SUN Thisweek Burnsville and Eagan

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Burnsville | Eagan

www.SunThisweek.com

February 1, 2013 | Volume 33 | Number 49

NEWS Bill is personal for Halverson State Rep. Laurie Halverson, DFLEagan, has introduced legislation to fund research of spinal cord and traumatic brain injuries. Page 3A Photo submitted

Janine Montgomery, 38 of Eagan, survived being trafficked as a teen growing up in Edina. She runs New Beginnings, a ministry to help end human trafficking.

OPINION

Local survivors help others

School safety is a focus Dakota County law enforcement and school officials have been focused on school safety for years. Page 4A

THISWEEKEND

Photo by Laura Adelmann

Andy Ronchak, Adri Carlson and Christie Schultz are helping in the Hosanna! Church ministry to help abolish human trafficking. Hosanna is the first of three Dakota County churches to host “Freedom Weekend” Feb. 16-17 informing the public about the issue and offering ways to get people involved.

by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK

‘The crisis of our generation’ Human trafficking: Get informed at Freedom Weekend “The youngest I’ve ever seen was 12 years old,” said Sgt. John Bandemer, Before being sold by the hour, they investigator with the St. Paul Police Deare coerced or kidnapped, drugged and partment’s human trafficking unit who beaten then “seasoned” by gang-rape will speak at Freedom Weekend, Feb. 16and marketed 17 in Dakota online as “willCounty. ing to do anySponsored “There are children being thing” in seedy sold to be raped several times by three lohotel rooms cal churches a day. For me, that’s a crisis – member across the na— Hosanna! worth rising up and facing.” tion, state and Kingdom Justice in Lakeville, in Dakota International County. Outreach in Some sex trafficking victims are not Burnsville and Community of Hope old enough to drive, but are used by five, in Rosemount — organizers hope the 10 or even 20 men daily, their bodies sold shocking evil that defines human trafby traffickers they believe love them or ficking in all its forms will strengthen a stay with because they are paralyzed by See CRISIS, 10A fear and threats. by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK

Michael Monroe at Frozen Apple The North Shore-based acoustic artist is bringing his sunny blend of folk, jazz and reggae to Apple Valley’s winter concert series this Saturday. Page 19A

SPORTS

Christie Schultz

After the rapes, Janine Montgomery found comfort in a long bath. At 13, locked behind the door of her parent’s Edina bathroom, the running water and music drowned out her sobs. “I’d been so traumatized by so much sexual abuse, that was how I’d always coped even as a little girl,” said Montgomery, now an Eagan resident and founder of New Beginnings, a Burnsville antitrafficking ministry. Montgomery will share how Photo submitted she was forced Human trafficking is into human trafnot a profession anyone ficking Saturday, chooses. Feb. 16, at Hosanna! Church, Lakeville, one of three Dakota County churches sponsoring Freedom Weekend to educate the community about sex and labor trafficking. Montgomery had been secretly molested by babysitters since she was 3; at 8, an adult family friend had raped her before her parents moved to Minnesota when she was 10. Like most victims, Montgomery never told her parents until years later, quietly plagued with low self-esteem and misplaced self-blame. In junior high, another 13 year-old girl befriended her, but within months became overbearing, angered if Montgomery talkSee SURVIVORS, 10A

A new chapter Beekeeping not allowed Regional in Burnsville, council says chamber president plans to slow down in Wisconsin Wide-open fight for section title Several local teams figure to be in the hunt when the Section 3AA girls hockey playoffs start next week. Page 12A

ONLINE To receive a feed of breaking news stories, follow us at twitter.com/ SunThisweek.

by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK

After planting her roots in Burnsville 30 years ago and establishing herself as a community leader, Ruthe Batulis is looking to start a new chapter in her life in Wisconsin. The 62-year-old and her husband, Lee, plan to sell their Burnsville home and move into their lakefront cabin in Spooner, Wis. after Batulis steps down in April as president

of Dakota County Re g i o n a l Chamber of Commerce. “Things are going Batulis great at the chamber,” Batulis said. “But it’s time for me to slow down my life and hit the reset button.” With her three sons grown and the chamber running smoothly, Batulis said she felt the timing was right to move to the sleepy town of Spooner. Batulis came to the DCR Chamber after gaining experience at both the See BATULIS, 8A

by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK

It’s not just honey that piqued Rich Hardegger’s interest in backyard beekeeping. The Burnsville resident is intrigued by the science of it. “Working with them is just as fascinating as getting the honey,” said Hardegger, who took a University of Minnesota course on beekeeping last winter. “Learning how they function as a colony is very fascinating.” While some cities around the country would allow it, Hardegger won’t

be putting an apiary in his yard any time soon. The City Council rejected Hardegger’s request that Burnsville consider ordinance changes to allow beekeeping. Council members, who reached consensus on the matter at a Jan. 25 work session, feared public backlash against the idea. “There are people who are afraid of bees and allergic to bees and oh, my,” Mayor Elizabeth Kautz said. “The problem is the perception with the public,” Council Member Mary Sherry said. “That

would be a real problem.” Beekeeping might be acceptable on the larger residential lots in semirural southwest Burnsville, Council Member Dan Kealey said. Hardegger, who lives on Melody Lane in the Skyline neighborhood, doesn’t own such a lot. Informed of the council’s response, the 20-year resident said he accepted the council’s verdict. “They understand that there would be a PR aspect to do this and that could take a lot of energy,” See BEES, 8A

TV parts seller now in city’s largest industrial building

Discuss stories with us at facebook.com/ SunThisweek

Was once Our Own Hardware headquarters by John Gessner

INDEX

SUN THISWEEK

Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Legal Notices . . . . . . . 11A Sports . . . . . . . . . 12A-13A Announcements . . . . . 14A Classifieds . . . . . . 16A-17A

General Information 952-894-1111 Distribution 952-846-2070 Display Advertising 952-846-2011 Classified Advertising 952-846-2000

A seller of TV parts is now occupying nearly three-quarters of Burnsville’s largest industrial building. ShopJimmy.com moved in late December to the former Our Own Hardware building at 2300 W. Highway 13. The company is leasing 289,000 square feet of space in the 422,600-square-foot building, which has struggled with vacancies over the years. “We are definitely excited to have

them here,” said Jenni Faulkner, Burnsville’s community development director. The 42-year-old building north of 13 and west of Interstate 35W was originally the corporate headquarters and a distribution center for Our Own Hardware. The co-op hardware chain, which once had a reported 900 stores, merged in 1998 with Indiana-based Hardware Wholesalers. Operations were moved from the Burnsville building, which is Photo by Rick Orndorf now owned by Chicago-based First In- ShopJimmy.com, which sells TV parts, now occupies nearly three-fourths of the former Our Own Hardware See BUILDING, 8A building at 2300 W. Highway 13 in Burnsville.

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2A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Winners named for 2013 Exceptional Businesswomen Celebration will be Tuesday, March 5, in Eagan by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK

Eleven women will be honored with the 2013 Exceptional Businesswomen Award during a recognition ceremony and breakfast Tuesday, March 5, at Lost Spur Event Center and Golf Course in Eagan.

This year’s winners in the fourth class of Exceptional Businesswomen are: • Sharon Hoffman Avent, Smead Manufacturing Company president and CEO, Hastings; • Ruthe Batulis, Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce president;

• Catherine Byers Breet, ARBEZ Inc. owner, Eagan; • Jeanne Hutter, Lakeville Convention & Visitors Bureau director; • Rosealee Lee, Dakota County Technical College hospitality faculty member, Rosemount; • Debbie McConnell,

Medi-Car Auto Repair owner, Rosemount; • Patti McDonald, McDonald Eye Care Associates business administrator, Lakeville; • Susan McGaughey, Valley Natural Foods general manager, Burnsville; • Kristina Murto, Ensemble Creative & Mar-

Integrity. Honesty. Respect. Service.

Lakeview Bank is pleased to announce its seventh annual

.GICE[ #YCTF This award honors members of our community who exhibit the core values embraced by Lakeview Bank. Through their personal and professional lives these people demonstrate integrity, honesty, respect, service, attitude and professionalism. Awards will be granted in three categories:

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secondary education.) (2 available)

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($1,000 contribution to a charitable organization of their choice.)

( $1,000 contribution to a charitable organization of their choice.)

If you know someone deserving recognition, please complete a nomination form available at Lakeview Bank and on-line at www.lakeview-bank.com. Nominations are due by February 8, 2013. Because it’s all about community

keting owner, Lakeville; • Linda Peterson, Beau Monde Salon owner, Burnsville; and • Stacey Stratton, True Talent Group president, Apple Valley. The award, which has been given by the Dakota County Tribune and Sun Thisweek since 2010, recognizes women who have distinguished themselves in Dakota County business and community efforts. This year’s group represents manufacturing, family-run small businesses, teachers, motivators, organizers, innovators and barrier breakers. Nominations were reviewed by a panel of judges from the Dakota County Tribune, Sun Thisweek and the Dakota County Technical College Foundation. The newspaper and the foundation are organizing the recognition program, which will include a special print edition of the Tribune profiling the winners and an awards breakfast. The event, which has previously been held in Lakeville, Apple Valley and Burnsville, will include guest speaker Coldwell Banker Burnet President Robin Peterson of Apple Valley and a chance to meet past and present Exceptional Businesswomen. A single ticket for the event costs $25. A table of eight may be purchased for $175. Tickets can be purchased online at www. SunThisweek.com/exceptional-businesswomen. Sponsorship packages are available by calling Mike Jetchick at (952) 846-2019. Past winners of the Exceptional Businesswomen award have been: Class of 2012: Sunny Bhakta, Comfort Inn and Budget Host Inn; Connie Braziel, Minnesota Zoo; Jamie Dahlen, Holiday Inn and Best Western Premier Nicollet Inn; Mi-

chele Engdahl, Thomson Reuters; Carrie Guarrero, Cornerstone Mortgage Company; Chris Holtan, Lancet Software; Peggy Johnson, Dakota Electric; Sheila Longie, Shred Right; Sona Mehring, CaringBridge; Terri Shepherd, Xact Resources Inc.; and Theresa Wise, Delta Airlines. Class of 2011: Mary Ajax, 360 Communities; Jan Beeson, Lily Wellness Inc.; Cheryl Caponi, Caponi Art Park and Learning Center; Jennifer Eisenhuth, Dr. Jennifer Eisenhuth Orthodontics; Elaine Grundhauser, One 2 One Marketing Inc.; JuliAnne Jonker, Jonker Portrait Gallery; Nicole Nogosek, Double N Equestrian Center; Wanda Oland, Rascal’s Apple Valley Bar & Grill; Nancy Quinnell, Hollstadt & Associates; Barbara Toombs, First State Bank of Rosemount; Janie Tutewohl, Janie’s Home Team and Market on Oak; Denise Vogt; Twin Cities Ballet & Ballet Royale MN; and Linda Young, Lucky’s 13 Pub. Class of 2010: LaDonna Boyd, Dakota Electric; Marie DeNicola; Mainstream Boutique; Jackie Fritz, Sterling State Bank; Holly Hewitt, Holly’s Centre Stage Dance; Rachel Hollstadt, Hollstadt and Associates; Kathy Klang, Cummings, Keegan and Co.; Beth Krehbiel; Fairview Ridges Hospital; Doris LaMott Hoel, Chateau Lamothe; Maggie Linvill, Linvill Properties; Annette Marquez, The Perfect Occasion; Amy Mayer, BI Consulting Group; Darlene Miller, Permac Industries; Deb Thomas, Partners in Excellence; Julia Thompson, TAGS Gymnastics; and Janelle Waldock, Blue Cross Blue Shield. Tad Johnson can be reached at tad.johnson@ecm-inc. com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

Workshop for small farm and acreage owners

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of their land. The course will begin with goal-setting and individual property inventory, then address soil, plant, water and animal basics. Registration is $200. Contact Mike Donnelly at (507) 332-6109 or donne099@umn.edu with questions. See http://z. umn.edu/2013lotl for the workshop brochure.

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University of Minnesota Extension will offer the “Living on the Land” workshop series from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursdays, March 7 to April 25, at the Northfield Community Resource Center. The eight-week course is designed to arm landowners with agricultural information to enable them to be good stewards

Mastering the Diamond Knights gh Baseball B Academy y Travel Baseball Club Tryouts Saturday, February 2, 2013 • 3–5pm Ages 12, 13 & 14 At the new Ames Baseball Facility Dakota County Technical College 1300 145th St. E., Rosemount, MN 55068 651-472-1029 The Knights Baseball Academy spring team is designed to prepare young players for their summer season. Our instructors are all college coaches with college and professional playing experience. Regardless of skill level, come to our free tryout and see what we have to offer.

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 3A

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Rep. Laurie Halverson, DFL-Eagan, talks about a bill that would create a grant program to fund spinal cord and traumatic brain injury research.

Bill would encourage medical advances Rep. Laurie Halverson is carrying measure to fund spinal cord, brain injury research by T.W. Budig SUN THISWEEK

Rep. Laurie Halverson, DFL-Eagan, who is carrying legislation to create a grant program to fund breakthrough research and treatment of spinal cord and traumatic brain injury, says this is more than just another bill to her. Since Halverson has a background as a caregiver for people with spinal cord injuries, the proposed Jablonski/Roderick Spinal Cord and Traumatic Brain Injury Grant Program is emotional. “It’s an issue very close to my heart,” Halverson said. Halverson and Sen. Jeff Hayden, DFL-Minneapolis, admit their legislation faces challenges. They have not identified a funding source for the $4 million a year they want the grant program funded, but they argue that the funding is out there. “When you look at the grand scheme of the budget, this will have a place in the discussion,” Halverson said. More than 10,000 Minnesotans sustain traumatic brain injuries a year, while some 300 suffer spinal cord injuries, according to legislation advocates. Injuries can happen to anyone, Halverson said. One happened to Gabe Roderick of Minneapolis. Roderick, who used to

play piano and still sings in a band, suffered a spinal cord injury close to five years ago while body surfing in Costa Rica on an exchange program. Roderick said he was injured when he dove too shallow. “The biggest thing I want back from this (advances in treatment) is my hands, my bladder, my bowels,” Roderick said. Getting ready in the morning takes two hours, he said. It would be wonderful to play the piano again, Roderick said. When people see someone in a wheelchair they often conclude the obvious — the person can’t walk, Gabe Roderick’s father, Matthew Roderick, said. But injuries to the spinal cord have a complex impact on the entire body, he said. The Rodericks have travelled the world seeking help for Gabe. “This is not some sort of escape,” Matthew Roderick said. It’s not an inability to deal with grief. Spinal cord injury research is on the brink of great advancements, Matthew Roderick is convinced. “This is not a pipe dream,” he said. Dr. Ann Parr, of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Minnesota, believes ongoing spinal and brain

injury research is showing great promise. She talks of transitional research — moving beyond basics into application. With spinal injuries, some of the “wires” in the spine can remain intact but lack cellular coatings, like a wire lacking plastic coating, Parr said, explaining her research. Parr is looking into ways of using cells taken from the injured person’s own body and using them to repair the “wires.” Advances in treatment may not translate into paralyzed people getting up and walking again, but it could mean regaining the use of some body functions. That’s a big thing, she explained. “Funding is very hard to come by,” Parr said. Halverson looks to getting more House members to sign onto her bill. Although no hearing has been scheduled, Halverson serves on the House Health and Human Services Finance Committee. That could help secure a hearing. The grant program also bears the name of another spinal cord injury victim, Jack Jablonski, a young man injured during a high school hockey game.

