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www.SunThisweek.com NEWS New Lakeville superintendent District 194 Director of Business Services Michael Baumann has been selected as the new superintendent. Page 9A

White doctor, wrong message A University of Minnesota Medical School billboard sends the wrong message, writes columnist Joe Nathan. Page 4A

THISWEEKEND

April 28, 2017 | Volume 38 | Number 9

Food co-op’s guiding light will retire McGaughey leaving Valley Natural Foods in October by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

OPINION

A Division of ECM Publishers, Inc.

Burnsville | Eagan

Susan McGaughey, a young Apple Valley mother influenced by the “health food� ethos of the time, ambled into a job at Valley Natural Foods 37 years ago. McGaughey will leave the Burnsville-based co-op as a leader in the member cooperative grocery field and the person most associated with Valley’s fourdecade success story. Valley’s board announced this month that McGaughey will retire as general manager at the end of October, when the co-op will mark its 40th anniversary. “She really is Valley Natural Foods in terms of what it’s been the last 40

ley, and it’s Susan — they know who Susan is and what she’s done,� Nauertz said. “But she doesn’t tout that. She’s never going to tout that. It’s not her style.� McGaughey first visited Valley Natural Foods after moving to Apple Valley with her husband, Roger, the first art teacher at Apple Valley High School. It was a front-porch storefront at the old Huddleston’s grocery in Lakeville where customers used $5 coupons to buy natural and organic foods in bulk, said McGaughey, who discovered it through Welcome Wagon. Some customers, McGaughey said, were parents with children on the Feingold diet, which Photo by John Gessner purported a link between Susan McGaughey, general manager of Valley Natural Foods, stood in the co-op’s food additives and hyperproduce aisle. She will retire in October after 37 years of working for the co-op. activity. Some liked the friendyears,� said Michelle Nau- successor. ops and the National environmentally ertz, a past board chair McGaughey is also a Co+op Grocers organiza- lier bulk packaging. Mcand leader of the commit- leader and mentor among tion, Nauertz said. See CO-OP, 11A tee seeking McGaughey’s the Twin Cities’ nine co“You mention Val-

Poet featured at library event Rosemount poet Vicki Mickelson will discuss her book “Island Attitudes� at a May 2 event at the Robert Trail Library. Page 17A

SPORTS

Photo submitted Photo submitted Minnesota State Trooper Paul Kingery rescued an eagle from the side of Interstate 35E April 16 in Eagan. It was The Renn family of Eagan had a unique forest, complete with stream and waterfall the second eagle he rescued off an interstate in Eagan in built in their backyard, which won a 2017 award from the Minnesota Nursery and Landscape Association as it fits a key landscape trend of using locally sourced, native 13 months. materials.

Trooper helps eagles in Eagan

Skaters take to the ice Burnsville-Minnesota Valley Figure Skating Club members will take part in the annual Impressions on Ice show this weekend. Page 10A

PUBLIC NOTICE Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek is the officials newspaper for the cities of Burnsville and Eagan and school districts 191 and 196. Public Notices are on Page 12A.

INDEX Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 10A Public Notices . . . . . . 12A Classifieds . . . . . . . . . 13A Announcements . . . . 16A

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Kingery assists injured eagles 13 months apart by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Minnesota State Patrol’s mission is to protect and serve, which sometimes includes birds of prey. State Trooper Paul Kingery has rescued two bald eagles found injured on the interstate in Eagan during his career. “It’s a unique situation,� he said. “One that I didn’t think would happen twice in his career.� Kingery responded to a report of an eagle that was hit by a car along Interstate 35E in Eagan near Pilot Knob Road at about 8:30 a.m. April 16, which was Easter morning. The eagle was standing on the shoulder facing traffic obviously immobile with a possible broken wing, Kingery said. “It seemed to me that I could use the inside of a coat to pick it up and protect myself,� Kingery said. “I found out that was the proper way to do it.�

The eagle was transported to the University of Minnesota Raptor Center. Despite the best efforts of Kingery and the Raptor Center, the eagle had to be euthanized. Rescuing an eagle is not something for which he received formal training, but he’s been in this situation before. Kingery helped rescue an eagle off Interstate 494 near the Pilot Knob exit in Eagan in March 2016. The eagle was named Trooper. After it was treated, the eagle was released back into the wild by Kingery. “It was a neat experience,� Kingery said. “I’m grateful the (Raptor Center) allowed me to do that.� He’s assisted with injured animals before such as deer and turkey, but it’s rare an eagle ends up in custody. Kingery said he’s only heard of one other Minnesota state trooper coming to an eagle’s rescue, so it’s rare that he’s helped two eagles. The Minnesota River, See EAGLES, 12A

Eagan yard wins landscaping award by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

When the Renn family sits in their backyard in their Eagan neighborhood, it feels like they’ve escaped to the Northwoods. “It reminds us of camping on the North Shore,� homeowner Toni Renn said. “We have a favorite spot right on the Baptism River where we wake up to the sound of the river.� Other people like the Renns’ backyard

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Park, trail open up riverfront to hikers, bikers and birders Burnsville will hold grand opening by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

After two years of work, a new park and trail in Burnsville are fully open, offering unprecedented access to the city’s riverfront. The $2.5 million project includes the city’s newest park, Minnesota Riverfront Park east of Interstate 35W on Black Dog Road. See RIVER, 11A

Photo by John Gessner

Picnic areas are available at Burnsville’s Minnesota Riverfront Park on Black Dog Road.

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too, so much so that it won an award. The backyard’s architect from Southview Design won the 2017 “Going Native� award from the Minnesota Nursery and Landscape Association earlier this year. Before the makeover, the Renns’ backyard was filled with sandy soil, it had erosion issues and little room to play. Southview Design landscape architect Meg Arnosti designed a naturalis-


2A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Longtime Mexican restaurant owner dies Octaviano ‘Otis’ Trujillo was in the business for 40 years by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Octaviano “Otis� Trujillo, the longtime owner of La Fonda de Los Lobos Mexican restaurant, died on April 15 from complications due to cancer. He was 73. Trujillo was known for his friendly demeanor and providing a restaurant experience that was many things to many people. With a main-level family dining room above the lower-level sports bar and gaming area, many people remember good times and good food at the restaurant that went through a few name changes since it originally opened in 1976. “Providing jobs for local people and being part of the community has been the most rewarding part of owning La Fonda,� Trujillo said in a 2016 Sun Thisweek story to mark the restaurant’s 40th year. “It’s become my passion. It’s all I do.� He’s provided jobs to longtime employees along with college students and single parents who used it as a stepping stone to other jobs. The family said on the restaurant’s Facebook page: “It is with great, heart-felt sadness that the La Fonda fam-

ily and our community lost our owner, mentor, friend and father, Otis Trujillo, on Saturday evening after a short, courageous, hard-fought battle with cancer.� The family asked for privacy at this time, but added the business will stay open. “As Otis would wish, we are open regular hours and will be happy to see everyone who visits. We are just having a hard time wrapping our heads around our emotions, so answering a lot of questions will be hard.� They said details about a public celebration of Trujillo’s life are pending. “And it will be a party,� they said. “Again, it’s the only way Otis would want it.� The Facebook post had been responded to by more than 650 messages of support within a few days after it was published. Many used extended comments or anecdotes, describing him as a sweet, kind, loving and generous man. The 2016 newspaper story said Trujillo opened La Fonda de Acebo in 1976 with a group of business partners as a part of a chain of 13 restaurants. In 1981, Trujillo’s partners bought him out and he moved to Denver, where he opened sev-

File photo

Octaviano “Otis� Trujillo, the longtime owner of La Fonda de Los Lobos Mexican restaurant, died on April 15 from complications due to cancer. He was 73. eral Mexican restaurants called He continued to live in DenLos Lobos. ver and run his businesses there In 1992, his former partners for about 10 years. In 2002 went bankrupt, and Trujillo he sold those restaurants and bought La Fonda back, chang- moved to the Eagan area to foing its name to La Fonda de Los cus on La Fonda. Lobos. When La Fonda opened its “I decided to give it another doors in 1976, Cedarvale Mall Contact Tad Johnson at tad.johngo because I still had the desire was a new state-of-the-art strip son@ecm-inc.com or at twitter. to make it work,� he said in the mall, Highway 13 was a two- com/editorTJ. 2016 story. lane road and the city of Eagan

Retro Run 5K set May 13 Burnsville Women of Today holds its fifth annual Retro 5K Run Walk 8:30 a.m. Saturday, May 13, at Crystal Lake Beach Park in Burnsville. Event proceeds benefit the organization’s Youth of Today High School Scholarship Fund. The Retro 5K is a fun run walk for all ages. Pets and strollers are welcome. All registered participants receive a neo-

prene insulated water bottle. Dress in fun, retro attire to win a prize. Burnsville Mayor Elizabeth Kautz will serve as honorary emcee for the event. Cost is $25 for adults or virtual runner/ walkers; $20 for children 12 and under. For race information and to register, go to www.burnsvillewomenoftoday. com or www.active.com.

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was just 2 years old. Much has changed over the past four decades, and La Fonda has made a few changes to keep up with the times, but its soul has remained the same. That soul is the cooking of recipes from Trujillo’s mother, Mama Feloniz, who is featured on the restaurant’s website. “Our menu and customer service has stayed the same,� Trujillo said in 2016. “And this is what brings people back and turns people into loyal customers.� Trujillo’s business has endured the economic ups and downs of the Cedarvale and now Cedar Grove area, whose center is just southwest of La Fonda on Highway 13. Prior to redevelopment efforts to build Twin Cities Premium Outlets along with other commercial and residential projects, the Cedarvale Mall went vacant and the area’s vitality declined. But Trujillo and the business persevered, and his effort to improve the business kept it a vital part of the area.

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Hansen elected as president of Metro Cities Council member will advocate for local control by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Eagan City Council Member Gary Hansen was elected president of Metro Cities, the Association of Metropolitan Municipalities, at the organization’s annual meeting in St. Paul earlier this month. He said in an email that he appreciates the members’ support and the opportunity. He served as vice president over the past year, so he feels prepared. His overriding goal for Metro Cities is to continue to represent the shared interests of its members before the Minnesota Legislature and Metropolitan Council. He wants to empower local governments. He said Metro Cities often advocates against leg-

islation that would restrict local control. He said legislation that would restrict local law enforcement along with a city’s ability to enact ordinances and fee structures, would negatively affect a city like Eagan. Among them are proposals that would “allow unfettered access to public rights of way and eliminate a city’s ability to manage them,� Hansen said. “Such proposals would negatively impact local officials’ ability to perform their responsibilities and their ability to appropriately address local needs,� Hansen said. A Metro Cities Board member since 2014, Hansen has been active on the Governance, Metropolitan Agencies, and Transportation and General Govern-

ment committees. He also serves as a Metro Cities appointee to the Transportation Advisory Board, which coordinates regional transportation and transit initiatives with the Metropolitan Council. “Through the work of the Transportation and General Government Committee, of which I am a member, Metro Cities is advocating for comprehensive, dedicated long-term funding of transportation and transit in the metro region,� Hansen said. Metro Cities represents 91 member cities, comprising more than 90 percent of the region’s population, before the Metropolitan Council, Legislature, and Governor’s Office. . Contact Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 3A

News Briefs 2nd District DFL convention set May 6 The 2nd Congressional District DFL will hold its convention Saturday, May 6, at Falcon Ridge Middle School, 12900 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. Registration will begin at 9 a.m. Party officers will be elected at the convention, which begins at 11 a.m. A Progressive Action Fair will be held in conjunction with the convention beginning at 9 a.m. The fair will offer an opportunity for grassroots activist groups to meet DFLers and participate in training opportunities. Fifth Congressional District Rep. Keith Ellison will be the featured speaker.

Artwork sought for International Festival The International Festival of Burnsville and the Ames Center are seeking artwork to display at the seventh annual IFB “Cultural Perspectives� art exhibition. This year’s theme, “A Global Family,� calls for artists to depict family, community or cultural connections, at home or across the globe. Artists are asked to relay a cultural craft, tradition or value, whether symbolic or realistic in nature. To display artwork in the Ames Center gallery, submit your response and photo of titled work to margosvolunteers@gmail.com by Tuesday, May 30. Include your choice of medium and dimensions. If the work is for sale, list the dollar value. For more information, text 612-308-9038. The exhibit will feature two-dimensional art of any media and freestanding or pedestal-mounted three-dimensional work, including sculptures, textiles and photographs. Artwork selection is based on relevance to the theme, and artistic excellence will be noted during a panel review. The Ames Center gallery provides wall hardware for hanging art pieces, a level tool, measuring tape and lighting.

Bike sale to benefit Kids ’n Kinship Apple Valley resident Rick Anderson is set to host his ninth annual bike sale to benefit Kids ’n Kinship, a local youth mentoring program, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 13, at Superior Service Center, 14580 Glenda Drive, Apple Valley. This is right at the Red Line’s 147th Street bus stop. There will be more than 300 bikes for sale, ranging in price from $30 to $300, with models available for all ages and skill levels. Anyone who purchases a bike can register to win one of two $25 gift certificates for Famous Dave’s BBQ restaurant in Apple Valley. Throughout the year, Anderson and other volunteers gather and tune up donated bikes for the sale, with all proceeds going to Kids ’n Kinship, an organization with which Anderson has served as a youth mentor. Monetary donations to Kids ’n Kinship will be accepted on site.

Recycle boat wrap Dakota County residents can recycle boat wrap for free through May 31 at Lighthouse Motorsports and Marine in Rosemount. The type of plastic used to wrap boats requires special handling and should not be placed with regular recycling. Residents can drop off boat wrap at Lighthouse Motorsports and Marine, located at 3316 151st St. W., during regular business hours. Call Lighthouse Motorsports and Marine at 651-322-4420

before dropping off boat wrap. Remove all straps, cords, rocks and gravel. Transhield covers and fabric liners, including plastic wrap with fabric, are not accepted. In 2016, Dakota County collected and recycled 1,760 pounds of boat wrap from marina operations. Collected material is taken to a special processor that can recycle the bulky plastic, which is turned into new plastic products.

city limits or those that directly assist residents of the city of Burnsville. To participate in PSA Day: • Sign up online at www.burnsville.tv/ psa. • Choose one of three pre-designed style options. • Submit logos, photos, script, etc. • Spend 40 minutes at the BCTV studio on June 7 to record the PSA. Registration deadline is 4 p.m. Wednesday, May 31. For more information or to register, visit www.burnsville. Burnsville’s McNeal tv/psa. For questions, call Tina Wilson, receives certification community television operations specialMegan (Margaret) McNeal, deputy ist, at 952-641-1354. city clerk and executive assistant for the city of Burnsville, recently became certi- Plant sale set May 20 fied as a Minnesota Certified Municipal Sweet Sioux Garden Club will hold a Clerk through Minnesota Clerks & Finance Officers Association’s certification plant sale 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, May 20, in the parking lot at Faith Covenant program. To become a certified, applicants are Church, 12921 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. The sale features perennials from required to be a MCFOA member for members’ gardens, perennials from at least three years, to have completed extensive education programs, and to af- South Cedar Greenhouse and combo firm that they believe in and practice the kits from Wagner Greenhouse. Proceeds will provide scholarships to college and association’s code of ethics. Those hoping to become certified also university horticulture students through require experience serving a municipality the National Garden Clubs of Minneeither with elections, human resources sota. management, general management, meeting administration, execution of of- Native Plant Market in ficial documents, records management, financial management or management Burnsville Burnsville will hold its third annual of legal instruments. McNeal is one of the 40 newly certi- Native Plant Market 9 a.m. to noon Satfied MCMCs throughout the state whom urday, May 20, in the parking lot across the League of Minnesota Cities recog- from City Hall, 100 Civic Center Parknizes for their commitment to profes- way. The sale will be open for both resisional development. For more informa- dents and nonresidents. Native wildflowers, ferns and grasses tion, visit www.lmc.org. will be for sale from multiple vendors at this farmer’s market-style event. Cinco de Mayo The sale will be held rain or shine. Only cash or checks will be accepted – fundraiser for fire no credit cards. The market area will be department closed to the public before 9 a.m. Arbors at Ridges, 13897 Community Exhibitors at the sale will include the Drive, Burnsville, will again host a Cinco Burnsville Natural Resources Departde Mayo-themed lunch benefiting the ment, Master Gardeners of Dakota Burnsville Fire Department 11 a.m. to 1 County and the Dakota County Soil & p.m. Thursday, May 4. Water Conservation District. Event proceeds will be used to purFor more information on nachase new CPR mannequins for use dur- tive plants and the Native Plant ing community CPR classes. Market, visit www.burnsville.org/ Lunch will include tacos, chips, salsa, nativeplants. churros and non-alcoholic margaritas. Members of the Burnsville Fire Department, as well as live entertainment, will Burnsville drug drop be on hand. box moving temporarily Tickets are $5 for adults and $2 for The Burnsville Police Department’s children. Raffle tickets also will be avail- prescription drug drop box will be movable. ing temporarily on May 1 to the Eagan Last year, the event raised $2,500 for Police Department, 3830 Pilot Knob the department to purchase rehabilita- Road. The box is being moved in prepation supplies for Burnsville’s emergency ration for construction at the Burnsville responders. police station, 100 Civic Center Parkway. For more information on the fundResidents wanting to use the box in raiser, contact Arbors at Ridges at 952- Burnsville are asked to do so on or be898-3288. For more information on the fore the weekend of April 29. The box Burnsville Fire Department, visit www. will not be staffed on Saturday, April 29, burnsville.org/fire. but the Police Department lobby is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The drop box is provided in partnerBCTV offers free PSAs ship with the Burnsville Police DepartLocal nonprofit organizations are invited to the Burnsville Community ment, Dakota County Sheriff’s Office, Television (BCTV) studio for I Love Dakota County Attorney’s Office and Burnsville PSA Day 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Dakota County Environmental ManageWednesday, June 7, Room C214 (second ment Office. Here are guidelines for dropping off floor), Burnsville High School, 600 E. Highway 13, Burnsville. PSAs are public prescription drugs. • Do not leave medicines outside the service announcements. box. BCTV is offering PSA Day to help • If the box is full, take your prescripnonprofit organizations spread the word tions with you. about who they are and the work they do. • Drop-off is safe and anonymous. No In addition to playing on BCTV Channel ID is required and no questions will be 14, finished videos will be provided free asked. to the organizations to use in their mar• Use a marker to cross out your name keting, on their websites or to post on on the medicine containers. social media and YouTube channels. Qualifying nonprofit organizations include those located within Burnsville

• Keep creams, gels, liquids and powders in their original container. • If it is not in the original bottle, write the name of the medicine on the container. The drop box will likely return once construction is complete. For more information on Dakota County’s prescription drug drop-off program, visit www. dakotacountysheriff.org and click the “Servicesâ€? tab.

