin for the past week in sales of Illinois Mutual Casualty Insurance in the accident, health and hospital line. 100 years ago October 20, 1916 Headline: Dobbyn Not Dead! — A few weeks ago, the Messenger, along with a number of other newspapers in this section, contained a notice of the reported death of Wm. R. Dobbyn. The report was unfounded. Mr. Dobbyn is very much alive. The following letter was written by him to friends in Chippewa Falls and published in the Independent. “I am not dead. At least if I am, I do not know it. But our little Dorothea has gone. She died July 4th of typhoid fever. Tell the papers to contradict the report. I never felt better in all my life, save for the awful sorrow which weighs me down.” Mr. Fred Potratz, auditor for the Midland Lumber Co., was here last Saturday from Minneapolis arranging for the erection of a new and greatly enlarged lumber house on their grounds here. A reward of $5 is hereby offered by the village board of Colfax for the arrest and conviction of any person or persons marking buildings, windows or disturbing in any way the people of said village. News for the week of October 9th to the 15th: It was another beautiful fall day on Sunday and we once again enjoyed a visit from Leona. We always look forward to her wonderful stories. Monday found the residents in the Square to paint pumpkins. Everyone enjoyed designing their faces and watching as they came alive. The afternoon found us back in the Square for a sing along with Kathy Irwin. We always enjoy her visits and singing along as she plays the piano so beautifully. Tuesday morning was time for Bounce Ball in the Rotunda. We always have a good time, and the bonus is, we get exercise at the same time. The afternoon found us back in the Square for an hour of bingo. As usual, many came away with bags full of goodies. Pastor Eide led us in our Wednesday morning church service. Everyone enjoyed her special message, and we always enjoy singing our favorite hymns while Delores accompanies on the piano. Residents gathered in the afternoon for an hour of giant crossword. This group always has fun as Cathy gives hints, and everyone has a chance to guess the words. Thursday morning found us prepping for a special event. It was Oktoberfest Time! While the kitchen prepared the German feast, residents and staff busied themselves in the Square decorating in a traditional Oktoberfest fashion. As the residents gathered they had fun getting their picture taken as Hilda, the German waitress and completing a quiz on how well they knew beer. Then it was time to eat. We started with a mustard beer dip served with pretzels, and for the main course it was Weinerschnitzle, sauerkraut sautéed OKTOBERFEST — Residents enjoyed an authentic German meal during our Oktoberfest Celebration. —photo submitted with onions, and brown sugar, German potato salad and for dessert, Apel Kuchen. After everyone was done eating we cleared the dining room and enjoyed an hour of polka music by Honey and Me. Some of us wore off our meal with a dance or two. On Friday morning our residents gather for rosary led by Loretta. Then, it was time for our weekly Gospel sing along. The afternoon found us back in the Square for an hour of dime bingo. It wouldn’t be bingo time without our faithful volunteers, Michelle, Vonnie and Olivia helping us out. In closing, here is this week’s recipe from the Area Nursing Home cook book published in 1996. Marie Schindler would make this for the residents each year when they would visit their cabin in Bloomer. She would always have to hide it from our bus driver, Dick, or he would have eaten the whole dessert! Apple Bars submitted by Marie Schindler, retired Nursing Assistant CRUST: 1 cup shortening, 1 tsp. salt, 2 ½ cups flour, 1 egg (separated), ¼ cup milk, 1 tsp. vanilla. In a bowl mix together shortening, salt and flour. In a second bowl, mix egg yolk with milk and vinegar. Add just enough of this mixture to crust mixture to moisten crust. Remove half of the dough. Roll out onto floured board. Roll large enough to fit a 10 X 15 inch cookie sheet. Place crust in pan. FILLING: 12 apples, peeled, cored and sliced. 1 cup sugar and 1 tsp. cinnamon. Place apples in bowl. Add sugar and cinnamon. Mix. Place apple mixture on crust. Roll out rest of dough and place on top of apples. Prick top of crust with fork. Seal edges. In a small bowl beat egg white until foamy. Brush over top crust. Bake for 15 minutes at 400 degrees, turn down oven to 350 and bake for another 40 minutes. Remove from oven and drizzle with a soft powdered sugar glaze. Next week we look forward to music by Dale Martell, and watching our movie of the month, The Sound of Music. Until next week, Barb Stobb, Activity Director Grapevine senior Colfax fire department 2017 budget, levy remains unchanged School menus nutrition menu The Town of Grant, which con“The fire department and EMS partment would soon have to reBy LeAnn R. Ralph Colfax Oct. 24: Baked cod w/tartar sauce, Cheesy hash browns, Creamed peas, Cornbread, Strawberries, Shortcake. Oct. 25: Salisbury steak, Seasoned noodles, Stewed tomatoes, Bread, Mandarin oranges. Oct. 26: Roast turkey, Sweet potatoes, Green bean almandine, Dinner roll, Tropical fruit mix. Oct. 27: Beef stew w/potatoes, onions & carrots, Baking powder biscuit, Orange, Frosted cake. Oct. 28: Italian sausage and peppers, Brown rice pilaf, Creamed corn, Bread, Apple crisp. Meatball Supper Thurs., Oct. 20, 2016 3:30 to 7 p.m. Grace United Methodist Church Wheeler Free Will Offering 6c*T,C42c Meatballs, Mashed Potatoes/Gravy, Corn, Coleslaw, Cranberries, Pickles, Bread, Desserts & Beverages Oct. 24: No School. Oct. 25: Chicken Ranch Wrap, Green Beans, Shredded Lettuce, Cheese, Cucumbers, Diced Tomatoes, Carrots & Celery Sticks, Fruit Choice. Oct. 26: Pepperoni Pizza, Cooked Carrots, Romaine Mix, Birthday Cake, Fruit Choice. Oct. 27: Chicken Noodle Soup, Crackers, Tuna or Egg Salad Sandwich, Carrots & Celery Sticks, Fruit Choice. Oct. 28: French Toast Sticks, Sausage Patty, Carrot & Celery Sticks, Strawberries, Juice. Elk Mound Oct. 24: No School. Oct. 25: Cheeseburger on Bun, Sweet Potato Fries, Baked Beans, Pears, Fresh Fruit. Oct. 26: Chicken Alfredo, Penne Pasta, Broccoli, Green Beans, Peaches, Fresh Fruit. Oct. 27: Chicken Strips, Rice Pilaf, Mixed Vegetables, Squash, Applesauce, Fresh Fruit. Oct. 28: Fish Sandwich or PB&J w/Cheese Stick, Sweet Potato Waffle Fries, Cole Slaw, Corn, Mixed Fruit, Fresh Fruit. * Menus subject to change. Milk choice available daily. 100 Years Colfax Public Library October 22 • 1 p.m. We’ve been your library for 100 years. Join us for treats and lively discussion about the past, present and future of the Colfax Public Library. Guest speaker and local historian Troy Knutson will show slides of Colfax from years past. The Colfax History Room also will be open. COLFAX — The Colfax Community Fire District Board has approved a budget for 2017 of $112,700, which is the same amount as the 2015 and 2016 budgets. The Colfax fire board met October 13 at the fire station to review and approve the budget and levy for 2017. Colfax Fire Chief Don Logslett said in his report that so far this year, the fire department has gone out on 18 runs, compared to 17 runs last year. The number of runs for this year and last year represents a substantial decrease in runs compared to 25 for 2014 and 27 for 2015, Logslett said. Regarding future expenditures, Logslett said the fire de- Mayo Clinic-Red Cedar lists births Menomonie The following babies were born at Mayo Clinic Health System in Menomonie: •Kristae and Jesse Olson, Menomonie, son, Jordan Michael Olson, Sept. 21 • Mercedes Everett and Brad Hoffman, Menomonie, daughter, Chezney Anna LaBelle Hoffman, Sept. 27 •Leah and Cory Maxon, Menomonie, son, Christopher Michael Maxon, Sept. 28 place one of the tanker trucks. “The tender is getting tired,” he said. The tender in question has a fiberglass tank and was purchased by the Colfax fire department in 1987. At that time the vehicle was used and had been a garbage truck in its previous life, Logslett said.. “It’s starting to nickel and dime us now,” he said Purchasing another used tender is expected to cost $50,000 or $55,000, Logslett said. As of August 31, the fire district’s equipment replacement fund contained $165,226.96. Logslett said fire department personnel would begin searching for a replacement tender, and if something suitable turned up, the fire board could call a special meeting to approve the purchase. When asked about the purchase of a fire engine, Logslett said he anticipated that one of the fire engines would need to be replaced in two or three years. A used fire engine could cost around $200,000. The Colfax fire district’s budget sets aside $20,000 per year for the equipment replacement fund. tains 18.7 percent of the equalized value at $36.8 million, will pay a tax levy of $17,676.22. The Town of Otter Creek, which contains 19.8 percent of the equalized value at $39.04 million, will pay a tax levy of $18,749.89. Fire runs for this year include three grass fires, one structure fire, three false alarms, four car accidents, three gas leaks (carbon monoxide), and four swimming pool fills. Other business In other business, the Colfax fire board: • Approved Dean Logslett as the assistant fire chief. •Approved Gary Bjork, representing the Town of Colfax, as president of the Colfax fire board. •Learned that the fire department is still interested in building a storage shed on the fire station property. The firefighters will build and pay for the shed themselves, and it will not cost the fire district any money, Logslett said. Bjork suggested that a set of plans for the shed should be presented at the next meeting so the fire board could review and consider the plans for approval. Subscribe to The Colfax Messenger Today! 715-962-3535 Join representatives from OVER 150 CRAFTERS -------- in one of the public forums discussing the need for a clinic in your community ! FREE CHILDCARE -------- Monday, October 24th 2016 FREE At the Viking Bowl and Lounge ADMISSION Meetings will be held at 3:30p.m. and 5:30p.m. ELK MOUND FALL ART & CRAFT SALE FREE Meal ● Prizes & Raffles! • Meet the new director: Lisa Bragg-Hurlburt. FREE Blood Pressure Screens & Flu Shots • Buy one of our new commemorative cookbooks! 3:30 p.m. — 6:30 p.m. OCTOBER 22, 2016 9:00 AM – 3:00 PM Limited Availability ● Ages 13 and Up Sponsored by the Elk Mound Booster Club Thank you to our sponsors! • Tour the History Room C42c* do a great job on grants,” said Scott Gunnufson, president of the fire board and Colfax village president. The Colfax fire district includes the Village of Colfax and the Towns of Colfax, Grant and Otter Creek. “It speaks a lot that the budget has stayed the same,” Gunnufson said. The 2017 budget contains $1,500 for clothing, and when asked if that was enough, Logslett said because the fire department had received a $40,000 Otto Bremer Foundation grant, all of the firefighters now have new turnout gear. A set of turnout gear for one firefighter costs about $2,500. In addition to approving the budget for 2017, the Colfax fire board also approved tax levies for 2017. The Town of Colfax, which contains 39.7 percent of the equalized value in the fire district at $78.3 million, will pay a tax levy $37,597.63. The Village of Colfax, which contains 21.8 percent of the equalized value in the fire district at $43.1 million, will pay a tax levy of $20,685.25. The Village of Colfax Interested in being a vendor? Email: elkmoundboosterclub@gmail.com C42c43 -------LUNCH AVAILABLE Two Locations: Elk Mound High School & Mound View Elementary -----------------University Street, Elk Mound, WI C41c42 Page 4 • Colfax Messenger SPORTS Wednesday, October 19, 2016 Mounders clipped by Cards; prepare to host Bloomer Blackhawks in playoffs By Cara L. Dempski SPRING VALLEY — The Elk Mound football team traveled to Spring Valley October 14 with hopes of taking back home a share of second place honors in the Dunn-St. Croix standings. But the Cardinals had no intentions of sharing the silver with the Mounders as they pulled out a 20-14 win in the regular and conference season finale last Friday night in the shadow of the Eau Galle Dam. Instead, Elk Mound finished fourth, right smack in the middle of the conference’s final standings with a 3-3 record and were 5-4 overall. Spring Valley, last year’s conference champ, had to settle for second place with a 5-1 mark just behind Durand, who won the Dunn-St. Croix with a perfect 6-0 mark. Glenwood City finished third at 4-2. Despite the loss, the Mounders still qualified for post-season play thanks to their .500 conference mark. Elk Mound was awarded the fourth seed in the WIAA Division 5 Northwest sectional at this past weekend’s seeding meeting and will host the Bloomer Blackhawks this Friday, October 21 in level one competition. Ironically, the two schools faced one another last year in a Division 5, level one contest which the Blackhawks won 20-6. Senior running back Hunter Adleman provided most of the Mounders’ ground yardage by rushing for 133 yards, while tight end Chandler Schreiber led the team in passing yards with 20 yards on a single attempt. Junior Dylan Black was Elk Mound’s starting quarterback against the Cardinals. He replaced senior Dane Lew who is still recovering from a shoulder injury he suffered during the October 7 game against Durand. Black had four completions for nine attempts, and recorded eight yards. He was intercepted twice. The Cardinals got on the board in the first with a run from Sam Verges. Brock Bune’s PAT was good, and Spring Valley grabbed the 7-0 lead with 6:16 left in the first. The Mounder defense held Spring Valley in check for the rest of the first and for most of the second. Then