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www.SunThisweek.com NEWS School budget, levy Facing a shortfall, District 196 plans to take a larger-thanprojected bite out of its fund balance. Page 3A

by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

OPINION Reform to help local districts U.S. Rep. John Kline, R-Burnsville, writes about his contributions to the new federal education law. Page 4A

THISWEEKEND

December 18, 2015 | Volume 36 | Number 42

Eagan man, 20, held on terrorism charges Complaint says he led local group trying to join ISIL in Syria

A 20-year-old Somali-American man from Eagan is in federal custody for allegedly leading a group of friends who planned to travel to Syria and fight for ISIL. Abdirizak Mohamed Warsame was charged on Dec. 10 with conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic State

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Burnsville | Eagan

and we will continue to work to stem the flow of foreign fighters abroad and to bring to justice those who seek to provide material support to designated foreign terrorist organizations,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney General Carlin in a news release. According to the complaint, Warsame and his co-conspirators began watching propaganda videos in 2014 that glorified religious violence and beAbdirizak Warsame gan to discuss aspirations to travel to Syria. of Iraq and the Levant. Warsame and others in “Counterterrorism is the group discussed ways the National Security Division’s highest priority, See SUSPECT, 16A

Burnsville landfill deal is at hand Would safeguard water, leave buildable land by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

A deal is at hand to close the old Freeway Landfill in a way that will prevent groundwater pollution and leave about 40 acres of valuable land for redevelopment, according to Burnsville City Manager Heather Johnston. Johnston said Tuesday night she expects “in the next day or so” a signed agreement between land-

owner representative Michael McGowan, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and Dakota County. A deal would end years of frustration and lapsed negotiations over the landfill west of Interstate 35W and south of the Minnesota River, which stopped accepting trash in 1990. It’s one of three among 112 qualified landfills that have yet to enter the state’s voluntary Closed Landfill Program, and the one that causes the MPCA the most concern. Recent negotiations See LANDFILL, 18A

Two brothers charged in Eagan Town Hall arson Video, feces left at scene and jail call to mom help break the case by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Local holiday entertainment Area residents in search of holiday shows will find plenty on offer at Burnsville’s Ames Center and the Lakeville Area Arts Center. Page 4A

The two-year mystery of who set fire to Eagan’s historic Town Hall has been solved, police say. T w o Prior Lake b r o t h e r s Wynn have been Arvidson charged with first degree arson in connection to the Sept. 8, 2013 fire that destroyed the 100-year-old building and many artifacts inside. Human feces left at the scene, a home surveillance video and a prison

Both brothers have a history of run-ins with the law and a long-standing grudge against the city. Damron served nearly a decade in federal prison for cutting 19 underground telephone cables in Fargo while he was an electrical engineering student in the 1990s. This disrupted service to thousands for days and cased $1 million in damage. He was released in 2005 and moved to the Twin Cities. His mother and sister live in Eagan. A year later, Damron pleaded guilty stealing more than $250,000 worth of property stolen in 20 Eagan’s historic Town Hall was severely damaged in a 2013 fire that police say was set thefts across the south metro. by two brothers from the Prior Lake area. (File photo) Damron and his family phone call led investiga- vidson, and 50-year-old Damron is currently serv- sued the cities of Eagan tors to 52-year-old Mi- Wynn Donald Arvidson, ing an 18-month sentence and Inver Grove Heights chael Duane Damron, according to the criminal for receiving stolen propSee ARSON, 18A also known as Wade Ar- complaint filed Dec. 9. erty.

SPORTS Eagan earns narrow victory The Eagan High School gymnastics team earned a narrow victory over conference rival Rosemount. Page 15A Egeziharya Yilma organized the Project Pencil drive at Burnsville High School to raise funds for school supplies for Ethiopian schools. (Submitted photo)

PUBLIC NOTICE Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek is the official newspaper for the cities of Burnsville and Eagan. Public notices begin on Page 17A.

INDEX

Pencils to Ethiopia Heather Sommer, shown in her backyard, is contesting a misdemeanor charge for having a deteriorating retaining wall on her property. (Photo by John Gessner)

Retaining wall rude welcome for first-time homeowner

Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 15A

Burnsville, some residents still at odds over property cases

Public Notices . . 17A-18A

by John Gessner

Classifieds . . . . . 19A-21A

SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A

Announcements . . . . 22A

General 952-894-1111 Display Advertising 952-846-2019 Classified Advertising 952-846-2003 Delivery 763-712-3544

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It’s Heather Sommer’s first house — a five-bedroom split-level on Fremont Avenue in Burnsville. The 42-year-old single mom likes the wood floors, open kitchen and bedrooms for each of her sons, ages 10, 19 and 23. But the previously foreclosed property came with a rude awakening — a deteriorating backyard retaining wall that drew a neighbor’s complaint and a city

enforcement action. Now Sommer is awaiting court dates. She’s seeking dismissal of a misdemeanor charge that followed her failure to fix the wall — a $50,000 to $100,000 project for which she said she can’t get a loan. “I maxed out on the loan for the house itself, so I didn’t qualify for another $50,000 to $100,000 through the bank,” said Sommer, who works in the Fairview Clinics pharmacy in Burnsville. The 17year employee fears the ramifications of a misdemeanor conviction on her work record. “I’ve tried everything I can,” said Sommer, who bought the house for $175,000 See PROPERTY, 16A

Burnsville student’s schoolsupply project honored by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Egeziharya Yilma remembers seeing children skipping to school wearing backpacks with broken zippers and few contents — maybe a single sheet of paper or a broken pencil that bounced with every skip. That was three years ago in her parents’ homeland of Ethiopia. It made Yilma reflect on her $35 backpack back home in Burnsville, filled with notebooks and supplies, and her closet filled with

shoes. “I had top-notch education, but I never once skipped to school,” Yilma wrote. “I knew right then I had to do something.” Now a Burnsville High School junior, Yilma went on to create Project Pencil, which culminated in July with her delivery of seven large suitcases of school supplies to two Ethiopian schools. Yilma’s efforts earned her this year’s Prudential Spirit of Community Award at BHS. She’s in the running to be named one of Minnesota’s top youth volunteers for 2016 through the Spirit of Community Award program, sponsored by Prudential See SUPPLIES, 18A


2A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

News Briefs Transit group recognizes legislators

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ciation to name an elected Free career official to the Transportacoaching tion Advisory Board. The awards reception NextCareer LLC, took place at Porter Creek an Eagan-based career The Suburban Transit in Burnsville. coaching service, will ofAssociation recently recfer free coaching sessions ognized state Sens. Jim on Jan. 16 at Country Inn Pet oxygen Carlson, DFL-Eagan, and & Suites, 3035 Holiday Greg Clausen, DFL-Apple masks donated Lane in Eagan. One-onValley, for their efforts on one appointment reservato Eagan FD behalf of transit. tions are required (this is Carlson was honored The Eagan Fire De- not a workshop format). for being the chief author partment received a dona- Contact Ruth at ruthr@ of Senate File 1487 that tion of pet oxygen masks nextcareerllc.com or call funded a demonstration on Dec. 14 from Invisible 612- 269-6843 to schedule suburb-to-suburb transit Fence Brand Twin Cities. and receive additional inservice between ShakoThe donation of the formation. Other dates are pee and Maple Grove via specially designed and po- available. highways 494 and 169, also tentially lifesaving animal serving Southwest Station/ oxygen mask sets enable Golden Triangle in Eden rescue squads to efficiently Job Transitions Prairie and Station 73 in administer oxygen to a Group potluck Plymouth. The bill appro- stricken animal. The Dec. 22 meeting of priated $2 million to the The donation is part suburban providers for of a national effort called the Easter Job Transitions the demonstration project. Project Breathe to equip Group will be a Christmas Carlson received a Cham- fire stations across the potluck for current mempion of Suburban Transit United States and Canada. bers and alumni. Bring a Award in recognition of his Invisible Fence Brand has brunch item to pass. The efforts. a commitment to fund de- group meets at 7:30 a.m. Clausen also was rec- serving projects that help to at Easter Lutheran Church ognized as a Champion of save the lives of pets. More – By the Lake, 4545 Pilot Transit as chief author of information is at www.in- Knob Road, Eagan. Call 651-452-3680 for informaS.F. 1486, which authorized visiblefence.com/O2. tion. the Suburban Transit Asso-

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 3A

District 196 projects larger A history of giving back than expected budget deficit Family plans to locate its fifth Culver’s in Rosemount Increase is due to special education funding cuts, unaccounted expenditures, officials say by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan School District plans to borrow twice the amount previously estimated from its reserves next year to balance the budget and avoid cuts. The district’s general fund budget is expected to face an $8.5 million loss in 2015-16, which is double what officials predicted in its preliminary budget in June. General fund revenues are projected to be $328.28 million and expenditures are projected to be $336.35 million next fiscal year. The increased projected shortfall is largely due to a $2 million cut in special education funding from the state, and expenditures that were not accounted for in the preliminary budget, said Jeff Solomon, director of finance and operations for District 196. Officials expect a $27.5 million deficit in the district’s special education ac-

count. Historically, this account has had a $24 million deficit each year. Special education programs are mandated by state and federal law and are funded by a combination of federal, state and district dollars. Whether individual schools planned to spend their left over funds from the previous year or place it in reserves hadn’t been determined when the preliminary budget was drafted. Schools decided to spend this money next year, which accounts for $2.4 million in expenditures that were not in the preliminary budget. District officials proposed at a Dec. 14 meeting to cover the deficit by reaching into district’s general fund balance. All Minnesota school districts maintain a general fund balance to assist with cash flow. After covering the loss, the general fund balance would total $23.85 million, which is 7.1 percent of general fund expenditures. Board policy requires a

fund balance that is at least 5 percent of the general fund expenditures. “However, if recent performance trends are an indicator, and we normally perform better than budget, it is quite possible, we believe, that this will be a year where our revenues and expenditures will be balanced,� Solomon said. Last year, the district planned to borrow from its general fund balance but outperformed its projections and contributed $800,000 to the fund instead. District 196 relies heavily on state funding, which accounts for 75.54 percent of its general fund revenues. Property taxes account for 19.18 percent of revenues. The School Board is expected to vote on the district’s final budget on Jan. 4. Jessica Harper is at jessica. harper@ecm-inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek.

Board passes levy max Expected tax increase is due to voter approved levy The Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan School District will seek the maximum property tax levy allowed by the state next year. On Dec. 14, the School Board unanimously approved a $44.8 million payable 2016 property tax levy. The district’s total levy will increase by $7 million due to a 10-year, $50 million capital improvement levy passed by voters in November. Without the capital improvement levy, the district’s total levy would have dropped by 1 percent, said Jeff Solomon director of finance and op-

erations for District 196. Due to the increase, taxes on the average valued home of $250,000 will likely increase by about $144 between payable 2015 and payable 2016, which is about $12 more a month. The capital improvements levy will pay for technology upgrades that would include expanding Wi-Fi capacity, maintaining interactive classroom equipment and replacing outdated telephone systems. Voters also approved a building bond referendum last fall that will fund

building upgrades, renovations and potentially a new school. District 196’s total levy fell each year during the recession when home values were dropping. In 2013, voters approved a $30 million tax levy referendum. Over the next two years, the levy remained largely unchanged. Property taxes account for 19.18 percent of the district’s revenues. State aid is the largest funding source and accounts for 75.54 percent of revenue.

by Tad Johnson

SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Though the first Culver’s didn’t open until 1984, the Culver family traces its roots back to 1961 when George and Ruth Culver purchased a restaurant. Since its founding 31 years ago, Culver’s has retained its old-school flair as its food is prepared quickly, but not quite at the speed of fast food restaurants. In addition to these roots, the family that plans to open a Rosemount location – its fifth Culver’s in the Twin Cities – has a history of finding spots in or near downtown areas. Orono residents John and Jan Laudenbach’s first Culver’s opened in downtown Savage along Highway 13 and near the historic depot. The location was so successful, the family branched out two years later to own the Anoka location, which is on Main Street west of the busy Ferry Street intersection. Another two years passed before the family brought its third location in the fold – West St. Paul – and the fourth site was added in September with the acquisition of the Eagan restaurant. While the latter two are in more urban areas peppered with strip malls and big-box stores, the Laudenbachs aim to keep the downtown theme running in Rose-

mount. Though the entire deal has not been finalized, the family has gained planning approval to build an 4,310-squarefoot building with a drive-thru just a few feet away from what is believed to be the last restaurant (circa 1965) with a carry out window in downtown Rosemount (more about that will be in a future edition). The prospects of opening a fifth location are exciting, said Amanda Braml, part owner and the daughter of John and Jan Laudenbach. She said traffic counts and ease of access for customers were among the criteria they weighed when selecting a site. Braml said the location, which would be across the street from one of Rosemount’s oldest businesses (Fluegel’s Farm, Garden and Pet and its working grain elevator), will add character to the restaurant. Much like the Fluegel’s business, which has been handed down to subsequent generations since it was started in 1927, the Laudenbachs have two generations in business together. John Laudenbach has a long history in the restaurant industry, which pre-dated his time running a restaurant in Chicago that was owned by his uncle, Lee. Laudenbach told Lee that he would run the business as long as Lee invested in John and Jan

Laudenbach’s first Culver’s. Braml, a 1999 graduate of Orono High School, bought into the business after college along with her younger siblings – Maria Veach and Matt Laudenbach. John’s brother, Joe, and his wife, Jill Laudenbach, also joined the company. They are currently going through franchise training along with Matt. “We are owners who are engaged and present every day,� Braml said. “Each one of us is in the story every day. That really keeps you connected and grounded to the community you are in.� She said they have been impressed with the fact that Rosemount is a young and growing area with strong ties to local schools. Braml said when the family started its restaurant in Savage, it sent letters and met with business, school and civic leaders to introduce themselves. The restaurant participates in a wide range of community activities, such as offering nights when a portion of sales go to specific groups or bringing dinners to homeless shelters. “When the community supports you, it’s important to support the community,� Braml said. Email Tad Johnson at tad.johnson@ecm-inc. com. Follow him on Twitter @editorTJ.

— Jessica Harper

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4A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Opinion Districts can learn from outstanding school leaders by Joe Nathan SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Steve Massey, Nell Collier, Datrica Chukwu and Bill Wilson are great school leaders, and this is a time when students and schools urgently need them. As I look back over many years and look ahead to a new year, experience and research convince me that we need to learn and apply more from great leaders. Educators throughout the world have asked Karen Seashore Louis, University of Minnesota professor, to discuss her research on school leaders. After a preliminary review of research, she and colleagues concluded, “Leadership is second only to classroom instruction as an influence on student learning.” Then: “After six additional years of research, we are even more confident about this claim. To date we have not found a single case of a school improving its student achievement record in the absence of talented leadership.” (Read more about the research at http://bit.ly/1R9ExRc.) So what do great leaders do? Louis’ team listed four major areas: setting directions, developing people, redesigning the organization and managing the instructional program. These certainly apply to Massey, Collier, Chukwu and Wilson. Massey, the Forest Lake Area High School principal, has recognized the

Sun Thisweek Columnist

Joe Nathan value of offering a strong mix of traditional academic and applied vocational courses. That’s what researchers call “setting directions and managing the instructional program.” Massey recently told me via email that about 1,000 of the school’s 1,600 students take at least one of these courses. Despite working in a society that often undervalues applied, technical courses, Massey has worked skillfully to retain them. I’ll say more about the value of such courses in the coming year. You can read more about the options Forest Lake Area High School offers at http:// bit.ly/1YYpawp. Collier and Chukwu led Friendship Academy of the Arts in Minneapolis for three years; Collier served as the executive director and Chukwu as the academic director. At this K-6 charter school, 91 percent of the students are students of color. Ninety-three percent of the students are from low-income families. Over the past five years, according to the statewide Minnesota

Comprehensive Assessments, reading proficiency has grown from 62 to 83 percent, math proficiency has grown from 49 to 90 percent and science proficiency has increased from 7 to 71 percent. The school features a variety of projects, including one where students read and write about a famous American of their choice. Then, they dress up like the person and make a presentation to families, teachers and friends describing key accomplishments of this person. Chukwu and Collier did many things, including working with staff to not just look at data about student achievement but to design a variety of learning experiences that increased student motivation and helped them improve their skills. Wilson has spent more than 50 years working for racial justice and expanded opportunity. He was the first AfricanAmerican elected to the St. Paul City Council and later served as Minnesota Commissioner of Civil Rights. About 15 years ago he founded and currently serves as the executive director at Higher Ground Academy in St. Paul. Wilson has led development of a school culture that honors academic accomplishment and self-discipline. The school staff includes a number of bilingual people of color, some of whom graduated from the school. Higher Ground Academy has received local, state and national awards for its ability to “beat the odds” in stu-

dent achievement. More than 85 percent of its 11th- and 12th-graders are taking some form of dual-credit courses. All of its students are students of color, mostly children of East African immigrants or immigrants themselves to the U.S. At Higher Ground, 97 percent of the students come from low-income families. Louis and her colleagues concluded, “Among all the parents, teachers and policymakers who work hard to improve education, educators in leadership positions are uniquely well positioned to ensure the necessary synergy” to improve schools. Unquestionably teachers are vital. But leaders can encourage or discourage the most effective teachers. Massey, Collier, Chukwu and Wilson are only four of the many Minnesota school leaders who are showing the way. They deserve thanks and recognition not only from professional groups but also families, community groups and the news media. We need to do more learning from and make wider use of these fine folks. Joe Nathan, formerly a Minnesota public school teacher, administrator and PTA president, is a former director and now senior fellow at the Center for School Change. Reactions are welcome at joe@ centerforschoolchange.org. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Another book reaffirmed for school libraries by Don Heinzman SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Over the years, I’ve reported stories about parents who have appealed to have books removed from their students’ school library bookshelves. Few have succeeded. One recent appeal came from parents of an 11-year-old sixth-grader who brought home from the Rosemount Middle School library the book “Just One Day” by Gayle Forman. Parents Ben and Kandi Lovin, of Rosemount, in their appeal wrote that the book has adult themes, vulgar language and sexual content. The story, in part, is about a young woman who spends one day in Paris with an actor as she tries to determine her future.