Little to host autismfocused town hall Sen. Matt Little, DFL-Lakeville, will host a town hall focusing on autism 1-3 p.m. Saturday, April 29, in conjunction with Autism Society of Minnesota and The Arc Minnesota as well as the Greater Twin Cities chapter. The town hall will be at Heritage Library, 20085 Heritage Drive, Lakeville. Individuals and family members affected by autism and other intellectual or developmental disabilities are invited for discussion, stories and legislative-related news. Sponsoring organizations will share resources about their programs and any upcoming events. No pre-registration is required. Those unable to attend can share input with Little at sen.matt.little@senate. mn or 651-296-5252.

Job Transitions Group meets Abby Doyle will present “Success for the Seasoned Search – The Benefit of Being Overqualified� at the May 2 meeting of the Easter Job Transitions Group. The group meets at 7:30 a.m. at Easter Lutheran Church – By The Lake, 4545 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan. Call 651-452-3680 for information.

Former Lakeville resident selected for Fishing Hall of Fame Former Lakeville resident of 37 years Terry Tuma was inducted into the Minnesota Fishing Hall of Fame on March 24. The Little Falls-based Minnesota Fishing Museum Hall of Fame enshrined Tuma and other inductees in its 2017 class at the Northwest Sportshow in Minneapolis. The hall selected Tuma and two other anglers, plus two Legendary Organizations, for enshrinement because of their lasting impact on Minnesota freshwater fishing. Joining Tuma in the 2017 class are longtime fishing editor Doug Stange, plus professional walleye angler Perry Good. The Burger Brothers Sporting Goods and Clam Corporation will join the ranks of Legendary Organizations. Based in the Brainerd Lakes area, the Hall of Fame annually recognizes up to three individuals and two groups or organizations that have made a major impact on Minnesota’s sport fishing industry. Inductees must be a state resident, have lived in Minnesota for a minimum of 25 years, be at least 50 years of age, and have made meritorious contributions to the sport of fishing.

Garden Club plant sale Apple Valley Garden Club will hold its plant sale 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 20, at Redwood Park Pavilion located at County Road 42 and Elm Drive in Apple Valley.

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4A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Opinion U of M Medical School sending flawed, unfortunate messages by Joe Nathan SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

A University of Minnesota Medical School advertising campaign is sending flawed, unfortunate messages. The university hopes to encourage students to apply to medical school, increase public support and generate more money. However, as St. Paul interim Superintendent John Thein told me via email last week, “We expect better.” My concerns started when a female University of Minnesota Medical School graduate and a practicing physician pointed out a U of M billboard across the street from Children’s Hospital in St. Paul. It proclaims, “Our graduates become your doctors.” One doctor is pictured: a white male. There’s nothing wrong with showing a white man, university graduate and doctor. But that billboard easily also could have shown several university graduatesdoctors, male and female, representing different races and communities. I showed a picture of the billboard to Lee-Ann Stephens, 2006 Minnesota Teacher of the Year who works in the St. Louis Park Public Schools. Stephens is African-American. She responded: “This billboard is sending an unintentional message that doctors are white

Sun Thisweek Columnist

Joe Nathan males; therefore, there is no need for anyone other than a white male to apply to the U of M Medical School. Although that may not be the intent, it’s the impact that really matters. This is steeped in structural racism. St. Paul is a diverse community and this mono-racial billboard doesn’t honor the beauty of that diversity at all.” Stephens explained that she showed the billboard to one of her black female students who wants to be a doctor. “She said that it tells her that she can’t be a doctor. This young lady is earning her IB diploma, takes all AP and IB classes, has a 3.93 (GPA) and is heavily involved in the school’s community. That’s the message that this accomplished teen is receiving,” Stephens said. Thein, who is white, wrote: “The U of M is sending the wrong message to our students, their parents and the larger community. I know the U of M is focusing on recruiting people of color to their programs. ... A picture is worth a million

words.” In an email statement to me, Ann Aronson, the University’s chief marketing officer, wrote, “The Medical School’s current advertising proudly reflects the diverse and inclusive medical school community.” University officials sent me four more pictures that are being used on billboards, light rail and digital ads. Two include women. All four contain pictures of people of color – all Asian-American. I asked university officials several times why American Indian, AfricanAmerican, or Hispanic or Latino doctors weren’t depicted. They did not respond by this column’s deadline. Louis Porter II, executive director of the Council for Minnesotans of African Heritage, did respond. He wrote: “By now, it should be obvious to those doing marketing and advertising that diversity and inclusion are essential to their work. Yet, a casual look at many ads still reveals way too many pictures that fail to reflect the increasing numbers of people of color and indigenous people now populating this state and entering virtually all fields. For many years, research has shown the dangers of subtle messages that put limits on people and what they can achieve. Intentionality is critical.” Sia Her, executive director of the Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans, explained: “Too often, we see young peo-

ple of color not even considering pursuing these professional careers because of too few examples of people, particularly women, of color achieving success around them. As institutions, the responsibility is ours to encourage young people of color to pursue these STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) careers until there comes such a time that they are surrounded by physicians, scientists and engineers that reflect their own experiences.” One positive step toward this time is a University of Minnesota mentorship program involving high school students and some of the university’s medical students. (More information about that is here: http://bit.ly/2oNXzTr.) And Naomi McDonald, Medical School communications director, and who is African-American, told me that future billboards will be more diverse. I hope this happens. I think U of M officials also should ask a diverse group of high school educators and students to help them plan outreach campaigns. As Thein said, “We expect better.” Joe Nathan, formerly a Minnesota public school teacher, administrator and PTA president, is director of the Center for School Change. Reactions are welcome at joe@ centerforschoolchange.org. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Rotarians reuse, recycle furniture for those in need by Don Heinzman SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Recently a woman said sadly that she put her used furniture on the curb to be picked up by city workers, only to have it ruined by an overnight rain. For the last 20 years, the Shakopee Rotary Club has sponsored a program other cities could copy that would solve that woman’s problem of ruined furniture. This year the club will sponsor a used furniture pickup while cooperating with the city of Shakopee’s Clean Up Day on April 29. On that day residents can take their housewares and used furniture to the city’s garage area where Rotarians

Sun Thisweek Columnist

Don Heinzman will load useable furniture and other household items into a huge semitrailer, provided by Bridging. This well-known agency accepts useable furniture items and then warehouses and provides them to people in need who have been referred by area service agencies. At the same time, Shakopee Rotarians, using donated vans, also pick up

used furniture at residents’ homes. Lee Hennen, a Shakopee Rotarian, directs the service project. He says the annual furniture pickup works because of the excellent cooperation of the city of Shakopee. The city handles all the advertising and provides the collection facility in conjunction with Clean Up Day. Hennen said that due to the city’s cooperation, it costs the Rotary Club only $100 to operate the furniture collection. Over the last 20 years, Hennen figures Rotarians have filled 30 semitrailers with furniture items. He said this is a project other cities could copy, particularly if they received cooperation from their city government. Hennen would be glad to talk to anyone

interested in starting a furniture pickup; he can be called at 612-968-4382. He particularly invites Rotary clubs to sponsor a used furniture collection. “Everyone is a winner,” he said. Before you place your still useable furniture on the curb during these annual citywide pickups, stop and think of how someone in your community could sit on your used but reliable couch if you would only take it to an agency that could make it available for some needy family. Don Heinzman is a columnist for ECM Publishers Inc. Send comments to editor. sun@ecm-inc.com. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Letters Destroying the rights of law abiding citizens To the editor: We the People are being shafted and have been shafted by individuals who are government employees. This is being accomplished by either, to a large extent, being elected or appointed to positions in our educational system. All of them seem to subscribe to what is laughingly referred to as progress. Too many of them have and are promoting acts of violence against our Constitution. Ostensibly they claim to engage in promoting it. However it is evident by now that they are promoting anarchy. Reflecting on the recent riots, and other acts of violence, it is obvious by now that their “rights” turns out to be the destruction of ours, the “normal” law abiding American citizens. All this is aided and abetted by some people charged with enforcing our laws. To a large extent our, primarily liberal,

media is complicit in this travesty of justice. When individuals clad in “ninja” disguises smash, burn and destroy private property, with police looking on, the obvious conclusion is that we have an anarchistic segment in our country bent on violating the Constitution and instilling fear in the American citizen. Not a day goes by when we are not being inundated with assertions that illegal “undocumented” individuals invading our country are really good people adding to our taxes e.g. being are real asset. We are being told to ignore the breaking of our laws in favor of only considering the “beneficial” aspects of adding to the tax coffers. Without going into multifaceted details, it is a real stretch to confirm the net tax benefit. No, any country that is prevented from asserting its sovereignty has given up its rights and is subject to anarchy and ultimate take over by a hostile entity. The last eight years are a perfect example of

either benign neglect or intentional “governing” to put America in a precarious position globally speaking. The present hot spots, Iran, North Korea to mention the worst offenders, are the most obvious evidence of malicious neglect by the previous government. Let the present government be guided by divine oversight. HENRY JANDEWERTH Eagan

Stakes are high for the Earth To the editor: I read the April 13 guest column by the Eagan High School graduate who Marched for Science at the Capitol on Earth Day, April 22. She’s a graduate of Eagan High School, going for her Ph.D. in Boston, and she marched like a lot of us around the country. I was with a group of people from Burnsville and Eagan, who marched from the St. Paul Cathedral. Speakers talked

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.

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John Gessner | BURNSVILLE NEWS/MANAGING EDITOR | 952-846-2031 | john.gessner@ecm-inc.com Andy Rogers | EAGAN NEWS | 952-846-2027 | andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com Mike Shaughnessy | SPORTS | 952-846-2030 | mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com Mike Jetchick | AD SALES | 952-846-2019 | mike.jetchick@ecm-inc.com 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 & PRESIDENT ........ Marge Winkelman GENERAL MANAGER........................... Mark Weber BURNSVILLE/DISTRICT 191 EDITOR .. John Gessner EAGAN EDITOR.................................. Andy Rogers DISTRICT 196 NEWS ..........................Tad Johnson

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

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about electric vehicles, the health effects of air pollution, and business prospects for alternative fuels. District 51 Sen. Jim Carlson and 2016 state Senate candidate Phil Sterner said hello and shook our hands. Six months ago, 2nd District DFL candidate Angie Craig said some things that make sense. Craig advocated cleaning up our worsening air quality. It sounded like common sense and I was glad somebody was talking about it in the congressional election. I saw banners and placards at the March. Folks carried a sign from Burnsville Indivisible, others had posters for Citizens Climate Lobby, and the Environmental Caucus. I think there a lot possible in the challenge of a warmer climate. Marchers heard from Patty O’Keefe, who works with a project to return carbon pollution to 350 parts per million. School science teachers talked about their students and professors. There were youngsters who themselves may have the greatest stake in clean air and water for our future. Some people championed conservation practices, projects to reduce the shrinkage of glaciers, and growing employment from green industries. Farmers discussed plowing techniques friendly to the atmosphere, lowtillage, and other moneymakers and -savers. I look forward to what science and continued communication breakthroughs can bring us in years to come. NANCY HALL Eagan

Russian meddling To the editor: I have delayed responding to a most befuddling letter to the editor sent to these papers from two weeks past and authored by Nika Davies of Apple Valley. In her letter Davies

expressed indignation that U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis had no town hall meeting regarding ostensible Russian meddling in U.S. elections. Never mind that ongoing CIA and FBI investigations in the matter are not completed. Nor has there been evidence that Russia either influenced the elections or whom they preferred in any of the races. Furthermore, the ongoing tensions between these powers would indicate neither side has any sub-rosa agreements that are mutually beneficial. In fact, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has said that our relations with Russia are at an all time low. Does Davies really think that our president is beholden to President Putin for any favors extended? However, I agree that Lewis should hold a town hall meeting so that Davies and the other 11 whom she identified can have their curiosity satiated and go home as wiser and more humble citizens. RICHARD IFFERT Eagan

Don’t choose profits over people

sold for profit and when the borrowers default, we the taxpayers bail out these lenders. Our taxes guarantee their profits. We have seen industry over the centuries pollute the air and water we breathe and drink causing cancers and lung disease. We die or get sick for their profits and growth. We have watched the oil and gas industry get billions of dollars in our taxpayer subsidies and industries pump carbon dioxide and methane gas into the atmosphere doing business. The resultant global warming is causing the destruction of life as we know it on our planet through drought and starvation leading to political instability in vulnerable parts of the world with resultant rebellion and war. The forced desperate migrations of millions upon millions of refugees fleeing death and violence invariably impacts our lives here. We face the consequences of increasing floods, rising tides, hurricanes, forest fires, and water shortages from climate change driven by unregulated growth and carbon pollution which will price us out of insurance for our homes and property and cost us taxpayers millions in federal disaster relief. Unfettered business growth purely for the sake of profit will not solve our problems but rather will lead to decreased quality of life for our families and our communities and set us back to the days of the robber barons, polluted cities, and conditions which led to the Great Depression and the Great Recession when industrialists and financiers ruled with little concern for working men and women. A rising tide of business prosperity will not be worth it if the price is a falling quality of life in the 2nd District.

To the editor: In the April 14 Sun Thisweek, U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis was quoted as saying “Economic growth solves almost all the problems ... It’s all about making commerce and business flow more smoothly and getting a rising tide of prosperity in the 2nd District.” The underlying assumption here is that the free market and profit motive has at its heart the best interest of the public rather than shareholders and corporate owners. This has been proven over and over not to be true. We have seen unregulated banks and lenders knowingly give loans to unqualified borrowers KAREN LUCAS who can’t pay them back. Apple Valley These are bundled and


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 5A

Education District 196 students win 27 medals at state speech tournament District 196 students won 27 of the 104 total medals awarded at this year’s Class AA state speech tournament held April 21 at Apple Valley High School. Medals are awarded at the state tournament for places one through eight in the final round of each of the 13 categories of competition. Apple Valley High School students finished with 12 medals and took second place in the team sweepstakes; Eagan High School students earned eight medals and took third place as a team; and Eastview High School students won seven medals. Jane Michaelson of Apple Valley won the state championship in original oratory. Five District 196 students were state runnersup: Angela Hugunin of Eagan in extemporaneous reading, Ross Abram of Eastview in extemporaneous speaking, Jonathan David of Eagan in informative speaking, Micaela

Garcia of Apple Valley in serious interpretation of poetry and Zakkiyah Sanders of Apple Valley in serious interpretation of prose. Third-place medals were awarded to Jenna Herbrand and Joshua Drucker of Eagan in duo interpretation, Jordan Homstad of Eastview in extemporaneous reading, Tram Nguyen of Eagan in original oratory, Arianna Rotty of Apple Valley in serious interpretation of drama, Uzo Ngwu of Apple Valley in serious interpretation of poetry and Emily Albert-Stauning of Eagan in serious interpretation of prose. District 196 students who medaled in places four through eight are as follows: • Fourth place – Three medals: Apple Valley’s Kate Brause in great speeches and Emilia Galchutt in informative speaking, and Eagan’s Brianna Sexton in storytelling. • Fifth place – Seven

medals: Eastview’s Campbell Bernstein in creative expression, Osman Mansur in extemporaneous speaking, Elizabeth Oberle in great speeches and Caleb Rotman in serious interpretation of drama, and Apple Valley’s Rickey Williams in original oratory, Liza Rotty in serious interpretation of poetry and Dominique Paulk in storytelling. • Sixth place – Four medals: Apple Valley’s Linnea Prehn in creative expression and Ian Jarvi in humorous interpretation, and Eagan’s Atulya Reddy in great speeches and Elsie Goren in informative speaking. • Eighth place – One medal: Aunya Mukherjee of Eastview in extemporaneous reading. A total of 56 District 196 students qualified to compete at this year’s state tournament and half of them advanced to the final round in their category to earn medals.

Eagan Foundation awards $130,750 in scholarships The Eagan Foundation has honored 121 graduating high school students with $130,750. This is a record year in scholarship dollars for the Eagan Foundation, approaching double the amount awarded five years ago ($74,000). The increase was due to several new scholarships this year, including the Carter S. Weber Memorial Scholarship created after the recent passing of Carter Weber, an avid hockey player and a 2016 graduate of Eagan High School Scholarships are funded by many local businesses, school organizations, family foundations and nonprofits. Scholarship recipients include: Eagan High School: Aaron Propson, Abinaya Ilavarasan, Adam Ford, Alexis Roelke, Alyssa Jolliffe, Alyssa Luecke, Amanda Lackey, Amelia Chea, Andrew Ching, Angela Hugunin, Anna Matzdorff, Annalise Kilgore, Annika Ysebaert, Benjamin Czaja, Benjamin Flanagan, Benjamin Goffman, Brandon Wuertz, Bridget Brown, Cameron Ellis, Cameron Marsh, Cameron Shepherd, Caro-

line Evans, Cassady Davis, Charles Novack, Christopher Wiese, Conner Cress, Dallas Edwards, Daniel Turin, Delaney Sereika, Dylan Schuller, Elizabeth Immen, Elizabeth Steenberg, Emma Slaikeu, Erik Peterson, Erin Bucki, Grace Coskran, Hannah Hegwer, Henry Najlis, Ia Xiong, Jack Husemann, Jack Reichenbach, Jacob Dansby, Jacob Flaum, Jacob Van Wyk, Jerry Ostrem, John Streed, Joleen Werden, Jonathan David, Joseph Rohlf, Joshua Mihm, Julia Pelton, Justin Haughton, Katherine Bustillo, Kayla Ryan, Khalid Ali, Kirsten Elliott, Lauren Kalina, Lauren Markowski, Lindsey Harris, Lucas Aronson, Lucas Duffy, Luke Gnatkowski, Luke Schammel, Mackenzie Thelen, Madeleine Roberts, Mariyum Mir, McKinley Carlin, Megan Gamme, Megan Larsen, Morgan Reddekopp, Nicholas Fillmore, Nicholas Moe, Nikhil Srikanth, Noah Hillesheim, Olivia Amundson, Owen Pixler, Owen Sackmaster, Paige Moy, Paul Filonowich, Rachel Knutson, Rachel Standal, Rosella Stower, Ryan Pagois, Samantha Gray,

Sami Sogge, Samuel Schaefer, Sarah Glaser, Sarah Rutzick, Sathyanarayanan Govindarajan, Seth Jackson, Shannah Howland, Sophia Bergman, Taylor Luecke, Taylor Olstad, Taylor Thompson, Thomas Clark, Tranquil Bent, Trevor Miklya, Zhen Tu. Eastview High School: Alexandra Gekht, Amanda Tran, Aunya Mukherjee, Claire Underhill, Haley Chinander, Jaclyn Lewine, Kaitlynn Stearns, Natalie Ryan, Rebecca Most. Rosemount High School: Lindsey Jalivay. School of Environmental Studies (SES): Allyson Sharbo, Amanda Boxrucker, Andrew Westgard, Claire Grannes, Ellen Anderson, Hanalei Lewine, Samantha Stevens, Samantha Van Buren, Sara O’Halloran, Shayla Luck. St. Thomas Academy: Alexander Adams. Trinity School at River Ridge: Grace Carlson. The 2017 scholarship winners were honored by Eagan Mayor Mike Maguire at an April 19 breakfast presentation at Eagan High School. Visit www. eaganfoundation.org for more information.