Sean Borgerding completed a 29-yard sprint for another touchdown. Brock Bune’s kick was good, and made the score 14-0 in favor of the Cards with 2:24 left in the half. Elk Mound finally provided an answering score when two tight ends combined for the score. Black handed the ball to Sch- reiber, who fell back and fired a pass to Hunter Johnson, who ran the ball the final 11 yards to the end zone for the Mounder score. Dane Lew took the field for the PAT, and his kick was good to make the score 14-7 with 1:03 left in the half. Spring Valley put up another six in the third quarter after Borgerding punched through the Elk Mound defense to put up another six. Bune’s kick was no good, and the Cards lead grew to 20-7 with 10:34 to go in the third. The Mounders stepped up again in the fourth quarter and narrowed the deficit to six points after a three-yard touchdown run from Adleman and a successful PAT from Lew with 10:54 left in the game. Elk Mound was threatening a score again late in the fourth when Noah Zurbuchen was pushed out to the sidelines by Cardinal defender Jaydon Nyeggen. Zurbuchen and Nyeggen stepped out of bounds at the same time, but were not able to untangle from each other before Zurbuchen flipped over the ropes marking the field boundaries. Medical staff and coach Dave Lew, who focused on his right knee, checked out Zurbuchen. He left the game and was as- sisted from the field by coaches and fellow players with the right knee wrapped in ice. His status for the playoff game is uncertain as of Monday’s press time. The Mounders’ drive ended shortly thereafter when the Cardinals’ Seth Schlegel intercepted a Dylan Black pass attempt to clinch the Valley victory. PRING VALLEY 20, ELK MOUND 14 Spring Valley……………..7 7 6 0 — 20 Elk Mound………………..0 7 0 7 — 14 First Quarter SV — Uncredited run (B. Bune kick), 6:16. Second Quarter SV — Uncredited 29 run (B. Bune kick), 4:39; EM — H. Johnson 20 pass from C. Schreiber (D. Lew kick), 1:03. Third Quarter SV — S. Verges 1 run (B. Bune kick fails), 7:00. Fourth Quarter EM — H. Adleman 56 run (D. Lew kick), 2:45. Individual Statistics Passing (comp-att-int-yds) — SV (6-8-089) — S. Borgerding 6-8-0-89; EM (5-102-28) — C. Schreiber 1-1-0-20, D. Black 4-9-2-8. Rushing (att-yds) — SV (36-127) — S. Verges 19-103, S. Schlegel 5-18, S. Borgerding 11-4, T. Kado 1-2; EM (38-190) — H. Adleman 14-133, N. Zurbuchen 2046, B. Lambele 1-6, C. Schreiber 1-3, D. Black 2-2. Receiving (rec-yds) — SV (6-89) — S. Schlegel 2-45, Z. Larson 1-34, T. Kado 1-8, B. Bune 1-1, S. Verges 1-1; EM (528) — H. Johnson 1-20, C. Schreiber 2-8, N. Zurbuchen 2-0. SACKED — Elk Mound defenders George Friberg (#87) and Hunter Adleman (#21) take down Cardinal quarterback Sean Borgerding in the fourth quarter of the Mounders’ 20-14 loss at Spring Valley on October 14. —photo by Cara L. Dempski CADE HANSON IS CONFERENCE RUNNER-UP Mounder cross country teams place third at conference meet By Cara L. Dempski MONDOVI — The Mounder boys and girls cross country teams both took third place in the Dunn-St. Croix conference meet held at the Valley Golf Course in Mondovi last Thursday, October 13. The girls scored 75 as senior Elizabeth Fasbender and sophomore Alana Plaszcz finished in the top eight. Freshman phenom Cade Hanson ran to a secondplace individual finish to led the Mounder boys who tallied 90 points. Coach Jeremiah Fredrickson expressed excitement over the runners’ times in Mondovi. “I think we are peaking at the right time, going into sectionals,” he said. “Most of our runners improved by a minute or more from the last time we ran at Mondovi.” Fredrickson said the girls ran well, despite the team’s usual third runner, Brook Plaszcz, being unable to finish the race. He also noted that senior Elizabeth Fasbender is coming back into her own after a short break due to tendonitis and sophomore Alana Plaszcz just keeps pushing Fasbender. Fasbender finished the race in 21:37.4 to take seventh, and Plaszcz was eighth with her 21:50.1 run. Victoria Fasbender completed the race as Elk Mound’s third runner, and took 15th for her 23:04.1 run. Kristin Martinson and Paige Romanowski were 20th and 25th with times of 23:31.8 and 24:11.4. Freshman Taya Schaefer and sophomore Ciera Lind finished 28th and 31st after running to the finish line in 24:22.3 and 24:31.8. ELK MOUND freshman Cade Hanson finished second in a time of 17:47.9 at the conference meet. —photo by Missy Klatt ELK MOUND’S top two finishers in the girls’ D-SC conference cross country meet in Mondovi last Thurday were senior Elizabeth Fasbender (left) and sophomore Alana Plaszcz. Fasbender placed seventh while Plaszcz was right on her heels in eighth. —photo by Shawn DeWitt Claudia Paul was 32nd with a time of 24:54.5, Meredith Hainstock took home a time of 25:27.4 and 36th, and Hannah Hollister was 39th after completing her run in 25:46.2. Kaylie Solberg and Audrey Westcott were 43rd and 46th with times of 26:04.5 and 26:38.1. Hannah Cynor, Hannah Carlson, Kaitlyn Baier and Mattea Linberg were 49th, 52nd, 53rd and 54th. Cynor ran to a 27:12.1 finish, Carlson ran a 28:00.9 race, Baier finished in 28:04.7, and Linberg finished at 28:07.4. Glenwood City won the girls team championship beating defending champion Colfax 55 to 63. Vikings’ sophomore runner Erica Kallstrom won the individ- ual title in 20:02.6. Fredrickson said the boys team went to Mondovi prepared to run, but perhaps no one more so than Cade Hanson. “I knew he had this kind of race in him, but didn’t know it would come this year,” Fredrickson stated. “I can’t wait to see how he performs at Durand next weekend.” Elk Mound netters win pair to finish in two-way tie for second By Cara L. Dempski As the saying goes, it doesn’t matter how you start but how you finish that counts. After beginning this season with just two wins in its first eight matches and going just 2-2 to open Dunn-St. Croix play, Elk Mound finished strong winning its final four conference matches including a pair of contests last week to wrap up the regular season on a high note and give it momentum for the WIAA tournament series. The Mounders picked up a pair of three-set sweeps against Elmwood and Glenwood City to conclude their conference and regular season slate. Elk Mound made short work of the Raiders when they traveled to Elmwood last Tuesday, October 11 winning in three sets 25-13, 25-17 and 25-17. Two days later, the Mounders hosted the Hilltoppers in the conference finale and beat winless Glenwood City 25-14, 25-9 and 25-9 in the October 13th match. With the victories, the Mounders tied for second place in the D-SC with Boyceville. Both teams finished with 6-2 records – the Mounders’ losses came against the Bulldogs and Mondovi while Boyceville fell to those same Buffaloes (on Tuesday) and Colfax. Elk Mound, the fourth seed in the WIAA Division 3 regional volleyball tournament, will hosted rival and fifth-seeded Colfax in the quarterfinal round last evening, October 18. The victor will advance to the semifinals to be played this Thursday, October 20. The winner will likely draw Grantsburg, the regional’s top seed and sixth-ranked team in the Division 3 state poll, who hosted the winless Glenwood City Hilltoppers Tuesday. The regional championship will be played Saturday, October 22 Elmwood The Mounders went to Elmwood with a 4-2 record in the DSC and left with a 5-2 record after a 3-0 sweep of the Raiders. Morgan Radtke led the team attack with 12 kills against Elmwood. She also recorded two digs, a solo block, and two block assists. Karie Jo Nigon was the team leader with three aces, and logged nine digs and one kill. Nigon led the team in score assists with 21. Abby Curry was the team leader for digs with 10. She chalked up one scoring assist. Junior Kourtney Zurbuchen sent in eight kills and is credited with six digs. Allie Weber, another junior, logged seven kill shots, an ace, nine digs, and a block assist. Lauren Scharlau is credited with three kills, one score assist, four digs, and a block assist. Riley Radtke, Jenna Heit and Madysen Borofka each took home one kill. Borofka assisted on 10 scores, logged an ace, and took four digs. Sarah Sweeney and Alex Jenson completed the service aces with one each. Sweeney is also credited with eight digs and Jenson with one. Colleen Olson took credit for a block assist. Glenwood City The Mounders played host to Glenwood City for their final regular season match and walked away with a 3-0 win. Junior Allie Weber led the Elk Mound attack with 10 kills, while Morgan Radtke followed with another nine kills. Karie Jo Nigon fired off five kill shots, Kourtney Zurbuchen and Riley Radtke each landed three, and Lauren Scharlau spiked in two kills. Nigon led the team for scoring assists with 15 sets, and Madysen Borofka contributed another 11. Zurbuchen set up two more scoring shots, and Morgan Radtke capped the team total at 29 by adding one set. Nigon and fellow senior Sarah Sweeney led the serve ace count for the night; Nigon recorded four aces, and Sweeney logged three. Borofka sent two unanswered serves to the Hilltoppers, and Weber and Alex Jenson each took credit for an ace. Weber led the team’s defense with 11 digs against Glenwood. Abby Curry provided another six digs, and Borofka and Nigon tied with five digs apiece. Morgan and Riley Radtke, and Sarah Sweeney, each accounted for three digs each, Zurbuchen recorded two digs, and Jenna Heit logged one. Morgan Radtke and Weber were the only two to record blocks during the match. Both took credit for one solo block. Altoona Invitational As was previously reported, the Mounders participated in a tournament at Altoona on Octo- ber 8. The Mounders lost to the Altoona Railroaders 1-0, Cameron Comets 2-1 and Chippewa Falls Cardinals 2-0, but won two separate matches against the Eau Claire Immanuel Lancers 2-1. Morgan Radtke again led the Mounder attack in the tournament by pounding in a total 54 kills. The next teammates closest to her were Allie Weber with 21 kills and Lauren Scharlau with 20. Kourtney Zurbuchen, Riley Radtke and Karie Jo Nigon completed the Elk Mound kill-squad with a total 39 scoring attacks between them. Nigon took credit for 48 of the Mounders’ 70 scoring assists. The other 22 sets came from Madysen Borofka (9), Zurbuchen (4), Weber (3), Morgan Radtke (3), Riley Radtke (1), Scharlau (1), and Abby Curry (1). Nigon also led the team in serve aces after recording 12. Abby Curry landed 11 more aces, Borokfa was credited with 10, and Weber chalked up eight. Sarah Sweeney and Scharlau each accounted for six aces, Morgan Radtke had four, Jenson picked up a pair, and Colleen Olson and Zurbuchen each had one ace. Defensively, libero Abby Curry led the way with 56 digs. Weber took credit for 46 digs, Nigon accounted for another 28, and Scharlau logged 27. Sweeney took 14 digs, and Borofka recorded 13. Riley Radtke, Zurbuchen, Morgan Radtke, Jenna Heit, Jenson and Olson provided the remaining digs. Hanson’s runner-up finish put him right behind individual boys’ winner junior Wesley Brantner of Durand. Hanson completed the 5,000 meter course in 17:47.9 to finish second to Brantner, who ran the race in 17:38.5. Nate Schreiber, a junior, and Seth Hazen, a freshman, finished 18th and 19th overall with times of 19:59.9 and 20:09.7. Another freshman, junior combination ran in the fourth and fifth spots. Freshman Andrew Pathos was 24th with a time of 20:14.2, and junior Nate Lind ran a 20:33.7 race to finish 30th. Matt McLaughlin, Jonas Kohls and Dylan Hanson were 40th, 43rd and 45th with times of 21:18.6, 21:25.3 and 21:36.8, while Jake Johnson, Ryan Mohr and Jared Strand finished in 22:15.2, 22:15.3 and 23:13.4 to take 50th, 51st and 53rd. Bowdrie Noller and Nate Bechel completed the boys team for Elk Mound. Noller raced to a 23:43.5 finish to take 56th, and Bechel finished 59th with his 23:51.8 run. The Durand boys, who secured four of the top five finished (1-34-5) and five of the first seven, scored only 20 points to literally run away with the conference championship. The lowest possible score in cross country is 15 points. Fredrickson said, “Overall, I couldn’t have asked the kids to run any harder or better than they did, and I can’t wait to see what they do next weekend.” The Mounders will turn their attention to the WIAA Division 3 sectional meet in Durand this Saturday, October 22. TEAM SCORES — BOYS VARSITY: 1. Durand 20, 2. Colfax 70, 3. Elk Mound 90, 4. Spring Valley 95, 5. Boyceville 122, 6. Glenwood City 124. Scoreboard DUNN-ST. CROIX VOLLEYBALL TEAM FINAL 2016 STANDINGS CONF *Colfax……………… 7-1 *Mondovi…………… 7-1 Boyceville…………… 6-2 Elk Mound…………… 6-2 Spring Valley………… 4-4 Durand……………… 3-5 Elmwood…………… 2-6 Plum City…………… 1-7 Glenwood City……… 0-8 *conference co-champions SESN 18-15 10-7 19-5 17-20 8-14 10-10 9-14 3-17 0-16 Thurs., October 13 Scores Somerset 3, Boyceville 0 (non-conf.) Colfax 3, Mondovi 0 Durand 3, Plum City 1 Elk Mound 3, Glenwood City 0 Spring Valley 3, Elmwood 1 Tues., October 11 Scores Elk Mound 3, Elmwood 0 Colfax 3, Glenwood City 1 Mondovi 3, Boyceville 2 Spring Valley 3, Plum City 0 End of Regular Season WIAA Division 3 Regionals Tues., Oct. 18 - Quarterfinals* Durand Sectional - Regional B Glenwood City (#8) at Grantsburg (#1) Unity (#6) at Boyceville (#3) Colfax (#5) at Elk Mound (#4) Durand Sectional - Regional C Durand (#4) at Mondovi (#4) Spring Valley (#6) at Fall Creek (#3) WIAA Division 4 Regionals Tues., Oct. 20 - Quarterfinals* Hayward Sectional - Regional C Elmwood (#5) at Clear Lake (#4) Plum City (#7) at Turtle Lake (#2) *Winners advance to semifinals on Thurs., October 20. Regional finals are Sat., October 22. DUNN-ST. CROIX FOOTBALL FINAL 2016 STANDINGS TEAM SCORES — GIRLS VARSITY: 1. Glenwood City 55, 2. Colfax 63, 3. Elk Mound 75, 4. Boyceville 97, 5. Durand 112, 