SUN Thisweek Lakeville

Page 1

www.SunThisweek.com NEWS Summer Sensations Inside the Summer Sensations special section, the newspaper staff has gathered information about events and activities in the south metro this summer. See insert

Lakeville’s John Enggren dies at age 84

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Lakeville May 10, 2013 | Volume 34 | Number 11

Shooting for a cause Lakeville paintball charity game to benefit pediatric heart patients

Waters: ‘It’s the passing of an era’ by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

OPINION Financing questioned Vikings stadium financing should be reevaluated at the end of 2013. Now is not the time to restructure Vikings stadium deal. Page 4A

THISWEEKEND

War comes to Farmington World War II weekend at Dakota City Heritage Village will see mock battles staged by living history groups. Page 23A

Lakeville lost one of its most prominent lifelong community members and business leaders April 27. J o h n Enggren, 84, died at home from John pneumonia Enggren he suffered recently after he injured his back about six weeks ago in a fall, according to his son Joel Enggren. A celebration of his life was held at the Chart House restaurant in Lakeville on Thursday, May 9. For generations, the Enggren family operated a grocery store in downtown Lakeville, also opening a clothing and dry goods store that later split into clothing shops for men and women. Later, John Enggren owned four Tom Thumb convenience stores in and around Lakeville, said Joel Enggren. The family also opened clothing stores in Prior Lake, according to John Enggren’s niece Jody Braun. Todd Bornhauser, See ENGGREN, 15A

SPORTS

Players at MN Pro Paintball should wear long pants and shirts — camouflage is optional. (Photo submitted)

MN Proo Paintball, Lakeville, akeville, will provide vide all equipment ent needed for tacticall play at its fifth annual nual Challenge for or Children’s fundraiser. ser. (Photo submitted)

by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

After years of warfare, worldwide collapse pits two surviving North American factions against each other in the year 3010, each fighting for the last remaining food and supplies. That scenario could be the premise of a movie or video game, but instead is available for

everyone to experience live in Lakeville on May 19 at MN Pro Paintball, where participants’ involvement may also help save a child’s life. The event is the fifth annual Challenge for Children’s Big Game experience, a fundraiser to benefit the Minneapolis Children’s Hospital cardiac unit. Hundreds of players are expected to participate in the sce-

nario-based mission, played on MN Pro Paintball’s 200 acres at 22554 Texas Ave. Each team will be led by Navy SEALS Larry Yatch and Isaiah Maring from Sealed Mindset, a firearms studio and training center in New Hope. Maring is scheduled to parachute into the game, according See PAINTBALL, 15A

Auto parts store plans may spur legal action Business owner claims city promised upscale restaurant; officials deny claims by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

True Team title secured The Lakeville South girls track team wins the True Team Section Meet title, and Lee Bares sets new state record in pole vault. Page 17A

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

An abandoned house and adjacent outbuildings will be torn down to make way for a housing development by D.R. Horton. The property is located off Kenwood Trail, just north of Kenwood Trail Middle School. (Photo submitted)

Lakeville approves housing development off County Road 50

Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Announcements . . . . 22A Sports . . . . . . . . 17A-18A Classifieds . . . . . 19A-21A Public Notices . . . . . . 16A

News 952-846-2033 Display Advertising 952-846-2011 Classified Advertising 952-846-2000 Delivery 952-846-2070

by Laura Adelmann Despite traffic concerns, the Lakeville City Council unanimously approved property rezoning, easement vacation and the preliminary plat for Stone Ridge, a 53 singlefamily home development off Kenwood Trail at its May 6 meeting. Developer D.R. Horton has discussed and planned the project since 1996, but was plagued with delays, most recently with the struggling economy. “We think the time is

$

trail will connect the neighborhood streets to Kenwood Trail, and an existing driveway off the road will be redesigned and connect into the local streets, Lakeville Planning Director Daryl Morey said. The project’s other eight homes will be constructed in phase two on the south side of the road in a cul-de-sac, “Jewel Court.” Sidewalks will be installed along one side of 188th Street, Javelin Avenue and Javelin Court, See HOUSING, 15A