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4A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Opinion Gov. Dayton’s tax plan a major leap forward by Jeff Van Wychen SPECIAL TO SUN THISWEEK

For over a decade, the tax policy coming from the State Capitol has been giving rural and middle class Minnesotans the short end of the stick. New reforms proposed by Gov. Mark Dayton take a big step toward reversing these trends while also restoring fiscal sanity to the state budget. Taken as a whole, Dayton’s proposed reforms will increase tax fairness, adequately fund critical public investments, and solve the state’s budget deficit without shifts or accounting gimmicks. True to recent public pronouncements, the governor proposed a “fourth tier” income tax rate. The wealthiest 2 percent of Minnesotans will see a 2 percent tax rate increase on income in excess of $250,000 for married joint filers, $200,000 for heads of households, and $150,000 for single filers. This is the single most powerful element in the Dayton tax proposal in terms of reducing the regressive nature of Minnesota’s tax system. Currently, the wealthiest 2 percent of Minnesota households pay 20 percent less in state and local taxes per dollar of income than do middle-income households. After the governor’s proposed income tax increase (in isolation from all other proposed changes), the wealthiest

Guest Columnist

Jeff Van Wychen 2 percent will be paying about 8 percent less – definitely a major leap in the direction of tax fairness. At the same time, the fourth tier income tax increase will generate $1.1 billion in badly needed revenue. The governor’s proposal both expands the corporate income tax base while reducing the corporate income tax rate. The base broadening is accomplished by eliminating several inefficient tax preferences that were doing little to create new jobs and new economic activity, including foreign operating corporation provisions. He also proposes adopting an “economic substance test,” which would require that corporate transactions have a legitimate business purpose other than tax avoidance. The expansion of the corporate income tax base will be offset by a significant reduction in the corporate income tax rate from 9.8 percent to 8.4 percent, reducing the state corporate income tax rate rank from the fourth highest in the nation to 12th highest. Dayton’s corpo-

rate income tax reforms will level the playing field among businesses. The governor lowers the sales tax rate and broadens the sales tax base by eliminating many current exemptions, including the following. • Selected consumer goods and services, including clothing items over $100, over-the-counter drugs, digital goods, repair services (including auto repair), personal care and instruction services, and legal and accounting services. • Selected business services, including legal, accounting, computer, advertising, architecture, employment, specialized design, management consulting, and business support services. • Goods sold over the Internet through Minnesota-based affiliates. To offset the broader base, the sales tax rate will fall from 6.875 percent to 5.5 percent, thereby reducing Minnesota’s sales tax rank from seventh highest in the nation to 27th. As a result of this rate reduction, the tax on goods that are already taxable under current law – items ranging from school supplies and shampoo to hockey sticks and hula hoops – will fall by 20 percent. The Dayton sales tax proposal will generate a net revenue increase of $2.1 billion in the fiscal year 2014-15 biennium. Property tax relief has been a priority for rural communities in recent years

and Dayton’s budget provides it through a direct $500 property tax rebate to all homeowners in 2014. In addition, the Dayton budget provides for an annual $80 million (19 percent) increase in city Local Government Aid and an annual $40 million (24 percent) increase County Program Aid that partially replaces cuts to these two programs over the previous decade. Dayton’s budget will result in an aggregate statewide property tax reduction of nearly 10 percent. The $2 billion generated by Dayton’s tax plan will be sufficient to close the FY 2014-15 structural deficit of $1.1 billion while also providing revenue to fund investments in K-12 and higher education and other areas that have been allowed to languish over the last decade. The Dayton tax proposal is not perfect, but all things considered, it is the most comprehensive and thoughtful reform initiative since the turn of the century and represents a major move forward in terms of promoting tax fairness, revenue adequacy, and budget stability. Jeff Van Wychen is fellow and director of tax policy and analysis at MN2020, a nonpartisan, progressive think tank focusing on education, health care, transportation and economic development. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Eagan City Council, uphold open space zoning at Parkview by Christie Soderling SPECIAL TO SUN THISWEEK

It’s not too late to save Parkview Golf Course as open space. At its next meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 5, the Eagan City Council should take a careful look at the request to rezone the Parkview parcel to residential housing, and turn it down decisively. The thoughtful 2010 Comprehensive Plan is a blueprint for Eagan that guides zoning, and protects and values natural spaces and livability. The long-standing designation of Parkview Golf Course as Private Recreation, which is sustained in the plan, complements the surrounding area and is vital to the best interests of all Eagan residents. The housing development proposed for this site is inappropriate because of its density and location. Listed below are some of the detrimental effects this development would have on Eagan’s residents. Traffic – A city-approved traffic study documents that burdensome levels of traffic would flow in and out of the proposed development. The expected traffic volume has prompted the Dakota County Plat Commission to recommend a change to the Cliff Road median that would limit access to right in/right out turns only at Parkcliff Drive and Dunberry Lane, while allowing the proposed development to have a full access intersection.

Guest Columnist Traffic safety for the Parkcliff neighborhood would be seriously impaired by rerouting traffic and requiring U-turns on Cliff Road. In addition, the high traffic volume flowing from the proposed development through Fairway Hills would further burden the residents who already contend with excessive Ohmann Park sports traffic and have difficulty turning left onto Cliff and Pilot Knob Roads. Neighborhood traffic volumes would violate the Metropolitan Council’s recommended traffic parameters (see the Met Council’s 2030 Transportation Policy Plan). They would also violate common sense safety and community standards for everyone. Park Impacts – Both citizens and local officials have major concerns about the proposed development affecting users of Lebanon Hills Regional Park. There is no effective mature wooded buffer that would ensure that park visitors could maintain their sense of being in a place apart. This is a key value for park users, and if the proposed housing development is allowed, the county’s options for using adjacent park property would be restricted in order to preserve a desirable park experience. Only in its current configuration can the Comprehensive Plan

designation for this parcel complement Lebanon Hills Park. Water Quality – Eagan and Dakota County have successfully teamed up to improve water quality in this part of the city. The location at the top of the highest hill in Eagan means that any water issues cannot be localized to this parcel. No holding pond scenario can fully accommodate the vastly increased runoff from the paved surfaces of the proposed 177-home development, or the many contaminants that would inevitably accompany the runoff. These changes would push back the dramatic progress that has been made to protect our ground water resources and clean up our surface water. Recreation – Parkview Golf Course is the last 18-hole golf course in Eagan. With nearly 40,000 rounds played this past year, it is a viable and thriving business. Parkview successfully appeals to all ages and a variety of skill levels, supporting kids’ golf programs, local school teams and senior leagues. It is an asset that Eagan needs, uses, and deserves to keep. We should work together to explore every opportunity to allow Parkview to continue as a golf course. Park Dedication – This proposal, which removes 80 acres of open space, does not meet the minimum 10 percent park dedication for new developments. In the final plan, the developer did not

even include the four acres (5 percent) requested by the Advisory Parks Commission. This is a disservice to the greater community for whom the dedication requirement is an intended benefit. Property Values – The city has an obligation to its residents to maintain consistent public policy that allows those residents to make sound financial decisions. If this development were to proceed, well-documented data indicates that many Eagan property owners would lose value in their most valuable assets — their homes. Every resident should have the right to rely on reasonable expectations established by the Comprehensive Plan. Changing that plan without just cause violates those rights. The best way to serve the 64,000 residents of Eagan is to uphold the current Comprehensive Plan at Parkview Golf Course and protect this valuable open space that benefits us all. We ask the City Council to stand by its vision that values open space, clean water, and livability. By doing so, it will preserve opportunities of future generations to enjoy the well-balanced community we treasure today. Christie Soderling wrote this on behalf of the Parkview Coalition. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Letters Listen to the voters

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John Gessner | BURNSVILLE NEWS | 952-846-2031 | john.gessner@ecm-inc.com Jessica Harper | EAGAN NEWS | 952-846-2028 | jessica.harper@ecm-inc.com Andy Rogers | SPORTS | 952-846-2027 | andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com Mike Shaughnessy | SPORTS | 952-846-2030 | mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com Mike Jetchick | AD SALES | 952-846-2019 | mike.jetchick@ecm-inc.com Keith Anderson | DIRECTOR OF NEWS | 952-392-6847 | keith.anderson@ecm-inc.com MANAGING EDITORS | Tad Johnson | John Gessner PUBLISHER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Julian Andersen PRESIDENT . . . . . . . . . . . . .Marge Winkelman GENERAL MANAGER. . . . . . . . Jeffrey Coolman BURNSVILLE/DISTRICT 191 EDITOR . . John Gessner EAGAN/DISTRICT 196 EDITOR . . .Jessica Harper

THISWEEKEND EDITOR . PHOTO EDITOR . . . . . . SPORTS EDITORS . . . . ................. SALES MANAGER . . . . .

. . . . .

. . . . .

. . . . .

. . . .Andrew Miller . . . . Rick Orndorf . . . . .Andy Rogers Mike Shaughnessy . . . . Mike Jetchick

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the free doughnuts, oranges, strawberries and coffee. Hang on to your wallets, fellow Minnesotans. To the editor: I attended the budget The DFL is about to reinformation session at quest a few more of your Burnsville City Hall on dollars to fund Minnesota’s bulging government. Jan. 26. It must have been a DFL deal since there were TOM ANDERSON no Republican legislative Burnsville folks there. So much for working across the aisle. Focus on Supposedly the purpose of the meeting was education to listen to the voters. To the editor: The first hour-plus was An editorial about the spent showing folks how state of education in Minto make a simple budget nesota was startling. After presentation into an ex- years of legislators using tremely complex useless budget shifts to rob our presentation. I doubt if schools of needed funds, the majority of the folks our state ranks 29th among attending were impressed the 50 states for its graduby the endless charts and ation rate. Statistics also detailed budget junk. show we have one of the I was interested in what largest gaps between racial the legislators think needs groups for graduation. to be done to balance the At a Burnsville town budget. I only heard “raise hall meeting Saturday, Jan. the revenue” – no cuts – 26, to their credit, state just become much more Sen. Jim Carlson, and state efficient. Are you kidding Reps. Will Morgan and me? The government be- Sandra Masin pledged to come more efficient? safeguard the state’s eduOne fellow had some cation budget and work to really good questions but pass full-day kindergarten was cut off because he legislation, in light of data used up his three minutes. about the receptivity of I thought the purpose of young minds. The meeting the meeting was to listen itself was well-attended, to the voters. The only and provided the opporthings I found useful were tunity for comment by

supporters and critics of education. Teachers like me, who are beleaguered by classes of 40 and more students, welcome the promise of the legislators. A letter recently suggested more parents home-school their children. In theory this might give parents more input and control in their children’s lives but the number of parents able to live on a single income may be limited to begin with. Our state’s children deserve the best education we can give them, and scrimping on schools is not the way to achieve that goal. Investing in the development of our young people, has them flourish and our economy as well, all at the same time. LARRY KOENCK Eagan

Correction The Jan. 25 story “Planning Commission rejects Parkview plans” incorrectly stated that Christie Soderling lives in the Fairway Hills neighborhood. Soderling lives in the Parkcliff neighborhood. Both are near a proposed housing project on the current Parkview Golf Course property. Sun Thisweek regrets the error.

Letters to the editor policy Sun Thisweek welcomes letters to the editor. Submitted letters must be no more than 350 words. All letters must have the author’s phone number and address for verification purposes. Anonymous letters will not be accepted. Letters reflect the opinion of the author only. Sun Thisweek reserves the right to edit all letters. Submission of a letter does not guarantee publication.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 5A

Inclusion is special ed teacher’s mission Leanne Banks wins award in District 191

by Laura Adelmann

by John Gessner

SUN THISWEEK

SUN THISWEEK

Growing up in Herman, Minn., Leanne Banks was reminded by her parents to be helpful and tolerant with the special-needs children in their small town. “They set the right example for me,” said Banks, now a special education teacher in Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District 191. “I just sort of ran with it.” Banks is this year’s winner of the Inclusive Education Practices Award, begun last school year by the district’s Special Education Advisory Council. The first winner was Mark Riggs, a teacher, coach and student council adviser at Burnsville High School. Banks was nominated for the award by the mother of one of her seven students in the district’s junior high neurobiological disorders program, which is based at Eagle Ridge Junior High. The program is for students with diagnosed syndromes such as Asperger’s, who receive special education services under categories including autism spectrum disorders. “It means so much when it comes from a parent, because you work with them as a team concerning their student,” Banks said. Banks is “one of a kind” in helping students reach their potential, the parent wrote in nominating her. Banks, who started teaching in 1972, has been intrigued by autism-spectrum disorders since her college days, when little was known about them. “I like challenges,” she said. “It was a mystery. It’s been fun to really follow the research and get the worldwide perspective on it.” Her first teaching as-

Eagan resident, Lakeville teacher dies suddenly A kindergarten teacher who had taught in Lakeville schools for 24 years died suddenly Monday night. Maryjo Cummings, 59, was found by her mother in the kitchen of the Eagan home they shared at around 9:30 p.m., said Lakeville Area School District spokeswoman Linda Swanson. “It was natural causes and happened so suddenly,” Swanson said. “It was totally unexpected.” She said Cummings’ mother went into the kitchen after she heard a noise and found Maryjo unresponsive.

Photo by John Gessner

Leanne Banks, who teaches the junior high neurobiological disorders program in School District 191, is this year’s winner of the Inclusive Educational Practices award given by the district’s Special Education Advisory Council. signment was in New Prague, with junior high students with developmental and cognitive delays. An emphasis of her work was enabling students to join mainstream classes and the everyday fabric of school life. “I guess everything that I’ve done has been around inclusion with kids, getting them into the mainstream,” Banks said. She soon left teaching to raise a family and didn’t rejoin the profession until 1994, when she was hired by District 191. It was the second year of the district’s junior high neurobiological disorders program. “In the late ’60s, early ’70s, there was very little information out there about autism, and much of it was inaccurate,” Banks said. “So the ’90s was a good time to start back in.”

Banks’ seven students this year — six eighthgraders and a ninthgrader — are bussed from across the district to Eagle Ridge. They spend from two to four periods of the six-period day in her program. Banks teaches classes in social skills and study skills, as well as language arts and math. Her room — 1007 at Eagle Ridge — includes a partitioned privacy room and posters on the walls meant to help students recognize and self-regulate their reactions and behaviors in social situations. “Because social understanding is not easy for them,” Banks said, “we teach many of the social interactions. ... They perceive the world differently than what most of us do. That’s the way they’re made with their disorder.”

But most of the students she works with are of average or above-average academic ability, she said. “The students in this program are bright kids” who are academically competitive with mainstream peers, she said. Banks has been known to urge her students interested in school clubs to buddy up with another student from the program for fortification. “Our students with disabilities have a lot of talents, they have a lot to offer,” Banks said. “And they want to find their niche in life. They want to fit in and they want to have friends. They want to help other people.” John Gessner can be reached at john.gessner@ ecm-inc.com or facebook. com/sunthisweek.

Swanson said crisis teams were in the schools to help students cope with the news. Cummings had taught kindergartners at Christina Huddleston, Lake Marion and JFK elementary schools since 1989. She was single and had no children, and considered her students like her own. “Her kids were her world,” Swanson said. Funeral arrangements had not been finalized by the time this edition went to press. Laura Adelmann is at laura.adelmann@ecm-inc. com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

District 196 to face future budget issues by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK

Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan School District officials expect the district will need to consider making budget adjustments in the next two years. District 196 will face budget constraints beginning in the 2014-2015 school year when the district loses its one-time $3 million compensatory funding and $7 million in integration aid, said Jeff Solomon, finance director for District 196. With the loss of these funding sources, the district’s state funding will remain flat while expenses rise due to inflation, Solomon said. As a result, the district will need to make a $33.3 million adjustment to its budget. This could come through a referendum, increases in fees or program cuts, Solomon said. District officials and School Board members plan to meet later this

month to develop different scenarios. Although District 196 expects to face future budget issues, its financial picture in 2012-2013 is better than projected. The district’s total revenue for the school year is $296 million, which is nearly $6 million more than projected. This is part of the district’s recent savings trend. It saved $9 million during the 2011-2012 school year due to increased state aid and internal cost savings. “This is a testament to our discipline,” Solomon said. Much of the savings this year is in wages and salaries. Three years ago, the district laid off 107 teachers as a part of budget cuts. Others were let go as the district increased its student ratio and changed its middle school schedule. In the years following, the district negotiated contracts that lowered increases in salary schedules.

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6A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Missouri man sentenced Eagan credit union acquired by Affinity Plus to 30 days for fatal crash by Tad Johnson

by Jessica Harper

SUN THISWEEK

SUN THISWEEK

A 23-year-old Missouri man pleaded guilty on Jan. 23 to misdemeanor careless driving in connection with an Oct. 13, 2011, crash on Interstate 35W in Burnsville that killed two electricians who were working at a construction site along the roadway. Kirk Edward Deamos of Raymore, Mo., was sentenced to 30 days in jail, 200 hours of community work service and a fine of $100. Craig Carlson, 47, of Ramsey, and Ronald Rajkowski, 44, of St. Joseph, died as a result of the crash. Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom indicated that under current Minnesota law felony charges were not possible in this case because no alcohol or drugs were involved, gross negligence could not be proved and Deamos did not flee the scene of the crash. Deamos lost control of his 1998 Mitsubishi 3000 GT at approximately 12:33 p.m. Oct. 13 just south of the McAndrews Road overpass. It careened into the ditch, killing the electricians who were working for Egan Co., a subcontractor on

Oak Trust Credit Union in Eagan will soon be under new ownership. Affinity Plus Federal Credit Union recently acquired Oak Trust’s Eagan branch, which serves more than 4,300 members. The purchase is expected to close on June 30. Members will be able to access Oak Trust services for some time while Affinity awaits regulatory approval, according to a news release. Oak Trust is an Illinoisbased credit union with two locations: one in Villa Park, Ill., and one in Eagan. Affinity Plus members won’t be able to access their accounts or process transactions at the Eagan branch until the deal closes. “(The acquisition) will allow Affinity Plus the opportunity to serve new members and provide con-

Photo by Jessica Harper

Oak Trust Credit Union in Eagan was acquired this week by St. Paul-based Affinity Plus Federal Credit Union. Members will be able to access Oak Trust services for some time while Affinity awaits regulatory approval. venience for our members located in the south metro,” said Kyle Markland, president and CEO of Affinity. The St. Paul-based credit union is owned by more than 160,000 members throughout Minneso-

ta and has more than $1.6 billion in assets. Affinity has 26 locations, including eight metro branches. Jessica Harper is at jessica. harper@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

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from 70 mph to 60 because of cement barriers in place. The speed limit remained 70 in the area, which wasn’t a designated construction zone, according to the State Patrol. Deamos told the patrol that he wanted to disengage his cruise control while driving through the area and briefly looked down at his steering wheel to press the correct button. When he looked up, he thought he was too close to the temporary concrete barrier and steered right, braking at the same time, the complaint said. The car turned further right than he expected, so Deamos steered back to the left, “then back to the right again, all the while applying the brakes,” the complaint said. The car struck a pole and then continued to slide, striking the electricians. Traffic cameras showed that Deamos was traveling at the speed of surrounding traffic, and a witness said his car didn’t appear to be speeding, the complaint said. Tad Johnson is at tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com. John Gessner contributed to this report.