Sun Thisweek Columnist

Don Heinzman

Following Rosemount-Apple ValleyEagan School Board policy, the district convened a committee to advise on the Lovins’ appeal. The committee included two media specialists, a principal, two teachers, five parents and a student. After hearing the Lovins, the committee voted 11-0 to allow the book to be read by high school students, with seven agreeing it was OK for middle

school students. Michelle Howe, a school media specialist and committee facilitator, said only a small part of the book had adult themes. She has an eighth-grade daughter, and Howe intends to discuss the content with her after her daughter has read the book. Howe pointed out that the book is not used in the classroom; it is up to parents to decide if their children can read the library book. That’s true of any book her daughter reads in school. One of the central questions was whether removing the book was unfair to the sixth-, seventh- and eighthgrade students in Rosemount Middle School and other district middle schools who have the right to choose what book they want to read. When it was pointed out that the

committee had five members employed by the school district, Howe noted there were five parents and a sixth if she, a parent, were included in that count. The case raises the question about the standards a school media specialist uses to buy a book in the first place. Howe said there is a board policy on what language is not appropriate in films, but it does not deal with books. The Lovins can appeal the committee’s decision to the School Board, which, over the years, has disagreed with a committee twice and upheld the committee’s advice five times. Don Heinzman is a columnist for ECM Publishers. He can be reached through editor.thisweek@ecm-inc.com. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Letters Reverse book decision To the editor: Regarding the article “Book to stay in school libraries despite concerns,” this decision is more than highly disappointing. The article states that the parents of a sixth-grade girl asked to have the book “Just One Day” removed from district libraries. They discovered it contained “ ‘graphic’ content that included a sex scene, underage drinking and date rape” when they reviewed the book their daughter had brought home. A sixth-grader is what, 11 or 12 years old? Is there no reference to age appropriateness in the District 196 policy? Using the flawed logic of the committee members, why not make the book available to elementary students as well? Permit me to approach this subject from a little different angle. I am a re-

tired police officer with 30 years of police experience. In over 10 of these years I was a detective. I took various courses and seminars specializing in child sexual abuse investigations. Unfortunately, I had the experience to make use of this training when investigating child sexual abuse cases. One thing I learned is that part of the grooming process a child abuser often uses includes desensitizing their victim(s). On occasion this occurred through the use of pornographic writing. In effect, abusers steal the child’s innocence even before the actual physical abuse. The decision to allow this book in the District 196 school libraries steals the innocence of children, just like a child molester does. This is not a matter of “censorship.” It is a matter of child protection, choices, and selecting appropriate materials for children. Please reverse this disappointing decision.

JEROME WACKER Farmington

Opposed to Impact Academy To the editor: At the Dec. 10 Lakeville Area School Board work session the board decided they had enough support (4-2) in moving forward with a January 2016 vote to make Orchard Lake Elementary a “choice” school called Impact Academy at a price tag of $500,000. In 2014 and 2015 we as a community had to pass three levies to get smaller class sizes, art and fifth-grade band at the elementary schools, expand STEM, reduce the teacher-student ratio at the high schools, and acquire new technology. Per the school district, without the generosity from the community successfully passing these three levies, these items would

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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

SPORTS EDITOR .......................Mike Shaughnessy THISWEEKEND EDITOR ...................Andrew Miller NEWS ASSISTANT ............................ Darcy Odden SALES MANAGER ............................. Mike Jetchick

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probably not exist today. However, less than 60 days has passed since the Nov. 3 election and four board members have decided that it is alright to spend $500,000 on Impact Academy at Orchard Lake – a project that few in the community support. When the board votes in favor of Impact Academy in early January the doors open for Orchard Lake students to escape the underperformance of the school. Students opting-out of Orchard Lake are being given a free pass – a free bus ride to Christina Huddleston at

the expense of the stakeholders. Orchard Lake for years has been the lowest performing school in our district and routinely ranks in the bottom half of our state. Knocking down walls, buying couches and tables and calling it Impact Academy isn’t going to fix it. Using catch phrases like “individualized learning,” “empowering teachers,” and “future ready,” to describe Impact Academy isn’t going to make it successful either. Several board members have spoken that Impact Academy wouldn’t work for their children

but feel the need to give the choice to others. A quote from a school board member at the Dec. 10 work session – “I think we go ahead with it and see what happens, if it isn’t successful who cares it is still another choice.” This is a poor use of taxpayer money. At a minimum the community needs to decide what we do with our school buildings. A project of this magnitude needs to be put on the Nov. 8, 2016, ballot. BEN OSBORN Lakeville

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 December 18, 2015 5A

Harmening, of Burnsville, is new chamber president Jennifer Harmening, a Burnsville resident and veteran executive and staffer for chambers of commerce, has been hired as president of the Burnsville Chamber of Commerce, the business group announced Wednesday. The chamber board of directors approved the hiring on Dec. 11 at the recommendation of a search committee, board Chairman Ameet Shah said in a news release.

“Jennifer’s history as a successful chamber leader and commitment to community service will bring great vision to the Burnsville area,� said Shah, CEO of Shah Corp. “Her passion and work ethic along with her ability to collaborate with others will benefit businesses and foster economic growth in this region.� Harmening, who begins work Jan. 5, replaces Bill Corby, who left the

chamber in February. The board had a “different vision than I do for the organization,� Corby said after his exit. Harmening and her family have lived in Burnsville for 18 years, where she most recently worked as a consultant in the areas of team building, organizational management and strategic planning. Before that, she was president of the Northern Dakota County Chamber

of Commerce. As president, Harmening was influential in increasing the membership, developing new programs and advocating for Dakota County businesses, the news release said. Before that Harmening was community development director for the TwinWest Chamber of Commerce and a membership sales associate at the St. Paul Chamber of Commerce.

Robert Stowell, chairman of the search committee, said members were impressed with Harmening’s breadth of professional experiences and “her enthusiasm and obvious passion for chamber work.� Said Harmening, “I am honored to join the Burnsville chamber, to focus my energy on this business community and to become even more active where we live. The Burnsville chamber has a great history and

I look forward to working with local businesses to grow the value and influence of the Burnsville chamber, partnering with other local organizations and community leaders to ensure the economic health and well-being of our community and to serve as an advocate for the Burnsville business community.� — John Gessner

Three more charged in Lakeville girls’ disappearance by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Three more people have been charged in the case of the more than 2-year disappearance of two Lakeville girls. Charges were announced on Friday, Dec. 11, against three people connected to the White Horse Ranch in Herman – Deirdre Elise Evavold, 51, of St. Cloud; Douglas Craig Dahlen, 53, and Gina Schmit Dahlen, 47, both of Herman. Each has been charged with two counts of deprivation of custodial and parental rights (involving the concealment of a minor), according to criminal complaints filed Dec. 11. The charges come after the two girls were found by law enforcement Nov. 18 at the White Horse Ranch, also the Dahlens residence located about 30 miles west of Alexandria. The girls’ mother, Sandra Grazzini-Rucki, was previously charged in Dakota County with six counts of deprivation of custodial rights in connection with taking and

concealing her children in violation of District Court custody orders. She was arrested Oct. 18 at a Florida resort by U.S. Marshals on a Dakota County warrant and was being held in the Ramsey County workhouse on $1 million bail. Evavold was the campaign manager for Rosemount attorney Michelle MacDonald’s unsuccessful Supreme Court candidacy. MacDonald was GrazziniRucki’s attorney in the custody case. Grazzini-Rucki was represented by attorney Stephen Grigsby in court on Nov. 24. The allegations reflect that the two girls (then ages 13 and 14) ran from their Lakeville home on April 19, 2013, and were picked up by Grazzini-Rucki. Prior to their disappearance, a Dakota County district court judge transferred the physical custody of Grazzini-Rucki’s five children, including the two girls, to a paternal aunt who was going to reside with the children in their family home. Within 10 minutes after arriving at the family home, the girls

disappeared. On Nov. 25, 2013, the district court judge awarded sole legal and physical custody of the five children to their father. The whereabouts of the girls was unknown until Nov. 18 when officers executed a search warrant at the Dahlens’ residence. It is alleged that the girls were dropped off at the Dahlens’ residence by GrazziniRucki and Evavold on April 21, 2013, where the girls remained until being found. The investigation into this matter has been extensive and Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom thanked the Lakeville Police Department and the U.S. Marshal’s Office for their hard work on this case. “Concealing children and keeping them from a parent for over two and half years in violation of a court order is unconscionable,� Backstrom said. Some new details emerged regarding the investigation that led to the charges against Evavold and the Dahlens. A little over two years

after the disappearance of Samantha and Gianna Rucki, the trail to finding the girls at the ranch picked up Aug. 6, 2015, when Lakeville police officers interviewed a woman who sheltered Grazzini-Rucki after the girls’ disappearance. The woman told officers that Evavold brought Grazzini-Rucki to her residence. The woman said she was a friend of Trish Van Pilsum, the FOX-9 television reporter who interviewed the girls for a piece that aired May 13, 2013. The woman said that she arranged the interview, which took place at a hotel in Sauk Centre. A separate interview with GrazziniRucki took place in St. Cloud where Evavold was also present, the woman said. Officers executed a search warrant on Aug. 24 at the Twin Cities residence of Eagan attorney Dale Nathan who claimed to be with Grazzini-Rucki when she picked up the girls on April 19, 2013. Officers found on Nathan’s computer emails sent by Evavold to him on April

21, 2013, that included two letters allegedly signed by Samantha and Gianna that were identical to those received the following day by the girls’ paternal aunt. The letters expressed the girls’ desire to be with GrazziniRucki. Officials with the U.S. Marshal’s Office noted on Aug. 25 that GrazziniRucki’s recent Facebook activity was tracked to Evavold’s IP address in St. Cloud. Police executed a search warrant at Evavold’s residence on Oct. 21 seizing computers and cellphones. Among the evidence they found were audio statements from Samantha and Gianna that matched those previously provided to police and two cellphone photographs: • an April 21, 2013, image of a street sign that was found to be near the location of Douglas Dahlen’s auto repair shop, and • a June 24, 2013, image of a female hugging a donkey. Investigators found that Douglas Dahlen was the owner of the White Horse Ranch with his ex-wife

Gina Dahlen, whom officers found was a Facebook friend of Evavold. After investigators reviewed the White Horse Ranch website, it was determined that the cellphone photo of the female hugging the donkey was taken at the ranch and the female was Samantha. Officers executed a search warrant at the White Horse Ranch on Nov. 18 when officers initially spoke with Douglas Dahlen who disclosed the girls were on the property and had been at the ranch for approximately 2.5 years. He then allowed officers into the residence where Samantha and Gianna were found. In interviews, Douglas and Gina Dahlen confirmed that Grazzini-Rucki and Evavold dropped off the girls on April 21, 2013. Evavold, and Douglas and Gina Dahlen are being summoned to court to face these charges. Their first appearances in court in Hastings are anticipated in the next month. Email Tad Johnson at tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com. Follow him on Twitter @ editorTJ.

Cause of crash that killed two Lakeville teens still unknown Law enforcement says ‘Nerf Wars’ game brought four boys together by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Law enforcement officials attempted to answer more questions on Friday, Dec. 11, about the crash that killed Lakeville South High School students Johnny Price, 18, and Jake Flynn, 17, and injured Alex Hughes, 17, and Mason Kohlbeck, 18, on Friday, Dec. 4. During a morning press conference at the Dakota County Sheriff’s Office in Hastings, Sheriff Tim Leslie and other officials confirmed that the Nerf Wars game “brought the four boys together� and that Kohlbeck was the only one wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash. Kohlbeck was treated and released for minor injuries following the crash. Lt. Tiffani Schweigart of the Minnesota State Patrol said 20 teenagers have been killed in car crashes in 2015. She said the crash survival rate of unbuckled drivers and passengers is 6 percent. Leslie emphasized the need for use of vehicle

restraints by ending the press conference by saying “seat belts, seat belts, seat belts.� He declined to provide details about what was happening inside the vehicle when it rolled over on 225th Street in Lakeville just south of the high school until law enforcement has a chance to talk to the driver, Hughes, who remains hospitalized after undergoing brain surgery and treatment for other injuries. The connection to the Nerf Wars game was made based on speaking with witnesses and finding Nerf guns at the scene, according to Capt. Jim Rogers, who is in charge of investigations for the sheriff’s office. The game involves teams that shoot each other with Nerf guns. Rules state shootings cannot take place on school

A memorial at the crash site on 225th Street features three crosses, piled with flowers, notes, a baseball hat and a football. (Photo by Laura Adelmann) grounds, and organizers have told the newspaper that Flynn was being kidnapped as part of the game. In the game, teams attempt to eliminate two opposing team members every week. There is a fee to play, and the pot for winners was $5,000 this year, ac-

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6A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

District 194 to spend $555K to expand Impact Academy Opt outs will go to Christina Huddleston Elementary by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The days of dual teaching methods at Orchard Lake Elementary are coming to an end. A majority of District 194 School Board members verbally agreed at a Dec. 9 work session to support spending $555,000 to make Impact Academy the Orchard Lake teaching method for all classes K-5 starting next school year. To pay for Impact Academy as a wholeschool model, the district is proposing budget shifts that include a $200,000 reduction in planned capital project spending and $255,000 from the IT budget for an Apple lease that ends in August 2016. Those funds had been planned as a “stopgap� if the referendum failed. The final $100,000 is proposed to be obtained by reducing all-day kindergarten maintenance, which the district said is not a high need. The money will instead pay up to $400,000 for removing walls and other construction work at Orchard Lake, up to $98,000 for new furniture and $57,000 for anticipated increased transportation costs for students in Orchard Lake boundaries who opt out of the Impact Academy model. Those students will be bused to Christina Huddleston Elementary. Consideration of changing the district’s transportation fee to reduce cost burdens on families has been dropped for now, but Orchard Lake families of students who opt out and are bussed to Christina Huddleston will pay the fee using the parameters of the student’s location from Orchard Lake, not Christina Hud-

dleston. “If you’re paying now, you’ll continue to pay,� District 194 Business Services Executive Director Michael Baumann said. “We wouldn’t change that policy in any way, and it wouldn’t affect new families in any way.� He estimated 64 riders will opt to leave Orchard Lake for a traditional classroom, requiring the district one additional bus for about $57,000 per year under current contract parameters with Schmitty & Sons Bus Company. Under the Impact Academy model, students are grouped by ability instead of age and grade, and focus on integrated studies that connect learning to real-world problems to incorporate service learning into the curriculum. Desk-and-chair classrooms are replaced with open spaces that include couches and tables to encourage collaboration for students and teachers. Since fall 2013, the school has housed both the traditional teaching model and Impact Academy, a situation that Orchard Lake Principal Marilynn Smith has said created challenges for families, students and staff. Impact Academy teachers and Smith have advocated for expanding Impact Academy to the whole school since it opened at the school in fall 2013, but School Board members sought more information, including a business plan that details program plans and costs. Reviews and results of Impact Academy have been mixed, and several School Board members said at the meeting the model does not work for all students but parents want educational choices. District surveys state some Impact Academy parents said their child is thriving in the open environment, while others complained about noise

and distraction. With only two school years of data, no trends have been established, but a District 194 survey of Impact Academy parents found 98 percent said overall they were satisfied with Impact Academy in 2014, which dropped to 84 percent in 2015. The percentage of Impact Academy parents reporting their child experienced academic success in the program also went from 96.7 percent satisfaction in 2014 to 88.1 percent satisfaction in 2015, according to the district. In the most recent statistical comparison measuring District 194 schools by grade band (the Multiple Measurements Rating) showed that Orchard Lake is the district’s only elementary showing a three-year drop from 2013 to 2015, according to statistics Jason Molesky, District 194 executive director of technology and data services, presented at the Nov. 10 School Board meeting. Smith called MMR scores “highly variable� because they are based on multiple factors including proficiency targets and student growth. “Minor fluctuations in any category can result in large increases or decreases in MMR,� she said. Smith noted that MMR decreases were also noted at six other elementary schools in Lakeville and several showed more significant drops from 2014 to 2015 than Orchard Lake. Minnesota Comprehensive Assessment scores show Orchard Lake thirdthrough fifth-grade students’ scores have dropped in math and reading since 2012. A breakdown of Orchard Lake Elementary’s Measures of Academic Progress scores shows no significant difference between Impact and non-Impact students, according to Molesky, and Smith said there was also no difference between the

two learning styles on the MCA assessment scores. “This suggests students who choose the Impact approach do not perform significantly higher or lower than students who choose a traditional approach,� Smith said in an email to this newspaper. Smith said they plan to monitor progress for all students and use the information to assess program effectiveness. The majority of School Board members said at the work session they are committed to Impact Academy because it provides an education option for students in the district. School Board Member Terry Lind said families have asked for choice and he supports expanding Impact Academy to provide them options. “I’ve been hearing it a lot,� he said. “I think the proof will be in the pudding. I think we’ll go ahead with it. We’ll see what happens. If it’s not amazingly successful academically compared to a traditional classroom, who cares? I mean if it’s equal, it’s still another choice.� In an interview, Lind clarified that he deeply cares about academics, but Impact Academy should be judged by the future results when it’s a whole-school program. He said Impact Academy offers results that are hard to measure. “I think it will show these kids are more independent in their work, they have more critical thinking and time management skills,� Lind said. “These are hard to measure, but I think that will be another result of the program. It’s not academic, but it affects their academics.� Board Chair Michelle Volk said while she would not have chosen Impact Academy for her own children, she would not want to take a choice away from another parent. She said there are some students who thrive in Impact Academy because they are empowered to be

a part of their own education and want to learn more. “Suddenly learning becomes that fun thing to do,� Volk said. “You wake up in the morning and you want to go to school because you’re going to learn something fantastic.� Board Members Kathy Lewis and Judy Keliher said they support expanding Impact Academy. Keliher said the district’s strategy is personalized learning and Impact Academy meets that strategy. Noting there is a waiting list to get into Impact Academy, she called it a “great program� and said they need to focus on the next innovative program because that is how District 194 is set apart from others. Lewis said if they do not advance Impact Academy, the district will be losing opportunities to learn for children that it would benefit. “I think it fits into what our community wants,� Lewis said. School Board Members Jim Skelly and Bob Erickson said they would not vote for expanding Impact Academy at Orchard Lake Elementary. Skelly cited concerns about the fluid nature of the plan, and questioned whether it is an equitable way to spend limited district funds. “If we decide to put money into this program, we’re basically deciding not to fund other programs,� Skelly said. Erickson cited a range of concerns that included the busing fee, test scores, the decline of almost 10 percent in parent satisfaction with Impact Academy, funding decisions and the district’s plans to maintain its current transportation fee. He said he is pleased the administration found a way to fund expanding Impact Academy without distracting the classrooms, but cited concerns that other needs remain.

