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Burnsville | Eagan November 20, 2015 | Volume 36 | Number 38
Landfill is $64 million question Cleanup deal deadline looms; feds threaten to intervene by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
NEWS Early deadline next week Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, the deadline for submitting items for consideration of publication will be 5 p.m. Monday, Nov. 23.
OPINION When there’s agreement Columnist Joe Nathan says when diverse groups of education leaders agree on something, then it must be a good idea. Page 4A
THISWEEKEND
Some $64 million questions hang over the old Freeway Landfill west of Interstate 35W and south of the Minnesota River in Burnsville. Will the owner and state regulators meet a Dec. 15 deadline on a deal to clean up the landfill and safeguard the groundwater? If not, will impatient federal regulators take over the process? If they do, who will pay for the cleanup? The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is proposing a $64.4 million cleanup plan under the state-funded Closed Landfill Program, which requires landfill owners and the MPCA to strike a deal on terms of the cleanup and future land use. The federal Environmental Protection Agency has warned repeatedly that
gally messy and often ineffective, the MPCA says. “They would work with the responsible parties, but it would be more than the landfill owner,� explained Kirk Koudelka, MPCA assistant commissioner. “It would be haulers, those who disposed of the waste there, big and small.� The EPA has given the MPCA three deadlines for getting the Freeway Landfill — one of only three eligible landfills in Minnesota that haven’t entered into an agreement — into the voluntary Closed Landfill Program. A total of 109 landfills are in the program, which gives the MPCA management responsibility for the propMinnesota Pollution Control Agency hydrogeologist Mark Umholtz, right, explained erties. April, August and Ocaspects of the Freeway Landfill at a Nov. 12 public meeting at Burnsville City Hall. tober deadlines passed (Photo by John Gessner) while the trust that owns if a deal isn’t reached, it tion attempting to recover pollution. The Superfund the landfill and the MPCA will take over the process cleanup costs from those process, which could cast See LANDFILL, 18A through a Superfund ac- responsible for the landfill a wide net of liability, is le-
NOW ENTERING NARNIA
Kimmel ends House campaign after ISIS tweet by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Burnsville resident Dan Kimmel, a candidate for state representative, ended his campaign Sunday, a day after tweeting that “ISIS isn’t necessarily evil.� Kimmel, a DFLer who was seeking the same House seat he ran for in 2014, was buffeted by criticism for his Nov. 14 Twitter posting, which came a day after the terror attacks in Paris for which ISIS claimed credit. “ISIS isn’t necessarily evil,� Kimmel tweeted. “It is made up of people doing what they think is best for their community. Violence is not the answer, though.� Reaction was swift and widespread in social media and even worldwide news media. Kimmel wrote on his campaign website Sunday that the tweet was “poorly worded and did not convey my intent� and he’s “folding up my campaign tent.� “I am very sorry for ‘spreading ick’ on the
Pastels and imagination A Rosemount artist’s exhibit of pastel landscapes, titled “Superior Light,� opens next week at the Benedictine Center. Page 23A
SPORTS Hockey season underway The Burnsville, Eagan and Eastview girls high schools’ hockey seasons are already underway. Page 14A
PUBLIC NOTICE Burnsvile-Eagan Sun Thisweek is the legal newspaper for the cities of Burnsville and Eagan. Public notices begin on Page 17A.
Above: Valley Middle School sixth-grader Giselle Valdez received some makeup touch-ups for her cheetah costume before rehearsal Tuesday night for “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.� The VMS Drama Club will present the play at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 20, and 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 21, at the Apple Valley school. At right: VMS students, from left, Jack Bauer, Nate Doty, Ceceilia Voss and Bella Lewis are cast as the four siblings who adventure through Narnia in the play. (Photos by Andrew Miller)
Burnsville man dies in workplace accident Involved packaging machine
INDEX
by Laura Adelmann
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 14A Announcements . . . . 16A Public Notices . . 17A-18A Classifieds . . . . . 19A-21A
General 952-894-1111 Display Advertising 952-846-2019 Classified Advertising 952-846-2003 Delivery 763-712-3544
SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
A Burnsville man was killed Nov. 15 from injuries sustained in a workplace accident at Genpak, a food packaging company in Lakeville. Lakeville police reported Mitchell Robert Hauschildt, 28, was severely injured after coming into contact with a packaging machine at Genpak. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s re-
other candidates and the DFL p a r t y,� he wrote Sunday. “I will do evDan Kimmel erything I can to help resolve the issue: most likely the best thing for me to do is shut up. The tweet was stupid. I’m sorry.� House Minority Leader Paul Thissen, DFL-Minneapolis, called on Kimmel to end his campaign, the Star Tribune reported. State DFL Party Chairman Ken Martin issued a statement on Saturday. “Earlier tonight a candidate for the Minnesota House made comments that do not reflect the views of the Minnesota DFL and have no place in our party,� he said. “On behalf of the Minnesota DFL, I strongly condemn his comments. I ask Dan Kimmel to apologize to all the families who have been torn apart by the terrorist organization and their senseless vioSee KIMMEL, 18A
ALDI store another addition to changing Burnsville mall
port said Hauschildt died of multiple blunt force injuries due to a mishap involving an industrial roller, and ruled the cause of death an accident. Police said they were called to the business at 7:43 a.m. and Hauschlidt was airlifted to North Memorial Trauma Center where he died later that day. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration and Lakeville police are continuing the investigation.
by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
A new ALDI grocery store will be the latest in a series of changes at a County Road 42 shopping mall that was built in the late 1970s. The Burnsville City Council approved plans for the store Nov. 17. It will add a new look to the Burnhill Plaza Shopping Center at 1200 County Road 42 W. ALDI will replace Princess Jewelry, a tobacco shop and a nail salon. Laura Adelmann is at laura. The Burnhill Plaza adelmann@ecm-inc.com. property is also the home of new Starbucks and
Chick-fil-A restaurants, located in separate buildings on the old Champps Americana restaurant site. Another new business, a beer-and-burger spot called JL Beers, is opening in the old Carpet King space at Burnhill Plaza. “This center is evolving,� Council Member Mary Sherry said. “I like that.� The ALDI store will be Burnsville’s second. The first is north of Highway 13 on Riverwood Drive. The council approved a storefront design that deviates some from the tan, brown and cream colors of the mall and its free-
standing buildings. ALDI and mall owner M-M Burnsville Associates Limited Partnership LLP originally proposed gray and silver metal panels on the entry and part of the storefront, and tan stucco on the rest. Gray and silver are corporate prototype colors for new and remodeled ALDI stores. The city’s planning staff said the colors should better match the rest of the mall. The Planning Commission disagreed, voting Nov. 9 for the proposed design. See ALDI, 18A
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2A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Local doctor, author takes readers into ‘the vortex’ by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Wayne Liebhard invites you to enter the vortex. Liebhard, a Burnsville doctor and award-winning author, takes readers on a journey through an alternate reality in his first novel, “The Vortex Effect.� Liebhard’s character, Derek Mann, an emergency room doctor in the Twin Cities takes a much needed vacation at a cabin in central Minnesota to reflect on life, society and medicine. He soon finds himself in a vortex where an unknown nemesis tries to kill him. “I hope readers enjoy it
as an action suspense novel but that it also challenges their mind,� Liebhard, 59, said. Wayne The book Liebhard also touches on social and political issues. Before entering the vortex, Mann reflects on the state of today’s social and political discourse and discusses these issues with his former college professor. “It’s a small part of the book, but it is intended to shed light on how both sides fail to communicate,�
the Prior Lake resident said. Although the story is fictional, many of its themes and characters are based on real people and
life experiences, he said. This is Liebhard’s third published book. His first two books “Elephants in the Exam Room: The Seven Things You Need to Know about Today’s Health Care Crisis� and “Elephants in the Exam Room: The Big Picture Solution to Today’s Health Care Crisis� are nonfiction works that examine the health care crisis and solutions. Both have won several national awards. Liebhard has worked in the medical field for three decades, first as a primary care doctor and then, for the past 10 years, as an urgent care doctor at a major
medical emergency clinic in Burnsville. When he’s not writing books or practicing medicine, Liebhard is playing guitar in local rock band The Solid Gold Band, which has released two CDs and several music videos on YouTube. Like Liebhard’s books, much of his music is inspired by the health care industry, such as “Doctor Sings the Obamacare Blues.� “I’ve learned that you can’t be a musician and a doctor but you can be a doctor and a musician,� Liebhard said. “I love practicing medicine but there’s not a lot of creativity.�
A pre-release party will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25, at the Prior Lake VFW, which will include a book signing and a performance by The Solid Gold Band. “The Vortex Effect,� which was published by Northloop Publishers, is available for pre-sale at Liebhard’s website, www. omegamed.com, and at Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com. It will hit the shelves at Barnes and Noble early next month. Jessica Harper is at jessica. harper@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.
Burnsville police: Despite incident, parks safe by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
After a December 2014 shooting in Alimagnet Park, Burnsville parks commissioners called for a report on the safety of city parks. Large, busy parks like Alimagnet get the most police calls, but city parks are safe, commissioners were told Nov. 16. “We have good parks in Burnsville, and the crime is really pretty minimal,� police Capt. Jef Behnken told the Parks and Natural Resources Commission. Alimagnet, a 178acre community park on County Road 11 with athletic fields, an off-leash dog park and many other amenities, has the most police activity in Burnsville. From the beginning of
2012 through Sept. 30, the park generated 489 police calls, 55 of them crime-related, according to police. Crimes range from assault to theft to weapons violations. This year Alimagnet has generated eight crimerelated calls through Sept. 30, compared with 21 in all of 2014. The next-busiest parks are Crystal Beach (325 police calls since 2012), Neill Park (289), Lac Lavon Park (195), Cliff Fen Park (179), North River Hills Park (140), Sunset Pond Park (126) and Red Oak Park (117). A dozen more parks have each generated fewer than 100 police calls since 2012. Following Alimagnet in crime-related calls are Lac Lavon Park (41 since
2012), Crystal Beach (28), Neill Park (15) and North River Hills Park (14). Crime-related calls at other parks numbered in the single digits. Since 2012, police calls at parks have totaled 2,472. Crime-related calls have totaled 210. The biggest crime concern in any park is theft, Behnken said. He showed a police video made at Crystal Beach — a popular swimming spot since the 1960s — advising parkgoers to lock their cars, shut their windows and remove valuables from sight. Alimagnet has had the most theft calls, 38, since 2012, followed by Lac Lavon Park (26) and Crystal Beach (12). Since 2012 Crystal Beach has generated the most reports of suspicious
activity or disturbances (154), followed by Neill Park (130), Alimagnet Park (125) and Cliff Fen Park (105). Total calls for service at parks are higher in the daytime (1,419) than at night after closing (1,053). Burnsville parks are closed from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. “If you see anybody in a park after 10 p.m., just call 911,� Behnken advised, “especially if you think they’re up to no good. “However you want to articulate what ‘suspicious’ is, that’s up to your own free will,� he said. Drug-related calls are few — just 22 since 2012. Weapons-related calls are fewer — only nine since 2012, with Lac Lavon Park leading the way with three. Calls for assaults, domestic disputes and fights
have numbered 33 since 2012. Crystal Beach has had seven, followed by Alimagnet Park (five), Neill Park (four) and North River Hills Park (3). “Usually they’re between two people who know each other,� Behnken said. “They’re not always that.� The December 2014 incident at Alimagnet involved an Apple Valley man who was walking his two dogs off-leash (not in the off-leash dog park). One of the dogs came over to a man and sniffed his lunch container. The man yelled at the dog. The alleged shooter, Lance Gavin Huston, came out of the woods and told the victim to leave his dog alone. Huston allegedly kicked over the man’s grill, and the two fought briefly.
The victim thought the incident was over when Huston allegedly said, “You want a piece of me?� and pulled a handgun from his waistband. The victim told police he ran away and heard five gunshots behind him. It was a “pretty scary deal,� Behnken said. “We were fortunate that no one was seriously injured in this incident.� Huston, arrested at his home, had a blood-alcohol content of 0.164, according to police. Charged with second-degree assault and reckless discharge of a firearm, Huston is scheduled to go to trial in March 2016. John Gessner can be reached at (952) 846-2031 or email john.gessner@ecm-inc.com.
Burnsville family earns Dakota County conservation award Burnsville residents Betsy and Ed Sturm were recently recognized by the Dakota County Soil and Water Conservation District as its 2015 Outstanding Conservationist for their leadership in conservation.
The couple and their daughter Julia live on Alimagnet Lake in Burnsville and have steered multiple efforts to protect water quality in the lake and surrounding areas. They restored native vegetation along the
shoreline at their home to prevent erosion and provide wildlife habitat. They installed a raingarden on their property to capture and infiltrate street runoff which previously drained directly to the lake.
The Sturms also coordinated volunteers for the installation of a 1,600-square-foot raingarden at their church in Eagan. The Sturms are active in their lake association and are involved in ongo-
ing efforts to improve water quality. They will be recognized at the Minnesota Association of Soil and Water Conservation District’s Annual Convention in December. Each year the Dakota County Soil and Water
Conservation District honors a landowner, business, or organization for their contributions to conserve or restore natural resources in Dakota County.
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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
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in Rice County crash $ ! "" 0$2 "" 0$2 $ A Burnsville man was hospitalized Nov. 12 following a one-vehicle crash on Highway 60 in Rice County. Shane A. Brankley, 28, was driving east at about 2 a.m. on Highway 60 when his Ford Super Duty pickup truck collided with a concrete median, continued into the north ditch and overturned, according
to the Minnesota State Patrol. Brankley, the vehicle’s sole occupant, was transported to a hospital in Faribault for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries, the State Patrol said. He was not wearing a seat belt when the crash occurred; no alcohol was detected in his system. The truck Brankley was
driving was totaled. Road conditions were wet on the four-lane, divided blacktop highway at the time of the incident, according to the State Patrol. Faribault police, the Rice County Sheriff’s Office and North Ambulance assisted the State Patrol at the scene. —Andrew Miller
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New Briefs Job Transitions Group to Blast buckthorn in meet on Nov. 24 county on Nov. 21 Rebecca Surmount will give an alumni testimonial at the Nov. 24 meeting of the Easter Job Transitions Group. The group meets at 7:30 a.m. at Easter Lutheran Church – By The Lake, 4545 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan. Small group sessions are offered following the meeting at 9:30 a.m. each week on many different topics. Call 651-452-3680 for information.
Seeking Miss Dakota County contestants Women ages 19-30 who are single and have never been married or given birth are invited to apply to be 2016 Miss Dakota County and represent the county at the Miss Minnesota pageant on March 12 in St. Cloud. Miss Dakota County will become an ambassador for the Dakota County area and will receive an official title and sash. Miss Minnesota will receive a prize package worth $7,000 and the chance to represent Minnesota at the 2016 Miss International pageant in Jacksonville, Florida. Contestants will compete in personal interview, fitness wear, fun fashion wear and evening gown. Those interested in applying should request a bio-form from: Miss Minnesota International Pageant, P.O. Box 240537, Apple Valley, MN 55124. Information: 952-432-6758, fax 952-9533896, email pagunltd@frontiernet.net
Nonprofit conservation group Trout Unlimited holds its final community buckthorn blast of the year 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 21, at the South Branch of the Vermillion River State Aquatic Management Area east of Farmington, next to this address: 4758 200th St. E., Hastings. It’s just west of U.S. Highway 52 on 200th Street, in Vermillion Township. All are welcome to help cut back the invasive brush. Bring hiking boots or knee boots, work gloves, clothing for getting dirty while cutting and hauling brush, and tree loppers or hand saws, if available. Also needed are a few expert chainsaw operators who know how to use their saws safely, and have appropriate safety equipment. Parents who cannot attend with their son or daughter should send a completed consent form with them, which can be found at http://mntu.org/info/volunteer-forms/. Lunch is provided. RSVP to Tony Nelson at Tony@1igprint.com or 952486-2282. Volunteers should also let him know if they’d like to help feed the hungry crew instead of haul brush. Directions heading south on U.S. Highway 52: Three miles south of Coates, drivers will drop down to the bridge over the Vermillion River. Take the next right on County 66/200th Street. Go half a block and turn left into the DNR Aquatic Management Area parking lot. Visit www.twincitiestu.org for more information.
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4A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Opinion District, union, charter advocates agree on teacher-led schools by Joe Nathan SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
When people who sometimes strongly disagree find something significant they like, it’s worth noting. One of those ideas drew more than 200 educators from 23 states to Minnesota Nov. 6-7. Educators praised Lakeville, Henderson and St. Paul, Minnesota, “teacher-led” or “teacher-powered” schools, along with others across the nation, from California to Maine. A national coalition for teacherpowered schools explains on its website (http://www.teacherpowered.org) that these schools share at least two features: –They are “collaboratively designed and implemented by teachers.” –Teachers have “collective autonomy to make decisions influencing the success of a school, project or professional endeavor.” District, charter and teacher union leaders in education sometimes disagree. But in the recent conference workshops, these folks focused on what they agree about: Teacher-powered schools can provide opportunities for teachers to use their best ideas to help students and families. Some have principals, some don’t. Conference organizers gave awards to several teacher-powered schools. They included:
Sun Thisweek Columnist
Joe Nathan
• Reiche Community School, a Portland, Maine, district K-5 school. After the school lost several principals, teachers visited Boston (district) Pilot Schools and decided to propose that a small team of teachers run the school. The superintendent and school board agreed. Reiche has several teachers who share leadership responsibilities, and continue to work directly with students. Jeanne Crocker, Portland’s interim superintendent, told me that the school has impressed her because of its improved student achievement, while serving as a model for others. She strongly supports their efforts, she said. (More information is at https://reiche.portlandschools.org.) • Avalon, a grades 6-12 project-based charter school in St. Paul. The school began in 2001-2002 and has received visitors from throughout the United States and other countries. A committee, the majority of whose members are teachers who work in the school, runs it. Avalon was founded by a group of parents and
educators. While following Minnesota’s high school graduation requirements, the school “features student-initiated independent projects, seminar classes, public student presentations, and partnerships with parents and community.” (More information is at http://bit. ly/1WMyPsl.) • Social Justice Humanitas Academy, one of four district schools sharing space on a Los Angeles public school campus. Jose Luis Navarro IV, a National Board certified teacher, serves as the school’s principal, working closely with teachers to make key decisions. He told me he felt a “moral imperative” to work with other educators and students at the school. The school opened in 2011. It seeks to “achieve social justice through the development of the complete individual.” (More information is available at http:// www.sjhumanitas.org.) Minnesota and Maine have passed laws allowing educators and parents to create teacher-led public schools. Because federal funds are available to help start charter public schools, union, district and charter advocates are encouraging Minnesota’s state Legislature to provide start-up funds for district teacher-led schools. Educators from Impact Academy, a Lakeville elementary teacher-led district option, and Avalon, along with Megan Hall, Minnesota’s 2014 teacher of the year, presidents of
several local teacher unions, the Minnesota Business Partnership and others, including me, support this idea. National Education Association, the nation’s largest teacher union, has praised teacher-led schools. The union is providing technical assistance to help teachers in these schools, as well as those who want to create one. The NEA wrote about its efforts here: http://bit. ly/1M6huCr. Part of the interest in teacher-led district schools may be coming from increased enrollment in charter schools. A report released on Nov. 10 by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools (http://bit.ly/1Mm5ue7) points out charter enrollment has increased more than 60 percent in the past five years to more than 2.9 million students. I’ll write more about this soon. But part of the push for teacher-powered or teacher-led schools comes from a deep belief in and respect for many educators. These schools ought to be options for students, families and teachers. It’s great to see growing national interest in this idea. Joe Nathan, formerly a Minnesota public school teacher, administrator and PTA president, directs the Center for School Change. Reactions are welcome at joe@ centerforschoolchange.org. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.
Media’s interest in Ben Carson is revealing the truth by Don Heinzman and Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
The news media is often criticized, and as newspaper editors, it might interest readers to know what editors are thinking when they report the news. Those in the news media believe an informed electorate is essential to a thriving democracy, and they believe once voters have all the facts, they usually make commonsense decisions. Dr. Ben Carson and other conservative presidential candidates believe the media is out to get them. While the national news media has been interested in finding the truth in Carson’s assertions in his book and other statements, editors and reporters like those at this newspaper also seek truth in their daily work as they aim to find local news that affects the public’s way of life. The news media covers local government because on
Columnists
Don Heinzman and Tad Johnson most days readers are unable to attend city council, school and county board meetings. Sometimes we make mistakes, and we are obliged to correct them immediately. We don’t need to ask “gotcha” questions, even in local election campaigns, unless the query will reveal important information. One of our suburban editors recently received a tip regarding the background of one of the local candidates. He followed up, asked some difficult questions and ultimately published the story. Had he not done so, he could have been ac-
cused of playing favorites. If readers sense that and lose trust in an editor, the editor might as well fold up the computer and look for another job. For the most part, suburban election campaigns are tame, as candidates realize the less said on the record the better. They all favor better opportunities for young people, a better tax base and spending wisely while keeping taxes down. They aren’t usually going to tell you that, if elected, they intend to oust the school superintendent or the city manager. We are careful to protect the reputation of persons whose names we print, since that is responsible journalism, but also because we could be sued for libel, which is intentionally defaming a person with false information. In only rare instances and with mul-
tiple sources confirming facts in a case, local newspapers refrain from publishing the names of suspects until they are charged. No longer do we print names and addresses of people who are on public record on the police blotter. Many years ago, many newspapers printed the names of the people in jail awaiting trial. So, where can readers go to find the facts of a story? Readers can trust the local news media to give them stories that are researched and edited to provide fair and accurate stories to the best of the newspaper staff’s ability. Don Heinzman is a columnist for ECM Publishers. Tad Johnson is a managing editor of Sun Thisweek and the Dakota County Tribune. They can be reached through editor.thisweek@ecm-inc.com. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.