Man pleads guilty to raping Eagan girl by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK

A Minneapolis man faces up to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to raping a 5-yearold Eagan girl. Dennis Michael Roy, 44, pleaded guilty in Dakota County Court on Jan. 22 to first-degree criminal sexual conduct for the abuse of his young

relative. The girl and her mother told police in April 2011 that Roy engaged in numerous sexual acts with the girl in 2007 when she was 5 years old. Roy was arrested and charged in February 2012. His sentencing hearing is 8:30 a.m. March 22 in Hastings. Roy faces

a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison and a $40,000 fine. Roy’s criminal record includes one felony, one gross misdemeanor and two misdemeanors, all for domestic assault. Jessica Harper is at jessica. harper@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

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a project to extend the MnPASS toll lane system through Burnsville. Backstrom said in a press release that he has been attempting to increase the penalty for careless (negligent) driving resulting in death to a gross misdemeanor since 2007. “This is another tragic example of the need to have a law in place that deals with taking negligent risks while driving that reflect it is more serious to hit and kill a human being than it is to damage a mailbox,” Backstrom said. Backstrom, who extended his deepest sympathy to the families of Carlson and Rajkowski for their great loss, said he is pursuing adoption of such a law once again this year at the Minnesota Legislature. Deamos had left his home in Missouri at 4 a.m. Oct. 13 to visit his girlfriend in Collegeville, Minn. After being ticketed for speeding that morning in Iowa, Deamos said he used cruise control to stay within the speed limit, according to the criminal complaint. Approaching the area where his vehicle left the road, Deamos slowed

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 7A

Eagan man was lone occupant in vehicle that struck a wall on I-35E by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK

The condition of former Minnesota Senate GOP staffer Michael B. Brodkorb, 39, of Eagan, has improved, according to a statement released last Friday by the family through Regions Hospital, after he was taken to the hospital in critical condition after a Jan. 23 one-vehicle crash. The statement said the family thanks “everyone for their concern, warm thoughts and prayers.” The family also asked the media and the public to continue to respect its wishes for privacy. Brodkorb was driving a 2004 Subaru Forester northbound on Interstate 35E near Highway 13 in Mendota Heights at about 9:15 p.m. when it hit the wall at the walkway then came to rest against the jersey barrier, according to the State Patrol report. The report said he was not wearing a seatbelt, but the airbag in the car deployed. The State Patrol reported that alcohol was detected in Brodkorb’s system, but the report did not provide more details. Brodkorb was the sole occupant of the vehicle. Road conditions on the three-lane northbound section were described as dry at the time of crash. On the day of the crash, Brodkorb reposted a Tweet about a get-to-know-you party for the Minnesota Governmental Relations Council at the Amsterdam Bar and Grill in St. Paul. The State Patrol report said Brodkorb’s vehicle was totalled. Brodkorb has been at the center of attention after he admitted to an affair he had with former Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch, R-Buffalo, when he was her executive assistant. He lost his job in December 2011 one day after Koch resigned her leadership position over an “inappropriate relationship” with a staffer. Brodkorb filed a lawsuit July 23, 2012, against the Senate, state of Minnesota and Secretary of the Senate Cal

Michael Brodkorb Ludeman claiming gender discrimination as he says he was treated differently than female staffers who had affairs with male legislators. The lawsuit, which is pending, is seeking damages in excess of $500,000. Koch eventually resigned as majority leader and did not seek re-election to the Senate last fall. Brodkorb is credited with helping Senate Republicans two years ago break decades of Democratic control of the Minnesota Senate in a stunning takeover of the Senate by Republicans. But Senate Democratic leaders last election, though careful in their wording, cited the Brodkorb-Koch scandal as part of a perceived aura of mismanagement of the Senate voters found unsettling. A former Minnesota State Republican Party official, Brodkorb is known for his aggressive political style. He created the blog Minnesota Democrats Exposed, and after leaving the Senate, resumed political blogging. Last fall, in his blog, Brodkorb indicated he believed Republicans would keep control of the Senate. They did not. Legal bills stemming from Brodkorb’s ongoing suit has cost the state some $200,000, according to recent media reports. Brodkorb is a former Forest Lake resident and a 1992 graduate of Forest Lake High School.

Restaurant loses liquor license amid concerns Police calls, fire code violations detailed by city’s public safety officials by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK

The Apple Valley City Council last week denied renewal of a liquor license for Spoon Fusion Cuisine after public safety officials detailed a host of police incidents and fire code violations at the restaurant. The decision at the Jan. 24 council meeting could have dire consequences for the business, according to attorney Michael Padden, legal counsel for Spoon and its owners, husband and wife Kav Theng and Van Ngo. “The reality is, if that liquor license is not sustained, they really can’t sustain the business,” Padden told the council. In December, with Spoon’s one-year liquor license set to expire at the end of the year, the council granted the restaurant at 14871 Granada Ave. a provisional, one-month liquor license valid through the end of January. That temporary measure came after city police Chief Jon Rechtzigel and Fire Chief Nealon Thompson outlined their concerns regarding the restaurant. Rechtzigel reported to the council that since May of 2011 police have

responded to at least eight incidents that occurred during “hip hop” and nightclub-type events at Spoon that were organized not by Spoon’s owners but by outside event producers. At one such incident, Rechtzigel said, unlicensed “security guards” were observed carrying loaded handguns while consuming alcohol. At another, in October 2012, police responded to a riotlike scene involving 20-30 people and made several arrests. And last May, city police learned from the Minneapolis Police Department that a known criminal gang had planned a hip-hop event at Spoon. Thompson noted a total of 27 fire code violations at Spoon in the past two years. Among the repeat violations were obstructed exits and allowing crowds that exceeded the maximum occupancy of the building. In December, Padden told the council that Spoon’s owners had agreed to no longer have a nightclub format and would no longer host hiphop events. However, in January, as the council was mull-

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Tad Johnson can be reached at tad.johnson@ ecm-inc.com or facebook. com/sunthisweek. T.W. Budig contributed to this report.

Apple Valley woman dies in rollover crash A 35-year-old Apple Valley woman died at about 11:17 a.m. Jan. 23 when the vehicle she was driving east on Highway 13 rolled over and struck several vehicles at Rollx in Savage. Danielle L. Wesley was driving a 2012 Nissan Altima when it went off the road to the right, crossed the frontage road and struck six parked minivans at Rollx, a Savage company that makes vehicles adapted for people who use wheelchairs. Wesley was wearing a seatbelt and the airbag on her vehicle deployed. Road conditions on the two-lane street at the time of the crash were described as dry. —Tad Johnson

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events for the local Cambodian community. Spoon co-owner Van Ngo sent an email to Hamann-Roland on Jan. 22; the letter included a plea not to be denied a liquor license because of these events, many of which are fundraisers. “Mostly, we have Cambodian, Laos, Vietnamese, and Philippino communities rent out the venue to do fundraising party,” wrote Ngo, for whom English is a second language. “We provide them FREE place to help them earn money to help others.” Though a full liquor license was not granted by the council, Spoon still has options. One option is to apply for a beer and wine license through the city. Another is litigation. In a letter to the city attorney prior to the Jan. 24 meeting, Padden wrote that if the liquor license is not granted, Spoon’s owners are contemplating litigation against the city, though he “will not be representing them in that matter.” Andrew Miller can be reached at andrew.miller@ecm-inc. com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

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ing over whether to grant Spoon a longer-term liquor license, entertainment events scheduled for February and March at Spoon caught the attention of city officials. The city’s attorney, Sharon Hills, wrote an email to Padden on Jan. 22 regarding the advertised events. “The advertisements clearly evidence that these events are evening entertainment/night club events that you represented to City Council on December 13, 2012, that Spoon did not want or will not have at its establishment,” Hills wrote. “More importantly, these advertised events are plainly prohibited by the conditions of Spoon’s current one-month liquor license.” The council voted 3-2 to deny the liquor license at its meeting last week, a measure supported by council members John Bergman, Clint Hooppaw and Ruth Grendahl. Mayor Mary HamannRoland and Council Member Tom Goodwin voted no, suggesting that some of the recent concerns at the restaurant were rooted in cultural differences. Hamann-Roland noted that the advertised events at Spoon were cultural

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8A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

State revenue commissioner to speak in Burnsville Feb. 4 Minnesota Revenue Commissioner Myron Frans will speak about the state budget at an interfaith legislative advocacy event at 6 p.m. Monday, Feb. 4, at Mary, Mother of the Church, 3333 Cliff Road, Burnsville. Frans will outline the problems facing Minne-

BEES, from 1A said Hardegger, an environmental engineer with Barr Engineering Co. “It doesn’t take a lot of people opposing it to make it not worth the effort. But I tried.” Minnesota cities that allow beekeeping include Minneapolis, St. Paul, Roseville and Lindstrom, according to Hardegger. BUILDING, from 1A dustrial Realty Trust. “There have been different tenants in and out of there ever since, but I don’t think it has ever been fully occupied again,” said Skip Nienhaus, Burnsville’s economic development coordinator. BATULUS, from 1A Bloomington and Burnsville chambers of commerce. In 2005, the then Northern Dakota County Chamber expanded to include the former Farmington Area Chamber of Commerce, after which Batulis implemented a rebranding campaign that included a name change for the organization. Her new regional focus allowed the organization to think differently about its approach to chamber membership. Batulis implemented the dues pro-

sota’s budget landscape and the key points of Gov. Mark Dayton’s proposed budget, which includes plans for new revenue. In addition, Brian Rusche, executive director of the Joint Religious Legislative Coalition, will present JRLC’s legislative priorities

for the 2013 session, which include the Family Economic Security Act, affordable housing, and services for victims of human trafficking. He will connect these issues to the question of revenue in this budget year. The audience will have the opportunity to ask ques-

tions and will also participate in small group discussions and practice legislative advocacy skills such as writing letters to the editor and contacting their legislators. A light supper will be provided. Myron Frans

There may be more, “including those that allow it by virtue of not having an ordinance that disallows,” he wrote last May in a letter to City Manager Craig Ebeling. “But I did decide that I am not willing to endure the cost of traveling to keep a hive in another city where bees are allowed.” In Burnsville, the hangup is that bees are defined

by ordinance as rodents. Buildings and exterior properties are to be kept free of rodent “harborage and infestation,” city code says. Hardegger provided the city with a model ordinance from the Minnesota Hobby Beekeeping Association. It suggests requirements designed to keep the practice safe in popu-

lated areas. It would limit beekeeping to two colonies on lots of a half acre or smaller, with larger operations allowed on larger lots. It calls for “flyway barriers” for apiaries less than 25 feet from a property line and provides for city inspections and potential removal of noncompliant beekeeping operations. “I bump up against a

wooded area on one side of my property,” Hardegger said. “I thought I had a good setting for it. Most towns that allow this require that you get your neighbors’ OK on it.” Hardegger took a course on beekeeping in northern climates from the university’s entomology department. Bees “fascinate and inspire” and are critical to

humans’ food chain, but bee health is “failing for a variety of reasons,” Hardegger wrote in his letter to Ebeling. “Beekeepers are helping to reverse this trend and there is a growing interest in beekeeping as a hobby.”

The ShopJimmy.com deal was the largest industrial lease in a multitenant building in the Twin Cities last year, Finance & Commerce newspaper reported Dec. 12. The company had been operating out of two Bloomington locations and a third-party distribution center in Lino

Lakes, Finance & Commerce reported. “This is by far the largest warehouse I could find and it was a good location. It was a perfect fit for us, really,” founder and CEO Jimmy Vosika told the paper. Vosika started the rapidly growing company as a hobby in 2007. Today,

the e-commerce firm has 120 employees, including 50 temporary workers, Finance & Commerce reported. Vosika told the paper he expected revenue of nearly $18 million in 2012. The company sells TV parts harvested from sets damaged during manu-

facturer-to-retail shipping. It also buys parts directly from manufacturers and manufactures its own products. “We ship worldwide,” Vosika told Finance & Commerce. Last summer the company acquired a competitor, Naperville, Ill.-based Discount TV Parts, the paper reported.

Sun Thisweek was unable to reach Vosika for comment.

gram, Bundle Up, which provides members a customized approach to their membership investment. Batulis was also instrumental in a workforce development initiative that connects graduating students with employers to make their transition into the workforce easier. “She has a good sense of how to connect these groups,” said DCR Chamber Chair Michele Engdahl. Batulis’ time at the chamber didn’t come without challenges. Over the past few years, busi-

ness owners reduced their chamber membership to cut costs during the recession. At the same time, the DCR and other chambers were met with competition from new networking organizations. Despite these challenges, Batulis managed to keep the chamber strong, Engdahl said. “She did a good job helping them see the value in chamber membership,” she said. Though Batulis found this work to be rewarding, it put a lot of pressure on her and required

long hours. Batulis said she views her departure as an opportunity for her to slow down and for the chamber to gain new leadership. Though Engdahl is confident the chamber will find a strong replacement, she said she will miss the assets Batulis brought to the chamber. “One thing that is remarkable about Ruthe is her ability to find energy,” Engdahl said. Engdahl said she admires Batulis’ ability to meet chamber members for breakfast early in the morning, then run to afternoon meetings and then attend a chamber happy hour in the evening, yet never lose her

energy and enthusiasm. Though she looks forward to her new life in Spooner, Batulis said she will miss the many friends she has made at the DCR Chamber. “I’ve had such an interesting and wonderful time getting to know each chamber member and their business,” she said. It’s building these relationships that Batulis enjoyed most as president. “I love being able to meet people from a variety of perspectives,” she said. The move from the busy suburb of Burnsville to a rural town of just over 2,600 people will be great change of pace for a woman who is always on the go.

Although Batulis plans to slow down, her new life won’t be limited to relaxing by the lake. Batulis said she plans to become involved in her new community by volunteering at area schools, nonprofits and even its chamber of commerce. “I won’t be taking over the chamber as president or anything,” she said. “I’m retired from chamber work.” With more free time, Batulis plans to pursue her passion for art by painting and making pottery.

John Gessner can be reached at john.gessner@ ecm-inc.com or facebook. com/sunthisweek.

John Gessner can be reached at john.gessner@ ecm-inc.com or facebook. com/sunthisweek.

Jessica Harper is at jessica.harper@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

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tionist approach to every job and the extent of his skill set have made him one of the best craftsman in the Twin Cities. My other two sons run the painting end of the business and are also professionally trained Artists. Jeremiah attended the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and later studied under the mentorship of the nationally renowned portrait and fresco painter Mark Balma. David similarly was accepted into a full time master apprenticeship program at the young age of 16 at the highly respected Atelier Lack Studio. They followed in the family tradition of mastering a professional craft and skill which they have brought to our company. Between the two they offer 25 years of experience painting interior and exterior homes in the metro area with our family business. A&J Painting takes great pride in our ability to make a true and lasting impression on you. I can’t tell you how many letters and calls I have received over the years from customers who just wanted to share with me what a great job we did. We hope to have the opportunity to do so with you as well. We are only a call or e-mail away to offer you a free estimate of our professional services.

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 9A

Eagan teen drivers being recruited for safety study

Dakota County Public Health offers immunizations

Eagan has been selected as a recruitment location for a teen driver study being conducted by the University of Minnesota to understand how technology may be used to improve teen driver

Dakota County Public Health provides reduced-fee immunizations for eligible children and adults. Check www. dakotacounty.us (search “Vaccines”) or call (952) 891-7528 for eligibility guidelines and vaccine availability. February clinics are: • Tuesday, Feb. 12, by appointment only, Dakota County Western Service Center, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Suite 286, Apple Valley. • Thursday, Feb. 14, walk-in from 4 to 6 p.m., Dakota County Northern Service Center, 1 Mendota Road W., Suite 410, West St. Paul. • Tuesday, Feb. 26, by appointment only, Dakota County Western Service Center, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Suite 286, Apple Valley. For more information, call the Immunization Hotline at (952) 891-7999.

safety and to enhance parental involvement with their teens during the learning phase of driving. The university seeks to recruit 20 teen drivers from Eagan who currently have their driver’s

permit, will receive their provisional driver’s license between Feb. 1 and April 30, 2013, are age 16 at that time, and are able to begin the study within one month of their licensure start date.

As part of the study, teens will receive a free Samsung Galaxy S3 smartphone and monthly data, text and talk service plan for one year. Additionally, teens will receive a monthly $25 incentive

at the end of the yearlong study totaling $300. For more information, contact Nichole Morris at nlmorris@umn.edu or call (612) 624-4614.