“I don’t want it just to be that we could find the money for our pet project when we have many needs in this district that could also benefit from being more creative,â€? Erickson said. Erickson expressed frustration that the district is not going to address the transportation fee at this time, noting that many people were expecting some relief. He said District 196 buses children to its magnet schools for free, and cited concerns about traffic around Orchard Lake, primarily caused by so many District 194 parents driving their students to school to avoid paying the district’s busing fee. “I can’t support going to a full-choice school and expecting 150 students to be transported up that narrow pathway from County Road 5, whether going north or south,â€? Erickson said. “I watched it for three days — that is not safe. That’s just not ‌ smart. And I don’t want to be held responsible for a calamity that could occur as a result of that very unsafe situation.â€? Erickson also said he has asked legislators to expand All Facilities funding to allow districts to use that money to allow these types of conversions. Impact Academy’s business plan calls for elective learning, but is not funded or in the program because it requires an extended day and results in increased transportation costs, according to Superintendent Lisa Snyder. She said the district is considering other options. “We have to look at elective learning in another way that doesn’t add costs,â€? she said. Original estimates to expand Impact Academy at Orchard Lake, which ranged from $490,000 to $582,000, were reduced by cutting paint and all-new carpeting. Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com.

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 7A

Lakeville Area School District 194 total levy increases over 15 percent District’s fund balance grows New audit completed

Tax increase includes voter-passed referenda Lakeville School Board unanimously voted at its Dec. 8 meeting to increase the school portion of the property levy by $5.7 million or 15.1 percent in 2016. With the change, property taxes on the school portion of a residential home in Lakeville valued at $450,000 will increase by $358 next year, according to Ehlers, the district’s financial advisors. Ehlers reported a Lakeville commercial property valued at $1 million in 2016 will pay another $875 in the school portion of the property tax bill next year because of the increase. The tax bump represents both an annual increase set by the School Board at 7.8 percent, but reduced to 7.1 percent by reducing the amount it levies for other post-employment benefits, and two levy referenda vot-

ers passed in November. Property tax estimates are also based on a 12.9 percent increase in property values, said Michael Baumann, District 194 director of Business Services. Baumann said school districts are increasingly depending on levy referendum funds because the state per-pupil funding formula has not kept pace with inflation since 2003. He said in 1993, 65 percent of districts had referendum revenue that averaged $332 per pupil, and in 2016, 99.4 percent of Minnesota districts have referendum revenue and local optional taxing revenue that averages $1,141 per pupil. “That’s significant,� Baumann said. “It does focus the fact that referendum trends have been one mechanism that we’ve needed to use in order to

deal with those gaps.� He said the Legislature last session granted districts a 2 percent annual increase in the funding formula, which for Lakeville means another $117 per pupil unit in FY16 and an additional $119 per pupil unit in FY17. “If the Legislature were to keep pace on a per-pupil allowance in fiscal year 17, instead of $119 per pupil, it would have required $626 to keep this pace,� Baumann said. Property taxpayers will also see increases in the city and county portions of their tax bill. Dakota County is planning a 0.41 percent tax levy increase and Lakeville City Council members recently approved a tax levyincrease of 3.85 percent. — Laura Adelmann

by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

District 194 left fiscal year 2015 about $6 million more in its General Fund than when it began, according to the district’s most recent audit. The district’s year started with a $9.9 million General Fund balance that grew to $16.2 million by fiscal year end on June 30, 2015, according to the district’s new audit firm, Clifton Larson Allen. Of that balance amount, $4 million is unassigned, said Clifton Larson Allen principal Dennis Hoogeveen at the Dec. 8 School Board meeting. Hoogeveen said the district’s unassigned category of fund balance puts Lakeville in league with successful metro schools in the state.

“In 2015, you’re getting the benefit of the new referendum dollars that were approved in 2013,� he said. Total audited General Fund expenditures for 2015 were $110.1 million and revenues totaled $114.9 million, according to the audit. The General Fund balance increase to $16.2 million accounts for about 14 percent of total annual General Fund expenditures. District 194 policy recommends a General Fund balance that is between 4 and 8 percent of annual General Fund expenditures. The audit found the district enrollment, as measured by average daily membership, dropped from 12,715 to 11,928, but for the first year the district saw more students open enrolling into the district than were

open enrolling out. Average daily membership of students enrolling into the district in FY15 was 616 while those in District 194 boundaries choosing another option was 587. Last year, the audit found 555 students open enrolling out of the district and 610 enrolling outside, as measured by ADM. Under the state’s perpupil funding formula District 194 was credited for 11,928 students, a drop from 2014 when the per-pupil count was 12,715. Hoogeveen said there is a different weighting factor used by the state to determine per-pupil funding. Laura Adelmann is at laura.adelmann@ecm-inc. com.

Education District 191 chess tournament is Saturday The annual chess tournament in Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District 191 will take place Saturday, Dec. 19, at Metcalf Junior High School, 2250 Diffley Road. The event is open to children in kindergarten through grade 12. Registration is 8:20-8:40 a.m. and the tournament wraps up around 3:30 p.m. The entry fee is $18 (make out checks to Metcalf Chess Club). Sections: • Grades K-3: For primary players with very little tournament experience. • Grades K-6: Team and individual awards including top grade level trophies.

• Grades 7-12: Top team and top three individuals will receive trophies. Participants are asked to bring a chess set along if they have one. There will be concessions, but lunches can be brought as well. For more information, contact Brian Ribnick, coordinator of the district chess program, at bribnick@isd191.org or 952707-2523.

Iron Maidens win Inspire Award The Iron Maidens, a FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC) robotics team at Apple Valley High School, won the Inspire Award at the Dec. 13 North Branch tournament. The Inspire Award is the highest award a robotics team

can earn at a competition. The team that receives this award is: chosen by the judges as having best represented a role model FTC team; a top contender for all other judging categories and a strong competitor on the field; and an inspiration to other teams both on and off the playing field. The winning team understands how to communicate their experiences and knowledge to other teams, sponsors and the judges. With the Inspire Award win, the Iron Maidens advance to the Minnesota FTC State Championship in February. FIRST Tech Challenge in Minnesota is part of an international robotics program that includes more than 3,000 teams globally. Teams of up to 15 students collaborate to build and program a robot that competes

on a 12-by-12-foot field. The challenge is new each year and is designed to challenge students to think critically and expand their knowledge of the engineering process.

Christmas astronomy Challenger Learning Center of Minnesota will present “The Star of Bethlehem� 3:30-4:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 20, at Black Hawk Middle School, 1540 Deerwood Drive, Eagan. The free presentation blends science and the holiday season. The presenter is Terry Flower, Ph.D., emeritus professor of mathematics and physics at St. Catherine University, where he served as chair of the department and held the Endowed Chair of Science for the uni-

versity. He was selected as a distinguished visiting professor of physics at the U.S. Air Force Academy, and has been inducted into the Aerospace Educators Hall of Fame. He currently serves on the board of directors for the Challenger Learning Center of Minnesota, a local nonprofit designed to inspire and engage students and teachers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) in a whole new way. For more information, visit www.challengermn.org. Enter Black Hawk Middle School through the front doors on the lower level. Snacks and refreshments to follow. Registration requested at https://www.facebook.com/ events/1657548637852102/.

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8A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Business Business Buzz ConvergeOne acquires California company ConvergeOne, an Eaganbased global provider of stateof-the-art communications and data solutions, has acquired Sigmanet, a Cisco Gold Certified Partner and one of the largest IT consulting, solutions, and managed services providers in California. Effective immediately, Sigmanet is now Sigmanet, a ConvergeOne Company. “This acquisition is an ideal addition to ConvergeOne and represents a natural progression in our ongoing strategy to develop and grow customer relationships by providing comprehensive solutions, services and support,� said John A. McKenna Jr., chairman and CEO, ConvergeOne. “We share Sigmanet’s focus and commitment to deliver outcomes-based solutions for our customers. They

have additional capabilities in the Cisco and EMC platforms, as well as cloud computing, security and the education vertical. This acquisition enables us to increase our presence in the western United States and advance our leadership position as a single-source provider of multivendor technologies, support and services.� With the acquisition, Sigmanet president and chief operating officer, Neil Wada, has been named vice president, Southwest Region for Sigmanet, a ConvergeOne Company.

Commitment Day Festival Life Time Fitness will host the fourth annual Commitment Day Festival and 5K Fun Run with events Jan. 1-3 to kick off the new year with a healthy start. The 5K Fun Run will be hosted at the Lakeville and Savage

locations 10 a.m. Jan. 1. Indoor activities will be available. Register for the run at www.commitmentday.com/minnesota. C9 Challenge Group Fitness Jams on Jan. 2 will feature Life Time’s Signature Group Fitness class in partnership with Target’s C9 active wear collection. Fitness jams will be at the Eagan, Lakeville and Savage locations. An Indoor Triathlon Hour powered by Ironman will be offered 7 a.m. on Jan. 3 at the Eagan and Lakeville locations.

Coffee shop hosts blood drive Dunn Brothers Coffee and the American Red Cross have teamed up for the 10 Hours of Giving blood drive to be held 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23, at Apple Valley Dunn Brothers Coffee, 15265 Galaxie Ave. To encourage donations, all those who give will be entered

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Biothera appoints new CEO Barry Labinger has been appointed chief executive officer at Eagan-based Biothera Pharmaceutical Inc. The company Barry is developing a Labinger cancer immunotherapy that triggers a coordinated immune response against a wide range of cancers. Labinger has nearly three decades of pharmaceutical and biotech industry experience, with leading roles at Emergent BioSolutions, Human Genome Sciences, 3M Pharmaceuticals, and Immunex. He holds an M.B.A. degree from J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management and a bachelor’s degree in economics from Northwestern University.

Business Calendar

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into a drawing for a chance to win prizes, including a free onenight stay at the GrandStay Hotel. Those attending the drive will also be thanked with a cup of Dunn Brothers coffee and will receive a long-sleeved Red Cross T-shirt, while supplies last. “By rolling up a sleeve and giving blood, donors have the opportunity to discover the true meaning of giving this holiday season,� said Sue Thesenga, communications manager, North Central Blood Services Region. “Donors are giving patients needing blood the chance to spend more holiday seasons with loved ones.� Healthy donors with all blood types are needed, especially those with types AB, O, A negative and B negative. To make an appointment, download the Red Cross Blood Donor App, visit redcrossblood.org or call 1-800733-2767 and use sponsor code “Dunn Bros.�

To submit items for the Business Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com. Apple Valley Chamber of Commerce events: • Friday, Dec. 18, 11 a.m. to noon, ribbon cutting, River Valley Church, 14898 Energy Way, Apple Valley. The church is celebrating its recent remodel. Free. Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce events: • Tuesday, Dec. 22, 7:30-9 a.m., Grow Minnesota - Dakota County Partners Meeting (invitation only), Valleywood Golf Course, 4851 McAndrews Road, Apple Valley. Information: 651-452-9872. • Tuesday, Jan. 5, 8-9 a.m., Coffee Break, State Farm - Paul Eggen, 14450 S. Robert Trail, Suite 204, Rosemount. Hosted by Paul Eggen State Farm and Judy Berg Cakes. Open to all DCRC members. Information: Emily Corson at ecorson@ dcrchamber.com or 651-2889202. Lakeville Area Chamber of Commerce events: • Thursday, Jan. 7, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., General Mem-

Council declares ‘Steve Mattson Day’ in Apple Valley by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

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bership Luncheon: Stevie Ray, Brunswick Zone XL, Lakeville. Ray is the executive director of Stevie Ray’s Improv Company in Minneapolis, a company that has provided training and entertainment since 1989. Cost: $25 members, $40 nonmembers. Information: Shanen Corlett at shanen@lakevillechambercvb.org or 952-469-2020. • Friday, Jan. 8, 8:30-9:30 a.m., Teacher Appreciation Breakfast, Lake Marion Elementary School. Information: Shelley Jans at shelley@lakevillechambercvb.org. Dakota Speakers Toastmasters club of Apple Valley events: • Mondays, Nov. 30 to Dec. 28, 7 p.m., Speech Craft workshop preview and demonstration, third floor learning center at Ecumen Seasons, 15359 Founder Lane, Apple Valley. The preview is free and open to the public. Workshop registration is now open until six registrants are accepted. Cost: $35 for the four-session workshop. Speech Craft begins in January on Monday nights. Information: Ron Kausak at rkausak@frontiernet.net or 612-201-1444.

small securities firm Juran & Moody. When Juran & Moody was sold to Miller Johnson in 1996, Mattson worked for that firm until 2002, when he and four others formed Northland Securities, Northland Networks, and Northland Trust Services. In 2004, he and the other co-founders started Northland Capital Holdings. Over his career, Mattson structured and marketed more than 2,000 bond issues for Minnesota cities. In addition to family, members of the Apple Valley Rotary Club, an organization with which Mattson served for 30 years, attended the ceremony last week at the Municipal Center. Rotary Club member Bill Tschohl said Mattson gave selflessly to Rotary and its causes, helping with the club’s annual car raffle fundraiser, and serving as auctioneer for many years at the Armful of Love fundraiser. Mattson also was a co-founder of the Rotary District 5950 Safe Water Plus project, which provides safe drinking water to Haiti. “I think the most important thing about Steve is his legacy,� said Tschohl. “It doesn’t matter when you pass how much you made or anything like that — it’s what did you do to give back. His legacy serves as an example for all of us.� Mattson was honored with the Legacy Award at the Apple Valley Chamber of Commerce holiday awards luncheon on Dec. 15 at the Old Chicago conference center.

City officials paid tribute to a prominent local business leader last week with a proclamation declaring Dec. 10, 2015, “Steve Mattson Dayâ€? in Apple Valley. Mattson, a financier and co-owner of GrandStay Hotel in Apple Valley, died Nov. 28 after a battle with cancer. Mayor Mary HamannRoland presented the proclamation to Mattson’s wife, Mary, and adult son, Andy, at the City Council meeting on Dec. 10. The proclamation noted that Mattson was a “visionary business leader ‌ who gave generously with his time and resources to support various community causes.â€? “Steve was always so proud to work with the city of Apple Valley,â€? said Mary Mattson. “He really loved Apple Valley.â€? City leaders said that Mattson, as the financier who sold and refinanced the city’s bonds for many years, was instrumental in helping Apple Valley achieve a top bond rating of AAA from both Moody’s Investor Services and Standard and Poor’s. “He was just a wizard with numbers,â€? City Council Member Tom Goodwin said. Through Mattson’s sale and refinancing of bonds, “the savings have been in the millions.â€? A native of Cokato, Minn., Mattson graduated from Cokato High School in 1968, and earned a degree in finance and economics from St. Cloud State University in 1972. He started his career in fi- Email Andrew Miller at nance that year with the andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 9A

Religion

Shepherd of the Valley Christmas events Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church, 12650 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley, has planned the following events: Sounds of the Season Concert, 6:309 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 20. Free. SOTV music groups perform carols with a grand finale of the “Hallelujah Chorus� from Handel’s “Messiah.� Christmas Eve Worship for Travelers, 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23. Free. Those traveling on Dec. 24 can attend the night before for a full candlelight Christmas Eve worship with all the trimmings: special music from ensembles and a pastoral message. Information: www.sotv.org/christmas. Christmas Eve Family Worship, 10 and 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 24. Designed especially for children, the services tell the Christmas story in word, drama, and carols with the youth band. Candlelight Worship Christmas Eve: 1:30, 3, 4:30, 6 and 8 p.m. with Holy Communion at 9:30 and 11 p.m. Information: www.sotv.org/christmas. Planning for and Living Your Retirement, 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, Jan. 9. Free seminar. Information: www.sotv. org/education/purposeful-retirementpre-retiree-seminar. Coffee House: Home-Brewed Jam Session, 6:30-9 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 16. Cost: $12. Features exceptional musicians with years of experience playing in local bands, including the SOTV worship band under the direction of Shawn Vaughn. The evening includes appetizers, dessert and beverages. All are welcome. Child care available. Information: www.sotv.org/fellowship/coffee-house.

winter� (Darke) and three mass choir selections. Scripture readers will range from youth to lay leaders to pastors to community leaders. A new feature this year is the church’s Nordlie pipe organ providing accompaniment for the choirs and hymn-singing. The new organ will be featured in a dedication concert on Feb. 27. The Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols is a Christian tradition dating to 19th century England. From its beginnings as a way to keep men out of the pubs on Christmas Eve, the service has become internationally prominent and a Christmas tradition through annual broadcasts from King’s College in Cambridge, England. This service is open to all; refreshments immediately follow.