6. Elmwood/Plum City 128, 7. Spring Valley 161, 8. Mondovi 205. Middle School The Elk Mound middle school boys and girls cross country teams also took third place at the Mondovi meet held October 13. The boys earned 77 points as a team, and the girls scored 96. Luke Lesmeister, a seventhgrade runner, was the first Elk Mound boy to finish the 3200-meter race. He placed 12th after his 15:11.8 run. Brennen Zais, Keagan McRea and Avery Lauer were 15th, 16th and 17th with times of 15:33.3, 15:35.8 and 15:36.7. Luke Hanson ran in the Mounders’ number-five spot. He finished 29th after racing across the finish line in 16:45.3. Mitchell Hainstock, Walker Banaszak and Jackson Severson completed the Elk Mound boys team in Mondovi. The Glenwood City boys took home the top team score of 22, and Elmwood/Plum City seventhgrader Patrick Tiffany raced to a win with his 13:42.5 finish. Seventh-grader Olivia Schreiber was the first Mounder girl to finish the race. She took home fifth place after finishing her race in 15:20.8. Olivia Schindler and Lilly Tanula finished in 17:09.1 and 17:28.3 to take 18th and 21st. Regan Jenson was 25th with her 17:57.1 effort, and Mercedes Hay crossed the finish line in 18:18.4 to take 30th. Sidney Wenzel and Lileana Williams also ran as part of the girls team in Mondovi. The Colfax girls took home first place at the meet after scoring 32. Viking seventh-grader Jasmine Best won the individual race after finishing in 14:47.7. TEAM CONF. *†Durand……………6-0 †Spring Valley………5-1 †Glenwood City……4-2 †Elk Mound…………3-3 Mondovi………………2-4 Boyceville……………1-5 Colfax…………………0-6 *conference champion †qualified for playoffs SESN 8-1 8-1 7-2 5-4 3-6 3-6 1-8 Fri., October 14 Scores Mondovi 41, Boyceville 0 Durand 69, Colfax 20 Spring Valley 20, Elk Mound 14 Glenwood City 44, Cameron 20 (non-conf.) End of Regular Season WIAA Football Playoffs – Level 1. Division 5 – Group A Bloomer (#5) at Elk Mound (#4) , Friday, October 21 at 7 p.m. St. Croix Falls (#7) at Durand (#2), Friday, October 21 at 7 p.m. Division 6 – Group A Glenwood City (#5) at Spring Valley (#4), Friday, October 21 at 7 p.m. Winners advance to Level 2 play on Friday, Oct. 28 COMPLETE LINE OF STEEL NEW & USED Starting at 15¢ Lb. Angles, Plates, I-Beams, Flats, Rounds, C Channel, etc. Saw Cutting also available STEEL TOWNE 7102 State Rd. 40, Elk Mound, WI (715) 879-5559 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 am-5 pm; Sat. 8-Noon FOOTBALL CONTEST Wednesday, October 19, 2016 Express Mart “Your Fast & Friendly Convenience Store” 5. Ole Miss at LSU Open 7 Days A Week 5:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. 616 Main St., Colfax Stop in and check us out! Watch for New Menu and Upcoming Events Viking Bowl Hwy. 12 in Elk Mound, WI 19. San Diego at Atlanta Weekly In-Store Drawings! 715-962-3252 14. Colorado at Stanford 21. Shorewood/Messmer at Germantown 409 Cedar Street • Colfax, WI (715) 962-3559 Mike Morgen, Owner 8.Oregon at California Fire & Water - Cleanup & Restoration™ SERVPRO® of Barron, Dunn, & Rusk Counties Boyceville, WI 715-643-7171 Goodrich FOOTBALL CONTEST Name the most winning teams each week and be a winner! In the event of a tie, the entry with the correct winner and closest point spread on the tie-breaker, will receive: 25.00 Cash $ 2nd Place: 15.00 Cash 1st Place: $ • Rules of the Game • • New & Used Trailers • Full Service Repair & Parts Departments 15. Northwestern at St. Croix Central 24-Hour Pay-at-the-Pump Convenience Store • L. P. Gas • Car Wash • Hardware • Tires • Auto Service 715-962-3172 3. Wisconsin Rapids Assumption at Edgar Mike’s Auto Repair Oil Change • Foreign or Domestic General Auto Repair - Major or Minor 202 Main Street • Colfax, Wisconsin 54730 715-962-3661 Mike Schindler 20. Syracuse at Boston College To enter, just write in the winning team listed in each of the 22 ads on this page on the official entry blank, plus mark the winning team and the point spread on the tie-breaker. Only official entry forms will be accepted - NO PHOTO COPIES. Entries will be judged by members of the newspaper staff, and the decision of the judges is final. Contest is open to everyone except newspaper employees and their immediate families. Entries must be delivered to Colfax Messenger, P.O. Box 517, Colfax, WI 54730 by the deadline to qualify each week. Prizes will be mailed out within 7 business days from publication of winners. Official Entry Form 1____________________ 12___________________ 3____________________ 14___________________ 5____________________ 16___________________ 7____________________ 18___________________ 2____________________ 13___________________ 4____________________ 15___________________ 6____________________ 17___________________ 8____________________ 19___________________ 10___________________ 21___________________ 9____________________ 20___________________ 11____________________ 22___________________ • Tie Breaker • Oakland (__) at Jacksonville (__) Point Spread_______________ Entries must be in by 3 p.m. Friday, October 21, 2016 www.chippewavalleyproperties.com Name__________________________________ Address________________________________ City____________________________________ Phone__________________________________ Entries must be brought in to the Colfax Messenger, 511 Railroad, Colfax, WI or sent to P. O. Box 517, Colfax, WI 54730 6. Glenwood City at Spring Valley 505 Main Street - Colfax, WI (715) 879-5888 Stop in before and after the games. 415 Cedar Ave. W. Menomonie, WI 9. Bloomer at Elk Mound 1-800-525-7724 or 715-232-6353 www.northtownford.com Independence State Bank Elk Mound Branch E401 Menomonie St., Elk Mound, WI (715) 879-4888 Lake Hallie Branch 2495 Commercial Blvd, Chippewa Falls, WI (715) 738-1897 www.independencestatebank.com Member FDIC 16. Tampa Bay at San Francisco Sundstrom’s Septic Service & Portable Toilets • Reasonable Rates • Dairy Barn Reception Pits • Septic Holding Tanks & Dry Wells 7. Washington at Detroit 715-962-4061 12. Brodhead/Juda at Lodi 715.235.2601 • Menomonie, WI 54751 Colfax Accepting Most Insurance Plans - Just Ask Cards • Gifts Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 22. Chippewa Falls at Hudson 525 Main - Colfax, WI 715-962-3784 • Full Service Pharmacy 2. Wisconsin at Iowa Downtown Menomonie 715-265-2144 North Menomonie 715-235-3422 Colfax 962-3141 1-800-908-BANK (2265) • Bremer.com Member FDIC Friday Night Fish Fry Buffet served 5 to 9 p.m. thru December 2 18 Hole Public Course 13. New England at Pittsburgh 11. Central Florida at Connecticut Please call for all your sales, services and parts needs. 715-962-3011• karlschev.com | STORE 22nd Annual Messenger LIMIT: One entry per person—No purchase necessary Trailer Sales www.goodrichtrailers.com Hours: 5:30 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. 7 Days a Week! State Road 40 • Colfax, WI 54730 Collision Repair • Custom Painting Frame Straightening No Appointments Needed for Estimates! I-94 at Exit 52 Elk Mound, WI 54739 Mound’s View Store GAS • DIESEL • GROCERIES • SNACKS • BEER • DELI Banquet Center & Lounge 715-962-3241 800-831-4916 Colfax Messenger • Page 5 Week #9 Winners: 1st - Tim Devine, Eau Claire 2nd - Julie Knutson, Colfax Mainstreet Sand Creek, WI 1-800-335-6418 715-658-1285 | Speed • Service Simplicity 115 Main Street, Colfax, WI 715-962-3585 18. Medford at New Richmond 4. New Orleans at Kansas City Colfax Animal Hospital, S.C. Hwy 40 between Colfax & Elk Mound 715-962-3888 1. Minnesota at Philadelphia Large and Small Animals Bruce Buckley, D.V.M. • Bev Halama, D.V.M. 411 East River — Box 429 — Colfax, WI 54730 Phone (715) 962-3380 Mon. - Fri. 8am to 4pm www.colfaxanimalhospital.com 17. UW-Stout at UW-River Falls 10. Seattle at Arizona 101 S. Main Street, Colfax • 715-962-3577 www.dairystatebank.com | Member FDIC SPORTS Page 6 • Colfax Messenger Wednesday, October 19, 2016 Vikings beat Buffaloes to earn share of fourth straight D-SC volleyball crown By Cara L. Dempski Heading into the final week of conference and regular season play, the Colfax volleyball team had its sights set on winning a fourth consecutive Dunn-St. Croix. To accomplish that feat, the Vikings would need victories over Glenwood City and Mondovi in their final two matches of the 2016 regular season. The former would seem much easier to achieve than the latter considering that the Hilltoppers had yet to win a match this year and the Buffaloes were the Dunn-St. Croix’ lone unbeaten squad. Colfax proved to be up to the task. After knocking off the Hilltoppers three sets to one in Glenwood City last Tuesday, October 11, Colfax returned home October 13 to battle the Buffaloes, who won a five-set thriller over once-beaten Boyceville in their Tuesday match, for the conference crown. A win would give the Vikings a share of the volleyball title while a loss would send Mondovi back home with the outright championship. Colfax delivered in a big way, sweeping Mondovi in three sets to claim a share of the title and continue its four year hold on the conference’s volleyball hardware. Both Colfax and Mondovi finished with identical 7-1 conference records. Coach Pam Meredith’s Viking squad may have saved their best for last. Colfax took out Mondovi in three sets, winning with scores of 26-24, 25-18 and 25-13. The latest conference crown was the Vikings’ sixth title in the past eight seasons. The Vikings looked ready to sweep the Hilltoppers in three sets October 11 after winning the first two sets 25-16 and 25-13. That was before the Glenwood team pounded out a series of unanswered scores to take the early lead in the third. The Toppers never let the Vikings take the lead and forced a fourth set by winning the third 26-24. Colfax appeared to have had enough by that point and made short work of the fourth set, beating the Hilltoppers 25-14 to take the set and win the match 3-1. The Vikings, the fifth seed, meet the Mounders one last time this season as the teams squared off in the opening round of the WIAA Division 3 regional tournament last night in Elk Mound. The Mounders, who saddled the Vikes with their only conference loss – a 3-1 setback on October 4, earned the fourth seed. The winner will likely travel to Grantsburg to play the Pirates, ranked sixth in the latest Division 3 state poll, in Thursday’s semifinal round. Grantsburg opened against winless Glenwood City. The regional final is slated for Saturday, October 22. Mondovi Coach Meredith said the Colfax squad played a very effective, efficient match against the Lady Buffaloes on October 13. The Vikings won 3-0 to take a share of the 2016 D-SC volleyball title. “What better way for the Vikings to finish the last conference match at home?” Meredith asked after the game. “This is the team we’ve seen all season in practice.” The Vikings won their fourth consecutive title on the same night they honored senior players Erin Nellessen, Morgan Schleusner, Mady Decker and Bryana Buchanan. Meredith said her team’s poise and confidence helped them battle back from three missed serves and 13 hitting errors to win the first set 26-24. She credits winning the first set with shifting the match momentum in Colfax’s favor. Freshmen Kameri Meredith and Samantha Prestasky drove in seven kills each, while fellow freshman Rachel Scharlau took credit for another six. Meredith recorded 10 digs, and Pretasky logged a pair of solo blocks and a pair of block assists. Sophomore Jozie Buchanan assisted on 21 scores, took 14 digs, and led the team with five aces. Her sister, Bryana, logged 14 digs, and senior Megan Schleusner provided another 10 digs. Glenwood City Viking hitter Makayla Mattson drilled in a team-leading 10 kills and took three digs in Colfax’s 3-1 victory over the Hilltoppers October 11. Freshman Kameri Meredith led the team in foiled attacks with her 20 digs, and tied with Rachel Scharlau with eight kills. Meredith also logged two aces in the match. Bryana and Jozie Buchanan tied with 17 digs apiece and three kills each. Megan Schleusner and Mady Decker tied with eight digs each, but Schleusner was the only one of the two to take credit for kills. She had four on the evening and led the team with five ace serves. Decker provided one unanswered serve during the match. Samantha Pretasky sent home seven kills, an ace, and three digs during the match. She also provided a solo block and block assist. Scharlau led the team in blocking after logging two solos and two assists. Schleusner provided one block assist, and Mer- COLFAX’ Kameri Meredith hit the volleyball for a point during the Vikings’ four-set win in Glenwood City last Thursday. —photo by Cara Dempski edith went up to assist with two blocks. Alyssa Dachel took credit for an ace serve, three digs, and one scoring assist. Jozie Buchanan was the team leader for scoring assists with 28, Mattson provided assistance on five, Meredith assisted for four scores, and Schleusner for two. Altoona Invitational The Vikings also played a tournament at Altoona on October 8, and matched up with the Stanley-Boyd Orioles, Hudson Raiders, Colby Hornets and Eau Claire North Huskies. Colfax lost to the Orioles 2-0, Raiders 2-0 and Huskies 2-0, but beat the Hornets 2-1. Freshmen Kameri Meredith and Samantha Pretasky led the Viking attack at the tournament, logging 30 kills between them. Jozie Buchanan sent in another 13 kills and Makayla Mattson drilled in 10. Senior Erin Nellessen and Sophomore Emma Hurlburt logged another five scoring attacks in the tourney. Libero Bryana Buchanan led the team with seven aces, and Mady Decker and Meredith each served another five aces. Jozie Buchanan sent four unanswered serves over the net, Pretasky chalked up three aces, and senior Megan Schleusner took credit for one ace. Rachel Scharlau, another freshman, led the team with five solo blocks and two block assists. Meredith logged