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Arthritis treatment options are growing BY ROXI REJALI – CONTRIBUTING WRITER Tracy Kaczrowski was devastated when she couldn’t lift her baby out of his crib. The young mother’s hands were so bent, stiff and painful that she struggled to reach into the crib and hold him. “You want to hold your baby,” she said. “It was my first child. It just felt like I couldn’t fully be the mom I wanted to be because I was feeling, at the time, this very crippling disease.” The Dakota County resident was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis at age 28. The joint pain in her hands, knees and feet was crippling. Sometimes, it was so bad that she couldn’t button a shirt, zip a jacket or tie a shoelace. Her symptoms improved after she began taking

Enbrel, an injectable biologic drug designed to treat symptoms and reduce joint damage. While her fingers and toes still ache constantly, she’s learned to live with her chronic disease. Kaczrowski, 39, still remembers being stunned by her diagnosis. “It was mindboggling to me at first,” she said. “I always thought that arthritis was for senior citizens, the older generation.“ Like Kaczrowski, some people may be surprised to know that arthritis is not just a disease of old age. The Arthritis Foundation estimates that two-thirds of people with arthritis are under the age of 65, including 300,000 children. Arthritis is the most common cause of disability, government figures show. Twenty-two percent of American adults have been diagnosed with arthritis and 42 percent of those

been forced to limit their activities due to the disease. Arthritis is joint inflammation that can cause pain, swelling and stiffness in and around joints of the lower back, hips, knees, feet and hands. Forms of arthritis include osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, tendinitis, gout, lupus and fibromyalgia. Osteoarthritis, the most common form of arthritis, is a degenerative joint disease marked by the breakdown of joint cartilage. Risk factors are overuse, injury and the natural process of aging, said Dr. Hammad Bajwa, rheumatologist at Arthritis and Rheumatology Consultants in Edina. Treatments can include medication for pain control, cortisone injections, physical therapy and in severe cases, joint replacement surgery. Inflammatory arthritis

is caused by inflammation of synovium or lining of the joints. Examples are rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis. Causes are unknown, but they may involve a genetic predisposition triggered by environmental factors like stress or smoking, Bajwa said. It’s essential to diagnose and treat the disease early to prevent damage to joints and other parts of the body, Bajwa said. Left untreated, it can spread to eyes, skin and lungs. Drugs have been developed to slow disease progression. Examples are disease-modifying drugs and a new class of biologic drugs like Enbrel, which target inflammation in the joints. “These drugs make a big difference in patients’ lives,“ Bajwa said. “They feel much better. They can live a normal life and their joints can be protected.”

Some patients may benefit from a different treatment approach. At the Justin Kukowski Center in Burnsville and Chaska, therapies are designed to treat the mind and body holistically. Clients may have tried standard medical treatments for pain, but they haven’t worked or may cause side effects like confusion or sleep problems, said Alecia Viera, psychologist at the center. The center’s treatments include reiki and restorative yoga as well as nutritional counseling emphasizing an anti-inflammatory diet. Psychotherapy and social support offered by a holistic pain management group can help patients to manage stress and anxiety that often accompany pain, Viera said. Some patients become preoccupied with their pain, a process that can interfere with normal

activities like work and family life. “The mind catches on and amplifies the thoughts, which then creates your anxiety, frustration, irritability, and then the pain increases,” she said. “So the mind plays an integral role in how the person perceives the pain in a way and then what they do with it.” Clients are taught ways to reduce tension. Relaxation techniques include diaphragmatic breathing or deep breathing and guided imagery, which helps them envision light and warmth penetrating sore muscles and joints. “We cannot take the pain away,” she said. “If that’s a side effect from this, that’s fabulous. The goal is to provide strategies and a way to cope with it, a new life.”

Chronic pain can change life goals BY ROXI REJALI – CONTRIBUTING WRITER Sometimes, back pain or headache goes away with simple steps of rest, aspirin or ice packs. But some pain is longer lasting and can make life miserable. Chronic pain can make it difficult or impossible to work or to perform basic activities like walking or even holding a coffee cup. The list of pain treatments is growing. It includes medication, physical therapy, surgery, implantable devices like drug pumps and alternative therapies like acupuncture or hypnosis. Despite treatment, some people have run out of options. Those are the type of patients who come to the Chronic Pain Rehabilita-

tion Program at Courage Center in Golden Valley. Pain has overtaken their lives and interferes with their ability to function at work or at home, said Jay Tracy, licensed psychologist and physician assistant in the program. They may be physically weak, depressed and dependent on opioids for pain relief. “People don’t come here because something worked,” he said. “They come here because things didn’t work.” Patients have pain caused by work-related injuries, car accidents, arthritis, fibromyalgia or neuropathic pain caused by damaged nerves. Some patients have lost their jobs and livelihoods; others lose relationships as they withdraw from friends

and family. While continuing to pursue medical treatment for their pain, patients in the three-week program are encouraged to take proactive steps to accept their new situation and create new goals, Tracy said. That may include physical therapy, job counseling or training for a new career, or stress management techniques like yoga or biofeedback. It’s important to treat the depression and anxiety that often accompany chronic pain, Tracy said. Psychotherapy and the program’s social support can help patients regain a sense of control and function with more hope, despite their losses. “The goal is to get back to life, get back to their own life, as best as they can,” he said.

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CRISIS, from 1A growing local abolitionist movement. “This is, I think, the crisis of our generation,” said Christie Schultz of Burnsville, a core member of the Kingdom Justice group at Hosanna focused on human trafficking. “There are issues that every generation has to face — if you were growing up at this time, what did you do? — and I think this is ours. There are children being sold to be raped several times a day. For me, that’s a crisis worth rising up and facing.” Bandemer said human sex trafficking is proliferating locally, having moved from the streets to computers with explicit ads on sites like backpage. com. Some solicitations feature photos of scantilyclad females they claim are at least 18, but use terms like “sugar daddy” and “playmate” to indicate they are younger. Adri Carlson, an Eagan resident and leader of the Hosanna trafficking justice group, said some “johns” prefer children; others seek the disabled. The Department of Justice reports the average age most girls get involved in prostitution is 14 and some can be as young as 9; most are abuse victims before they are prostituted. Of the 300,000 American children involved in prostitution, most are teen girls, often runaways or “throwaways,” according to Ernie Allen, president and CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Within 48 hours of being homeless, youths will be propositioned, Carlson said. She sought leadership in the ministry after witnessing human trafficking when teaching English in South Korea for a year. “In Cambodia and poor countries like that, it’s considered like winning the jackpot if you have a girl, because you can sell her and get money from the traffickers,” Carlson said. She said she was horrified to find out sex and labor trafficking was also flourishing at home. “Minnesota is a big sourcing state as well as a transporter through state,” Carlson said. Source Annex, a Minneapolis anti-trafficking organization, found that 10 percent of the teens arrested for prostitution in Las Vegas are from Minnesota. Carlson said while most victims are enticed by “boyfriends” who coerce them with proclamations of love before drugging and selling them.

“ U s u a l l y, “We cannot they meet turn a blind somebody eye to the fact that is attracthat this hortive and treats rific crime is them nice,” happening in said Andy Ronour own comchak, a member munities,” Steof the Hosanna vens said. anti-trafficking Bandemer, group. “They the St. Paul run away or are officer, said a looking for a Justine Reisdorf trafficker was more exciting faces new stopped in lifestyle. Then, prostitution-related Lakeville this all of the sud- charges. summer and den they are had minors in addicted to drugs and his car that had been prosforced into prostitution- tituted earlier that day. type lifestyle.” Lakeville Police Chief Carlson said some high Tom Vonhof said his deschool girls are selling partment conducted unthemselves to make mon- dercover prostitution iney without their parents’ vestigations at the County knowledge. Road 70/I-35 truck stop “Here, we have quite an about seven years ago and epidemic of high schoolers made several arrests. thinking it’s cool, popular Following a recent and fun to go out during prostitution complaint class and make some mon- there, he said investigators ey,” Carlson said. conduced surveillance for Justine Alex Reisdorf several weeks but did not was 19 in 2007 when see any illegal activity. charged with running a The city passed an orprostitution ring of minor dinance last fall requiring high school girls out of the massage therapy centers Burnsville motel where she to be licensed after a man worked, advertising three reported being offered sex “party girls” on Craigslist. following a massage serShe pleaded guilty to vice at Pro Massage, foruse of an interstate facility merly located in the Laketo promote prostitution; ville Crossings mall. charges of sex trafficking Vonhof said it is great of a minor were dropped. that the community is raisReisdorf, now 24, was ing awareness of human again arrested in Sher- trafficking. burne County in Novem“Most people don’t reber for use of an interstate alize it’s going on,” Vonfacility to promote prosti- hof said, adding parents tution, and is being held should be diligent to monin the Renville County Jail itor their children’s online awaiting federal charges. and cell phone activity to Burnsville Police Chief keep them from falling vicEric Gieseke said some of- tim. ficers have received training regarding human traf- Event ficking, but have not had Freedom Weekend besituations of teenagers in gins at Hosanna Church, prostitution recently. 9600 163rd St. W., Lake“We’re going to con- ville, from 9 a.m. to 12:30 tinue to train about it and p.m. Saturday, Feb. 16, learn about it as an agen- where trafficking experts cy,” he said. will inform and discuss the The U.S. Justice De- horrors of human traffickpartment rates Minneap- ing around the world and olis-St. Paul 13th in the locally. nation for sex traffickInternational Out ing, and victims are often Reach Church, located on transported through the the north side of Destiny trucking industry, prosti- Christian Church at 12119 tuted at truck stops and 16th Ave. S., Burnsville, in motels, according to will present a day in the the nonprofit organization life of a trafficking vicTruckers against Human tim from 9:30 - 11:30 a.m. Trafficking. Sunday, Feb. 17. Ryan Hanson, 32 of The weekend wraps up Eagan, owns a cell phone at Community of Hope businesses in the Burns- Church, 14401 Biscayne ville Center and at a truck Ave. W., Rosemount, from stop south of the Twin Cit- 6 to 9 p.m. Feb. 17 with a ies where he said truckers showing of “Nefarious, openly talk about the cost Merchant of Souls,” a docfor bringing kidnapped umentary that exposes the women or girls to live in inside world of sex slavery, their trucks. including testimony from “They’re to provide survivors and a former sex services to the person trafficker. that brought them here,” For more information, Hanson said. “Many are go to www.freedomweekwhat I would consider sex endmn.com. slaves.” Ashley Stevens, a Da- Laura Adelmann is at kota County social work- laura.adelmann@ecm-inc. er, said she learned of sex com or facebook.com/suntrafficking when working thisweek. with local victims.

SURVIVORS, from 1A years old. “I was hit on from the beginning,” Montgomery ed to her other friends. “Melanie” (not her real said. “It made me very unname) coerced Montgom- comfortable.” When she tried to deery into meeting her “boyfriend” at Southdale Mall, cline an invitation to one but were instead met by a of their homes, Melagroup of older boys and nie grabbed her arm and men between 16 and 20 dragged her.

“The house was filled with men,” Montgomery said. Melanie’s “boyfriend” raped her, then threatened her family’s lives if she told anyone. “They knew where I See SURVIVORS, 11A

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SURVIVORS, from 10A lived,� Montgomery said. After Montgomery dropped hints to a close friend, Melanie and others hit and threatened her at school, eventually forcing Montgomery into a car and taking her to a park where she was gang raped. “That was their way of conditioning me,� Montgomery said. “From there things got a lot worse. They wanted me to be submissive and afraid to say anything.� Montgomery was soon ordered to sneak out of her parent’s house and older men picked her up for latenight drug-infused sex parties. Traffickers kept the money men paid to use her; she was plied with alcohol and drugs and kept in a bedroom while men filtered through before she was returned home. “I’d wash and get an hour or two of sleep before school,� Montgomery said. “That was the cycle for many years. Because of all the abuses, I hated myself. I also had to live a double life, because nobody could know what was going on.� Her family and teachers suspected there were problems, and she met with a school counselor frequently, but never told the truth of what was happening to her. By Montgomery’s senior year, she became trusted enough to be a drug runner and they stopped calling her for sex. At 16, she escaped from the gang’s control by simply becoming unavailable; eventually they just stopped calling, which she calls “a blessing from God.� Although she escaped the abuse, the mental damage was lasting and deep; she struggled with anorexia, cutting and depression. Tammy Mensink, 50, a Burnsville therapist who works with sexual abuse victims, said many go through post traumatic stress syndrome, struggle with feelings of worthlessness and many become promiscuous or develop eating disorders. “It’s very hard for them to seek help,� Mensink said. She became a therapist almost three years ago, after going through eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy (the same therapy is used for traumatized military members) for a rape she endured at age 11. An teenage neighbor boy offered to take her for a ride in his new car, but instead brought her to a corn field where he raped her. “I was extremely ashamed to tell anyone,� Mensink said, a common feeling among abuse victims. Like Mensink, Montgomery has worked to overcome her traumatic childhood and is now married with children.

Her ministry, New Beginnings, partners with churches and abolitionist groups to fight sex trafficking. “My story still happens today,� Montgomery said, and although there are no statistics, she said she has read blogs online that indicate sex trafficking is happening in Burnsville, Eagan and Lakeville. “I know teenagers that go to those specific schools, and they tell me that it’s happening in those schools,� Montgomery said. She said high school girls brag about their exploits online, sharing how much they made and describing “rainbow parties,� involving oral sex and lipstick. Adri Carlson, one of the Freedom Weekend organizers, said girls may start off selling services themselves, but then a trafficker finds them and takes control. Ashley Fladager, a senior at the School of Environmental Studies in Apple Valley, said one of her friends was working at clothing shop when a man approached her and promised her a modeling job in California. “Modeling has been her dream her whole life,� Fladager said. She went with him to California. “He tried to get her to do things,� Fladager said. “He was pawning her off on his friends, and when she wouldn’t do anything, he left her. She lived on the streets.� Her family brought her back to Minnesota. “For a while she just felt her family wouldn’t understand,� Fladager said. “She was ashamed of herself and afraid to ask for help.� Since learning about human trafficking, Fladager has become passion-

ate about educating others, and for her senior project is creating a nonprofit that will perform skits about trafficking in local schools. She is also making posters and will be presenting her project to the senior class. Her awareness of sex trafficking began while taking a mission trip. “The women we got to work with didn’t feel there was any other way,â€? Fladager said. “They felt pretty much helpless. ‌ They all had a huge burden on their shoulders. Their entire demeanor looked as though they were in chains and held down. Stuff like that catches my heart, the injustice people face.â€? Montgomery said parents can look for signs of abuse, including withdrawn behavior, weight loss, depression, cutting, a change in friends and not wanting to be close to people or being touched. “It’s not much different than being in an abused marriage,â€? Montgomery said. Sgt. John Bandemer, investigator the St. Paul Police Department’s human trafficking unit, also compared human trafficking to domestic violence but for a different reason. “We are where domestic violence advocates were 25 years ago,â€? he said. “We are (also) trying to get people to understand that (this) is a rampant problem in our community, and women are being victimized but never coming forward to say anything about it.â€? For help and information, contact the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at 1-888373-7888 or Breaking Free in St. Paul at (651) 6456557. Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

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12A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Sports Third-period burst does it for Eagan Wildcats boys hockey team sweeps season series from Burnsville by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK

Certain motivational tactics can be used only a few times before players’ eyes glaze and their faces take on a heard-it-all-before kind of look. Facing a one-goal deficit after two periods Tuesday night, Eagan boys hockey coach Mike Taylor had to reach into his briefcase for this one: challenge the team. “We challenged them to refuse to be denied these two points,” Taylor said later. “We told them, ‘We’re in a 17-minute hockey game. What are you going to do about it?’ ” It must have worked because the Wildcats played the third period as if they were shot out of a cannon. They scored five goals in the third period of a 7-3 victory over Burnsville at Eagan Civic Arena. Eagan swept the regular-season series against Burnsville

and stretched its lead in the South Suburban Conference to six points over Burnsville and Prior Lake. Defensemen Nick Wolff and Tommy Muck scored the tying and goahead goals in the third period, with goals by Josh Loew, Cullen Willox and Zach Glienke putting the game out of reach. Kyle Stebbing scored in each of the first two periods for the Wildcats (16-3-1 overall, 12-1 conference). “We tried to play pretty physical,” Glienke said. “I think maybe we wore them down in the first two periods and that helped us in the third.” As for what was said between the second and third periods, “that’s happened a few times this year,” Glienke said, “but usually we do a good job of motivating ourselves.” Eagan, ranked seventh in Class AA, won at Burnsville 4-2 on Dec. 18 in what Glienke said prob-

ably still is the Wildcats’ best overall effort. In the rematch, Taylor said Eagan had to throw several forechecking systems at the Blaze before finding one that worked. “We sent our wings in wide, but Janne (Kivihalme, Burnsville’s coach) saw that right away and had his kids start to cycle,” Taylor said. In the third period, Eagan kept Burnsville trapped in its own zone for long stretches and outshot the Blaze 18-6. “We just had a lot of time in their zone in the third period,” Taylor said. “I didn’t like the way we played in the first, and in the second Burnsville had a lot of time on the power play. But when we were down only 3-2 at the end of the second, I thought, ‘We’re OK now.’ ” Burnsville scored all Photo by Mike Shaughnessy three of its goals on power Burnsville’s Andy Schoen (left) and Eagan’s Will Peterson battle for the puck near the plays. Tyler Sheehy put the end boards during Tuesday night’s South Suburban Conference hockey game won by See HOCKEY, 15A Eagan 7-3.