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right to move forward with it,” Mike Suel, D.R. Horton land development manager, told the council. Proposed is a twophase development on 40 acres, on both sides of Kenwood Trail between 188th Street and Jordan Trail. First to be developed will be 45 homes on the north side of Kenwood Trail. An existing vacant house, built in 1890 is slated for removal, along with outbuildings and a fence encroaching on the north end of the property. A future bituminous

More than 30 food booths will be at the Taste of Lakeville at Lakeville Area Arts Center from 5-9 p.m. Thursday, May 16. More on page 13A. (Photo by Rick Orndorf)

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Traffic concerns cited, before City Council gave unanimous approval to D.R. Horton proposal SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

INDEX

The Lakeville City Council unanimously approved a preliminary and final plat May 6 for development of an auto parts business, although the owner of a neighboring business has threatened legal action because of the plans. The property, located off Kenwood Trail between Culver’s restaurant and NTB (Formerly Tires

Plus), has been approved for a lot split and construction of an Advance Auto Parts building on one of the lots. Dave Malmberg, owner of the neighboring building that houses RE/MAX Advantage Plus owned by his son Eric Malmberg, claims Eric Malmberg was verbally promised by city officials that the property would be nothing other than a high-end sit-down

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2A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

Lakeville woman honored for advocacy efforts her of her long leadership and advocacy for employees who have a disability at A Lakeville woman was her Eagan workplace. recognized last month for Diane Wells, Intake by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

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Operations in Integrated Health Management manager at Blue Cross and Blue Shield, Minnesota, was named Advocate of the Year on April 25 by Lifeworks Services, a nonprofit serving 850 disabled individuals by offering social enrichment programming, support services and employment opportunities. Wells has worked with Lifeworks since she started in management 13 years ago. As a leader, she encourages her staff to support inclusion and respect in all aspects of employment, according to Lifeworks officials. Wells and her staff aim to find work opportunities that are meaningful and appropriately match each individual’s skill level. Parents of Lifeworks clients report the program helps their children to fit in and be accepted, valued and part of the team;

Diane Wells and Lifeworks President and CEO Judy Lysne. (Photo submitted) some are able to live independently with the income and experience they have gained. “Diane Wells is a remarkable person who sees everyone with one face,� Lifeworks President and

nering with Lifeworks Services, I find their clients full of talents, strengths and abilities. My role is to understand what those strengths are and marry them to job tasks we have at hand.� Blue Cross employs 10 Lifeworks clients who are supported by a Lifeworks coach, and the work the clients perform increases in complexity and diversity. Wells said it has been rewarding to witness personal growth in the people she has helped through the program. “We are so fortunate that she works at Blue Cross where we have had a wonderful partnership for 26 years,� Lysne said. “She is a model manager in a model company.� For more information, go to www.lifeworks.org.

CEO Judy Lysne said at the gala. “She doesn’t see disability; she sees only ability and possibility.� “I struggle with the word ‘disabilities,’ � Wells Laura Adelmann is at laura. stated in a news release. adelmann@ecm-inc.com. “From my years of part-

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From the City of Lakeville

City Meetings No meetings this week

1PMJDF 0QFO )PVTF

-1% 0QFO )PVTF Saturday, May 18 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Lakeville Police Station 9237 183rd Street Tours and displays FREE - open to the public This open house is held jointly with the Dakota County Sheriff’s Office in honor of National Police Week. Residents are welcome to visit and take tours of the station, meet police officers and Sheriff’s deputies, and see displays from our partners in public safety, including: t Sheriff’s Water Patrol t Sheriff’s Mounted Possee t SWAT units t Minnesota State Patrol Troopers t Minnesota State Patrol helicopter t Allina EMS ambulance t Police K-9 unit t Horse Patrol t FREE CPR classes offered throughout the day t McGruff the Crime Dog will also be on hand to visit with the kids

Crack Sealing Crack seal crews are scheduled to begin on this year’s sealing projects on May 13, weather permitting. The crack seal map showing street locations, is posted on the website at www.lakevillemn.gov. The project is expected to be completed in three days.

LFD now recruiting for paid on-call firefighters The Lakeville Fire Department is now hiring paid on-call firefighters for Fire Stations 1 and 3. Applicants must be at least 18 years of age, reside within two miles of either station 1 or 3 and possess a valid Minnesota Drivers License.