District 196 Gifted and Talented Advisory Council has elementary parent opening District 196 is accepting applications for one elementary school parent position on its Gifted and Talented Advisory Council. Applicants should have a child who is identified for the Gifted and Talented program. The term for this position is for three years, beginning Sept. 1, 2017. The purpose of the council is to ensure community awareness and understanding of the district’s Gifted and Talented programs and to provide

input to the district’s Curriculum and Instruction Advisory Council and administration on Gifted and Talented programming plans that support district goals, policies and initiatives. The Gifted and Talented Advisory Council is composed of seven resident, parent or student members and 10 district employees, as well as one School Board member. The group meets four times during the school year at the District Office

in Rosemount, usually from 5-6:30 p.m. Applications are due by June 1 to be considered for the open elementary parent position. The application is available at District196.org or by calling 651-423-7739. Completed applications should be mailed to Independent School District 196, Director of Teaching and Learning, 3455 153rd St. W., Rosemount, MN 55068, or faxed to 651423-7614.

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Root for Earth

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Preschoolers at The Goddard School in Lakeville, along with over 460 other Goddard School locations nationwide, celebrated the seventh annual Root for Earth initiative April 17-21. While the children learn about eco-friendly topics throughout the year, this week particularly celebrated learning about the environment and what it means to be a good environmental steward. During Root for Earth, preschoolers engaged in activities such as harvesting vegetables, building instruments from recycled materials, observing insects, and other eco-friendly projects inspired by STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and math). Pictured, preschool students pose with a class mosaic made from cardboard and bottle caps.

Eastview Community Foundation awards scholarships, grants The Eastview Community Foundation is awarding over 130 scholarships worth more than $100,000 to 2017 graduating seniors. These scholarships are awarded to students who have achieved excellence in academics, arts and athletics as well as provided countless hours in service to their community. In addition, $10,000 worth of grants will be awarded

to teachers with deserving projects from Eastview High School as well as the elementary and middle schools that feed into the high school. The awards ceremony will be held at the Eastview High School Performing Arts Center on May 30. Registration begins at 6:30 p.m. and the program starts at 7 p.m.

Now and Then Singers present Cabaret show Lakeville North’s Now and Then Singers are holding their annual Cabaret show 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 5, and Saturday, May 6, at the Lakeville Area Arts Center, 20965 Holyoke Ave. The show features solos by all the members of Now and Then as well as

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6A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Business ConvergeOne to acquire Outlet mall supports NY company Komen ConvergeOne, an Eagan-based provider of state-of-the-art communications and data solutions, has signed an agreement to acquire Rockefeller Group Technology Solutions, a New York-based provider of telecom and data services to corporate customers. Required regulatory and government approvals to complete the transaction will occur in the coming weeks.

Credit union awards Burnsville-based Firefly Credit Union was recently honored with three Diamond Awards at the 24th annual Marketing & Business Development conference held March 29-April 1 in San Antonio, Texas. The Diamond Awards recognize the outstanding marketing and business development achievements in the credit union industry, in each of 30 categories ranging from advertising to community events and beyond. Firefly took home first place in the website, plastic access card design, and video categories. The awards were presented by the Credit Union National Association (CUNA) Marketing & Business Development Council, a national network comprised of over 1,200 credit union marketing and business development professionals. For more information on the Diamond Awards or to view the list of winners, go to www.cunacouncils.org/ awards.

Credit union honored Firefly Credit Union, Burnsville, was honored as an Alpha BETA Partner in Excellence at the 2017 Fiserv Education and Technology Conference for XP2. In 2016, Firefly’s information systems team worked closely with Fiserv subject matter experts through the Alpha and BETA quality assurance testing of three major releases of XP2. It was with their feedback and partnership that Fiserv continued to enhance XP2 as they prepared the product for general release. Firefly was one of three credit unions in a user group of more than 200 processing on the XP2 core system selected to receive this honor.

New sales leadership at SelectAccount Greg Champlain has been named senior vice president of national account sales at Eagan-based SelectAccount, a health savings account administrator and affiliate company of Blue Cross Blue Shield. He is responsible for national account sales and providing sales leadership within the Central Region, reporting to Chief Growth Officer E. Craig Keohan.

Twin Cities Premium Outlets in Eagan announced its spring 2017 More Than Pink movement in support of Susan G. Komen and the fight against breast cancer. Mall visitors who donate $10 to Susan G. Komen will receive a discount card providing 25 percent off one item at participating retailers. Discount cards are available at guest services, and all discount card donations go to Susan G. Komen. The 25th annual Twin Cities Race for the Cure presented by Susan G. Komen Minnesota will be held at Southdale Center on Sunday, May 14. Participants are encouraged to register by visiting komenminnesota.org.

Insurance agency recognized

Photo submitted

Burnsville-based Kraus-Anderson Insurance has been named one of Western National Insurance Group’s “Circle of Excellence� agencies for 2017. The recognition spotlights an elite group of agencies who have excelled based on performance and growth over the past six years (2011-16) and demonstrated that they meet high standards of professional excellence and integrity. This recognition places Kraus-Anderson Insurance in the 95th percentile of all Western National partners for overall performance, growth, and partnership over the past six years.

Hillman selected as 2017 Leader of the Year Al Hillmann, the president of Burnsville-based Standard Dynamics Inc., has been selected the 2017 Graphic Arts Industry Leader of the Year by Printing Industry Midwest. Hillmann, an Apple Valley resident, was to receive the award at PIM’s annual Star of Excellence Awards Banquet on April 27 at the Sheraton Minneapolis West. He was selected to receive the award by past recipients based on his knowledge and expertise of print products and services expertise that he offers the industry. He also served on the PIM Board of Directors. Al Hillmann “Al Hillmann has been an active and respected participant in our industry for many years,� said Gary Garner, GLS/Next Precision Marketing chairman. “The selection committee is pleased to recognize his effort as this year’s Graphic Arts Industry Leader of the Year.� Hillmann bought Standard Dynamics Inc. in 1983 and has grown the business to include finishing and print production equipment and solutions. He and his wife, Victoria have three grown children of which two, Joe and Lizzie, are currently involved in the business.

Image Skin Care CEO and founder Janna Ronert (second from left) presented the Corporate World Class Spa Award during the Image Skin Care World Wide Launch Party in West Palm Beach, Florida. It was accepted by estheticians Kathy Jensen, Kim Natterstad and Jaclyn D’Amico.

Cole’s Salon earns World Class Spa award by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Cole’s Salon, which has locations in Burnsville, Apple Valley, Savage, and two in Eagan, was selected by Image Skin Care as its 2017 Corporate World Class Spa award winner. The honor was announced this month at the Image Skin Care World Wide Launch Party, hosted at Image headquarters in West Palm Beach, Florida. It was accepted by estheticians Kathy Jensen, Kim Natterstad and Jaclyn D’Amico. “It was a complete surprise,� said Melissa Hanson, Cole’s chief operating officer. She said the three Cole’s estheticians were so excited they texted her right away that Cole’s had won. “When we look at the award, we look at the relationship that has been constant and the caliber of the spa,� Hanson said. Image Skin Care is a worldwide company that Cole’s has partnered with since the Florida-based company was founded 14 years ago as a small startup. “I’m so grateful that they’ve believed in us from the very beginning,� Image CEO and founder Janna Ronert said of the partnership. “We’ve both grown tremendously over the years, and I thank them from the bottom of my heart.� “That partnership and relationship has continued to grow,� Hanson said. Cole’s Salon, which was up against many other larger companies across the world, was recognized for its excellence in education and service and brand loyalty. “World class service is always given

at Cole’s,� Ronert said. “From the moment you walk in, you are treated like family. Cole’s consistently delivers professional services with a tenured team which ensures for a world class experience.� Hanson said education is part of the culture at Cole’s. “We continue to focus on how do we better our best,� she said. “What are the things we need to do individually and collectively to engage with ourselves and our clients?� That allows Cole’s estheticians to keep current with the latest innovations in products and treatments, especially in the area of skin care as clients are increasingly seeking better results. Hanson said the spa experience at Cole’s has been an integral part of the business for the past 20 plus years. Image gives one Corporate World Class Spa award each year. Based on Image Skin Care sales, six Cole’s Salon estheticians qualified to attend the annual launch party. “They all very much earned it,� Hanson said. D’Amico and Natterstad attended the event along with Jensen, who was invited by Ronert in recognition of the long relationship between Cole’s and Image. During the event, Image aims to celebrate top talent with recognition and awards. Cole’s President Doug Cole, who founded the company 35 years ago, said he was very honored and proud of these individuals. He said he knows it is not just about those three people, but it’s a great honor for the entire company.

Business Calendar To submit items for the force Solutions Meeting, Gateway Office Plaza, Business Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ Basement Conference Room (Level G), 350 W. ecm-inc.com. Burnsville Parkway, Burnsville. Ideas on finding and retaining employees. Free to attend; Apple Valley Chamber of Commerce events: registration appreciated. Information: jennifer@ • Saturday, April 29, 9-11 a.m., NEXT Lead- burnsvillechamber.com. ers, 360 Communities, 501 E. Highway 13, • Thursday, May 4, 4:30-6:30 p.m., Business Suite 102, Burnsville. The young professionals After Hours, El Loro Mexican Restaurant, 2501 group will volunteer at the 360 Communities Horizon Drive, Burnsville. Pre-Cinco de Mayo parfood shelf. Free. Information: Fabiana at fabi- ty. Free to attend. Information: Tricia Andrews at ana@applevalleychamber.com. tricia@burnsvillechamber.com. • Tuesday, May 2, 7:30-9 a.m., Coffee Con• Wednesday, May 10, 8-9 a.m., AM Coffee nection, Galaxie Library, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Break, Firefly Credit Union, 1400 Riverwood Drive, Apple Valley. Free. Information: Fabiana at fabi- Burnsville. Free. Information: Tricia Andrews at ana@applevalleychamber.com. tricia@burnsvillechamber.com. • Wednesday, May 10, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., State of the City Address with May- Dakota County Regional Chamber of Comor Mary, Apple Valley Senior Center, 14601 merce events: Hayes Road, Apple Valley. Cost: $20 per per• Thursday, May 4, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., son, $15 for students; pay at the door. RSVP Celebrate Small Business Luncheon, Lost required. Information: Fabiana at fabiana@ Spur Golf & Event Center, 2750 Sibley Memoapplevalleychamber.com. rial Highway, Eagan. Speaker: Carl Rick, third • Wednesday, May 10, 5-7 p.m., generation spokesman and co-owner of Kwik Business After Hours, Uponor Train- Trip. Cost: $30. Registration required. Informaing Center, 5925 148th St. W., Apple Val- tion: Emily Corson at 651-288-9202 or ecor ley. Free. Information: Fabiana at fabi son@dcrchamber.com. ana@applevalleychamber.com. • Thursday, May 4, 3-4 p.m., ribbon cutting, Sprint by Universal Wireless, 1992 Rahncliff Burnsville Chamber of Commerce events: Road, Eagan. Information: Lori Oelrich at loel• Tuesday, May 2, 8-9:30 a.m., 2017 Work- rich@dcrchamber.com.

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• Friday, May 5, 7:30-9 a.m., Legislative Breakfast: Tim Pawlenty, The Commons on Marice, 1380 Marice Drive, Eagan. Pawlenty will share his perspectives of the current state of the country and of Minnesota. He is currently the CEO and president of Financial Services Roundtable, a Washington, D.C.-based, industry roundtable advocacy group. He served as Minnesota’s 39th governor from 2003-11. Cost: $25 members, $30 nonmembers. Registration required. Information: 651-452-9872 or info@ dcrchamber.com. • Monday, May 8, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Good Day Dakota County, Valleywood Golf Club, 4851 McAndrews Road, Apple Valley. Bill Blazar from the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce and Maura Donovan, University of Minnesota economic development director, will discuss the contributions of immigrants to the development and growth of Minnesota’s economy. Registration required. Cost: $25 chamber members, $40 nonmembers; $220 series pass. Information: 651-452-9872 or info@dcrchamber.com.

Information: Amy Green at 952-469-2020 or amy@lakevillechambercvb.org. • Friday, May 5, 7:30-8 a.m., Teacher Appreciation Breakfast, McGuire Middle School. Information: Amy Green at 952-469-2020 or amy@lakevil lechambercvb.org. • Friday, May 5, 2 p.m., ribbon cutting, Lakeville Family Pet Clinic, 17510 Dodd Blvd., Lakeville. Information: Shanen Corlett or Amy Green at 952-469-2020 or shanen@lakeville chambercvb.org. Encourage Her Network events: • Monday, May 15, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Signature Women’s Networking Luncheon, Hyatt Regency Hotel, 3200 E. 81st St., Bloomington. “How to Create Shared Successâ€? with Rhoda Olsen, president and CEO of Great Clips. Cost: $30 members, $50 nonmembers ($60 at the door). Information/registration: encouragehernet work.com.

Business Networking International events: • Leads to Referrals Chapter of BNI meets Lakeville Area Chamber of Commerce 7:30 a.m. Tuesdays at Vivo Restaurant, 15435 events: Founders Lane, Apple Valley. Information: Hel• Wednesday, May 3, 8-9 a.m., Morning en Peterson, 952-412-0265. Brew and grand re-opening, Chuck & Don’s Pet Food & Supplies, 7397 179th St. W., Lakeville.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 7A

Religion

Seniors ‘Lunch and learn’ workshop TRIAD of Dakota County will host a “lunch and learn� workshop for area seniors on reducing and helping prevent crimes targeted at older adults. The workshop, for ages 62 and older, runs 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, at the Apple Valley Senior Center, 14601 Hayes Road, Apple Valley. Attendees will learn about personal safety issues and crime trends that target seniors – and have the ability to ask questions and voice their concerns. TRIAD is a partnership between local law enforcement, senior citizens and community groups with the objective to reduce crime against seniors as well as the unwarranted fear of crime that older adults sometimes experience. Lunch is sponsored by Ebenezer. For more information or to register, call 952-707-4120. Space is limited.

Monday, May 1 – Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 9:30 a.m.; Balance/Brains, 10:15 a.m.; Mobility, 11:15 a.m.; Pinochle, 12:45 p.m.; Defensive Driving Refresher, 1 p.m. Tuesday, May 2 – Balance/Brains, 10:15 a.m.; Scrabble, 10:30 a.m.; TRIAD, 11 a.m.; Mobility, 11:15 a.m.; Duplicate Bridge, 12:30 p.m.; Line Dancing. Wednesday, May 3 – Woodcarvers, 8 a.m.; Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 9:30 a.m.; Chair Tai Chi, 11 a.m.; MOBB, 11 a.m.; 500, 12:45 p.m.; BABS, 1 p.m. Thursday, May 4 – Foot Clinic, 9 a.m.; Health Insurance Council, 9 a.m.; Crafters, 10 a.m.; Balance/ Brains, 10:15 a.m.; Mobility, 11:15 a.m.; Wood Carving, 6 p.m. Friday, May 5 – Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Men’s Breakfast, 8:30 a.m.; Painting, 9 a.m.; Hand & Foot, 12:15 p.m.

Eagan seniors

Alzheimer’s talk in Lakeville Legal and financial planning after an Alzheimer’s diagnosis will be discussed 6:30-8 p.m. Thursday, May 4, at Hosanna Church in Lakeville as part of the Get the Facts Education Series sponsored by The Alzheimer’s Association and the Fountains at Hosanna. The church is at 9600 163rd St. W. For more information, contact Katie Roberg at kroberg@alz. org or 952-767-7568.

Burnsville seniors The Burnsville Senior Center is located in the Diamondhead Education Center at 200 W. Burnsville Parkway. Call 952707-4120 for information about the following senior events.

The Eagan Parks and Recreation Department offers programs for seniors in the Lone Oak Room at the Eagan Community Center, 1501 Central Parkway. Call 651-675-5500 for more information. Monday, May 1 – Mahjong, 9 a.m.; Zumba (Oasis), 9 a.m.; F&Fab, 10 a.m.; FFL (Oasis), 11 a.m.; Drop In Time, 1-4 p.m. Tuesday, May 2 – Quilting, 9:30 a.m.; Euchre and 500, 12:45 p.m.; Book Club No. 1, 1 p.m. Wednesday, May 3 – Coffee, Conversations & Games, 9 a.m.; Brain Fitness, 9:30 a.m.; Hand & Foot, 12:45 p.m. Thursday, May 4 – Dominoes, 9 a.m.; Bridge, 12:45 p.m. Friday, May 5 – ESB Meeting, 9 a.m.; Zumba (Oasis), 10:15 a.m.; S/B/ Yoga (Oasis), 11:10 a.m.; Bingo, 1 p.m.