Letters Only one side of a decision can be lived To the editor: I read the story about Tom Goodwin’s opinion’s about war and was bothered by something that is quite common; it is so easy to judge past decisions by looking over one’s shoulder. I believe that those kinds of judgments are flawed. There has always been evil in this world and probably always will be. How we respond to the evil is never a easy decision. We usually don’t know the complete picture. To make those decisions requires a certain amount of guess work. I believe people making those decisions really do have America’s best interest at heart, so to second guess them by looking over one’s shoulder is not fair. Once all the facts are known, then the decision becomes easy.
We then know the success or failure of the previous decision. Also, we do not know what would have happened had we chose another path to eliminate the threat. Since only one side of the decision can be lived, the results of other alternatives are not known and are a mystery. We do not know what would have happened had we done nothing in Vietnam or Iraq; we can only guess. Comparing reality against guesses does not paint a true picture. I thank Tom Goodwin for his service. I attended a program to honor the veterans at Vista View Elementary School on Nov. 11. It was a wonderful program that generated lots of heart felt tears in me. The students were beautiful and the folks that prepared the students did a wonderful job. Thanks to the students for showing their love for America and
its veterans. TOM ANDERSON Burnsville
Veterans Day coverage appreciated To the editor: After reading all four editions of the Nov. 13 Sun Thisweek and Dakota County Tribune papers, our community owes the newspaper staff the utmost gratitude its recent extensive coverage for Veterans Day, Nov. 11. The articles included coverage of special events, free dinners, salutes to veterans and various Beyond the Yellow Ribbon groups supporting service men and women and veterans. All this recognition and praise is well deserved and we cannot thank our military service members enough.
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John Gessner | BURNSVILLE NEWS/MANAGING EDITOR | 952-846-2031 | john.gessner@ecm-inc.com Jessica Harper | EAGAN NEWS | 952-846-2028 | jessica.harper@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 Darcy Odden | CALENDARS/BRIEFS | 952-846-2034 | darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com Tad Johnson | MANAGING EDITOR | 952-846-2033 | tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com Keith Anderson | DIRECTOR OF NEWS | 952-392-6847 | keith.anderson@ecm-inc.com PUBLISHER .................................. Julian Andersen PRESIDENT .............................. Marge Winkelman GENERAL MANAGER........................... Mark Weber BURNSVILLE/DISTRICT 191 EDITOR .. John Gessner EAGAN/DISTRICT 196 EDITOR .........Jessica Harper
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In the Apple Valley edition, “Salute to veterans at AVHS” included photos by Andrew Miller at Apple Valley High School’s sixth annual Veterans Day Assembly under the direction of Principal Steve Degenaar. Also included was information about the Apple Valley Beyond the Yellow Ribbon dinner for veterans on Nov. 19. The Burnsville-Eagan editors devoted over half of the front page to the story of Mike Clark, who reached out to military families in need, and Geraldine Longfellow, who was inducted Oct. 4 into the Minnesota National
Guard Court of Honor and who is “on a mission to help those who serve.” The Lakeville edition featured “Lakeville Yellow Ribbon thanks veterans.” More than 300 military veterans and their guests were treated to Lakeville Yellow Ribbon’s military dinner and program. The Farmington-Rosemount edition featured the arts council’s variety show to salute military veterans. Many of these articles were found overlapping in the four papers, which helped everyone better understand what was be-
ing done for veterans. It provides ideas and examples for others to follow in honoring veterans and service men and women. The newspapers reach a large audience and help us to keep informed of what is happening. While I am addressing respect for our veterans, the newspaper also covers many other subjects, which are important to all. We are facing challenging times and we need to support our veterans and military personnel to the utmost. The papers are very important in helping to reach and honor military people. See LETTERS, 5A
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 November 20, 2015
5A
Opinion Preventing school stop arm violations requires proactive approach by Kari Hoglund Kounkel
Guest Columnist
SPECIAL TO SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
School transportation made news recently, this time because the Minnesota State Patrol made a study of stop arm violators last April, also noted in Keith Anderson’s Nov. 6 column. Though the study is a good thing and the data is being used appropriately, as is common, the news was presented to raise alarm in the hearts of parents whose children rely daily on school transportation. I emphatically believe that any fatality or injury is too many. What I offer does not discount or minimize any person who has been injured or killed in a school transportation-related crash. My goal is zero fatalities. Students should ride school buses every day because it is the safest form of ground transportation. A variety of agencies dedicated to school transportation safety and state and federal agencies have spent massive amounts of time and money compiling statistics. Before we start to fix problems with stop arm violations or any other school bus-related safety feature, mechanism, or practice, we need to acknowledge that school transportation vehicles have an amazing safety record. Parents do not need to be alarmed or afraid to put their children on the bus; to
LETTERS, from 4A The newspapers do a great job in showing respect for military people. Thanks for all you do to promote praise and gratitude to our military. Keep up your great work. WILLIAM H. TSCHOHL Apple Valley
Thanks to Lakeville To the editor: On behalf of the Unite for 194 Volunteer Committee, our schools, and our students, we want to sincerely thank the Lakeville Schools community for supporting both levy
the contrary, they can be confident that they are making a safe choice for their children. Remaining vigilant with their children, though, is a good practice for parents. I urge parents to know about the people providing transportation, ask questions about school bus driver licensing and training, and report questionable driver behavior to authorities. The final suggestion is critical; school transportation officials cannot be with every driver every day, and direct public input is helpful to those officials. Recent news reports fail to indicate how many times a stop arm violation results in an injury or death to a student. The reason they have not done so is because hard data is difficult to obtain. The number is extremely low. I’ve spoken to many bus drivers who had stories about near misses. The drivers were always scared and often angry. One of our drivers watched a 13-year old student hit by a violator on a clear day. “I was laying on my horn, but she didn’t hear me� she said, horrified. “And then the car hit, and the she rolled across the hood of the vehicle, over the roof, and landed on the ground behind.� The girl escaped injury. The driver of the vehicle had no consequences.
questions on Nov. 3. We understand that saying yes to more taxes is not an easy decision. We would like to thank all of the volunteers who passed out stickers and literature, volunteered at conferences, and sent email and social media messages to help spread the word. Special thanks to Mary Brucciani, Amy Willingham, Leslie Johnson, Rick Krueger and Kelly Barke for sharing their talents and serving as advisors to our committee. We advocated for this investment in our schools, and we are committed to stick with the plan and ensure that your tax dol-
lars are spent exactly as promised. We hope you will join us in connecting with the district and having a voice in the future of the Lakeville Schools. AMY SOLINGER, ERIN GONYEA and JENNIFER HARMENING Unite for 194 Volunteer Committee
Ben Franklin store offered help, friendship To the editor: The closing of the Ben Franklin store in downtown Lakeville makes me so sad. Scott Erickson and his Ben Franklin
We need to raise awareness that flashing yellow lights mean that motorists must prepare to stop; once stopped they are required to stay stopped. Meanwhile, we focus on keeping our children safe despite passing motorists. All drivers need to focus on operating a motor vehicle when they are behind the wheel. Know school bus laws, and respect them. Pay attention to where students are standing during a daily commute. Stop and stay stopped 20 feet from a school bus when its lights are flashing, until the stop arm is retracted and there are no flashing lights. Teen drivers need specific awareness of the law; their training should include how to act when they meet a school bus. The youngest drivers are statistically vulnerable during the school-commute hours. Bus drivers must practice safe-stop skills and remain vigilant and consistent during every stop. Bus drivers must also be prepared for drivers who fail to stop by teaching their students what it means when they honk the horn. Students can be part of a safe solution. Minnesota students do school bus safety training and take a competency test every fall. They are instructed to wait in a safe location and to watch for the driver’s safety signal before approaching the bus. If there is no signal, the students need to wait. I contend that making stop arm violation consequences more punitive will not
store have been with our family through the joyous occasions from weddings to graduations. They have supplied us with balloons, decorations and support. Always delivered on time. And they’ve been with us through the sad, tearful purchase of flowers and American flags for the cemetery. They have helped us with framing 4-H photo projects at the last minute to that skein of yarn needed to finish a knitting piece. They have always done so with quiet, calm humor. I’ve always felt welcomed in the store, and I’ll miss that place where I could buy just about anything I needed on a Sunday afternoon
improve school bus stop safety, nor will it increase awareness. The problem is not with established law, regulations particular to school districts, or practices. I never experienced a repeat stop-arm violator in my district. I know those violators shared their stories with their families and friends, increasing awareness, and they did so regardless of the severity of their consequences. Requiring violators to pay fines or attend classes accomplishes nothing more, and anything we do after the fact of the violation occurs after students have been at risk. Proactively solving the problem may involve something more creative to increase awareness. Perhaps we offer a short video to every driver when they are renewing their driver’s license. Requiring drivers to watch the video before appearing at the DMV is technologically possible and easily enforceable. The critical factor and only thing under our control remains making the effort to teach students and bus drivers how to safely navigate school bus stops. Kari Hoglund Kounkel, CARES Consulting Inc., has worked in school transportation for 30 years and is currently launching an application designed to improve transportation operations. Her business is based in Monticello, Minn. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.
and find out the score of a Gopher, Vikings or Twins game. I know the present economy played a part in the store closing, how could it not. But I also feel really bad that it will no longer be a presence in downtown Lakeville. Scott has been a driving force behind trying to keep business in downtown. I know that without someone telling me because that is what the Erickson family has always done. Scott has generously contributed to the well-being of Lakeville and in doing so reminds me so much of his dad. And I thank him for that. The downtown Lakeville
of my childhood is gone. The downtown Lakeville of my adult years is just about non-existent. I thank Scott for always being there when my family needed him. His friendship has been a bonus. From sewing advice from Scott’s mother to classes downstairs, safety pins, dish towels, framing and embroidery thread to name a few. I thank him again for his friendship and kindness. His business has always been the gold standard of customer service. I wish Scott well in the future. PEGGY MADDEN Lakeville
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Rucki girls found at rural Minnesota ranch Police executed warrant Wednesday by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Gianna and Samantha Rucki, the two Lakeville teens who had been missing since April 2013, were found by police on Wednesday at the White
Horse Ranch in Herman, Minn., about 30 miles west of Alexandria. Lakeville Police Lt. Jason Polinski confirmed they executed a search warrant at the property that is operated by Gina Dahlen, according to its website, as part of a string of police searches related to the case. The Star Tribune reported that at 1:20 p.m.
officers in four vehicles, including Lakeville police, entered the White Horse Ranch property. Polinski did not immediately reveal what specifically led them to this ranch, but said they did not know if the girls were there when they arrived. He described their condition as “good� and “healthy� and said they were immediately being
brought to Dakota County. According to its website, which appears to have been shut down Wednesday, the White Horse Ranch aims to provide therapy to children through working with horses. It said on its website: “The realization of this combination revealed itself to us the summer of
2010 when two abused girls visited the ranch. What we did not realize at the time was the love and healing that would come out of the interaction of a horse and two abused children. It was a new found love and freedom they experienced that day that left such an imprint on two hearts. As we continued to work with these children God
started to implant the realization of a nonprofit ranch in which hurting kids could experience His love through the interaction with a horse.� More on this story will appear at SunThisweek. com. Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com.
Son: Mom of missing girls told kids to run in 2012 Police found her elementary-school age children wandering alone by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Just months before her two daughters disappeared, Sandra GrazziniRucki instructed her five children, then ages 9-16, to run from home and avoid the police, says her son, now 19. The Lakeville mother is suspected in the 2013 disappearance of her two daughters, Samantha and Gianna, now 16 and 17. After months of hiding from police herself, Grazzini-Rucki was arrested by U.S. Marshals in an upscale Florida resort, extradited to Minnesota by bus and is jailed in Dakota County on three felony counts of depravation of parental rights. Her bail has been set at $1 million. Police believe GrazziniRucki is hiding her daughters from their father through an underground network of people who believe family court to be corrupt. The girls were last seen publicly in a May 2013 Fox-9 news interview with then-reporter Trish Van Pilsum. They said their custodial father, David Rucki abused them.
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David Rucki denies any abuse, and police said there is no evidence to support the allegations. Nico Rucki said he was 16 on Sept. 6, 2012, when Grazzini-Rucki pulled him out of classes at Lakeville North High School and told him she expected she would lose full custody the next day. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She told me she was losing custody, and I had to run and I couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t trust anybody,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She told me to run ... and, like, donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t come back home, because if I came back home the police would get me.â&#x20AC;? That night at their closed-up Lakeville home, Nico Rucki said GrazziniRucki warned all her children they would not be safe if she lost custody. From behind the front door windows Grazzini-Rucki had painted opaque and blinds she always pulled closed, she instructed them all to leave home without telling them where to go, he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She told the rest of the kids and me to run,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. The next day, Sept. 7, 2012, Grazzini-Rucki did lose custody and was instructed by the courts to move out of the house. A Lakeville police report of the same date states David Ruckiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s sister, Tammy Love, had been granted temporary custody of the children and had
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Roger Kittelson brings rural perspective to race by Tad Johnson
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Third Democrat to seek 2nd District endorsement
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police found discarded wrappings of a cellphone left behind. Police called it the night of April 19, 2013, but got no answer. Nico Rucki said he is concerned about the girls and is fearful there is a chance they may not be alive. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know where they are,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;?I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know who theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been talking to (or) who theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been staying with, because you canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t live on your own. You canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t live out on the streets without being noticed.â&#x20AC;? He said he wants his sisters to come home, and described how hard it is to hear of sightings or online social media posts that have raised false hopes, and noted how stressful the ordeal has been for David Rucki. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I can see itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been tough on him,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Emotion, sad emotion when we bring up the girls, he gets emotional. ... You can see heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been through the ringer a lot.â&#x20AC;? He denied any abuse by his father to himself or any of his siblings, and said the two youngest children are doing well in school, happy and safe with their father. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re doing better than they were with my mom,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re happier than Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve ever seen them before. I mean, theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re a part of the family, theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re willing to go do family things. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re being kids again.â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki encouraged the girls, if they can hear his words, to come back and find out for themselves how things are, not just believe what they have been told. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I want to see them come home, and I want all this to end,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s crazy that this is all happening. It shouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be like this.â&#x20AC;?
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earlier visited the youngest children at Eastview Elementary School and told them of the ruling. She said she wanted their routine to stay the same and let them ride the bus home, according to the report. The children reportedly got off the school bus and immediately ran away. They were found over an hour later pacing a sidewalk in front of a house more than two miles away from their home, across busy County Road 50. A 911 caller stated the young children â&#x20AC;&#x153;ran off from an aunt who was granted custody,â&#x20AC;? according to the police report, and told police they called their motherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s boyfriend â&#x20AC;&#x153;Michaelâ&#x20AC;? to tell him what had happened. Michael Rhedin, a former Elko police officer, was dating GrazziniRucki at the time. The report says the Ruckisâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; then 10-year-old daughter told police Michael told her to go to Kwik Trip and â&#x20AC;&#x153;wait while he found someone to go there and pick them up.â&#x20AC;? She told police she just wanted â&#x20AC;&#x153;to go to Kwik Trip and see their mom,â&#x20AC;? but the report said police told them that was not going to happen because Love had temporary custody of them. Police say as they were driving the children home, the girl told them Love had been abusive toward
lice report, the day Love was to move in and care for the children the home needed repair and was lacking some of the basics found in most homes. The refrigerator and microwave were not working, and there was no wired or cell telephone service. Police reported the homeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cable television and Internet services had also been disconnected. The painted windows, locked doors and closed blinds created an environment that Nico Rucki described as creating an atmosphere of being â&#x20AC;&#x153;in dangerâ&#x20AC;? and â&#x20AC;&#x153;not safe.â&#x20AC;? He said he would challenge Grazzini-Ruckiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s claims about their father, but the rest of the children â&#x20AC;&#x153;did whatever she said.â&#x20AC;? He said Grazzini-Rucki gave the children no instructions about where to go or what to do once they left their home. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She just said run,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t say go anywhere, she just said run. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s how the conversation went down: Do not go home. Go anywhere but home.â&#x20AC;? Samantha and Gianna Rucki also did not come home after school that day, but instead went to the Lakeville police. Nico Rucki said he was at a friendâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s home and police picked him up and brought him to his house, where he helped his aunt clean and repair the house. The police report said the rest of the children, including Samantha and Gianna, spent the weekend with another aunt and uncle. Seven months later, Samantha and Gianna would run away from the home again without their shoes or coats, and according to suspended attorney Dale Nathan, dive into a car waiting nearby and driven by GrazziniRucki. Court documents state
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her in the past but could not recall any specific time or incident of any abuse. The report said both children indicated that if they go back home, they are â&#x20AC;&#x153;just going to run away,â&#x20AC;? and said they did not feel safe with Love. Nico Rucki said his mother used â&#x20AC;&#x153;scare tacticsâ&#x20AC;? to separate the children from their father, David Rucki. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She basically told us that he was, the best way to put it is, the devil,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If we went with him, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d die. We would never come back, we would be forever, like, damned.â&#x20AC;? He said at first he believed her, but when he started questioning his motherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s claims of abuse, Grazzini-Rucki turned the other children away from him as well, and he felt like he was being made out to â&#x20AC;&#x153;be the bad guy.â&#x20AC;? One of the last times he saw his sister Samantha Rucki before she disappeared in 2013, Nico Rucki said she called him a â&#x20AC;&#x153;traitor.â&#x20AC;? He said by the time the girls left, they were barely in contact with each other. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I saw Sammi at school here and there,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She avoided me all she could because I was talking to my dad at the time.â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said Grazzini-Rucki told the children Dave Rucki was â&#x20AC;&#x153;always staring through the windows,â&#x20AC;? was going to go after them and â&#x20AC;&#x153;destroy their lives.â&#x20AC;? He said GrazziniRucki made the children â&#x20AC;&#x153;victimsâ&#x20AC;? and â&#x20AC;&#x153;put fear into their minds.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was always the conversation with the kids that my dad was a bad guy and we shouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t go back to him,â&#x20AC;? Nico Rucki said. Love did not return multiple phone messages seeking comment. According to the po-
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Roger Kittelson, who has twice run for political office, announced this week he would be seeking the DFL endorsement in the 2nd District House race. Kittelson, of Goodhue, is the third Democrat to seek the endorsement as St. Jude Medical vice president of global human resources Angie Craig, of Eagan, and former Center for Vision Excellence executive director Dr. Mary Lawrence, of Prior Lake, have had their campaigns running for months. Kittelson said in a press release that he had been meeting with various DFL groups, labor representatives, family business own-
ers, and decided to get into the race due to his and their strong interests in protectRoger ing senior Kittelson citizens, urban and rural family businesses, and workers from unfair trade deals. He said he also supports a single-payer health care system to provide better health care at lower costs to all residents. The 2nd District seat will be vacated by U.S. Rep. John Kline, R-Burnsville, as the seven-term Republican announced in September he would not seek re-election in 2016. A debate among the declared Republican can-
didates â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Pam Myhra, Jason Lewis, David Gerson, John Howe and David Benson-Stabler â&#x20AC;&#x201C; was Thursday night in Inver Grove Heights and can be see at SunThisweek.com. Kittelson was the DFLendorsed candidate in Goodhue County in 1982 when he ran against incumbent Steve Sviggum. He also was the DFLendorsed candidate in Wisconsinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 6th Congressional District in 2008 when he won a primary challenge by a fellow Democrat. Kittelson was a state Capitol intern and was an intern in the U.S. Congress when he was a student at the University of Minnesota. He has a masterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s degree from the University
of Minnesota with emphasis in agricultural economics and statistics, and a Bachelor of Science with a double major in agricultural economics and political science from the University of Minnesota. He spent two years working in rural banking and 33 years in the dairy industry, nine years with U.S. Dairy Association and 24 years with various cooperative and private dairy companies. Kittelson is the father of four adult children and one grandchild. More about his candidacy is at www.rogerkittelson.com. Tad Johnson is at tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com. Follow him on Twitter @editorTJ.
Proposed property tax notices available online Beginning Nov. 12, Dakota County property owners can access their 2016 Proposed Property Tax Notice on the county website. These notices provide an estimate of what their property taxes will be in the following year if the taxing jurisdictions approve the budget
amounts they are considering. Property owners can go to www.dakotacounty. us and click on Property Information Search. Enter the address number or Property Identification Number of the property and click Search. Then, select the 2016 Proposed
Tax Notice. State law requires counties to mail the proposed notices to taxpayers in mid-November each year. Property owners also have the option to receive all tax notices via email if they opt into this delivery method.
Property owners are encouraged to sign up to receive future Proposed Property Tax Notices, Valuation Notices and Property Tax Statements electronically by going to www.dakotacounty.us and searching â&#x20AC;&#x153;electronic tax statements.â&#x20AC;?
SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
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Education A total of 778 District 196 AP scholars recognized The College Board recognized 778 District 196 high school students for their performance on Advanced Placement course exams taken during the 2014-15 school year. District 196 high schools offer 24 different AP courses which have been audited and approved by the College Board, a nonprofit organization of colleges, universities, secondary schools and higher education institutions focused on college readiness programs. Students who complete an AP course can take an optional exam and earn college credit, depending on their score on the exam and admission requirements at the college or university they attend. An AP exam score of 3 or higher (on a scale of 1 to 5) earns credit at many of the nationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s colleges and universities. There are four different levels of AP scholar recognition that are defined by the scores received and the number of exams taken during a studentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s high school career: AP Scholar is granted to students who receive scores of 3 or higher on three or more AP exams taken; AP Scholar with Honor recognizes students who receive an average score of at least 3.25 on all AP exams taken and scores of 3 or higher on four or more of the exams; AP Scholar with Distinction is given to students who receive an average score of at least 3.5 on all AP exams taken and scores of 3 or higher on five or more of the exams, and National AP Scholar recognizes students who receive an average score of at least 4 on all AP exams taken and scores of 4 or higher on eight or more of the exams. The District 196 students who earned recognition as AP scholars during the 2014-15 school year are listed below by category and school. National AP Scholars : Apple Valley High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Leah Andrews and Matthew Hofmann; Eagan High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Miriam Barnicle, Jacob El-Afandi, Eric Elert, Utkarsh Koshti, Ridhima
Mishra, Anthony Park, Jiadi Qian; Eastview High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Charles Cahow, Carly Challgren, Henry Clinton, Dan Dao, Anthony Deziel, Ribhav Gupta, Archat Iyer, Michelle Ji, Garrett Johnson, Shretij Kapoor, Hemanth Kumar, Dillon Kurila, Benjamin Lanning, Tanner Leighton, Taylor Leighton, Justin Lu, Apoorva Malarvannan, Varoon Pazhyanur, Christopher Roos, Spencer Sawyer, Carter Schwartz, Matthew Slane and Benjamin Slotten; and Rosemount High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Grace Herron, John Kessler, William Lai and Joseph Splettstoeser. (These 36 National AP Scholars are also recognized as AP Scholars with Distinction.) AP Scholars with Distinction (245 students): â&#x20AC;˘ Apple Valley High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Leah Andrews, Sydney Benson, Jacob Bierman, Davita Blyakher, Ilana Blyakher, Rachel Carlson, Andrew Carter, Jackson Courtright, Tessa Dahlgren, Colin Fackler, Robert Hapke, Alex Hoff, Grace Hoffa, Matthew Hoffman, Jessica Kostecki, Mitchell Krisnik, Cooper Lorsung, Sophia Moschkau, Katie Moynihan, Danielle Niederkorn, Margaret Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien, Alexander Perkins, Davis Petros, Margo Sanders, Laura Schulz, Jacob Swanstrom, Habb Tan, Jacob Thompson, Grant Udelhofen and Malini Wijesinghe. â&#x20AC;˘ Eagan High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Lucas Abbott, Tahir Ahsan, Reed Anderson, Matthew Balascak, Erin Barcaskey, Miriam Barnicle, Hannah Bergom, Gavin Brehm, Jenna Bromen, Tyler Buresh, David Cox, Jacob Dean, Joshua Duchene, Dylan Duerre, Joshua Edelstein, Jacob El-Afandi, Eric Elert, Matthew Erickson, Courtney Estenson, Miranda Gibis, Connor Hage, Berit Hansen, Steven Hasslinger, Elizabeth Jaeb, Bartosz Janczuk, Olivia Jones, Sarah Jurgens, Utkarsh Koshti, Noah Kuehn, Sarah Lardy, Quinn Las, Julia Lundquist, Gina Luu, Daniel Markon, Helen Matsoff, Dennis Melamed, Anthony Metcalfe, Mathew Miller, Ridhima Mishra, Saumik Narayanan,
Gretchen Nelson, Anthony Park, Zixiong Peng, Nick Pocquette, Jiadi Qian, Melanie Quick, Clara Richard, Caleb Ringkob, Jacob Rupp, Meagan Ruppert, Suraj Shah, Madison Thornton, Emma Toomey, Anya Udovik, Rayyaan Usmani and George Williams. Eastview High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Aundrea Abernathy, Shivani Alapati, Syed Ali, Alexis Anderson, Samuel Atkinson, Lauren Barcus, Epiphanie Belanger, Kendall Bradley, Noah Brown, Elijah Buscho, Charles Cahow, Abraham Carter, Carly Challgren, Michelle Chen, Olivia Chrysler, Henry Clinton, Joseph Cunningham, Dan Dao, Noah Desutter, Anthony Deziel, Anita Dharod, Anne Dillon, Van Duong, Madeline Fisher, John Flanagan, Neeraja Gollamudi, Kanika Gupta, Ribhav Gupta, Pavithran Guttipatti, Kaitlyn Hepp, Archat Iyer, Michelle Ji, David Johnson, Garrett Johnson, Bryan Joung, Taylor Kamano, Shretij Kapoor, Kevin Kayser, Nicholas Kilen, Jeremy Koletar, Kylie Kraemer, Hemanth Kumar, Dillon Kurila, Kyle Lamott, Benjamin Lanning, Helen Larson, Tanner Leighton, Taylor Leighton, Daniel Lekah, Nisse Lewison, David Lu, Justin Lu, Apoorva Malarvannan, Megan Matalamaki, Kennedy Mindeman, Anne Mitsch, Andrew Morgenstern, Joseph Mosset, Anoohya Muppirala, Amanda Myroniuk, Danielle Nash, Breanna Olson, Bhoomi Parikh, Joseph Parkhill, Varoon Pazhyanur, Samuel Penders, William Rannells, Natascha Rivera, Christopher Roos, Kaitlyn Ryan, Audrey Salo, Spencer Sawyer, Lena Schmitt, Carter Schwartz, Rostyslav Simonov, Kara Sjostrom, Mackenzie Skipper, Matthew Slane, Benjamin Slotten, Maxwell Smidt, Jacob Sobiech, Lindsay Stenzel, Lucy Stephenson, Kunal Sujanani, Sydney Tait, Taylor Thompson, Jordan Tigner, Rahul Tiwari, Sean Tuff, Eshan Varma, Emma Veum, Mitchell Walstad, Margaret Webster, Jillian Welborn, Caley Williams, Katherine Xu, Sonya Yermish-
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Katherine Koprowski, Bruce Lee, Jeremy Lutz, Elizabeth Lyne, Andrew Marell, Katherine Moon, Kayla Moor, Aekta Mouli, Madison Mountain, Grant Nafziger, Garrett Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Keefe, Thomas Olson, Manu Padma, Benjamin Pankow, Ria Patel, Lucy Post, Adam Pugh, Olivia Robinson, Devin Roelke, Elizabeth Sandstrom, Linde Schaffer, Joe Schmitz, Charlie Seidel, Haleigh Simon, Alexander Slater, Madison Sogge, Aisha Tahir, Olivia Taylor, Toni Treger, Caroline VanVliet, Curtis Wehrman, Collin Westgard, Charles Wickham, Grace Wilson, Nyanna Wright and Julia Yelle. â&#x20AC;˘ Eastview High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Connor Allen, Caitlin Anderson, Brooke Berglund, Adam Bobka, Elizabeth Boyer, Joshua Brown, Andrew Cheng, Kathleen Coyne, Nicole Crashell, Bernadette Dehnert, Siri Dove, Margaret Freed, Joshua Gerrelts, Jack Groves, Rishabh Gupta, Carolyn Handke, Maryam Haque, Tyler Hasselmann, Grace Hauser, Caeleb Heinen, Lauren Herland, Morgan Hierlmaier, Kathryn Hinderaker, Joshua Illg, Weifan Jiang, Andrew Johns, Sean Kamano, Mitchell Kamman, Meghan Kratz, Rebecca Levey, Peter Liffrig, Annie Martel, Daniel Mclean, Claire Meyer, Maggie Murray, Alexander Nunn, Harini Pasupuleti, Jarod Robinson, Hannah Rumon, Janelle Ruth, Alan See, Faduma Shaba, Joseph Sheehan, Emma Sinn, Jaclyn Solinger, Trevor Swanson, Nam Ta, Abigail Thompson, Patrick Twomey, Anika Vij, Maria Woehler, Danielle Wong, Emily Yung and Danielle Zhang. â&#x20AC;˘ Rosemount High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Grant Brokl, Danielle Brown, Jacob Campen, Kylee Carr, Hope Chvatal, Rozalyn Davis, George Dippold, Justus Doese, Megan Enochs, Trevor Graham, Emily Hackerson, Jessica Hanley, Aleezeh Hasan, Nicole Hutchinson, Samuel Ivanecky, Woo Min Jeon, Amanda Karges, Leopold Molitor,
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8A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Education Harriet Bishop offers magnet program information nights Parents are invited to learn more about the magnet program at Harriet Bishop Gifted & Talented Elementary School at two upcoming information meetings. Slated for 6:30 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 23, and Monday, Jan. 11, the meetings will provide information about how the magnet program works, qualification requirements, and how instruction is delivered to meet the unique needs of gifted students.
SCHOLARS, from 7A William Northway, Rachel Otto, JeeEun Park, Jacob Pietruszewski, Katherine Schuman, Hillary Smith, Ellen Stefanko, Lauren Topor, Brock Totman, Dominic Voto and Benjamin Wemple. â&#x20AC;˘ School of Environmental Studies â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Amy Bendsten, Sydney Gram, Riley Hale, Naomi Kolb-Untinen, Nasra Mohamed, Ruby Sevilla, Margaret Swanson, Augustina Teuber and Melissa Wilson. AP Scholars (365 students): â&#x20AC;˘ Apple Valley High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Sara Beneke, Michael Borman, Gina Chen, Hannah Chung, Kevin Cranmer, Brita Dawson, Tanner Dezee, Gabrielle Dougan, Mitchell Dunbar, Kristopher Egan, Alayna Erickson, Marisa Erickson, Emilia Galchutt, Jenna Kacheroski, Kenneth Kaijage, Frank Kelly, Kimberly Knourek, Lukas Krueger, Elizabeth Lane, Hannah Larson, Heidi Le, Tony Lee, Brett Levac, Madeline Martens, Anna Milbauer, Meaghan Murphy, Megan Orzolek, Luke Peterson, Erin Plasek, Prince Hyeamang, Zachary Robole, Emma Sackett, Chelsi Serba, Hannah Slater, Adam Stacer, Anita Stasson, Ashley Suter, Jack Vogelgesang, Samuel Wetzel and Nicholas Willette. â&#x20AC;˘ Eagan High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Luke Aarestad, Christopher Acton, Nicholas Aldinger, Anusha Arcalgud, Nicholas Asta, Tyler Baillif, Mckenna Barker, Rachel Blakely, Ian Buddecke, Erin
Parents will also learn more about the schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mission, values and opportunities for all students. Harriet Bishop is a hybrid school, serving both students from outside its attendance area who qualify and all students within its attendance area. The school provides enrichment for all students as well as targeted and leveled instruction within the school day for students who meet the gifted criteria. There are many within-school and outside of school opportunities for highly-gifted students to soar. For more information, go to www.isd191.org/harrietbishop or call the school at 952-707-
3900. Harriet Bishop is located at 14400 Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connell Road in Savage, within Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District 191.
h. Agenda Additions i. Approval of Agenda 2. Consider Approval of Consent Agenda a. Board Minutes b. Employment Recommendations, Leave Requests and Resignations c. Other Personnel Matters d. Payment of Bills & Claims e. Wire Transfers/Investments f. Other Business Matters Following is the agenda for g. Resolution Regarding Acceptance the 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24, reg- of Gift Donations ular meeting of the District 194 h. Field Trips School Board at Lakeville City 3. Consent Agenda Discussion Items 4. Reports Hall. a. 2014-15 WBWF Reporting Update â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Ms. Knudsen 1. Preliminary Actions b. 2016-17 District Calendar First a. Call to Order Reading â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dr. Snyder b. Pledge of Allegiance c. Roll Call and Board Introductions 5. Additions to Agenda 6. Information d. Spotlight on Innovation a. Superintendentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Report e. Good News b. Board Members Reports f. Public Comment 7. Adjournment g. Board Communications
College news
Burns, Alex Choi, Staci Conocchioli, Zachary Day, Katherine Dewolf, Leah Dunlevy, Dana Duran, Cole Estrem, Karalyn Giles, Jacqueline Gnatkowski, Maxwell Goldberger, Alexander Grieme, Ellen Gustafson, Nicole Hanson, Zachary Harder, Louise Hareid, Margaret Harings, Alexander Hauser, Annika Heine, Stephen Herron, Cole Hibbard, Maggie Holtz, Kristen Howland, David Immen, Tommy Jaakola, Morgan Jacoby, Hanna Jaeb, Michael Jaeb, Nicole Jaeb, Mahala James, Alex Janvrin, Andrew Kemp, Britta Koenen, Michael Kranz, Anna Krueger, Kaden Kruse, Dominic Lemieux, Daniel Lev, Matthew Little, Aaron Liu, Emma Lundquist, Isabelle Lunow, Kathryn Maas, Zachary Markon, Danielle Marshall, Nicholas Mattson, Sean McCoy, Meredith McCrady, George Mcgivern, Sommer Meyer, Mckayla Miller, Matthew Mills, Olivia Mitchell, Mark Moran, Claire Mugge, Matthew Munns, Max Najlis, Billy Nguyen, Stephanie Nguyen, Bianca Nkwonta, Mandy Noethe, Madeline Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor, Anders Olson, Hannah Olson, Brooke Olstad, Roshni Pandey, Ashley Patyk, Haley Pesik, William Poirier, Benjamin Portzen, Katrina Pross, Ryan Quigley, Kara Reardon, Robert Schedler, Caitlin Scovil, Sera Serim, Sneha Shankar, Ellie Simonett, Holly Smith, Brenna Steichen, Mallory Stock, Brianna Tenace, Elizabeth Tepozteco, Saiteja Thota, Anna Van
Wyk, James Wagley, Rachel Wall, Monica Warner and Olivia Weinberger. â&#x20AC;˘ Eastview High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Alexis Adrian, Fardous Ahmed, Carson Albrecht, Alex Baker, Josiah Bawden, Stephen Bergman, Eric Bergquist, Emma Bersie, Laura Bestul, Nicole Bichsel, Danielle Bodette, Ryley Boelter, Grant Boraas, Zachary Borhauer, Eleanor Borshak, Dylan Brend, Samuel Burns, Catherine Cahow, Blake Carlson, Christopher Cartwright, Lauren Casey, Sarah Chatfield, Lydia Clinton, Jessica Davis, Ilea Decker, Mikayla Denicola, Caleb Dettmer, Sunita Dharod, Ethan Dohm-Palmer, Jacob Donlan, Rachel Drehmel, Jarod Edwards, Stephanie Eilts, Madeline Ericksen, Jonathan Falkenberg, Alexander Frandle, Charles Fuller, Emily Funk, Haley Gallagan, Camille Gonzalez, Jayson Gouette, Kaleb Gunderson, Robert Hall, Janessa Hammers, Katelyn Hanson, Sydney Hedberg, Nicholas Hilger, Emily Holmberg, Sean Homstad, Hee Hong, Yekaterina Ivanchuk, Eleanor Jayne, Lyle Johnson, Abigail Keelin, Katie Keelin, Sarah Knutson, Shelby Kohler, Lubomir Krastev, Matthew Kratz, Amy Lao, Amelia Larwood, Kassidy Lavelle, Megan Lewandowski, Mackenzie Lindell, Kevin Lindorfer, Abby Loew, Kristina Loomis, Chelsey Lorence, Jamie Lucas, Julia Luciano, Annika Martell, Erin Mayer, Grace Mayer, Laurel Mckeag, Mackenzie Mellum,
Timothy Effertz, Jackson Erdmann, Kylee Essen, Elizabeth Evenocheck, Kylee Frank, Collin Goldsworthy, Gabrielle Green, Noah Greenfield, Nicholas Guden, Faith Haley, David Hanson, Mackenna Hinz, Justin Hohenstein, Kirstin Honcharenko, Andrew Johnson, Ashleigh Johnson, Kantika Jones, Samuel Karlson, Noah Kuzas, Chuemeng Lee, Lauren Lemke, Mary Lenertz, Abigail Linnett, Tyler Luitjens, Taylor Marquardt, Brandon Menne, Michaela Minarik, Caroline Morris, Andrew Nelson, Melanie Nelson, Cole Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien, Gage Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien, Jessica Ojala-Reed, Ethan Olson, Jenna Olson, Alisha Patel, Jessica Petersen, Cole Peterson, Ryan Poehler, Kali Regenold, Riley Roberts, Caroline Sachse, Colleen Sachse, Nikhita Sandesh, Brandon Sawyer, Melissa Sawyer, Cody Schultz, Tanner Sorlien, Fernando Souza, Michael St. Ores, Neha Sunkum, Maureen Toner, Nathan Van Handel, Sierra Wahlin-Rhoades, Peter Wallin, Natalie Welshons, Delaney Wier, Anna Wise, Austin WongParker, Joan Reiziell Yambing and Zachary Zweber. â&#x20AC;˘ School of Environmental Studies â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Gillian Catano, Maren Connell, Ariel Doran, Hannah Geere, Allison Hagg, Abby Keller, Mariel Klaverkamp, Victor Maynard, Danielle Palm, Trent Peters, Mikaela Schriber, Nora Straquadine, Erik Thompson, Amy Villella and Benjamin Young.
District 194 School Board
Rebecca Michaels, Sumayo Moâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;allin, Kelly Montgomery, Sarah Montgomery, Ashuna Moore, Keith Muehlbauer, Caleb Negussie, Robel Negussie, Bridget Nelson, Olivia Nichols, Ethan Odegard, Aimiyomdeh Ogbeide, Deirdre Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Keeffe, Emily Pachan, Brooke Pahlen, Alessia Palacios, Pravan Pallempati, Alexander Pan, Thomas Pearson, Andrew Pegelow, Brianna Peterman, Joshua Peterson, Rebecca Peterson, Matthew Psick, Zachary Pugmire, Allison Quady, Patrick Ramiscal, Kristina Ratsamy, Carolyn Robertson, Rachel Roeder, Alexis Rufi, Alexsandra Rybakina, Jacob Salo, Rachel Schmidt, David Schrader, Karena Schrempp, Bryn Schroeder-Phill, Jolene See, William Selby, Lielte Senay, John Sholl, Nicholas Spann, Andrew Stern, Adam Stockwell, Lauren Stretar, Zachary Suhsen, Luke Swenson, Christopher Tracy, Samantha Trammel, Max Tritschler, Jeremy Trogstad, Dominique Ubel, Siri Underdahl, Nathaniel Vander Schaaf, Caitlin Van Meter, Joshua Wahlen, John Wiegele, Rachel Williams, Jacob Wilson, Stephanie Xu, Bridget Zappe and Lauryn Zugschwert. â&#x20AC;˘ Rosemount High School â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Erin Abraham, Ellen Ailts, Grace Anderson, Noah Anderson, Kristen Andrews, Logan Becker, Sneh Bhakta, Michael Brehmer, Jordan Casby, Amanda Davidson, Shale Demuth, Joshua Dennis, Joshua Doese, Nicholas Dykhuizen,
The College of St. Scholastica, Duluth, summer deanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s list, Carla Simonson, of Eagan. University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, August graduate, Garrett Runing, of Eagan, B.S., recreation management. Rebekah De Penning, of Eagan, has been selected to play the alto saxophone in the Dordt College Campus-Community Band, Sioux Center, Iowa. De Penning is a senior majoring in engineering. To submit college news items, email: reporter.thisweek@ecminc.com.
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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
9A
Longtime Rosemount businessman dies Don Corrigan was part of Corrigan Electric for more than 50 years by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Corrigan Electric was a fixture in downtown Rosemount for more than 50 years, and the man who ran that business for most of those years died on Friday, Nov. 13. Don Joseph Corrigan was 75. The tall, cheerful president of Corrigan Electric was known throughout the community as a strong family man, a devout Catholic and a lover of history. All of his life pursuits seemingly were done with a smile, though he was serious about his craft as an electrician and great service to his customers. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He was the most good-natured guy,â&#x20AC;? Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s longtime friend and Rosemount resident Jerry Mattson said on Tuesday. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t lose his temper. He didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t lose his cool. He was friendly with everybody. I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t anyone who didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t like him. We all are going to miss him.â&#x20AC;?
Don Corrigan Prior to the construction of the Corrigan Electric building at the corner of 145th Street and Cameo Avenue in 1957, Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s father, Thomas Corrigan, ran the business from his home. Don Corrigan left college to run the business when he father became ill. He became the companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s president in 1968 when Thomas Corrigan died. Don Corrigan, whom the family said was famous for seeking payment of electrical services in chocolate chip cook-
ies, operated the business from that familiar street corner until 2011. Mattson said Corrigan was a great resource for historians, since Corrigan had been inside virtually every commercial building and many of the homes in Rosemount through his years as an electrician. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Don was a walking encyclopedia of Rosemount history,â&#x20AC;? Mattson said. Born on March 22, 1940, to Thomas and Erma Corrigan, the young Corrigan got an early start in remembering family names and the homes they lived in as he delivered newspapers. His familiarity with people grew as he was an altar boy at St. Joseph Catholic Church and then started working with his father in the family business along with helping on his relativesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; farms. Family stories were part of Don Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s recollections as his family traces its Rosemount roots back four generations
when his great-grandparents, Thomas L. and Mary Corrigan, emigrated from Ireland and settled in nearby Inver Grove Heights. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He could tell all sorts of stories,â&#x20AC;? Mattson said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If you would talk to him, he would say: â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Oh, yeah. I know them,â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and he would tell me all about this person. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He was a natural storyteller,â&#x20AC;? Mattson said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t take him much to get him going. Sometimes you wish you had a recorder with you when he started talking.â&#x20AC;? Mattson said it was not in Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s nature to write down the history he knew, rather preferring to tell stories and collecting tidbits through the years that he donated and are now considered artifacts by the Rosemount Area Historical Society. Rosemount resident and historian Maureen Geraghty Bouchard said Corrigan was one of her â&#x20AC;&#x153;go-to guysâ&#x20AC;? when she had a question. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He was a great source
for me,â&#x20AC;? Bouchard said. She said Corrigan was always willing to oblige. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He was jovial. Always had a good story, always had a positive story,â&#x20AC;? Bouchard said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He is going to be missed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He was a very devoted family man, devoted to his religion and devoted to the people in town,â&#x20AC;? Bouchard said. Corrigan and Rita Marie Beyer were married on July 18, 1964. They had five children â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Patrick, Kat, Tom, Colleen and Kelleen. The family spent many years traveling the United States in a Winnebago motorhome and went on many camping holidays on the north shores of Lake Superior. In 2013, Don, Rita and their three daughters traveled to Ireland and went to Rosemount, County Westmeath, and visited tombstones of his family near County Mayo. The family said in an obituary that Corrigan looked forward to regular luncheons with his four
sisters and that he loved dogs, especially Rusty. Corrigan was a member of the Knights of Columbus, was a Third Degree Knight and served as Grand Knight. The family said he was only ever away from home when he would attend the Knights annual retreat near Stillwater. This year he was given a plaque for 40 years of attendance, which the family said he cherished. Mass of Christian burial will be 11 a.m. Friday, Nov. 20, at The Church of St. Joseph, 13900 Biscayne Ave., Rosemount. Visitation is 4-8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 19, at White Funeral Home, 12804 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville, and one hour prior to Mass. Interment will follow at St. Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cemetery. A full obituary for Corrigan appears in todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s edition. Tad Johnson is at tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com. Follow him on Twitter @editorTJ.