Interested individuals are encouraged to call or email Fire Administration at 952-985-4700 or tduban@ lakevillemn.gov to request an informational packet. Deadline is May 24, 2013.

Applicants must pass a written test, a physical agility test, an oral interview, a pre-employment physical and a criminal background check. LAKEVILLE FIRE DEPARTMENT STATION LOCATIONS WITH CURRENT OPENINGS Fire Station 1 20190 Holyoke Avenue Fire Station 3 17490 Kenrick Avenue

Discover treasures at the Citywide Garage Sale Citywide Garage Sale Saturday, May 18, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Online, printable maps available at www.lakevillemn.gov Maps also available at all three Lakeville Liquor Store locations.

There is still time to register! Sales registered by May 16 will be included on the online map as well as the printed maps that will be available at all three Lakeville Liquor Store locations.

Whether you’re a shopper or a seller, join the fun at the Citywide Garage Sale. Register your Lakeville sale to be included on the online map of sale locations and the category listing of items each is selling. It’s simple and it’s free. Just go to www.lakevillemn.gov and click on the Citywide Garage Sale logo. Whether you are looking for kids clothes, furniture, or miscellaneous items, the online listing will help you find what you want.

Find us on Facebook! City of Lakeville, Minnesota You can now find the City on Facebook at City of Lakeville, Minnesota - Government. This name ensures that you are on the official City of Lakeville page. Our Facebook page provides updates on events and programs, as well as emergency information when

needed. From our main Facebook page, you can also directly ‘Like’ department pages, such as Parks & Recreation or Economic Development, if you would like additional information specific to that area. If you have questions or suggestions, please call 952-985-4407.

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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 3A

Weather puts Dakota County Fairgrounds behind schedule Soggy grounds slowed down set up for its first big event of the season

clude the World War II reenactment May 18-19 (see related story inside), the German Shepherd Dog Club of Minneapolis and St. Paul June 21-23, and Southern Cruzers Aug. 24. The main attraction, the Dakota County Fair runs from Aug. 5-11. Some new events this year include the free Donkey Races in the Grandstand Monday night and a rabbit agility tent to show off rabbits who can maneuver through a dogshow type obstacle course. Tuesday, Aug. 6, will feature a tractor pull, Wednesday, Aug. 7, is professional bull-riding and cowgirl barrel racing. The rest of the schedule is to be determined. For more information, check out dakotacountyfair.org.

by Theresa Malloy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

On a snowy Friday, May 2, crews at the Dakota County Fairgrounds were trudging through soggy grounds as snow fell to set up for its first event of the season, the Minnesota Scottish Fair. The fair was moved two weeks earlier because miserable humidity last season made the wool kilts a little unbearable, but event planners probably did not anticipate a late winter meant a frigid day for kiltwearers this year. A maintenance worker bundles up as snow lightly falls in May. He moves snow-covered picnic tables to the tents while Crews worked quickly setting up for the Minnesota Scottish Fair. Usually crews have a week to set up for events, but bad weather pushed it Email Theresa Malloy at to get things ready. Typi- to one day. (Photo by Theresa Malloy) theresa.malloy@ecm-inc.com. cally, fair set up starts at least seven days in adthe campgrounds are ready for tending their stays. While winThe Dakota vance, said Kristine Smith, fair- campers by May 1. ter storage typically runs from County Fairgrounds office manager. At noon on Friday, the wa- mid-September to the first week grounds had a “This year is different. We ter still was not turned on at the of May, some vehicles stayed in fresh layer of have one day,” she said. fairgrounds. Camp-goers had storage a little longer thanks to snow Friday, Snow piled up around tents to carry jugs of water to their the weather. May 3, one as it slipped off the awnings. campers. Water was turned on “We’re as lenient as can be day before its Grounds workers moved snow- for half the grounds in time for to get the buildings cleared for first fair of covered picnic tables to the eat- the Scottish Fair the following events,” Smith said. the season. ing area. day. Despite these setbacks, the (Photo by “Campers are not able to All horse clinics and events Dakota County Fairgrounds is Theresa Malpull into the actual campground were also canceled for the fol- looking forward to its busiest loy) area as the ground is too soft lowing week because the horse season. and wet, and they would sink,” arena fence was not replaced yet “We’re getting a lot more Smith said. Instead campers due to the weather e, Smith said. events in general,” Smith said, are parked along the road and Local residents who are stor- including more weddings and have extension cords connecting ing equipment and cars in the private events. them to power sources. Usually fairground buildings are exSome summer highlights in-