two solo blocks, and Pretasky added a solo block and two block assists to her season stats. The team totaled 124 digs in the tournament. Seniors Mady Decker and Bryana Buchanan took credit for 45 digs, with Decker turning away 25 and Buchanan accounting for 20 foiled attacks. Meredith logged another 17 digs, and fellow freshman Taylor Irwin put up 16. Jozie Buchanan recorded nine digs, and Pretasky, Schleusner and Mattson took seven each. Nellessen took six digs, Alyssa Dachel and Hurlburt took four each, and Scharlau rounded out the total with two digs. The freshman Buchanan also assisted on 34 scores during the weekend. Irwin provided another 13 assists, and Meredith assists on 10. Schleusner, Dachel, Hurlburt, Bryana Buchanan, and Pretasky all recorded one scoring assist at the tournament. Colfax CC teams run to second-place finishes in D-SC conference meet By Cara L. Dempski MONDOVI — The Colfax Vikings managed to get their girls healthy enough and their boys far enough forward for both teams to finish second in the Dunn-St. Croix’ cross country conference meet held October 13 at the Valley Golf Course in Mondovi. The girls finished with 63 points in Thursday’s race just eight points behind Glenwood City’s championship tally of 55. The boys earned 70 points and were a distant second to Durand. Both of Colfax’ squads came into the 2016 conference race as the defending champions. Coach Joe Doucette said after the meet that the girls knew they had a chance to repeat as conference champions, but also knew that Glenwood City and Elk Mound might prove tough to beat. “I really thought the girls were good enough for a conference title, but Glenwood City ran just a little better,” Doucette stated. Sophomore Erica Kallstrom joined the illustrious company of former Vikings’ Julie Liebich, Laura Bjork, Sarah McMahon and Dempsey Fogarty as an individual conference champion. Kallstrom ran to the title in 20:02.6 as she topped the other 64 runners including defending champion Kassye Todd, a junior from Elm- BATTLE FOR FIRST — Colfax sophomore Erica Kallstrom (left) led defending champion Kassye Todd of Elmwood/Plum City in the late stages of the girls’ Dunn-St. Croix Conference cross country meet last Thursday in Mondovi. Kallstrom held on to win her first individual championship in a time of 20:02.6. —photo by Shawn DeWitt wood-Plum City who finished second nearly three second behind Kallstrom. “Erica has a great race in beating a great field including Kassye Todd who is a state medalist in cross country and track,” noted Doucette. Senior Abbagail Schotter ran to a fourth-place finish with a time of 20:53.3. Schotter was also named first team all-conference for a fourth straight year which Doucette said was “a great accomplishment”. Freshman Jayna Bowe had her best race of the year, according Doucette, running across the finish line in 22:49.4 to take 13th. Haley Prince and Ally Heidorn finished 19th and 26th for their 23:30.7 and 24:16.3 efforts, despite lingering issues related to earlier injuries. Juelia Berger rounded out the varsity team. The freshman placed 27th after racing to the finish line in 26:19.8. Bowe’s finish earned her second team all-conference honors. While Colfax’ top two girls’ runners both finished ahead of Glenwood City’s, the Hilltoppers third, fourth and fifth place finishers all crossed the finish line ahead of the Vikings’ to garner Glenwood City, who had three runners in the top six, this year’s championship. The Vikings girls’ secondplace showing was their DeMoe finishes 18th in State golf tournament By Cara L. Dempski MADISON — Colfax freshman Abby DeMoe participated in the Division 2 state Girls Golf tournament at University Ridge in Madison October 10 and 11 and finished tied for 18th with Arcadia’s Rylee Haines after carding a 188 in the 36-hole tournament. DeMoe’s final score for the two-day tournament put her 44 over par. Sarah Busey from Racine St. Catherine’s was the individual Division 2 state championship after shooting a seven-over-par 151. The Prairie School won the D2 state team title with a score of 687 to best runner-up Spooner who shot a 737. Fellow Heart O’ North member Hayward was just four shots behind the Rails and took third. “Abby played phenomenally at state,” coach Kim Myers said. “I watched other girls get into a lot of trouble – bunkers, red stakes, and out-of-bounds – but Abby consistently hit her ball down the middle of the fairway.” DeMoe had a 10:10 a.m. tee time October 10 and played her first round in a group that included players from LaCrosse Aquinas, Hayward, and the Prairie School. She started at the first hole and stayed one above par on each of the first three holes. De- Moe played to six on the par-four fourth hole before going just one over again on the fifth. The freshman stayed within one or two strokes of par on each hole she played October 10, and swung for one under on the eighth and 12th holes and went par on the 15th to end her first day of play with 90 strokes. DeMoe’s second-day round on October 11 started at 9:50 a.m. on the tenth hole. This time players from the Prairie School, Aquinas and Spooner joined her. She managed to make par on the tenth hole with four strokes, but could not get under on any holes during her second round. While DeMoe stayed within a stroke or two of par for the second day in a row, she struggled with the par-four first and 14th holes, swinging for seven on both. With DeMoe’s state match complete, coach Kim Myers is looking forward to next year’s team and matches. She explained that having two freshmen qualify for sectional play bodes well for the team’s future. “I am extremely proud of what the Colfax girls’ golf team accomplished this year,” Myers said. “As a team we had one first-place finish and two second-place finishes, our best season yet.” IN MOTION — Colfax freshman Abby DeMoe prepared to take a swing during her play at the WIAA State Girls’ Division 2 Golf Championship held last Monday and Tuesday on the links of the Ridges Golf Course in Madison. DeMoe finshed 18th. —photo submitted fourth in the past 11 years to go with seven championships. Like their female counterparts, the Colfax boys have been a been a dominate force on the Dunn-St. Croix’ cross country scene having won five titles including the previous three and a pair of runner-up finishes in the last seven years. But a fourth consecutive championship was not to be as the Durand boys, as expected, unseated Colfax. The Panther boys had four of the top five individual finishes led junior Wesley Brantner who won the race in 17:38.5 to beat the Vikings by 50 points. Doucette said he was proud of how fired up the boys team was going into the race. The boys wanted to run well and take second, and met that goal on solid runs from all eight boys. “We knew Durand was going to win,” he stated. “They are very good – one of the state’s best.” Senior Jacob Larson led the Viking boys to the finish by taking ninth with his 18:50.3 race. Freshman Trey Hovde finished in 18:55.8 to take 10th. Luke Heidorn and Cole Seehaver were 14th and 17th with runs of 19:08.4 and 19:21.6. Sawyer Best completed the Colfax top five when he finished in 20:10.5 to take 21st. Matthew Reisdorf and Trevor Rothbauer were 22nd and 23rd after running the race in 20:13.2 and 20:13.6. Rowdy Kadinger completed the boys team with his 21:28.5 race to take 44th. There were 63 runners competing in the boys’ race. Larson, Hovde and Heidorn all earned second team all-conference honors. The Durand boys team scored 20 to take home the team trophy. The best (lowest) score a team can earn is 15 which is achieve by having the top five individual finishes (1-2-3-4-5). The Vikings are now turning their attention to the WIAA Division 3 sectional meet to be held on Rolling Greens Golf Course in Durand this coming Saturday, October 22. TEAM SCORES — BOYS VARSITY: 1. Durand 20, 2. Colfax 70, 3. Elk Mound 90, 4. Spring Valley 95, 5. Boyceville 122, 6. Glenwood City 124. TEAM SCORES — GIRLS VARSITY: 1. Glenwood City 55, 2. Colfax 63, 3. Elk Mound 75, 4. Boyceville 97, 5. Durand 112, 6. Elmwood/Plum City 128, 7. Spring Valley 161, 8. Mondovi 205. Middle School The Colfax girls middle school cross country team capped a great season by winning the conference’s middle school championship with a score of 32 points in Mondovi October 13. It was the girls’ seventh victory in as many meets this year as five of the Vikings’ middle school girls’ finished in the top 14. The middle school boys fielded only four runners and were not scored as a team. Seventh-grader Jasmine Best won the girls’ individual race with a time of 14:47.7. Molly Heidorn took fourth for her 15:19.8 run, Addison Olson finished in 15:39.7 to take sixth, and Jaycee Bowe ran to an eighth place finish and a time of 15:49.3. Jillian Bowe finished 13th with a time of 16:39.5. Ansely Olson, Emily BurchamScofield and Mariah Smith completed the middle school team in Mondovi. For the boys, Luke Blanchard was the first Viking to finish the race. He placed fifth with a time of 14:28.5. Panthers pummel Vikes in regular season football finale By Cara L. Dempski DURAND — The Colfax Vikings may only have won a single football game this season, but they scored more points in the October 14 regular season finally against newly crowned conference champion Durand than they have against any other opponent this season. The only problem was that the Panthers also scored more points than any of the Vikings’ previous eight opponents. After surrendering 40 or more points in six of its 2016 contests, visiting Colfax allowed Durand to put 63 points on the scoreboard before the Vikings finally found the end zone as time expired in the first half. Colfax added a touchdown in each of the third and fourth quarters but the outcome had long been determined as Durand had 365 yards rushing and ten touchdowns enroute to a 69-20 victory over the Vikings at Wauner Field last Friday. Junior Josh Biesterveld returned a pair of first-quarter punts for touchdowns and finished with 132 yards rushing on four carries, two of which went for six, to lead Durand to an unbeaten 6-0 record in the Dunn-St. Croix and an 8-1 overall mark. While the Panthers are headed into the WIAA Division 5 football playoffs as a number two seed, Colfax will put away the pads until next August after going winless (0-6) in conference play for a second straight season and 1-8 overall. “Durand was the best team we faced all year, and it showed in the first quarter,” coach Matt DeMoe said. “Our goal this week was to score the most points in a game this year.” DeMoe’s team exceeded that goal with their 20 points, having previously scored only 16 against the Mondovi Buffaloes on September 30. The Vikings rushed for only 39 yards, but threw for 227. Colfax senior Brad Kamp accounted for 203 passing yards in the game. The Panthers scored ten times in the game, with six touchdowns and 421 points coming in the first quarter alone. It took a while for the Viking offense to get going, but Kamp struck receiver Tyler Snyder with a 65-yard pass play to put Colfax’ first six on the board as the firsthalf clock registered triple zeroes. Snyder also reeled in a pass for the two-point conversion as the half ended with a score of 63-8. DeMoe said the Vikings made some great defensive plays when they worked as a team and played as a cohesive unit. The Colfax squad held the Panthers scoreless in the third and scored another touchdown on a quarterback keep. Kamp dove over a pack of Panthers from one yard out with 4:00 left on the clock in the third. The subsequent two-point attempt was no good, and the score remained 63-14 until 8:52 in the fourth. Then, Durand made it into the end zone one more time in the game, scoring another six to make the score 69-14. The Vikings weren’t done, though, as freshman Mitch Harmon pushed past Durand to cross the plane of the goal for Colfax’ final touchdown of the game and season. The following two-point try was unsuccessful, but the Vikings moved to 69-20 with four minutes left in the game, and held the Panthers scoreless the rest of the way. DeMoe seemed pleased with how his team played against the Panthers. He also stated the team will be working hard to set some goals and standards for the offseason to help the team improve and build a successful program. “The Colfax kids fought hard,” DeMoe said of the game on October 14. “We were positive throughout the game.” DURAND 69, COLFAX 20 Durand………………...42 21 0 6 — 69 Colfax……………………0 8 12 0 — 20 First Quarter D — A. Glaus 30 run (conversion good), 11:13; D — J. Biesterveld 73 run (conversion fail), 9:25; D — J. Biesterveld 18 punt return (kick good), 7:47; D — K. Kurth 37 run (kick good), 4:45; K. Kurth run (kick good), 3:39; J. Biesterveld punt return (kick good), :44. Second Quarter D — W. Berger 20 run (kick good), 11:54; D — J. Biesterveld run (kick good), 11:44; C. Boardman 2 run (kick good), :10; C — T. Snyder 65 pass from B. Kamp (T. Snyder run), :00. Third Quarter C — B. Kamp 1 run (conversion fail), 4:00. Fourth Quarter D — Uncredited 2 run (kick fail), 8:52; C — M. Harmon 2 run (conversion fail), 4:00. Individual Statistics Rushing (att-yds) — C (18-39) — B. Kamp 8-29, T. Anderson 9-6, M. Harmon 1-4; D (28-365) — J. Biesterveld 4-131, K. Kurth 3-69, C. Boardman 6-62, A. Glaus 2-32, Unk. 5-22, W. Berger 1-20, D. Paje 2-17, C. Schlosser 1-6, T. Tulip 1-4, B. Ingli 3-0. Passing (comp-att-int-yds) — C (15-250-227) — B. Kamp 13-22-0-203, N. Albricht 2-3-0-24. Receiving (comp-yards) — C (15-227) — T. Snyder 4-118, J. Charlesworth 5-58, M. Kiekhafer 3-27, D. Schotter 2-14, A. Pretasky 1-10. Wednesday, October 19, 2016 COLFAX VOLLEYBALL SALUTE Colfax Messenger • Page 7 Congratulations to Pam Meredith’s Colfax V lleyball Team Dunn-St. Croix