Innovation Zone project seeks space, budget targets Lakeville, Prior Lake school boards hold first joint meeting by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
There are still many unknowns about the Lakeville and Prior Lake school districtsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; joint Innovation Zone project, including the cost. At their first joint meeting Nov. 17, Lakeville and Prior Lake board members expressed concern at the lack of information about project costs to jointly establish the Minnesota Center for Advanced Professional Studies. Described as an offcampus, hands-on opportunity for high school juniors and seniors in
both districts to tailor their studies toward either a business or health care track, the program is set to take its first registrations in early 2016. MNCAPS Coordinator Melanie Smieja recommended its off-site location be one side of the Minnesota School of Business building at 17685 Juniper Path in Lakeville. An optometry business located in the building is planning to move by early next year. The MNCAPS program is proposed to occupy 8,400 square feet, but Smieja said they do not know how much the lease
will cost. An advisory board is to be established that would include industry professionals, a student, a member from each school board and some district staff. District 194 Board Member Jim Skelly, who has previously expressed concern about being able to sustain the costs of the program, suggested the district also have a backup plan if the space did not work out. District 194 Board Member Bob Erickson questioned if the program could run without administration on site. District officials said
many costs will be driven by enrollment, and the districts plan to survey students to gauge interest so they can plan staffing levels. While the Minnesota Department of Education gave the required approval for the districts to jointly create the Innovation Zone project, the state provides no funding for it. Both districts committed $70,000 to the program to fund the coordinator position. The Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District was originally included in the Innovation Zone with the other districts, but with-
drew in August. Plans require gaining involvement from local businesses, as the program promises one-on-one mentorships with employees in their field of study, which include, business, medicine and health care. A meeting with businesses was slated for Nov. 20, after this issue went to press. At MNCAPS, students would be immersed in a professional culture and work on real-world problem solving using industry standard tools. They would earn both high school and college credits and parents must give written permission
before their child could enroll in the program. The program is expected to start in the 2016-17 school year, and Curriculum Director Barb Knudsen has said their goal is for the program to help increase the districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s graduation rate in â&#x20AC;&#x153;targeted subgroupsâ&#x20AC;? by at least 5 percent and narrow the achievement gap by at least 50 percent by 2017. Both district boards will meet again about the project 6 to 8 p.m. Feb. 22 at Prior Lake High School. Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com.
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10A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Interstate Power Systems moving to Lakeville Future road upgrade, trail fees questioned by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Interstate Power Systems, a 58-year-old Minnesota business, is moving from Bloomington to Lakeville and bringing 80100 skilled jobs with it. The City Council unanimously approved the preliminary plat for the business to relocate on a 14.3-acre property in the Airlake Industrial Park on the southeast corner of County Road 70 and Highview Avenue at its Nov. 16 meeting. Planned is development of an 82,000-square-foot building housing the businessâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; offices and sales, warehouse, semi-truck repair center and a retail
A side view of the 82,000-square-foot Interstate Power Systems building is included in preliminary plat plans approved by the Lakeville City Council Nov. 16. The facility is to be located on over 14 acres Airlake Industrial Park at the intersection of Highview Avenue and County Road 70. (Graphic submitted) store that sells accessory vehicle parts. In addition to other development fees, the city is requiring cash fees of $158,664 for future widening of County Road 70 and another $10,000 for future trail construction along the road. While widening County
Road 70 has been discussed by city and county officials, the project is not included in either entityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s five-year Capital Improvement Plans. Concerns were raised by Appro Development CEO Jack Matasosky and Interstate Power Systems CEO Travis Penrod about
the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s long-standing policy of collecting fees for future road projects. Penrod said he has developed 23 locations in 10 states and never heard of charging a fee before a road is even designed or planned. He said the company would pay the fee when the
project has been planned and costs are known. City Administrator Justin Miller said the fee is charged to help fund future road improvements on that road as development occurs because the city cannot assess the cost of the improvements to county roads, but pays a portion of the costs for their improvement. Associate City Planner Frank Dempsey noted at a Nov. 5 Planning Commission meeting that County Road 70 has more access drives than would currently be allowed for a county road. He said county and city officials agree more study is needed to determine what accesses will be in-
cluded for the roadâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s final design for the expansion. City Council members did not make a final decision about the proposed fee, but agreed to review how the policy is applied in this situation at an upcoming work session. Council Member Colleen LaBeau added the city should also consider whether the road needs to have paved trails on both sides of the reconstructed road as is currently planned. LaBeau frequently has cited concerns about the expense of maintaining the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s extensive parks and trails system. Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com.
Farmington man sentenced to 5 years in prison by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Ten years after being convicted of three felony counts of criminal vehicular homicide for killing three brothers in an alcohol-related crash, a Farmington man is back in prison. Boe Elijah Barlage, 33, was sentenced to five years in the St. Cloud Correctional Facility for first-degree driving under the influence by Dakota County Judge Tim Wermager on Nov. 12. Barlage pleaded guilty in August. He received 107 daysâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; credit for time served.
Barlage pleaded guilty in 2005 in connection with a crash when Boe Barlage he was 23 that killed the three Backstrom brothers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Matthew, 20; Jacob, 17; and Justin, 16, of Hampton â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and he was sentenced to eight years in prison. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hard to understand how anyone who had previously killed three persons while driving under the influence could ever drink and drive again,â&#x20AC;? Dakota County Attorney James Back-
strom said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I hope that Mr. Barlage will reflect once again on the terrible trauma he inflicted on the Backstrom family 11 years ago and finally find a way to deal with his serious problems with alcohol abuse.â&#x20AC;? Backstrom is not related to the three brothers, but he has grown to know the family through the years. The brothersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; parents, Connie and Nathan Backstrom, have volunteered hundreds of hours to speaking to high school students in Minnesota. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve shared the story of their loss and urge young people to make
good decisions and never drink and drive. â&#x20AC;&#x153;They are an amazing family with more strength and courage than I could ever hope to have under similar tragic circumstances,â&#x20AC;? James Backstrom said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I know that Mr. Barlageâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s recent decision to drink and drive again was deeply disappointing to them as it was to me.â&#x20AC;? In May, the Lakeville Police Department responded to a report of a vehicle driving all over the road on Cedar Avenue, according to the criminal complaint. Barlage said he was on his way home to Farm-
ington from the Mall of America and denied consuming alcohol, but the officer observed that Barlage had red eyes, slurred speech and a slight odor of alcohol. At the police station, Barlage consented to a breath test, which showed an alcohol concentration of 0.19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; more than twice the legal limit. He was still on probation for the 2005 crash when he was pulled over in May. According to the 2004 police report, Barlage was driving east of Farmington on County Road 50 when he struck the Backstrom vehicle. Barlage
was talking on his cellphone and attempting to pass another car; when he realized another car was coming at him, he overcorrected and lost control. Matthew and Justin died at the scene and Jacob was transported to the hospital where he died the following day. Barlage was ejected from his vehicle and was airlifted to Regions. Two hours following the crash, Barlage had a blood alcohol level of 0.15. Email Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.
Rep. John Kline hosts app challenge for high school students In an effort to showcase the technological talents of students in Minnesotaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 2nd District, U.S. Rep. John Kline, R-Burnsville, is hosting a Congressional App Challenge for high school students. The Congressional App Challenge is aimed at encouraging U.S. high school students
to learn how to code by creating their own applications. It was created because Congress recognized that science, technology, Engineering, and math (STEM) skills are essential for economic growth and innovation. For the contest, students will compete with
peers in their own congressional district by creating and exhibiting their software application, or â&#x20AC;&#x153;app,â&#x20AC;? for mobile, tablet, or computer devices on a platform of their choice. Students may participate as individuals or in teams of four. Students entering the competition
must submit their appâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s source code online, as well as provide a video demo explaining their app and what they learned through this competition process. Students should be sure to find the correct registration page specific to Kline and the 2nd District. Students must regis-
ter and submit their apps on www.challenge.gov by Friday, Jan. 15, 2016. Students can access Klineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s challenge webpage by typing â&#x20AC;&#x153;Klineâ&#x20AC;? in the search field. Winners will be named Feb. 22, 2016. Winning students will have their apps featured on the U.S. House of Representa-
tives website and displayed in a U.S. Capitol exhibit, and will be honored by Kline. For additional details about the program, visit www.congressionalappchallenge.us or contact Klineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Burnsville office at 952-808-1213.
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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
11A
Major kudos given to Valleywood Golf Course Apple Valley-run course named â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Club of the Yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; by Minnesota Golf Association by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Joel Comstock, right, regional affairs director for the Minnesota Golf Association, explained why Valleywood Golf Course was selected â&#x20AC;&#x153;Member Club of the Yearâ&#x20AC;? to the Apple Valley City Council at its Nov. 12 meeting. Pictured at left is Valleywood Golf Course manager Jim Zinck. (Photo courtesy City of Apple Valley)
Innovative youth programs â&#x20AC;&#x201D; along with multiple sets of tee markers of varying distances, making golf enjoyable for players of all ability levels â&#x20AC;&#x201D; are what set Valleywood Golf Course apart. That was the message delivered to Apple Valley City Council members Nov. 12 by Joel Comstock, regional affairs director for the Minnesota Golf Association, as he pre-
sented the MGAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;Member Club of the Yearâ&#x20AC;? award to city officials. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Valleywood is widely recognized as one of the premier public golf courses in the Twin Cities area,â&#x20AC;? Comstock said. The city-run, 18-hole golf course located at 4851 McAndrews Road was officially named the 2015 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Member Club of the Yearâ&#x20AC;? at the MGAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s annual Meeting and Awards Dinner on Nov. 2 at Oak Ridge Country Club in Hopkins. The MGA, which has about 400 member clubs, has handed out the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Member Club of the Yearâ&#x20AC;? award since 2000, and Valleywood is one of only a handful of public courses to have received the award.
Other recent recipients include Rochester Golf & Country Club, Baker National Golf Club, and Brackettâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Crossing Country Club. Valleywoodâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s youth programs were singled out as exemplary by the MGA. Parent-child golf lessons â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and the policy of letting kids play free on Sunday afternoons â&#x20AC;&#x201D; were among the programs noted by the MGA, Comstock said. The course also plays host to a number of U.S. Golf Association qualifier events and state-level tournaments, Comstock added. Mayor Mary HamannRoland praised Valleywood Golf Course manager Jim Zinck for creating
â&#x20AC;&#x153;a culture of accessible golf â&#x20AC;? for area youths. â&#x20AC;&#x153;These are kids that are golfing out there that would have never had the opportunity to do it,â&#x20AC;? she said. Valleywood, a par-71 course spanning 190 acres, received a makeover in recent years with the addition of a new clubhouse. The new $3.2 million facility, completed in September 2012, boasts a pro shop, bar and grill, outdoor patio, and a main dining room with seating for about 150 people. The old clubhouse, which was built in 1980 and had been showing structural defects, was demolished. Email Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.
Lakeville Women in Business are giving back Organization holds first campaign for the needy by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
KARE-11 news anchor Kim Insley, who Corlett said shared an inspirational story about no matter what your age, we still have so much to offer. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She spoke of generational differences and how much we have to learn from each other,â&#x20AC;? Corlett said in an email to this newspaper. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Experience matters, but the thought process of the younger generation (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, fast pace, etc.) matters just as much. How do we all work together and bring value? Corlett called the WIB members a â&#x20AC;&#x153;fabulous groupâ&#x20AC;? of women who regularly network with each other and enjoy a speaker. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Why not take this opportunity to do some good as well?â&#x20AC;? Corlett said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m so proud to be a part of a group that was willing to each give to make 30 more families happy on Thanksgiving Day.â&#x20AC;?
Lakevilleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Women in Business members recently stepped up to make Thanksgiving better for others. For the first time, organization members held their first LWB Gives Back campaign during their quarterly luncheon to donate food for Thanksgiving baskets for those in need. According to Women in Business founder and President Shanen Corlett, 75 women attended the luncheon and, along with a few men who stepped in to help, brought food donations totaling 292 pounds. They also gave $190 in cash and $155 in gift cards, enough for 30 Thanksgiving baskets that were donated to 360 ComKARE-11 news anchor Kim Insley, fourth from left, was guest speaker at the quarterly munities, which serves local people in Laura Adelmann is at laura.adelmann@ Women in Business luncheon Nov. 12 at the Lakeville Holiday Inn. She is pictured with ecm-inc.com. need. the WIB committee members who help WIB founder and President Shanen Corlett The eventâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s featured speaker was plan their monthly luncheons. (Photo submitted)
County Electronic Crimes Task Force to receive award The Dakota County Electronic Crimes Task Force will receive the Local Government Innovation Award from the University of Minnesotaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Humphrey School of Public Affairs at a ceremony to be held Dec. 10. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are honored and excited to receive this award. Dakota County law enforcement is blazing a trail with this task force, creating a template for law enforcement agencies throughout the state,â&#x20AC;? said Dakota County Sheriff Tim Leslie. The task force is a joint powers agreement among the county and eight local law enforcement agencies. The unit increases law enforce-
mentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s arsenal against electronic crimes. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There are no fences around Dakota County,â&#x20AC;? explained Leslie. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There has been an increase in peer-to-peer sharing of child pornography, identity theft, and financial crimes, not to mention the nexus with violent crime. This task forceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work allows us to incorporate a trail of information associated with cellphones, digital media, and email, which enhances our investigations and leads to more convictions.â&#x20AC;? The Dakota County Electronic Crimes Task Force is just completing its first year. It was created with a financial com-
mitment from each of the partner cities, and personnel supplied by the Apple Valley Police Department, Burnsville Police Department, and the Sheriffâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Office. The task force reflects Sheriff Leslieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s commitment to building strong partnerships with the countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s public safety allies. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are all better and more effective when we work together. Criminals donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t ponder jurisdiction or geography and we shouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t handcuff ourselves over those lines,â&#x20AC;? added Leslie. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cyber threats are only going to get worse and thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s why we created this county-
wide unit dedicated solely to investigating electronic offenses. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m proud of the work the Electronic Crimes Task Force is doing and I thank all the
partner cities for making this a truly effective tool throughout Dakota County.â&#x20AC;? The task force includes the cities of Apple Val-
ley, Burnsville, Farmington, Hastings, Mendota Heights, Rosemount, South St. Paul and West St. Paul.
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12A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Business Business Buzz QA1 Precision Products wins award
sorption. These enhancements allow for redesign of composite structures, eliminating weight while improving strength and Lakeville-based QA1 stiffness. Precision Products won the Materials and Process Innovation Award from Orthodontist the American Composites installs free Manufacturers Association during the 2015 Com- library Snyder Orthdontics has posites and Advanced Materials Expo in Dallas, installed a Little Free Library in the officeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s front Texas. During the expo, yard at 14065 Essex Ave. ACMA presents its Awards in Apple Valley. Call 952for Composites Excellence 423-1909 for information. to companies that implement innovation in three Santa categories: composites design, manufacturing, and experience market growth. QA1 PreKeller Williams Premier cision Products won in the Realty South Suburban is manufacturing category holding its second annual for its nanosilica-infused Santa Experience 12-3 resin for use in automo- p.m. Sunday, Dec. 6, at tive drive shafts. The resin Spirit of Brandjten Farm has improved compressive Barn, 16972 Brandtjen strength, fracture tough- Farm Drive, Lakeville. ness and reduced water abPhotos with Santa are
slated 12:30-2:30 p.m. The event features food, kidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; crafts and prizes. Raffle tickets are provided for each toy or food donation. Attendees are asked to bring peanut butter, jelly and gift cards for the Rosemount Community Center. RSVP to your Keller Williams agent.
Coffee and bagels in Eagan Caribou Coffee and Einstein Bros. Bagels debuted their newest coffee and bagels concept in Eagan on Nov. 17. Both Caribou and Einstein Bros. Bagels fan favorites are on the combined menu. Different limited time offerings will complement each other, like Caribouâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s pumpkin chai latte and Einstein Bros. pumpkin bagel and shmear.
The shop is located at 3405 Promenade Ave., Suite 400. Hours are 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.
Wireless Zone collects Toys for Tots Wireless Zone of Lakeville, an exclusive carrier and retailer of Verizon Wireless products and services, is partnering with the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots campaign by placing a collection bin in the store during the holiday season. The Toys for Tots campaign delivers new toys during Christmas to less fortunate children in every community it serves. Toys can be dropped off at the Wireless Zone located at 17442 Kenwood Trail until Dec. 17. This season Toys for
Tots is encouraging donors to think about the teens and young adults the program serves. Suggested donations include books, backpacks, cosmetics, purses, bath gift sets, board games and electronics.
Outlet mall holiday hours Twin Cities Premium Outlets, Eagan, will open 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving night and stay open until 10 p.m. on Black Friday. The schedule for Black Friday and holiday season hours are: â&#x20AC;˘ Thanksgiving, Nov. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 6 p.m. to midnight â&#x20AC;˘ Black Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; midnight to 10 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Nov. 28 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Nov. 29 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Nov. 30 to Dec. 18 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sundays 10
a.m. to 7 p.m. Holiday season hours â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Dec. 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 8 a.m. to midnight â&#x20AC;˘ Dec. 20 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Dec. 24 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Dec. 25 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed. â&#x20AC;˘ Dec. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Dec. 31 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Jan. 1 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Santa Claus and his reindeer will be at the mall: â&#x20AC;˘ Black Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1-3 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, Dec. 13 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1-3 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Saturday, Dec. 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1-3 p.m. Visit premiumoutlets. com/twincities for more information.
Business Calendar To submit items for the Business Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com.
Christmas Holiday Awards Luncheon, Old Chicago, 14998 Glazier Ave., Apple Valley. Features Eastview chamber choir. Apple Valley Chamber of Cost: $20 members, $25 nonCommerce events: members. RSVP to Fabiana at â&#x20AC;˘ Wednesday, Dec. 2, 7:45 fabiana@applevalleychamber. a.m., Chamber Coffee Break, com. Sun Thisweek and Dakota Burnsville Chamber of County Tribune, 15322 Galaxie Commerce events: Ave., Suite 219, Apple Valley. â&#x20AC;˘ Thursday, Dec. 3, 6-11 â&#x20AC;˘ Thursday, Dec. 10, 4:30- p.m., Holiday Gala and 50th 6:30 p.m., Chamber Business Anniversary, Legends Golf After Hours, Vivo Kitchen, Club, 8670 Credit River Blvd., 15435 Founders Lane, Apple Prior Lake. Cost: $50 per perValley. Open to all Apple Valley son, $350 per table of eight. Chamber members and their Registration required. Sponguests. sorships available. Information: â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, Dec. 15, 11:30 952-435-6000 or linda@burnsa.m. to 1:15 p.m., Chamber villechamber.com.
Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce events: â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, Nov. 24, 8-9 a.m., West St. Paul/Mendota Heights Coffee Break, Marketplace Home Mortgage, 800 S. Plaza Drive, Mendota Heights. Open to all DCRC members. Information: Emily Corson at 651-288-9202 or ecorson@ dcrchamber.com. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, Dec. 1, 7:30-9 a.m., Grow Minnesota â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dakota County Partners Meeting (invitation only), Valleywood Golf Course, 4851 McAndrews Road, Apple Valley. Seven chambers participating. Information: 651-452-9872 or info@
dcrchamber.com. â&#x20AC;˘ Wednesday, Dec. 2, 4:306 p.m., Why Not Wednesday Business After Hours, Granite City, 3330 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan. Information: Emily Corson at 651-288-9202 or ecorson@ dcrchamber.com. â&#x20AC;˘ Friday, Dec. 4, 7:30-9 a.m., Legislative Breakfast: Beyond the 2016 Elections, The Commons on Marice, 1380 Marice Drive, Eagan. Speakers: Maureen Shaver, public affairs professional, and Todd Rapp, partner at Himle Horner. Cost: $25 members, $30 nonmembers (call 651-452-9872 to register as a nonmember). Series pass: $160. Registration re-
quired. Information: Vicki Stute at 651-288-9201 or vstute@ dcrchamber.com. Lakeville Area Chamber of Commerce events: â&#x20AC;˘ Friday, Nov. 20, 7:308:30 a.m., MNCAPS meeting, Crystal Lake Education Center, 16250 Ipava Ave. W. Superintendents from Lakeville Area Public Schools and Prior LakeSavage Area Schools will share this new program with the business community. Minnesota Center for Advanced Professional Studies aims to help students jump start their futures and educate the workforce of tomorrow. Information: Amy Olson at olso3753@isd194.org.
â&#x20AC;˘ Friday, Nov. 20, 9 a.m., ribbon cutting, The Goddard School for Early Childhood Development, 16189 Elmhurst Lane, Lakeville. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, Nov. 24, 4 p.m., ribbon cutting, Exuberance Chiropractic & Wellness Center, 17787 Kenwood Trail, Lakeville. New location. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, Nov. 24, 6-7 p.m., Holiday Lighting Ceremony, Pioneer Plaza, downtown Lakeville. â&#x20AC;˘ Wednesday, Dec. 2, 7:309:30 a.m., Leadership Breakfast, Holiday Inn & Suites, 20800 Kenrick Ave., Lakeville. Speaker: Ross Bernstein. Cost: $20. Registration required.