Spring Walk of Fashion

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More than 300 people saw the latest fashions modeled at the Downtown Lakeville Business Association’s Spring Walk of Fashion on April 25 at the Lakeville Area Arts Center. The event featured a cash bar, appetizers and the latest spring fashions and décor. Model Amy Wolter, wears a long, lace-detailed skirt with a brown ribbon belt and a dressy T-shirt from Isabella’s Apparel & Accessories. (Photo by Tricia Riggin Photography)

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Senior living plans move forward a final approval from the Metropolitan Council and the City Council before Southview can move forward with its plans. A rezoning and plat will also need to be approved before construction can begin. The property is currently zoned as medium-density residential and is occupied by two single-family homes and several outbuildings. The property owner plans to sell the property to Southview upon approval of the development, City Planner Mike Ridley said. Southview Senior Communities owns and operates seven senior living facilities in the Twin Cities area.

by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

A plan to build a four-story senior living facility in Eagan is moving forward. Southview Senior Communities plans to construct a 148-unit facility on 10 acres at 4232 Blackhawk Road south of Diffley Road. The facility would include assisted living, memory care and independent living units. The Eagan City Council unanimously approved sending a Comprehensive Guide Plan amendment to the Metropolitan Council for review that, if approved, would change the land designation from medium-density residential to high-den- Jessica Harper is at jessica.harper@ecmsity residential. inc.com or facebook.com/sunthisweek. The guide plan amendment will need

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4A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

Opinion Stadium financing a conundrum, but project is worth it When the Minnesota Sports Facility Authority unveils the design for the new Minnesota Vikings stadium on May 13 at the Guthrie Theatre, the public will get a glimpse of the grand edifice that is planned to be built over the next three years. When ground is broken on the Metrodome site in Minneapolis this fall, the public will know for certain that the $975 million stadium will be built. What is less certain, however, is the funding piece for the stadium that was approved by the Legislature in 2012. For stadium fans, it will take patience to wait until July 2016 when the facility is slated for completion. It will take an equal amount of patience on the part of the public and legislators to feel comfortable that funding is available. Much discussion has emerged over the lack of tax dollars flowing to the state from electronic pulltabs, one of the key pieces in funding the stadium. The second vital funding source from charitable gambling venues is electronic bingo. E-bingo is just now coming on line. There is good reason for funding fears. E-pulltabs have not generated the funding once predicted by the Minnesota Charitable Gambling Board, and the board admits it. The state did not anticipate the snail’s process of establishing charitable sites for sales of electronic pulltabs. Electronic bingo almost became a forgotten partner in the funding piece. For various reasons, many smaller charitable gambling sites have said no to electronic pulltabs. Some have identified startup costs and fees, in addition to state taxes, as major roadblocks. Other say e-pulltabs wipe away the social fun a group of friends may have sifting through a stack of paper pulltabs. It may not be such with e-bingo.

ECM Editorial The state was remiss in not identifying the electronic pulltab concerns early on. Such action may have helped lawmakers a year ago as the legislation was crafted. For stadium opponents, the door is now open for a barrage of criticism, including calls by lawmakers to redo the agreement with the Vikings. Fool’s errands of the like serve no good purpose. Those taking shots at the Vikings seem to ignore that the NFL club will pay an estimated $15 million per year to the sports facility authority, including $8.5 million in rent alone. Other user groups will contribute $2 million throughout the year. State leaders from Gov. Mark Dayton on down have long preached patience as the funding mechanism for the stadium unfolds. We would agree that patience is needed, but faced with many unknowns it is worrisome to just assume the tax dollars from charitable gambling will somehow magically appear in the future. But we give state leaders the benefit of the doubt that patience is needed through the balance of this year. As stated in interviews with this editorial board, officials of the gambling board and the sports authority remain confident that the funding picture will see major improvements. The number of active charitable gambling sites offering electronic pulltabs is growing, and more game manufacturers and distributors are being approved by the state. The same holds true for electronic bingo. The impact of e-bingo linked to hundreds of sites could be a game changer.