Christmas cantata at Church of the Apostles Presbyterian Church of the Apostles in Burnsville will present a cantata called “The Christmas Truce� at its 10 a.m. service Sunday, Dec. 20. The cantata is the story of the 1914 Christmas truce between German and Allied troops during World War I. Presbyterian Church of the Apostles is at 701 E. 130th St., Burnsville. For more information, call 651-688-6515.

Christmas services at Cross of Christ

Christmas and Christmas Eve services will be held at Cross of Christ Community Church, 8748 210th St. W., Lakeville. The Christmas service with children singing will be 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 20. The Christmas Eve service will be 5 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 24. Lessons and carols at For more information, visit www. Mount Calvary crossofchristchurch.org or call 952-469Mount Calvary Lutheran Church, 3113. 3930 Rahn Road, Eagan, will celebrate Christmas through the traditional “Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols,� at 6 Christmas Eve service p.m. Sunday, Dec. 20. The service fea- planned at City on a Hill tures a blend of scripture readings, choCity on a Hill Church in Rosemount ral anthems and participative carols and is celebrating Christmas with music and hymns. worship at its 4 p.m. Christmas Eve The church’s youth and adult vocal service at the Rosemount Community and handbell choirs will present a vari- Center Banquet Hall, 13885 S. Robert ety of music, including “Hodie Chris- Trail. tus� (Sweelinck), “In the Bleak Mid-

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10A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

At the Capitol Garofalo: No tolerance for interfering with emergency personnel Farmington state representative plans to introduce bill next session by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Minnesota state Rep. Pat Garofalo, R-Farmington, is advocating zero tolerance and automatic jail time for those interfering with emergency medical personnel. He announced plans to introduce the Public Safety Personnel Protection Act during the next legislative session, which begins March 8, 2016. The legislation would enhance criminal penalties for those who inter-

fere with public safety personnel who are trying to render medical assistance. He said the last thing medical responders, such as police officers, firefighters or paramedics, should have to worry about when responding to a medical emergency is someone impeding medical treatment. Like all laws, it’s meant to be a deterrent. “The focus on this is to get people to obey the law, not necessarily put more people in prison,� Garo-

falo said. Garofalo is still working on specific language of the bill. He said he’s looked at similar legislation in other states, such as Colorado, for inspiration. “There’s been aggravated sentences before,� Garofalo said. “What this bill does, in the past you had a physical assault. If you interfere with them rendering medical care, there’s a minimum mandatory sentence.� He confirmed he was inspired by recent events.

“Obviously there’s been some high-profile incidents cases in the nation and in Minnesota where there was an attack on a public safety worker,� Garofalo said. “We want those who are thinking about attacking (a public safety worker) that there are no excuses, no exceptions, they’re going to go to prison.� During an incident in Minneapolis last month, Jamar Clark was allegedly interfering with paramedics who were responding to an assault report.

“I would say it was part of the motivation, but not solely,� Garofalo said. He said there’s been other cases nationally that have also brought this to the forefront. He said he’s received an overwhelmingly positive reaction since he announced his intention to bring the legislation forward, particularly from police officers, firemen and emergency medical technicians. Email Andy Rogers at Rep. Pat Garofalo andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

Seniors Apple Valley seniors 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, Dec. 21 – 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, Dec. 22 – Quilting Bees, 9 a.m.; Zumba Gold, 9:15 a.m.; Tuesday Painters, 9:30 a.m.; Pool, noon; Pinochle, 12:30 p.m.; Cribbage, 1 p.m.; Hand & Foot Cards, 1 p.m.; Table Tennis, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23 – Donated Bread, 9 a.m.; Yoga, 9:45 a.m.; Morning Stretch, 10 a.m.; Pool, noon; Mahjong, 1 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 24 –

Closed. Friday, Closed.

Eagan Community Cen– ter, 1501 Central Parkway. Call 651-675-5500 for more information. Monday, Dec. 21 – Burnsville Drop In Time, 9-11:30 seniors a.m.; Recycled Cards, 9:30 The Burnsville Senior a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 22 – Center is located in the Diamondhead Education Health Insurance CounCenter at 200 W. Burns- seling, by appointment ville Parkway. Call 952- only, 8:30 a.m. to noon; 707-4120 for information Euchre/500, 12:45 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23 – about the following senior Coffee, Conversations & events. Monday, Dec. 21 – Games, 9 a.m.; Hand & Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Foot, 12:45 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 24 – Advisory Council, 9:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 11 a.m.; Closed. Friday, Dec. 25 – Card Recycle, 12:30 p.m.; Pinochle, 12:45 p.m.; SS Closed. For full information Flex. Tuesday, Dec. 22 – on senior events and deQuilters, 9:30 a.m.; Scrab- tails, read the Front Porch ble, 10:30 a.m.; Duplicate newsletter on the city of Eagan website. Become a Bridge, 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23 – senior center member for a $10 annual fee and receive Closed. Thursday, Dec. 24 – the Front Porch quarterly by mail. For questions or Closed. Friday, Dec. 25 – to register for events and Closed. Reopening Jan. 4. pay by credit card, call Eagan Parks and Recreation Department. Dec.

25

Eagan seniors

The following senior activities are offered by the Eagan Parks and Recreation Department in the Lone Oak Room at the

Oak St. For more information on trips, programs and other activities, call 651-280-6970. Monday, Dec. 21 – Coffee Guys, 9:30 a.m.; Dulcimer Club, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10 a.m.; Recycled Cards, 12:30 p.m.; 500 Cards, 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 22 – Coffee Guys, 9:30 a.m.; Fitness Center Orientation, 9:30 a.m.; Chair Exercise, 10 a.m.; Lady Slipper Garden Club, 1 p.m.; Wood Carving, 1 p.m.; Table Tennis, 2 p.m.; Yoga, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23 – Wii Games, 9 a.m.; Coffee Guys, 9:30 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10 a.m.; Bridge, 1 p.m.; Lap Robes, 1 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 24 – Closed. Friday, Dec. 25 – Closed. Happy Harry’s Furniture Fundraiser – Stop by Happy Harry’s Furniture in Farmington and mention the Rambling River Center when ordering/purchasing your new furniture. Happy Harry’s Farmington Furniture will give 10 perseniors cent of the purchase to the The Rambling River Rambling River Center. Center is located at 325

Rosemount seniors

Lakeville seniors

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, Dec. 21 – Bridge, 9 a.m., Do Drop Inn; 500, 1 p.m., DDI. Tuesday, Dec. 22 – 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, Dec. 23 – Velvet Tones, 10 a.m., Apple Valley Senior Center; Card Bingo, 1 p.m., DDI. Thursday, Dec. 24 – Closed. Friday, Dec. 25 – Closed. The Rosemount Area Seniors “Do Drop Inn� 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.

All Lakeville Area Active Adults events are held at Lakeville Heritage Center, 20110 Holyoke Ave. Call 952-985-4622 for information. Monday, Dec. 21 – Yoga, 8:15 a.m.; Computer Tutoring, 9 a.m.; Wii Bowling, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Healthways Fitness 1, 11 a.m.; Healthways Fitness 2, noon; Cribbage, 12:30 p.m.; Cards, 1 p.m.; Mahjong, 1 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 22 – Dominoes & Poker, 9 a.m.; Tappercize, 9:30 a.m.; Craft Group, 9:30 a.m.; Zumba Gold, 10:30 a.m.; Party Bridge, noon; Billiards, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 23 – Poker & Hearts, 9 a.m.; Line Dancing, 9 and 10 a.m.; Healthways Flex Fitness 2, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Healthways Flex Fitness 1, 11 a.m.; Pinochle, noon; Dime Bingo, 1 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 24 – Closed. Friday, Dec. 25 – Closed.

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14A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Baldy’s expands, adds full bar after being denied. His restaurant, which he started with a partner and now of which Wheeler is the sole owner, provided table service liquor prior to the expansion. “They denied us and all that stuff, so we’ve just kinda year by year we’ve been having to add different things,� Wheeler said. “Now, we’re a full-bar restaurant.� The restaurant plays sporting events on four 65-inch televisions and features two daily happy hours from 4-6 p.m. and 8-10 p.m. Wheeler said he has worked hard to overcome his “troubled past.� “I guess I had to earn my stripes with the city, and now we’re fully endorsed by pretty much all of the City Council, the mayor,� Wheeler said. “We’re an outstanding community-based restaurant. ... We proved all our critics wrong, I guess.� The bar side of the restaurant will be open until 1 a.m. on weekends and midnight weekdays for now. “We’re kinda going to see how it’s going to play out,� Wheeler said.

by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Baldy’s BBQ owner Brian Wheeler is finally getting past his past. After years of liquor licensing delays due to failing to completely disclose his criminal history on his liquor license application, Wheeler is operating his restaurant with a full bar, as he originally intended when he opened Baldy’s BBQ in Lakeville in 2009. He added 2,000 square feet of space to his I-35 and County Road 70 location to recently open a full-service bar serving what he described as highquality spirits. “We’re kinda going higher-end, but not higher-end prices,� Wheeler said. The Lakeville City Council initially denied him a liquor license because his liquor license application did not disclose an old felony drug charge that Wheeler, now 36, said happened when he was 21. He is now a churchgoing husband, father and football coach who has turned his life around. The City Council has gradually allowed Baldy’s to serve liquor in his restaurant, starting with a 3.2 Laura Adelmann is at laura. percent beer license a year adelmann@ecm-inc.com.

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 15A

Sports Eagan swimmers, divers still will be tough to beat Many of top performers from Class AA champs are back by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Chris Morgan isn’t saying the outcome will be different when Eagan swims against Minnetonka and Eden Prairie again – which will happen in a couple of weeks – but he’s curious to see what will happen when the Wildcats have their entire lineup available. When the Wildcats went to the Minnetonka Invitational last Saturday, they were missing four athletes who were taking college entrance exams. Another swimmer was held out of the meet after striking his head during warmups. One of Eagan’s most talented young swimmers, sophomore Quenton Steffen, didn’t begin practicing with the team until Monday because he competed in the USA Swimming Winter Junior Championships last weekend. Minnetonka breezed to the team championship of the eight-team invita-

Mac Johnson swims the 100-yard butterfly for Eagan during the Wildcats’ 96-85 victory over Burnsville at Dakota Hills Middle School. (Photo by Mike Shaughnessy) tional, finishing 95 points ahead of Eden Prairie and about 250 ahead of thirdplace Eagan. All three of those teams are scheduled to compete in the Maroon and Gold Invitational on Jan. 2 at the University of Minnesota. “We have all but two of our state qualifiers from last year back, which is one of the reasons we went to the Minnetonka Invitational,” said Morgan, who coached the Eagan boys

team to its first state Class AA team championship in 2015. “But we have some big holes to fill with Eli Broman and Sam Zenner graduating. “Right now Minnetonka is the best team; they have a lot of depth. You also have to consider Eden Prairie because they put up a lot of very competitive times.” Eagan finished 16 points ahead of Minnetonka at the 2015 state

meet, largely because of the Wildcats’ depth. Eagan did not win an individual event but piled up the points with numerous high finishes. The Wildcats finished in the top four in all three relays at state. Last year’s squad also was responsible for nine of the 12 school boys swimming and diving records going into this season. The Wildcats, however, do have several highability swimmers. Parker

Lemke, a senior and University of Minnesota recruit, finished second in the 100-yard backstroke and sixth in the 100 freestyle at state. He also set a Dakota Hills Middle School pool record of 1 minute, 57.44 seconds in winning the 200 individual medley as the Wildcats defeated Eastview 96-85 in a South Suburban Conference meet last Friday. Lemke took first in the 100 backstroke at the Minnetonka meet in 53.73. Lemke and fellow seniors Zach Dawson and Tal Shub are Eagan’s captains. Jasper Appleton is one of the top swimmers in the junior class. Steffen and Max Stigman are expected to be big pointscorers in the sophomore class, and ninth-grader Colin Kehoe has turned in some impressive performances so far this season, including a victory in the 100 butterfly against Eastview. Seniors Mac Johnson and Shub were second and fourth in the 50 freestyle at the Minnetonka meet. Then there are the divers, a group Morgan described as “scary good.”

Seniors Nic Lemieux and Alex Crow were third and fourth at the 2015 state Class AA meet. Crow and Lemieux finished first and second in diving at the Minnetonka meet, with Crow scoring 415.90 points (for 11 dives) and Lemieux scoring 411.80. Both scores were better than the existing meet record. Two more Eagan divers, sophomores Jordan Nguyen and Vessna Lundgren, finished in the top 10 at Minnetonka. Morgan said Eagan’s divers started the season doing intricate dives that other high school performers won’t attempt until the end of the season, if then. The coach said the returning Wildcats take their status as defending state champions seriously. “We’ve seen a lot of dedication from our returning kids, a lot of determination,” Morgan said. “Some of them swam a lot for their club teams and came back faster than when they left us last year.”

Notebook: Eagan swim Snow disappears, so out come the roller skis team honors parent, Eastview girls, Eagan Eagan, Rosemount) and Lakeville in 13:07. South were fourth through sixth. The Wildcats had three other boys win Nordic meet Margie Freed, an Eastview se- skiers in the top 20 and scored 157 booster in fundraiser nior, finished second in 14 minutes, points. Prior Lake had 148 and by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The defending state Class AA champion Eagan boys swimming and diving team participated Dec. 9 in the Hour of Power, a marathon relay practice and cancer research fundraiser started in 2006 as a memorial to a former Carleton College swimmer. Last year more than 180 college, high school, club and international teams took part in the fundraiser. This was Eagan’s first year participating. Most teams did their Hour of Power observance Nov. 10, but that’s before Minnesota high school boys teams can officially start practice. The Wildcats waited until Dec. 9 because it’s the birthday of Pat O’Keefe, an Eagan High School swimming parent and booster who died of cancer recently. Eagan coach Chris Morgan said the team plans to make the Hour of Power an annual event. The practice consists of continuous relays for an hour, using any stroke, with the idea of keeping all lanes in the pool on the same lap. The Carleton College men’s swimming team started the fundraiser following the 2006 death of Knights swimmer Ted Mullin from a rare form of sarcoma. Teams that participate in the Hour of Power are asked to gather donations for the Ted Mullin Fund for Pediatric Sarcoma Research at the University of Chicago Medicine Comer Children’s Hospital. The event raised almost $560,000 in its first nine years.

No snow; now what? South Suburban Conference Alpine and Nordic skiing teams have yet to hold a meet on snow. Races scheduled for Tuesday at Buck Hill (Alpine) and Hyland Lake Park Reserve (Bloomington) were canceled because of poor snow conditions, or lack of snow altogether. Nordic teams did hold a race on roller skis last Friday in Prior Lake. Colder temperatures predicted for later this week could help Buck Hill make snow, but it’s not clear when Nordic athletes will get to use their snow skis. There’s little snow available on any Nordic trail in Minnesota, which forced the ISD 196 team (Apple Valley, Eagan, Eastview, Rosemount and the School for Environmental Studies) to take the unusual step of canceling its winter training trip to Biwabik, which had been scheduled for Dec. 26-28. The South Suburban Conference is scheduled to hold a True Team meet Jan. 2 at Valleywood Golf Course, but unless a major snowstorm hits the area before then, that meet looks likely to be canceled or moved.

by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Local Nordic skiing teams decided they could wait no longer for snow. After the first two scheduled South Suburban Conference meets were canceled because of lack of snow they did the next best thing, breaking out roller skis for a South Suburban Conference 5-kilometer race in Prior Lake. Eastview defeated Burnsville by one point (160-159) in the girls team competition and Eagan had a nine-point victory over Prior Lake in the boys race Dec. 11 at Cleary Lake Regional Park. Eastview had three of the top six finishers in the girls race, while Burnsville had four of the top 11 (team scores are determined by a team’s top five finishers). Lakeville North, ISD 196 (Apple Valley,

42 seconds, 10 seconds behind Prior Lake senior Maria Berg. Burnsville sophomore Kelly Koch was third in 14:53, followed by Eastview’s Annika Martell in 15:00. Kiley Kraemer of Eastview and Krista Holmstrom of Burnsville were sixth and seventh, and the Blaze’s Kaitlyn Qualley and Abby Thompson were 10th and 11th. Two Lakeville North skiers placed in the top 10 – senior Molly Wilson (fifth, 15:24) and junior Emma Drangstveit (eighth, 16:12). Violet Tessier, a junior, was the top Lakeville South skier, finishing ninth in 16:34. Sophomore Tess Grunklee led the ISD 196 team, finishing 18th in 17:31. Eagan juniors Patrick Acton and Ryan Steeger took the top two places in the boys 5K race. Acton’s time was 12:36 and Steeger finished

Lakeville South was third with 130. ISD 196 (consisting of Apple Valley, Eastview and Rosemount) and Burnsville tied for fourth, each scoring 124 points. Lakeville North had one boys skier in the Dec. 11 meet. Lakeville South seniors Grant Halvorson (14:16) and Noah Lavesseur (14:26) were fifth and sixth in the boys race, and junior Tyler Haroldson was ninth in 14:39. Burnsville junior Nate Blichfeldt finished fourth in 13:55 and teammate Dillon Wong, a senior, was seventh in 14:30. Max Johnson led the ISD 196 team, placing 10th in 14:43. Lakeville North’s competitor, senior Tom Rittenhouse, was 31st in 17:20. Email Mike Shaughnessy at mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com.