Rosemount United Methodist Women Holiday Bazaar set The Rosemount United on Saturday, Nov 21, at Methodist Women will the church, 14770 Canada hold the annual Holiday Ave. Bazaar 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Bake Shop will Ă?¨Â&#x17E;a 0AÂŁĂ?A
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have a special table for gluten and lactose free baked goods. There will be a variety of homemade cookies, breads, bars, candies, and snack mixes. Peach jam from Colorado peaches, crabapple butter, raspberry jalapeĂąo jam, jalapeĂąo jelly, beet pickles, and salsa will be included. Rosettes will be available from an independent vendor. Special cloth bags for many uses â&#x20AC;&#x201C; purses, travel, jewelry, and totes for shopping are available.
Hand-tied quilts in all sizes, hostess and gift baskets, needlework, crafts, dĂŠcor and many other gifts will be featured. The Family Life Center will be filled with independent vendors selling metal art work, watercolor paintings, and ornaments from the Philippines, along with Christmas items, jewelry, baby items, cards, embroidered towels, fashion accessories and other items. Also on sale will be items from Tastefully Simple, Mary Kay, Norwex,
Tupperware, Stampinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Up or Osborn Books for children. The Coffee Shop is open from 9-10:45 a.m., serving sweet rolls and beverages. Lunch will be served from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. On the menu are turkey rice soup or 11-bean and ham soup served with slices of Italian bread and beverages for $4.25. Grilled cheese sandwiches are $1.50 and for dessert there will be pie or angel food cake and unsweetened strawberries for $1.75.
The Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Store allows 3- to 8-year-olds the opportunity to shop for their family members from 9 a.m. until noon. The funds raised support local missions, national and international mission projects that enhance the education and leadership development of women, children and youth. For more information, call 651-423-2475.
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Gov. Mark Dayton has proclaimed Friday, Nov. 27, to be Free Park Friday at all Minnesota state parks and recreation areas.
Entrance fees to all 76 Minnesota state parks and recreation areas will be waived to encourage Minnesotans to spend time outdoors, and with family,
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14A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Sports Wildcats win state, add to volleyball legacy Eagan tips Prior Lake for 6th championship by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Eagan volleyball is one of the enduring success stories in Minnesota high school athletics, as evidenced by the number of Wildcat players who weren’t even around when their team started winning. A 25-17, 25-23, 15-25, 16-25, 15-13 victory over Prior Lake in the Class 3A championship match on Saturday gave Eagan its sixth state title, with the others coming in 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003 and 2013. Eagan is one of only seven Minnesota teams to win state championships before and after the calendar turned to the year 2000. Later Saturday, in the media center at Xcel Energy Center, several of Kathy Gillen’s current players couldn’t help but giggle as their coach talked about Eagan’s volleyball history. “So ... before these guys were born, I started the program at Eagan,” Gillen said. That was 1989. Eagan’s first varsity season was 1990. Winning seasons came soon thereafter. The first state tournament appearance was 1996, and Eagan was the state largeschool champion a year later. Gillen took a three-year break from high school coaching in 2008-10 because of family considerations, but has been on the sideline for all 12 of Eagan’s state appearances. Coaching volleyball in 2015 versus coaching in the 1990s is “100 percent different,” Gillen said. “These guys,” referring to her current players “are goofy. You just have to have fun sometimes. That’s way it goes. The game is much faster than even 10 years ago, so I’ve had to do a lot of adjustments in drills and practices, as well as just dealing with the temperament of 15-, 16and 17-year-olds. “My former players are flabbergasted that I’m as soft as I am, but these guys still think I’m tough.” Along the way, this year’s Wildcats developed
a sense of calm that kept them from overreacting to any situation they faced on the court. “Everything we do (in practice) is applicable to games,” said sophomore outside hitter Ally Murphy, who had 13 kills in the championship match against Prior Lake. “The only thing that’s different is the venue we’re playing at. A lot of things stay constant.” The Wildcats maintained their poise despite losing their two-set lead and falling behind 3-0 in the fifth set. “We didn’t give up when the other team started to play better. We started playing better, too,” junior Brie Orr said. Eagan erased the early deficit in the fifth set, scoring six consecutive points. But the Wildcats later fell behind 10-7, but took back the lead on Brie Orr’s kill and three attack errors by Prior Lake. Alyssa Doucette’s kill gave Eagan a 14-13 lead, and a kill by Murphy on the next point ended a match with multiple momentum and emotional swings. “The nice thing about these girls is they don’t waver too much,” Gillen said. “It doesn’t seem like bad plays, or good plays by the other team, bother them. We can serve out of bounds, tip out of bounds or hit four feet out of bounds, and it doesn’t faze them. It fazes me, but it doesn’t faze them.” Brie Orr had 16 kills, 31 assists and 12 digs in the championship match. Her sister Kennedi, a ninthgrader, had 19 assists. Taylor Olstad and Hannah Hegwer had 22 and 13 digs, and McKenna Melville chipped in with nine kills. Prior Lake senior Ella Francis had a match-high 18 kills. “They pushed us to the limit, and we pushed them to the limit. It was just a great volleyball match,” Prior Lake coach Matt Dean said. Eagan (28-4) split two matches against Prior Lake (28-5) during the regular season. The Wildcats have
Clockwise from upper left: Eagan’s Taylor Olstad receives serve in the state Class 3A championship match against Prior Lake; Brie Orr gets a shot past a Prior Lake blocker; the celebration begins after the Wildcats get the championship-clinching point in the fifth set. (Photos by Mike Shaughnessy) reached the state Class 3A championship match the last three years and won it two of those years. Many of their players already have started tryouts or practices with their club teams, but a high school championship holds special significance. “You become a lot closer with people you can
Burnsville’s Le is top seed at state in butterfly by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Eagan
too. Eagan is tied for fifth all-time with six state volleyball championships. The four programs ahead of the Wildcats – Bethlehem Academy, Chaska, Robbinsdale Armstrong and Tracy-Milroy – each have seven. Returning everybody “will be nice, but there’s going to be more pres-
sure with that, too,” Gillen said. “It depends on how the girls respond to pressure.” Doesn’t seem to have bothered them so far. Email Mike Shaughnessy at mike.shaughnessy@ecminc.com.
Rosemount holds off Eagan in Section 3AA swimming
Eagan wins, Blaze falls in SSC girls hockey The two teams that represented the South Suburban Conference in the 2015 Class AA girls hockey tournament also won their league openers Tuesday night. Lakeville South, which finished fourth at state last February, defeated Lakeville North 4-2 at Hasse Arena. Eastview, which was sixth at state, won 7-0 at Burnsville. But neither Lakeville South nor Eastview is undefeated in all games. Only one South Suburban team is – Eagan, which defeated Farmington 5-2 on Tuesday to improve to 3-0-1.
share interests with,” Brie Orr said. “And having our student section behind us is a lot of fun.” With Eagan’s entire varsity lineup eligible to return next season, you can count on the Wildcats being the No. 1 team in the 2016 Class 3A preseason rankings. They could be playing for some history,
Senior captain Lauren Bench returns in goal for the Burnsville girls hockey team. (Photo by Mike Shaughnessy) second. Madsen, who has signed with Penn State, also assisted on Anderson’s goal. The Wildcats also have defeated Hopkins 5-4 and Rochester John Marshall/ Lourdes 4-1, while tying potential Section 3AA rival Hastings 3-3. Anderson and Madsen are tied for the team scoring lead with 10 points through four games. Anderson, a sophomore forward, factored in the scoring for every goal in the Hopkins game, scoring two and assisting on the other three. Eagan will play at Lakeville North at 3 p.m. Saturday.
pend heavily on senior goalie and captain Lauren Bench. Bench signed last week to play at Bemidji State University. Burnsville got goals from Sloane Taylor and Mady Bodick in the final four minutes to defeat North St. Paul/Tartan 3-1 in its season opener Nov. 12. Taylor also assisted on Jenna Hartung’s secondperiod goal. Bench made 28 saves. The Blaze managed only 12 shots on goal in its home opener Tuesday night against Eastview. The Lightning pulled away late with four third-period goals. Burnsville will play at Rosemount at 7 p.m. Saturday.
Tied 2-2 with Farmington in the third period, the Wildcats broke the tie on goals by Brooke Madsen, Sophia Bergman and Taylor Anderson, all coming in a 2 minute, 59 second span. Burnsville Madsen also scored in Goals could prove dif- Email Mike Shaughnessy at the first period and Berg- ficult to come by for the mike.shaughnessy@ecmman had a goal in the Blaze, who figure to de- inc.com.
The race for the Section 3AA girls swimming and diving championship was too close to call until the final stages, when Rosemount nudged in front of Eagan for a 14-point victory. As significant as the team championship is to the Irish, the purpose of section meets in swimming is to advance as many athletes as possible to the state meet. Rosemount succeeded on that front as well with state qualifiers in 10 of the 12 events. Eagan finished 80 points ahead of third-place East Ridge in last Friday’s section finals at Richfield Middle School. The Wildcats have state qualifiers in nine events. Apple Valley and Eastview finished fifth and sixth of eight teams. Neither school will have athletes at the state meet this season.
Eagan The Wildcats won three events at the Section 3AA finals and had their best performance in the 100 breaststroke, where Deidree Voss and Olivia Mitchell placed first and second and Isabelle Hopewell took eighth. Voss’ winning time in the breaststroke was 1:06.67, with Mitchell finishing in 1:06.77. Jennifer Lenertz, a ninth-grader, won the 200 freestyle in 1:55.26. The Wildcats also took first in the 200 medley relay with eighth-grader Lara Mitchell, Voss, ninth-grader Jenna Joerger and Olivia Mitchell finishing in 1:47.31. Eagan has the fifth-fastest 200 medley relay time in the state Class AA pre-
liminaries. Joerger also advanced to state in the 200 individual medley by finishing second in 2:10.07. Jess Gartner, a senior, will compete at state in diving after finishing fourth in the Section 3AA meet in 353.90. Ninth-grader Keely Tierney finished third in the 500 freestyle in 5:10.79, a time that beat the state qualifying standard. Lara Mitchell also beat the state cutoff in the 100 backstroke, finishing third in 57.99. Two Eagan relays that finished second in the section also will advance to state. Mitchell, Lenertz, junior Erin Bucki and Joerger were runners-up in the 200 freestyle in 1:38.47. Junior Lena Bruggemann, Lenertz, Lara Mitchell and Bucki swam the 400 freestyle in 3:37.92 to qualify for state.
Section 2AA – Burnsville Burnsville senior Angela Le is the top seed in the 100 butterfly in the state Class AA preliminaries after winning that event at the Section 2AA finals in 56.18 seconds. Le also will compete at state in the 100 backstroke after finishing second in her section in 56.68. She is the fifth seed in that event. Le is aiming for a Class AA championship in the butterfly after finishing third in that event in the 2014 state meet. Neither of the two swimmers who finished ahead of her last year are back this season.
State meet schedule The state Class AA meet started Wednesday night with diving preliminaries at the University of Minnesota Aquatic Center. Swimming preliminaries are 6 p.m. Thursday, also at the Aquatic Center, with swimming and diving finals scheduled for 6 p.m. Friday.
SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
Religion Peace cookie and craft sale Peace Church in Eagan will hold a Christmas Cookie and Craft Sale 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 5. The sale will feature a â&#x20AC;&#x153;cookie walkâ&#x20AC;? where customers handpick homemade cookies and pay by the pound. Several vendors will sell homemade goods. A minimum of 10 percent of all sales will benefit local and global missions. Peace Church is at 2180 Glory Drive, Eagan (www.peace-eagan.org). For more information, call Marilynn at 651-325-7526 or Gayle at 651-454-7127.
15A
Seniors Driver improvement
The Minnesota Highway Safety Center will offer 55-plus driver-improvement courses on the following days: â&#x20AC;˘ 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Nov. 21 (four-hour refresher), Lakeville Senior Center â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Heritage Center, 20110 Holyoke Drive, Lakeville. â&#x20AC;˘ 5:30-9:30 p.m. Nov. 23 and 24 (eight-hour firsttime course), Lakeville Senior Center â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Heritage Center, 20110 Holyoke Drive, Lakeville. â&#x20AC;˘ 5:30-9:30 p.m. Dec. 1 and 2 (eight-hour firsttime course), Burnsville Senior Center â&#x20AC;&#x201C; ISD 191, 200 W. Burnsville ParkEcumenical way, Burnsville. service â&#x20AC;˘ 5:30-9:30 p.m. Dec. Spirit of Life Presbyte- 3 and 4 (eight-hour firstrian Church will host this time course), Market Vilyearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s annual Apple Val- lage, 100 J Roberts Way, ley-Burnsville ecumenical New Market. â&#x20AC;˘ 8 a.m. to noon Dec. 7 Thanksgiving Eve Service (four-hour refresher), Ea6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25. The church is located gan Community Center, at 14401 Pilot Knob Road 1501 Central Parkway, Eagan. in Apple Valley. â&#x20AC;˘ 5:30-9:30 p.m. Dec. Other congregations 7 and 8 (eight-hour firstparticipating in the service include the Church of the time course), Apple ValRisen Savior, Community ley Senior Center, 14601 of Christ, Grace Lutheran Hayes Road, Apple Valley. â&#x20AC;˘ 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 Church and Southcross Community Church. All p.m. Dec. 12 (four-hour refresher), Lakeville Seare welcome to attend. For more information nior Center â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Heritage or directions, call the Spir- Center, 20110 Holyoke it of Life office at 952-423- Drive, Lakeville. â&#x20AC;˘ 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 2212. p.m. Dec. 15 (four-hour refresher), Burnsville â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Thankfulness AAA Minnesota â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Iowa, Saints Martha & Mary 600 W. Travelers Trail, Episcopal Church in Ea- Burnsville. gan is offering a brief â&#x20AC;˘ 5:30-9:30 p.m. Dec. meditation and opportu- 15 (four-hour refresher), nity for prayer 6-6:30 p.m. Burnsville Senior Center Wednesday, Nov. 25. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; ISD 191, 200 W. BurnsSometimes with the ville Parkway, Burnsville. stress of visiting family or The courses are open to preparing a Thanksgiving the public; however, premeal, taking just a mo- registration is requested. ment to be centered on The eight-hour course is being thankful can get lost $24; the four-hour refreshin the holiday rush. All are er is $20. For more inforwelcome to stop in, if only mation or to register, visit for a minute, for prayer, si- www.mnsafetycenter.org lence and peace. or call 888-234-1294. The church is at 4180 Lexington Ave. S. in Ea- Apple Valley gan. Call 651-681-0219 for more information.
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The Apple Valley Senior Center, 14601 Hayes Road, is home to the following activities, which are organized and run by the Apple Valley Seniors and Apple Valley Parks and Recreation. The facility is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For information, call 952-953-2345 or go to www.cityofapplevalley. org. Monday, Nov. 23 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Int. Line Dancing, 9:30 a.m.; Tap Dancing, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Stretch, 10 a.m.; Zumba Toning, 11:30 a.m.; Pool, noon; Bridge, 12:45 p.m.; Happy Stitchers, 1 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Quilting Bees, 9 a.m.; Zumba Gold, 9:15 a.m.; Tuesday Painters, 9:30 a.m.; Pool, noon; Pinochle, 12:30 p.m.; Hand & Foot Cards, 1 p.m.; Cribbage, 1 p.m.; Table Tennis, 1 p.m.; Spanish â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Intermediate, 1 p.m.; Spanish for Travelers, 2:45 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Donated Bread, 9 a.m.; Yoga, 9:45 a.m.; Velvet Tones, 10 a.m.; Morning Stretch, 10 a.m.; Pool, noon; Dominoes, 1 p.m.; Mahjong, 1 p.m.; Oil Painting, 1 p.m.; Tai Chi, 2 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving Day. Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving.
Burnsville The Burnsville Senior Center is located in the Diamondhead Education Center at 200 W. Burnsville Parkway. Call 952707-4120 for information about the following senior events. Monday, Nov. 23 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 11 a.m.; Card Recycle, 12:30 p.m.; Pinochle, 12:45 p.m.; SS Flex. Tuesday, Nov. 24 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Quilters, 9:30 a.m.; Scrabble, 10:30 a.m.; Duplicate Bridge, 12:30 p.m.; Troubadours, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25
â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Woodcarvers, 8 a.m.; Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 11 a.m.; Tai Chi, 11 a.m.; 500, 12:45 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving Day. Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving.
Eagan The following senior activities are offered by the Eagan Parks and Recreation Department in the Lone Oak Room at the Eagan Community Center, 1501 Central Parkway. Call 651-675-5500 for more information. Monday, Nov. 23 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Zumba (Oasis), 9 a.m.; Drop In Time, 9-11:30 a.m.; F&Fab, 10 a.m.; FFL (Oasis), 11 a.m.; Drop In Time, 1-4 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Health Insurance Counseling, by appointment only, 8:30 a.m. to noon; Euchre/500, 12:45 p.m.; Lone Oak Series: Kandinsky, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Coffee, Conversations & Games, 9 a.m.; LPM Class (Boardroom), 9:30 or 10:30 a.m.; Hand & Foot, 12:45 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving. Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Drop In Time, 9-11:30 a.m.; Bingo, 1 p.m. Upcoming events: Holiday Luncheon and entertainment, for senior center members only, Monday, Dec. 14. Register by Friday, Dec. 4. Cost: $6. Santa Visit in the Eagan Community Center, 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Dec. 5. Bring the little ones and your cameras. For the Monday Movie Matinees schedule for coming months, check out the Front Porch newsletter. For full information on senior events and details, read the Front Porch on the city of Eagan website. Become a senior center member for a $10 annual fee and receive the Front Porch quarterly by mail.
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For questions or to register for events and pay by credit card, call Eagan Parks and Recreation Department.
Farmington The Rambling River Center is located at 325 Oak St. For more information on trips, programs and other activities, call 651-280-6970. Monday, Nov. 23 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Coffee Guys, 9:30 a.m.; Dulcimer Club, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10 a.m.; Dominoes, 10:30 a.m.; Recycled Cards, 12:30 p.m.; 500 Cards, 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Coffee Guys, 9:30 a.m.; Fitness Center Orientation, 9:30 a.m.; Chair Exercise, 10 a.m.; Wood Carving, 1 p.m.; Pumpkin Pie Social, 1 p.m.; Table Tennis, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Wii Games, 9 a.m.; Coffee Guys, 9:30 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10 a.m.; Lap Robes, 1 p.m.; Bridge, 1 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving Day. Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving holiday. Happy Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Furniture Fundraiser â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Stop by Happy Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Furniture in Farmington and mention the Rambling River Center when ordering/purchasing your new furniture. Happy Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Furniture will give 10 percent of the purchase to the Rambling River Center.
Rosemount The following activities are sponsored by the Rosemount Parks and Recreation Department and the Rosemount Area Seniors. For more information, call the Rosemount Parks and Recreation Department at 651-322-6000. Monday, Nov. 23 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Bridge, 9 a.m., Do Drop Inn; 500, 1 p.m., DDI. Tuesday, Nov. 24 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Coffee, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Rosemount Cub; Bid Euchre, 9 a.m., DDI; Bowling, 9:30
a.m., Eagan; Bunco, 1 p.m., DDI. Wednesday, Nov. 25 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Velvet Tones, 10 a.m., Apple Valley Senior Center; Card Bingo, 1 p.m., DDI. Thursday, Nov. 26 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Closed for Thanksgiving Day. Friday, Nov. 27 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Euchre, 9 a.m., DDI; Hand and Foot, 1 p.m., DDI. The Rosemount Area Seniors â&#x20AC;&#x153;Do Drop Innâ&#x20AC;? is open to senior citizens 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The room is located in the Rosemount Community Center and allows seniors a place to stop by and socialize during the week. Anniversaries
Gary and Ann Betters Gary and Ann Betters are celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary! They were married on November 20th, 1965 at San Gabriel Mission Church in San Gabriel, California. They have four children (Dawn, Dave, Lynn, and Mark) and 15 grandchildren. Congratulations! Thank You
Do you know Jane? I chatted with Jane at an airport in Europe. She is 77, short hair, articulate, brilliant, visiting her brother in France. Friendships are rare and I am sorry I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t give her my info. If you know Jane, and she is interested in continuing the conversation, please share doyouknowjane@yahoo.com
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16A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
Heart of the City event set
Lighting contest entrants sought
The Burnsville Community Foundation is sponsoring the 17th annual Heart of the City Winter Lighting Ceremony 6-6:45 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25, at Nicollet Commons Park, located on Nicollet Avenue and 126th Street just outside of Ames Center. More than 200,000 mini-lights, 230 streetlight snowflakes and a 30-foottall tree will come to life. All Burnsville residents and winter-lighting enthusiasts are invited to attend. Residents and visitors can attend the ceremony, stroll through the lights and visit with Santa and Mrs. Claus. The Burnsville
The Burnsville Convention & Visitors Bureau (BCVB), in partnership with Dakota Electric Association, present the 2015 Winter Lighting Contest for Burnsville residents. In its fourth year hosting the contest, the BCVB encourages all citizens to decorate their residence to help spread holiday cheer and welcome visitors throughout the season. Between Nov. 25 and Dec. 11, Burnsville residents may nominate Single Family Dwellings, Neighborhoods (20 single family homes or less), Apartment/Condo Complexes or Townhomes/ Apartments or Condo-
High School Freestyle Singers and the Sioux Trail Elementary Choir will perform. Jo Joâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Rise & Wine will provide complimentary hot beverages. Chianti Grill will provide complimentary fresh baked cookies. Cub Foods will provide candy canes. Chick-fil-A will provide complimentary hot sandwiches. LED snowflake pins will also be for sale at the event. Proceeds will support the Winter Lighting Event. Free parking will be available at the Heart of the City Park and Ride Ramp located one block north of Burnsville Parkway on Pillsbury Avenue,
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and in the Heart of the City Parking Deck located north of Ames Center. This year the founation is partnering with Thrivent Financial as a Toys for Tots drop spot. Stop by the Burnsville Thrivent office for popcorn and hot apple cider with your gift. The Winter Lighting Ceremony is sponsored and paid for by the Burnsville Community Foundation, through donations from area businesses and residents. Visit www.burnsville. org/winterlighting for more information.