And patience must be the rule based on the unknowns. It is still uncertain the extent of the first bond sale slated for late summer or early fall. The state continues to crunch numbers to determine if all or part of the financing bond is issued this year. That decision will determine the actual debt service and the amount the state will need to repay next year. Early state estimates said debt service payment could be as high as $30 million a year. Make no mistake about this. The bonds are backed by the state’s general fund, and any shortage in stadium debt service must come off the top. By law, it will be the Legislature that must each year appropriate dollars from the general fund to address any debt service shortage. Failing to do so would result in the state defaulting on its obligation. The legislation approved last year includes backup funding sources. A Minnesota State Lottery game earmarked for the stadium is projected to provide $3 million a year for bond support. Once the stadium is open, a tax on luxury suites would bring in another $2 million a year. A proposal removed from last year’s bill that called for a sales tax on sports memorabilia could have produced as much as $19 million a year depending on the extent of the tax. The memorabilia tax is again being considered this session and should be passed if lawmakers want to hedge their bet. It amounts to a user fee that is paid by those closely associated with professional and Division I collegiate athletics. Another factor that has received little attention is that state charitable proceeds are growing by 6-7 percent this year. The electronic games are certainly a factor here while paper pulltabs continue to sell well. While tax income from electronic pulltabs

is now projected to pull in an estimated $1.5 million this year, the total tax contribution from all forms of charitable gaming could well top $7 million. And with the egames likely to grow, this estimate would seem conservative. State officials and lawmakers must remain vigilant in monitoring this process over the remaining months of 2013. By year’s end, there should be a clear picture of the funding levels that can be expected from charitable gambling. If red flags continue to fly, more serious action will be needed from legislators. If serious funding holes are evident, racino backers are ready to plug that hole with tax revenues generated by slot machines at Running Aces Harness Park in the north metro. It is not surprising that the funding picture for the stadium has become a hotbutton issue. It was controversial a year ago and will remain so. With the general fund potentially at risk for a financial hit in 2014, now is no time for state officials to relax as revenue streams for the stadium are rolled out. They need to make sure the projections work. What should not be forgotten are the many benefits from three years of a huge construction project that will produce 7,500 jobs and pump huge amounts of money into the economy. The end result will be a multipurpose stadium, with all the bells and whistles, that will serve Minnesota well every month of the year and not just in the fall when the Vikings call it home. An opinion of the ECM Editorial Board. Sun Thisweek Newspapers and the Dakota County Tribune are part of ECM Publishers Inc.

Balancing work and family: It’s about time by John Kline SPECIAL TO SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

More and more Minnesotans are telling me, “It’s about time.” A South St. Paul mom and dad are having a difficult time balancing work and family. They feel time spent with their children – something we all dearly covet and our kids direly need – is harder to come by. A member of the Minnesota National Guard deployed overseas can’t stop worrying about a spouse juggling work and parenting responsibilities halfway across the world. A Shakopee college student struggles to work full time while pursuing an undergraduate degree. An Eagan couple joins more than 50 million workers who spend time each week caring for an aging relative while meeting the demands of a job. For many Minnesotans, supporting a family is about more than providing an income. It’s about spending time with loved ones, cherishing good moments and caring for each other during difficult times. For nearly 30 years, public-sector workers have been able to choose and accrue paid time off or “comp time” instead of cash wages for working overtime hours. As a result, state and local employees have more opportunities to spend time with their families and attend to their needs. Unfortunately, the Fair Labor Standards Act denies many private-sector workers this fundamental choice. The