Eagan set to defend section title Blaze optimistic Hockey playoffs start next week about section playoffs by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK

Eagan coach Tom Younghans is aware of all the scenarios that could affect seeding for the section girls hockey playoffs that begin next week. And while they’re not trivial, he wishes everybody could just get on with it already. “Let’s just drop the puck,” he said with a chuckle. At this point of the season, everybody’s anxious for the playoffs to start. Eagan entered the final week of the regular season with a good chance of earning the No. 1 seed in Section 3AA and was still alive in the South Suburban Conference race. Eagan played host to Burnsville on Thursday and will close the regular season at Prior Lake at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. “I can look ahead, and I’d like us to get the No. 1 seed,” Younghans said Tuesday morning. “But we’re trying to get the girls to think one shift, one period, one game at a time, and if we can get that kind of mindset, I think we’ll do well.” The Wildcats were on a four-game winning streak going into their meeting with Burnsville, but Younghans said he was looking for more consistency. “When we’ve played strong teams, we’ve played up to their level,”

Girls skaters seeking first state appearance in three years by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK

Photo by Mike Shaughnessy

Eagan’s Megan Wolfe (left) goes to the net while checked by Lakeville South’s Kalley Ravndalen during a South Suburban Conference girls hockey game last week. the coach said. “When we’ve played teams that haven’t won as much, we’ve done just enough to win. My challenge is to get them to play more consistently. Burnsville is going to be a tough battle for us, and then we’ll have Prior Lake on the road.” Burnsville (12-8-3) might have an argument for the No. 1 seed if it wins out this week. Otherwise, Eagan has the best overall record (14-8-1) in the section as well as the best record (7-0-1) against section opponents. Last week Eagan won home games against Lakeville South (4-3) and Rosemount (6-4). In each case, Younghans said, the Wildcats played well at

times, “but we’re trying to get 51 minutes (of solid play), not just 34.” Eagan scored three times in the second period against Lakeville South, which has Eagan High School’s all-time best girls hockey player (Natalie Darwitz) as its head coach and a former EHS head coach (Scott Darwitz) as an assistant. The Wildcats’ top line scored all six goals against Rosemount, led by senior Megan Wolfe with a hat trick and three assists. Shelby Williams had two goals and Brooke Madsen had a goal and assist. Wolfe has 40 points (23 goals, 17 assists) despite missing four games in December and January to

play for the U.S. team in the world Under-18 tournament. Wolfe, Madsen (34 points) and Williams (22) are the only Eagan players with more than 12 points. At the beginning of the season, Younghans moved Williams to the second line in search of more scoring balance but the coach has since put her back with Wolfe and Madsen. “It was OK” with Williams on the second line, Younghans said. “But we talked about it and decided to put them back together because they really work together well as a line.” See WILDCATS, 14A

Garnet Asmundson has tried to bring more intensity into the Burnsville girls hockey program, but at this time of the season he’s looking for smiles on the players’ faces. If they show up to the rink happy, that tells Asmundson they’re anxious for the season to continue rather than waiting for it to end. And with the Section 3AA playoffs starting next week, the smiles also tell the coach the players believe they have a chance to go to St. Paul for the state tournament. “It’s good to see the smiles,” said Asmundson, the Blaze’s first-year head coach. “But now we’ll see where we’re at. There’s a lot of parity in our section, and if we don’t play for 51 minutes we’re not going to get very far. “We’ll know pretty soon if I’ve done my job effectively.” Burnsville (13-8-2 overall) has been on a good run lately with five victories in its last seven games. That kept alive hope of earning the No. 1 seed in the section playoffs. To have a chance to get it, Burnsville needs victories over Ea-

gan (Thursday, after Sun Thisweek presstime) and Apple Valley (5 p.m. Saturday at home) in its final two regular-season games. “The girls have been doing a good job,” Asmundson said Tuesday. “Hopefully, that will continue. We’ll need to play well against Eagan because they’ve got some nice players. The last time we played Apple Valley (a 2-1 loss Jan. 3) we had 50 shots on goal and only scored once.” Even if the Blaze doesn’t get the No. 1 seed, it likely will play at home in the section quarterfinals Wednesday night. After starting 3-0-1, the Blaze went through a stretch in which it won once in eight games. Then things steadied for the Blaze, thanks in part to its all-junior first line of Lindsey Coleman, Briita Nelson and Paige Skaja, who were first, second and tied for fifth in scoring in the South Suburban Conference at the beginning of the week. Coleman had 42 points, Nelson 41 and Skaja 39. Junior defender Emma Wittchow had 22 points, but no other Burnsville See BLAZE, 15A

Notebook: Clendening named AVHS football coach by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK

Apple Valley High School stayed in-house to hire its next head football coach by appointing Chad Clendening to the position Tuesday. Clendening has been on the AVHS football staff since 2000 and has been defensive coordinator since 2009. He is a graduate of Apple Valley High School and Augsburg College and currently teaches physical education at Valley Middle School. He also is head wrestling coach at Valley Middle School and has been a lead coach in the AVHS conditioning program. Clendening replaces Mike Fritze, who retired from his teaching and coaching positions at AVHS in November. Several weeks ago, Fritze was named an assistant coach at the University of Minnesota-Crookston. In 2012, Apple Valley finished 8-3 and reached the state Class 5A quarterfinals before losing to eventual champion Totino-Grace. That was Apple Valley’s best record since 2006, and the 2013 team is expected to have as many as 80 juniors and seniors on the roster.

Junior national qualifiers Several Nordic skiers with local connections were named to the Midwest Junior National Team following the final qualifying race Sunday at Wirth Park in Minneapolis. Sonja Hedblom of Eagan High School and Vivian Hett of Burnsville High School made the J1 (under 18) girls team. In addition to skiing for the high school teams, both also compete for the Loppet Nordic Rac-

ing club program in Minneapolis. Eastview High School student Margie Freed is an alternate on the Midwest J2 (under 16) girls team. She also skis for Loppet Nordic Racing. Chris Parr, a 2011 Eagan High School graduate and student at the College of St. Scholastica, made the men’s under-20 team, as did Lakeville’s Ben Saxton, who won the state high school pursuit championship in 2012. Hedblom, Hett, Parr and Saxton have automatically qualified for the U.S. Ski Association Junior Nationals to be held March 7-17 in Fairbanks, Alaska.

Air Force appointment

Section Nordic meets

Border Battle

Once again, the dates and sites of local high school Nordic skiing meets are subject to change at a moment’s notice. The Section 1 meet, which includes Apple Valley, Eagan, Eastview, Rosemount, Lakeville North and Lakeville South, is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday at Troll Hollow in Dresser, Wis., with the first race at 10:30 a.m. However, if enough snow falls this week to maintain a trail at Valleywood Golf Course, the section meet would be held there. Burnsville will compete in the Section 3 meet, which remains scheduled for Tuesday at Theodore Wirth Park. The South Suburban Conference meet also had to be moved because of inadequate snow at the scheduled site, Battle Creek Park in St. Paul. It also went to Troll Hollow, which has a Nordic trail with artificial snow. The SSC meet was still in progress when this edition went to press.

Eagan High School senior Hannah Wilken accepted an appointment to the United States Air Force Academy on Monday. She will compete for the gymnastics team there while training to become an officer. Wilken is a Level 10 gymnast for TAGS South in Apple Valley. She qualified for the USA Gymnastics NIT Nationals in 2012 and placed seventh on uneven bars. Wilken was nominated for the appointment by Rep. John Kline. There were about 12,000 applicants this year for Air Force Academy appointments, of which 1,200 were accepted. Apple Valley will play Madison (Wis.) in the final game of the Border Battle, an event pairing boys basketball teams from Minnesota and Wisconsin. The event, organized by Breakdown Sports USA, will be Saturday at Prior Lake High School. The Apple Valley-Madison Memorial game will be at 8:30 p.m. Prior Lake, Osseo, De La Salle, Hopkins, Eden Prairie and Mahtomedi are the other Minnesota teams playing. Action starts at 11 a.m. Apple Valley was 14-1 going into this week’s play and was ranked second in Class 4A. Madison Memorial was 15-1 and was ranked second in Division 1, Wisconsin’s largest enrollment class. For more information about the event, visit www. breakdownsportsusa.com. Mike Shaughnessy is at mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 13A

WILDCATS, from 13A The Wildcats are hoping players such as Sarah Jackson, Rachel Wall, Kelsey Walsh and Lexi Wilson can score some key goals in the playoffs on the second and third lines. Emily Goff is one of the leaders on defense and also has seven goals. The Wildcats went into the season with three goaltenders who had never stopped a shot in a varsity game. Sophie Lundquist (3.24 goals-against average, .863 save percentage) has taken over the starting job. Eagan was 12-2-1 in South Suburban Conference games going into this week’s play and trailed Lakeville North (13-2) by one point. Eagan needs someone to beat or tie North, which has won nine in a row, to have a chance to finish first in the league. “It’d be nice, but right now we’re looking at trying to get to the state tournament,” Younghans said. Burnsville, Apple Valley, Eastview, Rosemount, Hastings, East Ridge, Park of Cottage Grove and Woodbury are the other teams in Section 3AA, where Eagan is defending champion. A playin game between the eighth and ninth seeds will be Monday, with the semifinals scheduled for Wednesday at the home sites of the higher-seeded teams. The semifinals (Feb. 9) and championship game (Feb. 13) will be at Veterans Memorial Community Center in Inver Grove Heights.

Power move

2013 Spring Sports Registrations WHEN:

Saturday, February 9th Thursday, February 21st

9am-Noon 6pm-9pm

LOCATION: BURNSVILLE CITY HALL FOR:

Boys In House and Traveling Baseball Girls In House & Traveling Slowpitch Softball Girls Traveling Fastpitch Softball Boys and Girls Recreation Soccer Boys and Girls Lacrosse Register Online: www.bacsports.org **See individual sports @ www.bacsports.org (online registrations 2/1/2013 fees, start dates and sign-up deadlines)**

Photo by Rick Orndorf

Eagan forward Kelli Wickard pulls down a rebound in the Wildcats’ 71-51 loss to Eastview in South Suburban Conference girls basketball Friday night. Eagan is 11-7 overall and 5-6 in the conference after losing to Bloomington Jefferson 63-57 on Tuesday.

Off to the races Eastview guard Madison Guebert charges upcourt with Eagan’s Raissa Hansen (left) and Sammie Delzotto in pursuit during a South Suburban Conference girls basketball game Friday night. Guebert scored 30 points as Eastview won 71-51 and remained in second place in the conference, one game behind Bloomington Kennedy. Photo by Rick Orndorf

Mike Shaughnessy is at mike.shaughnessy@ ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

Why wonder where your valuable jewelry goes when you drop it off to be repaired!

Registration is open to students currently in grades K-12 who live in Burnsville/Savage or attend school within the boundaries of District 191, to include sections of Eagan/Apple Valley & St. Johns Catholic School. For more information, contact the BAC hotline (952) 895-4425. Or visit the website at www.bacsports.org

Save time and gas.

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Walk-In Registration Held At:

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Baseball Baseball Lacrosse Lacrosse Soccer Softball Softball Tennis Tennis Track Volleyball Wrestling

VAA Fieldhouse 14599 Hayes Road Apple Valley 952-432-5618

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DANCE TEAM

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Amanda Webster is a four year varsity dancer athlete and captain. She has led her team to move up from 7th in conference to 4th in conference in one season. The team has placed higher at competitions this season than the previous three seasons. At the latest South Invitational, Amanda led her team to placing 2nd in both high kick and jazz. She has done this while also being a member of Student Council, National Honors Society, DECA and maintaining a GPA of 4.019.

Zach has had an incredible stretch of high level play in the nets for the Eastview Varsity Boys Hockey team. He is currently ranked the #2 goalie in the state statistically with an 8-2 record, a goals against average of 1.82 and a save percentage of 94.6%. Most recently he has huge games against some of the state’s best teams. He made 64 saves in a 4-2 win against #7 ranked Eagan, 30 saves in a 1-0 shutout victory over #14 Prior Lake and 24 saves in a 2-1 loss at #10 Burnsville on Saturday. Zach and his teammates are looking forward to a good stretch run in the South Suburban Conference and the Section 3AA playoffs.

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Congratulations to this week’s highlighted athletes! Each will receive a $10 Gift Certificate to Paragon Odyssey 15 in Burnsville, courtesy of Paragon Odyssey 15 and Sun Thisweek.


14A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Career connections

Photo by Rick Orndorf

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Burnsville police officers Leslie Perry and Mark Hetherington answered questions from students at the 19th annual Burnsville High School Career Fair, held Jan. 28 in the school cafeteria. Representatives from business, government and community organizations were on hand with information on their respective fields and answers to students’ and parents’ questions.

BLAZE, from 13A player had more than nine. Asmundson said that doesn’t bother him. “The job of our second and third lines is not to get scored on,� he said. “If you want to play, you have to play strong defense. “I’ve got three girls playing on the same line who have a lot of points. If you’re playing us, you can’t try to shut down one player. You have to shut down three, and that’s tough to do.� Lauren Bench, a ninthgrader in her second year as the starting goalie, has a 2.06 goals-against average.

HOCKEY, from 13A Blaze in front 2:51 into the game. In the second, with the Blaze trailing by a goal, Nick DiGregorio and Teemu Kivihalme scored 3:25 apart to put their team back in front. Tenth-ranked Burnsville is 11-8-1 overall and 9-3 in the South Suburban. All of the Blaze’s losses are to teams in the

Burnsville last played in the state tournament three years ago. So far this year the Blaze is 5-3-1 against teams from its section, and all three losses were by one goal. Eagan, Apple Valley, Hastings, East Ridge, Park of Cottage Grove, Eastview, Rosemount and Woodbury also are in Section 3AA. Of that group, only Eagan (17th) is in the Let’s Play Hockey Class AA top 20. Mike Shaughnessy is at mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc. com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

top 12 of the Let’s Play Hockey state Class AA rankings. Burnsville returns to action Saturday at 3 p.m. at home against Apple Valley. Eagan plays at Prior Lake on Saturday, also at 3 p.m. Mike Shaughnessy is at mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc. com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

Action under the hoop

To submit an announcement

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Forms for birth, engagement, wedding, anniversary and obituaries announcements are available at our office and online at www. thisweeklive.com (click on “Announcements� and then “Send Announcement�). Completed forms may be e-mailed to class. t h i s w e e k @ e c m - i n c. com or mailed to Sun Thisweek Newspapers, 15322 Galaxie Ave., Suite 219, Apple Valley, MN 55124. If you are submitting a photograph along with your announcement, please only submit photographs for which you have the right to permit Sun Thisweek Newspapers to use and publish. Deadline for announcements is 4 p.m. Tuesday. A fee of $50 will be charged for the first 5 inches and $10 per inch thereafter. They will run in all editions of Sun Thisweek Newspapers. Photos may be picked up at the office within 60 days or returned by mail if a self-addressed, stamped envelope is provided.

24-hour road condition information

1-800-542-0220 Minnesota Department of Transportation

Photo by Mike Shaughnessy

Eagan guard Ryan Johnson goes to the basket as Eastview’s Ben Oberfeld defends during a South Suburban Conference boys basketball game last Friday. Johnson scored 13 points in the Wildcats’ 41-40 victory.

Burnsville Athletic Club Girls In House Slow-Pitch Softball Registrations On-line registrations are currently being taken for BAC Girls In House Slow-pitch Softball @ www.bacsports.org. Our commitment and mission for the 2013 program is to provide a fun and educational environment that promotes the best possible experience for young girls in the community. Registration is open to girls currently in grades K-12 who live in Burnsville/Eagan/Savage/St. Johns Catholic School; including players in neighboring communities that do not currently have a Slow-pitch program for girls grades 6-12.

For more information, contact the BAC hotline (952) 895-4425, Or visit our website @ www.bacsports.org.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 15A

Celebrate

Valentine’s Day

With Us!

F E B RUA RY 7–2 4 , 2 013

Sweetheart Movie Deal

$25 Per Couple

Includes 2 Movie Tickets, your choice of Large Popcorn or Two Candies, and Two Beverages (Medium Soft Drink, House Wine, or Domestic Beer)

A Sweet Night Out Includes 2 Premier* or General Admission Movie Tickets, your choice of two entrees and one dessert, and two Beverages (Medium Soft Drink, House Wine, Domestic Beer or Well Cocktail) *Must be 21 or older for Odyssey Premier admission

$50 Per Couple

On Sale Now In Theater or Online

Redeem at the Box Office February 7 th –24 th Subject to availability. Upcharges apply for 3D, ExtremeScreen, Diamond Row, and DBOX.

14401 BURNHAVEN DRIVE, BURNSVILLE

(952) 892.3456 FOR TICKETS & SHOWTIMES, VISIT PARAGONTHEATERS.COM


16A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

AU TO • E M P LOY M E N T • R E A L E S TAT E Ads may be placed Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at Apple Valley location and 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at Eden Prairie location. DEADLINE: Display: Tuesday 4 pm* Line Ads: Wednesday 12 pm* * Earlier on holiday weeks

GARAGE$42 SALES Package

$40 Package

• 3 line ad • 2 week run • FREE Garage Sale Kit* • Metro Wide Coverage – 318,554 homes

BY PHONE: 952-846-2000 or 952-392-6888 952-846-2010 or 952-941-5431

BY MAIL:

15322 Galaxie Ave., Ste. 219 Apple Valley, MN 55124

Visit our Apple Valley or Eden Prairie office to place your Classified ad, make a payment, or pick up your Garage Sale Kit.

WEBSITE: EMAIL:

INDEX

$50

• 3 lines, Runs for 13 weeks, choose 2 zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • For one item priced under $2500,

• 3 lines, 4 weeks, All zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • Private party only

MERCHANDISE MOVER $44 • 3 lines, 4 weeks, All zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • Merchandise $151.00 or more

price must be in ad, you must call every fourth week to renew. Private party ads only. • Includes mnsun.com website • Maximum of 13 weeks

3900-3990 4000-4600 9000-9450 5000-6500 7000-8499 9500-9900

SERVICES & POLICIES

Friday, Monday, and Call-ins: $7.00 per ad, 1 week, 1 zone One ad per customer per week. Additional zones are $7.00. Three line maximum. Price must be in ad.