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miniums that they think have outstanding winter light displays. Nominees must be located within Burnsville city limits, be visible from the street and match criteria for the submitted category. Submissions will be reviewed by the BCVB board of directors and the top three entries in each category will receive the following: $100 Visa gift card donated by Dakota Electric Association (first place), $50 gift card to a Burnsville restaurant (second place), and two passes to the Minnesota Zoo (third place). To submit a nomination, visit www.burnsvil-
lemn.com/Winter-Lighting-Contest.cfm or pick up a nomination form at any of the following locations: Burnsville Convention & Visitors Bureau, Burnsville City Hall, Cornerstone Copy Center and Jo Joâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Rise & Wine. All submissions must be accompanied by a photo to be considered. Nominations will be accepted Nov. 25 through Dec. 11. Winners will be notified via phone. Follow the contest on Facebook at www.facebook.com/burnsvilleconventionvisitorsbureau or on Twitter at @burnsvillemncvb.
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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
17A
LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT LIEN FORECLOSURE SALE Date: October 8, 2015 YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT: 1. Default has occurred in the terms and conditions of the Declaration of Diffley Commons Homeowner’s Association (hereinafter the “Association”) which was recorded as Document No. 1022377 on January 10, 1997, in the office of the County Recorder of Dakota County, Minnesota, and also, pursuant to Minn. Stat. §515B.3-116, covering the following property: Legal Description: Unit No. 56, Condominium No. 107, Diffley Commons Property Address: 4076 Beaver Dam Road, Eagan, MN 55122 PID: 10-20450-04-056 2. Pursuant to said Declaration, there is claimed to be due and owing as of the date of this notice from the owners of said unit, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., to the Association, a Minnesota nonprofit corporation, the amount of $3,170.39 for unpaid association dues commencing from February 1, 2015 and accelerated through December, 2015, attorneys fees and costs, plus any other such amounts that will accrue after the date of this notice for costs of collection and foreclosure which will be added to the amount claimed due and owing at the time of the sale herein. 3. No action is now pending at law or otherwise to recover said debt or any part thereof. 4. The owner has not been released from its financial obligation to pay said amount. 5. The lien arises pursuant to the Declaration, described above, Minn. Stat. §515B.3 116, and is further described in a Notice of Assessment Lien in favor of the Association recorded on September 28, 2015, as Document No. 3092410 in the Dakota County Recorder’s Office. 6. Pursuant to the power of sale contained in the same Declaration and granted by the owner in taking title to the premises subject to said Declaration and pursuant to Minn. Stat. Sec. 515B.3-116, said Lien will be foreclosed by the sale of said property by the Sheriff of Dakota County, at 1580 Highway 55, Hastings, MN 55033 on December 8, 2015, at 10:00 am at public auction to the highest bidder, to pay the amount then due for said assessments, together with the additional costs of foreclosure, including attorneys fees as allowed by law. 7. The time allowed by law for redemption by the unit owner, his personal representatives or assigns is six (6) months from date of sale. If the lien is not satisfied under Minn. Stat. §580.23 or the property is not redeemed under Minn. Stat. §580.23, the owner must vacate the property on or before 11:59 p.m. on June 8, 2016, or the next business day if June 8, 2016, falls on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday. REDEMPTION NOTICE THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGAGOR, THE MORTGAGOR’S PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR ASSIGNS, MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE WEEKS IF A JUDICIAL ORDER IS ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA STATUTES, SECTION 582.032, DETERMINING, AMONG OTHER THINGS, THAT THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OR LESS THAN FIVE UNITS, ARE NOT PROPERTY USED IN AGRICUL-
TURAL PRODUCTION, AND ARE ABANDONED. 8. THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT, ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Dated: October 8, 2015 Attorney for the Association: THE LAW OFFICE OF DAVID S. HOLMAN, LTD. By: /s/ David S. Holman David S. Holman # 193628 201 W Travelers Trail Suite 225 Burnsville, MN 55337 952-895-1224 Published in Burnsville/Eagan October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 13, 20, 2015 460236
NOTICE OF AND ORDER FOR HEARING ON PETITION FOR FORMAL ADJUDICATION OF INTESTACY, DETERMINATION OF HEIRS, FORMAL APPOINTMENT OF PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS STATE OF MINNESOTA COUNTY DAKOTA DISTRICT COURT FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Court File No.: 19HA-PR-15-822 In Re: Estate of Landon Irving Allantee Washington, Decedent. It is Ordered and Notice is given that on December 17, 2015 at 9:00 a.m., a hearing will be held in this Court at Dakota County District Court, 1560 Highway 55, Hastings, MN 55033, on a petition for the adjudication of intestacy and determination of decedent’s heirs, and for the appointment of Mistie Annette Brantley-Garner, whose address is 13401 Morgan Avenue South #101, Burnsville, MN 55337, as personal representative of the decedent’s estate in an unsupervised administration. Any objections to the petition must be raised at the hearing or filed with the Court prior to the hearing. If the petition is proper and no objections are filed or raised, the personal representative will be appointed with the full power to administer the decedent’s estate, including the power to collect all assets; to pay all legal debts, claims, taxes, and expenses; to sell real and personal property; and to do all necessary acts for the decedent’s estate. Notice is further given that, subject to Minn. Stat. §524.3-801, all creditors having claims against the decedent’s estate are required to present the claims to the personal representative or to the Court within four (4) months after the date of this notice or the claims will be barred. Dated: November 17, 2015 BY THE COURT /s/ Kathryn D. Messerich Judge of District Court ARNESON & GEFFEN, PLLC Stafanie Letze (Atty. Reg. No. 0347607) 333 Washington Ave N., Suite 415 Minneapolis, MN 55401 Telephone: (612) 436-0475 Facsimile: (612) 465-8584 stefanie@arnesongeffen.com Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 27, 2015 477479
CITY OF APPLE VALLEY WARNING WATER AERATION SYSTEM OPERATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an aeration system, creating open water and thin ice, will begin operating on Lake Alimagnet in the Cities of Apple Valley and Burnsville, Dakota County, Minnesota; as early as December 1, 2015, and continue through April 1, 2016. The system is installed at the southeast corner of the lake, in Alimagnet Park, in Apple Valley. Weather conditions may cause the areas of thin ice and open water to fluctuate greatly. Stay clear of the marked area!
NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE THE RIGHT TO VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT AND IDENTITY OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY LAW IS NOT AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That default has occurred in the conditions of the following described mortgage: DATE OF MORTGAGE: April 25, 2007 ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE: $118,370.00 MORTGAGOR(S): Dorothy J Williams, Unmarried MORTGAGEE: TCF National Bank, a national banking association SERVICER: Bayview Loan Servicing LLC LENDER: TCF National Bank . DATE AND PLACE OF FILING: Dakota County Minnesota, Recorder, on May 8, 2007, as Document No. 2515216. ASSIGNED TO: Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC Dated: February 11, 2015, and recorded June 29, 2015 by Document No. 3075663. LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: Unit No. A107, CIC No. 468, Eagan Gardens, Dakota County, Minnesota. Abstract Property. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 4110 Rahn Rd #A107, Eagan, MN 55122 PROPERTY I.D: 10-22470-02-107 COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS LOCATED: Dakota THE AMOUNT CLAIMED TO BE DUE ON THE MORTGAGE ON THE DATE OF THE NOTICE: One Hundred Ten Thousand Eight Hundred Eighty-Four and 58/100 ($110,884.58) THAT no action or proceeding has been instituted at law to recover the debt secured by said mortgage, or any part thereof; that there has been compliance with all preforeclosure notice and acceleration requirements of said mortgage, and/or applicable statutes; PURSUANT, to the power of sale contained in said mortgage, the above described property will be sold by the Sheriff of said county as follows: DATE AND TIME OF SALE: 10:00 AM on December 29, 2015 PLACE OF SALE: Sheriff`s Main Office, Law Enforcement Center, 1580 Highway 55, Hastings MN 55033-2343 to pay the debt then secured by said mortgage and taxes, if any actually paid by the mortgagee, on the premises and the costs and disbursements allowed by law. The time allowed by law for redemption by said mortgagor(s), their personal representatives or assigns is 6.00 months from the date of sale. If Mortgage is not reinstated under Minn. Stat. §580.30 or the property is not redeemed under Minn. Stat. §580.23, the Mortgagor must vacate the property on or before 11:59 p.m. on June 29, 2016, or the next business day if June 29, 2016 falls on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday. “THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGAGOR, THE MORTGAGOR’S PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR ASSIGNS, MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE WEEKS IF A JUDICIAL ORDER IS ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA STATUTES, SECTION 582.032, DETERMINING, AMONG OTHER THINGS, THAT THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OF LESS THAN FIVE UNITS, ARE NOT PROPERTY USED IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AND ARE ABANDONED.” Dated: November 13, 2015 Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC Randall S. Miller & Associates, PLLC Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgage/Mortgagee Canadian Pacific Plaza, 120 South Sixth Street, Suite 2050 Minneapolis, MN 55402 Phone: 952-232-0052 Our File No. 15MN00523-1 THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 13, 20, 27, December 4, 11, 18, 2015 474313
NOTICE OF SALE
If there are questions concerning this aeration system, please call Apple Valley Natural Resources at 952-953-2400. /s/ Pamela J. Gackstetter Pamela Gackstetter Apple Valley City Clerk Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek & Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek November 13, 20, 2015 470383
Division of School Finance 1500 Highway 36 West Roseville, MN 55113-4266
Notice is hereby given that the property will be sold on December 16, 2015. The property will be offered online at www.StorageBattles.com/StorageTreasures.com and more information about the sale can be found at that website. The undersigned Acorn Mini Storage will sell at Public Sale by competitive bidding the personal property heretofore stored with the undersigned by: Unit # 660- Sharrod Rowe/ Jessie Holt, vacuum cleaner, luggage, furniture, boxes of unknown content Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 27, 2015 476890
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 196 ROSEMOUNT-APPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS REGULAR MEETING MINUTES OCTOBER 26, 2015 This is a summary of the Independent School District 196 regular School Board meeting on Monday, October 26, 2015 with the full text available for public inspection on the district website at www.district196.org or at the District Office, 3455 153rd Street West, Rosemount, Minnesota 55068 or by standard or electronic mail. The meeting was called to order at 6 p.m. on October 26, 2015 at Dakota Ridge School followed by the Pledge of Allegiance. Board members present: Joel Albright, Rob Duchscher, Gary Huusko, Mike Roseen and Superintendent Jane K. Berenz. Absent: Art Coulson, Jackie Magnuson and Bob Schutte. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Albright and carried, with a 4-0 vote to approve the agenda. Superintendent Berenz congratulated marching bands from Rosemount and Eastview high schools on participating in the Bands of American Super Regional. She announced fall season state tournaments have already begun and wished all participants good luck. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Roseen and carried, with a 4-0 vote to approve Consent items: October 12, 2015 regular board meeting minutes; claims, electronic funds transfer, schedule of investments, gifts; contracts with Telin Transportation Group, Inc. and North Central Bus Sales, Inc.; contracts with Steve Perron, Zarbok and Friedges Landscaping; Title VI American Indian Education grant; personnel separations, leaves of absence and new staff, and an individual employment agreement. A report on The Sheridan Story, a weekend food program that bridges the gap for students facing food insecurity, was presented. Jackie Huegel, senior manager with Malloy, Montague, Karnowski and Radosevich & Co., PA (MMKR), presented an overview of audit results for the Fiscal Year 2014-15 Audited Comprehensive Annual Financial Report. The auditors gave the district a clean, unmodified opinion, the highest opinion they are able to give, on basic financial statements. Huegel reviewed fund balances, revenues and expenditures, and a 10-year history of the general fund. She noted the CAFR was prepared in conformance with the Government Accounting Standards Board (GASB) Statement No. 34 for the 14th year and, for the first time, also implemented GASB Statement No. 68, “Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pensions” – an amendment of GASB Statement No. 27. In summary, she reported the district general fund is in sound financial condition. The board is scheduled to act on the 2014-15 Audited Comprehensive Annual Financial Report at its next regular meeting. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Roseen and carried, with a 4-0 vote to approve revisions to Administrative Regulation 801.5AR, Community Use of District Facilities, which adds a new category in section 9, Fees for Facility Use, for rooms of less than 100 square feet with a charge ranging between $2 and $5 per hour, depending upon the class category. Berenz reminded voters information is available on the district website and that they can cast their votes either by absentee ballot or in person. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Albright and carried, with a 4-0 vote to adjourn the meeting at 6:30 p.m. Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek, Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 476872
CITY OF BURNSVILLE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 6:30 p.m., or as soon thereafter as possible, by the Burnsville City Council at the Burnsville City Hall, 100 Civic Center Parkway, to consider an increase for On-Sale, 3.2 Percent On-Sale, 3.2 Percent Off-Sale, Wine and Temporary liquor license fees within the City of Burnsville. All persons desiring to be heard on this item will be heard at this time. For more information concerning this request, please contact the City of Burnsville. Telephone (952) 895-4460, TDD: (952) 895-4567. Tina Zink CITY OF BURNSVILLE Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 476605
DISTRICT REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES BUDGET FOR FY 2015 AND FY 2016
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 191 BURNSVILLE –EAGAN SAVAGE PUBLIC SCHOOLS ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS CONTRACT #2100 FIRE PROTECTION REBID Notice is hereby given that Independent School District #191, will receive multiple prime sealed bids for Contract #2100 Fire Protection for the 2015 Additions and Alterations to Burnsville High School, Bid Package #4, until 2:00pm on Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at which time they will be opened and read aloud. Project Description: The work of this bid package includes the following Prime Contracts as described in Specification Section 01 12 00 –Contract Work Scopes Description: #2100 Fire Protection. Delivery and Opening of Bids: Bids shall be delivered to and opened at Independent School District No 191 Administrative Services Center, 100 River Ridge Court, Burnsville, Minnesota 55337, at 2:00 pm on December 1, 2015. Bids will be opened publicly and read aloud immediately after the specified time of closure for bidding period. Interested parties are invited to attend the bid opening. All bids must be sealed and marked for the appropriate contract for which the bid is submitted. Bids shall be submitted in exact accordance with Bid Documents (including Instructions to Bidders and Proposal Forms) and Contract Documents (including Drawings and Specifications) as prepared by Armstrong, Torseth, Skold & Rydeen, Inc.(ATS&R) Architects & Engineers. Bidders must comply with the MN Responsible Contractors Act (16C.285) as noted in the Supplemental Instructions to Bidders Section 00 22 00. The bid must include the completed contractor Verification of Compliance affidavit which is located after the bid form in Section 00 41 00. Documents will be available on or about November 9, 2015, for public inspection at the ATS&R Architects & Engineer’s office (8501 Golden Valley Road, Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN 55427), the Construction Manager’s office (7500 Olson Memorial Highway, Suite #300, Golden Valley, MN 55427), Minnesota Builders, Mankato, Rochester, St. Cloud and Mid-Minnesota Builder’s Exchanges; Reed Construction Data (CMD) and McGraw-Hill Construction Plan Room. Bidders may obtain sets of Bidding Documents by contacting Judith Bergren (952-831-5408) at the office of the Construction Manager, Wenck Construction, Inc., 7500 Olson Memorial Highway, Suite #300, Golden Valley, Minnesota 55427. Plans will be distributed electronically only. Contractors will be responsible for costs for printing plans if hard copies are desired. Bid Security: The bids shall be accompanied by a certified check, cashier’s check, or corporate surety bond in an amount equal to five (5%) percent of the total bid (Base Bid plus Alternate Bids), as bid security. No personal checks will be accepted. No bids may be withdrawn within 45 days after opening the bids. A bidder may withdraw his or her bid at any time prior to the date set for receiving bids, or authorized postponements thereof. Thereafter, bids may be withdrawn only after 45 days have elapsed after bid date, provided Independent School District #191 has not acted thereon. Bids may be withdrawn only by written request. Independent School District #191 reserves the right to reject any or all bids received and to waive informalities and irregularities in the bidding. Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 13, 20, 2015 472878
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 191 SCHOOL BOARD RETREAT MINUTES OCTOBER 27, 2015 The school board retreat was called to order by Chair VandenBoom at 5:45 p.m. at the ISD 191 Administrative Services Center, 100 River Ridge Court, Burnsville, MN, 55337. Members present: Directors Luth, Alt, Currier, Schmid, Sweep and Chair VandenBoom. Director Hill was absent. Others in attendance were Dr. Gothard, superintendent; C. Amoroso, assistant superintendent; D. Watkins, director of instruction and R. Dunn, director of communications. The purpose of the meeting was Vision One91. The workshop adjourned at 9:20 p.m. /s/ DeeDee Currier DeeDee Currier, clerk Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 477022
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GENERAL INFORMATION: Minnesota Statutes, section 123B.10, requires that every school board shall publish the subject data of this report. District Name: ISD # 196 Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan Public Schools District Number: 196 FY 2015 ACTUAL FY 2016 BUDGET FY 2015 FY 2015 ACTUAL JUNE 30, 2015 FY 2016 BUDGET JUNE 30, 2016 EXPENDITURES EXPENDITURES FUND BEGINNING REVENUES AND ACTUAL FUND REVENUES AND PROJECTED AND AND FUND BALANCES TRANSFERS IN BALANCES TRANSFERS IN FUND BALANCES TRANSFERS OUT TRANSFERS OUT General Fund/Restricted $ 2,270,890.98 $ 32,228,049.64 $ 56,528,808.00 $ 2,475,402.30 $ 31,610,206.00 $ 54,404,275.00 $ (20,318,666.70) General Fund/Other $ 28,859,994.17 $ 286,296,163.81 $ 260,885,471.55 $ 29,457,246.64 $ 291,636,843.00 $ 273,024,572.00 $ 48,069,517.64 1,271,051.00 Food Service Fund $ 2,376,363.01 $ 11,370,177.44 $ 11,788,021.45 $ 1,958,519.00 $ 11,811,287.00 $ 12,498,755.00 $ Community Service Fund $ 1,387,625.33 $ 7,735,009.34 $ 7,721,579.87 $ 1,401,054.80 $ 7,593,002.00 $ 7,873,042.00 $ 1,121,014.80 Building Construction Fund $ 8,152,735.85 $ 6,248,391.73 $ 14,404,915.26 $ (3,787.68) $ 8,535,237.00 $ 8,153,000.00 $ 378,449.32 Debt Service Fund $ 18,345,311.81 $ 16,721,219.73 $ 19,219,161.26 $ 15,847,370.28 $ 4,631,137.00 $ 4,190,920.00 $ 16,287,587.28 Trust Fund $ 439,763.70 $ 1,547,985.06 $ 1,500,210.35 $ 487,538.41 $ - $ 1,000.00 $ 486,538.41 Internal Service Fund $ 5,191,455.11 $ 6,309,001.56 $ 10,079,001.56 * OPEB Revocable Trust Fund $ 32,809,466.18 $ 2,121,067.79 $ 5,688,650.38 $ 29,241,883.59 $ 1,730,000.00 $ 880,000.00 $ 30,091,883.59 OPEB Irrevocable Trust Fund $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - $ OPEB Debt Service Fund $ 486,316.92 $ 2,548,471.48 $ 2,496,437.50 $ 538,350.90 $ 9,965,385.00 $ 9,537,588.00 $ 966,147.90 TOTAL-ALL FUNDS $ 100,319,923.06 $ 366,816,536.02 $ 380,233,255.62 $ 87,712,579.80 $ 367,513,097.00 $ 370,563,152.00 $ 88,432,524.80 CURRENT STATUTORY OPERATING DEBT PER LONG-TERM DEBT MINNESOTA STATUTES, SECTION 123B.81 Outstanding July 1, 2014 $ 123,254,863.00 AMOUNT OF GENERAL FUND DEFIC IT, IF ANY, IN N/A EXCESS OF 2.5% OF EXPENDITURES 06/30/2015 Plus: New Issues $ 4,200,000.00 Less: Redemeed Issues Outstanding June 30, 2015 SHORT-TERM DEBT Certificates of Indebtedness
$ 20,205,544.00 $ 107,249,319.00
COST PER STUDENT - AVERAGE DAILY MEMBERSHIP (ADM) 6/30/2015
TOTAL OPERATING EXPENDITURES $ 329,883,094.59 FY 2015 TOTAL ADM SERVED + TUITIONED 27,537.19 OUT ADM + ADJUSTED EXTENDED ADM Other Short-Term Indebtedness None FY 2015 OPERATING COST PER ADM $ 11,979.55 The complete budget may be inspected upon request to the superintendent. Comments: FY2014-15 data is based on the district’s audited comprehensive annual financial report. FY2015-16 budget information is based on budget adopted by the school board in June 2015. Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek, Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek, Lakeville Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 475553 None
SUMMONS STATE OF MINNESOTA COUNTY OF DAKOTA DISTRICT COURT FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT CASE TYPE: DISSOLUTION WITHOUT CHILDREN In Re the Marriage of: Guadalupe Andrade, Petitioner, and Fernando Castro Andrade, Respondent. THE STATE OF MINNESOTA TO THE ABOVE-NAMED RESPONDENT: Fernando Castro Andrade, address unknown: BE ADVISED THAT the Petitioner (your spouse) has initiated a court action against you asking for a dissolution of your marriage (divorce). A copy of the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage is attached to this Summons. BE ADVISED THAT you must serve upon Petitioner and file with the Court a written Answer to the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage. You must serve your Answer upon Petitioner and her attorney if represented, within thirty (30) days of the date you were served with this Summons, not counting the day of service. If you do not serve and file your Answer, the Court may award your spouse everything she is asking for in the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage. Answer forms are available from the Court Administrator’s office. NOTICE OF TEMPORARY RESTRAINING PROVISIONS Under Minnesota law, service of this summons makes the following requirements apply to both parties to the action, unless they are modified by the court or the proceeding is dismissed: (1)Neither party may dispose of any assets except (a) for the necessities of life or for the necessary generation of income or preservation of assets, (b) by an agreement of the parties in writing, or (c) for retaining counsel to carry on or to contest this proceeding. (2)Neither party may harass the other party. (3)All currently available insurance coverage must be maintained and continued without change in coverage or beneficiary designation. (4)Parties to a marriage dissolution proceeding are encouraged to attempt alternative dispute resolution pursuant to Minnesota law. Alternative dispute resolution includes mediation, arbitration and other processes as set forth in the district court rules. You may contact the court administrator about resources in your area. If you cannot pay for mediation or alternative dispute resolution, in some counties, assistance may be available to you through a nonprofit provider or a court program. If you are a victim of domestic abuse or threats as defined in Minnesota Statutes, Chapter 518B, you are not required to try mediation and you will not be penalized by the court in later proceedings. IF YOU VIOLATE ANY OF THESE PROVISIONS, YOU WILL BE SUBJECT TO SANCTIONS BY THE COURT. Dated: March 2, 2014. GUADALUPE ANDRADE, 13004 Oliver Avenue South Burnsville, Minnesota 55337 (952) 923-6447 Published in Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 27, December 4, 2015 466189
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 191 REGULAR MEETING MINUTES OCTOBER 22, 2015 This is a summary of the Burnsville-Eagan-Savage Regular School Board Meeting on Thursday, October 22, 2015, with full text available for public inspection on the district website at www.isd191.org or the District Office at 100 River Ridge Court, Burnsville, MN. The meeting was held at the Diamondhead Education Center, 200 W. Burnsville Parkway, Burnsville, MN, 55337 and was called to order by Chair VandenBoom at 6:30 p.m. Board members present were Alt, Currier, VandenBoom, Schmid, Luth and Sweep. Director Hill was absent. Superintendent Gothard, Student Representative Abegaz, administrators, staff and members of the public were also present. Gothard led the Pledge of Allegiance. Public recognition was given to “Read for the Record.” Gideon Pond Elementary and Edward Neill Elementary were recognized for being Reward Schools. The following Consent Agenda items were approved: minutes; personnel recommendations; September payroll checks, direct deposits, claims and receipts; second reading of Board Policies 515: Protection and Privacy of Pupil Records (rescind JO), 517: Student Recruiting (rescind IGDK), 519: Interview of Students by Outside Agencies (rescind JIH), 520: Student Surveys, 523: Policies Incorporated by Reference, 525: Violence Prevention, and 529: Staff Notification of Violent Behavior by Students (rescind GBEAD); and change orders #014, #015, #016 and #017 for the 2015 Additions and Alterations to Burnsville High School Bid Package #1. Reports presented: Oral reports were given by Schmid on behalf of the Negotiating Committee, Currier on behalf of the Policy Review Committee, and Luth on behalf of the Ad Hoc Technology Committee. Recommended actions approved: award the Burnsville High School Bid Package #4 prime contracts, including the base bid and Alternates #1 through #7, and #9 through #11 and the owner direct purchase to contractors as listed and authorize the signing of contracts with said contractors; recommended 2016-17 and 2017-18 academic calendars and February conferences in both school years are not accepted; listed rates of pay for the 2015-2016 school year; and first reading of Board Policy 527: Student Use and Parking of Motor Vehicles; Patrols, Inspections and Searches and rescind JHFD. The meeting adjourned at 7:49 p.m. Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 477018
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18A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
LANDFILL, from 1A continued negotiations that had lapsed for years. The next EPA-threatened deadline is Dec. 15. “There have been three deadlines that have come and gone. And we hope to negotiate a satisfactory resolution to this,” said Mike McGowan, who represents the trust and whose late father, Richard, bought the landfill property in the mid-1960s and began accepting waste in 1969. Asked whether a deal can be reached by Dec. 15, Koudelka said, “We’re working on it, and we believe it can.” But there’s been bad blood between the McGowans and the MPCA over regulatory matters, and McGowan now says the agency’s cleanup plan severely limits what he could do with the 190acre property, which includes an old 40-acre mining quarry.