Guest Columnist

John Kline 75-year-old law assumes everyone would choose more money in the bank over time with family. No doubt some workers would seize an opportunity to earn a few extra dollars, perhaps to cover an unexpected home repair or purchase a student’s school supplies. But others may welcome the chance for additional paid time off to see a child hit a home run, visit with an elderly parent or be with a loved one about to deploy overseas. Although this compensatory time system has been available in the public sector since 1985, private-sector employers can be sued or fined by the federal government for extending the same benefit. That’s not fair to millions of hardworking Americans. A West St. Paul dad shouldn’t miss his daughter’s soccer game because of outdated federal policy. An Apple Valley mom shouldn’t miss her son’s little league ball game because of a law written during the Great Depression. A Red Wing family shouldn’t have to confront unnecessary barriers in order to care for their grandmother. When it comes to overtime compensation, workers should decide what’s

best for their families. Legislation moving through Congress, known as the Working Families Flexibility Act of 2013, will help bring an antiquated law into the 21st century. The legislation would allow private-sector employers to offer employees working overtime hours a choice between comp time and cash wages – helping to level the playing field with their counterparts in the public sector. Some mistakenly think this effort will lead to more intrusion by the federal government. I appreciate the perspective of Americans who critically view lawmakers through that lens, and I share their skepticism. I also believe hardworking Americans, not the government, are what make our country great. This common-sense legislation will reduce the role of the federal government in the nation’s workplaces, not increase it. Under the proposal, the use of comp time would be completely voluntary for both workers and their employers. If a worker decides some additional income is what’s most important, then that’s what he or she will receive. If an employer believes administering comp time would interfere with his or her business, then that is a decision Washington will not second-guess. The bill simply removes an unnecessary barrier that prevents employers and workers from making these choices for themselves. Make no mistake: I will continue to advocate for a more efficient and effective government. The Working Families Flex-

ibility Act is an important part of that effort. As chairman of the House Education and the Workforce Committee, I am proud to help move this bill to the floor of the House of Representatives. In the coming days, the people’s elected representative will have a choice of their own to make: Support less government and greater freedom for workers by voting “yes,” or defend the outdated status quo by voting “no” on this sensible proposal. Minnesotans sacrifice a great deal to provide for their families. As a father of two and grandfather of four, I know well the challenges that come with juggling home and work. I understand the difficult choices hardworking American families make every day. We can make life a little bit easier by removing barriers that deny workers the choice and flexibility they need to thrive at home and work. I look forward to leading the charge in Congress for this legislation on behalf of the Minnesotans I represent and all Americans. Washington must come together on this worthwhile effort to eliminate this federal barrier in our workplaces and help provide more freedom for our workers. As I tell my colleagues in Washington: It’s about time. John Kline is chairman of the House Education and the Workforce Committee. He also serves on the Armed Services Committee. He and his wife, Vicky, live in Burnsville. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.

Letters Our president needs your help To the editor: Have you heard politicians decry government “waste, fraud and abuse” when running for office? Yes, unless you are from Mars. Did President Obama participate in the condemnation? He did. Did the Republican House offer President Obama discretionary authority over sequester cuts? They did. Did President Obama

threaten to veto that bill? He did. So, why I ask you, did President Obama choose to close the White House to tours and choose to furlough Air Traffic Controllers rather than accept discretionary authority to attack “waste, fraud and abuse?” Maybe he needs help in identifying the difference between “waste, fraud and abuse” and essential services. My guess is that everyone reading this can come up with several examples of

government “waste, fraud and abuse.” How ’bout everyone email him a suggestion? DIANA BRATLIE Lakeville

Clausen votes for huge tax increase To the editor: I was incredibly disappointed to see Sen. Greg Clausen, DFL-Apple Valley, vote to increase our taxes by $1.8 billion. What’s

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worse is that he originally voted against the tax increase but then switched his vote after DFL party bosses made him vote for the tax increase. Doesn’t Clausen understand that this bill isn’t a tax increase on the wealthy? This bill includes a huge income tax increase on the middle class and taxes all Minnesotans by expanding the sales tax to clothing, over-the-counter drugs, haircuts, oil changes and many other services. During the last election, the voters wanted less partisan games at the State Capitol and I’m disappointed to see Clausen vote with the DFL party bosses instead of the hardworking taxpayers of Senate District 57, Apple Valley and Rosemount.