HOW TO PAY

1000-1090 1500-1590 2000-2700 2700-2760 3700-3840

Sun Thisweek reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first day of the publication, and Sun Thisweek will be responsible for no more than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from the publication or omission of an advertisement.

FREE CLASSIFIEDS: One Item for Sale, $100 or Less. Mail or FAX in only Tues. - Thurs.

sunthisweek.com or minnlocal.com class.thisweek@ecm-inc.com

• Announcements • Professional Services • Business Services • Education • Merchandise & Leisure Time • Animals • Family Care • Employment • Rentals • Real Estate • Automotive

13 WEEK RUN!

$44

Additional Lines $10.00 Ads will also appear on sunthisweek & minnlocal.com each Wednesday by 9:00 a.m.

IN PERSON:

BUSINESS SERVICES

TRANSPORTATION

• 3 line ad • 2 week run • FREE Garage Sale Kit* • Metro Wide Coverage – 318,554 homes • Rain Insurance – we will re-run your ad up to two weeks FREE if your sale is rained out.

*Garage Sale Kits can be picked up at the Eden Prairie office.

10917 Valley View Road Eden Prairie, MN 55344

952-846-2000 or 952-392-6888

TO PLACE YOUR AD

BY FAX:

classifieds

We gladly accept VISA, American Express, Mastercard, Discover, personal checks, and cash.

$175 to $3,500

FOR JUNK OR WRECKED CARS & TRUCKS

It could be yours. Call for details. 952-392-6862

651-460-6166 www.vikingautosalvage.com If you want to drink that's your business... if you want to STOP that's ours.

South Suburban Alanon

1060

Notices & Information

Mondays 7pm-8:30pm

Ebenezer Ridges Care Center

Call

13820 Community Drive Burnsville, MN 55337 Mixed, Wheelchair Accessible. For more information: Contact Scott 612-759-5407 or Marty 612-701-5345

Alcoholics Anonymous Minneapolis: 952-922-0880 St. Paul: 651-227-5502

Notices & Information

1060

Find a meeting:

www.aastpaul.org www.aaminneapolis.org

Burnsville Lakeville

A Vision for You-AA

Recovery International Self-help organization offers a proven method to combat depression, fears, panic attacks anger, perfectionism, worry, sleeplessness, anxiety, tenseness, etc. Groups meet weekly in many locations. Voluntary contributions.

Thursdays 7:30 PM A closed, mixed meeting at Grace United Methodist Church East Frontage Road of I 35 across from Buck Hill - Burnsville

EAGAN/

BURNSVILLE/SAVAGE

AA

3600 Kennebec Drive (2 nd Floor) Eagan, MN (Off of Hwy 13)

Meeting Schedule •Sundays 6:30pm (Men's) & 8pm (Mixed) •Mondays 6:30pm (Mixed)

•Tuesdays 6:30pm & 8pm (Mixed)

•Wednesdays Noon (Mixed)

•Thursdays 6:30pm

Alanon & 8pm (Mixed)

•Fridays 6:30pm (Mixed) & 8pm (Mixed)

•Saturdays 10am

Open, mixed ACA & 8pm (Open) Speaker Meeting

Questions? 653-253-9163

Dona: 612-824-5773

www.LowSelfHelp Systems.org

Professional Services

1500

1505

TURN YOUR CAR INTO CASH!

Selling or Buying Gold & Silver

* WANTED *

US Coins, Currency Proofs, Mint Sets, Collections, Gold, Estates & Jewelry Will Travel. 27 yrs exp Cash! Dick 612-986-2566

Lew Electric: Resid & Comm. Service, Service Upgrades, Remodels. Old or New Constr. Free Ests. Bonded/Insured Lic#CA05011 612-801-5364

TEAM ELECTRIC

www.teamelectricmn.com Lic/ins/bonded Res/Com All Jobs...All Sizes Free Est 952-758-7585 10% Off w/ad

Above All Hardwood Floors Installation•Sanding•Finishing “We Now Install Carpet, Tile & Vinyl.” Call 952-440-WOOD (9663)

Escobar Hardwood Floors Carpet & Ceramic Tile We offer professional services for your wood floors! Installs/Repair Sand/Refinish Free Ests Ins'd Mbr: BBB Professional w/12 yrs exp.

952-292-2349

5% Discount With Ad SANDING – REFINISHING Roy's Sanding Service Since 1951 CALL 952-888-9070

Garage Door

2260

GARAGE DOORS & OPENERS

Repair /Replace /Reasonable Lifetime Warranty on All Spring Changes www.expertdoor.com

651-457-7776

6-10-15-20 Yd Dumpsters

1510

Building & Remodeling

2050

Building & Remodeling

2050

ARTHUR THEYSON CONSTRUCTION

WORK GUARANTEED

TheysonConstruction.com

• Window & Door $27,800 Replacement 16’x16’ room • Additions • Roofs addition • Basements Call for details • Garages 28 yrs. exp. • Decks • Siding Insurance Claims

952-894-6226 / 612-239-3181

FREE ESTIMATES Insured, Bonded & Licensed No. 20011251

Lic. BC609967

Roofing • Siding • Windows 952-882-8888 www.capstonebros.com

Accountants & Tax Svcs

Accounting & Tax Solutions. Stop by for a FREE consultation. 952.985.1040 Mark J Haglund CPA LLC 2438 117th St E. Suite 201 Burnsville 952-646-2444

Business Services

2000

2050

Building & Remodeling

EGRESS WINDOWS FREE EST YEAR ROUND INS/LIC 651-777-5044

Most contractors who offer to perform home improvement work are required to have a state license. For information on state licensing and to check a contractor's license status, contact the MN Dept. of Labor and Industry at 651-284-5069 or www.dli.mn.gov

2070

Cabinetry & Counters

Expert Cabinet/Trim & Window-Wood Refinishing

Very cost-effective, beautiful results! Usually, windows only need the planes replaced Free Estimates. Call or Text! St. Christopher Decorating

952-451-7151

2100

Cement, Masonry, Waterproofing

The Original

2100

Cement, Masonry, Waterproofing

QUALITY SERVICE Since 1949

Concrete & Waterproofing, Inc. We Specialize In:

The Origina The Origina

• Buckling Walls • Foundation Repair • Wet Basement Repair The Origina • Wall Resurfacing • Garage/Basement Floors Licensed

(MN# BC215366) •

READERS’ CHOICE

Awards www.MinnLocal.com

Carpet & Vinyl

0%Hassles 100%Satisfaction All Carpet & Vinyl Services Restretch Repair Replace www.allcarpetmn.com

952-898-4444

2100

Cement, Masonry, Waterproofing

Free Estimates

SWEEP • INSP. • REPAIR

Full Time • Professional Ser. Certified Registered / Insured 29 Yrs Exp. Mike 651-699-3373

londonairechimney service.com

2170

Drywall

3-D Drywall Services 36 yrs-Hang • Tape • Spray • Painting 651-324-4725 PearsonDrywall.com 35 yrs taping, ceiling repair, remodel 952-200-6303 PINNACLE DRYWALL *Hang *Tape *Texture*Sand Quality Guar. Ins. 612-644-1879

2180

Electric Repairs

DAGGETT ELECTRIC

• Gen. Help & Lic. Elec. • Low By-The-Hour Rates 651-815-2316 Lic EA006385 JNH Electric 612-743-7922

(952) 431- 9970 MN Lic. BC096834

Status Contracting, Inc.

Kitchens & Baths, Lower Level Remodels. Decks. Wall/Ceiling Repair/Texture Tile, Carpentry, Carpet, Painting & Flooring #BC679426

MDH Lead Supervisor

Dale 952-941-8896 office 612-554-2112 cell “Soon To Be Your Favorite Contractor!”

Statuscontractinginc.com 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

952-451-3792

R.A.M. CONSTRUCTION Any & All Home Repairs

Concrete Dumpster Service Carpentry Baths & Tile Fencing Windows Gutters Water/Fire Damage Doors Lic•Bond•Ins Visa Accepted

All Home Repairs! Excell Remodeling, LLC Interior & Exterior Work One Call Does it All! Call Bob 612-702-8237 or Dave 612-481-7258

SPRING SPECIAL Professional, Reliable. Plumbing, Painting, Fans, Flooring, Faucets, Ceiling & Caulking, Window Insul Kits & General Repairs.

Call 612-327-0100

Dakota Home Improvement Kitchens, Baths, Bsmts Drywall, Tile & Flooring CC's accept'd 952-270-1895 Direct Solutions LLC For all your home remodeling & repair needs. Ests. Derrick 952-237-2750 Gary's Trim Carpentry Home Repair, LLC Free Estimates, Insured. All Jobs Welcome 612-644-1153

Bonded Insured Free Ests Resid, Comm & Service. Old/New Const, Remodels Serv Upgrades. Lic#CA06197

Full Interior & Exterior www.ktpainting.com

Housecleaning

Dirty Deeds Cleaning Come home and feel the difference. 952-210-8303 Enjoy doing housecleaning for elderly people & other chores req., good ref's. Jamie 651-528-3351

Painting

2420

“Superior Painting” Int/Ext. $ Lowest Prices $ 612-516-7633

*A and K PAINTING*

Int./Ext Painting/Staining & texturing. Free Est. 952-474-6258 Ins/Bond Major Credit Cards Accepted

3 Interior Rooms/$250 Wallpaper Removal. Drywall Repair. Cabinet Enameling and Staining. 30 yrs exp. Steve 763-545-0506

4 Seasons Painting

Free Ests.

Int/Ext Comm/Res 952-997-6888 10% Off

952-500-1088

Quality Residential

Tear-offs & New Construction Siding & Gutters Over 18 yrs exp. Free est. Rodney Oldenburg

612-210-5267 952-443-9957 Lic #BC156835 • Insured

LLC

l Interior / Exterior Painting l Texturing l Drywall l Deck Staining l Epoxy Resin Garage Floors l Fine Finishing & Enameling Fully Insured Free Estimates

PRE-HOLIDAY DISCOUNT 15% OFF! Plumbing

2470

A RENEW PLUMBING •Drain Cleaning •Repairs •Remodeling •Lic# 060881-PM Bond/Ins 952-884-9495 SAVE MONEY - Competent master plumber needs work. Lic#M3869 Jason 952-891-2490

Roofs, Siding, & Gutters

A Family Operated Business

We Take Care of Insurance Claims Offering the Best Extended Manufacturers Warranty

2570

Snow Removal

SNOW PLOWING

Commercial & Residential Dependable – Insured - Exp'd LSC Construction Svcs, Inc Mbr: Better Business Bureau

Free Ests. 952-890-2403

2620

Tree Service

20+ Yrs Experience Roggenbuck Tree Care, LLC. Licensed-Bonded-Insured Call (612)636-1442 952-883-0671 Mbr: BBB Tree Removal Silver Fox Services

3150

2 Years Dried

Oak & Birch - $120 4' x 8' - Delivered. Quantity discounts.

763-238-5254

Ideal Firewood

Dry Oak & Oak Mixed 4' x 8 'x 16” - $120; or 2 for $220 Free Delivery

952-881-2122 763-381-1269

3160

Furnishings

QN. PILLOWTOP SET

New In Plastic!! $150 MUST SELL!! 763-360-3829 Bedroom Set oak Q sz contemp $400. DR set, oak, leaf 4 lthr chrs $400 952-926-3206

Pine trestle table, veneer top, 32x48, 2 benches, $250, Cash Only. 952-926-4425 Solid Oak Rnd DR Tbl, 2 lvs., 6 chrs. Exc cond! Asking $350/BO. 612-868-2597 Stanley DR Set, 9 pcs., Exc cond., $500. 2 sofas – $40/BO. Desk - $30/BO. 952-540-6419

3320

Snowblowers & Equipment

YardMan Snowblower 5.5 hp, elec. start, like new! $350/BO. 952-884-4280

3700

Leisure

3720

Boats, New & Used

Al's Seasonal Services

Tree Trimming & Removal Insured Call 763-498-9249 We Accept Credit Cards

2660

Window Cleaning

Chrysler 17ft, fiberglass open bow-tri hull, Good Cond. *New price $875 612-825-6283

Wall Paper Removal INTERIOR EXTERIOR

3900

Roofing/Tear-offs •Ben's Painting•

New Construction

Paint/Stain/Ceilings. We

No Subcontractors Used.

Will meet or beat prices! Int/Ext, Drywall Repair accept Visa/MC/Discvr.

952-432-2605 DAVE'S PAINTING and WALLPAPERING Int/Ext • Free Est • 23 Yrs Will meet or beat any price! Lic/Ins Visa/MC 952-469-6800 Jasper Painting • 20 yrs exp. • Int/Ext. • Free ests. • Refs avl. Lisa 651-208-7838

BBB Free Est. MC/Visa

Lic/Ins. 952-891-8586 Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs – Snow & Ice Removal - 30 Yrs Exp Insured - Lic#20126880 John Haley #1 Roofer, LLC. Call 952-925-6156

3000

3050

Merchandise Boutiques/Craft Shows & Gifts

Flea Market – Feb. 2 (9-4) Richfield Lutheran Church - 60 th & Nicollet For info: 612-861-2265

3090

Check us out online at

sunthisweek.com

Window Cleaning 651-646-4000

Painting

2420

A Fresh Look, Inc.

Cemetery Lots

3950

Herd of beef cows, black, bred Charolais, vacc., pored and wormed, big cows. Call 320-220-5501

4000

4100

5000

5200

Estate Sales

Lic. #BC626700

Contact Jeanne at

952-392-6875

Deadline: Mondays at 3pm

2620

Credit Cards Accepted

Rentals Townhouse For Rent

LV Compl. Remod. 3 BR, 2 BA, TH. Bkgrd Credit chk req. pd for by applicant. $1350 W/D 612-490-6292

Tree Service

Visit www.sunthisweek.com for updated news.

2620

Tree Service

612-825-7316/952-934-4128 www.afreshlookinc.com Roofs, Siding, & Gutters

2510

Roofs, Siding, & Gutters

2510

Senior Discounts

General Contractors Storm Damage Restoration Roofing ■ siding ■ windows Established 1984

(763) 550-0043 (952) 476-7601 (651) 221-2600

$$$$$$$$ Sell your items in Sun•Thisweek Classifieds

Powerwashing

Child Care

To Place Your Sale Ad

Interior/Exterior Painting by the Pros Bonded & Insured Free Est. • Senior Discounts

Turn your unneeded items in to

952-846-2000

Family Care

AV Opngs: Mimi's International Daycare. Military Discount 651-242-8566

For Sale: 4 Lots Glenhaven Good Samaritan Garden

3130

Horses & Livestock

Black & Red beef cows, bred black, Ivemec poured on vacc., $1325 each. Call 320-746-1405.

Bloomington Cemetery Plots priced at $1200 each Call 952-884-0868

$6,500/BO. 320-243-3165

Agriculture/ Animals/Pets

Great Service Affordable Prices

Fix It • Replace It • Upgrade It Any Size Project Over 40 yrs experience Ron 612-221-9480 Licensed • Insured

2490

Fireplace & Firewood

FIREWOOD

HANDYMAN

Home Tune Up

2110

gardnerconcrete@integra.net

0 Stress! 110% Satisfaction!

John 952-882-0775

Chimney & FP Cleaning

•FREE ESTIMATES •INSURED

651-452-4802

Ceiling & Wall Textures

CONCRETE & MASONARY

Steps, Walks, Drives, Patios Chimney Repair. No job to Sm. Lic/Bond/Ins

Locally owned & operated

Roofs, Siding, & Gutters

H20 Damage – Plaster Repair

Carpentry, Remodeling, Repair & Painting Services. I love to do it all! 612-220-1565

Bonded • Insured

612-824-2769 952-929-3224 Family Owned & Operated

2090

651-815-4147

Painting & Drywall

Handyperson

2510

Why Wait Roofing LLC

2510

Don't Want It - We Haul It! Call Scott 952-890-9461

2290 Sun•Classifieds 952-846-2000

Specializing in residential & commercial repairs & maintenance. Fully insured. Lic#20639540

Hauling

2280

Painting

2420

Jack of All Trades Handyman

2310

Flooring & Tile

2230

Handyperson

2290

Electric Repairs

2180

3500 Vicksburg Lane Suite 400-351 P l y m o u t h , M N 5 5 4 4 7 Lic # 6793

2490

Powerwashing

2490

Powerwashing

BOB’s Commercial and residential pressure washing Decks strip & seal, roof washing, house washing, concrete cleaning and staining. Full exterior washing.

Our job is to make you look good!

763-225-6200

www.sparklewashcmn.com

3970

Pets

3970

Pets

BENNY LOVES YOUR COMPANY! Benny was tied up to a dog house and rescued! He is now very interested in having someone with him 100% of time or he goes crazy. Great with other dogs. Benny is a 2-yearold shedless mix about 24 lbs. Great with kids. Call Dave or Deb at 651-3304372 to learn more. $275. All our dogs are spayed/ neutered unless too young. See all of them at www. last-hope.org or come to the Apple Valley Petco from 11-3 this Saturday to see all our dogs and cats looking for homes!