KIMMEL, from 1A lence. In this time of enormous grief, we shouldn’t be making excuses for this barbaric behavior.” Kimmel wrote that his
ALDI, from 1A ALDI then submitted a new design that kept the silver and gray but changed the tan stucco to red brick and added a row of windows to that part of the building. The council voted 4-1 for the revision. Sherry
The landfill stopped taking trash in 1990 but the McGowans then opened a waste-transfer station, replacing one revenue stream with another. The station is still operating. “If bullying is a crime,” McGowan said in an interview, “then what the PCA has done to my family over the last 35 years is a crime.” MPCA officials held a public meeting on the landfill Nov. 12 at Burnsville City Hall. They said they want to plan early for safeguarding public health and the environment from landfill contamination. The property was originally a wetland area that wouldn’t have been permitted for a landfill under modern environmental regulations, the MPCA says. (McGowan disputes that it was a wetland area.) During the landfill’s early years, groundwater
flowed mainly to the Minnesota River. But a limestone quarry to the south, owned by Kraemer Mining and Materials, has been dewatered as mining went deeper. That lowered the water table, reducing the amount of groundwater coming into contact with landfill waste, and shifting the groundwater flow toward the Kraemer quarry. When that company stops mining and dewatering the quarry, the water table will rise to the level of the landfill, the MPCA says. Groundwater — and leachate from decomposing garbage — will flow toward the river and a future lake that will fill the dormant quarry, the agency says. When the water table rises, portions of the 132acre waste footprint will be sitting in groundwater that will become contaminated with pollutants such as heavy metals, medical waste, volatile
organic compounds and cobalt, the MPCA says. Contaminants will spread away from the landfill, some entering the river and quarry lake. This past spring the MPCA drilled wells into the waste and found “water in the waste as well as contamination in the waste — contamination that is above state standards for either surface water or groundwater,” said Mark Umholtz, an MPCA hydrogeologist. Once quarry dewatering stops, groundwater will exceed pollution standards for drinking and for discharge to the river, Umholtz said, noting that the quarry lake will be part of Burnsville’s and Savage’s water-supply systems. Burnsville now gets and treats some of its water from quarry dewatering and sells some of it to Savage. City officials estimate that Kraemer’s quarry operations will continue for
another 20 years or so. McGowan disputes MPCA projections for the eventual height of the water and its exposure to garbage. The MPCA proposes to dig up the waste and enclose it in a protective liner. The waste area would cover about 60 acres, surrounded by a 200-foot buffer, said Peter Tiffany, the MPCA engineer assigned to the property. That would leave 42 acres of reclaimed land on the west side of the property, next to the freeway. It would be very valuable land, say city and MPCA officials. McGowan said negotiations have so far been unsatisfactory. He said under an MPCA proposal plan some of the property’s supposedly developable acres would have to come from the quarry, which is landlocked; some might be reserved for wetland mitigation, and some
could one day be fingered by the Department of Transportation for a new 117th Street interchange. “It’s going from 200 acres to nothing,” McGowan said. He’s also worried that removal of berms around the transfer station to extract buried garbage would leave the station susceptible to flooding, and disputes MPCA claims that some garbage may be buried beneath the station itself. Koudelka said the MPCA would seek money for the $64.4 million cleanup through state bonding legislation. Other funds for the Closed Landfill Program that come from past settlements with insurance carriers that covered landfills have been depleted, he indicated.
tweet was “in response to a statement made during the candidate debates, not in response to the activities in Paris.” He called the attacks “cowardly and despicable.”
“I apologize to the volunteers and contributors who have put so much time, effort and money into my campaign,” Kimmel wrote. Kimmel, 63, was seek-
ing DFL endorsement for the District 56A House seat, which includes four northwest Burnsville precincts and all of Savage. The seat is held by 22-yearold Republican Drew
Christensen, of Burnsville. In 2014 Christensen beat Kimmel by about 12 percentage points for the then open seat. A new DFL candidate for Christensen’s seat has
yet to emerge, a local party activist said.
voted against it, objecting to the gray and silver. In a separate vote, the council unanimously rejected a request for a “cabinet” sign — a back-lit box sign — over the entryway. City ordinance allows cabinet signs only with a logo, not text, if they are subordinate to the main tenant
sign. Signs with a business name must have individual raised letters. Cabinet signs appear “low-rent,” Sherry said. “Signs really can project an image,” she said. “I do not want to see perpetuated the image that cabinet signs can project.” The trademark ALDI
sign — which includes a stylized letter “A” over the store name in a field of blue — is one of a piece, said Andy Brandel of ISG, ALDI’s architectural firm. No city where any of this region’s 54 ALDI stores are located has forced the logo and letter parts of the sign to be separate, Bran-
del said. Burnsville did. A cabinet sign will be allowed for the logo, but the “ALDI” beneath must have individual raised letters. “I think there is a lot of creativity to make this work,” Mayor Kautz told Brandel. “This is a great location for ALDI.”
The council voted on the two design questions and then approved a planned unit development amendment to allow the project.
CITY OF EAGAN ORDINANCE NO. 549 2ND SERIES
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 194 REGULAR MEETING MINUTES OCTOBER 27, 2015
MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME
MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME
John Gessner can be reached at (952) 846-2031 or email john.gessner@ecm-inc.com.
John Gessner can be reached at (952) 846-2031 or email john.gessner@ecm-inc.com.
John Gessner can be reached at (952) 846-2031 or email john.gessner@ecm-inc.com.
LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT: 1. Default has occurred in the conditions of the following Mortgage: MORTGAGOR(S): PB Industries, LLC MORTGAGEE/LENDER: U.S. Bank N.A. ASSIGNEE OF THE MORTGAGE: States Credit Holdings II, LLC MORTGAGE SERVICER: States Resources Corp TRANSACTION AGENT: N/A ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT SECURED BY THE MORTGAGE: $550,000 DATE OF MORTGAGE: April 16, 2008 WHEN AND WHERE RECORDED/REGISTERED: April 28, 2008 as Doc. No. 627190 in the office of the Dakota County Registrar of Titles ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Assignment dated December 23, 2014, recorded January 15, 2015 as Doc. No. 740646 in the office of the Dakota County Registrar of Titles PHYSICAL STREET ADDRESS OF THE MORTGAGE PREMISES: 1300 115th Street East, Burnsville, MN 55337 TAX PARCEL IDENTIFICATION NUMBER: 02-64053-01-020 DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE PREMISES: Lot Two (2), Block One (1) in River Bluffs 4th Addition, according to the recorded plat thereof. 2. No action or proceeding at law is now pending to recover the debt secured by the Mortgage, or any part thereof. 3. The holder of the Mortgage has complied with all conditions precedent to acceleration of the debt secured by the Mortgage and foreclosure of the Mortgage, and all notice and other requirements of applicable statutes. 4. At the date of this Notice, the amount due on the Mortgage, and taxes, if any, paid by the holder of the Mortgage is $527,149.91. 5. Pursuant to the power of sale in the Mortgage, the Mortgage will be foreclosed and the Mortgage Premises will be sold by the Dakota County Sheriff as follows: DATE: Wednesday December 9, 2015 TIME: 10:00 a.m. PLACE: Dakota County Sheriff’s Office 1580 Highway 55 Hastings, MN 55033 to pay the debt secured by said Mortgage, taxes, if any, on said Mortgage Premises and the costs and disbursements, including attorneys’ fees allowed by law. 6. The time allowed by law for redemption by the Mortgagor(s) or Mortgagor’s personal representatives or assigns is six (6) months after the date of sale. Dated: October 8, 2015 STATES CREDIT HOLDINGS II, LLC MORTGAGEE By: /s/ Jennifer L. Lappegaard Jennifer L. Lappegaard Attorneys for Mortgagee Speight & Lappegaard, P.A. 411 West Third Street Red Wing, MN 55066 (651) 388-8805 Published in Burnsville/Eagan October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 13, 20, 2015 460828
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF EAGAN, MINNESOTA, AMENDING EAGAN CITY CODE CHAPTER 11 ENTITLED “LAND USE REGULATIONS (ZONING)” BY AMENDING SECTION 11.30 REGARDING DEFINITION OF RESIDENTIAL OCCUPANCY OF DWELLING; AND BY ADOPTING BY REFERENCE EAGAN CITY CODE CHAPTER 1 AND SECTION 11.99. The City Council of the City of Eagan does ordain: Section 1. Eagan City Code Section 11.30 is hereby amended by revising the following definition to read as follows: Dwelling means a building or one or more portions thereof intended to be occupied for residential occupancy. Residential occupancy means inhabiting the building, or any portion thereof, as a household for a period of not less than 30 consecutive days. Dwelling does not mean rooms in motels, hotels, nursing homes, boarding houses, motor homes, tents, cabins or travel trailer coaches. Section 2. Eagan City Code Chapter 1 entitled “General Provisions and Definitions Applicable to the Entire City Code Including ‘Penalty for Violation’” and Section 11.99, entitled “Violation a Misdemeanor” are hereby adopted in their entirety by reference as though repeated verbatim. Section 3. Effective Date. This ordinance shall take effect upon its adoption and publication according to law. ATTEST: CITY OF EAGAN City Council By: /s/ Christina M. Scipioni Its: City Clerk By: /s/ Mike Maguire Its: Mayor Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 477144
NOTICE OF HARASSMENT Notice of Issuance of Harassment State of Minnesota County Hennepin District Court Fourth Judicial District Court File Number: 27-CV-15-17634 Case Type: Harassment Andrew Jon Wendt Petitioner(s) vs. Jessy David Ryks Respondent(s) To Respondent named above: Jessy David Ryks YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Harassment Order For Relief has been issued in the above matter. You may request a hearing on this matter if you file a Request For Hearing with the Court within 45 days of issuance of the Harassment Order For Relief. You may obtain a copy of the Harassment Order For Relief from the court administrator’s office at the following address: Hennepin County Government Center / B-Level Record Center, 300 South Sixth Street, Minneapolis, MN 55487 Failure to appear at a scheduled hearing or to obtain a copy of the Harassment Order For Relief will not be a defense to prosecution for violation of the Court’s order. Date: 11-13-15 /s/ Joan Johnson Senior Court Clerk Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek 11/20/15 476990
This is a summary of the Independent School District No. 194 Regular Board of Education Meeting on October 27, 2015 with full text available for public inspection on the district website at www. isd194.org or 8670 210th Street W., Lakeville, MN 55044 Regular Meeting: October 27, 2015 The regular meeting was called to order at 7:00 p.m. followed by pledge of allegiance. All board members and administrators were present except Superintendent Snyder and Exec Dir Molesky. Public Comment: Erin Gonyea, 17155 Hollyhock Ct, and Jennifer Harmening, 1220 Bluebill Bay, representatives from Unite 194, spoke about voting in support of the referendum. Consent agenda items approved: Minutes of the meetings on October 13 & 20; employment recommendations, leave requests and resignations; payment of bills & claims; wire transfers and investments; donations; field trips. Reports presented: Infant Toddler Intervention Team; Ignite! update; referendum update; Innovation Zone update. Approved actions: Resolution; Policies 505-Distribution of NonSchool Sponsored Materials on School Premises by Students and Employees, 904-Distribution of Materials on School District Property by Non-School Persons, 905-Advertising, 706-Acceptance of Gifts, and 535-Political Campaigns and Activities. Adjournment at 9:16 p.m. Published in the Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 475326
NOTICE OF HARASSMENT Notice of Issuance of Harassment State of Minnesota County Hennepin District Court Fourth Judicial District Court File Number: 27-CV-15-17635 Case Type: Harassment Lori Sue Wendt Petitioner(s) vs. Jessy David Ryks Respondent(s) To Respondent named above: Jessy David Ryks YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Harassment Order For Relief has been issued in the above matter. You may request a hearing on this matter if you file a Request For Hearing with the Court within 45 days of issuance of the Harassment Order For Relief. You may obtain a copy of the Harassment Order For Relief from the court administrator’s office at the following address: Hennepin County Government Center / B-Level Record Center, 300 South Sixth Street, Minneapolis, MN 55487 Failure to appear at a scheduled hearing or to obtain a copy of the Harassment Order For Relief will not be a defense to prosecution for violation of the Court’s order. Date: 11-13-15 /s/ Joan Johnson Senior Court Clerk Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek 11/20/15 476993
Minnesota Statutes, 333 The filing of an assumed name does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable consumers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Jay Bendt PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 3301 Country Wood Drive Burnsville, MN 55337 NAMEHOLDER(S): Jael Bendt 3301 Country Wood Drive Burnsville, MN 55337 This certificate is an amendment of Certificate of Assumed Name File Number 728371900028 Originally filed on January 22, 2014 I, the undersigned, certify that I am signing this document as the person whose signature is required, or as agent of the person(s) whose signature would be required who has authorized me to sign this document on his/her behalf, or in both capacities. I further certify that I have completed all required fields, and that the information in this document is true and correct and in compliance with the applicable chapter of Minnesota Statutes. I understand that by signing this document I am subject to the penalties of perjury as set forth in Section 609.48 as if I had signed this document under oath. DATE FILED: October 15, 2015 SIGNED BY: Jael Bendt Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 27, 2015 476326
CITY OF EAGAN DAKOTA COUNTY MINNESOTA NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PROPOSED EASEMENT VACATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE City Council of the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota, will meet at the City Hall, 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan, Minnesota 55122, on Monday, November 30, 2015, at 6:30 p.m., or as soon thereafter as possible. The purpose of the meeting will be to hold a public hearing on the vacation of public drainage and utility easement over and across the following described property in the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota: All drainage and utility easements lying within: The westerly 5.0’ drainage & utility easement over Lot 1, Blk 1, Oakbrooke 8th Addition, Dakota County, Minnesota, lying north of the south 10.0’ of said Lot 1 and south of the southerly line of Williams Brothers Pipeline easement, Document #1317835 And: The easterly 5.0’ drainage & utility easement over Lot 2, Blk 1, Oakbrooke 8th Addition, Dakota County, Minnesota, lying north of the south 10.0’ of said Lot 2 and south of the southerly line of Williams Brothers Pipeline easement, Document #1317835 Dated: November 2, 2015 /s/ Christina M. Scipioni Eagan City Clerk Dakota County, MN Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 13, 20, 2015 472378
Minnesota Statutes, 333 The filing of an assumed name does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable customers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Great Clips-Nicollet Plaza PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 270 East Travelers Trail Burnsville, MN 55337 NAMEHOLDER(S): Rubol’s Inc. 8921 Hwy 5 Lake Elmo, MN 55042 I, the undersigned, certify that I am signing this document as the person whose signature is required, or as agent of the person(s) whose signature would be required who has authorized me to sign this document on his/her behalf, or in both capacities. I further certify that I have completed all required fields, and that the information in this document is true and correct and in compliance with the applicable chapter of Minnesota Statutes. I understand that by signing this document I am subject to the penalties of perjury as set forth in Section 609.48 as if I had signed this document under oath. DATE FILED: November 10, 2015 SIGNED BY: Amy Vegoe Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 27, 2015 475515
MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME Minnesota Statutes, 333 The filing of an assumed name does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable customers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Market Distributing PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 25 West Cliff Road Suite 115 Burnsville, MN 55337 NAMEHOLDER(S): Market Distribution, Inc. 5365 Shore Trail Prior Lake, MN 55372 I, the undersigned, certify that I am signing this document as the person whose signature is required, or as agent of the person(s) whose signature would be required who has authorized me to sign this document on his/her behalf, or in both capacities. I further certify that I have completed all required fields, and that the information in this document is true and correct and in compliance with the applicable chapter of Minnesota Statutes. I understand that by signing this document I am subject to the penalties of perjury as set forth in Section 609.48 as if I had signed this document under oath. DATE FILED: November 5, 2015 SIGNED BY: William Bernard Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek November 13, 20, 2015 473044
CITY OF EAGAN 2016 FEE SCHEDULE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held before the Eagan City Council at the Eagan Municipal Center, 3830 Pilot Knob Road, on November 30, 2015
at 6:30 p.m. regarding approval of the 2016 Fee Schedule. Dated: November 20, 2015 /s/ Christina M. Scipioni City Clerk Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 476879
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE SS MNRI, LLC, doing business as Simply Self Storage intends to enforce its lien on certain personal property belonging to the following at the facility located at 4025 Old Sibley Memorial Highway, Eagan, MN 55122. The sale will take place (unless otherwise withdrawn) via an on-line auction at www.storagetreasures.com on Wednesday, November 25th, 2015 beginning at approximately 10:00AM and concluding on Wednesday, December 9th, 2015 at approximately 10:00AM. This public sale will result in the goods being sold to the highest bidder. Certain terms and conditions apply. G. Mahler 532- bikes, tool box, batteries, totes, table G. Mahler 131A- boxes, aquarium, skis, tools, table, sled, bed frame L. Rodriguez 175- tool box, totes, boxes, ladder, art work R. Johnson 520- bike, furn, chair, lamp, 2 wheeler, bookshelf A. Sanchez 944- couch, paint, lamp J. Okerstrom 121A- Bins, art work, lamp, grill M. Evans 143- furn, lamps, art work, misc boxes, books Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun ThisWeek November 13, 20, 2015 470269
NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE Please take notice Town Centre Self Storage - Eagan located at 3495 Denmark Avenue Eagan MN 55123 intends to hold an auction of the goods stored in the following units in default for nonpayment of rent. The sale will occur as an online auction via www. storagetreasures.com on 12-092015 at 10:00am. Unless stated otherwise the description of the contents are household goods and furnishings. Lisa Serrano; Morris Gibson; Hirman Brad; Susan Hauber. All property is being stored at the above self-storage facility. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply. See manager for details. Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 27, 2015 476940
NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to MN Statute 168B.06 Notice is hereby given that property described as; Vehicle: Dodge Caravan Plate# (WI) 686 ERW VIN# 1B4GP45G3XB911359 Towed from; 3860 Hamilton St, Burnsville, MN 55337 On: 09/18/2015 Vehicle will be eligible for sale on: 11/23/2015 At Southside Towing, 7700 Hwy 101 E. Shakopee, MN 55379 952-445-8928 Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek November 20, 2015 476312
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4020 Crafts, Boutiques & Flea Markets
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20-21 (10-7pm); Sun, Nov. 22 (12-5pm). Jewelry, gifts, Holiday & Home Decor Visit our Christmas Resale Room for New & gently used Holiday Decor! 13400 Commonwealth Dr
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20A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
5370 Painting & Decorating
5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
5420 Tree Care & Stump Removal
DAVEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING and WALLPAPERING
â&#x2014;&#x2020; Roofing â&#x2014;&#x2020; Siding
ArborBarberTrees.com
Gutters â&#x2014;&#x2020; Soffit/Fascia TOPSIDE, INC.