Spring fair at Trinity Lutheran Trinity Lutheran Church, 600 Walnut St., Farmington, will hold its annual Spring Fair 5-7 p.m. Saturday, April 29. The fair will feature a hot roast beef meal, bake sale, country store, kids carnival and country music by The Country 3. Tickets will be sold at the door: $10 adults, $8 seniors and youth 6-18, $25 families, and free for children under 6. Funding supplemented in part by Thrivent Financial.

Prison ministry workshop Church of St. Joseph, 13900 Biscayne Ave. W., Rosemount, will host a prison ministry workshop 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 20. The event will give an overview of some of the different ways to become involved in Jesus-encouraged prison ministry, from Prayer Warriors, Bible study facilitators, mentoring, “inside� weekend retreats, transition after release, etc. Lee Buckley from the Minnesota Department of Corrections, will be the keynote speaker. She will be followed by a panel on transition following release, facilitated by Tom Lundquist, Prison Fellowship’s program coordinator. Attendees will then choose between two breakout sessions: Session A: overview of many activities by current participants. Session B: focused on mentoring, led by Deacon Clarence Shallbettor (juvenile detention ministry) and Lundquist. The last part of the morning will feature lunch (free will offering) and questions. All are welcome. For more information, visit www.stjosephcommunity.org and click on “Prison Ministry� under “Outreach.� For questions, contact Fay at fay.connors@gmail.com, 952-250-7613; Kevin at kevin.connors@gmail. com.

Community meals at Grace Grace Lutheran Church in Apple Valley will serve community meals Mondays, May 1, 8 and 22. Dining hall doors open at 5:30 p.m.

and dinner is served from 6-6:30 p.m. These meals are for senior citizens, single-parent families, families in transition and all others in the surrounding community seeking a healthy meal in a relaxed atmosphere. Although the meals are free, donations are accepted. For more information, call the church at 952-432-7273. Grace Lutheran Church is located at the intersection of Pennock Avenue and County Road 42.

Community garden plots available at Spirit of Life As a means of reaching out to the community, Spirit of Life Presbyterian Church each year offers a limited number of garden plots for rent for the season. The 8-by-8-foot raised beds are behind the church, which is located at 14401 Pilot Knob Road in Apple Valley. The rental period is May 1 to Oct. 31. The fee is $35, but gardeners will receive a $20 refund at the end of the season if their plot is maintained and cleared after the ground freezes. Spirit of Life church members each year also plant vegetables and fruits in a larger plot. They donate much of the harvested produce to local food shelves. In 2016, Rosemount Family Resource Center received 780 pounds of more than 20 different varieties of fresh produce. For more information about the garden plots, call Spirit of Life at 952-423-2212 Monday through Thursday. Renters are asked to sign a contract that is available in the church office.

Discussing Islam Samir Saikali, imam of AlSalam Mosque in Maplewood, will present “Islamic Beliefs and Practices� at 10:20 a.m. Sunday, April 30, and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, in the sanctuary of Glendale United Methodist Church, 13550 Glendale Road, Savage. Saikali’s presentation will include an overview of Islam and discussion on freedom of belief, views on diversity as well as jihad, war and violence. The events are part of the Glen-

Earth Day cleanup at Patrick Eagan Park This year’s focus will be on the entrance, trails and areas around the lake. The activity is suitable for families with children. Bring gloves, and if necessary, boots. Garbage bags will be provided. For more information, call 651-470-2687 or visit www.eagancoregreenway. org.

Lakeville residents attending Berean Baptist Church in Burnsville benefited last fall when Berean opened a second campus near their homes at Kenwood Trail Middle School. Fifty Lakeville families gathered for the site’s inaugural worship service on Oct. 2, 2016. “It was a great Sunday,� said Dan Feldkamp, pastor of the Lakeville campus. “More than 200 people attended, full of energy, full of life.� The new Lakeville campus represents Berean’s first venture into becoming a multisite church. “We believe this multisite strategy is the best way for our church to reach surrounding communities with the gospel,� said Wes Feltner, Berean’s lead pastor. “Because there are thousands in the south metro who will not come to us, launching new campuses will allow us to go to them.� Lakeville was a logical choice for a second campus because a particularly high concentration of Berean attendees lives there. It’s not a “church plant,� Berean’s leadership is careful to make clear. Both campuses operate under the same vision and leadership structure – it’s one church meeting in multiple locations. Live, in-house worship precedes Sunday sermons simulcast in real time from Burnsville to Lakeville via technology that virtually puts viewers in the front row. “The aspect we like most about being the body of Christ at Berean Lakeville is that it is a smaller setting,� said Lakeville native Stephanie Bychinski, who is a 13-year veteran of Berean Burnsville together with her husband, Brad. “A community of people we see throughout every week, people we really get to know well, people we can serve in times of need, people we can count on, people who are eager to serve and be involved, people to build relationships with because of a smaller setting.� For more information, visit bereanbaptist.com.

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Eastview High School will present Bravo 2017: “Viva Las Vegas� at 7 p.m. April 28 and 29 in the school’s Performing Arts Center. The show will include a tour of the sights and sounds of Las Vegas. The show features more than 100 students in vocal music, instrumental music, dance and technical theater programs. Ticket information is at http://www.evperformingarts.com.

Frightening medical ordeal a test of strength, faith Mother and daughter release ‘Maze of Thorns’ by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Kris Kelbrants’ prognosis was grim. In 1997, the Apple Valley resident was a recent college graduate beginning a career with a Twin Cities publishing corporation. Then strange symptoms started to surface. She’d be reading a document at work, and suddenly she wouldn’t be able to comprehend the text. She started having seizures. She lost her appetite. As her condition worsened, “I resigned from my job, and after that I don’t have a lot of memories,� she said. Her mom, Sherry Shuss, also of Apple Valley, remembers it all too well. Kelbrants was admitted to the hospital not being able to walk, talk or even recogniz e her family. Doctors had difficulty making a diagnosis. “Things progressed w o r s e , w o r s e , worse,� Shuss said. “If there was a test for it, they did it because they didn’t know what they were dealing with.� After a brain biopsy, Kelbrants was diagnosed with CNS vasculitis, an inflammation of blood vessels in the brain. Doctors informed her parents that there was a chance she might die, but if she didn’t, because of brain damage she’d likely be confined to a nursing home for the rest of her life. Kelbrants’ ordeal, and her road to recovery, is documented in “Maze of Thorns,� the book she and Shuss co-authored and released earlier this year. “Our faith, family and friends held strong, and this girl who left the hospital not adding one plus one and not being able to read is here to tell you miracles do happen,� Shuss said. “She’s also a strong willed, I-can-doit type of person, and I think that’s what allowed her to endure and get better.� Recovery came bit by bit — learning how to talk again, learning how to eat on her own. On the medical end, Kelbrants was prescribed massive doses of steroids to shrink the swelling in her brain. She also starting taking French and piano lessons in hopes of stimulating her brain. She took a job at a bread bakery where her primary task was count-

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Kris Kelbrants and Sherry Shuss ing change, another way, she hoped, of rebuilding basic cognitive skills. “It took a good five years to turn everything around and get my career back,� said Kelbrants, who’s now married and works as a sales manager with a Burnsville company. Twenty years after her harrowing brush with death, Kelbrants said she still isn’t completely r e c ov e r e d and continues to take medication for her condition. K e l brants and Shuss met weekly over the course of two years to write “Maze of Thorns.� “We had a lot of fun and we had a lot of tears,� Shuss said of the writing process. “I had journaled (during Kelbrants’ illness), and we could not have done this had I not journaled, because to this day she has no memory of being in the hospital. I also saved all of the doctor reports and all the cards people sent.� Kelbrants, a 1989 graduate of Rosemount High School, and Shuss, a retired administrative secretary at Rosemount High School, recently spoke at their church, Hosanna Church in Lakeville, about Kelbrants’ journey through illness and recovery. Both mother and daughter said faith was key throughout the medical ordeal. “The book was kind of that final journey for me, realizing at this point in my life I want to help other people — we wanted to multiply hope with our book,� Kelbrants said. “By relying on faith and God, you stop trying and start trusting, and you’re given all the strength you need.� “Maze of Thorns� is available through online booksellers such as Amazon. More about the book is at www.myhealthyangel.com. Contact Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc. com.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 9A

Baumann selected as District 194 superintendent Contract negotiations underway by Tad Johnson and Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

It didn’t take long for the Lakeville Area School Board to agree April 21 on its preferred superintendent candidate. Current District 194 Executive Director of Business Services Michael Baumann emerged as the Photo by Laura Adelmann favored candidate of all Michael Baumann, District 194 executive director of six board members dur- business services, speaks to teachers following a meet ing an estimated 45-min- and confer meeting April 25. Baumann has been selected ute discussion that started as the district’s next superintendent. Contract negotiaabout 7 p.m. at the Crystal tions are to start next week with approval expected in Lake Education Center. May. Board members repeatedly said they saw in May, with the and Ann Schultz, Mosinee a different Michael start date July 1. (Wisconsin) School DisBaumann during Advertisements trict superintendent. his interviews with for the superinWhile board members community memtendent position had praised the “teaching bers, city leaders indicated the saland learning� experience and school groups ary was $195,000 of Holmberg and Schulin the morning and annually, but Volk tz, they cited a variety of early afternoon said in an interskills and attributes Bauand during the Michael view the negotiat- mann possessed as they School Board’s in- Baumann ed amount may be went around the room terview with Baudifferent than that. one-by-one to talk about mann later in the Baumann, a retired the candidates. day. lieutenant colonel in the Volk started the review The board unanimousU.S. Army, came to Disof her impressions of the ly voted at its April 25 to trict 194 in 2013 after servcandidates, which was folenter into contract negoing nearly nine years in lowed by others. tiations with Baumann. By the time the fourth Board Chair Michelle St. Paul Public Schools, where he served in several board member spoke, it Volk said Board Members positions, ultimately secwas clear the Baumann Bob Erickson and Judy ond-in-command as that was separating himself Keliher will represent the district’s deputy superinfrom the other two. district in the negotiations One of the district’s along with its search firm, tendent. Other candidates for other finalists, Roger Ray & Associates. the position were Jeffrey Rindo, superintendent, She said negotiations are expected to start next Holmberg, Prior Lake- Oconomowoc (Wisconweek and the board will Savage Area Schools as- sin) Area School District, superintendent; removed his name from likely approve the contract sistant

consideration prior to the day-long interviews on Friday. Board members did not mention as a detractor the possible need to hire another top cabinet position if Baumann were to get the job. Board Member Kathy Lewis said she didn’t sleep the night before the interviews, waking up about four or five times, because she was so interested to see how the process would play out. Lewis was the first board member to say Baumann was her preferred candidate, citing his ability to work with a team and his experience. Keliher read off a long list of positive comments regarding Baumann that were forwarded from community members and school personnel during their interviews earlier in the day. Those included his clear vision for the future of the district, trustworthiness, a track record of addressing issues head on, his collaborative nature, and knowledge of finance. “Those are very strong messages,� Keliher said. “Michael is the right leader and has the right leadership style for this board.� Keliher said one teacher called Baumann “authentic, not fake or rehearsed.� She said one parent called him “the real deal.� Another said “hire him.� Erickson noted that former Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent David Jennings had the

same military to finance director to superintendent career arc as Baumann was pursuing, and noted Jennings was widely regarded as bringing stability and innovation to a district that needed it. Board Member Jim Skelly said Baumann provides the district with the best opportunity for success. He said the Bloomington and White Bear Lake districts have superintendents who were previously finance directors. Skelly cited a positive of Baumann’s comments was that it was his goal to not have budget cuts in the district ever again. Erickson said Baumann expressed his intent for fiscal accountability and owning the budget as superintendent. “I appreciated that,� Erickson said. Erickson said he counted Baumann’s residence in the community since 2005 as a positive, saying that gave him insight into the community’s value system. Other strengths Erickson cited were Baumann’s understanding of the district and the respect he has among staff and the community. Board Member Terry Lind, a former elementary principal in the district, said Baumann’s biggest challenge would be the education side of it. Board members said Baumann acknowledged that as an area he would need to work on. Keliher didn’t see that

as much of an issue due to the expertise of Director of Teaching and Learning Emily McDonald. In a news release, Volk said Baumann rose to the top for many reasons. “He has proven leadership and communications skills,� she said. �We have been impressed with his belief in teamwork and being driven to find solutions.� Volk had also noted after the interviews that board members and various stakeholder groups also noted his connection to the community and knowledge of the district. Baumann’s current salary is $149,312, according to Tony Massaros, the district’s executive director of administrative services. If an agreement is reached, Baumann would replace Superintendent Lisa Snyder, who announced in November she would resign when her contract expires June 30. Snyder is currently paid $187,278, and she has accumulated 17 days of vacation, according to Massaros. Under Snyder’s contract, the School Board will also determine the amount of performance pay she has earned in her last year leading the district. Snyder has been superintendent for five years. Contact Tad Johnson at tad. johnson@ecm-inc.com and Laura Adelmann at laura.adelmann@ecm-inc.com.

Sinner wins Education Minnesota honor for leadership Don Sinner, president of Education Association Lakeville, has been named the winner of the 2017 Peterson Schaubach Award for outstanding leadership. Sinner was recognized at Education Minnesota’s 2017 Representative Convention held April 21 in Bloomington. The Peterson-Schaubach Outstanding Leadership Award is given annually to an Education Minnesota leader (local or state) who has made outstanding contributions to Education Minnesota or its locals through demonstration of Education

Minnesota’s Statements of Principle. His award nomination highlighted his commitment to listening to members and to working in the community as a voice for public education. “Don’s work has always been consistent with his personal belief in a life of service. His dedication to public education as a vital institution in the fight for equity and social justice for all in society has driven his choices from his involvement in first the classroom, then as a union leader. His firm commitment to the principle, ‘all of us to-

gether are smarter, and more powerful, that any one of us alone,’ has led him to serve as a voice for educators and the profession in their service of students, families, and the community,� his nomination stated. On the local level, Sinner has served in diverse roles including: member rights advocate, grievance chair, negotiations, government relations, secretary, vice president and president. For many years Sinner has also been actively involved at the intermediate organization level, first in the Metro Area Council, a

group of 47 locals, serving as the negotiations chair, and then as president. He recently founded the new South Suburban United, a group of 12 south metro locals and was elected its first president. On the Education Minnesota Governing Board, he has served on numerous committees, task forces and in several pilot efforts, spending 10 years on its Executive Committee. Sinner has also served as the voice of educators Photo by Laura Adelmann at the national level and is currently an NEA direc- District 194 Education Minnesota-Lakeville President Don Sinner is recognized at the April 25 School Board tor. meeting, where he was formally presented his award.

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10A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

Sports Skaters let loose creative side in Impressions on Ice Show is Friday, Saturday in Burnsville by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Being scrutinized by judges is something every competitive figure skater accepts as part of the sport. But there also are times such as this weekend, when Burnsville-Minnesota Valley Figure Skating Club members take part in the annual Impressions on Ice show, and the pressure will be off. “Personally, I love both (competing and performing), but competing is a whole different level,” said Bailey Pekar, a Burnsville High School junior who will be a soloist in this weekend’s show at Burnsville Ice Center. “When you compete, judges are looking for the entire package. You have to be on. “With performances, you get a little leeway. Your jumps don’t have to be perfect. If they are, great, but if you give a good performance they’re going to love you anyway. That’s the part I really like. In a way, performing is my stress relief. I can just go out and have fun.” The club will celebrate its 40-year anniversary in the Impressions on Ice show Friday and Saturday. Show times are 7 p.m. each day. Ticket information is available at the club’s website, bmvfsc.clubexpress. com. BMVFSC draws skaters from a number of local communities, including Burnsville, Eagan, Lakeville, Apple Valley, Rosemount and Savage. This weekend’s show will feature skaters of all ability levels, performing in

Photos by Mike Shaughnessy

These are some of the skaters who will perform in the Burnsville-Minnesota Valley Figure Skating Club’s Impressions on Ice show this weekend at Burnsville Ice Center. groups or as soloists. This year’s show also includes about 25 BMVFSC alumni skaters. It’s believed to be the first time since the club’s 20-year anniversary that alumni skaters have been part of Impressions on Ice. Skating in Impressions on Ice isn’t mandatory, but “a lot of kids participate in one or two numbers, and they find they want to do it again right away,” said Dawn Anderson, one of the show directors. Several skaters have been coming back for years. This will be Pekar’s 10th appearance in the show, and she is quick to point out that she will get to do one more before she graduates from BHS. It will be the 14th Impressions on Ice show for Lakeville North High School senior Nicki Jenn, who plans to continue skating when she goes to the University of Iowa in the fall but won’t be competing. Jenn, who like Pekar is one of the soloists at this weekend’s show, said she wants to come back as an alumni performer someday.

Jenn doesn’t remember much about her Impressions on Ice debut at age 4, but said it was a number with other skaters from the BMVFSC Learn to Skate program. Mostly, she said, she concentrated on not falling. There will be a lot of family and friends in the crowd at the show, but Jenn said she doesn’t view that as pressure. “A lot of us are used to competition, so we’ve dealt with pressure,” she said. “In the show, you get to be creative, and that’s fun. That’s one of the reasons I keep doing this. I enjoy putting on a performance in front of my family and friends.” Show directors Anderson and Davina Nelson are former BMVFSC skaters and have been coaches since the 1980s. They have run the Impressions on Ice show for about seven years. “You start with a theme, then try to find 40 different pieces of music,” Nelson said. “We start working on it toward the end of summer, talking about ideas, picking cos-

Burnsville moving up SSC softball standings

Burnsville High School junior Bailey Pekar will be one of the featured skaters at Impressions on Ice. other times skaters have to take on-ice tests to reach certain competitive levels. If a skater stays off the ice for long, skills erode and are difficult to regain. Pekar found out about that when she missed six months after contracting mononucleosis and pneumonia at the same time. She also was out several weeks because of a spinal fracture suffered in a fall during practice. “Coming back from that and finding yourself unable to do the stuff you’re used to doing, it’s really frustrating,” Pekar said. “But skating has become such a big part of who I am that I couldn’t

give it up.” Skating in a show such as Impressions on Ice is the payoff for staying the course. “This show in particular, it’s the thrill of getting out there, hearing the music and getting the lights in your face,” Pekar said. “All the people in the audience you know are staring at you. “It’s intoxicating. There’s nothing better than the lights going down, and when it’s over thinking, ‘That was awesome.’ ” Contact Mike Shaughnessy at mike.shaughnessy@ecminc.com.