Last Hope, Inc. (651) 463-8747


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 17A

5400

Houses For Rent

Farmington, 2BR, 1BA, $1125/mo Large yard. Extra space 2 car det. Garage. Avail Now. 651-398-5473

5500

Rental Information

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.� Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; pregnant women; and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

6400

Diesel Truck Mechanic Randy's Environmental Services has an immediate opening for a qualified diesel ,heavy truck mechanic at our Burnsville location. Must have Experience! Randy's Environmental Services is one of the largest, fastest growing,independently owned waste companies in the country. Great Working Conditions! Call Now! 612-919-2303 Ask for Paul 12620 Vincent Ave S. Burnsville, MN EOE - jobs @RandysSanitation.com

FT Infant Teacher

9100

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Immediately hiring for a large food production company located in Shakopee 1st shift starting at 5am no weekends. Pay is $8/ hr. No experience needed!! Apply today at

Now Hiring!

Warehouse/Packaging/ Assembly All shifts. Entry level to skilled positions available. Email resume to:

jobs@awardstaffing.com or call (952)924-9000 for more info.

952-895-0423

RENTS START AT 1 BR $690 – 2BR $790 $150 OFF FIRST MONTHS RENT Rosewood Manor 14599 Cimarron Ave. Rosemount 651-423-2299

Real Estate

RECEPTIONIST 8:00am - 5:00pm, Monday-Friday Perform receptionist/switchboard responsibilities which includes operating a switchboard console, greeting visitors, various administrative duties and maintaining records. Position requires telecommunications skills and general office experience. Please send resume to Boise Building Material 8714 215th Street W., Lakeville, MN 55044 or fax to 952-469-2692. Boise is an Equal Opportunity Employer

Expanding Our Team Park Chrysler Jeep has pioneered a unique, customer-focused TEAM SALES approach and is in need of expanding its sales staff. This is a great opportunity for individuals with good people skills willing to learn Park’s way of treating customers. Paid on-the-job training plus paid vacations, 401K and full-benefits program. No Sunday hours. A good driving record is a must. This one hour Park Chrysler Jeep seminar can start your new career. Call (888) 865-5490 to pre- register.

SEMINAR DATE

Tuesday, Feb. 12th, 6:30 PM

8100

Manufactured Homes

Apple Valley/Lakeville border: 3 BR, many updates pets OK. $29,900 financing avl. 612-581-3833

All seminars are held at Park Chrysler Jeep 1408 Highway 13 Burnsville, MN 55337 If unable to attend, send resume to Mike Choe. mchoe@parkchryslerjeep.com

School Nurse Kinderberry Hill Child Development Center is accepting resumes for a school nurse for our Eden Prairie location. Ideal candidate will have a RN license. Keep your evenings and weekends free. Hours are m-f from 7-1. For more information or to schedule an interview call Heidi @ 952-345-8012 or Email resume to edenprairie@ kinderberryhill.com. E.O.E.

Education

9020

Employment Business Opps & Info

Advertising Disclaimer Because we are unable to check all ads that are placed in our media, we encourage you to be safe and be careful before giving out any important information such as credit card numbers or social security numbers, when responding to any ad.

Health Care

9050

ENCORE Senior Home Care

Hourly & Live-In Caregivers Needed! Great positions in Prior Lake and Eden Prairie 952-426-1371 or employment@encorecare.com

PCAs

Regency Home HealthCare is seeking both part time/full time; day, evening and night PCA's to care for clients in their homes throughout the metro. Seeking help in Mendota Heights, Apple Valley, and Burnsville. Responsible for all client cares, light housekeeping and food prep. Must be compassionate, reliable, have great attention to detail, excellent problem solving and communication skills. If interested please submit online application at www.regencyhhc.com or fax resume attn: Stephanie @ 651-488-4656 EOE. Social Services

Nurse Consultant Burnsville Thomas Allen Inc.

Hours: Part time 4.5 hours per week, 1 site contact per week, available by phone to Program Manager and LPN, Must be a MN Licensed Registered Nurse, Prefer previous experience working with individuals with developmental disabilities and/or mental health issues. Must have valid MN Driver's Lic, clean record, Apply to: SandyQ@ thomasalleninc.com www.thomasalleninc.com

9100

NOREX, Inc., North America’s leading IT peer networking resource is adding to our sales team. Candidates with high moral integrity, strong work ethic, self-reliance and excellent communication skills are encouraged to apply. No IT or sales background necessary. College degree and 5 year work history preferred. • Salary + Commission & Benefits • Calling on IT Executives • High Income potential • Professional Prior Lake office • 25% travel to exclusive territory • Full time Position

Community Community Editor Editor Sun Newspapers (ECM Sun Group), publishers of community newspapers in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, has an opening for a community editor. The editor will be based in the Osseo office & cover the city of Eden Prairie. The beat includes general reporting, government news, features, religion, seniors, & business news. Quark or InDesign experience preferred. The successful candidate will have a degree in journalism or related area, & experience reporting for a newspaper in an internship or professionally. Entry level, full time with benefits, including 401(k).

Mail or e-mail cover letter & writing clips to: Dan Callahan, Sun Newspapers 33 2nd St. N.E., Box 280 Osseo MN 55369 E-mail applications may be sent to dan.callahan@ecm-inc.com. ECM Publishers, Inc. is a drug-free workplace.

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Help Wanted/ Full Time

Machine Operators, Apple Valley, Uponor makes homes and commercial environments comfortable, safe and healthy. These positions set-up, adjust and operate extrusion or packaging equipment. Email your resume for prompt consideration human.resources@uponor.com

6(1' 5(680(6 72

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Toddler Teacher Kinderberry Hill Child Development Center in Eden Prairie is accepting resumes for a Toddler Teacher. Candidates must be teacher qualified under MN Rule 3 guidelines. We offer 401K, health, dental and life insurance plus more. For more information or to schedule an interview call Heidi @ 952-345-8012 or email resume to edenprairie@ kinderberryhill.com. E.O.E.

PLUMBER

Roto-Rooter is looking for a licensed plumber to work evenings & weekends. Requirements are, full size white van and desire to make money. We are extremely busy on the weekends. $1000 bonus will be paid 30 days after on the job. No layoffs, year round work! Medical, Dental, 401K & paid vacation. Email resume to: James.Michael@rrsc.com 651-638-9990 ext 7

SilverCrest Properties seeks an experienced Director of Marketing for Kingsley Shores Senior Living in Lakeville, MN, scheduled to open September of 2013. The position, expected to begin March of 2013, will be responsible for all prelease/start-up marketing, and sales activities for Kingsley Shores. Must have at least 2 years of hands-on sales experience working in a senior living community or a related field. Exceptional networking skills, ability to work independently and to be a self-starter, a must. Must be computer literate on Microsoft Office products. Experience with lead tracking programs is desirable. Please send resumes to: Jack Collins, SilverCrest Properties, 5402 Parkdale Drive, Suite 301, St. Louis Park, MN 55416 or email to jcollins@ silvercrestproperties.com

9200

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Part Time OfďŹ ce

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866) 453-6204

We have a new position for someone to learn and assist the licensing and titling functions for the dealership & including some general office duties. The position is part-time to begin with, but could expand to full time in the future. Hours are flexible between 8am - 4:30pm daily. Send resume to ccarlson@ dodgeofburnsville.com Or stop in and ask for an application.

Help Wanted/ Part Time

$$$ $200 - $10,000 $$$ Junkers & Repairables More if Saleable. MN Licensed

www.crosstownauto.net

612-861-3020 651-645-7715

Must have good manual dexterity skills. Our dental laboratory is looking for a career minded individual who is SELF MOTIVATED and willing to learn. No experience necessary.

$225+ for most Vehicles Free Towing 651-769-0857

Help Wanted/ Part Time

9200

Church Custodian, Savage, PT, responsible for cleaning & general maintenance. 10-15 hours/week; flexible per church schedule. Send resume to Glendale UMC, 13550 Glendale Rd, Savage MN 55378 glendalechurch@msn.com Office Administrator, Burnsville, Duties include: Set up and manage file systems, organize multiple projects, assist field managers. Answer phones, customer service. Qualifications: Capable of organizing and manging multiple projects, computer skills. Knowledge of quickbooks and mac systems a plus. Understanding of bookeeping and accounting basics. 15-20 hrs per week to start, flex. schedule. Sumbit Resume to Bob@ronel.net, or Fax to 952-895-1914 Home-Based B2B

www.infotechmarketing.com

B2B interviewing & selling services exp pref. No home calling. 15+hrs/ wk avail from your home. College a plus. Strong verbal & written skills. M-F days. $14-$20/hr. Call 952-252-6000

Houseaides FT & PT

Community Assisted Living is looking for FT & PT Houseaides to work in our residential homes taking care of 5/6 Seniors in Farmington & Apple Valley. We have openings on Evenings and Awake Overnights. All shifts include E/O weekend. Previous direct care experience is preferred. Call 952-440-3955 for application address. PT CNA/Exp PCA Wanted: AM & PM hrs. Burnsville. 952-807-5102 PT Help Wanted: Donna's Cleaning 1-2 days / wk. Transp. necess. So. Metro 952-892-6102

LPN / RN – 40 hrs/PP We are looking for a creative, energetic professional with excellent communication, interpersonal and leadership skills who has a passion for serving seniors. Candidate must have a current MN license & CPR.

NAR – PT/FT We are seeking nursing assistants to serve in our LTC facility. Duties include assisting residents with their daily grooming, dining needs, ambulating and transferring residents. Candidates must be on the Minnesota Registry.

Classified Misc./ Network Ads

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (888) 686-1704

Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District Visit www.isd191.org for more details

may be for you.

Please call 651-463-3785 or visit our website at www. dexteritydental.com for an application.

9999

Substitute Teachers

9600

Trinity Campus

9999

Classified Misc./ Network Ads

$294 DAILY! MAILING POSTCARDS! Guaranteed Legit Opportunity! www.ThePostcardGuru.com NOW ACCEPTING! ZNZ Referral Agents! $20$60/Hour! www.FreeJobPosition.com BIG PAYCHECKS! Paid Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com $500 To $1000 WEEKLY MAILING OUR BROCHURES and POSTCARDS + ONLINE DATA ENTRY WORK. PT/FT. Genuine Opportunity! No Experience Needed! www.EasyPayWork.com **ATTENTION: JOB SEEKERS!** MAKE MONEY! Mailing Postcards! www.ThePostcardGuru.com NOW ACCEPTING! ZNZ Referral Agents! $20-$60/Hour! www.FreeJobPosition.com HOME WORKERS Make Money Using Your PC! www.SuperCashDaily.com EARN BIG PAYCHECKS Paid Every Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com **OLD GUITARS WANTED! ** Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker. Prairie State, D'Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1920's thru 1980's. TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877) 818-0783 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 800-488-0386 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com Attention Joint & Muscle Pain Sufferers: Clinically proven allnatural supplement helps reduce pain and enhance mobility. Call 888-474-8936 to try Hydraflexin RISK-FREE for 90 days. ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get FREE CPAP Replacement Supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 866993-5043 Bundle & Save on your CABLE, INTERNET PHONE, AND MORE. High Speed Internet starting at less than $20/mo. CALL NOW! 800-2914159 CA$H PAID - UP TO $28/BOX for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. SE HABLA ESPANOL. Emma 1-888-776-7771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Call Today 888-459-9961 for $25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. CANADA DRUG CENTER. Safe and affordable medications. Save up to 90% on your medication needs. Call 1-888734-1530 ($25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.) CAR DONATIONS WANTED! Help Support Cancer Research. Free Next-Day Towing. NonRunners OK. Tax Deductible. Free Cruise/Hotel/Air Voucher. Live Operators 7 days/week. Breast Cancer Society #800-728-0801. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1888-416-2330

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CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800864-5960 CREDIT CARD DEBT? LEGALLY HAVE IT REMOVED! Need a Minimum $7,000 in debt to qualify. Utilize Consumer Protection Attorneys. Call now 1-866-652-7630 for help. Diabetic Test Strips Wanted Check us out online! All Major Brands Bought Dtsbuyers.com 1 866 446 3009 Direct To Home Satellite TV $19.99/mo. Free Installation FREE HD/DVR Upgrade Credit/Debit Card Req. Call 1-800795-3579 DISH Network. Starting at $19.99/month PLUS 30 Premium Movie Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL - 877-992-1237 Do you receive regular monthly payments from an annuity or insurance settlement and NEED CASH NOW? Call J.G. Wentworth today at 1-800-7410159. DONATE YOUR CAR to CHILDREN'S CANCER FUND of AMERICA and help end CHILDHOOD CANCER. Tax Deductible. Next Day Towing. Receive Vacation Voucher. 7 Days 1-800-469-8593

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FREE RX SAVINGS CARD Save up to 85% at over 60K pharmacies. All US Residents qualify. CALL 888-960-0026

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

WE BUY AND TOW UNWANTED & WRECKED VEHICLES MN Licensed Dealer ~ Call for Quote

Please apply online at: www.sfhs.org/employment Or at: Trinity Campus 3410 213th Street West Farmington, MN 55024

651-322-1800

9250

Help Wanted/ Full & Part Time

9250

EXT. 2

www.upullrparts.com

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Help Wanted/ Part Time

PROGRAM MANAGER Burnsville 37 hrs/wk Flexible, Benefit Eligible Overall management of a home serving 4 women with DD, writing and revising programs, assist in overseeing medical needs, I35W & Cliff Road monitor meds, hire, train, and supervise staff. Must be a DC with 2 yrs exp. Automotive working with DD or a 9500 QDDP with 1 year exp. with persons with DD, 1 Vehicles year supervise exp req'd, Exp w/ behaviors & psych meds pref'd, DL., Clean 06 Hyundai Sonata, GLS record, & insurance. V6, 65 K, new tires/brakes. Contact: Katya@ Clean! $9,150. 612-669-2052 thomasalleninc.com For MORE openings and Junkers & info Visit us at: Repairable Wanted www.thomasalleninc.com

Dental Tech

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ASPHALT CONSTRUCTION LABORER Plehal Blacktopping, Inc. is expanding operations & has openings for asphalt laborers. Skid loader & asphalt experience a plus. Class "A" - CDL driver license a plus. Competitive compensation, w/benefits of Health, Dental, Life & 401K. Please apply in person at 13060 Dem Con Drive,Shakopee, MN 55379 FT - Admin. Asst. $16-$20 per hr. plus benefits. karin@ learnersedgeinc.com

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Thomas Allen Inc.

Are you looking for a career change?

You are invited to an open house Wednesday, Feb 6 Please RSVP for one of the discovery Q & A sessions beginning at 6:00 or 6:45pm. NOREX, Inc., 5505 Cottonwood Lane, Prior Lake, MN 55372 - 952-447-8898. www.norex.net EOE

Social Services

9200

9810

Sales – Full time

9000

Help Wanted/ Full Time

9100

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18A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Dancing in the snowbanks

theater and arts briefs Youth art exhibit in Lakeville An exhibition of selected art by area students in grades 1-12 will be on display at the Lakeville Area Arts Center from Feb. 25 to March 10. An opening reception will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 25. Participating are District 194 schools, Parkview Elementary, All Saints and Fortè Fine Arts Academy. In addition, the artwork from the Lakeville Area Arts Center home-schooled students will be included. The exhibit can also be viewed during regular art center hours, Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on Wednesdays 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. The Lakeville Area Arts Center is located at 20965 Holyoke Ave. Call (952) 985-4640 for more information.