Clausen right to oppose sprinkler mandate

To the editor: When the economy collapsed in 2008, the housing industry took a hard hit. New home construction came to a standstill. Steady work and reliable income became an issue for those who build new homes. The dream of home ownership was suddenly a far out reach for many Minnesota families. In the last year, the industry is showing signs of a recovery and many families can begin to dream of the ideal home again. For builders like me, this recovery brings more work and stability for my staff and their PAT HALL families. Apple Valley In order to keep new Former Senate District 57 homes affordable and candidate continue the economic

recovery, Builders Association of the Twin Cities and Builders Association of Minnesota members continue to fight to protect consumers against needless regulations. These two organizations have joined Minnesota’s Realtors and others in the housing industry to strongly oppose a new state regulation being discussed – a requirement that an indoor home sprinkler system must be included in every new 4,500-square-foot and above (including the unfinished lower level) home built. This mandate would come at an estimated cost of $9,000 for a fourbedroom, three bathroom home, and $15,000 or higher for homes with private wells. Annual maintenance and inspections, accidents and malfunctions add even more See LETTERS, 5A

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


SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 5A

LETTERS, from 4A

chase new homes, but will also threaten the recovery costs. of an important segment Recently, the Min- of our economy. nesota Senate, including Sen. Greg Clausen, RICK KOT passed a prohibition on President, R.A. Kot home sprinkler man- Homes Inc. dates in the Omnibus Economic Development Green bill. I thank Clausen for his leadership on this is- boondoggles sue and urge Gov. Mark To the editor: Dayton and the MinneIn a recent letter to the sota House to follow. So editor titled, “Support far 40 of the 50 states green technologies,” one have rejected the sprin- would have thought that kler mandate. Six states Judy Finger had just put have not made a deci- down that classic book sion yet and two do not by Sen. Al Franken titled, have a statewide code. “Lying Liars and the Lies Only California requires …” Unbelievable. sprinklers statewide and I think I may have Maryland’s sprinkler re- stumbled on the true quirement can be over- source of greenhouse ridden by local govern- gases; you got it, hot air. ments. The sprinkler The only talking point decision should be a con- she left out was about sumer decision, not gov- the starving polar bears, ernment. though she did mention With new homes in extinction. Note, current Minnesota already the population of bears are model for safety, this re- at or near record levels. quirement adds too much The species have been cost for not enough ben- around for 700,000 years. efit. The added costs of They’ve apparently made this mandate will not it through all sorts of exonly hurt middle class tremes. Maybe she should families looking to pur- read the headlines about

all the “support” we have given to green companies like Enerdel, A123, Fisker and all the other multibillion dollar boondoggles that have been funded and gone belly-up while delivering nothing but empty promises and pink slips. Ethanol ring a bell? How about the cover-ups in regards to no global warming in 10-15 years? Now, one hears the term “global weirding.” I’ve even heard global warming is causing global cooling. Mark Twain said it best over 100 years ago, “They say you can’t believe everything you hear, well I’m telling you, you can’t believe anything you read.” Rising sea levels? You mean the 2 millimeters/year in the past 40 years (3 inches), yet none in the past two years? Refresh this scientist/ engineer on how many variables are needed to make that accurate of a measurement? I know, science is settled right? My professor emeritus at the University of Minnesota told me, “When you hear the words science is settled, be very aware.”

He stated only four laws were settled. Oddly, most of the global warming rhetoric disregards them. It’s man’s laws that will “settle” them. Good luck with all that. A recent quip by a Russian scientist gives fitting closure. Buy a good fur coat, and a good set of boots, you will need both. Me? Why tonight I’m building a red-hot bonfire and dedicating and toasting all those global warmingweirding jihadists with my favorite throat cooler. Bud wiser!

crats pushed their “taxthe-rich” theme. They claimed repeatedly that the “rich” do not pay “their fair share” of taxes, and that Democrats would see to it that they do so. The November 2012 election was very good to Democrats. They took control of both the House and the Senate. In January, the Democrats got their opportunity to stick it to the rich. But it seems Democrats forgot about the promise to tax only the “top 2 percent.” On April 29, the Senate passed its tax bill with $1.8 billion in higher taxes. They have proposed to expand the sales tax to clothing, over-thecounter medications and auto repairs, among other things. They will place a higher tax burden on public utilities so energy costs will go up. They added a 13 percent tax to sports memorabilia. Parents will pay that tax if their son or daughter plays on a rec team that uses licensed jerseys or caps. The highest income tax rate in Minnesota went