North wins opening SSC golf tourney Wildcat girls place third by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Winning streak includes title at North St. Paul tourney by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Burnsville is on the move in South Suburban Conference softball. The Blaze defeated Apple Valley 9-4 on Monday for its fifth victory in a row. The team improved to 8-3 overall and 4-2 in the league. That followed a dominating performance over the weekend at the Polar Invitational in North St. Paul. After beating defending North Dakota state champion West Fargo 3-1 in the opening round Friday, the Blaze thrashed Lakeville South 16-0 and Roseville 10-0 to win the championship. On Monday, Burnsville fell behind Apple Valley 3-0 in the top of the first but responded with five runs in the bottom of the inning. The Blaze scored three more in the fourth to extend its lead to 8-3. Sawyer Brewster was 2-for-3 with a home run and four RBI against Apple Valley. Winning pitcher Megan Osterhaus drove in two runs, and Angela Wollmuth, Skylar Lindemuth and Bridget Arm-

tumes. At Christmastime, we have to order costumes. It’s fun to see it all come together, see the girls in the costumes and skating to their music. They also get to skate in group numbers with their friends, which is unusual because skating is so much an individual sport.” The directors and coaches choose most of the music and choreography, although the more experienced skaters do have some input. “I designed my costume. That’s as hands-on as I can be,” Pekar said. “It’s all in the hands of the coaches. They have the expertise, and they’re why we’re here.” Soloists get their music at the beginning of April and practice five days a week in the weeks leading to the show, Anderson said. The club has time at the Burnsville Ice Center 12 months a year. Although the coaches encourage skaters to take breaks, figure skating is a year-round enterprise. The competition season is mostly in the fall and winter, but at

Photo by Mike Shaughnessy

Burnsville’s Megan Osterhaus had a strong showing at the Polar Invitational in the pitching circle and at the plate. strong had two hits each. Osterhaus pitched a four-hitter with 12 strikeouts in Burnsville’s victory over West Fargo at the North St. Paul tourney. She also had a hit and drove in two runs. Burnsville had 18 hits Saturday against Lakeville South in a game shortened to three innings. Burnsville scored three runs in the first inning, seven in the second and six in the third. Brewster and Osterhaus had three RBI each. Heidi Stewart was 3-for-4 with two RBI, and Melissa Marsolek had two hits and drove in two runs. The Blaze scored three runs in the bottom of the fifth against Roseville to end the Polar Invitational championship game early.

Osterhaus had another big game at the plate with two hits and three RBI. She also held Roseville to one hit over five innings and struck out nine. Bri Hoevet was 3-for-3 with two RBI in the Roseville game. Wollmuth, Brewster and Stewart had two hits each, and Lindemuth drove in two runs. Burnsville was one of three South Suburban Conference teams to play in the North St. Paul tourney. Eagan lost to Roseville 4-3 in the first round but defeated Spring Lake Park 7-1 and West Fargo 11-1 to finish fifth. The Wildcats are 6-2 overall and 4-1 in the South Suburban after defeating Shakopee 13-8 on Monday.

Defending champion Lakeville North took the lead in South Suburban Conference girls golf by winning the first of four league tournaments April 20 at Valleywood Golf Course. The Panthers shot 345 and finished three strokes ahead of Eagan. North eighth-grader Emma Welch shot 76 and was individual medalist. North earned nine points in the race for the conference championship. A team gets one point for each team it defeats in a conference tournament. Eagan had eight points, third-place Rosemount (354) had seven, fourth-place Lakeville

North (371) scored six, fifth-place Eastview (371) scored five, seventh-place Apple Valley (383) had three and ninth-place Burnsville (446) scored one point. Farmington was 10th at the April 20 tourney with 449. The second conference tourney was scheduled for Wednesday at Crystal Lake in Lakeville but was postponed with a tentative makeup date of May 25. The other two tournaments are May 18 at Rich Valley and May 23 at Heritage Links. Welch, who qualified for the state tournament as a seventh-grader last year, was one of two players in the 70s at last week’s conference tourney. The other was Eagan ninth-grader Josalyn Abbott, who shot 78. Welch’s sister Megan, a North junior who tied for second

in the 2016 state Class 3A tournament, shot 84 at Valleywood and tied for fourth place. Eagan had four individual scores below 100. In addition to Abbott, they were an 86 by Joleen Werden, an 87 by Sarah Rutzick and a 97 by Carly Schriner. Werden, Rutzick and Schriner are seniors. Eastview’s top players were Courtney Carson, Tessa Schafer and Cassidy Carson, all of whom shot 92 to tie for 13th place. Apple Valley sophomore Josie Nyblom shot 89 and finished 11th. Amy Breckner (94) and Jenna Nyblom (96) also finished in the top 20. Lyndsey Howard, a sophomore, shot 98 to lead Burnsville.

Roullier a possible NFL Draft target by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

It lasts seven rounds and takes three days to complete. It’s the NFL Draft, and several players with local connections will watch with interest. The area player with perhaps the best chance of being drafted is University of Wyoming offensive lineman Chase Roullier, a Burnsville High School graduate. Several draft projections had Roullier being picked in the

later rounds (rounds four through seven will take place Saturday). If Roullier is selected, he would have a chance to join former Blaze teammate C.J. Smith in the NFL. Smith went undrafted in 2016 but signed as a free agent with Philadelphia and made the Eagles’ roster as a defensive back and special teams player. A scouting report at NFL.com praised Roullier’s technical proficiency, work ethic, toughness and versatility. Roullier

(6-foot-4, 312 pounds) started for three-plus seasons at Wyoming, switching from guard to center in his senior year. The same scouting report said Roullier could stand to have longer arms and quicker feet, but projected him to be selected in the fifth or sixth round. The first round of the draft will be Thursday night. The second and third rounds will be Friday with the last four rounds taking place Saturday.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 11A

CO-OP, from 1A Gaughey had read “Let’s Have Healthy Children� by Adelle Davis, a nutritionist prominent in the 1960s and 1970s. “I was looking for whole grains, fresh fruit,� McGaughey said. “I didn’t know a lot about organic at the time, but as I read about it, it made sense to me.� A teacher by trade, McGaughey was substituting at Valley Middle School in 1980 when she was hired as the evening coordinator at the mostly volunteer co-op, which had moved to the Colonial Ridge strip mall on Nicollet Avenue in Burnsville. McGaughey was part of a collective management group that marshaled the volunteers. “I had a fourth daughter in 1983,� said McYARD, from 1A tic setting featuring native garden plantings with a stream, waterfall and pond stocked with native fish. “We can see the waterfall from almost every room in the house,� Renn said. The sandy soil was leveled. A stream and a drainage system was installed to manage storm water. “Eagan has sandy soil

RIVER, from 1A The 1.8-acre park — which has picnic tables, a grilling area, a bicycle-repair station and parking — serves as the trailhead for the Black Dog segment of Dakota County’s Minnesota River Greenway. The 3.75-mile segment of paved riverfront trail stretches from the park through Xcel Energy’s Black Dog power plant property and on to the Cedar Avenue bridge in Eagan. “It’s new for our area. Burnsville has never had access to the Minnesota River in the past,� said Julie Dorshak, the city’s

Gaughey, who had taken a hiatus from teaching, “and my intent always was to return to the classroom when she started school.� Then came January 1989, when a fire destroyed the co-op’s rented space. “We were in the basement, and you could see blue sky,� said McGaughey, who resolved to help the co-op rebuild. Valley moved to a strip mall on Grand Avenue in Burnsville east of Interstate 35W. “It was a struggle. We were there 11 years,� McGaughey said, noting that the tuckedaway location became easier for customers to find once a post office was built nearby. The co-op also matured as a business, though McGaughey admits it lost some of its all-volunteer social cohesion.

“The membership changed in 1989, because of the fire,� said McGaughey, who became general manager in the post-fire period. “It used to be sweat equity: You’d buy five dollars (in product) and then however many hours you worked the quarter before, you’d get discounts. After the fire, it changed to cash equity — $100 for four shares of stock.� The co-op outgrew the Grand Avenue space and built its own 10,000-square-foot store at County Road 11 and McAndrews Road in Burnsville. A 3,300-square-foot addition followed a few years later, along with a mezzanine for offices, community gardens and a teaching garden. The store’s healthy food

options — produce, groceries, meat and seafood, as well as a deli, juice bar and drive-up window — were now part of the mainstream. McGaughey continued to expand education and outreach programs during her tenure. “That was part of the co-op way, I think,� she said. “People that knew how to bake bread or make yogurt, share tofu recipes, they would come and teach other people that wanted to learn.� In recent years Valley added two wholesale operations: Down in the Valley Bakehouse on Cliff Road in Burnsville, which supplies gluten- and peanut-free products to other retailers, and Down in the Valley Meat. The co-op recently launched a subsidiary, Valley Natural Meats, after buying and refur-

bishing a meat-processing plant in Northfield. “The farmers around there couldn’t wait for us to open,� McGaughey said, noting that the business has processed organic and grass-fed hogs and is now taking on cattle. Through it all, membership in Valley Natural Foods has continued to grow, recently topping 12,000, Nauertz said. The co-op is planning yet another expansion and remodeling that will enlarge shopping and food-preparation spaces. But with corporate grocery chains expanding and playing in the co-ops’ natural foods space, Valley has hit an inevitable soft patch in sales growth. Sales of roughly $20 million during the last fiscal year are slightly off Valley’s recent peak, McGaughey said.

Seven grocery stores have recently opened in Valley’s trade area — three HyVees, two Fresh Thymes Farmers Markets and two ALDI stores, she said. “We knew we were going to have a smaller piece of the pie,� McGaughey said. McGaughey, 68, told her board more than a year ago that she planned to step down. Her husband retired from Apple Valley High School eight years ago. “He’s been ‘watiently paiting,’ � McGaughey said, laughing. “I always felt like when I hit the age I am at, that would be the right time.�

and if you put sand on a slope, there’s nothing holding it back,� Arnosti said. The homeowners are lovers of the outdoors and they love to fly fish, but they don’t have a cabin for such an escape. “They wanted to have a haven in their own backyard,� Arnosti said. “And they’re very friendly people, so they wanted to have a big enough fire pit to have friends over.�

They also wanted it capture some of the natural habitat they’ve grown to love in Minnesota, so they used stone from the Boundary Waters. The pond is populated with native fish such as perch and crappie. Arnosti said she has never had a request to create a habitat for native fish. “Most people want goldfish or carp,� Arnosti said.

Arnosti said people usually love the idea of using native plants in their landscaping, but not everyone in Minnesota likes the way they look. “They’re used to cultivated plants that are neat and tidy,� Arnosti said. “Native plants tend to be wilder. They love the idea, but not everybody has gone whole hog. If people were to see this place, I think they’d change their

mind.� Wild, native plants tend to grow together and interconnect. “It’s quite beautiful,� Arnosti said. “It’s like a wild prairie.� She said people are starting to request more pollinating plants because they recognize why important they are to the ecosystem. “Many of the plants, the flowering plants you’d

think would attract butterflies, don’t attract the butterflies because of the way they’re bred,� Arnosti said. “The native plants truly attract the pollinators we need. They’re tricky to find. A standard nursery doesn’t always have them. But places like Bachman’s Nursery are growing them now.�

recreation and community services manager. The city will hold a grand opening for the park and trail segment on Saturday, June 3, from 10 a.m. to noon at the park, located at 600 Black Dog Road W. The event will include a program, refreshments and family activities. The trail segment, located within the Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge, includes wildlife viewing areas and a crossover from the riverfront to an observation deck overlooking Black Dog Lake in Burnsville. “There’s some binoculars there for people to take a look and some interpre-

tive panels to tell you what kind of animals you can look for in that space,� Dorshak said. “The birders love it,� she said. The American white pelican is Black Dog Lake’s signature bird, seen annually from mid-April to midMay and from mid-August to mid-September, according to the wildlife refuge. The trail segment is part of the 17-mile Minnesota River Greenway, which stretches through Burnsville, Eagan, Mendota Heights, Mendota and Lilydale before arriving at St. Paul’s Lilydale Regional Park. From there, trails continue to Harriet Island

and downtown St. Paul. Some hikers, bikers and rollerbladers have already discovered the Black Dog trail. Motorized vehicles are not allowed. “I’ve heard nothing but positive things from people I’ve seen out biking in the area,� Dorshak said. “It’s a nice, flat trail ride, and anybody can get out there and enjoy the wildlife and enjoy the ride. It’s very peaceful.� About 2 miles of trail were completed in 2015, beginning on the west end, Dorshak said. The rest was completed last October, after Xcel had finished a coal-ash removal project. “Now, it’s open� from end to end, Dorshak said.

“We want everyone to let everybody know they’re welcome to come. You can park on either side (Burnsville or Eagan). There’s a dirt parking lot on the Cedar Avenue side.� Federal funding for the project totaled about $1.8 million, Dorshak said. The city and Dakota County have each contributed about $341,400 to construction and engineering costs, she said. They also purchased wetland credits, with the city’s share at about $134,500. The trail runs through Xcel Energy and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service property, said Dorshak, who credited them for making

Contact John Gessner at john.gessner@ecm-inc.com or 952-846-2031.

Contact Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

the project possible. Xcel leases hundreds of acres to the Fish and Wildlife service, which administers the wildlife refuge. Other partners on the project are Dakota County Parks, the National Wildlife Refuge System, the Minnesota Department of Transportation and the U.S. Department of Transportation. The grand opening is part of the city’s I Love Burnsville Week activities. More information is at www.burnsville.org/love. Contact John Gessner at john.gessner@ecm-inc.com or 952-846-2031.

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12A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

EAGLES, from 1A which borders Eagan, has a large population of eagles. While in the air, eagles perceive freeways as bodies of water, Kingery said. “They don’t differentiate all that well,” Kingery said. “When they see an injured animal or roadkill on the road, they see an opportunity.” Eagles don’t have the ability to launch from a standing position as well as a smaller bird like a crow. “It’s usually an instance

with the bird was just in the wrong place when a car comes along,” Kingery said. “You’d like to think people can see them, but you never know the circumstances. “Due to the sheer size of the eagle and the wingspan of the eagle, they need a little more time to get airborne.” From a safety standpoint, Kingery advises it’s best for motorists not to take extreme evasive action when they see an animal in the road. “Even if it’s an eagle, you and your passengers

lives are more important,” Kingery said. “The last thing we want is someone to take evasive action and lose control.” For those who may come across an injured eagle, call the authorities first. “They’re big powerful creatures,” Kingery said. “You never know what their level of cognitive functioning is if you pick them up.”

in order to enable customers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Berean Preschool PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 309 East County Road 42 Burnsville, MN 55306 NAMEHOLDER(S): Berean Education Center 309 East County Road 42 Burnsville, MN 55306 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: April 19, 2017 SIGNED BY: Kristi Ann Charles Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 27, May 4, 2017 680107

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 194 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS EASTVIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PARKING LOT RECONSTRUCTION 18060 IPAVA AVENUE LAKEVILLE, MINNESOTA 55044

Contact Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

Apple Valley educator receives national award Apple Valley High School teacher Pam Cady Wycoff was awarded the Distinguished Service Award – Sixteenth Honors by the National Speech & Debate Association. Since the honor society was created in 1925, Wycoff is one of only two coaches to earn this honor. “Pam has dedicated her life to speech and debate,” said executive director J. Scott Wunn. “She

is a leader in the speech and debate community in Minnesota, and across the country. I’m proud to recognize her outstanding accomplishments.” Wycoff began teaching and coaching speech and debate in Minnesota in 1980. She became the director of speech and debate at Apple Valley High School in 1990, where she built a nationally recognized program and continues to be a full-time classroom teacher. Over

the last 30 years she has earned countless awards including Apple Valley High School Teacher of the Year (2009), Minnesota State High School League Hall of Fame (2004), National Speech & Debate Association Hall of Fame (2007), National Coach of the Year (2009) and a six diamond coach award. She is also the vice president of the NSDA board of directors.