Co-Champions Fourth Straight Year! Sixth Title in Eight Seasons! D-SC Record • 7-1 Overall Record • 18-15 2016 DUNN-ST. CROIX VOLLEYBALL CO-CHAMPIONS — Members of the Colfax Vikings’ varsity volleyball squad held up four fingers after they beat the Mondovi Lady Buffaloes October 13 to earn a share of the Dunn-St. Croix volleyball title. This is the fourth consecutive year the Vikings have topped the conference for volleyball. Pictured above are, front row (L to R): Jozie Buchanan, Mady Decker, Bryana Buchanan, Megan Schleusner, Erin Nellessen and Alyssa Dachel. Back row (L to R): Assistant Coach Lori Buchanan, coach Linda Bilodeau, statistician RyAnna Martinson, Rachel Scharlau, Savannah Henrick, Samantha Pretasky, Kameri Meredith, Emma Hurlburt, Makayla Mattson, Taylor Irwin, Taylor Meyer, head coach Pam Meredith, assistant coach Joan Ebnet. —photo by Richard Meredith Congratulations on a great season! Regular Season Colfax 3, Plum City 0 Colfax 1, Unity 2 Colfax 3, Baldwin-Woodville 0 Colfax 2, Wausau West 1 Colfax 0, Eau Claire North 2 Colfax 2, Barron 1 Colfax 2, Mondovi 1 Colfax 0, Cochrane-Fountain City 2 Colfax 0, Onalaska 2 Colfax 0, Turtle Lake 2 Colfax 1, Bloomer 3 Colfax 3, Somerset 2 Colfax 2, Baldwin-Woodville 1 Colfax 2, Prescott 0 Colfax 0, Hudson 2 Colfax 0, Bloomer 2 Colfax 3, Plum City 0* Colfax 3, Durand 1* Colfax 0, Rice Lake 2 Colfax 2, Prairie Farm 0 Colfax 1, Boyceville 2 Colfax 1, Cameron 2 Colfax 2, Fall Creek 1 Colfax 3, Boyceville 2* Colfax 3, Spring Valley1* Colfax 1, Elk Mound 3* Colfax 3, Elmwood 1* Colfax 2, Colby 1 Colfax 0, Hudson 2 Colfax 0, Stanley-Boyd 2 Colfax 0, Eau Claire North 2 Colfax 3, Glenwood City 1* Colfax 3, Mondovi 0* *Conference matches This page proudly sponsored by the following area businesses and organizations. Each wish to Congratulate the Volleyball Team on it’s fine performances and accomplishments! A Little Slice of Italy Ackerman Dairy Products, Inc. Anytime Fitness Express Bear Valley Electric Blue Diamond Family Dental Bremer Bank Cedar Country Co-op Colfax Cenex Colfax Animal Hospital Colfax Health Mart Pharmacy Colfax Health & Rehabilitation Colfax Messenger Commercial Testing Laboratory, Inc. Dairy State Bank Deluxe Beauty & Tanning Salon Dunn Energy Cooperative Express Mart Gilberts of Sand Creek Goodrich Trailer Sales H&H Plumbing, LLC Herrick Construction Independence State Bank Johnson Trailers Karl’s Chevrolet Kyle’s IGA Market Mane Street Salon, Spa & Tanning MarketPlace Foods Mayo Clinic Health System-Chippewa Valley Midwest Physical Therapy Mike’s Auto Repair Morgen’s Auto Body, LLC Nate’s Towing Prince Windshield Repair & Service Ray’s Metal Works, LLC Re/Max Real Estate Russell-Toycen American Legion Post 131 Sampson Funeral Home Security Agency, LLC Seeds & Stuff Farm Market SERVPRO® of Barron, Dunn & Rusk Counties Sundstrom’s Septic Service Tainter Machine WESTconsin Credit Union Whitetail Golf Course Whitetail Organics Woods Run Forest Products, Inc. Obituaries GOLDIE BLODGETT (NEE GOTLIBSON) DARREL BLODGETT ARLO L. ROSWELL Arlo “Art” Leroy Roswell passed from his earthly home on Tuesday, October 11, 2016 to join his beloved wife Dolly in heaven. He missed his 93rd birthday by one day. Arlo Leroy Roswell was born on October 12, 1923 to Edmund Leon Roswell and Emma Amelia Scherf Roswell in Tainter Township, Dunn County, Wisconsin. Art grew up on a dairy farm with his five siblings, Mildred, Ernest, Linnie, Leonard and Victor. At the age of 19 Art enlisted in the army air corps as a member of the 91st Bombardment Group, which was activated on April 15, 1942. After several months of training he graduated as a sergeant in the 8th Air Force, 91st Bomb Group, otherwise known as “The Ragged Irregulars.” Art was a flight engineer and top turret gunner on his 3rd mission aboard the B-17 Flying Fortress “Blonde Bomber” when it was shot down on January 11, 1944 over Oschersleben, Germany. When his parachute landed on the ground in Germany, Belgium was the closest place for him to try to walk to not get caught by the Nazis. He was on the loose for 5 days. He walked to a farm because he was hungry. They fed him bread and then a soldier from the German air force came and took Art away. He was a prisoner of war (POW) for 17 months, until the Germans surrendered and the war was RELIGION & NEWS over. After the war, Art worked for 16 years driving a gas truck for the Wheeler Oil Company. He then went to work for the Dunn County Highway Department, retiring in 1985. Art loved deer hunting up north, as well as squirrel hunting in the woods on his little hobby farm. He raised beef and pigs while working his other jobs. Art was a devoted husband to his wife Viola “Dolly” Owen, and a loving father to his three girls, Linda, Mary and Shirley. Art and Dolly were active members of Our Savior’s Lutheran Church in Wheeler for many years. Following his retirement, Art and Dolly traveled together to many places in the United States as well as to Germany when their daughter Shirley’s husband was stationed there. Arlo Roswell is survived by his children Linda Barta of Cameron, Mary Bergeson of Menomonie and Shirley Nelson of California and his grandchildren Todd (Jayne) Barta, Kristi (Josh) Dezek, Heather (Shaun) Olson, Jessica (Adam Bjork) Bergeson, Jodi Windsor and Josh Windsor. He was preceded in death by his parents, wife Dolly, siblings Mildred (Samuel) Muralt, Earnest (Thelma) Roswell, Linnie “Babe” (Lyle) Misselt, Leonard and Victor Roswell, a son-in-law Robert Barta. Art’s greatest achievement and joy in life was taking care of his family. He will be greatly missed by all who knew him. Funeral Services will be held at 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, October 18, 2016 at Olson Funeral Home in Menomonie with Pastor Kristine Stedje officiating. Burial will be at Cedar Falls Cemetery, Township of Red Cedar, Dunn County with military honors by the Menomonie Veterans Honor Guard. There will be visitation one hour prior to the service. To share a memory, please visit obituaries at www.olsonfuneral.com Goldie was born to life July 1, 1932, in Colfax, and found peace October 4, 2016, at age 84. Darrel was born January 1, 1933, in Eau Claire, and found peace October 8, 2016, at age 83. They would have celebrated 64 years of marriage on October 11, 2016. They are the loving parents of Karen (Doug), Bruce (Kathi), Pam (Bill) and Steven; cherished grandparents of Megan (Edward III)l and loving great-grandparents of Rowan and Edward IV. They are survived by nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. Memorial visitation will be DALE W. HENDRICKS Dale W. Hendricks, age 92, of Colfax, WI, passed away Thursday, October 13, 2016, at his home. Dale was born on September 9, 1924, in Eau Claire, to William and Ethel (Andrews) Hendricks. Dale was graduated from Eau Claire Memorial High School with the class of 1943. He served in the US Navy during WWII from 1943 to 1946, when he was honorably discharged. Dale married Victoria Iverson on May 18, 1946 in Colfax, WI. He worked at AT&T for 35 years. Dale was a lifelong member of the VFW, a member of the Masonic Lodge 164, Norton Lutheran Church, Grapevine Senior Center, Colfax Merry Mixers, and the Telephone Pioneers of America. Dale is survived by his wife of 70 years, Victoria; son, Terry Hen- A clinic for Colfax: Marshfield Clinic forum scheduled Oct. 24 By LeAnn R. Ralph COLFAX — Do you miss having a medical clinic in Colfax? Do you believe Colfax needs a clinic? What would you like to see for services if a new medical clinic were to locate in Colfax? Representatives for Marshfield Clinic will be holding a public forum Monday, October 24, at the Viking Bowl and Lounge in Colfax to find out what you think about having a clinic in town again. “We want to have a public forum for people to voice their opinion about not having a clinic and possibly having Marshfield here. Right now Marshfield is in the research phase to decide, so this will be very important to have people come to the forum,” said Lynn Niggemann, village administrator-clerk-treasurer. The meetings on October 24 will be at 3:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. A representative from Marshfield will be there to “give a bit of an idea of where they are at and then open it up for discussion,” Niggemann said. The forum will include free blood pressure screening and free flu shots for ages 13 and up from 3:30 to 6:30. The forum also will include a free meal, prizes and raffles. Tickets for prizes will be drawn at each session to give people who attend either session an opportunity to be included, Niggemann said. “It is important for people to emphasize the kind of services they want so when Marshfield is doing their research they can identify what type of services they want to offer,” she said. Target audience The forum is for “anyone who would be using the clinic. Anyone who feels it is important to have a clinic in Colfax. Anybody who has kids in school here. Anybody and everybody,” Niggemann said. A clinic in Colfax is important for the school district and for students in the district, she said. If a child is having some symptoms, or needs a regular checkup, and there is a clinic here in Colfax and parents do not have to drive a half an hour or 45 minutes, it means the child will be in school longer instead of having to take a half a day off or a day off for an appointment elsewhere, Niggemann said. A clinic in Colfax also is impor- tant for workers compensation issues. “If anybody locally has a minor injury, and they need to get checked out for that purpose, a clinic in Colfax would be useful,” Niggemann said. Hours The question of what hours a clinic should be open in Colfax is an issue Marshfield Clinic is carefully considering. “Would people be happy with three days a week, or would they want someone full time or half days? They are still trying to get a feel for that, even though we provided survey numbers to them,” Niggemann said. On the other hand, “they think it is important to be open five days a week. They don’t want someone to go to the clinic and then find that the clinic is not open (when they need it),” she said. Last summer, the Village of Colfax sent out surveys to are residents who would be likely to use a clinic in Colfax. Of those who responded to the survey question asking about part-time hours for the clinic, 123 said they would prefer mornings (8 a.m. to noon); 79 people said afternoon (noon to 4 p.m.); and 70 said 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. In response to a question on the survey asking about what kinds of services people would want a health-care provider to offer in Colfax, out of those who responded, 147 said they wanted blood work; 144 wanted routine care; 104 wanted x-rays; 67 wanted physicals; 4 wanted nail care; 39 said any medical issue; 13 said family medicine; 7 said blood pressure; 21 said emergencies; 2 said ultrasounds; 4 said mammograms; 4 wanted flu shots to be available; 1 person said a cardiologist; 2 said allergies; 6 said pediatrics; 2 wanted orthopedics; 2 said same-day appointments; 1 respondent said an MRI; and 10 wanted prescription renewals. In addition to conducting research to find out if it is feasible for Marshfield to open a clinic in Colfax, Marshfield also is working on trying to find staff for a clinic in Colfax. “In the end, that will be a determining factor also,” Niggemann said. Disappointing Marshfield would like to know, too, what people found disappointing about the Mayo Clinic in Colfax, such as not providing Sunday, October 16, at Church and Chapel Funeral Home, 380 Bluemound Road (at highways J and JJ, four blocks south of Interstate 94), Waukesha, from 11 a.m. until time of the memorial service at 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association or the Alzheimer’s Association. Church and Chapel Funeral Home is serving the family. For more information, call 262-8270659 or visit www.churchandchapel.com to view the online obituary or leave condolences. a service that they had hoped would be provided, Niggemann said. “If someone went for blood work, for example, (the clinic in Colfax) would send that person to Bloomer or Menomonie. That’s an important thing to have (at a clinic in Colfax) is blood draw,” Niggemann said. Traveling mammogram or MRI units also might be an important component for a clinic in Colfax. Sometimes people can have difficulty taking as much time off from work as they would need to drive to a clinic that is farther away, Niggemann noted. Rescue squad The Colfax Rescue Squad also is logging more transports since the Mayo Clinic closed in July. “Instead of going to the clinic to get checked out, people are waiting, and then they have to be transported to the hospital,” Niggemann said. “The numbers are showing this to be true,” she said. During the annual meeting of the Colfax Rescue Squad at the end of August, Don Knutson, director of the rescue squad, said since the clinic in Colfax had closed July 1, he was noticing more calls for transports to the hospital. At the time, Knutson said he was not sure if it was a trend or if it was a temporary increase. Back in August, Knutson speculated that people probably felt like they could drive themselves to the clinic when it was here in town, but with no clinic here, they do not feel they are up to driving a half hour or more, so they wait until it gets to the point where they need to go to the hospital, and then they need the ambulance. Niggemann says she hopes an existing clinic building in Colfax also will make it more attractive for Marshfield to consider locating in Colfax. While the public informational meetings and discussions on Monday, October 24, are scheduled at 3:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. at Viking Bowl and