Fraction of a point separates Wildcats, Irish Gymnastics teams turn in best scores of season by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Less than four-tenths of a point separated Eagan and Rosemount at a South Suburban Conference gymnastics meet Tuesday night. In the short team, it put a “W” on Eagan’s record. Long-term, it might not mean much, Wildcats coach Shelly Eklund said. “It’s our third meet, so it’s still early in the season,” Eklund said. “Rosemount will improve, and so will we. There’s no time to relax. We have to keep on keeping on.” Eagan edged Rosemount 145.1144.75 at Tuesday’s meet at Eagan

High School. Each team had its best score of the season. Each team also understands it probably will need to score higher to get out of Section 3AA, which could be the state’s deepest gymnastics section. Last season Rosemount, East Ridge and Eagan were second, third and fifth in the final Class AA state rankings. All were in Section 3AA, which East Ridge won. The Raptors went on to finish fourth at the state meet. “Last year, I think five of the top 10 teams in the state were from our section,” Eklund said. Rosemount sophomore Josie Schlie, who finished second at the

2015 state meet on floor exercise and 16th in the all-around, was the all-around winner Tuesday night, scoring 36.9 points. That was her best all-around score this season. Meanwhile, Eagan’s Shelby Neumann, Shannon McCoy and Jailyn Robinson were second, fourth and fifth in the all-around. Neumann (uneven bars, 9.55), McCoy (balance beam, 9.5) and eighth-grader Teagan Ramboldt (floor exercise, 9.425) each won an event. “One of the exciting things about our team this year is we have a lot of depth,” Eklund said. “We really think we will have four solid scores in every event.”

Blaze players attack the basket

Hopkins takes Tip-Off University of Minnesota recruit Amir Coffey scored 22 points as Hopkins defeated Apple Valley 89-81 in the featured game of the Breakdown Sports USA TipOff Classic last Saturday at Minnetonka High School. It was the first loss in more than 11 months for Apple Valley, whose last defeat was against Champlin Park in the Granite City Classic on Dec. 27, 2014. Apple Valley avenged that loss in the state Class 4A championship game and could have a chance to do the same against Hopkins as the Eagles and Royals are heavily favored to reach the 2016 state tourney. Junior guard Gary Trent Jr. led Apple Valley with 27 points. Senior center Brock Bertram had 21 points and 12 rebounds for the Eagles, who trailed by 14 points early in the second half but couldn’t come all the way back. Apple Valley improved to 7-1 with a 78-61 victory at Farmington in a South Suburban Conference game Tuesday night.

Skate with the Blaze The Burnsville High School boys and girls hockey program will host a free Skate with the Blaze event 1:40-2:40 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 17, at Burnsville Ice Arena.Attendees can skate with the boys and girls varsity hockey teams\ and get team photos signed by the players. Email Mike Shaughnessy at mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com.

(Left) Burnsville forward Jason Gumm dunks during a boys basketball game last Friday at Eastview. (Right) Blaze guard Jackson Martens drives to the basket. Eastview defeated Burnsville 83-60. The Blaze dropped to 1-6 overall after losing to Eagan 53-44 on Tuesday. (Photos by Mike Shaughnessy)


16A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Teen driver safety program offered at DCTC The Tire Rack Street Survival teen driver safety program will return to Dakota County Technical College, 1300 145th St. E., Rosemount, for two sessions, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays, Jan. 30 and Feb. 27. The program aims to improve

PROPERTY, from 1A and occupied it in September 2014. “I’ve exhausted all the resources. I don’t have the means to come up with that much money.� Sommer’s is one of the latest in a series of scrapes between homeowners and Burnsville’s Licensing and Code Enforcement Division. Most have stemmed from a City Council-directed effort that began in 2013 to, over time, canvass the entire city looking for property code violations. Before, most violations were discovered only when neighbors complained. That’s what happened to Sommer. She said she didn’t know that the house, built in 1968, had a backyard retaining wall. The wall is along a steep embankment that overlooks other backyards. It’s outside a chain-link fence at her property’s edge. A neighbor below prompted a city inspection by complaining that the wall, built in tiered sections down the embankment, posed a hazard of wood and bricks falling into the family swimming pool or onto the children, Sommer said. Her first city SUSPECT, from 1A to leave the United States to travel to Syria, despite the face that law enforcement was intensely scrutinizing them. In late 2014 Warsame was appointed “emir� or leader of the group. During the same period of time, Warsame sent $200 to Adnan Farah so Farah could obtain an expedited U.S. passport

driver competence through handson experiences in real-world driving situations. Students will receive a short classroom session and then will learn how to manage everyday driving hazards, obstacles and challenges in a controlled envi-

ronment on an advanced driving course. Students learn emergency braking and skid control, how to control proper braking, and how to avoid accidents. Students are taught in their own cars, so the skills they learn

can be directly translated to their daily driving experiences. Tire Rack Street Survival is a 501c3 organization and is the largest active nonprofit national driver education program that aims to teach teens the driving skills. The class is open to licensed

and permitted drivers ages 15-21. Forms, schedules and more information can be found online at www.streetsurvival.org. The cost is $75 per student and some insurance companies offer premium discounts to graduates.

notice of an exterior property code violation came in December 2014, she said. Sommer doesn’t dispute that the wall is deteriorating. She questions the timing of the complaint, which she said came about six weeks after she moved in. The house had been bank-owned the previous 18 months, and Sommer said a neighbor told her the wall had been in similar condition for 15 years. “If it was dangerous, it was dangerous before I came here,� she said. Nevertheless, Sommer sought a solution. She said she was approved for an interest-free, $25,000 loan from the Dakota County Community Development Agency whose repayment would be deferred until she sold the house. But calls to contractors turned up estimates of $50,000 to $100,000 to replace the wall, Sommer said, adding that she can’t get a conventional bank loan for the project. “I’m not a criminal,� she said. “I just don’t have the money.� Notified by the city in August that her case’s next stop was Dakota County District Court, Sommer

found the name of Minneapolis attorney Valerie Sims. Sims has been representing several Burnsville clients — including some homeowners at the Rambush Estates mobile home park — in their disputes with the city over property code violations. Sims said she’s representing Sommer for free. Sims alleges the city has “deputized itself � by including a criminal misdemeanor citation as a last resort in property disputes that go unresolved civilly. Sommer’s case has “no place in the criminal courts,� Sims said. “If you look at the legal research, criminalizing this type of thing is held only in the extreme circumstances,� such as that of a landlord who doesn’t provide heat or water, Sims said. “It should not be used in this way to bring your own citizens in because you want them to put paint on their home or change or fix a deck. We’re not creating Mayberry here.� Burnsville City Attorney Joel Jamnik said the court does have jurisdiction over property disputes, and “courts do

recognize that community livability issues are important. They are sensitive to the idea that we have a rule of law and that people need to abide by it in order to not take matters into their own hands.� The share of property cases that wind up in court is “very, very small,� he said. “She’s on top of that wall,� Jamnik said, referring to Sommer, “and obviously the property owner at the foot of the hill looking up at that wall has got a different perspective.� The enforcement action “is not some kind of abstract enforcement for the sake of enforcement, but really to address a problem that even Ms. Sims and Ms. Sommer acknowledge exists. And it is a hard problem to solve.� Better to solve it than to let the wall continue to deteriorate and possibly fail, he said. Sommer said she missed her first court date and was the subject of an arrest warrant. She said she didn’t get the citation in the mail. Sommer had to post a bond, Sims said. Her client’s next court date is a discovery hear-

ing on Jan. 27. “I think that there is a file on this property that predates my client’s ownership, and the city will not give it to me,� Sims said. On March 16, Sims said, she’ll file a motion to dismiss the charge on constitutional grounds.

to travel oversees to join ISIL, according to the charges. Farah, a SomaliAmerican from Minneapolis was charged in April for trying to join ISIL. Warsame also applied for an expedited passport but his application was initially denied. Warsame repeatedly attempted to obtain a telephone number and other contact information of ISIL members in June

2014 so he could pass it along to another person who was attempting to travel from Turkey to Syria to join ISIL. In April 2015, Warsame encouraged members of his group to travel to Syria through Mexico but didn’t plan to join the group himself because he was planning to travel with his family to East Africa. Once in East Africa, Warsame planned to either separate

from his family and head to Syria or wait in Somalia for a while. He believed al-Shabaab would pledge its allegiance to ISIL and thus expand ISIL to Somalia. According to the complaint, Warsame recounted on April 2 a conversation he had with Abdi Nur before Nur left the United States for Syria. Nur is a 20-year-old Somali-American man from Minneapo-

lis who federal authorities say left Minnesota to join ISIL in Syria. Warsame told another man that he proposed to Nur that they rob people to finance their trip to Syria but Nur rejected the idea and suggested they instead rob the government, according to court documents. Warsame is one of 12 men in the Somali-American community to face charges for allegedly plot-

Rambush Estates

cause state law gives the Department of Health regulatory authority over manufactured home parks. The city began inspecting Rambush Estates properties in May as part of its citywide inspection program. At least 40 residents had joined the class of plaintiffs by late September, according to King. Among the issues were 22 portable carports city inspectors cited as code violations. Thanks to the injunction, “The carports stand,� Sims said, “although a number of people have taken them down because they were scared.� Carports at Rambush were installed without required building permits, the city contends, and have many potential flaws: They might not comply with state building code, they might violate setback or accessory-structure rules and they might be inadequately anchored and become hazardous in high winds.

Sims said she’s taken about a half dozen cases in Burnsville, which is showing “fundamental disrespect� for its citizens. In September, Sims won a temporary injunction halting city enforcement action for scores of alleged code violations at Rambush Estates, a rental-lot mobile home park on West Burnsville Parkway. The ruling by District Judge Colleen King also granted Sims’ request that her lawsuit against the city on behalf of Rambush homeowners be treated as a class action. Individual lawsuits would weigh down the court, and many of the homeowners can’t afford them, King said in her rulJohn Gessner can be reached ing. Sims contends the city at (952) 846-2031 or email lacks authority to enforce john.gessner@ecm-inc.com. its codes in the park be-

ting to go to Syria to join ISIL. Three have pleaded guilty to terrorism-related charges, five are expected to start trail in May and one is in Syria. Two others are thought to have been killed in Syria. Two men were charged in November 2014. Seven others were charged this year. Jessica Harper is at jessica. harper@ecm-inc.com.

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 17A

LEGAL NOTICES CITY OF BURNSVILLE PUBLIC HEARING

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Vacation of Easement Area

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A public hearing will be held on Tuesday, December 22, at 6:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible by the Burnsville City Council, 100 Civic Center Parkway, in the Council Chambers on an application to vacate drainage and utility easements in Lot 1, Block 1, CLIFF RIVER RIDGE. All persons desiring to speak on this item are encouraged to attend. For more information concerning this request, please contact the City of Burnsville at (952) 895-4534. Macheal Collins, City Clerk City of Burnsville

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Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 485693

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: December 17, 2004 ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE: $207,500.00 MORTGAGOR(S): Brent F Newton and Heidi M. Newton Husband and Wife as joint Tenants MORTGAGEE: First Franklin Financial Corp., subsidiary of National City Bank of Indiana SERVICER: Specialized Loan Servicing, LLC LENDER: First Franklin Financial Corp., subsidiary of National City Bank of Indiana. DATE AND PLACE OF FILING: Dakota County Minnesota,Recorder , on February 10, 2005, as Document No. 2294765. ASSIGNED TO: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for FFMLT Trust 2005-FF2, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-FF2 Dated: August 10, 2011 , and recorded January 10, 2012 by Document No. 2841493 . LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: Lot 5, Block 4, Burnsville Highlands first addition, Dakota County, Minnesota. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 13628 Washburn Ave S, Burnsville, MN 55337 PROPERTY I.D: 02-15550-04-050 COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS LOCATED: Dakota THE AMOUNT CLAIMED TO BE DUE ON THE MORTGAGE ON THE DATE OF THE NOTICE: One Hundred Ninety-Six Thousand Six Hundred Ninety-Nine and 98/100 ($196,699.98) 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 February 2, 2016

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 August 2, 2016, or the next business day if August 2, 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: December 18, 2015 Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for FFMLT Trust 2005-FF2, Mortgage PassThrough Certificates, Series 2005FF2 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. 15MN00512-1 THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 25, 2015, January 1, 8, 15, 22, 2016 485581

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 consumers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Kwik Trip #179 PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 4600 Slater Road Eagan, MN 55122 NAMEHOLDER(S): Kwik Trip, Inc. 1626 Oak Street PO Box 2107 La Crosse, WI 54602-2107 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 24, 2015 SIGNED BY: Doanld Zietlow Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 483840

CITY OF EAGAN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS IN THE CITY OF EAGAN, DAKOTA COUNTY, MINNESOTA PROJECT NO. 1193 DENMARK AVENUE, TIMBERSHORE ADDITIONS & PILOT KNOB HEIGHTS ADDITIONS STREET IMPROVEMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota, will meet at the Eagan Municipal Center at 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan, Minnesota 55122, on Tuesday, January 5, 2016, 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 improvements, known as Project No. 1193. The proposed project is in accordance with the preliminary engineering report prepared by the Assistant City Engineer. The estimated cost of the foregoing improvement is as follows: $440,400. The area proposed to be assessed for said improvements is described as follows: The area located within the Southwest ¼ of Section 15, lying South of Duckwood Drive and East of Pilot Knob Road, in Township 27, Range 23, in the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota. All persons who desire to be heard with respect to the question of whether or not the above improvements should be made shall be heard at said time and place. Dated November 30, 2015 BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL /s/ Christina M. Scipioni By: Christina M. Scipioni Eagan City Clerk Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 486218

CITY OF EAGAN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS IN THE CITY OF EAGAN, DAKOTA COUNTY, MINNESOTA PROJECT NO. 1191 EAGANDALE CORPORATE CENTER STREET IMPROVEMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota, will meet at the Eagan Municipal Center at 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan, Minnesota 55122, on Tuesday, January 5, 2016, 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 improvements, known as Project No. 1191. The proposed project is in accordance with the preliminary engineering report prepared by the Assistant City Engineer. The estimated cost of the foregoing improvement is as follows: $423,700. The area proposed to be assessed for said improvements is described as follows: The area located within the South ½ of Section 11, lying North of Yankee Doodle Road, East of Lexington Avenue, in Township 27, Range 23, in the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota. All persons who desire to be heard with respect to the question of whether or not the above improvements should be made shall be heard at said time and place. Dated: November 30, 2015 BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL /s/ Christina M. Scipioni By: Christina M. Scipioni Eagan City Clerk Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 486198

CITY OF BURNSVILLE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS FOR DUPONT AVENUE/126TH STREET/CLIFF ROAD STREET IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (16-105) TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Burnsville will meet at their regularly scheduled Council meeting in Burnsville City Hall Council Chambers, 100 Civic Center Parkway, Burnsville, Minnesota, at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, December 22, 2015, to consider the making of the following public improvements. The estimated cost of the said improvements is $1,135,000. IMPROVEMENT NOS. TYPE OF IMPROVEMENTS ESTIMATED COST 16-105 Street Improvements $1,135,000 Dupont Ave/126th St/Cliff Rd A reasonable estimate of the impact of the assessment, and a description of the methodology used to calculate individual assessments for affected parcels, will be available at the hearing. Such persons as desire to be heard with reference to the proposed improvements will be heard at this meeting. The property proposed to be assessed for these improvements and/or improvements previously made benefiting the property is as follows: All parcels and tracts of land in the City of Burnsville, Dakota County, Minnesota abutting or adjacent to the following streets: City Project No. 16-105 – Dupont Avenue/126th Street/Cliff Road Street Improvement Project 126th Street from 500’ east of CSAH 5 to Dupont Avenue Dupont Avenue from 126th Street to Cliff Road West Cliff Road West from Dupont Avenue to Interstate 35W South Exit Ramp In conducting said public hearing for making its decision on the proposed improvement, the City Council proposes to proceed under authority granted by Minn. Stat. §§ 429.011 to 429.111. BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL. Macheal Collins, City Clerk Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek, December 11, 18, 2015, 485754

BURNSVILLE-EAGAN-SAVAGE ISD 191 REGULAR SCHOOL BOARD MEETING MINUTES This is a summary of the Burnsville-Eagan-Savage Regular School Board Meeting on Thursday, November 19, 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, Hill and Luth. Sweep was absent. Superintendent Gothard, Student Representative Abegaz, administrators, staff and members of the public were also present. Luth led the Pledge of Allegiance. The following Consent Agenda items were approved: minutes; personnel recommendations; donations, payroll, deposits, receipts and investments; out-of-state travel for board members; change orders #027 and #029 for 2015 additions and alterations to Burnsville High School Bid Package # 1; and change orders #028 and #030 for the 2015 additions and alterations to Burnsville High School Bid Package # 3. Recommended actions approved: agenda; change order #2 for the 2015 Sky Oaks Elementary School Alterations Project in the amount of $33,596.00; 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 the following contractors and authorize the signing of contracts with said contractors: Contract# 0335 0790 1044 1420