LEGAL NOTICES 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: Americlean PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 4191 Lexington Way Eagan, MN 55123 NAMEHOLDER(S): Vicky Czaplewski 4191 Lexington Way Eagan, MN 55123 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: April 6, 2017 SIGNED BY: Vicky Czaplewski Published in the Burnsville-Eagan SunThisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 680523

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 196 This is a summary of the April 10, 2017 School Board meeting. The full text is available for public inspection at www.district196.org, at the District Office, or by standard or electronic mail. The meeting was called to order at 6 p.m. at Dakota Ridge School, followed by the Pledge of Allegiance and a moment of silence for a student who passed away. Present: Albright, Coulson, Huusko, Isaacs, Magnuson, Roseen and Supt. Berenz. Absent: Schutte. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Coulson and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve the agenda. Students and staff were recognized. The next principal of Shannon Park Elementary School, Erik Davis, and Leon Tazel, a volunteer, were introduced. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Coulson and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve Consent items: board meeting minutes; designated Berenz Identified Official with Authority; claims; electronic funds transfer schedule; schedule of investments; treasurer’s report; gifts totaling $89,004.08; advertising revenue totaling $599; grants totaling $18,000; letter of intent for a solar energy subscription with GreenMark Solar; contract with Marshall Line, Inc. for supplemental transportation service during 201718 personnel separations, leaves of absence and new staff; resolution terminating certain probationary teachers and a resolution to expel a student immediately through and including April 9, 2018. The board heard legislative and financial updates. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Albright and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve contracts totaling $1,080,950 for secured vestibule upgrades at seven facilities. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Albright and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve contracts totaling $465,789.20 for the parking lot upgrade at Northview Elementary School. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Isaacs and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve a three-year agreement with HealthPartners and a two percent premium increase effective July 1, 2017. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Coulson and carried with a 6-0 vote to approve a resolution declaring April 17-21, 2017 District 196 Volunteers Appreciation Week. Albright recognized the district teachers for putting students first. Magnuson commented on the tailgate event Dakota County United Educators sponsored prior to the meeting and noted the Partners in Education banquet is next week. Berenz reported that, according to the statewide expenditure data for fiscal year 2016, the district continued to spend more money per pupil on regular classroom instruction and less on administration and support services than the averages for districts statewide and in the metro area. She also encouraged interested parents and residents to consider serving on district advisory councils. Motion by Huusko, seconded by Isaacs and carried with a 6-0 vote to adjourn at 7:10 p.m. Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek Lakeville Sun Thisweek April 28, 2017 681488

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

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 196 ADVERTISEMENT FOR CONTRACT #420 & #1000 RE-BID VALLEY MIDDLE SCHOOL / SOUTHVIEW ELEMENTARY ADDITIONS & RENOVATIONS Notice is hereby given that Independent School District #196, will receive multiple prime sealed bids for the Valley Middle School/ Southview Elementary Additions & Renovations at the District Office – 3455 153rd Street W. Rosemount, MN 55068 until 2:00pm on Friday, May 5th, 2017 at which time they will be opened and read aloud. The work for this bid package includes Contracts for: #0420 Masonry/Brick/Architectural Precast & #1000 Misc. Specialties – Supply. Reference Specification Section 01 12 00 Contract Work Scope Descriptions for detailed listing of items included in each Contract. All bids must be sealed and marked for the appropriate contract for which the bid is submitted. Bids shall be submitted in exact accordance with Bid Documents (including Instructions to Bidders and Proposal Forms) and Contract Documents (including Drawings and Specifications) as prepared by Wold Architects & Engineers. Documents are available currently for public inspection at Wold Architects & Engineer’s office (332 Minnesota Street,W2000, St Paul, MN 55101), the Construction Manager’s office (7500 Olson Memorial Highway, Suite #300, Golden Valley, Minnesota 55427), Minneapolis; St. Paul, Mankato, Rochester, St. Cloud and Mid-Minnesota Builder’s Exchanges; Reed Construction Data (CMD) and Dodge Data & Analytics Plan Room. Bidders may obtain sets of Bidding Documents by contacting Amber Sager at the office of the Construction Manager, Wenck Construction, 7500 Olson Memorial Highway, Suite #300, Golden Valley, Minnesota 55427. Plans will be distributed electronically only. Contractors will be responsible for printing plans if hard copies are desired. The bids shall be accompanied by a certified check, cashier’s check, or corporate surety bond in an amount equal to five (5%) percent of the base bid, as bid security. No personal checks will be accepted. No bids may be withdrawn within 45 days after opening the bids. A bidder may withdraw his or her bid at any time prior to the date set for receiving bids, or authorized postponements thereof. Thereafter, bids may be withdrawn only after 45 days have elapsed after bid date, provided Independent School District #196 has not acted thereon. Bids may be withdrawn only by written request. Independent School District #196 reserves the right to reject any or all bids received and to waive informalities and irregularities in the bidding. Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek, Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, 2017 679691

NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that the property will be sold on May 17, 2017. The property will be offered online at www.StorageTreasures. com and more information about the sale can be found at that website. The undersigned Acorn Mini Storage will sell at Public Sale by competitive bidding the personal property heretofore stored with the undersigned by: Unit # 476- Scott Sharp: furniture Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 21, 28, 2017 677501

Independent School District #194 will receive single prime sealed bids for Eastview Elementary School Parking Lot Reconstruction until 2:00 PM local time on May 16, 2017 at the Independent School District #194 District Office Building, 8670 210th Street West, Lakeville, Minnesota, 55044, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. Bidding documents, including the Proposal Form, Drawings and Specifications, will be on file at the Minnesota Builders Exchange; McGraw Hill Construction/Dodge Plan Center; Reed Construction; iSqFt Plan Room (St. Paul, MN); and from PlanWell at https://order.earc.com/arcEOC/Secures/PWELL_ PrivateList.aspx?PrjType=pub This project includes: Removal and replacement of the existing bituminous parking lot, exterior lighting replacement, concrete curb and sidewalk replacement and parking lot/road striping. American Reprographics Company, 4730 Park Glen Road, St. Louis Park, Minnesota 55416 (952) 697-8800, facsimile (952) 697-8803 will provide complete downloadable sets of the Bidding Documents to prospective bidders and subcontractors. The downloads will be available [ISSUE]. A deposit check in the amount of $25 made out to ARC for each set downloaded via the internet at http://www.e-arc. com/mn/saintlouispark and clicking on the PlanWell icon, then the Public Plan Room icon, select Eastview Elementary School Parking Lot Reconstruction. Make proposals on the bid forms supplied in the Project Manual. No oral, telegraphic or telephonic proposals or modifications will be considered. Submit with each bid, a certified check or acceptable bidder’s bond payable to Independent School District #194 in an amount equal to five percent (5%) of the total bid. The successful bidder will be required to furnish satisfactory Labor and Material Payment Bond, and Performance Bond. Bids may not be withdrawn within thirty (30) days after the scheduled time of opening bids, without the consent of the Owner. The Owner reserves the right to accept any bid or to reject any or all bids, or parts of such bids, and waive informalities or irregularities in bidding. The Owner requires Substantial Completion of the project on or before August 11, 2017 Board of Education INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT #194 Published in the Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 681177

CITY OF BURNSVILLE MINNESOTA ORDINANCE NO. 1411 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING TITLE 10, OF THE BURNSVILLE CITY CODE, BEING THE ZONING TITLE OF THE CITY OF BURNSVILLE CHASERE CASE FILE NO. DEV2017-0002 The City Council of the City of Burnsville, Minnesota ordains as follows: Section 1. Title 10 of the Burnsville City Code is hereby amended to allow a four story mixed use apartment complex with up to 172 units, 8,000 square feet of retail, underground and surface parking located at 50 Travelers Trail East in accordance with the Amended Planned Unit Development Agreement on file in the City Clerk’s office dated April 18, 2017 for the following described property located within the City of Burnsville, Minnesota: Lot 3, Block 1 Nicollet Plaza Addition Section 2. The zoning map of the City of Burnsville referred to and described in said Title 10, shall not be republished to show the aforesaid rezoning, but the Community Development Director or his/her designee shall appropriately mark the zoning map on file in the City Clerk’s office for the purpose of indicating the rezoning provided for in this ordinance and all of the notations, references and other information shown thereon are hereby incorporated by reference and made a part of this ordinance. Section 3. This ordinance shall be effective immediately upon its passage and publication according to law. PASSED AND DULY ADOPTED THIS 18th day of April, 2017 by the City Council of the City of Burnsville. Elizabeth B. Kautz, Mayor ATTEST: Macheal Collins City Clerk Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, 2017 679374

MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE AMENDMENT TO 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: Noah Cleaning System PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 3359 Coahman Road, Apt. # 208 Eagan, MN 55121 NAMEHOLDER(S): Wesene Gizaw 3359 Coahman Road, Apt. # 208 Eagan, MN 55121 This certificate is an amendment of Certificate of Assumed Name File Number 812213500030 Originally filed on February 17, 2015 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: April 24, 2017 SIGNED BY: Wesene Gizaw Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 681314

MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME Minnesota Statutes, 333 The filing of an assumed name does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable customers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Wild Boar Beard Company PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 1220 Earley Shores Lane Burnsville, MN 55306 NAMEHOLDER(S): Steve Eugene Connelly 1220 Earley Shores Lane Burnsville, MN 55306 Jennifer Mary Connelly 1220 Earley Shores Lane Burnsville, MN 55306 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: March 28, 2017 SIGNED BY: Steve Connelly Published in the Burnsville-Eagan SunThisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 679378

MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME Minnesota Statutes, 333 The filing of an assumed name does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable customers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: The Travel Academy PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 3140 Neil Armstrong Blvd #220 Eagan, MN 55121 NAMEHOLDER(S): Capstone Institute, Inc. 2880 South Atlantic Avenue Unit #201 Cocoa Beach, FL 32931 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: April 14, 2017 SIGNED BY: Randi Walz Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 21, 28, 2017 678023

MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME Minnesota Statutes, 333 The filing of an assumed name

does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable customers to be able to identify the true owner of a business. ASSUMED NAME: Dezigns PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: 545 Red Oak Ct. Eagan, MN 55121 NAMEHOLDER(S): Desire Marie Sobiech 545 Red Oak Ct. Eagan, MN 55121 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: April 7, 2017 SIGNED BY: Desire M Sobiech Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 21, 28, 2017 677556

NOTICE OF ISSUANCE OF EMERGENCY (EX PARTE) ORDER FOR PROTECTION BY PUBLICATION (MINN. STAT. § 518B.01, SUBD. 8) State of Minnesota Stearns County District Court Seventh Judicial District Court File Number: 73-FA-17-3157 In the Matter of Dorine Lauren Jinkins vs Adrhyon Whitney Spohn To Respondent: Adrhyon Whitney Spohn YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an Ex Parte Order for Protection has been issued in this case. You may request a hearing if you contact the court administrator’s office within 12 days of the date of publication of this notice. You may obtain a copy of the Ex Parte Order for Protection and the form to request a hearing from the court administrator’s office at the following address: Stearns County District Court 725 Courthouse Square Room 134 St. Cloud MN 56303 Failure to request a hearing or to obtain a copy of the Ex Parte Order will not be a defense to prosecution for violation of the Court’s order. Dated: April 25, 2017 George Lock Court Administrator Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, 2017 681547

CITY OF BURNSVILLE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING A Public Hearing will be held on May 8, 2017, at 6:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible by the Burnsville Planning Commission, 100 Civic Center Parkway, in

the Council Chambers. The City of Burnsville proposes to amend City Code Title 3 Business Regulations to add a new chapter regulating Special Events and proposes to amend City Code Title 10 (Zoning), Chapter 30 (Signs) related to Special Events. The application will be scheduled for the next appropriate City Council meeting following the Planning Commission meeting. All persons desiring to speak on this application are encouraged to attend. For more information concerning this request, please contact Planner Regina Dean (952) 895-4453 at the City of Burnsville. Regina Dean On Behalf of the Chair of the Burnsville Planning Commission Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 681493

CITY OF BURNSVILLE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING A Public Hearing will be held on May 8, 2017, at 6:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible by the Burnsville Planning Commission, 100 Civic Center Parkway, in the Council Chambers on the application of Vastgoed LLC for a PUD Amendment to allow a Conquers Ninja Warrior sports performance fitness facility at 3203 Corporate Center Drive. The application will be scheduled for the next appropriate City Council meeting following the Planning Commission meeting. All persons desiring to speak on this application are encouraged to attend. For more information concerning this request, please contact Planner Deb Garross (952) 895-4446 at the City of Burnsville. Deb Garross On Behalf of the Chair of the Burnsville Planning Commission Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 681480

CITY OF BURNSVILLE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING A Public Hearing will be held on May 8, 2017, at 6:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible by the Burnsville Planning Commission, 100 Civic Center Parkway, in the Council Chambers on the application of City of Burnsville for a Zoning Ordinance Amendment to Title 10-30-6(D) Leasing Banners, to remove reference to “STAR Program”. The application will be scheduled for the next appropriate City Council meeting following the Planning Commission meeting. All persons desiring to speak on this application are encouraged to attend. For more information concerning this request, please contact Planner Deb Garross (952) 895-4446 at the City of Burnsville. Deb Garross On Behalf of the Chair of the Burnsville Planning Commission Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 28, May 5, 2017 681496

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 191 BURNSVILLE-EAGAN-SAVAGE SD - BURNSVILLE ANNEX BUILDING AUTOMOTIVE SPRAY BOOTH ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS PROJECT IDENTIFICATION: Sealed Bids will be received for the Automotive Spray Booth for Burnsville Eagan Savage Public Schools, Independent School District No. 191, in accordance with the Bidding Documents prepared by Armstrong, Torseth, Skold & Rydeen, Inc., Architects and Engineers, 8501 Golden Valley Road, Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN 55427-4414, Phone 763-545-3731. PROJECT DESCRIPTION: Project shall include the removal of old spray booth and associated equipment and installation of a new automotive spray booth with associated fans, make-up air, controls and associated utilities at the Burnsville High School Annex building. TYPE OF BIDS: Single Lump Sum Bids will be received for the total Scope of the Work for the Project. BID DATE: Bids must be received on or before May 10, 2017 at 3:00 P.M., local time. DELIVERY AND OPENING OF BIDS: Bids shall be delivered to and opened at Independent School District No. 191 Diamondhead Education Center, 200 West Burnsville Parkway, Burnsville, Minnesota 55337. Bids will be opened publicly and read aloud immediately after the specified time of closure for bidding period. Interested parties are invited to attend the bid opening. PROCUREMENT OF BIDDING DOCUMENTS: Bidding Documents and Plan Holders List/On-Line Documents may be procured from: Thomas Printworks, 801 2nd Avenue North, Minneapolis, MN 55404; Telephone Number: 612-374-1120; Toll-Free Number: 800-3287154; Fax Number: 612-374-1129. View Documents On-Line: Bidders may view Bidding Documents by accessing http://dfs.thomasrepro.com/portals/atsr. This site is intended for viewing of Bidding Documents only; there is no charge for viewing documents. For ordering on-line documents and associated costs; Call or Email Requests to: Minneapolisaec@thomasprintworks.com. Payments shall be made to Thomas Printworks and are non-refundable. BID SECURITY: Bids shall be accompanied by a certified check, cashier’s check or Bid Bond in the amount of 5 percent of the Base Bid submitted, made payable to the Owner, as a guarantee that the Bidder will, if awarded the contract, enter into a contract with the Owner in accordance with Bid submitted and the Contract Documents. TIME OF COMMENCEMENT: Work may commence on project site on June 12, 2017. TIME OF COMPLETION: Owner requires Substantial Completion of Contract Work on or before August 11, 2017. PRE-BID MEETING: A Pre-Bid meeting will be held at 3:00 P.M. on April 25, 2017 at Burnsville High School, meet at the Main Office. WAGE DETERMINATION REQUIREMENTS: Contract is subject to compliance with the applicable Schedule of Prevailing Wages issued by the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry. BIDS REQUESTED BY: Burnsville Eagan Savage Public School Independent School District No. 191 Diamondhead Education Center 200 West Burnsville Parkway Burnsville, Minnesota 55337 Published in the Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek April 21, 28, 2017 677024


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 13A

auto

employment

•

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

By Phone: By FAX:

real estate • business services

Garage$52 Sales $50 Package Package

Mondays at 3:00 pm* * Earlier on holiday weeks 952-392-6888

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

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By Mail:

•

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TO PLACE YOUR AD Deadline:

classifieds

10917 Valley View Road Eden Prairie, MN 55344 Attn: Classified

• 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:

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LOCATION

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

Eden Prairie theadspider.com

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

10917 Valley View Road 952-392-6888

HOW TO PAY

1000 WHEELS

4000 SALES

1010 Vehicles

4020 Crafts, Boutiques & Flea Markets

LOOK for a new pet

in Sun•Thisweek Classifieds

1050 RV’s & Campers 2013 Monte Carlo Travel Trailer, 40’ long, 2 electric slide outs, sleeps 6 people, $22,999 B/O 952-715-2118

2500 PETS

r IFMQJOH TFOJPST EPXOTJ[F r QSFQBSF BOZ FTUBUF GPS MJRVJEBUJPO r CZ PVU PS UPUBM FTUBUF DMFBO PVU -FU T NFFU! 763-443-0519 Apple Valley 115+ GARAGE SALES Diamond Path N’brhood

Sat, April 29 (8am - 4pm)

2510 Pets Free Kittens - 8 wks old, males/females, buff color. 952-469-5155

3500 MERCHANDISE 3580 Household/ Furnishings Rattan: 4 chairs & table nice cush, glass top 48� round, $290 763-416-4831

3600 Miscellaneous For Sale Woodstream Gun Case, 50�x7.5�, like new! Large 9 drwr tool chest. 5HP Johnson trolling motor. Fishing equipment. 651-456-5329

3620 Music Instruments Wurlitzer Baby Grand Piano: Exc. condition! Appraised $4,650; will sell for $1,500 Call 480-471-1771, 952-942-7279 Picts avail.

Maps avail. at Gas Stations N. of Cty Rd 42 between Diamond Path & Pilot Knob

Apple Valley Estate Sale May 4-5-6 (8-5). Tons of tools! Furn., collectibles, HH, more! 15639 Fjord Ave Apple Valley Estate/Moving 4/29 (8-5) Craftsman tools, furn, HH, kids stuff, antiqs, Xmas, etc. 795 Newell Circle

Apple Valley, April 28 & 29, 9am - 3pm. Great moving sale! Furn, tons of household, outdoor & yard equip, snow blower, tile cutter, boys baby/toddler clothes, car seat, stroller, wagon. Lots of nice stuff. Priced to sell! Don’t miss it. 5747 143rd St. W. Bloomington Garage Sale @ St. Bonaventure Ambrose Hall 90th Street & 10th Ave. Preview 5/2 (5:30-7:30) $1 Adm; 5/3 (9am-7pm); 5/4 is 1/2 price @ 9am; $3/bag 12-4pm

Bloomington Multi-Family 5/3-4-5 (8-5) HH items, cloz, furn., & much more!

100th Street & 10th Ave.

1020 Junkers & Repairables

1020 Junkers & Repairables

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$10,500

100+ Families contributing

Annual Spring Sale Thurs, April 27 (5-8pm) $3 Adm. - Thurs. only; Fri, April 28 (2pm-7pm) Sat, April 29 (9am-Noon) (Sat. - Bag Sale $4/bag) r 'PPE "WBJMBCMF r Hwy 7 to Christmas Lk Rd For info: 952-474-5471

Having a Garage Sale?

4500 RENTALS / REAL ESTATE

BLOOMINGTON May 4 - 6, Th & Fri 7am6pm & Sat 8am-2pm. 10,000 SQ FT INDOOR SALE 95% NEW MERCHANDISE Great opportunity for retail & thrift shop owners! Men’s/women’s clothing, caps, clocks, watches, sporting goods, gift ware, bags, tools, promotional products, scale model trucks, toys, games, home & office decor, antiques, HH items, photo equipment, Disney collectibles, used office furniture, office supplies, retail displays, clothing racks & MORE! 10951 NESBITT AVE SO Bloomington, May 4, 8-5, May 5 & 6, 8-12. Downsizing/Moving Sale. Must see. 3610 W 103rd St.