Lounge (N8590 State Road 40), Niggemann said each session is expected to last about an hour. “The importance of people being at the forum is going to be huge,” she said. dricks, of Grantsburg; daughter, Mary (Greg) Berg, of Lindstrom, MN; grandson, Nathan, of Hudson; granddaughter, Cari Marie, of Arizona; two great-grandsons; four great-granddaughters; brother, Larry Hendricks of FL; sister-in-law, Naomi Iverson, of River Falls; niece, Lee Ann Iverson of River Falls; nephew, Mark Bjerstadt, of River Falls; and many friends and many cousins. The funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, October 18, 2016, at Norton Lutheran Church, E6806 State Rd 170, Colfax, with Pastor Bob Schoenknecht officiating. Visitation will be held one hour prior at the church. Burial will follow at the church cemetery. Sampson Funeral Home is assisting the family with arrangements. Wednesday, October 19, 2016 BERNICE EISENHUTH Bernice E. Eisenhuth, 94, of Colfax, WI, passed away peacefully with her daughters by her side on October 11, 2016 at Colfax Health and Rehab. Bernice was born June 3, 1922, to Alexander and Mamie (Wagner) Steinmetz. She married Ausman Quevillon March 1, 1941 and they were together until his death on April 8, 1968. Bernice worked in the Colfax School System as a cook until she was 81 years old. She loved her job, the friendships that she made there, and all the children she interacted with every day. Many called her grandma. Bernice enjoyed her family, walking all over town, old-time dances, gardening, canning, going to her cabin, traveling to Florida, Aruba, and Hawaii. She said she thought she died and went to Heaven when she went to Aruba, but then she said she was sure she went to Heaven when she saw Hawaii. Now Bernice is in Heaven with her creator. In her later years, Bernice was lovingly cared for by her daughter, Nadine, and son-in-law, Rick Johnson, who was like a son to her. She is survived by her daughters, JoAnn Quevillon, Gail (Shirlyn) Steinmetz, and Nadine (Rick) Johnson; one sister, Gardella Aspen; grandchildren, Kerry (Carrie) Johnson, Teresa (Scott) Berger, Diana (Orville) Bauer, Jeffrey (Mary) Steinmetz, Michele (Kurt) Hostager, Scott (Lisa) Johnson, and Jason (Barb) Johnson; thirteen great-grandchildren; one step great-grandchild; one greatgreat-grandchild; and two step great-great-grandchildren. The family would like to send a special thank you to the staff and caregivers at Colfax Rehab and St. Joseph’s Hospice for their kind and loving care. Private family services were held on Monday for Bernice. She was laid to rest in Evergreen Cemetery with Pastor Leslie Walck officiating. Sampson Funeral Home assisted her family. For online condolences, please visit www.sampsonfuneralhome. com SAMPSON FUNERAL HOME 1017 Railroad Avenue • P.O. Box 175 Colfax, WI 54730 P: 715-962-3525 • F: 715-962-2525 “Providing Dignified Caring Funeral & Cremation Services” Dana Zwiefelhofer Funeral Director Daniel Duffenbach Funeral Director C6c9, C11eow Page 8 • Colfax Messenger Worship Services BAPTIST GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor Aaron Blumer 515 East Street (Hwy 29 just north of Hwy 170) Boyceville, WI • 715-643-5011 Sun.: 10 a.m. Sun. School, Adult Bible Studies; 11 a.m. Morning Worship. Wed.: 7 p.m. Prayer Meeting. Schedule varies on the fifth Sun. of any month that has five. Call for information. CATHOLIC ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CATHOLIC Fr. John Potaczek 4540 State Road 40, Bloomer Cooks Valley Mass Schedule: 8 p.m. Saturday Mass; 9:30 a.m. Sunday Mass; Wednesday and Thursday 8:30 a.m. Pine Creek - 715-949-1750 Sun.: 9 a.m. Worship Service. ST. JOSEPH’S CATHOLIC Elk Mound, Wisconsin Fr. Joseph Nakwah Sat.: 4:30 p.m. Mass. Sun.: 10:15 a.m. Worship. CHURCH OF LATTER DAY SAINTS CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 2721 5th St. E, Menomonie, WI 54751 Sunday Services: Sacrament Meeting 10:00-11:00; Sunday School 11:0012:00; Relief Society, Priesthood, Primary 12:00-1:00. LUTHERAN BARUM - BIG ELK CREEK LUTHERAN PARISH Pastor Hal Schroetter, Barum Sun. (Barum): 9 a.m.-Worship Service; 10 a.m.-Sun. School. Sun. (Big Elk Creek): 9:30 a.m.-Sun. School; 10:30 a.m.-Worship Service. Wed.: 7 p.m.-Confirmation at BEC; 8-9 p.m.-Youth Group. BETHANY LUTHERAN BRETHREN Pastor Ron Wik Jordan Herrick, Elder/Directory Of Youth Ministry (715-704-0107) Colfax, WI • 715-962-2280 www.bethanylbchurch.org Sun.: 9:30 a.m. worship, 10:45 a.m. Sunday school. Our sanctuary is wheelchair accessible. Visit our website and listen to sermons online. COLFAX LUTHERAN Leslie W. Walck, Pastor 715-962-3336 www.colfaxlutheran.org Wed., Oct. 19: 3:20 p.m. Praise Kids, 3:40 p.m. Confirmation Classes, 6 p.m. Colfax Crafters, 7 p.m. Faith Circle. Sun., Oct. 23: 9:30 a.m. Worship. 10:30 a.m. Coffee Fellowship, 10:30 a.m. Sunday School, 10:30 a.m. Choir Rehearsal, 6-7:30 p.m. Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace. Tues., Oct. 25: 7 p.m. Barbershoppers. Wed., Oct. 26: 3:20 p.m. Praise Kids, 3:40 p.m. Confirmation Classes, 6 p.m. Colfax Crafters. COLFAX RURAL LUTHERAN Pastor Bob Schoenknecht 715-962-3913 Wed., Oct. 19: 9:30 a.m. Norton & NRV Bible Study at the Parsonage, No Confirmation, 6:30 p.m. Joint Council Meeting at the Parsonage Thurs., Oct. 20: 1:30 p.m. Holden Hope Circle & Ladies Aid at the Parsonage Sun., Oct. 23: 8:30 a.m. Norton Worship, 9:45 a.m. Holden Worship, 9:45 a.m. NRV Sunday School, 10:30 a.m. Holden Sunday School, 11 a.m. North Running Valley Worship. Tues., Oct. 25: 10:30 a.m. Bible Study at the Grapevine Wed., Oct. 26: 3:45 p.m. Confirmation at the Parsonage. FAITH LUTHERAN RUNNING VALLEY AFLC Jim Haga, Pastor 3 1/2 miles N on east side Cty Hwy A Sun.: 9 a.m. - 10 a.m. Sunday School/ Bible Study; 10 a.m. Worship Service. Wed.: 6:30-7:30 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study. HAY RIVER-RIDGELAND LUTHERAN Pastor Loren Barker 715-949-1976 Wed., Oct. 19: No Confirmation. Thurs., Oct. 20: 7:30 p.m. Hay River Council Meeting. Sun., Oct. 23: WORSHIP WITH COMMUNION: 9 a.m. Ridgeland, 10:30 a.m. Hay River. SUNDAY SCHOOL: 9:30 a.m. Hay River, 10:30 a.m. Ridgeland. Wed., Oct. 26: 6:30 p.m. Confirmation at Ridgeland. NEW HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA) E9085 County Rd. V, PO BX 85 Sand Creek, WI 54765 Office: 715-658-1470 www.newhopescpc.org newhope@chibardun.net Pr. Josh Toufar, pastor pastorjosh@mosaictelecom.net *Sand Creek: 8:30 a.m. (*telephone ministry 715-658-1777) Pine Creek: 10:15 a.m. 9:30 a.m. Coffee Fellowship at both churches. OUR SAVIOR’S LUTHERAN (ELCA) Hwy. 170, P.O. Box 186 Wheeler, WI Sec. Hours: Wed. & Fri., 9:30-3 oursaviorswheeler@yahoo.com 715-632-2530 Sun. worship service is at 9:15 a.m. SHEPHERD OF THE HILL LUTHERAN 207 University St., Elk Mound 715-879-5115 Pastor Mary Eide Sun.: 8:45 a.m. Sunday School, 10 a.m. Worship. SPRING BROOK LUTHERAN 7 miles south of Elk Mound off H on 930th Sun.: 8:30 a.m. Sun. School; 9:30 a.m. Family Worship Hour. ST. JOHN LUTHERAN POPPLE CREEK Wisconsin Synod 10 miles north of Colfax on County W, Colfax, WI Pastor James Strand Sun.: 5:30 p.m. Sunday School; 6 p.m. Worship. ST. KATHERINE’S LUTHERAN CHURCH Evangelical Lutheran Synod Pastor Shawn Kauffeld E7250 N. Cty. Rd. E Menomonie 715-556-9307 Sun.: 8:30 a.m. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m Worship Service. TRINITY LUTHERAN 1039 Nordveien Dr., P.O. Box 247 Boyceville, WI 54725 trinitychurch@celectcom.net Pastor Brad Peterson Phone: 715-643-3821 Parish Office Hours: M-T, Th-Fri 8 a.m.noon; Wed noon-3 p.m. Communion 1st, 3rd & 5th Sun. Sun.: 9 a.m. Worship Service; 10:15 a.m.-Sun. School. NON-DENOMINATIONAL INDEPENDENT BIBLE CHURCH Pastor Robert Koepp Sand Creek - 715-309-2888 Thurs., Oct. 20: No Bible Study or Prayer Meeting. Sun., Oct. 23: 9:30 a.m. Worship Service, 10:45 a.m. Sunday School. NEW DIMENSION MINISTRIES 5448 Balsam Drive Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin Pastor Darrell Wood, Sr. Phone 715-723-9520 Sun.: 10 a.m. Worship Service. Wed.: 6:30 p.m. Worship Service. CALVARY CHAPEL Pastor Jason Taylor N10091 Co. Rd. S, Wheeler 715-658-1036 Sun.: 10 a.m. Prayer; 10:30 Worship. Thurs.: 7 p.m. Bible Study. UNITED METHODIST SALEM-IRON CREEK UNITED METHODIST CHURCH E. 7285 N. County Trunk E Menomonie, WI 54751 Pastor Allen M. Christensen Sun.: 9:15 a.m. Worship, 10:15 a.m. Sunday School TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 105 S. Holly Avenue Elk Mound, WI 54739 715-879-5596 Pastor Allen M. Christensen Sun.: 9:45 a.m. Sunday School, 10:45 a.m Worship. UNITED METHODIST Rev. Craig Conklin Tainter: 715-962-4335 Sun.: 9:30 a.m. Worship Service; 10:30 a.m. Sun. School. Colfax Sun.: 11 a.m. Worship Service. Tues.: 9:30 a.m. Prayer Group. Caring Ministry Food Pantry: 715-7049571 CLASSIFIEDS & PUBLIC NOTICES Wednesday, October 19 2016 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Tribune Press Reporter • Colfax Messenger • Classified and TV TAB Great Value For ONE LOW Price your ad will appear in three publications! Excellent Coverage 8 for the first 10 words and 20¢ for $ each additional word. Your ad will be seen by nearly 15,000 readers! (All ads must be paid in advance prior to publication!) 511 E. Railroad Ave. • Colfax, WI 54730 or call (715) 962-3535! 235-7202, 715-308-4178. 5c6 FOR RENT - 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom apt., Colfax. $475 plus utilities. No pets or smoking. Available Oct. 1. 715-2145312.3tfc FOR RENT - 1 bedroom upper apartment in Boyceville. Water, sewer, garbage and heat included. Available Oct. 1. $450 plus deposit. 715-643-3206, 715-3051665.2tfc FOR RENT - 2 bedroom, one bath Clint Peterson Construction Schofield, Parent, Mayer & Huff S.C. Fully Licensed & Insured Contractor 15 years serving the area No job too small! Handyman & Honey-do list New construction, Remodel, Additions, Roofing, Siding, Windows 715-632-2402 C34tfc Great rates, Free estimates Attorneys at Law • Probate • Wills • • Real Estate • Wednesdays Bremer Bank • Colfax By Appointment Only Telephone: (715) 235-3939 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY RN FOR IN HOME VISITS In connection with MAPC grants. Interesting and rewarding work. 715-643-4068 • SERVICES • STEAM TEAM CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING-Call John Humpal, 715-632-2109 or 1-800-553-3677; www. Apartment Maintenance Tech St. Croix & Dunn County Area Qualified candidates will be well versed in building maintenance, including apt. turnover, some painting, cleaning, and completing work orders. Individuals must also possess strong customer service skills with an emphasis on fair housing principles. Some after hours on-call responsibilities are required. Applicant must provide their own basic tools and transportation. Please email resume and letter of interest to blipscy@cardinalcapital.us or fax to 715-743-3035. steamteamcleaning.com14tfc WE PRINT EVERYTHING from business cards to graduation invitations. Large format printing too! In-house designer available to help you create your personalized promotional items. Call today for a free quote. 715-265-4646. KIM’S ENTERPRISES: Dog grooming, canine massage, blade and scissor sharpening. 715-265-4031. 50pth2016 SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC MOTORSComplete electric motor rewinding and repairing service. Prepare now for electrical power outages with a PTO generator for your farm. We service all brands of PTO generators. 5815 3M Drive, Menomonie, WI 715-235-7530 or 1-800-3004182.33tfc JAY’S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR, Glenwood City. 715-977-0397 11tfc WE PRINT EVERYTHING from business cards to wedding invitations. Call today for a free quote. 715-265-4646. • STORAGE • FOR RENT-Mini storage with insulated ceilings. Quinn’s Storage, Knapp. 715-665-2209. • FIREWOOD • FOR SALE - 8’ firewood. Contact Royal Bignell for pricing, 715-308-1417. 49tfc FOR SALE — 8’ seasoned firewood. 12 cord load. $80/cord. 25 miles of Colfax. 715-556-9700. 2p8 • HELP WANTED • HELP WANTED: Part-time milk hauler needed. Will need Class B CDL. 715643-7232.4c6 Colfax Animal Hospital, S.C. CNA Professional Services, L.L.P. Large and Small Animals C42c43 6c7T* Call 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM Monday-Thursday only. NO WEEKEND CALLS PLEASE!! School District of Colfax BOARD OF EDUCATION MEETING HIGH SCHOOL LIBRARY BRUCE BUCKLEY, DVM BEV HALAMA, DVM Hours: Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. • We Feature Royal Canin Prescription Diets • 411 E. River – Colfax Phone 10tfc HOUSE FOR RENT - Located on Highway Q north. Contact 715-2654102.6tfc HOUSE FOR RENT - 3 bedroom, 1 bath, attached garage on 3 lots. Quiet area - 1815 12th St., Menomonie. Refrigerator, stove, microwave, central air, new carpet/paint. No smoking or pets. Utilities not included. $875 a month. Phone: 715- apartment with garage and laundry room. 721 Syme Ave. in Glenwood City. $600 per month plus utilities. Call Cassellius’ at 715-265-4919.1tfc HAVENWOOD ASSISTED LIVING located in Glenwood City. 1 and 2 bedroom units, all utilities are included. Some income restrictions. Call for more information. 715-265-4140 EHO. 40tfc TWO & THREE BEDROOM mobile homes for rent in Wheeler. 12 month lease required, rental lots available. 