Type Contractor Amount Polished Concrete Floors Centimark d.b.a Questmark Flooring $ 15,969 Caulking The Caulkers Company, Inc. 86,900 Signage Walker Sign Holdings, Inc. d.b.a Lawrence Sign 32,425 Elevators TBD – Process in final stage Total all Contracts $ 135,294 allow Kelly Services to pay the following rates for substitute teachers and EA’s effective November 23, 2015: Increase retired ISD 191 licensed teacher’s daily flat rate from $127 per day to a daily flat rate of $135 for teaching as a short term substitute teacher for the first forty-five full-day assignments and a flat rate of $145 per day thereafter. Increase licensed teacher’s daily flat rate from $117 per day to a daily flat rate of $125 for teaching as a short term substitute teacher for the first forty-five full-day assignments and a flat rate of $135 per day thereafter. Increase Education Assistants hourly rate from $11.75 per hour to an hourly rate of $13.00 per hour for support as a short term substitute EA. Increase Personal Care Assistants hourly rate from $12.25 per hour to an hourly rate of $14.00 per hour for support as a short term substitute PCA; and first reading of Board Policies 104: School District Mission and Vision, 206: Public Participation in School Board Deliberations, 421: Gifts to Employees and School Board Members (rescind GBI-R), 427: Workload Limits for Certain Special Education Teachers, 499: Nepotism Prohibition (rescind GBCAA), 505: Distribution of Nonschool-Sponsored Materials on School Premises by Students and Employees, 507: Corporal Punishment, 508: Extended School Year for Certain Students with Individualized Education Programs, 533: Wellness (rescind JFCI & JFCI-E), 608: Instructional Services-Special Education (rescind IHBHA), and 904: Distribution of Materials on School District Property by Nonschool Persons (rescind KJA & KJA-R and KI) and rescind GBEC. Reports presented: Business Leader and Education Partnerships and oral reports given by Currier on behalf of the Policy Review Committee, Hill on behalf of the Legislative Committee and Student Performance and Achievement Committee; Luth on behalf of the Ad Hoc Technology Committee; Schmid on behalf of the Negotiating Committee; and Alt on behalf of Foundation 191. The meeting adjourned at 8:12 p.m. Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 2015 488432

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 196 ROSEMOUNT-APPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS REGULAR MEETING MINUTES NOVEMBER 9, 2015 This is a summary of the Independent School District 196 regular School Board meeting on Monday, November 9, 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 November 9, 2015 at Dakota Ridge School followed by the Pledge of Allegiance. Board members present: Joel Albright, Jackie Magnuson, Mike Roseen, Bob Schutte and Superintendent Jane K. Berenz. Absent: Art Coulson, Rob Duchscher and Gary Huusko. Motion by Schutte, seconded by Albright and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the agenda. Superintendent Berenz recognized Eagan High School girls’ soccer and volleyball teams on their state wins; Eastview High School girls’ and Rosemount High School boys’ cross-country teams that participated in the state meets; Apple Valley High School speech and debate program for earning significant recognition from the National Speech and Debate Association that placed them in the top 3 percent of schools nationwide; Cara Skoglund, Pinewood Community Elementary School, and Jill Jensen, Glacier Hills Elementary School of Arts and Science, on being selected to receive TIES Exceptional Teacher awards; board members who were re-elected and maintenance support staff who provide a variety of services to the district. Motion by Albright, seconded by Roseen and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve Consent items: October 26, 2015 regular board meeting minutes; claims; electronic funds transfer; schedule of investments; gifts; grants, and personnel separations, leaves of absence and new staff. A report on enrollment projections from 2016-17 through 202021 was presented. Enrollment is expected to increase by 0.32 percent to 27,879 in 2016-17, with growth continuing in the eastern and southern portions of the district. Motion by Schutte, seconded by Albright and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the Fiscal Year 2014-15 Audited Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR). Director of Teaching and Learning Steve Troen presented an overview of the course revision process and highlighted proposed middle school and high school course revisions for the 2016-17 school year. Course revisions reflect what is happening in education at the local, state and national level. Courses are aligned with state academic standards and federal graduation requirements. The board is scheduled to act on the proposed course revisions at its next regular meeting. Motion by Schutte, seconded by Roseen and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve a two-year collective bargaining agreement with the Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan (RAVE) Clerical Association. Motion by Roseen, seconded by Albright and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve a two-year collective bargaining agreement with the Support Staff Association of Independent School District 196. Motion by Albright, seconded by Schutte and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the World’s Best Workforce (WBWF) Report Summary. Motion by Albright, seconded by Schutte and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the Achievement and Integration (AI) Progress Reports. Motion by Schutte, seconded by Roseen and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the resolution canvassing the returns of votes of the November 3, 2015 school district general and special election. The four incumbents were re-elected and the referendum question was approved. Motion by Albright, seconded by Schutte and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the resolution authorizing issuance of certificates of election and directing the school district clerk to perform other election-related duties. Motion by Roseen, seconded by Schutte and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the resolution declaring November 16-20, 2015 as District 196 Clerical and Secretarial Employees Appreciation Week . Motion by Schutte, seconded by Albright and carried with a 4-0 vote to approve the resolution declaring November 16-20, 2015 as District 196 Maintenance Support Employees Appreciation Week. Re-elected board members thanked voters for their support and for passage of the bond referendum. Schutte encouraged attendance at athletic and fine arts performances to see student talents on display. Magnuson reported attending a technology meeting and noted that with passage of the bond referendum, the excitement increases as the district’s learning and technology vision expands. Berenz voiced her thanks for the bond referendum passage, stating it was the culmination of two years of work. She noted that, due to the scope of the projects, not all projects would be done at once. Berenz also extended an invitation to the opening of the fabrication lab at Apple Valley High School. Motion by Roseen, seconded by Albright and carried with a 4-0 vote to adjourn the meeting at 7 p.m. Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek Lakeville Sun Thisweek Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 2015 488832

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

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 196 ROSEMOUNT-APPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS SPECIAL MEETING MINUTES DECEMBER 2, 2015 This is a summary of the Independent School District 196 special School Board meeting on Monday, December 2, 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 5:02 p.m. on December 2, 2015 at the District Office. Board members present: Joel Albright, Art Coulson, Rob Duchscher, Gary Huusko, Jackie Magnuson, Bob Schutte, Superintendent Jane K. Berenz, Director of Special Education Mary Kreger, School District Attorney Jill Coyle and Attorney Tim Palmatier. Absent: Mike Roseen. Motion by Magnuson, seconded by Albright and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve the agenda. Motion by Duchscher, seconded by Magnuson and carried with a 6-0 vote to close the meeting pursuant to M.S. 13D.05, Subd. 3(b), attorney-client privilege, to review litigation strategy for pending litigation in Federal District Court. Motion by Coulson, seconded by Magnuson and carried with a 6-0 vote to re-open the meeting. Motion by Duchscher, seconded by Albright and carried with a 6-0 vote to adjourn the meeting at 5:42 p.m. Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek Lakeville Sun Thisweek Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 2015 488835

NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that default has occurred in the conditions of the following described mortgage: DATE OF MORTGAGE: December 05, 2003 ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE: $263,700.00 MORTGAGOR(S): Stuart E. Gale and Sandra W. Gale, husband and wife MORTGAGEE: Argent Mortgage Company, LLC DATE AND PLACE OF RECORDING: Recorded: December 30, 2003 Dakota County Recorder Document Number: 2158442 ASSIGNMENTS OF MORTGAGE: And assigned to: Deutsche Bank

National Trust Company, as Trustee for, Argent Securities Inc. AssetBacked Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-W3, Under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement Dated March 1, 2004 Dated: February 11, 2009 Recorded: February 17, 2009 Dakota County Recorder Document Number: 2637612 Transaction Agent: Not Applicable Transaction Agent Mortgage Identification Number: Not Applicable Lender or Broker: Argent Mortgage Company, LLC Residential Mortgage Servicer: Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC Mortgage Originator: Not Applicable COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS LOCATED: Dakota Property Address: 1688 Oakbrooke Way, Eagan, MN 55122-4202 Tax Parcel ID Number: 10-53763-01-160 LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: Lot 16, Block 1, Oakbrooke Fourth Addition Common Interest Community Number 264, Dakota County, Minnesota AMOUNT DUE AND CLAIMED TO BE DUE AS OF DATE OF NOTICE: $230,544.97 THAT all pre-foreclosure requirements have been complied with; that no action or proceeding has been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by said mortgage, or any part thereof; 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: May 22, 2015 at 10:00 AM PLACE OF SALE: Dakota County Law Enforcement Center, 1580 Highway 55, Lobby S-100, Hastings, Minnesota to pay the debt secured by said mortgage and taxes, if any, on said premises and the costs and disbursements, including attorney fees allowed by law, subject to redemption within six (6) months from the date of said sale by the mortgagor(s), their personal representatives or assigns. If the 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 November 23, 2015, or the next business day if November 23, 2015 falls on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday. Mortgagor(s) released from financial obligation: NONE THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. 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. 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: February 03, 2015 ASSIGNEE OF MORTGAGEE: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for Argent Securities Inc., AssetBacked Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-W3 Wilford, Geske & Cook P.A. Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgagee 7616 Currell Blvd Ste 200 Woodbury, MN 55125-2296 (651) 209-3300 File Number: 032823F01

NOTICE OF POSTPONEMENT OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE The above referenced sale scheduled for May 22, 2015 at 10:00 AM has been postponed to June 22, 2015 at 10:00 AM in the Dakota County Law Enforcement Center, 1580 Highway 55, Lobby S-100, Hastings, Minnesota in said County and State. DATED: May 07, 2015 ASSIGNEE OF MORTGAGEE: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for Argent Securities Inc., AssetBacked Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-W3 Wilford, Geske & Cook P.A. Attorneys for Assignee Of Mortgagee: Lawrence A. Wilford James A. Geske 7616 Currell Blvd Ste 200 Woodbury, MN 55125-2296 (651) 209-3300 File Number: 032823F01

NOTICE OF POSTPONEMENT OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE The above referenced sale scheduled for November 23, 2015 at 10:00 AM has been postponed to December 28, 2015 at 10:00 AM in the Dakota County Law Enforcement Center, 1580 Highway 55, Lobby S-100, Hastings, Minnesota in said County and State. DATED: November 18, 2015 ASSIGNEE OF MORTGAGEE: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for Argent Securities Inc., AssetBacked Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-W3 The redemption period shall be 5 weeks from the date of said sale. Wilford, Geske & Cook P.A. Attorneys for Assignee Of Mortgagee: Lawrence A. Wilford James A. Geske 7616 Currell Blvd Ste 200 Woodbury, MN 55125-2296 (651) 209-3300 File Number: 032823F01

NOTICE OF POSTPONEMENT OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE The above referenced sale scheduled for December 28, 2015 at 10:00 AM has been postponed to February 08, 2016 at 10:00 AM

Continues Next Page


18A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

SUPPLIES, from 1A Financial and the National Association of Secondary School Principals. “I’m not like Bill Gates,” Yilma said, “but I can do something to help these kids.” Born in the United States, Yilma periodically visits family in Ethiopia with her father, Yilma Hailu, and mother, Hirutgishen, who came to this country separately after high school. Her previous visit to see family in the capital city of Addis Ababa made an impression on Yilma, then old enough to understand differences in wealth and opportunity between the two countries. She saw children without shoes, mothers asking for coins to feed their children and schoolkids with scrawny backpacks. “Ethiopia is in Eastern Africa, and it’s a developing country,” Yilma said in an interview this week. “There are rich parts, but most parts are actually strugLANDFILL, from 1A were hastened by a series of deadlines set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which has threatened to take over the cleanup process. Burnsville officials have for years pined for a landfill deal. They say it’s needed to safeguard groundwater in the Minnesota River bottom and to help chart a course for eventual redevelopment of the industrial area known as the Minnesota River Quadrant, which includes two landfills and a limestone mining pit. “This is a huge thing, not only to you but to the community to close that landfill,” state Sen. Dan Hall, R-Burnsville, said at Tuesday night’s City Council work session. Burnsville-area legisARSON, from 1A for $12 million claiming the police took personal items during the investigation. According to the complaint, Damron has a history of writing threatening letters to public officials. The day of the fire, an Eagan police officer saw the Old Town Hall — located at Pilot Knob and Wescott roads — engulfed by flames

gling and suffering from poverty. There’s a drought going on there, and there’s a strain on natural resources. And a lot of children there are victims whose parents passed away from the AIDS epidemic and

things like that. The economy is the fastest-growing in Africa, but it still needs help — especially the children.” Yilma set her plan in motion this January. She brought the idea of

a school-supply drive to BHS Principal Dave Helke, who gave his blessing. Yilma set up boxes around school where students and staff could drop donated supplies. The drive got a boost in

March, when parents came for conferences. Boxes remained open for donations through the school year. A Facebook post by Yilma days before she and her father delivered the goods to Ethiopia gave the drive its final boost. “I had like four people come with buckets of school supplies all the way to my house,” she said. “It really just touched my heart.” Yilma and her father had consulted with Ethiopia’s education bureau to find especially needy schools. Many of the students at the two schools had lost one or both parents. “It’s not because the area is infested with disease,” she said. “It’s just that they don’t have the resources to take care of themselves, so they get sick. And a lot of these kids had really good grades, which is crazy to me. We make excuses about not having good grades for the littlest things, and then these kids don’t have parents and they

lators attended the work session to discuss the city’s state-level priorities for the 2016 session of the Legislature. Not surprisingly, closing the Freeway Landfill is No. 1 on the list. City officials say legislators’ help is needed to get funding for the $64.4 million closure plan into a bonding bill next year. “Madame Mayor, I think you’ll get good support from all of us on this,” Hall said, speaking of Burnsville’s two-party, fivemember legislative delegation. Tuesday was the latest EPA deadline for a deal. Though negotiators didn’t quite hit it, Johnston said the state won’t ask for more extensions as it has in the past. Negotiators are “optimistic” a deal is near, she said.

Negotiators failed to meet EPA deadlines in April, August and October. The MPCA plans to dig up waste in the landfill, which McGowan’s father opened in 1969, and enclose it with a protective liner underneath. Gas- and leachate-collection systems would be installed. The plan leaves about 40 acres next to the freeway to be reclaimed for development. Without a protective liner, groundwater will be endangered once dewatering ceases at the Kraemer Mining and Materials quarry south of the landfill, the MPCA says. Dewatering will end when mining ends, which city officials say could be 20 years from now. Dewatering has lowered the water table and shifted groundwater flow

toward the quarry. When dewatering ends, the water table will rise to the level of the landfill, leaving some of the waste sitting in groundwater that will be exposed to contaminants such as heavy metals, medical waste, volatile organic compounds and cobalt, the MPCA says. When the quarry stops pumping, groundwater will flow to a lake that will fill the spent quarry and to the river, bringing contamination with it, the MPCA says. The closure plan “is very important to us to protect our aquifer,” Mayor Elizabeth Kautz said. Council Member Bill Coughlin asked Johnston to explain what will happen if no deal is reached and the federal EPA takes over. It will become a Super-

fund action, and “there are going to be an awful lot of happy lawyers,” Johnston said. “What it means is that the landowner will have to sue anybody who has put garbage into that landfill in order to pay for the remediation. The landowner becomes responsible.” Liability would fall to the city, the state, the county — “everyone,” Johnston said. Litigation and the EPA’s own design process for the closure would take time, pushing up costs to probably twice what the MPCA plan would cost, Johnston said. “It’s messy, it’s ugly and it’s why the Closed Landfill Program was created,” she said. Sen. Jim Carlson, DFLEagan, asked about the sale for private development of

property that has been improved by state bond funding. Bonding is for state assets, not private, and by law can’t be put in private hands while bonds are being repaid, according to Carlson. He said there’s a 37.5-year “encumbrance.” Johnston said Minnesota’s bonding bills sometimes include cash as well as borrowing. If roughly $10 million of the $64.4 million could be secured in cash, that would be enough to clean up the developable land, she said. Also attending the meeting were Rep. Drew Christensen, R-Burnsville, Rep. Roz Peterson, R-Lakeville, and Rep. Sandra Masin, DFL-Eagan.

around 5 a.m. Investigators later discovered a large hold cut in a chain-link fence along I35E nearby. At the scene, they found a small bicycle, “a fresh pile of human feces and several clumps of used toilet paper.” The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension found Arvidson’s DNA on the toilet paper. During a search of the

brothers’ Credit River Township home near Prior Lake in 2013 police found a home surveillance system with footage of the brothers’ actions leading up to and after the Eagan fire. A search this year uncovered a 2-liter bottle containing a dark liquid that Damron was seen holding in surveillance footage prior to the fire, police say. After the final search,

police monitored phone conversations in September from prison during which Damron was recorded discussing the statute of limitations and DNA samples with his mother. “Then there’d be that thing over in Eagan that they tied to, Wynnie’s poop or something,” Damron said, according to the complaint. Arvidson made his first

court appearance on Dec. 10 and is in jail in lieu of $350,000 bail. Damron is expected to appear in Dakota County for his court appearance soon, the county attorney’s office said. The Old Town Hall was built in the approximate center of Eagan in 1914 and residents would gather there for annual meetings and to vote on the town’s budget. It served as Ea-

gan’s official town hall until 1965. For the past several decades, it functioned as a museum with displays and artifacts from the city’s history. A number of artifacts were destroyed in the fire. A $350,000 restoration of the building is nearly complete.