Brooklyn Park Register for the

City Wide Garage Sales Deadline:

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4570 Storage For Rent

Farmington Multi-Family 4/26-27-28-29 (9-6:30) Kids stuff - car bed, furn, HH, tools. 19735 Canary Path

8’ x 20’ and 8’ x 40’ Storage Units Available Now 612-889-8768

Farmington Multi-Family Sale - April 29 & 30 (8-3)

Lonsdale Mini-Storage 7 sizes available. 5’x10’ to 10’x40’. Call 507-744-4947 leave message.

Hwy 3 and Cty Rd 66 Farmington TOOL SALE! 4/28-29 (8-4) Table saw, radial arm saw, much more! Cash only. 1000 8th Street

For just $10, you get areawide promotion through the city’s website, social media accounts, printed media & more. You’ll also receive an official citywide garage sale sign & be included in the highly popular online and printed map. Visit: www.brooklynpark. org/garagesale to register. Brooklyn Park, Thurs-Sat May 11-13, 9a-7p HUGE PLANT SALE! Hennepin Tech College Vegetables, annuals perennials, patio pots & more! Look for signs 9000 Brooklyn Blvd All forms of payment accepted. C H A S K A / J O N AT H A N : 31st Annual Jonathan Festival of Garage Sale. Sat. April 29 (8-3) 100+ garage sales, maps, food, satellites at World Learner School 112050 Hundertmark Rd Circle Pines-Moving Sale, 4/29&30, 9-3. Pics: www.oldisknew.com 111 E Golden Lake Ln CRYSTAL ESTATE SALE 4/26-29, 8-5. Furn., HH items, clothes & much misc 3418 Florida Ave North

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Lakeville, May 4-6, Thurs 9-7, Fri 9-5 & Sat 9-2. Save BIG on everything for Baby, Kid, Teen, Adult & Home! Toys, Books, Games, Baby Gear, Sports, Purses, Crafts, Home Furnishings & Much More! Ames Arena, 19900 Ipava Ave. Minneapolis

Annual Jewelry Sale! May 4-5 (8-5); and May 6 (8-3) Walker Methodist 3737 Bryant Ave. South Minnetonka Multi-Family, Moving Sale 5/5-6 (9-4) HH, tools, seasonal, furn.

3739 Park Valley Rd. Richfield - HUGE SALE! UM Church of Peace 4/27-28 (9-5); 4/29 (9-1)

6345 Xerxes Ave. So. Richfield Mini-Estate Sale 5/4-5-6 (8-6) Jewelry, HH, quilting, Antiq. Porcelain table, tiller, snowblower. Cash only 7421 3rd Ave. S. St. Anthony

Donations taken 5/3-4 (9-9) Call for info: 612-706-1095

Eagan Multi-Family 5/4-6 (9-5) collectibles, HH, hunting, fishing, tools, kids Adirondacks 2036 Shale Lane

Vadnais Heights/WBL, Huge Kids’ Sale May 5-7, Fri/Sat 9a-9p, Sun 8a-1p. Clothing, Toys & More! 1490 East Cty Rd E - 55110

April 28-29-30 (10-7) Champions Hall

7000 Washington Ave. S. edenprairie.jbfsale.com

4020 Crafts, Boutiques & Flea Markets

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GARAGE APRONS

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30+ Years Experience Asphalt Paving & Sealcoat Quality Work W/Warranty LSC Construction Svc, Inc 952-890-2403 / 612-363-2218 Mbr: Better Business Bureau

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Valley Investments Construction Serving the south metro since 1970, all types of remodeling. Call today 651-454-5191

Professional w/15 yrs exp.

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Roy’s Sanding Service Since 1951

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info@staincrete.com Rick Concrete & Masonry

All Types of Concrete Work! Additions, drive-

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**A CONCRETE** PRESSURE LIFTING “THE MUDJACKERS� Don’t Replace it Raise it! Save $$$ Walks- StepsPatios- Drives- Garage Floors- Aprons- BsmntsCaulking Ins/Bond 952-898-2987

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Duffy’s Hardwood Floors

Dan’s Concrete

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Â?Concrete, Chimneys,Â? brick, stone, Drain Tile New or Repair Â?Christian Brothers Â? Construction & Concrete

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From the Unique to the Ordinary

5 Star Home Services

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4/28 (8-5) & 4/29 (8-3)

Eagan 75+ Families! All Saints Lutheran Church

5140 Carpet, Floor & Tile

Hopkins

Patriots Marching Band Garage Sale Sat. 5/6, 8-6 & Sun. 5/7, 9-4. Lower Gym @ SAVHS 3303 33rd Ave NE (Door # 11)

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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.

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952-392-6888

Midnight on May 5th

Kids Consignment Sale 200+ Families

4020 Crafts, Boutiques & Flea Markets

$54

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

Valley Athletic Assn (VAA) Garage Sale ONE DAY ONLY! Sat., Apr. 29 (10-3) 14599 Hayes Rd, Apple Valley Next to AV Community Center. Athletic Equip & Apparrel: Baseball, Football, Soccer, Softball, Lacrosse, Basketball & Volleyball.

Eden Prairie

4020 Crafts, Boutiques & Flea Markets

Merchandise Mover

Excelsior United Methodist Church

Eden Prairie Estate Sale May 5 (8-6); May 6 (8-3) High quality yarn & quilt fabric. 12685 Tussock Ct.

Call/Text Ryan 763-229-6180 for more details and pictures

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Huge Sale - HUGE!

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3 Sisters Estate Company

$54

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Transportation

4030 Garage & Estate Sales

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Lots of vintg. & collectibles May 4, 5, 6 (8-5)

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14A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

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Recycling means manufacturing jobs in Minnesota.

Anchor Glass in Shakopee produces 915 million bottles every year and is the biggest consumer of recycled glass feedstock in the upper Midwest. Anchor employs 280 workers.

Learn more about how and why to recycle at home.

recyclemoreminnesota.org

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DIRECTOR, BEHAVIORAL HEALTH Seeking Nurse to manage 14-bed inpatient Geropsychiatry Unit in Regina Hospital, Hastings, MN. Req’s BSN or MSN, plus 3 yrs acute care inpatient psych mgmt. experience in a hospital setting. Resume to: Terry Good, Horizon Health, terry.good@ horizonhealth.com; Fax: 1-804-684-5663. EOE

TEACHERS & ASSISTANT TEACHERS New Horizon Academy in EAGAN & LAKEVILLE are now accepting applications! Must be lead teacher qualified under MN Rule 3. Previous experience & 2-4 year degree in ECE or related field. 401K, health, dental and life insurance, a positive and rewarding work environment and much more! For more information contact Kim at: 612-749-4128 or apply online: www.newhorizon academy.net/careers E.O.E

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Free Ests. Lic’d & Ins’d 952-888-5123

michelle

5510 Full-time

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5370 Painting & Decorating

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– Part Time Days Ebenezer Ridges Care Center seeks a part-time (8:00am - Noon, Mon-Fri) maintenance person for our community in Burnsville. Applicant must have strong organizational skills, ability to troubleshoot appliances/plumbing/electrical/carpentry issues. Minimum 1 year recent experience required, boiler’s license preferred but not required.

** School VAN DRIVERS** Company minivan from Home! $14/hr 3.5 weeks PTO after 1 year. 651-203-8149

5510 Full-time

NOVAK STUMP REMOVAL

5500 EMPLOYMENT

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763-420-3036 952-240-5533

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Maintenance Technician

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Home Tune-up

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5510 Full-time

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RETAINING WALLS

5510 Full-time

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SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 15A

5510 Full-time

5520 Part-time

STERICYCLE IS HIRING IN EAGAN ! Maintenance Technician r 1FSGPSNJOH 1. USPVCMF TIPPUJOH BOE SFQBJST PG JOEVTUSJBM FRVJQNFOU r 1FSGPSNJOH NBJOUFOBODF PO QOFVNBUJDT QVNQT NPUPST r 1FSGPSNJOH GBDJMJUZ NBJOUFOBODF PO CVJMEJOH r 5SPVCMF TIPPUJOH JTTVFT PO IJHI BOE MPX WPMUBHF FMFDUSJDBM TZTUFNT BOE 1-$ T r 5FSSJêD CFOFêUT m .FEJDBM %FOUBM 1SFTDSJQUJPOT NBUDIJOH , &NQMPZFF 4UPDL 1VSDIBTF 1SPHSBN "11-: ! www.stericycle.com +PC *% &0& .JOPSJUJFT 8PNFO %JTBCMFE 7FUFSBOT 4UFSJDZDMF

STERICYCLE IS HIRING IN EAGAN! Lead Maintenance Technician r 1FSGPSNJOH 1. USPVCMF TIPPUJOH BOE SFQBJST PG JOEVTUSJBM FRVJQNFOU r 1FSGPSNJOH NBJOUFOBODF PO QOFVNBUJDT QVNQT NPUPST r 1FSGPSNJOH GBDJMJUZ NBJOUFOBODF PO CVJMEJOH r 5SPVCMF TIPPUJOH JTTVFT PO IJHI BOE MPX WPMUBHF FMFDUSJDBM TZTUFNT BOE 1-$ T r 5FSSJêD CFOFêUT m .FEJDBM %FOUBM 1SFTDSJQUJPOT NBUDIJOH , &NQMPZFF 4UPDL 1VSDIBTF 1SPHSBN "11-: ! www.stericycle.com +PC *% &0& .JOPSJUJFT 8PNFO %JTBCMFE 7FUFSBOT 4UFSJDZDMF

5520 Part-time

SECURITY

Friendship Village of Bloomington, a premier continuing care retirement community, seeks an evening shift Security Officer to work every other weekend from 2:00 pm to 10:00 pm. On-call position also available for all shifts. Duties include conducting security rounds inside and outside of building, completing daily log/report, conducting preliminary investigations, handling emergencies, and performing light maintenance. Qualifications include at least two years of security experience and a state issued driver’s license with a clean driving record. Apply online at friendshipvillagemn.com by following the Careers link. Call (952) 646-9024 with questions.

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5530 Full-time or Part-time

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5540 Healthcare

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16A April 28, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan

theater and arts calendar

Books Lorna Landvik, 7 p.m. Monday, May 1, Content Bookstore, 314 Division St., Northfield. Landvik will read and sign her new novel, “Once in a Blue Moon Lodge,â€? a sequel to “Patty Jane’s House of Curl.â€? Information: 507-222-9238. Comedy Nick Swardson, 8 p.m. Friday, April 28, Mystic Lake, Prior Lake. Tickets: $35. Information: 952-496-6563 or mysticlake. com. Dance “CoppĂŠlia Nouveau,â€? presented by Twin Cities Ballet of Minnesota, 7 p.m. May 12-13 and 2 p.m. May 13-14, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $18-$36 at the box office, 800-982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com. Events Farm Babies runs through April 30 at the Minnesota Zoo in Apple Valley. Information: mnzoo.org. Fifty Shades of Men “Cuffs ’n Collarsâ€? The Show, 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. May 12-13, Mystic Lake, Prior Lake. Tickets: $25. Information: 952-4966563 or mysticlake.com. Exhibits Solo exhibit by Burnsville artist Annie Young runs to April 28 at the Eagan Community Center art gallery, 1501 Central Parkway, Eagan. Information: 651-675-5550. Music “Americana,â€? spring concert by the Minnesota Valley

Men’s and Women’s chorales, 7:30 p.m. April 27-29, Grace Lutheran Church, 7800 150th St., Apple Valley. Tickets: $10 ($5 for veterans and active service members) at MVWC sings.org or MVMCsings.org or at the door. Julida Alter and Sean Alter, 5-6 p.m. Friday, April 28, BlueNose Coffee, 20700 Chippendale Ave., Farmington. Free. Alison Cromie, 10-11:30 a.m. Saturday, April 29, BlueNose Coffee, 20700 Chippendale Ave., Farmington. Free. ABBA tribute band ABBASolutely Fab, 7 p.m. Saturday, April 29, Steeple Center, 14375 S. Robert Trail, Rosemount. Tickets: $18 at www.rose mountarts.com. “American Roots: Harmonies that Shaped a Nation� by The Rose Ensemble, 2 p.m. Sunday, April 30, Lakeville Area Arts Center. Tickets: $18 adults, $15 students and seniors at LakevilleAreaArtsCenter.com and at the door. Todd Rundgren, 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, Ames Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: $42.50-$72.50 at the box office, 800-982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com. Cabaret show by the Lakeville North Now and Then Singers, 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 5, and Saturday, May 6, at the Lakeville Area Arts Center, 20965 Holyoke Ave. Tickets: $5-$10 at http://lnhs.seatyourself.biz/. Switched at Birth, 7-9 p.m. Friday, May 5, Steeple Center, 14375 S. Robert Trail, Rosemount. Part of Bluegrass at the Steeple Center series.

Tickets: $10 at www.rosemoun tarts.com or at the door. South Metro Chorale spring concert, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6, Holy Trinity United Methodist Church, 16150 Arcadia Ave., Prior Lake; 3 p.m. Sunday, May 7, Christ the King Lutheran Church, 8600 Fremont Ave. S., Bloomington. Tickets: $12 adults, $8 seniors and students at the door. Theater Bravo 2017: Viva Las Vegas, presented by Eastview High School, 7 p.m. April 2729. Tickets: $9 adults, $7 senior citizens, $5 students at http:// seatyourself.biz/evhs. Information: 952-431-8955. “Guys and Dolls,� presented by Lakeville South High School, 7 p.m. April 27-29. Tickets: http://seatyourself. biz/lshs. Information: 952-2323322. “The Miracle Worker,� presented by the Northfield Arts Guild April 21-30, Northfield Arts Guild Theater, 411 Third St. W., Northfield. Information: NorthfieldArtsGuild.org. “The Three Musketeers,� presented by Lakeville North High School, 7 p.m. April 2729. Tickets: $12 adults, $9 students at http://lnhs.seatyourself.biz/. Information: 952232-3600. OnStage 2017: Working for a Living, presented by Rosemount High School, 7 p.m. April 27-29, May 4-6; 2 p.m. April 30. Information: 651423-7501. “Twelfth Night,� presented by Apple Valley High School, 7 p.m. April 27-29; 2 p.m. April 30. Tickets: $7 adults, $5 se-

Obituaries

niors and students at http:// seatyourself.biz/avhs. Information: 952-431-8200. “Anything Goes,� presented by Eagan High School, 7 p.m. April 28-29, May 4-6; 2 p.m. April 30, Eagan High School. Tickets available online at www.eagan.k12.mn.us, at the ticket office 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. school days, and one hour prior to performances (651683-6964). Workshops/classes/other Watch Me Draw – Paint & Splash, 5-8:30 p.m. Friday, May 5. Paint at the studio followed by swimming at McGuire Middle School. Cost: $30. Sign up through LakevilleAreaCom munityEd.org call 952-4691234 for more information. Watch Me Draw summer camps at the studio, 20908 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville, are open for registration at www. WatchMeDraw.net or 952-4691234. Yoga wind down class is the first Thursday of the month at Precision and Flow Pilates, 13708 County Road 11, Burnsville. Information: www.preci sionandflowpilates.com. 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. “Flemish and Renaissance Oil Painting Method,� 4-7 p.m. Thursdays, River Ridge Arts School, Burnsville. Six weeks of comprehensive study of oil painting for students of all levels. Information/registration: Dan Petrov at 763-843-2734 or www.danpetrovart.com.

theater and arts brief Women’s choir presents Broadway tribute Eagan Women of Note will present “A Broadway Tribute to Leading Ladies� 4 p.m. Sunday, May 7, at Mt. Calvary Lutheran Church, 3930 Rahn Road, Eagan. The concert will include Broadway songs made famous by female leads and female casts. The 50-voice community choir will also honor their personal leading ladies through repertoire that spans decades of Broadway shows. Songs from “The Sound of Music,� “Cats,� “Gypsy,� “Wicked� and more have been particularly selected to highlight the strengths, talents and resilience of women. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children under 12. Visit www.eaganwomenofnote.org for more information about the choir.

