District levy to rise 24 percent in 2015
Transcription
District levy to rise 24 percent in 2015
Gala of Giving, Page 2 • Eagle Scout, Page 3 • Letters to Santa, Section C Paynesville Salem Christmas, Page 5 Press www.paynesvillearea.com Wednesday, December 24, 2014 Olympic Tutor, Page 7B Volume 128, No. 51 SCHOOL BOARD CITY COUNCIL District levy to rise 24 percent in 2015 Council agrees to delay booster station project Early start in 2015? Additional space still needed for liquor store With Question #1 passing, district’s 2015 levy raises from preliminary By Michael Jacobson With the approval of Question #1 by district voters in November, the Paynesville Area School District’s 2015 levy will now increase 24.65 percent. In the preliminary estimates, before Question #1 passed in November, the levy was slated to increase by just 1.99 percent. Question #1 included $2.03 million in bonds for building repairs and maintenance, as well as $240,000 per year for the technology levy. The school levy was approved at $2.184 million, up $431,913 from 2014, when it was $1.752 million. The 2015 levy, pre-referendum, would only have increased $34,930. The general fund levy will increase $333,850, up 36.6 percent, including $240,000 for the new technology levy. The debt service levy will increase $93,302, up 12.2 percent. And the Community Education levy will increase $4,761, up 6.2 percent, totalling a $431,913 levy increase. •Huot discussed with the board the late starting date for school in 2015-16. By state law, school cannot start until after Labor Day, which falls on Monday, Sept. 7, next year, the latest possible, meaning school would start on Tuesday, Sept. 8. It is not likely that state law will change to allow schools to start before Labor Day, said Huot, but the district could seek an individual exemption. Huot plans to put together two calendars for 2015-16, one with school starting before Labor Day and the other after. It would be nice, said Huot, to have three or four days of school before Labor Day, so students don’t have to go to school until mid June. While he realizes some businesses would be affected by an early start, he would like to get input from staff and the community about starting school early in September 2015. Student Advisory •The board heard from students who attended WE Day and from the middle school and high school principal’s advisory councils. A dozen PHS students attended WE Day at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul in SCHOOL – see page 5 Magnan crowned Arabian horse queen Horse association sponsors royalty program, where Josie Magnan will reign as queen By Ellarry Prentice Josie Magnan is looking forward to making another scrapbook of her year as a royalty member…this time as queen. A 2011 PAHS graduate, Magnan was crowned the 2015 Queen of the Northern Minnesota Arabian Horse Association on Saturday, Dec. 6, in Sauk Centre. In a new royalty program sponsored by the association, she had reigned as the 2014 Junior Queen. In its second year, the breed association’s royalty program also crowned a junior queen, a princess, and a sweetheart to serve as ambassadors in the coming year. “I am super excited to be queen,” said Magnan. “I am super excited to see how this year goes with the royalty, and I have no doubt it will be so much fun,” she added. As queen, Magnan will write articles for the club’s newsletters; will solicit sponsorships for the club’s community show in Litchfield in June; will participate in a royalty ride at one of the shows; and will volunteer at shows by passing out ribbons, answering questions, helping with the gates, and being available to help guests and participants with anything they may need. She has set a personal goal of collecting $300 in sponsorships for the community show. A lifelong equine enthusiast, Magnan is a second-year member of the Northern Josie Magnan of Paynesville is the new 2015 Northern Minnesota Arabian Horse Association Queen. Minnesota Arabian Horse Association. She has been showing horses at events hosted by the association for several years. Magnan was introduced to the Northern Minnesota Arabian Horse Association by her cousin, Jaime Liestman, and her aunt, Jean Liestman. Ever since she watched Jaime reign as queen for another breed and represent its association, Magnan said she knew she wanted to do the same. Inspired by Jaime, Magnan began showing horses and pursuing royalty events as a girl. In 2005, she joined the Minnesota Pinto Horse Association and began showing Liestman’s horses at its events. And, in 2006, she was crowned Junior Princess of the Minnesota Pinto Horse Association. Magnan had a lot of fun during her reign as junior queen of the Northern Minnesota Arabian Horse Association this past year. “I got my foot in the door and saw how much I loved being one of the people that club members were able to look up to and talk to if they had questions,” she said. In June, she was able to show her own horse at the club’s show in Litchfield. “It MAGNAN – see page 2 By Ellarry Prentice Photos from the Allie’s Wish Facebook page Berkley Damhof (right) of Paynesville has been chosen as the 2015 recipient of Allie’s Wish, a charity created in 2006 by 19-year-old Allie Kanyetzny (left), a current freshmen at the College of Saint Benedict. Proceeds from the third annual Allie’s Wish Benefit Concert, which will be held in Anoka on Saturday, Jan. 3, will go toward Berkley’s medical expenses. Giving-focused charity was created by a current freshmen at St. Ben’s Berkley Damhof is 2015 recipient of Allie’s Wish By Ellarry Prentice Berkley Damhof has made a new friend named Allie. The four-year-old from Paynesville, who was diagnosed with stage-four cancer in August, has been chosen as the 2015 recipient of Allie’s Wish, a charity created by Allie Kanyetzny, a freshmen at the College of Saint Benedict. The public is invited to join in a night of music to help spread the gift of giving to the Damhof family at the third annual Allie’s Wish Benefit Concert in Anoka on Saturday, Jan. 3. The concert – featuring musical performances by five Anoka High School students – will be held at the Avant Garden (215 East Main Street) from 6 to 8 p.m. There is no cover charge, but donations will be accepted to help fund Berkley’s medical expenses. The goal of Allie’s Wish – a charity that strives to help others in need and to celebrate the gift of giving by inspiring people to help others – is to raise at least $5,000 for Berkley in 2015. In addition to the concert, donations can also be made online. A link to donate is available on the Allie’s Wish website at www.allieswish.org under ‘Current Project.’ Berkley, the daughter of Kandace and Duane Damhof of Paynesville, was diagnosed with stage-four, high-risk neuroblastoma on Aug. 13, 2014. She has been receiving medical treatments at Children’s Hospital in Minneapolis. Allie Kanyetzny, a 19-yearold Anoka native who created Allie’s Wish during her 10th birthday weekend in 2006, met Berkley for the first time on Sunday, Dec. 14. “It was a great night!” the undergraduate nursing student posted on the charity’s Facebook page. “I am already in love with her!! I am so excited to see what this year holds for us!” she added. After receiving an email from a close friend of the Damhofs, who read a feature story about Allie’s Wish in the Huffington Post and decided to nominate Berkley for the charity, Kanyetzny said she “soon fell in love with Berkley and her inspiring story,” writing on her website,“I knew I had found my 2015 recipient.” “We are very excited to start this journey with Allie and to make a new and long-lasting friendship with her and to have her be part of our family also,” the Damhofs wrote on their CaringBridge webpage. About Allie’s Wish As her tenth birthday approached, Kanyetzny decided she didn’t want, nor need, anything, according to information from her website. She decided to celebrate by giving away gifts rather than receiving them, titling her project ‘Allie’s Wish,’ which would later inspire a charitable project and inform her life’s mission of helping others in need, according to Kanyetzny’s September feature in the Huffington Post. “My family and I named this wish of mine Allie’s Wish. From then on, I dedicated my birthdays to donating to others. Each year it got bigger, received more publicity, and knowledge from citizens all over Minnesota,” Kanyetzny wrote on her website. In lieu of drafting a wish list for herself for her birthday on Dec. 4, from 2006 to 2010, Kanyetzny collected toys, toiletries, and clothing from friends and family and donated the items to a homeless shelter in Minneapolis. She continued the tradition each year on her birthday, until 2011, when she decided to make an even bigger push for donations, according to the Huffington Post. She raised $1,250, donating $500 to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and used the remainder to make birthday baskets for patients who spent most of their days under the care of Children’s Hospital. As her 17th birthday approached, Kanyetzny decided to restructure the donation style of Allie’s Wish and has Berkley Damhof since focused on one recipient each year. In 2013, she sponsored a two-year-old girl diagnosed with cerebral palsy, and in 2014, she sponsored an eightyear-old boy with muscular dystrophy. Berkley will be her third individual recipient. Kanyetzny says the charity has grown as a part of her and is officially what she lives for and what she wants to spend the rest of her life doing. “It gives me the ability to not only change lives, but inspire people to never give up on their dreams. Allie’s Wish has taught me so much about life and has given me a fuller understanding of who I am as a person and what I stand for.” She hopes to make her charity an official non-profit after college and then to travel around the world for a year with it, feeding the hungry, helping the ill and disabled, and, most of all, spreading the gift of giving, which remains the basis of Allie’s Wish. A New Milestone On Friday, Dec. 5, the Damhofs reached one of many milestones on their journey: Berkley finished her last of five rounds of chemotherapy. Her scans show that the treatments have eradicated cancer in her bone marrow, which is very exciting news for the Damhof family. The Damhofs plan to travel to New York City in January to have a surgeon operate to remove a tumor around Berkley’s lower spine. After Berkley’s recovery, the Damhofs plan to visit the University of Minnesota for a stem cell transplant. That process will involve a three-month stay, with approximately a month of inpatient treatment. The Damhofs will then return to Children’s Hospital in Minneapolis to begin radiation. Once radiation is complete, they hope to begin antibody therapy. Believing that more space for inventory is needed, the City of Paynesville continues to research options for expanding and/or relocating its municipal liquor store. At a work session on Tuesday, Dec. 16, the Paynesville City Council discussed the current needs of the liquor store and possibilities for relocating it. The city currently leases commercial space for its municipal liquor store in the Teal’s Market complex on the west end of town. The lease expires in April 2016 and could be renewed for a term of five years, according to liquor store manager Bill Ludwig. Ludwig has strived to expand the storage capacity at the store, though the current space is becoming cramped, hindering his ability to add new inventory. Last summer, he contacted Teal’s management to inquire about obtaining additional space. He planned to contact management again to see if expansion opportunities are available. During the remainder of the current lease, Ludwig told the council that he does plan to make some improvements to the current space, includCOUNCIL – see page 7 $1 Paynesville Press 211 Washburne Avenue, P.O. 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