715658-1282.30tfc 1tfc*, C37tfc • FOR RENT • 715-962-3380 Berres Family & Sports Chiropractic Monday, October 24, 2016 7:00 p.m. Regular Session This meeting is a meeting of the Board of Education in public for the purpose of conducting the School District’s business and is not to be considered a public community meeting. There is a time for public participation during the meeting as indicated in the agenda. AGENDA 1. Call to order 2. Roll call 3. Pledge of Allegiance 4. Reportofmeetingnotification 5. Minutes – Consent Agenda 6. Treasurer’s Report – Consent Agenda 7. Bill list – Consent Agenda 8. Communications and Visitors A. Mr. Dachel B. Mr. Hovde C. Mrs. Rudi D. Visitors 9. Old Business A. Referendum Update B. PI -1505 Annual Report (2015-2016) C. PI-1505 SPED Annual Report (2015-2016) 10. Superintendent’s Report A. Meetings Attended/Scheduled B. Immunization Records 11. New Business A. Equalized Values (Fall 2016) B. Open Enrollment Update (2016-2017) C. Pupil Count Report (3rd Friday in September 2016) D. Pupil Count Summer School (2016) E. Discuss/Motion: Approve Coach Resignation F. Discuss/Motion: Approve Coaching Hires G. Motion: Establish 2016-2017 tax levy. Consideration of levying a property tax for the 2016-17 budget of $______________ or, (If the state law changes that affects the amount of general aids available to the school district) a property tax for the 2016-17 budget in the amount equaling the maximum revenue limit allowed less all allowed state general aids, whichever is less, and $_____________ for Non-Referendum Approved Debt Service. H. Presentation / signature tax statements (May not be available by meeting.) I. Discuss/Motion: Youth Options applications (Spring 2017) J. Discuss/Motion:Toadjustbudgettoreflectactual revenue & expenditure amounts 2016-2017 (May not be available by meeting date.) 12. Adjournment WNAXLP C42c RN, LPN, CNA & PCW Part Time and Full Time Positions Available (every other weekend required) Colfax Health & Rehabilitation Center is looking for dedicated caregivers to join our team. We offer competitive wages. Call Kenzie Galetka for an interview or apply in person at our new State-of-the-art facility located at: 110 Park Drive, Colfax WI 715-962-3186 EOE 110 Park Drive • Colfax, WI 54730 715-962-3186 C40c42 Myers Septic Service, LLC Licensed Bonded Insured Family Owned and Operated Since 1965 Commercial • Farm • Industrial • Residential Services Provided: Portable Toilets Septic, Drywell & Holding Tank TerraLift-Drainfi eld Pumping Rejuvenation Car Wash Pits Roto-Root Grease Traps Sand & Shop Pits Jetting Clean, Steam & Thawing Lines 2500 20th St., Elk Mound, WI 715-874-5274 • www.myersseptic.com Colfax Messenger • Page 9 Sex offender released in Bloomer October 19 By LeAnn R. Ralph BLOOMER — A 34-year-old man convicted in 2005 of second degree child sexual assault in Pepin County will be released from the Stanley Correctional Institution October 19 and will be living at 1914 Queen Street, Bloomer. Paul L. Clement is described as being 5’8” tall, 175 pounds, with brown hair (balding), brown eyes and with scars on his forehead, according to a news release from the Chippewa County Sheriff ’s Department. Upon his release, Clement will no longer be under the direct supervision of the Department of Corrections but will be mandated to comply with all requirements and is a lifetime registrant of the Wisconsin Sex Offender Registration Program. Clement was convicted of second-degree sexual assault of a child in October of 2005, and his victims included teenaged female acquaintances, according to the news release. Information about Clement or any other lifetime sex offender registrant is available at the sex registry website at www.doc. wi.gov. According to online court records, Clement pleaded guilty to one Class C felony of the seconddegree sexual assault of a child on October 24, 2005. A second felony count of second-degree child sexual assault was dismissed but read into the record for sentencing. A misdemeanor count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor also was dismissed but read into the record for sentencing. In a separate case, Clement was charged with another felony count of second-degree sexual assault of a child that was dismissed but read into the record for sentencing. Two additional counts of contributing to the delinquency of a child were dismissed as well but read into the record for sentencing. In December of 2005, Clement was sentenced to three years in state prison and seven years of extended supervision, according to online court records. In August of 2009, extended supervision was revoked in Pepin County Circuit Court after Clement pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana. Colfax approves sharing TID 4 revenue with TID 3 By LeAnn R. Ralph COLFAX — The Colfax Village Board has approved sharing revenue from Tax Increment District 4 with Tax Increment District 3. The village board approved sharing the revenue October 10 following a meeting of the Joint Review Board for the village’s tax increment districts and a meeting of the Colfax Plan Commission. The plan commission recommended that the village board approve the resolution to share revenue from TID 4 with TID 3. The Joint Review Board will consider whether to approve the proposal at a meeting October 31. Representatives for the taxing jurisdictions that receive taxes from the property in the TID make up the Joint Review Board. Members of the Joint Review Board included Scott Gunnufson (village); Steve Rasmussen (Dunn County Board); Dan Lytle (CVTC); Bill Yingst (Colfax school district) and Jeremy Klukas (public). Sean Lentz of Ehlers & Associates, the village’s financial consultant, explained how tax increment districts work for those who might not be familiar with the concept. A tax increment district has a base property value when the district is formed. Each of the taxing authorities receives their share of the property taxes from the base value in the TID for the life of the district. When improvements are made within the tax increment district, the property taxes that would have been paid on the improvements, instead of being paid to the taxing authorities, goes into a special fund for the village. The village can then use those funds to make further improvements in the TID, such as street projects, Lentz explained. Tax increment districts are set up for either 20 or 27 years, he said. When the TID is closed out, the property tax on the improvements is then paid to the taxing authorities in the district, Lentz said. In order to share revenue with another TID, the receiving tax increment district must be considered “blighted,” he said. TID 3 in Colfax has been declared a blighted district. Blighted means that 50 percent of the district is blighted and is in need of rehabilitation, Lentz said. TID 4, a mixed-use district, was created in 2006 and will close out in 2026. According to the preliminary financial forecast, TID 4 has paid back all of the current expenditures and had a surplus of $19,000 in 2015, Lentz said. TID 3 was created in 2002 and will close out in 2029. The financial forecast for TID 3 is that with no further development, the district will experience a shortfall, Lentz said. The process being considered by the Joint Review Board, the plan commission and the village board is to share TID 4’s revenue with TID 3, he said. Members of the Colfax Plan Commission include Gary Stene, Dave Hovre, Nancy Hainstock, Jason Johnson, Mike Buchner and Gunnufson. The plan commission held a public hearing on the proposal for sharing revenue between the two TIDs, although no one from public spoke at the public hearing. Some of the projects that could be included in TID 3 for which money would be supplied by TID 4 are upgrading infrastructure, transportation, sidewalks and store fronts, Lentz said. The Colfax Plan Commission unanimously approved a motion to recommend that the village board approve amending TID 4 to allow sharing of revenue with TID 3. TID 4 is expected to generate $22,000 in revenue each year, Lentz said. The Colfax Village Board unanimously approved amending TID 4 to allow the district to share revenue with TID 3. The Joint Review Board will meet at the village hall at 5:30 p.m. October 31 to consider the proposal. Other business In other business, the Colfax Village Board: •Approved bartender operators’ licenses for Tarris Turner (American Legion) and Patrick L’Esperance (Express Mart) from October 10, 2016, to June 30, 2017. •Approved a resolution to support and agree to be included in the 2016-2020 Dunn County Outdoor Recreation Plan. •Learned that the Colfax Rescue Squad had gone out on 62 runs in September. Marjorie A Clement, DDS 304 Gray Street Eau Claire, WI 54701 (715) 832-5566 606 Main Street Colfax, WI 54730 (715) 962-3565 New Patients Welcome! Subscribe to The Colfax Messenger Today! 715-962-3535 DeWittMedia.com Page 10 • Colfax Messenger NEWS Wednesday, October 19, 2016 Dunn County considers CAFO moratorium Colfax Referendum By LeAnn R. Ralph MENOMONIE — The Dunn County Planning Resources and Development Committee planned to meet October 17 to discuss a six-month moratorium on Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations to present at the Dunn County Board meeting Wednesday. The PR&D committee discussed the possibility of a moratorium at the October 11 meeting. About 50 people attended the meeting, and 18 audience members addressed the committee during public comments. PR&D members planned to more closely review a draft of the moratorium at their October 17 special meeting that was then expected to be presented to the Dunn County Board at the October 19 meeting. Nick Lange, Dunn County corporation counsel, submitted a draft for PR&D members to review. Members of the PR&D committee were generally in favor of a moratorium but disagreed on how long the moratorium should be in place. A six-month moratorium with the possibility of a six-month extension if needed seemed to have the most support among committee members. The majority of those who spoke during public comments said they were concerned about soil and groundwater contamination from CAFOs, specifically from large dairies, and were in favor of a moratorium to give Dunn County time to review the county’s zoning ordinance to make sure regulations are adequate to keep the groundwater from being contaminated. Many of the speakers said they believed the state Department of Natural Resources is too shorthanded to make sure the CAFOs are complying with state law. Many of the speakers also referred to problems in Kewaunee County where 320 water wells have been found to be contaminated with coliform bacteria and nitrates. The concern about CAFOs, the expansion of large dairies and the contamination of soil and groundwater was prompted by a request for expansion at Cranberry Creek Dairy in the Town of Rock Creek. Cranberry Creek Dairy plans to expand to 7,250 animal units — or 5,000 dairy cows — by next summer. The dairy currently has 1,250 dairy cows. Rock Creek is one of six unzoned townships in Dunn County. Nutrient management Charles Harschlip, who lives in the Rock Falls area, is a dairy farmer with a 70-cow herd and a Wisconsin Natural Resources Conservation Service 590 Standard Nutrient Management Plan. A nutrient management plan establishes how much manure can be applied to farm fields based on soil testing and the nutrients needed for that particular field to grow a particular crop. Harschlip said he is “getting nervous” because the “bigger operators are putting on way too much manure on some fields.” Three large dairy herds, including two in Pepin County, would be within six to eight miles of each other, he said. Describing the Cranberry Creek nutrient management plan as a “scary situation,” Harschlip noted that nutrient management plans are self-regulated. Pepin County and the Black River Falls office of the DNR are short-handed, and “they need help,” he said. “If the county could do any kind of moratorium to slow this down,” Harschlip said. Dead zone Rachel Kummer of Rock Falls also identified herself as a dairy farmer in favor of a moratorium on CAFOs and described Cranberry Creek Dairy as a neighbor who wants to expand in size by five times. Kummer said she wrote a nutrient management plan last winter and knows how to read the plans. When she looked at the Cranberry Creek nutrient management plan, the plan was missing soil samples, had incorrect crop rotations and listed landowners where the manure would be spread who had not been asked permission to use their land, Kummer said. For the expansion, Cranberry Creek needed an inspection, and an August 5 letter to the dairy listed all of the areas of non-compliance, such as the over-application of nitrogen in 2015 and 2016 — one hundred pounds more of nitrogen per acre than should have been applied, Kummer said. The dairy has not submitted manure samples for nutrient analysis and has had problems with run-off control from feed bunkers, she said. A local bow hunter recently located a site where every bit of vegetation is dead in a spot ten feet wide by 30 feet that leads to the creek bank, Kummer said. Cranberry Creek Dairy has been pulling water from the creek for fertilizing, and the equipment must have been leaking all summer, she said. Soil samples were tested for urea, ammonia and nitrate, and the amount was so high that it was beyond what the machines could be calibrated to accurately measure, Kummer said. “We need time to make sure our environmental concerns are addressed,” she said. Public trust Randy Koehler is a dairy farmer in the Rock Falls area who lives a half mile south of the proposed Cranberry Creek Dairy expansion. The 100 pounds more per acre of nitrogen is perhaps an overage of 50 percent, Koehler said. The public wants farmers to be more sustainable, and the public wants to be able to trust farmers, he said. Violations of regulations by one large dairy hurts all farmers because the public then does not trust farmers not to violate regulations, Koehler said. “We need a moratorium to get some time to look into this,” Koehler said. Mike Grant from Menomonie said government was supposed to be for the people to serve the people. But the state government in Wisconsin has defunded the DNR and has stopped