Int/Ext â&#x20AC;˘ Free Est. â&#x20AC;˘ 23 Yrs. Will meet or beat any price! Lic/Ins Visa/MC 952-469-6800
612-869-1177 Lic CR005276 â&#x2014;&#x2020; Bonded â&#x2014;&#x2020; Insured 35 Yrs Exp. A+ Rating BBB
5380 Plumbing
5410 Snow Removal
SAVE MONEY Competent Master Plumber needs work. Lic# M3869. Jason 952-891-2490
$350* For The Season Driveway Plowing and Small Parking Lots.
5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
*Most Drives 651-592-5748
CAYERING LAWN SERVICE â&#x20AC;˘ Snowplowing â&#x20AC;˘ Holiday Lighting â&#x20AC;˘ Bobcat Work Res. & Commercial Call Tim 952-212-6390
A Family Operated Business No Subcontractors Used
MN Nice
612-703-0175 Mbr: BBB Trimming, Removal & Stump Grinding. Call Jeff for
Stump Removal 9 Narrow Access 9 Backyards 9 Fully Insured
Jeff 612-578-5299 Thomas Tree Service 25 yrs exp./ Expert Climb. Immaculate Clean-up! Tree Removal/Trimming Lot Clearing/Stump Removal
Free Ests 952-440-6104
5500 EMPLOYMENT 5510 Full-time
Snow Plowing / Removal
952-288-7693
Tear-offs, Insurance Claims BBB A+, Free Est. A+ Angies List Lic # BC170064 Certified GAF Installer - 50 yr warranty. Ins. 952-891-8586
Modern Landscapes Residential Snow Removal Dependable
612-205-9953
y Residential Plowing y Senior Discounts 15 Yrs Exp 952-994-3102
SNOW PLOWING Commercial & Residential
Flat Roof Specialist
Dependable - Insured - Expâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d
Ins. claims & wood shakes Overhead Roofing Est 1983 952 463-4592 Lic# BC4706
Ă&#x152;Ă&#x152;Finish CarpentersĂ&#x152;Ă&#x152;
Schwieters Co. Wants You! We Offer Year-Round Work and Great Benefits for Experienced Finish Carpenters. Work throughout the metro. Call 612-328-3140 to schedule an interview. Finishcarpenters.com EOE
5510 Full-time
5510 Full-time
5510 Full-time
5510 Full-time
Accessible Space is seeking a FT Caretaker/Maintenance for our locations in Burnsville. Duties include apt turns, cleaning, painting, minor maintenance. Comp Wage + Benefits! 18 months related work exp. Apply online today: www. accessiblespace.org or fax resume to HR (877) 645-0541 Ref job code 696
Check us out online at sunthisweek.com theadspider.com Minnesota Energy Resources, a subsidiary of WEC Energy Group, is currently recruiting for an Administrative Assistant II position for our Rosemount, MN location. To view the requirements for this position and to apply, please visit our website at http://www.wecenergy group.com/careers/ by November 24th 2015. Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
5510 Full-time
5510 Full-time
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Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs - 30 Yrs Exp Insured - Lic#20126880 John Haley #1 Roofer, LLC. Call 952-925-6156
Swede Outdoor Services Serving Eagan - Commercial Lawn & Snow 612-810-9374
Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â? To place your Classified Ad contact Mike Specht at: 952-392-6877 or email: mike.specht@ ecm-inc.com Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?
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5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
612-644-8035 Remove Large Trees & Stumps CHEAP!!
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5420 Tree Care & Stump Removal
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Chanhassen, Excelsior, Hopkins, Minnetonka, Plymouth, Shorewood, St. Louis Park, Wayzata
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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
5510 Full-time
5520 Part-time
Fantasy Gifts
Sales Clerk
OTR CLASS A TRUCK DRIVER WSC is looking to fill a FT Driver position based out of Lakeville, MN. Driver must have CDL Class “A” and clean driving history. Essential Duties: • Lifting rqmnt of up to 75 lbs • Assist with loading and unloading trucks • Maintain all aspects of equipment maintenance • Must comprehend all DOT trucking regulations • Must be able to complete a background check and drug screening • Sun – Thurs work schedule • Pref’d mountain driving experience
Candidates must be reliable and possess customer service skills. Wausau Supply Company is an EOE offering competitive salary & benefit pkg. including: Health, Dental, Holiday/Vacation Pay, 401K and ESOP program. Email resumes to: humanresources@ wausausupply.com Or stop by our location at: 21700 Highview Avenue Lakeville, MN 55044
Visit us at SunThisweek.com
5520 Part-time
Part Time Eves and weekends, set schedule. Burnsville Location 2125 Highway 13 W Applications at store or Send resume to: Michael@ fantasygifts.com
5530 Full-time or Part-time
Sun•Thisweek Classifieds
Community Living Options Direct Care Staff Various locations All shifts
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& community outings. Excellent Pay, Benefits + ANNUAL BONUS!
651-237-1087 or
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www.clo-mn.com REIMBURSED SENIOR VOLUNTEER POSITIONS Lutheran Social Service of MN is looking for volunteers (age 55 & older) to service in our Senior Companion Program by providing friendly in-home visit to elderly adults throughout Dakota County. Our volunteers receive a tax-free hourly stipend, mileage reimbursement & other benefits. Contact Melissa Grimmer at 651-310-9443 or email Melissa. Grimmer@lssmn.org
Make a difference in someone’s life!
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5530 Full-time or Part-time
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Community Assisted Living in Apple Valley & Farmington is looking for dedicated employees to work as Certified Nursing Assistants taking care of six seniors in our assisted living homes. We are currently looking to fill PT & FT positions on Evenings, Nights and W/E Days. All shifts include E/O weekend. CNA positions start at $13 /hr. Call: 952-440-3955 for application address.
5520 Part-time
• Employment
, e an ad To plac dly t a frien contac ntative represe today!
SUN Thisweek 952
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392-6888
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22A November 20, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan
State band performs
Christmas pageant chaos
Expressions Community Theater concludes its run of the stage comedy â&#x20AC;&#x153;Christmas Bellesâ&#x20AC;? this weekend with shows at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 20-21 and 2 p.m. Nov. 22 at the Lakeville Area Arts Center. The play follows the feuding Futrelle sisters â&#x20AC;&#x201D; played by local actors Beth Adams, Andrea Moore and Gina Sauer â&#x20AC;&#x201D; as one of them attempts to get back in her small Texas townâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s good graces by staging an over-the-top church Christmas program. Tickets are $13 and can be purchased online at www.LakevilleAreaArtsCenter.com or by calling 952-985-4640. (Photo submitted)
theater and arts calendar The Minnesota State Band, the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s official band, presents its fall concert 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 21, at Grace United Methodist Church, 15309 Maple Island Road, Burnsville. The first half of the concert has an â&#x20AC;&#x153;Old Band Classicsâ&#x20AC;? theme and includes a classic Sousa march, a late 19th century overture, a bit of funeral music from Wagner, and â&#x20AC;&#x153;Finlandia,â&#x20AC;? an iconic piece by Sibelius that helped unify Finland. The second half kicks off with a Sousa-style march titled â&#x20AC;&#x153;Them Basses,â&#x20AC;? then moves into three works from British composers: a calm organ-like piece by Vaughn Williams, a classic suite by Holst, and a modern overture for symphonic band by Gordon Jacobs. The Minnesota State Band was founded in 1898. The 60-piece concert band is the only remaining state band in the nation. The concert is free, but donations are accepted. More information is at www.minnesotastateband.org. (Photo submitted)
theater and arts briefs
IMAX Family Fun IMAX Family Fun on Saturday is Nov. 28 at the Great Clips IMAX Theatre at the Minnesota Zoo,
Auditions Purple Door Youth Theater, an educational theater company for students in grades two to 12, will hold auditions and technical theater interviews for â&#x20AC;&#x153;Robin Hoodâ&#x20AC;? Monday and Tuesday, Dec. 7 and 8. Call the Northfield Arts Guild at 507-645-8877 to schedule a 30-minute appointment between 6:15 and 8:15 p.m. For audition information, visit the education page at NorthfieldArtsGuild.org. Auditions will be held at 512 Washington St., Northfield. Books SouthSide Writers, Saturday workgroup for aspiring writers, offering critique, submission and manuscript preparation information, support and direction, 10 a.m. to noon, Wescott Library, 1340 Wescott Road, Eagan. Information: 651688-0365. Comedy Louie Anderson Live! 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 31, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $32.95$102.95 at the box office, by phone at 800-982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com. Dance â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Minnesota Nutcracker,â&#x20AC;? presented by Twin Cities Ballet of Minnesota, Dec. 11-13, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Blvd., Burnsville. Tickets: $18-$34 at the box office, by phone at 800-982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com.
Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $28 at the box office, by phone at 800982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com. Farmington High School fall jazz ensemble concert, 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 23, Farmington High School. Information: 651-252-2501. Apple Valley High School concert band with Valley Middle School eighth-grade band, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23, Apple Valley High School. Information: 952-431-8200. Hitchville, 9 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25, Carboneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, 7670 W. 160th St., Lakeville. $6 cover charge. Country music. Information: www.welcometohitchville.com. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Coming Home for Christmasâ&#x20AC;? variety show, 2 and 7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 5, Steeple Center, Rosemount. Tickets: $15. Information: 952-2558545 or rosemountarts@gmail. com. VocalEssence Welcome Christmas concert, 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 5, Shepherd of Valley Lutheran Church, 12650 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. Tickets: $10-$40. Tickets/information: 612-3715656 or vocalessence.org. Pyramid Jazz Concert, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 15, Eagan High School, 4185 Braddock Trail, Eagan. Includes jazz ensembles from Eagan High School, Dakota Hills and Black Hawk middle schools. Free. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Christmas with Cantusâ&#x20AC;? concert, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 19, Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church, 12650 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. Tickets: www.cantussings.org or 612-435-0055. Eagan High School holiday vocal music concerts, 6 and 7:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21, Eagan High School. Free.
Events Eagan Art House Pottery and Art Sale, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 21, 3981 Lex- Theater ington Ave. S. and 3945 Lexâ&#x20AC;&#x153;Stanley Ann: The Unlikely ington Ave. S., Eagan. Informa- Story of Barack Obamaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s tion: 651-675-5521. Mother,â&#x20AC;? Nov. 6-22, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Exhibits Burnsville. Tickets: $22 at the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Brilliant Passages,â&#x20AC;? fall box office, Ticketmaster.com or exhibit by the Minnesota Wa- 800-982-2787. tercolor Society, runs through â&#x20AC;&#x153;Godspell,â&#x20AC;? presented by Dec. 12 at Ames Center, 12600 Farmington High School, 7 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. In- p.m. Nov. 20-21, Boeckman formation: www.ames-center. Middle School Theater. Tickets: com. $10 adults, $6 students and seTuesday Painters exhibit niors. runs through November at the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Into the Woods,â&#x20AC;? presentRobert Trail Library, 14395 S. ed by Burnsville High School Robert Trail, Rosemount. Theatre Guild, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 19-21, Mraz Center. InformaMusic tion: www.MrazCenterTickets. Donny & Marie Celebrat- com. ing the Holidays, 8 p.m. Nov. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sweeney Todd,â&#x20AC;? pre20-21, Mystic Lake Casino, sented by Lakeville North High Prior Lake. Tickets: $79-$119. School, 7 p.m. Nov. 19 and Information: www.mysticlake. 21, Lakeville North auditorium, com. 19600 Ipava Ave. W. Tickets: Sinatra and Company, 2 $10 adults, $5 students and sep.m. Sunday, Nov. 22, Ames niors at www.seatyourself.biz.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Christmas Belles,â&#x20AC;? presented by Expressions Theater, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 19, 20, 21, and 2 p.m. Nov. 15 and 22, Lakeville Area Arts Center, 20965 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville. Tickets: $13 at www.lakevilleareaartscenter. com or 952-985-4640. OnStage 2015: The Envelope Please, presented by Rosemount High School, 7 p.m. Dec. 10-12, 17-19, and 2 p.m. Dec. 13, in the Performing Arts Center, Rosemount High School, 3335 142nd St. W., Rosemount. Free senior citizen preview 3:30 p.m. Dec. 8. Tickets: $9 adults, $7 seniors, $5 students. Visit www.district196. org/rhs/theatrearts for tickets. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Servantâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Christmas,â&#x20AC;? presented by Eagan High School, 7 p.m. Dec. 10-12, Eagan High School, 4185 Braddock Trail, Eagan. Free senior citizen preview 3:30 p.m. Dec. 9. Tickets: $7 adults, $5 seniors and students. Visit www.eagan. k12.mn.us for tickets. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Into the Woods,â&#x20AC;? presented by Eastview High School, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 11-12, 17-18, and 2 p.m. Dec. 13, Eastview High School, 6200 140th St. W., Apple Valley. Free senior citizen preview 3:30 p.m. Dec. 8. Tickets: $9 adults, $7 senior citizens, $5 students. Purchase online at http://www.evperformingarts.com/ticket-info/ or at the box office one hour before the performance. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Christmas Carol Radio Play,â&#x20AC;? presented by the Eagan Theater Company, 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 11, and Saturday, Dec. 12, at Woodcrest Church, 525 Cliff Road, Eagan. Tickets: $15 adults, $12 seniors and students age 17 and under. Information: www.etc-mn.org. Workshops/classes/other Teen Poetry Jam/Rap Battle, 4-5 p.m. the first Tuesday of each month at Apple Valley Teen Center, 14255 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley, 952-953-2385. Ages 12-18. Drawing & Painting (adults and teens) with Christine Tierney, 9 a.m. to noon Wednesdays, River Ridge Arts Building, Burnsville. Information: www. christinetierney.com, 612-2103377. Brushworks School of Art Burnsville offers fine art education through drawing and painting. Classes for adults and teens. Information: Patricia Schwartz, www.BrushworksSchoolofArt.com, 651-214-4732. 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. Line dance classes Wednesdays at Lakeville Heritage Center, 20110 Holyoke Ave., beginners 9-10 a.m., intermediate 10 a.m. to noon. Information: Marilyn, 651-4637833. The Lakeville Area Arts Center offers arts classes for all ages, www.lakevillemn.gov, 952-985-4640. Rosemount History Book Club meets 6:30-8 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Robert Trail Library. Information: John Loch, 952-2558545 or jjloch@charter.net.
TODAYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S THE DAY
The annual Eagan Art House Pottery & Art Sale will be 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 21. The sale features 24 local artists from the Eagan Art House and from Eagan Artist Connect. The sale has expanded this year to two locations â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the Eagan Art House and just across the parking lot at Advent United Methodist Church. Admission is free. A portion of the proceeds benefits the Eagan Art Festival Board in support of the arts in Eagan. The Eagan Art House is located at 3981 Lexington Ave. S. and Advent United Methodist Church is at 3945 Lexington Ave. S. For more information, call 651-675-5521.
Lake Lutheran Church, 3611 North Berens Road N.W., Prior Lake. The theme centers on families coming together to celebrate the holiday season and includes a variety of choral works, including Stephen Paulusâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Road Homeâ&#x20AC;? and Bachâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cantata BWV 36.â&#x20AC;? The concert also will be presented 4 p.m. Dec. 6 at Gethsemane Episcopal Church, 905 S. Fourth Ave. in Minneapolis. Tickets will be available â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Home for the at the door for $12 adults, $8 Holidaysâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; students and seniors, or visit Eagan High School The- www.southmetrochorale. atre will present â&#x20AC;&#x153;Home org to purchase them. for the Holidays,â&#x20AC;? featuring 2008 EHS graduate Honey â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Winter Ribar 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 19, in the school au- Wonderettesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; ditorium. Tickets for this The Northfield Arts fundraiser for EHS Theatre Guild presents â&#x20AC;&#x153;Winter are $10-$13 at http://www. Wonderettes,â&#x20AC;? a musical in seatyourself.biz/eaganhs. four-part harmony, 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, Dec. 11, 12, 18, 19, and 2 South Metro p.m. Sundays, Dec. 13 and Chorale concert 20, with an additional perThe South Metro Cho- formance 7:30 p.m. Thursrale, based in Prior Lake, day, Dec. 17. All perforwill present a holiday con- mances are at the Northfield cert 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Arts Guild Theater, 411 W. Dec. 5, at Shepherd of the Third St., Northfield. The play takes place during the 1968 Christmas party at Harperâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hardware store. When their Rent-aSanta turns up missing, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s up to the Wonderettes to keep the employees entertained. Tickets are $18 for adults and $13 for students and seniors. Tickets may be purchased online at northfieldartsguild.org or by calling 507-645-8877.
12000 Zoo Blvd., Apple Valley. Doors open at 9 a.m. for photos with Santa and storytime by the Dakota County Library. Complimentary snacks are available (while they last) in the lobby before the show. The movie, â&#x20AC;&#x153;To The Arctic in 3D,â&#x20AC;? begins at 10 a.m. Cost is $6. For more information, call 952-9979714 or email cpurfeerst@ imax.com.
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Eagan Art House pottery and art sale
To submit items for the Arts Calendar, email: darcy. odden@ecm-inc.com.
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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan November 20, 2015
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Thisweekend Glimpses of â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Superior Lightâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Rosemount artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s exhibit opens Nov. 24 at Benedictine Center by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Rita Corrigan her painting â&#x20AC;&#x153;Resurrectionâ&#x20AC;? earned a secondplace award. Corrigan has been painting all her life, focusing most recently on northern Minnesota landscapes. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Painting or drawing is something I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t think I could live without,â&#x20AC;? she said.
family calendar To submit items for the Family Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com.
Saturday, Nov. 21 Holiday bazaar and bistro, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Heritage Lutheran Church, 13401 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. Features a bake sale, lefse, soup, holiday items, vendors and more. Information: 952431-6225. Mattress sale fundraiser by the Henry Sibley High School band, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Henry Sibley, 1897 Delaware Ave., West St. Paul. Information: http://www.henrysibleyband.org/. Cat claw clipping clinic by Feline Rescue Inc., 2-4 p.m., Chuck & Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pet Food Outlet, 1254 Town Centre Drive, Eagan. All cats must be transported in a carrier for their safety. Free. Information: http:// felinerescue.org/. Mistletoe Market, an upscale vendor show, 4-9 p.m., Faithful Shepherd Catholic School, 3355 Columbia Drive, Eagan. Tickets: $15 in advance, $20 at the door. Information: www.mistletoemarketeagan.com. Tuesday, Nov. 24
Criminal expungement information clinic, 1:30 p.m., room L139, Dakota County Western Service Center, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Apple Valley. Free. Information: Dakota County Law Library at 651-438-8080. Wednesday, Nov. 25 Nature Play Date, 1-2 p.m., Cleary Lake Regional Park, Prior Lake. Explore the park and meet other families interested in getting their children outdoors. Wear appropriate clothes and shoes. Free for all ages. Children 17 and younger must be accompanied by an adult. Ongoing Marriage Encounter weekend, Dec. 12-13, Mt. Olivet Conference and Retreat Center in Farmington. Visit www.marriages.org for additional information or call 651454-3238. Emotions Anonymous meetings, 7:30-9 p.m. Tuesdays at SouthCross Community Church, 1800 E. County Road 42 (at Summit Oak Drive), Apple Valley. EA is a 12-step program for those seeking emotional health. All are welcome. Information: http://www. emotionsanonymous.org/outof-the-darkness-walks.
later this year she plans to open a gallery and studio in Rosemount in the building that formerly housed Corrigan Electric, a company once owned by her husband Donald, who recently passed away. The Benedictine Center, located at 2675 Benet Road in Maplewood, sponsors five exhibits annually featuring local artists. Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;Superior Light,â&#x20AC;? and the other exhibits, are open to the public and free of charge. Viewing hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Email Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.
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â&#x20AC;&#x153;Superior Twilight No. 2,â&#x20AC;? a pastel by Rita Corrigan.
A love for nature, and an expertise with pastels, are at the heart of Rosemount artist Rita Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s exhibit â&#x20AC;&#x153;Superior Light.â&#x20AC;? Corriganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s pastel landscapes will be on display at the Benedictine Center, an arm of St Paulâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Monastery, Nov. 24-Jan. 22. For the past two years, Corrigan has won awards in the Benedictine Centerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s juried art exhibit called â&#x20AC;&#x153;Seeing God,â&#x20AC;? which aims to show how art sustains and expands the spiritual imagination, and deepens awe for the beauty of nature. Last year, Corrigan won first place in the competition with an abstract work titled â&#x20AC;&#x153;Superior Sunrise.â&#x20AC;? In 2013,
Corrigan has a masterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s degree in creative photography and oil painting, and was an art teacher for 25 years. She taught art at St. Joseph Catholic School in Rosemount, as well as in the Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan School District. In addition to her exhibit at the Benedictine Center, her paintings can be seen at the Mayo Hospital Gallery in Red Wing, and at the Bloomington Art Center in Bloomington. This past spring, Corrigan participated in an exhibit in St. Paul at a reception for the ambassador from Ireland, and
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