CITY OF EAGAN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS IN THE CITY OF EAGAN, DAKOTA COUNTY, MINNESOTA PROJECT NO. 1203 MALLARD PARK 2ND ADDITION STREET IMPROVEMENTS

west shore of McDonough Lake, both located in Lebanon Hills Regional Park. The period of aeration operation shall be during periods of suitable ice cover commencing on or about January 4, 2016 and ending on or about April 1, 2016. The aeration systems may create open water and thin ice conditions. The public is cautioned to stay clear of all areas marked with warning signs on the lakes. For further information call (952) 891-7983. Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 25, 2015 487309

CITY OF EAGAN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS IN THE CITY OF EAGAN, DAKOTA COUNTY, MINNESOTA PROJECT NO. 1196 CEDAR GROVE 3RD ADDITION STREET IMPROVEMENTS

pledge of allegiance. All board members and administrators were present except Jim Skelly, Superintendent Snyder, Executive Directors Knudsen and Ouillette. Consent agenda items approved: Minutes of the meetings on Nov. 10, 17 & 19; employment recommendations, leave requests and resignations; payment of bills & claims; wire transfers and investments; donations; and field trips. Reports presented: 2014-15 WBWF reporting update; 2016-17 district calendar first reading. Actions approved: Passive consent on the MN Student Survey; Passive Consent Notice to parents include a statement notifying parents that there are questions relating to Family Substance Abuse and Physical & Sexual Abuse be included and bulleted. Adjournment at 9:00 p.m. Published in the Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 2015 486341

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 196 ROSEMOUNTAPPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS EDUCATING OUR STUDENTS TO REACH THEIR FULL POTENTIAL CALL FOR BIDS

Children at one of the Ethiopian schools visited in July by Egeziharya Yilma and her father were grateful for the gift of school supplies. (Submitted photo)

have a 4.0 GPA.” She plans to repeat the drive next year as a senior. Meanwhile, Yilma is keeping busy. She’s a chief of staff for Youth in Government and an assembly vice president for Model United Nations. She’s a member of the BHS Theatre Guild’s cast of “Marie Antoinette.” She works at Designer Shoe Warehouse in Burnsville. A junior class officer, Yilma also serves on the advisory board of the school’s Youth Service program and is a student representative to the board of Burnsville Promise. “I’m definitely happy to be as much help as I can in every way,” she said. Five other BHS students received Prudential Spirit of Community Certificates of Merit for their volunteer service: Maedin Abegaz, Hau Bui, Benjamin Hubbard, Stephanie Nkatia and Jaylin Wong. 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.

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

LEGAL NOTICES in the Dakota County Law Enforcement Center, 1580 Highway 55, Lobby S-100, Hastings, Minnesota in said County and State. DATED: December 08, 2015 ASSIGNEE OF MORTGAGEE: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for Argent Securities Inc., AssetBacked Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-W3 The redemption period shall be 5 weeks from the date of said sale. Wilford, Geske & Cook P.A. Attorneys for Assignee Of Mortgagee: Lawrence A. Wilford James A. Geske 7616 Currell Blvd Ste 200 Woodbury, MN 55125-2296 (651) 209-3300 File Number: 032823F01 Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 2015 486656

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 196 ROSEMOUNT-APPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS CALL FOR BIDS FOR DATA SWITCHES AND IMPLEMENTATION SERVICES Notice is hereby given that responses to Request for Bid (RFB) for Data Switches and Implementation Services will be received by Independent School District 196 at the District Office, 3455 153rd Street West, Rosemount, MN 55068, until 2:00 PM, Monday, January 11, 2016. Specifications for the above Request for Bid will be available on December 4, 2016 on the school district’s website at: http://www. district196.org/District/LegalNotices/index.cfm. Responses are due as listed above at which time only the name of the vendors responding will be announced. Bid Bond, Payment and Performance Bonds, requirements are described in the RFB documents. The School Board reserves the right to reject any or all responses and to waive any informality in responses. Gary Huusko, Board Clerk Independent School District 196 Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek, Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 483975

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota, will meet at the Eagan Municipal Center at 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan, Minnesota 55122, on Tuesday, January 5, 2016, 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 improvements, known as Project No. 1203. The proposed project is in accordance with the preliminary engineering report prepared by the Assistant City Engineer. The estimated cost of the foregoing improvement is as follows: $95,900. The area proposed to be assessed for said improvements is described as follows: The area located within the Southwest ¼ of Section 28, lying South of Diffley Road, East of Johnny Cake Ridge Road, in Township 27, Range 23, in the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota. All persons who desire to be heard with respect to the question of whether or not the above improvements should be made shall be heard at said time and place. Dated November 30, 2015 BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL /s/ Christina M. Scipioni By: Christina M. Scipioni Eagan City Clerk Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 486199

DAKOTA COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE OF INTENT TO OPERATE AERATION SYSTEM The County of Dakota, pursuant to the terms and conditions of a Permit for Lake Aeration System, granted by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, hereby gives notice of its intention to operate two winter lake aeration systems in the city of Eagan. The systems shall consist of an air injection pump. The systems shall be in operation near the northwest shore of Holland Lake and near the

CITY OF EAGAN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS IN THE CITY OF EAGAN, DAKOTA COUNTY, MINNESOTA PROJECT NO. 1192 JOHNNY CAKE RIDGE ROAD (CLIFF ROAD TO TEAL COVE) STREET IMPROVEMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota, will meet at the Eagan Municipal Center at 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan, Minnesota 55122, on Tuesday, January 5, 2016, 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 improvements, known as Project No. 1192. The proposed project is in accordance with the preliminary engineering report prepared by the Assistant City Engineer. The estimated cost of the foregoing improvement is as follows: $351,100. The area proposed to be assessed for said improvements is described as follows: The area located within the West ½, Section 28, lying North of Cliff Road, East of I-35E, in Township 27, Range 23, in the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota. All persons who desire to be heard with respect to the question of whether or not the above improvements should be made shall be heard at said time and place. Dated: November 30, 2015 BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL /s/ Christina M. Scipioni By: Christina M. Scipioni Eagan City Clerk Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 486203

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota, will meet at the Eagan Municipal Center at 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan, Minnesota 55122, on Tuesday, January 5, 2016, 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 improvements, known as Project No. 1196. The proposed project is in accordance with the preliminary engineering report prepared by the Assistant City Engineer. The estimated cost of the foregoing improvement is as follows: $424,900. The area proposed to be assessed for said improvements is described as follows: The area located within the Southeast ¼ of Section 19, lying North of Diffley Road, East of Nicols Road, in Township 27, Range 23, in the City of Eagan, Dakota County, Minnesota. All persons who desire to be heard with respect to the question of whether or not the above improvements should be made shall be heard at said time and place. Dated November 30, 2015 BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL /s/ Christina M. Scipioni By: Christina M. Scipioni Eagan City Clerk Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 11, 18, 2015 486225

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 194 REGULAR MEETING MINUTES NOVEMBER 24, 2015 This is a summary of the Independent School District No. 194 Regular Board of Education Meeting on November 24, 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: November 24, 2015 The regular meeting was called to order at 7:00 p.m. followed by

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, December 23rd, 2015 beginning at approximately 10:00AM and concluding on Wednesday, January 6, 2016 at approximately 10:00AM. This public sale will result in the goods being sold to the highest bidder. Certain terms and conditions apply. J. Herschbach -724 TV’s, Speakers, Propane, Tools H. Carrero-607 Dresser, Bed Frame, TV’s T. Morgurm 404A Tables, Chairs J. Youngdahl- 401 Snow Plow, Lawn Mower, Tools, Furniture Brandon Biljan- 526C Golf Clubs, Tent J. Foster- 127A Bookcase,Speakers, Boxes Published in the Burnsville/Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 25, 2015 481071

Data Infrastructure Cabling for Wireless Network Notice is hereby given that BIDS will be received for the purpose of securing a contract for data infrastructure cabling for the wireless network by Independent School District 196 at the District Office, 3455 153rd Street West, Rosemount, MN 55068, until 10:00 AM, Tuesday, January 19, 2016, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read. Instructions for obtaining Bid specifications can be found at: http://www.district196.org/District/ LegalNotices/index.cfm. The School Board of Independent School District 196 reserves the right to reject any or all Bids and to waive any informalities. Gary Huusko, Board Clerk Independent School District 196 Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 25, 2015 488658

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 196 ROSEMOUNTAPPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS EDUCATING OUR STUDENTS TO REACH THEIR FULL POTENTIAL CALL FOR BIDS Aruba Wireless Access Points Notice is hereby given that BIDS will be received for the purpose of securing a contract for Aruba Wireless Access Points by Independent School District 196 at the District Office, 3455 153rd Street West, Rosemount, MN 55068, until 1:00 PM, Tuesday, January 19, 2016, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read. Bid specifications and subsequent addendums can be found at: http://www.district196.org/District/ LegalNotices/index.cfm. The School Board of Independent School District 196 reserves the right to reject any or all Bids and to waive any informalities. Gary Huusko, Board Clerk Independent School District 196 Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek December 18, 25, 2015 488670


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 19A

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5110 Building & Remodeling

local classifieds

Baths Kitchens Decks

theadspider.com The Ad Spider is your source for local classiďŹ ed listings from over 200 Minnesota communities. 2020 Farm Miscellaneous

Christian Brothers Construction Minn Lic. BC679768

612-423-2784

5140 Carpet, Floor & Tile Above All Hardwood Floors Installation-Sanding-Finishing

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local classifieds

“We Now Install Carpet, Tile & Vinyl.� 952-440-WOOD (9663)

4510 Apartments/ Condos For Rent

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1020 Junkers & Repairables

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

We offer professional services for your wood floors! Installs/Repair Sand/Refinish Free Ests Ins’d Mbr: BBB

Professional w/15 yrs exp.

Local Electrician Universal Electric

952-292-2349 SANDING-REFINISHING

Roy’s Sanding Service Since 1951

952-888-9070

MDH Lead Supervisor

Dale 952-941-8896 office 612-554-2112 cell We Accept Credit Cards “Soon To Be Your Favorite Contractor!� Statuscontractinginc.com Find Us On Facebook � All Home Repairs! � Excell Remodeling, LLC Interior & Exterior Work One Call Does it All! Call Bob 612-702-8237 or Dave 612-481-7258

Home Tune-up

Service Upgrades, Remodeling & Small Jobs

952-445-7504

• Fix It • Replace It • Upgrade It Over 40 Yrs Exp. Ins’d Ron 612-221-9480

TEAM ELECTRIC

Smart Move Home Services

Tile & Stone Specialists

teamelectricmn.com

651-724-0157 Jeff

Install - Build - Repair Remodeling & Handyman Services. 35 yrs exp Ins-Lic ProToCall 612-250-3370

Lic/ins/bonded Res/Com All Jobs...All Sizes

Insured / Ref. Home Repairs, Painting, Tile Trim, Doors, and more...

5170 Concrete/Masonry/WaterprooďŹ ng

5260 Garage Doors

Free Ests. 10% Off W/Ad

Call 952-758-7585

GARAGE DOORS & OPENERS Repair/Replace/ Reasonable Lifetime Warranty on All Spring Changes www.expertdoor.com 651-457-7776

CONCRETE & MASONRY

Steps, Walks, Drives, Patios Chimney Repair. No job to Sm. Lic/Bond/Ins John 952-882-0775Â?612-875-1277

5270 Gutter Cleaning

V Lowell Russell V V Concrete V BBB A+ Rating Angies List Honor Roll

From the Unique to the Ordinary

Specializing in drives, patios & imprinted colored & stained concrete. Interior acid stained floors and counter tops. www.staincrete.com

Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â? To place your Classified Ad contact Elliot Carlson at: 952-392-6879 or email: elliot.carlson@ ecm-inc.com Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?Â?

5370 Painting & Decorating

No job too small!! Quality Work @ Competitive Prices! Roofing & Roof Repair

Ray 612-281-7077

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Ben’s Painting Int/Ext, Drywall Repair Paint/Stain/Ceilings. Visa/MC/Discvr., benspaintinginc.com

952-432-2605 DAVE’S PAINTING and WALLPAPERING Int/Ext • Free Est. • 23 Yrs. Will meet or beat any price! Lic/Ins Visa/MC 952-469-6800

5380 Plumbing SAVE MONEY Competent Master Plumber needs work. Lic# M3869. Jason 952-891-2490

5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs - 30 Yrs Exp Insured - Lic#20126880 John Haley #1 Roofer, LLC. Call 952-925-6156

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5370 Painting & Decorating

Handyman,Painting, Maintenance. Sm/Lg Odd Jobs. Ref/Ins. Bob 952-855-2550

3 Interior Rooms/$275 Wallpaper Removal. Drywall Repair. Cabinet Enameling and Staining. 30 yrs exp. Steve 763-545-0506

612-869-1177

5 Star Home Services

5110 Building & Remodeling

5170 Concrete/Masonry/WaterprooďŹ ng

5300 Heating & Cooling Services

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952-461-3710

5370 Painting & Decorating

Gutters â—† Soffit/Fascia TOPSIDE, INC.

5280 Handyperson

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1010-1070 1510-1580 2010-2080 2510-2520 3010-3090 3510-3630 4010-4030 4510-4650 5010-5440 5510-2280 6010

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

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

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• Wheels • Sporting • Farm • Pets • Announcements • Merchandise • Sales • Rentals/Real Estate • Services • Employment • Network Ads

SERVICES & POLICIES

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

Additional Lines $10.00 Ads will also appear on www.mnSun.com each Wednesday by 9:00 a.m.

Eden Prairie theadspider.com

Transportation

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

In Person:

INDEX

local classifieds

theadspider.com The Ad Spider is your source for local classiďŹ ed listings from over 200 Minnesota communities. Place your classiďŹ ed ad or announcement using our easy 4 step process and start getting responses today!


20A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters

5420 Tree Care & Stump Removal

A Family Operated Business

$0 For Estimate Timberline

5500 EMPLOYMENT

Tree & Landscape. Fall Discount - 25% Off

No Subcontractors Used

Tree Trimming, Tree Removal, Stump Grinding 612-644-8035 Remove Large Trees & Stumps CHEAP!!

ArborBarberTrees.com 612-703-0175 Mbr: BBB Trimming, Removal & Stump Grinding.

Tear-offs, Insurance Claims BBB A+, Free Est. A+ Angies List Lic # BC170064 Certified GAF Installer - 50 yr warranty. Ins. 952-891-8586

WANT ADS GET RESULTS

Thomas Tree Service

5410 Snow Removal

25 yrs exp./ Expert Climb. Immaculate Clean-up! Tree Removal/Trimming

CAYERING LAWN SERVICE • Snowplowing • Holiday Lighting • Bobcat Work Res. & Commercial Call Tim 952-212-6390

Lot Clearing/Stump Removal

Free Ests 952-440-6104

Child Care Providers

y Residential Plowing y

Advertise your openings in Sun•Thisweek Classifieds

Senior Discounts 15 Yrs Exp 952-994-3102

SNOW PLOWING Commercial & Residential Dependable - Insured - Exp’d

952-392-6888

LSC Construction Svcs, Inc Mbr: Better Business Bureau

5510 Full-time Case Manager RNWe are seeking a friendly, reliable RN to see our clients in Rosemount, Eagan, and Hastings. The position is 4days/week. No WEEKENDS. You would see 7 clients per day. Laptop provided. Call Rachelle 651-460-4201 with questions. Email resume to: rpariseau@rvhci.com

5510 Full-time

5510 Full-time

Bloomington Co seeks exp’d individual to work as part of our team. Phone & counter sales. Strong communication skills. Automotive background preferred. Great benefits. Fax or e-mail resume 952-881-6480 delegard@ delegardtool.com

5510 Full-time

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5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters

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5510 Full-time

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Snow Plowing

5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters

5510 Full-time

CUSTOMER SERVICE AUTOMOTIVE TOOL

Free Ests. 952-890-2403

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5510 Full-time

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5420 Tree Care & Stump Removal

5420 Tree Care & Stump Removal

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classifieds To Place Your Classified Ad

real estate • business services

In the community, With the community, For the community

Private Party Rates

Please call 952-392-6888 for business rates.

Merchandise Mover (CMM) $54.00

• 3 lines, 4 weeks, choose 2 zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • Merchandise $151.00 or more • Quick Post theadspider.com website

Garage Sales (CGS) $50

Contact Us Classified Phone Classified Fax

952-392-6888 952-941-5431

Ads may be placed Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. DEADLINE:

Transportation (CTRAN)

In Person:

By Phone: By FAX: By Mail:

$54

Mail order form to: Sun•Classifieds, 10917 Valley View Road • Eden Prairie, MN 55344 Or fax order form to: 952-941-5431 Deadline: Mondays at 3:00 pm - Earlier deadline on Holiday Weeks Note: Newsprint does not fax legibly, you must fax a photocopy of the completed order form below. Please use this order form when placing your Classified ads.