looking at science. “Everyone has to have clean air and clean water,” he said. In recent years, the larger dairy operations have represented a major change in agriculture, Grant said. “We need time to look at it more closely,” he said. Villains Ryan Ullom of Eau Claire said he is a third-generation dairy farmer. The people speaking at the PR&D meeting are painting a broad picture that dairy farms are bad, he said. Farmers do not want to contaminate the environment, Ullom said. “We do not intend to contaminate the water or the air. We want to provide for our families and for everyone,” he said. Farmers want to work with the government. Grain farmers also over apply nutrients and are self-regulated, Ullom said. The people speaking at the meeting are “painting dairy as the villain,” he said. Lee Ullom of Menomonie said his family is working on following the CAFO standards. How much is a moratorium going to help operations that are already following the standards? Ullom wondered. The Ulloms have a family farm that is expanding to support the family. A moratorium will cause some operations to fold, he said. “A moratorium would cause us to no longer be an operation to the fullest extent … (it would be a) detriment to our operation as a family,” he said. Doug Ullom begged to differ with his sons about the farm being third generation and said it was, in fact, a fourth generation farm. Ullom said he is a supervisor on the Spring Brook Town Board and his farm is located in the Town of Dunn. All together, he has four sons and 11 grandchildren, and Ullom said he understands the concerns about clean water. The Town of Spring Brook is removing the water fountains at the town hall because of nitrate contamination, and there are very few dairies in Spring Brook, he said. “Like my sons said, we’re being put out as villains,” Ullom said. In every business, there are good operators and not-so-good operators, he said. Cheryl Ullom said she has lived on a dairy farm her whole life. “We work hard, and we love what we do,” she said. The economics of dairy farming are difficult, and Ullom said she would love if if they could stay at 50 cows or 100 cows. The big dairy farms have been driven by economics, she said. “Every farm that is trying to survive should not be punished,” she said. The Ullom family wants to expand their farm in order to be able to support the family, Cheryl Ullom said. “It’s too bad we have to be at war over this,” she said. The DNR is understaffed, and laws are not being enforced. If people want the laws enforced, they should ask the state Legislature for enforcement, Ullom said. Parts per million Helen Kees of Durand said she is a farmer and has cattle. Working farmers have taken time out of their busy schedules, especially at this time of year during the harvest, to do research and complete work that should have been done by civil servants, she said. Kees said she had requested information from the DNR before the hearing in Rock Creek in September for the Cranberry Creek Dairy expansion. In some areas, drinking water in Dunn County has a nitrogen levels of 12 to 24 parts per million, she said. In Wisconsin, the enforcement level is ten parts per million, but two parts per million is considered the protective action limit at which something should be done, Kees said. The federal Environmental Protection Agency is in Madison right now, reviewing the DNR’s enforcement of clean water regulations, she said. Emerald Emerald Sky Dairy in the Town of Emerald in St. Croix County is planning an expansion, said Kim Dupree, who lives one and a half miles from Emerald Sky Dairy. Three of her neighbors have had excessively high nitrates in their well water the last several months, she said. After doing an open records request, Dupree said she had discovered that Emerald Sky Dairy has only submitted half of the required compliance logs to the DNR since 2008, and the DNR is understaffed. One of her neighbors spent $11,000 to install a reverse osmosis system on one faucet to deal with the nitrates, and another neighbor spent $20,000 drilling a new well, Dupree said. Reverse osmosis and new wells to draw water from below the contaminated level are not covered by homeowners insurance, she noted. St. Croix County also is currently considering a moratorium on CAFOs, Dupree said. “Clean drinking water is essential … we all need to work together to protect our water,” she said. Another woman from the Town of Emerald said she had attended a two-day summit on CAFOs in Green Bay in September and had learned about the damage in Kewaunee County. The Algoma public school system has a clean water kiosk because well water cannot be used for drinking or bathing or cooking, she said, and in the Town of Emerald, there are contaminated wells in all four directions from Emerald Sky Dairy. Citizen Action Jeff Smith, who lives in a township neighboring Rock Creek, is a member of the Citizen Action Cooperative of Western Wisconsin. Clean drinking water is a bipartisan issue, he said. “We have to figure out what is in the best interests of everyone,” Smith said. Manure can be land spread 12 miles away as part of a nutrient management plan, but many people are not aware of the amount of land involved, Smith said. Smith said no one wants to “vilify the family farms.” Wisconsin is rich in water resources, and it is “not smart” to contaminate the water. “We should be protecting our water at all costs,” he said. Moratorium “It is appropriate for us to take a look at this,” said Tom Quinn, chair of the PR&D committee and a county board supervisor from Downing. Quinn also is the executive director of the Wisconsin Farmers Union. The regulation of CAFOs is an enormously complicated issue, said Diane Morehouse, PR&D member and county board supervisor from Menomonie. “It seems to me it would be prudent to take some time,” she said. Gary Bjork, PR&D member and a county board supervisor from Colfax who also is a farmer, agreed that it would be appropriate to take a look at the county’s regulations and suggested a sixmonth moratorium on CAFOs. Bjork expressed concern for farmers being able to continue any plans for expansion during a moratorium longer than six months. Gary Seipel, PR&D member and a county board supervisor from Eau Galle, said he had missed the meeting two weeks ago and had been “blindsided” by the idea of a moratorium. A one-year moratorium would be detrimental to existing farms that want to expand, he said. A moratorium would prohibit licensing of new operations or expansion of existing operations, said Lange, the county’s attorney. By studying groundwater, surface water and watersheds in relation to possible impacts by CAFOs, Dunn County would be doing what the DNR and what the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection should be doing and is mandated to do, Seipel said. The state law that regulates CAFOs was done in 2004, and at that time, no one thought about farms with 26,000 hogs or 5,000 dairy cows, Quinn said. “The scale is so much greater. Maybe the state regulations are not being managed correctly,” he said. DNR personnel are told to issue permits for the lowest standards on the books, Quinn said. A moratorium would not prevent farmers from starting the application process; obtaining all the proper permits for a CAFO is a lengthy process, he said. Responsibility The Dunn County Board has a responsibility to Dunn County residents regardless of what the DNR or DATCP does or does not do, said Steve Rasmussen, chair of the Dunn County Board and ex officio member of the PR&D committee. “This is about local control,” he said. Taking a look at the county’s ordinances and gathering information about groundwater and surface water “is not blaming. It is addressing a perceived need in the community. It is not blaming agriculture or dairy. It is an issue that is of concern to Dunn County residents,” Rasmussen said. Rasmussen suggested that citizen members should be part of a committee appointed to review the ordinance and the scientific information available, including farmers such as Dave Styer. The committee will be looking at “what works, what doesn’t, what is appropriate,” Rasmussen said, adding that he was anticipating community engagement that is thoughtful and reasoned as well as focused on evidencebased decision making. Seipel advocated taking two weeks to review the proposed moratorium — until the next regular PR&D meeting. Quinn advocated for approving the moratorium so it could be presented to the Dunn County Board at the October 19 meeting. Waiting two weeks for the next PR&D regular meeting means it would be six weeks before a moratorium comes before the county board, Quinn said. The Dunn County PR&D Committee unanimously postponed making a decision on recommending a moratorium on CAFOs until a special meeting of the committee October 17. Continued from page 1 or 132,000 gallons per quarter — or about 400,000 gallons for the nine-month school year. At two flushes per day per person, that amounts to 264,000 gallons per quarter of water saved — or about 800,000 gallons per school year. Lockers Anyone who graduated from high school in at least the last 50 years remembers having a locker. Depending on when you graduated, those lockers were newer or older, better or worse. If your locker was an older model and gave you problems getting it open, the delays and difficulties could put a real dent in your school day. The lockers at Colfax Middle School and Colfax High School are part of the $2.2 million infrastructure portion of the $7.2 million referendum. “Lockers are very expensive. These lockers are relatively old and the locking mechanisms keep wearing out,” Yingst said. The problem is, “they don’t make those anymore. So we’re trying to get used parts to fix them,” he said. Replacing the lockers will make the school day run more smoothly for both students and staff. Parking lot No matter whether you are talking about a parking lot, a street or a road — asphalt is expensive. Part of the $2.2 million infrastructure portion of the referendum is for the parking lots at Colfax High School/Middle School and Colfax Elementary. Paving a mile of road costs around $100,000, and maintaining the asphalt pays off in the long run. “Parking lot maintenance is ongoing. If you don’t maintain the parking lot, then it becomes very expensive to replace it,” Yingst said. Additional updates Other updates that would be included in the infrastructure portion of the referendum would be technology updates that would help the school district meet new testing standards. Exterior building repairs would be part of the infrastructure portion as well. During the energy efficiency project three years ago, the interior of the school building was examined and sealed up where necessary. This part of the project would examine the exterior of the building to find places where water could seep into the building through failed sealants, windows or roof flashings, according to information provided to the school board at the time of the previous energy efficiency project. Water infiltration can damage interior and exterior portions of the building and can eventually cause structural damage. Other projects Other projects in the $7.2 million referendum include replacing temporary classrooms that were meant to be used for less than a decade but have now been in use for 30 years. The temporary classrooms would be replaced with a 7,000 square-foot addition on the north side of the elementary school. The $1.4 million for the new classrooms includes demolition of the temporary classrooms. In addition, the referendum amount includes $750,000 for a bus maintenance building (a maintenance garage and not the “bus barn” where the buses are parked); $1.2 million for technical education/STEM (improvement and expansion of existing tech ed areas including equipment and technology upgrades); $650,000 to improve safety and security (relocate the existing high school office to the east side of the building, card access, cameras). The referendum amount also includes $600,000 to purchase six new liquid propane buses to begin the replacement cycle. Colfax runs 18 buses, so replacing one per year means that each bus must last 18 years. The last item included in the referendum amount will be $400,000 to pay off the Wisconsin Retirement System “unfunded liability.” The school district has been working on paying off the liability to the Wisconsin Retirement System for the last 27 years, since 1989. The school district is paying $60,000 per year, and at the current pay rate, the unfunded liability would be paid off in 2029. If the school district continues to make payments of $60,000 per year for the next 13 years, the total would amount to $780,000 — or nearly twice the amount the Board of Education is asking for in the referendum question. More info The Colfax Messenger plans to publish an article in the October 26 edition that takes a closer look at the Science, Technology, Engineering and Math portion of the referendum. Anyone who wishes to tour the school buildings to see what needs to be replaced or updated is welcome, Yingst said. If you would like to set up a tour, contact Superintendent Bill Yingst at 715-962-3773 or by e-mail at wyingst@colfax. k12.wi.us. Two informational meetings also are scheduled on October 26 and November 3 at 7 p.m. at the Colfax High School library. • Business Cards • Brochures • Letterhead • Posters • Flyers • Calendars • Greeting Cards • Announcements • Invitations • Carbonless Forms RAISE THE BAR ON YOUR PRINT & PROMOTIONAL PRODUCTS lts &anteed service. ! u s e uar y te R y iver ct quo l t G i e l d Qua ervice ickup &ree proje t S offer p for a f s a F We oday Call t Colfax Messenger 511 E. 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