Tracy Morgan to perform

Photo submitted

The young “snowflake dancers” in Children’s Castle Theater’s production of “Jack Frost” rehearse Monday in preparation for the opening of the winter-themed show this week at the Lakeville Area Arts Center. The cast includes 130 local children and adults who take on the roles of villagers, dancers and one-eyed Yetis. Show times are 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Feb. 1-3 and 8-10; tickets are available at www.childrenscastletheater.com, by calling (952) 985-4640 or at the door.

theater and arts calendar chronology of rhythm development commonly referred to as jazz, blues, R&B, and gospel Saturday, Feb. 2, 10:30 to 11:30 Auditions a.m., Burnhaven Library, 1101 Expressions Community W. County Road 42, Burnsville. Theater will hold auditions for Free. Information: www.dakothe office comedy “Wage War- tacounty.us/library or (651) 450fare” at 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2900. 4, and Tuesday, Feb. 5., at Dakota Valley Symphony the Lakeville Area Arts Center, “Grieg Meets Verdi” concert, 20965 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville. 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 10, at If required, callbacks will be 7 Burnsville Performing Arts Cenp.m. Thursday, Feb. 7. Informa- ter, 12600 Nicollet Ave. Tickets tion: JAndrewWilkins@gmail. range from $5 to $16 at the box com or (612) 293-0173. office and through Ticketmaster at (800) 982-2787 or TicketExhibits master.com. “Cars, Crowds, and FamiTwin Cities Community ly,” a photographic glimpse into Gospel Choir will perform Satthe life of a local racing family, is urday, Feb. 16, 11 a.m. to noon, on display at Dunn Bros., 20700 Galaxie Library, 14955 Galaxie Chippendale Ave. W., Farming- Ave., Apple Valley. Free. Inforton. mation: www.dakotacounty.us/ library or (651) 450-2900. Music “The Legend of Johnny Workshops/classes/other Cash” performed by Philip Bau“Writing Fiction for Teens: er, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 2, Character and Voice,” 12:30 at Lakeville South High School. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. Sponsored by the Lakev- 2, at Heritage Library, 20085 ille Area Arts Center and the Heritage Drive, Lakeville. Teen Lakeville Rotary. Tickets range fiction writers Loretta Ellsworth from $23.50 to $28.50 online and Janet Graber will discuss at www.LakevilleAreaArtsCen- innovative ways to create fullyter.com and at the arts center, fledged characters with au20965 Holyoke Ave. thentic voices that readers will Drum Fun and Vocals, Too root for. Free, but registration – Leonard King Jr. highlights the required at www.dakotacounty. To submit items for the Arts Calendar, email: darcy. odden@ecm-inc.com.

us/library or (952) 891-0360. Teen Poetry Jam/Rap Battle from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 5, at Apple Valley Teen Center, 14255 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley, (952) 953-2385. Ages 12-18. Cost: $3 in advance (register at www. cityofapplevalley.org), $2 each per group of 10, $4 at the door. Teen artist gatherings at the Eagan Art House from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Thursdays, Feb. 7 and March 7, and from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturdays, Feb. 2 and March 2. Cost: $3. Information: (651) 675-5521. Heavenly Moves Home School Ballet will begin a 10week series of classes for ages 3-9 at 2:30 p.m. Fridays beginning Feb. 8 at Footsteps Dance Studio in Burnsville. Information: berrygood2@charter.net. Princess Prep School – Lakeville will begin a sevenweek session for ages 3-9 at 4:30 p.m. Mondays beginning Feb. 4. Information: berrygood2@charter.net. Adult painting open studio from 9 a.m. to noon the first and third Fridays of the month at the Eagan Art House, 3981 Lexington Ave. S. Fee is $5 per session. Information: (651) 6755521. Music Together in the Valley offers classes for parents

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and their infant, toddler and preschool children in Rosemount, Farmington, Lakeville and Apple Valley. Information: www. musictogetherclasses.com or (651) 439-4219. The Eagan Art House offers classes for ages 4 through adult. For a complete listing go to www.eaganarthouse.org or call (651) 675-5521. Dan Petrov Art Studio in Burnsville offers oil painting classes for beginners, intermediate and advanced skill level painters, www.danpetrovart. com, (763) 843-2734. Teens Express Yourself with Paint, 5 to 7 p.m. Mondays at Brushworks School of Art in Burnsville, www.BrushworksSchoolofArt.com, (651) 214-4732. Drama/theater classes for ages 4 and up at River Ridge Arts Building, Burnsville, (952) 736-3644. Show Biz Kids Theater Class for children with special needs (ASD/DCD programs), In the Company of Kids 13710 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville, (952) 736-3644. Broadway Kids Dance and Theater Program for all ages and abilities, In the Company of Kids, 13710 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville (Colonial Shopping Center), (952) 736-3644. Join other 55-plus adults at the Eagan Art House to create beaded jewelry. The Jewelry Club meets on the third Friday of each month from 1 to 3 p.m. Information: (651) 675-5500. Soy candle making classes held weekly in Eagan near 55 and Yankee Doodle. Call Jamie at (651) 315-4849 for dates and times. $10 per person. Presented by Making Scents in Minnesota. Country line dance classes held for intermediates Mondays 1:30 to 4 p.m. at Rambling River Center, 325 Oak St., Farmington, $5/class. Call Marilyn (651) 463-7833. Country line dance classes on Wednesdays at the Lakeville Senior Center, 20110 Holyoke Ave. Beginners, 9-10 a.m.; Intermediate, 10 a.m.noon. $5/class. Call Marilyn (651) 463-7833. The Lakeville Area Arts Center offers arts classes for all ages, www.lakevillemn.gov, (952) 985-4640. Rosemount History Book Club meets the second Tuesday of each month from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Robert Trail Library. Information: John Loch, (952) 255-8545 or jjloch@charter.net.

Stand-up comic Tracy Morgan of “30 Rock” and “Saturday Night Live” will perform at 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 20, at Burnsville Performing Arts Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave. Tickets are $49.50 and are on sale at http://tinyurl.com/ TMorganPAC. Visit www.burnsvillepac.com for more information.

Language days return to zoo The Great Clips IMAX Theatre at the Minnesota Zoo will celebrate languages from around the world with select films shown in French, German and Spanish. • French Day (films shown in French): Tuesday, Feb. 5, 9 a.m. “Ultimate Wave Tahiti 3D”; 10 a.m., “Deep Sea”; 1 p.m., “Ultimate Wave Tahiti 3D.” • German Day (film shown in German): Wednesday, Feb. 6, 10 a.m., “Deep Sea”; 11 a.m., “Deep Sea.” • Spanish Day (films shown in Spanish): Tuesday, Feb. 12, 11 a.m., “Galapagos 3D”; noon, “Born to be Wild 3D.” • Spanish Day (films shown in Spanish): Wednesday, Feb. 13, 9 a.m., “Deep Sea”; 11 a.m., “Galapagos 3D”; noon, “Born to be Wild 3D”; 1 p.m., “Galapagos 3D.” • Chinese Day (film shown in English): Wednesday, Feb. 20, noon, “China the Panda Adventure.” Tickets are $9.75 for adults and $7.50 for children (3-12) and seniors (65-plus). For group reservations for these films contact (952) 997-9714 or cpurfeerst@imax.com. The Minnesota Zoo will also be participating by presenting select indoor exhibits in the featured language of the day. Upper level language students use music, costumes, and props to interpret more than 40 animal exhibits. All days are geared toward language students in grades seven to 12 and elementary immersion students. To register a class, visit http://www.mnzoo.org/teachandlearn or call (952) 431-9218.

Chorale’s cabaret The South Metro Chorale’s annual fundraiser, Cabaret 2013, will be performed at 7 p.m. Saturday, March 2, and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, March 3, at the Lakeville Area Arts Center, 20965 Holyoke Ave. The cabaret-style musical variety show will include a silent auction, games, cash raffle, food and beverages. Tickets can be purchased at (952) 985-4640 or tickets@southmetrochorale.org. Visit southmetrochorale.org for more information.

Local arts groups honored The Metropolitan Regional Arts Council presented grant awards to area arts organizations Jan. 31 at Bloomington Center for the Arts. Local grant recipients include Burnsville Visual Arts Society (Burnsville), Chamber Music Lakeville (Apple Valley), Chameleon Theatre Circle (Burnsville), Eagan Men’s Chorus (Eagan), Exultate (Eagan), International Festival of Burnsville (Burnsville), Rosemount Area Arts Council (Rosemount), Savage Arts Council (Prior Lake), South Metro Chorale (Prior Lake), and Velvet Tones (Apple Valley). The grants were awarded through a competitive process using funds from appropriations by the Minnesota Legislature and the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund of the Legacy Amendment.

family calendar tution of Oceanography will speak by national conference call on the topic of “Ocean Acidification – Can Corals Friday, Feb. 1 Cope?” All are welcome. InFamily Fun Night with formation: Deb Nelson at Prizes and Meatballs, 5:30 (952) 965-8284. to 8 p.m. at St. Joseph CathoYouth Ice Fishing Conlic Church, 13900 Biscayne test, noon to 2 p.m., Valley Ave., Rosemount. Free ad- Lake Park, 16050 Garrett mission. Pasta dinner offered Path. Prizes will be awarded until 7 p.m. is $7 for adults, to youth ages 13 and under $5 for ages 3-12, free for for different fish categories. ages 0-2; family cap set at Participants need to bring $25. Silent auction and raffle their own fishing equipment tickets available at an ad- and bait. Register the day of ditional cost. Cash or check the contest. Free. Sponsored only. All proceeds benefit St. by Lakeville Knights of CoJoseph School. Information: lumbus. https://www.facebook.com/ events/236993279767217/. Sunday, Feb. 3 “Super” pancake breakSaturday, Feb. 2 fast by the Farmington Kick-off Party for Team Knights of Columbus, 9 a.m. In Training (TNT), benefitting to noon at Church of St. MiThe Leukemia & Lymphoma chael, 22120 Denmark Ave., Society, 9:30 a.m., Crowne Farmington. Menu: pancakes, Plaza Hotel and Suites – Min- French toast, sausage links, neapolis Airport, 3 Appletree scrambled eggs, coffee, juice Square, Bloomington. RSVP: and water. Good-will offerings http://www.teamintraining. accepted for DARTS. org/mn/firsttimehere/tellmemore or (763) 852-3042. Monday, Feb. 4 Walk-ins welcome. Change Begins With Us, “Tangled” movie, 10 a.m. 6 p.m. in the Mary Center at to noon, recital hall, Farm- Mary, Mother of the Church, ington High School, 20655 3333 Cliff Road, Burnsville. Flagstaff Ave. Free. Conces- Join Joint Religious Legislasions sold during 20-minute tive Coalition executive direcintermission. Children must tor, Brian Rusche, and the be accompanied by an adult. Minnesota Commissioner of Sponsored by Farmington Revenue, Myron Frans, for an Area Community Education. evening of interfaith dialogue Citizens Climate Lobby about social justice principles meeting, 11 a.m. at Galaxie in action. A light supper will Library, 14955 Galaxie Ave., be provided at 6 p.m. and Apple Valley. Dr. Martin Tres- the program begins at 6:30 guerres of the Scripps Insti- p.m. RSVP to Alison Killeen To submit items for the Family Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com.

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at (612) 230-3233 or Alison@ jrlc.org. Sunday, Feb. 10 Benefit concert for Marie Sandvik Center, 4 p.m., Highview Christiania Lutheran Church, 26690 Highview Ave. W., rural Farmington, (952) 469-2722. Variety of vocal and musical performances. Free-will offering accepted. Blood drives The American Red Cross will hold the following blood drives. Call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767) or visit redcrossblood.org to make an appointment or for more information. • Feb. 4, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Park Nicollet Clinic, 14000 Fairview Drive, Burnsville. • Feb. 4, 1:30 to 6:30 p.m., Mount Calvary Lutheran Church, 3930 Rahn Road, Eagan. • Feb. 4, 1 to 7 p.m., Berean Baptist Church, 309 E. County Road 42, Burnsville. • Feb. 5, 12:30 to 6:30 p.m., Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church, 12650 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. • Feb. 7, 1 to 6 p.m., Mount Olivet Assembly of God Church, 14201 Cedar Ave. S., Apple Valley. • Feb. 9, 10:15 a.m. to 3:15 p.m, Burnhaven Library, 1101 W. County Road 42, Burnsville. • Feb. 11, 1 to 6 p.m., Christus Victor Lutheran Church, 7510 Palomino Drive, Apple Valley.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan February 1, 2013 19A

Thisweekend Michael Monroe at the Frozen Apple

Photo submitted

Now in their 16th season, the Velvet Tones have grown in membership from 10 singers their first year to a present membership of 70. The group’s next public concert is this weekend as part of Apple Valley’s citywide Mid-Winter Fest celebration, where they’ll perform at 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 2, at the Apple Valley Community Center; admission is free with a Mid-Winter Fest button.

Velvet Tones are thinking spring Senior community chorus presents ‘Spring Festival of Music’ We may be stuck in the winter doldrums, but the Velvet Tones have their sights set on brighter days ahead. The Dakota Countybased senior-adult community choir is now preparing for its annual “Spring Festival of Music,” which will be held Sunday, March 3, at Eastview High School in Apple Valley. It will be the 11th year the Velvet Tones have staged their free-admission spring concert, and they’ve got some special guests lined up to mark the event. Twin Cities broadcast journalist Stan Turner is set to serve as master of ceremonies, and joining the Velvet Tones on stage will be the young singers from Thomas Lake Elementary’s Da Capo choir. Now in their 16th season, the Velvet Tones have grown in membership from 10 singers their first

year to their present membership of 70. They present about 30 shows each year throughout the metro area. Leading the choir is director Rich Clausen, a former school music educator and one of the founding members of the Swinging Ambassadors, the popular Twin Cities music act that grew its following at Diamond Jim’s in Mendota. As a member of the Swinging Ambassadors, Clausen was inducted into the Minnesota Music Hall of Fame in 2011. South-metro residents will have a chance to catch the Velvet Tones perform prior to their annual spring concert, as the choir has a performance lined up as part of Apple Valley’s citywide MidWinter Fest celebration this weekend. The group will be performing at 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 2, at the Apple Valley Community Center; admission

is free with a Mid-Winter Fest button. The choir is always looking for new members. Rehearsals are held Wednesday mornings, September through May, at the Apple Valley Senior Center, and singers ages 55 and up can find out more at the choir’s website, www.velvettones.org. —Andrew Miller

Photo submitted

Acoustic artist Michael Monroe is bringing his feel-good blend of folk, jazz and reggae to Apple Valley this weekend as part of the Frozen Apple concert series sponsored by the Apple Valley Arts Foundation. The concert – which runs from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 2 at the Valleywood Golf Course clubhouse – will mark the release of Monroe’s new CD, “Time to Get Away.” A resident of Minnesota’s North Shore who lives and records his music in a solar-powered log cabin, Monroe has become a familiar face in Dakota County in recent years with his performances at the annual Music in Kelley Park summer concerts, as well as last’s year inaugural Frozen Apple. Admission is free to this weekend’s performance; food and beverages, including a full bar, will be available for purchase, and there also will be prize drawings for books, a digital camera and an acoustic guitar, which were donated by local merchants. More information is at www.facebook.com/MusicInKelleyPark.

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20A February 1, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Tickets on sale now! 2013

Join Us in honoring the exceptional women in our community!

Why replace your windows when you don’t need to? Homeowners...If Your House is 8 Years Old or Older...Let Us

REPLACE Your FOGGED or DAMAGED GLASS and SAVE 2/3 the COST of WINDOW REPLACEMENT!

Recognition Banquet

We provide complete Glass and Mirror Service

FREE

FOGGED? BROKEN? MOISTURE IN BETWEEN?

Tuesday, March 5th, 2013 7:30AM Registration | Breakfast Buffet & Program 8:00AM Installation We can do it for you.

Member of

IN -HOME ESTIMATES AVAILABLE and

Keynote Speaker

10921 Excelsior Blvd • Hopkins

Robin Peterson

952-933-3223 www.glassandmirroroutlet.com

President | Coldwell Banker Burnet

Store hours: Mon, Tues, Fri 8am-5:30pm, Wed-Thurs 8am-7pm

2013 HONOREES

CALL NOW & SAVE UP TO 84% ON YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION

Ruthe Batulis President | Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce

Catherine Byers Breet Owner | ARBEZ Inc. | Eagan

Sharon Hoffman Avent President and CEO | Smead Manufacturing Company | Hastings

Jeanne Hutter Director | Lakeville Convention &Visitors Bureau

Rosealee Lee Hospitality Faculty | Dakota County Technical College | Rosemount

Debbie McConnell

Drug Name Plavix 75mg Combivent 18/103mcg Ventolin 100mcg Viagra 100mg Zetia 10mg Cialis 20mg Nexium 40mg Advair 250/50mcg Asacol 400mg Spiriva 18mcg Entocort 3mg Actos 30mg Flomax 0.4mg Lipitor 20mg Levitra 20mg Propecia 1mg Celebrex 200mg Crestor 20mg Symbicort 160/4.5ug Singulair 10mg Effexor XR 150mg Aciphex 20mg

Patti McDonald Susan McGaughey General Manager |Valley Natural Foods | Burnsville

$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $

Price* 89.99 74.99 49.99 79.99 94.99 79.99 94.99 169.99 49.99 154.99 94.99 104.99 64.99 89.99 94.99 74.99 89.99 144.99 179.99 119.99 99.99 84.99

Drug Name Namenda 10mg Xifaxan 200mg Cymbalta 30mg Niaspan 500mg Ranexa ER 500mg Tricor 145mg Quinine 300mg Avodart 0.5mg Revatio 20mg Colchicine 0.6mg Neurontin 300mg Femara 2.5mg Januvia 100mg Lexapro 20mg Janumet 50/1000mg Aggrenox 200/25mg Wellbutrin XL 300mg Aricept 10mg Pentasa SR 500mg Flovent 125mcg Abilify 10mg Protonix 40mg

Qty (pills) 100 100 100 90 100 90 84 90 90 100 100 100 84 90 84 180 90 100 100 360 doses 90 90

$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $

Price* 99.99 124.99 99.99 69.99 99.99 104.99 49.99 139.99 144.99 74.99 44.99 139.99 244.99 69.99 169.99 94.99 144.99 84.99 94.99 99.99 134.99 79.99

All pricing in U.S. dollars and subject to change without notice. We accept Visa, MasterCard, Personal Check or Money Order. *Prices shown are for the equivalent generic drug if available.

Over 1500 Medications Available Price Match Guarantee Call for Free Price Quote Prescriptions Required Toll Free Phone

CIPA Certified Toll Free Fax

1-800-267-2688

Owner | Medi-Car Auto Repair | Rosemount

Business Administrator | McDonald Eye Care Associates | Lakeville

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1-800-563-3822

Shop: www.TotalCareMart.com or Call Now! 1-800-267-2688 Mailing Address: ORDER PROCESSING CENTER, PO BOX 121 STN L

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Bernie’s Garage

Kristina Murto

s Enjoy the Spaciou r New Office u o in m o o R g in it Wa

Owner | Ensemble Creative & Marketing | Lakeville

Linda Peterson Owner | Beau Monde Salon | Burnsville

Stacey Stratton President | True Talent Group | AppleValley

Lost Spur Golf & Event Center 2750 Sibley Memorial Hwy | Eagan 651-454-5681 | wpgolf.com/lostspur

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any service or repair over $200 No other discounts apply. Valid only with coupon. Offer ends 3/1/13.

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