To Place Your Ad

• 4 lines, 2 weeks, All zones • Additional lines: $10.00 • FREE Garage Sale Kit available at one of our three offices - Or we can mail it to you for an additional $4.50 • Rain Insurance $2.00 • Quick Post theadspider.com website

Please Fill Out This Form Completely

Mondays at 3:00 pm* *Earlier on Holiday Weeks 952-392-6888 952-941-5431 10917 Valley View Road Eden Prairie, MN 55344 Attn: Classified Visit the Eden Prairie Classified Office

• Use the grid below to write your ad. • Please print completely and legibly to ensure the ad is published correctly.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Choose from the following 5 zones: n Sun•Sailor

• 3 lines, 4 weeks, choose 2 zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • Quick Post theadspider.com website

Chanhassen, Excelsior, Hopkins, Minnetonka, Plymouth, Shorewood, St. Louis Park, Wayzata

How to Pay

n Sun•Focus

Location

n Sun Thisweek

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

Apple Valley, Burnsville, Eagan, Lakeville, Rosemount, Farmington

10917 Valley View Road Eden Prairie, MN ď™ˆď™ˆď™†ď™‡ď™‡

n Sun•Current Central

Bloomington, Eden Prairie, Edina, Richfield

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

Columbia Heights, Fridley, Mounds View, New Brighton

n Sun•Post

Brooklyn Center, Brooklyn Park, Crystal, Golden Valley, New Hope, Robbinsdale

• Punctuate and space the ad copy properly. • Include area code with phone number. • 3 line minimum

Please fill out completely. Incomplete forms may not run. Amount enclosed: $________________________ Classification _____________________________ Date of Publication ________________________ Credit Card Info: n VISA n MasterCard n American Express n Discover Card # ____________________________________ Exp. Date __________________CID #__________ Name ____________________________________ Address __________________________________ __________________________________________ City ______________________ Zip ____________ Phone: (H) ________________________________

theadspider.com 884235 Private Party Form • March 2014

(W) ______________________________________


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 21A

5510 Full-time

5510 Full-time

DRIVER/ WAREHOUSE

FT. To deliver cabinetry & work in a warehouse environment loading & unloading trucks. Clean driving record req. Knowledge of the Twin Cities area helpful. Warehouse experience preferred. Health benefits, 401K & 2 weeks paid vacation. Immediate start. Apply in person at: DIVERSIFIED DIST., INC.

11921 Portland Ave S Ste A Burnsville, MN 55337 952-808-9649 pmortensen@ ddicabinets.com

Get your Auto Maintenance & Light Repair Certificate

Classes begin in Jan. at DCTC.

raegan@ goodwilleasterseals.org 651-379-5608

Learn English

or Get Your HS Diploma or GED!

Classes begin Jan. 5 ABE@district196.org 952-431-8316

TURN YOUR CAR INTO CASH!

Mid-States Distributing Company, Inc. the leading Farm, Ranch and Home Retail Cooperative is looking for: Product Data Specialist I- FT- Within Product Information Management Team, contact members and suppliers to collect product data for items that are available online and in stores. Qualifications include excellent communication skills, ability to multi-task, strong organizational skills and proficiency on MS Office programs (esp Excel) & in web platforms and web content management. Accounts Receivable Specialist I- FT- Process deposits, apply cash, resolve variances. Assist in claim resolution. Soft collections with strong customer service focus, ability to organize and prioritize. Proficient on Excel and Word, 10 key and keyboard accuracy. Strong attention to detail. Team environment. Requires min: Associate Acctg Degree & 2 yrs acctg exp. Competitive Salary, Excellent Benefits Package, Opportunities for Growth & Development, Convenient South Metro location off 494 and Pilot Knob Rd. Send resume to recruiter@msdist.com

5520 Part-time

Fantasy Gifts Sun•Thisweek Classifieds 952-392-6888 MENTAL HEALTH CTSS SKILLS WORKERS, BEHAVIORAL AIDES & CLINICAL TRAINEES, LICENSED MENTAL

Sales Clerk

Part Time Eves and weekends, set schedule. Burnsville Location 2125 Highway 13 W Applications at store or Send resume to: Michael@ fantasygifts.com

HEALTH PROFESSIONALS

Secure Base Counseling Center is looking for hardworking, compassionate, caring people to help children and their families learn skills. Positions available in Northfield, New Prague and our new Lakeville location. Skills position requires Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology or Social Work, experience in mental health field and/ or fluency in Spanish. SBCC is also hiring licensed mental health professionals and clinical trainees holding a Master’s degree in the field of psychology or social work and currently on a licensure track; requires willingness to work from an attachment perspective and from a team approach. Email jim@secure basecounselingcenter.com or call 507-301-3412 or send resume to: Secure Base Counseling Center 570 Professional Drive Northfield, MN 55057

House Cleaners $10+/hr-M-F -No Nights No Weekends. No Holidays- South Metro Call: 952-898-1560

You need it? We have it!

LOOK

to Sun•Thisweek Classifieds theadspider.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

5520 Part-time

5520 Part-time

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5520 Part-time

ROSEMOUNT

KinderCare Learning Centers is looking for enthusiastic Teachers who are interested in inspiring and educating young minds each day, KinderCare is a leader in Early Education and offers a great benefits package. All interested candidates should forward their resume & cover letter to 301531@klcorp.com or call Michelle 651-322-1998

Sun•Thisweek Classifieds

Community Living Options Stillwater Now Hiring For Direct Support Professionals, All Shifts Excellent Pay , Benefits Package + Annual Bonuses! 651-237-1087 or www.clo-mn.com Make A Difference In Someone’s Life!

WORK! 952.392.6888 5530 Full-time or Part-time At Home-Burnsville is hiring Supervisors & Associates. Apply online at: www. athome.com/careers Community Living Options Direct Support Professionals Various locations All shifts Assist in daily living needs

& community outings. Excellent Pay, Benefits + ANNUAL BONUS!

651-237-1087 www.clo-mn.com Make a difference in someone’s life!

hunting for a

Job? local classifieds

theadspider.com

Olepiper.com

Ole Piper 952-432-7111 16604 Cedar Ave S

5530 Full-time or Part-time

The Ad Spider is your source for local classiďŹ ed listings from over 200 Minnesota communities.

5530 Full-time or Part-time

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22A December 18, 2015 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Obituaries

theater and arts calendar To submit items for the Arts Calendar, email: darcy. odden@ecm-inc.com.

Laughs with Louie

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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: 651-688-0365. Comedy Steve Byrne and Isaac Witty, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Dec. 18 and 19, Mystic Lake Casino, Prior Lake. Tickets: $19. Mature audiences only. Information: 952-445-9000 or www.mysticlake.com. 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 800-9822787 or Ticketmaster.com. Exhibits “Inside, Outside, Upside Down� exhibit by the Minnesota Contemporary Quilters runs through Jan. 10 in the gallery at the Lakeville Area Arts Center, 20965 Holyoke Ave. Information: 952-9844640. Music The Bloomington Chorale presents its annual holiday concert “Everywhere Christmas Tonight� 7:30 p.m. Dec. 18 and 4 p.m. Dec. 19 at the Bloomington Center for the Arts – Schneider Theater. Tickets available at the box office (952-563-8575) or at the door. Information: www. bloomingtonchorale.com. “Home for the Holidays� featuring Honey Ribar, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 19, Eagan High School. Tickets for this fundraiser for EHS Theatre are $10-$13 at http:// w w w. s e a t y o u r s e l f . b i z / e a ganhs. “Christmas with Cantus� 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 612-4350055. Rocky Mountain Christmas: A Country Roads Special, 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 20, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $42-$62 at the box office, by phone at 800-982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com. Eagan High School holiday vocal music concerts, 6 and 7:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21, Eagan High School. Free. Eastview High School winter choral concerts, 6 and 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21, Eastview High School. Free. Farmington High School holiday concert featuring the wind ensemble and choirs, 6 and 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21, Farmington High School. Free. Lakeville North High School choir concerts, 6 and 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21, Lakeville North High School. Free. Rosemount High School choir concerts, 6 and 7:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21, Rosemount High School. Free. Girl Singers of the Hit Parade Christmas Show, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 22, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $21 at the box office, by phone at 800982-2787 or Ticketmaster. com. Jim Brickman, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 30, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $35-$70 at the box office, by phone at 800-982-2787 or Ticketmas-

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Famed Minnesota comic Louie Anderson is set to perform his stand-up act on New Year’s Eve at the Ames Center in Burnsville. Tickets for the 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 31, all-ages show range from $33 to $73, along with a $103 VIP ticket that includes a meet-and-greet with Anderson. Tickets are available at the Ames Center box office, 12600 Nicollet Ave., and through Ticketmaster online or 800-982-2787. (Photo submitted)

Student art on exhibit

An art exhibit by students from Rosemount’s Shannon Park Elementary is on display at the Robert Trail Library. The exhibit is part of an ongoing series spotlighting student artwork sponsored by the Rosemount Area Arts Council. Pictured at the Dec. 6 reception are, from left: Millette Avenido, Kiara Avenido, Shannon Park art teacher Stephanie Stahl and Leo Avenido. (Photo submitted) ter.com. Feed My Starving Children benefit concert with The Niskas, 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 31, Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, 13901 Fairview Drive, Burnsville. Tickets: $20 at http://popmn.org/ event/nye/. Theater “Turn of the Screw,� presented by Chameleon Theatre Circle, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 17-19; 2 p.m. Dec. 20, at Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $22 adults, $19 students and seniors, at Ticketmaster.com or 800-982-2787. “Into the Woods,� presented by Eastview High School, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 17-19, Eastview High School, 6200 140th St. W., Apple Valley. Tickets: $9 adults, $7 senior citizens, $5 students. Purchase online at http://www. evperformingarts.com/ticketinfo/ or at the box office one hour before the performance. OnStage 2015: The Envelope Please, presented by Rosemount High School, 7 p.m. Dec. 17-19 in the Per-

forming Arts Center, Rosemount High School, 3335 142nd St. W., Rosemount. Tickets: $9 adults, $7 seniors, $5 students. Visit www.district196.org/rhs/theatrearts for tickets. “Elf Jr. – The Musical,� presented by The Play’s The Thing Productions, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 18-19 and 26; 2 p.m. Dec. 20 and 27, at the Lakeville Area Arts Center, 20195 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville. Tickets: $14 at the arts center or www.LakevilleAreaArtsCenter.com. 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, 612-210-3377. 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, 651463-7833. 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, 952-255-8545 or jjloch@charter.net.

family calendar

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by candlelight; slide on the lit sledding hill, and warm up at the bonfire. Indoor activities include face painting, live animals, a storyteller and more. Ball drops at 7:59 p.m. Bring your own sleds and ice skates. gan Community Center, 1501 Snowshoe rental available. DinCentral Parkway. Information: ner provided by food trucks; www.cityofeagan.com/market- prices vary. All ages. Cost: $8 fest. if preregistered by Dec. 30; $10 Cat claw clipping clinic by at the door. Free for ages 5 and Feline Rescue Inc., 2-4 p.m., under. Register at www.dakoChuck & Don’s Pet Food Out- tacounty.us/parks/. let, 1254 Town Centre Drive, Eagan. All cats must be trans- Friday, Jan. 1 ported in a carrier for their Forever Wild Family Frisafety. Free. Information: http:// day: Fun on the Ice, 7-8:30 felinerescue.org/. p.m., Lebanon Hills Visitor Center, 860 Cliff Road, Eagan. Bring Sunday, Dec. 20 your own ice skates or try out “The Star of Bethlehem,� the Visitor Center’s kicksleds. presented by Challenger Learn- All ages. Free. Registration reing Center of Minnesota, 3:30- quested. Information: www. 4:30 p.m., Black Hawk Middle co.dakota.mn.us/parks/. School, 1540 Deerwood Drive, Eagan. Speaker: Terry Flow- Saturday, Jan. 2 er, Ph.D., professor emeritus Indoor Winter Farmers of mathematics and physics Market, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Eaat St. Catherine University. gan Community Center, 1501 Free presentation blends sci- Central Parkway. Information: ence and the holiday season. www.cityofeagan.com/marketRegistration requested at fest. https://www.facebook.com/ Stories in the Warming events/1657548637852102/. House, 1-2 p.m. in the skating Information: www.challeng- rink warming house at Cherermn.org. ryview Park, 7925 175th St. W., Lakeville. Heritage Library staff Sunday, Dec. 27 will present a program of fun Chili cook-off by the Rose- stories. Hot cocoa provided by mount VFW during the noon Lakeville Parks and Recreation. Vikings game, 2625 120th St. W., Rosemount. Entries are Ongoing free. Cash prizes for top three Emotions Anonymous entries. Buy a bowl of chili for meetings, 7:30-9 p.m. Tues$5. Meat raffles and beer spe- days at SouthCross Commucial also. nity Church, 1800 E. County Road 42 (at Summit Oak Drive), Thursday, Dec. 31 Apple Valley. EA is a 12-step New Year’s Eve party, 5-8 program for those seeking p.m., Lebanon Hills Regional emotional health. All are welPark, 860 Cliff Road, Eagan. come. Information: http://www. Ice skate, hike and snowshoe emotionsanonymous.org/out-

of-the-darkness-walks.

• Dec. 22, 12-6 p.m., Rosemount American Legion, 14401 Blood drives Biscayne Ave. W., Rosemount. The American Red Cross • Dec. 23, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., will hold the following blood Dunn Brothers, 15265 Galaxie drives. Call 1-800-RED CROSS Ave., Apple Valley. (1-800-733-2767) or visit red• Dec. 24, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., crossblood.org to make an ap- Culver’s, 3445 O’Leary Lane, pointment or for more informa- Eagan. tion. • Dec. 28, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 • Dec. 22, 12-6 p.m., Car- p.m., School of Environmental mike 15 Theatres, 15630 Cedar Studies, 12155 Johnny Cake Ave., Apple Valley. Ridge Road, Apple Valley. • Dec. 22, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., • Dec. 28, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Culver’s, 15225 Galaxie Ave., Wescott Library, 1340 Wescott Apple Valley. Road, Eagan.

From the Archives

Anyone who’s ever tried to get a restless pet to sit still for a photo portrait can appreciate the poise — and one might say gravitas — this feline brought to its big photo shoot. John Evert, of Apple Valley, submitted this image of a cat beneath a Christmas tree to Thisweek News in 1980 as part of the newspaper’s reader photo contest. It ran in the May 19, 1980, edition under the headline “Le Kat.�


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan December 18, 2015 23A

Thisweekend Holiday entertainment abounds south-of-the-river Ames Center, Lakeville Area Arts Center host Christmas shows

theater and arts briefs

by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Dakota County residents in search of holiday entertainment this month will find plenty of seasonal fare not too far from home. The Ames Center in Burnsville is continuing its monthlong run of holiday productions this weekend, starting with Lightwire Theater’s “A Very Electric Christmas� on Saturday, Dec. 19. “A Very Electric Christmas� will be performed in complete darkness with the Lightwire crew presenting its unique brand of “electroluminescent artistry� to tell the story of a young bird and his family as they begin their journey south for the winter, according to producers. Dancing toy soldiers, caroling worms and performing poinsettias light up the stage in the all-ages show, which includes holiday music by Nat King Cole, Mariah Carey and Tchaikovsky. The following day, on Dec. 20, John Denver tribute artist Jim Curry will present “Rocky Mountain Christmas� on the Ames Center’s main stage. The familyoriented concert celebrates Grammy-winner Denver’s hit songs along with music from his 1975 Christmas album. The holiday music

Cole Spanovich

Local boy in ‘Charlie Brown Christmas’

John Denver tribute artist Jim Curry is set to present “Rocky Mountain Christmas� on Dec. 20 at the Ames Center in Burnsville. The family-oriented concert celebrates Grammy-winner Denver’s hit songs along with music from his 1975 Christmas album. (Photo submitted) continues at the Ames Center on Dec. 22 when the Girl Singers of The Hit Parade present their Christmas concert. Three vocalists and trio of backing musicians will present a “fun-filled, nostalgic show� featuring the music of the Lennon Sisters, Andrew Sisters and McGuire Sisters, along with an array of other 1950s Christmas favorites, according to organizers. Jim Brickman, an adult-contemporary pianist and songwriter, is bringing his 2015 holiday tour, “Comfort and Joy,� to the Ames Center on Dec. 30. The two-time Grammy nominee will showcase holiday songs and his original music. Tickets for all the

The Girl Singers of The Hit Parade will present their Christmas concert — featuring music of the Lennon SisLakeville actor and ters, Andrew Sisters and McGuire Sisters, along with an array of other 1950s Christmas favorites — on Dec. 22 singer Cole Spanovich plays “Re-Run� in Stages at the Ames Center. (Photo submitted) Theatre Company’s prothis weekend and next. teens and children. Show duction of “A Charlie Presented by Lakeville- times are 7:30 p.m. Dec. Brown Christmas.� Rebased The Play’s The 18-19 and 26, and 2 p.m. Run is Linus and Lucy’s Thing Productions, the Dec. 20 and 27. Tickets little brother. Spanovich is a sixthshow follows Buddy, a are $14 and are availhuman raised as one of able at www.Lakevil- grader at Century Middle Santa’s elves, who goes leAreaArtsCenter.com, School in Lakeville. The play runs through in search of his human or during business hours father. at the arts center located Dec. 29 at Stages Theatre The TPTT produc- at 20965 Holyoke Ave. in Company, 1111 Mainstreet, Hopkins. Tickets tion of “Elf Jr.� marks Lakeville. can be purchased at www. the regional premiere of the musical, which fea- Email Andrew Miller at stagestheatre.org. tures a cast of about 35 andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.

Ames Center shows are available at the Ames Center box office, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville, and through Ticketmaster online or 800-9822787. “Elf Jr.: The Musical,� a stage adaptation of the 2003 Christmas comedy film starring Will Ferrell, continues its run at the Lakeville Area Arts Center with shows

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