Obituaries

Angeline Lucille Anderson

Curtis LeRoy Thorstenson

Angeline Lucille Anderson was born April 13, 1919 (minutes after her twin sister Adeline) to Helmer and Ida (Haldorson) Markison at their home in rural Lakeville, MN. She was baptized DQG FRQÂżUPHG DW :HVW &KULVWLDQLD /XWKHUDQ &KXUFK 6KH DWWHQGHG school at the Eureka 47 country school. Her mother died when she was nine years old. She often remarked about the wonderful job her Dad did in raising his young family. She met her fuWXUH KXVEDQG $UQROG $QGHUVRQ DW &KULVWLDQLD ZKHUH WKH\ were married on May 1, 1937 shortly after her 18th birthday. They made their home on the Anderson farm in New Market Township where Angie was a homemaker. And a wonderful “home makerâ€? she was! She was an amazing baker. The coffee pot was always on and they entertained family, friends and neighbors most every Sunday afternoon. The Sunday afternoon tradition has continued and many family members can be found “at homeâ€? each Sunday. She was an expert lefse maker. Arnold and Angie raised four children. Angeline’s greatest sadness was the death of their son Paul when he was four years old. Once all their children were in school she began to work away IURP KRPH 6KH ÂżUVW ZRUNHG DV D GRPHVWLF KHOSHU LQ WKH homes of several families in Lakeville where she soon became part of these families as well. But her long term career was at Enggren’s Grocery store in Lakeville where she became a cashier and friend to many customers over her more than 25 years there. Arnold preceded her in death on April 10, 1994 and Angie remained on the farm for several more years before moving to a smaller home in Lakeville. In 2010 MillVWUHDP &RPPRQV LQ 1RUWKÂżHOG EHFDPH KHU KRPH 6KH KDV OLYHG DW 7KUHH /LQNV LQ 1RUWKÂżHOG VLQFH 2XU IDPilies’ deepest gratitude goes to the loving staff at Three Links. Angeline passed away on April 17, 2017. $QJHOLQH ZDV D OLIHORQJ PHPEHU RI &KULVWLDQLD &KXUFK where she was active in the circles, Ladies Aid, and many service groups. In later years she was often the “driverâ€? making sure her friends could attend church. Angie was a great model of kindness, generosity and humble service to others. She loved to spend time with neighbors and friends and her family. Several grandchildren and a niece made their home with her when they were in transition. Angie was easy to love since she showed such great love to others. She was proud of her children and grandchildren and her great grandchildren always brought a smile to her face! Angie is lovingly remembered by her children, David Anderson and his wife Louise who live on the family farm in New Market Township. Nancy and husband Norman Jensen who live in rural Faribault. Jane and husband %HUQDUG :DUG RI /DNHYLOOH DQG -XOLH DQG KHU KXVEDQG $O Meyer of Owatonna. Grandma Angie will be missed by her 13 grandchildren and 27 great grandchildren as well as many friends and family. Angie was preceded in death by her husband, Arnold; son Paul Michael in 1951; parents Helmer and Ida Markison; brother, Milton Markison; twin sister, Adeline Larson and son-in-law, Alan Sansgaard. Funeral services for Angie will be Saturday, May 6, EHJLQQLQJ DW $0 DW &KULVWLDQLD /XWKHUDQ &KXUFK Lakeville. Visitation will be Friday, May 5, 2017 from 5 30 WR 30 DW &KULVWLDQLD /XWKHUDQ &KXUFK %XULDO ZLOO EH DW :HVW &KULVWLDQLD &HPHWHU\ $UUDQJHPHQWV E\ BHQVRQ /DQJHKRXJK )XQHUDO +RPH 1RUWKÂżHOG QRUWKÂżHOGIXQHUDO FRP

(May 9, 1935 - April 15, 2017)

family calendar

Curt was born May 9, 1935 in Battle Lake, MN and passed away on Sunday April 15, 2017. Curt was living in Bloomington, MN at the time of his passing. Funeral service was held at 11 AM Tuesday, April 25 at the White Funeral Chapel in Burnsville, MN with visitation beginning one hour before the service. The funeral service was followed by lunch and the interment took place at Acacia Park Cemetery in Mendota Heights at 2 PM. He is preceded in death by his parents Thore and Irene and his brother Arvid. He is survived by his wife, Ardy; two sons, Scott (Tracy) and Robb (Cathy); brothers, Thore, Gary(Gerry), and Gordon (Pat); sisters Shirley Scott, Ruby Olson, Marion (Floyd) Haugen, and Carol (Daryle) Billberg; grandchildren Gavin, Bailey, Morgan, and McClain. Curt served in the US Army and then went on to college at St. Cloud State where he received a teaching degree. He later went on to receive advanced degrees from Mankato State and the University of Minnesota. Following graduation he began his career as a teacher with the State of Minnesota and later as a school administrator at Anoka Technical College. He went on to become a director at Dakota County Technical College and was instrumental in developing the curriculum when the school was initially founded in 1972. During this period he also worked with Partners of the Americas as a consultant and a guest lecturer throughout South America as they worked to improve their educational system. He loved to travel and has been around the world with his family. His hobbies LQFOXGHG JROI ¿VKLQJ SOD\LQJ ELQJR DQG UHDGLQJ $IWHU Curt retired he was proud of his 12 years of service as a traveler assistant at the Minneapolis Airport and enjoyed his morning coffee with his friends and colleagues. He loved coaching his sons’ soccer and baseball teams and volunteered for many years as the soccer commissioner in Burnsville. He will be dearly missed. White Funeral Home Burnsville 952-894-5080 www.whitefuneralhomes.com

Octaviano “Otisâ€? A. Trujillo Octaviano “Otisâ€? A. Trujillo, 73, died Holy Saturday after a brief battle with leukemia. He is survived by children Michael (Melissa) and Josephine Thiel (Chris); mother Feloniz; siblings Ben (Veronica) and Margie Anglada (Louie); grandsons Benjamin and Alexander; and close friends Augustina “Tinaâ€? Trujillo and Patricia “Patâ€? Sutter. His family would like to express a sincere thank you for all the support and love that continues to bless us. The rosary is 6 p.m. May 18 and mass is 10 a.m. May 19, both at San Francisco de Asis, 60 St. Francis Church Plaza, Ranchos de Taos, NM 87557. In OLHX RI Ă€RZHUV SOHDVH GRQDWH LQ KLV QDPH WR /LYHVWURQJ Fisher House or DAV.

To submit items for the and the Dakota County Law Family Calendar, email: Library. Call 952-431-3200 for darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com. more information and to schedule an appointment. Saturday, April 29 Pancakes for a Playground, Wednesday, May 3 8:30-11 a.m., Grace Church, Parkinson’s Support 7800 150th St. W., Apple Valley. Group, 2-3 p.m., Augustana Fundraiser for a new playground Regent at Burnsville, 14500 at Cedar Park Elementary Regent Lane, Burnsville. InforSTEM School. Cost: $4 for ages mation: Jane Hubbard at 9520-11, $6 for ages 12 and older. 898-8728. Menu: pancakes with sprinkles, whipped cream, butter, syrup, Thursday, May 4 strawberries, sausage, juice and Lakeville National Day of coffee. Extra tax-deductible do- Prayer, 12-1 p.m., Lakeville nations taken at the door. Spon- City Hall, 20195 Holyoke Ave., sored by Cedar Park PTO. Lakeville. Presentation of the Earth Day cleanup of Pat- colors – Lakeville VFW. Informarick Eagan Park, 10 a.m. to tion: www.nationaldayofprayer. noon, meet in main parking lot org. behind the Eagan Art House, off Lexington, just down the hill from Saturday, May 6 Diffley, Eagan. Suitable for famiPancake breakfast by Boy lies with children. Bring gloves Scout Troop 455, 8-11 a.m., (and boots). Garbage bags pro- Rosemount American Legion, vided. Sponsored by Friends of 14590 Burma Ave. W., Rosethe Eagan Core Greenway. Infor- mount. Menu: all-you-can-eat mation: 651-470-2687 or www. pancakes (gluten-free available eagancoregreenway.org. by request), sausage, juice, cofScotts Major League Base- fee. Tickets: $5 at the door; chilball Pitch Hit & Run competi- dren 5 and under are free. tion, 12-3 p.m., Kenwood Trail Dakota County Water FoMiddle School, 19455 Kenwood rum: A Clean Water Strategy, Trail, Lakeville. For ages 7-14. 9:30 a.m. to noon, Eagan ComFree. Sponsored by Lakeville munity Center, 1501 Central Fastpitch Softball Association. Parkway, Eagan. Free. ContinenAll participants must bring a tal breakfast included. Limited copy of their birth certificate and seating: RSVP to Avery@conserhave their parent or guardian fill vationminnesota.org. out a registration/waiver form Family Fishing, 1-3 p.m., prior to the start of the competi- McColl Environmental Learning tion. Questions: Bill Cook at bil- Center, Savage. Learn about lydcook2014@yahoo.com. types of fish, preparing equipment, bait, and handling fish. Sunday, April 30 Equipment and fishing license Omelet breakfast by the provided for class only. Cost: Lakeville Knights of Columbus, $6, reservations required by two 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., All Saints days prior to the program. InforChurch – Murphy Hall, 19795 mation: Three Rivers Park DisHolyoke Ave., Lakeville. Build- trict at 763-559-6700. your-own omelet with hash browns, sausage, pancakes, Ongoing coffee and juice. Cost: $10 Marriage Encounter, April adults, $8 seniors and children 29-30, Mt. Olivet Conference 11 and older, $5 ages 10 and un- and Retreat Center, Farmingder. ton. Register at www.marriages.org. Information: 651-454Monday, May 1 3238. Legal Assistance of Dakota Emotions Anonymous County, 1-4 p.m., Galaxie Li- meetings, 7:30-9 p.m. Tuesbrary, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Apple days at SouthCross CommuValley. Receive a free 30-minute nity Church, 1800 E. County consultation from a volunteer at- Road 42 (at Summit Oak Drive), torney regarding family law mat- Apple Valley. EA is a 12-step ters such as domestic abuse, program for those seeking custody, child support or visita- emotional health. All are weltion. Call 952-891-7135 for more come. Information: http://www. information and to schedule an emotionsanonymous.org/outappointment. of-the-darkness-walks. Tuesday, May 2 Consumer law clinic, 1-4 p.m., Galaxie Library, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Apple Valley. Get help with consumer law matters such as debt collection, garnishment, credit issues, foreclosures, contracts and conciliation court with a free 30-minute consultation from a volunteer attorney. This clinic is a joint program of Legal Assistance of Dakota County, the Dakota County Family Court

Births

Cheryl Denise Kniefel Cheryl Denise Kniefel was born January 29, 1961 in a Owatonna, MN, and moved to Lakeville, MN when she was a child. She grew up and graduated from school in Lakeville, and spent most of her life in Dakota County raising her two children Bobby Jo and Joshua all on her own. She ZDV WKH WUXH GH¿QLWLRQ RI D ¿JKWHU She loved with all her heart. She got her wings on April 15, 2017. Preceded in death by her parents Bernice & Art Senart, and Harlan & Betty Kniefel. Cheryl is survived by her two children Bobby Jo Kniefel and Joshua Brisse; two grandchildren Kayli and Christopher; six brothers Jerry (Anita), Dan (Kris), Bob (Kay), Jim, Rod (Jodi) & Todd (Jane) Kniefel; two step siblings Cathy (Dave) and Steve Senart; many nieces and nephews, and tons of extended family and friends. Please join us in Celebrating Cheryl’s life on Saturday, April 29 from 2-5pm at Presbyterian Homes in Inver Grove Heights, 6307 Burnham Circle, 55078.

Drawing & Painting (adults and teens) with artist Christine Tierney, classes 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and 9 a.m. to noon Wednesdays, River Ridge Studios, 190 S. River Ridge Circle, Burnsville. Information: www.christinetier ney.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.Brushworks SchoolofArt.com, 651-2144732. 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. The Lakeville Area Arts Center offers arts classes for all ages, www.lakevillemn.gov, 952-985-4640. Rosemount History Book Club meets 6:30-8 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Robert Trail Library. Information: John Loch, 952-2558545 or jjloch@charter.net. SouthSide Writers, Saturday workgroup for aspiring writers, offering critique, submission and manuscript preparation information, support and direction, 10 a.m. to noon, Wescott Library, 1340 Wescott Road, Eagan. Information: 651688-0365. Dakota Speakers Toastmasters meets 6-7 p.m. Mondays at Apple Valley Ecumen Seasons Learning Center. Information: http://dakota.toast mastersclubs.org/.

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Isabelle Violet Meinke was welcomed with love to proud parents Matt and Molly (Sorvik) Meinke, along with big sister Alexa, of Savage, MN. Isabelle was born on March 14, 2017. She weighed 8 pounds, 1 ounce and was 20 inches long. Proud grandparents are Bob and Steph Meinke of Webster, MN and Kent and Mary Pat Sorvik of Onamia, MN. Greatgrandparents are Irene Bonhus of Northfield, MN and Pat and Mary Boyle of Alice, ND. Welcome Baby Isabelle!

Blood drives The American Red Cross will hold the following blood drives. Call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767) or visit red crossblood.org to make an appointment or for more information. • April 28, 1-7 p.m., Bowlero Lakeville (formerly Brunswick Zone XL), 11129 162nd St. W., Lakeville. • April 29, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Crown of Life Lutheran Church, 4150 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan. • May 1, 12-6 p.m, Christian Life Center, Prince of Peace Church, 13901 Fairview Drive, Burnsville. • May 1, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Eagan City Hall, 3830 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan. • May 2, 12:30-6:30 p.m., Messiah Lutheran Church, 16725 Highview Ave., Lakeville. • May 2, 12-6 p.m., Bible Baptist Church, 19700 Akin Road, Farmington. • May 5, 11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Easter Lutheran Church – By The Lake, 4545 Pilot Knob Road, Eagan. • May 6, 10:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m., Burnhaven Library, 1101 W. County Road 42, Burnsville. • May 6, 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Lakeville Fire Department, Station 4, 9465 185th St. W., Lakeville. Memorial Blood Centers will hold the following blood drive. Call 1-888-GIVE-BLD (1-888448-3253) or visit mbc.org to make an appointment or for more information. • April 25, 8:30 a.m. to noon, Firefly Credit Union, 1400 Riverwood Drive, Burnsville.


SUN THISWEEK - Burnsville - Eagan April 28, 2017 17A

Thisweekend Poet’s muse is the seashore and the tropical sun Vicki Mickelson featured at May 2 author event by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Each year, when the weather in Minnesota turns cold, Vicki Mickelson heads for sunnier climes. And that’s when the poetry starts to flow. “Most of my writing is done during the winter on a Florida barrier island, Anna Maria,� said Mickelson, a Rosemount resident and retired teacher. “I write when inspiration moves me — at the beach, at midnight, while listening to classical music or sunning with the geckos. All I need are a pencil and a notebook. I’m oldschool that way.� Mickelson is set to speak at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, at Rosemount’s Robert Trail Library as part of the Meet the Author series presented by the Rosemount Area Arts Council. Admission is free. The author of four books of poetry, Mickelson will discuss her latest work, “Island Attitudes,� at the event.

Vicki Mickelson Mickelson spoke with this newspaper recently about her current writing projects, the poets who have inspired her, and the joys of writing at the beach. Q: At what point in your life did you know you wanted to be a writer? A: In second grade I knew the written word had a profound effect on me. With my lined manila paper tilted at just the right angle, I composed a story entitled “It Rained Blue Snow.� My teacher read it to the class. I was hooked. Q: Describe your writing room. A: At the beach I sit in a blue canopied canvas

chair. The waves whisper, the crystal sand glistens, the pelicans dive, and the occasional boat skims the aquamarine water. Inside my yellow cottage, my corner desk sports numerous mechanical pencils and gel pens in a rainbow of colors, three pairs of cheaters, pics of my five grandchildren, neon Post-Its, a few notebooks, my laptop computer, a book of poems by Billy Collins and purple tulips. Q: How did you come to write “Island Attitudes?� What do you hope readers take away from the book? A: The book is a poetry collection of island observations about the people and places they frequent. It reflects the environment that has brought me contentment, aided my focus, and the inhabitants who taught me I could have a second act. I hope readers envision the universality in my experiences, take with them rejuvenation of spirit and find their own slice of key lime pie. Q: Which of your books holds the most emotional resonance for you? A: My first book, “Under the Crumbling Stars,�

was the most difficult to write and spurred such emotion I found myself reflecting on my past, tearyeyed through most of the cathartic process. Growing up with a bipolar parent created a tumultuous childhood. There were so many positive experiences, yet the negative were great influences as well. I finally realized the dichotomy. Q: What are you working on now? Any book projects in the works? A: This summer my fifth poetry book, “Frozen Symmetry,� will be released. It delves into the subject of miscarriage, specifically my miscarriage of twins. I am working on a second book of island poems. So many of Anna Maria’s residents have asked me to write more. They love reading about their paradise. Q: Which writers have inspired you? A: Poets Billy Collins and Mildred Miller have been inspirations. Hemingway taught me the importance of simplicity and sparse use of words. Q: What are you reading right now? A: I’m the midst of reading two books — “LaRose� by Louise Er-

Twin Cities Ballet presents ‘CoppĂŠlia Nouveau’

have for young writers? A: Take your broken heart and make it into art. Find a place to write that makes you come alive. Contact Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.

Men’s chorus spring concert The Eagan Men’s Chorus will present its annual Spring Concert 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6, at Christ Lutheran Church, 1930 Diffley Road, Eagan. Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for students, and free for children under 12. Tickets are available from chorus members or at the door. Call Jim Andrews at 651-451-7502 or Paul Carlton at 651-452-7557 for additional information.

Production runs May 12-14 at Ames Center Lakeville-based Twin Cities Ballet of Minnesota will debut its fulllength production “CoppĂŠlia Nouveauâ€? May 12-14 at the Ames Center in Burnsville. Set in 1920s Paris, “CoppĂŠlia Nouveauâ€? centers on a dance company staging the classic ballet comedy “CoppĂŠlia.â€? The production shifts between “real lifeâ€? company scenes and traditional dances from “CoppĂŠliaâ€? itself, giving audiences two distinct ballets in one performance. The production is a whimsical romantic comedy, according to producers, and aims to be approachable for both those familiar with the original “CoppĂŠliaâ€? story and those experiencing ballet

drich and “Afterland� by Mai Der Vang. Q: What was the last truly great book you read? A: “Born to Run� by Bruce Springsteen moved me. I’m a sucker for a good memoir. Q: What advice do you

Photo submitted

Luke Xavier, left, and Marissa DeBenedictis are among the cast of dancers in “CoppĂŠlia Nouveau.â€? for the first time. “People don’t often think of ballet and comedy going together,â€? said Rick Vogt, Twin Cities Ballet associate artistic director. “They can find ballet intimidating or fear they will not understand or appreciate it. ‘CoppĂŠlia Nouveau’ is understandable, accessible, and a fun production for all ages.â€? Tickets for “CoppĂŠlia

Nouveau� are $18-$36 and are available at the Ames Center box office, online at Ticketmaster.

com and by phone at 800982-2787. More about the production is at www. twincitiesballet.org.

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theater and arts briefs Community band concert The Rosemount Community Band performs its spring concert 3 p.m. Sunday, May 7, at the Rosemount Steeple Center. Doors open at 2 p.m.; limited seating is available. The concert is free; families are welcome. Selections will include: “Die Bankelsängerlieder,â€? late 17th century; “Kentucky 1800,â€? Grundman; “Danza Final,â€? Ginastera; “Irish Tune from County Derry,â€? Grainger; and “Amparito Roca,â€? Texidor. For more information, visit www.rosemountcommunityband.org or Rosemount Community Band on Facebook.

South Metro Chorale concert South Metro Chorale, a 50-voice mixed choir from Prior Lake, will present its spring concert series 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6, at Holy Trinity United Methodist Church (16150 Arcadia Ave., Prior Lake) and 3 p.m. Sunday, May 7, at Christ the King Lutheran Church (8600 Fremont Ave. S., Bloomington). The theme of the concert is “Love: Agape, Storge, Éros, Philiaâ€? featuring the Lord Nelson Mass by Joseph Haydn as well as the music of Whitacre, Shank, and more. Tickets are $12 for adults, $8 for seniors and students, and can be purchased at the door, by email at tickets@southmetrochorale.org, and at SouthMetroChorale.org.

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