JON KUZNIA Lakeville

The Democrats’ bait and switch To the editor: Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mark Dayton campaigned in 2010 on a “tax-the-rich” mantra that was picked up by Democratic legislative candidates. Dayton won in November, but Republicans won the majority in both legislative bodies. For two years, Demo-

up to 9.4 percent from its current 7.85 percent. So at least we stuck the rich there, right? Wrong! The new 9.4 percent rate applies to individuals starting at just over $79,000 and married joint filers starting just over $140,000. Don’t misunderstand me, $140,000 is a very good income. But I really don’t know that a family of four or five could be considered “rich” at that income level. Under the current tax plan literally every single Minnesotan will pay more in taxes. And what are we going to get for it? More of the same. There is not one big item of reform in this bill, or in any budget bill. This is the same old song Democrats have been singing since I was a kid. The solution to every problem: just throw more money at it. That has not worked in the past and it will not work now. DAVE THOMPSON Lakeville Senate District 58 - Farmington, Lakeville MORE LETTERS, 9A

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Step 2 picnic table, furniture, media table, handbags, Pottery Barn Anywhere chair & HH items. (30) 3944 143RD ST W - Fri 5/17 & Sat 5/18 (8-5) Moving Sale! Furniture, bed frames, snow blower, household and misc. (31) 13324 CARLINGFORD LANE - Thursday 5/16 (7-2) Furniture, electronics, clothes, toys & books. (32) 13587 CROSSCLIFFE PL - Thur 5/16–Sat 5/18 (8-5) Furniture, clothes, toys, movies and household items. (33) 3602 CLARE DOWNS PATH - Fri 5/17 & Sat 5/18 (8-4) Multi-Family Sale! Furniture, Room & Board desk, mountain bikes and household items. (34) 13362 COUCHTOWN CT - Fri 5/17 & Sat 5/18 (9:30-6) Furniture, baby & kid toys and much more! (35) 15381 CHILI CT - 5/17- 5/18 (10-6) Clothing for kid’s & young adults, toys, Dept 56 holiday decorations & HH items. (36) 14249 BAYBERRY TRAIL - Thur 5/16 & Fri 5/17 (2-6) Lots of baby gear, Maternity & boy’s clothing (NB – 12 mos). (37) 3715 152ND ST W - 5/16-5/17 (9-6) & 5/18 (9-4) Toys, dolls, men’s & women’s clothing, baby items, books, movies, HH, collectible piggy banks, shoes, Tupperware/ kitchen items. (38) 13864 CLARE DOWNS WAY - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (9-4) Bikes, books (romance),

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(1) 3435 LOWER 147TH ST W - 5/16 - 5/18 (7am-7pm) Large 8 Family Sale! (16) 8 ft tables, 2 rounders of clothes, 2 sets of washers/dryers, mowers & more! (2) 15392 CHILI CT - 5/17 (Starts at 2:30pm), 5/18 (7-5) Toys, clothing, games & household items! (3) 3826 153RD ST W - Fri 5/17 (8-4) & Sat 5/18 (8-1) Toys, adult & kid’s clothing, books, household items & more! (4) 2056 138H ST W - Wed 5/15 – Fri 5/17 (8-6) Moving! Everything must go! Daycare toys, clothes, antique radios, household items & misc. (5) 13229 BRONZE PARKWAY - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (9-5) Toys, furniture, electronics, tools, HH, name-brand clothing for women, teens, boys & girls. (6) 3370 147TH ST W - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (9-6) Fundraiser for Animal Rescue! (7) 3860 UPPER 149TH ST W - May 1618 (7-4) Furniture, clothing, exercise equipment, household & misc. (8) 14173 AVALON PATH - May 16-18 (starts at 8am) Large collection of Elvis items, CDs, DVDs & household items. (9) 13299 BRASS PKWY - Fri 5/17 (8-3) & Sat 5/18 (8-2) Household items, lots of baby items – highchair, pack & play, etc. No baby clothing. (10) 13619 BIRNAMWOOD TR - Fri 5/17 & Sat 5/18 (8-4) Baby clothesa, furniture, holiday décor, TV, HH items & more! (11) 15465 DARLING PATH - 5/16-5/17 (8-6) & 5/18 (8-4) Adult & kid’s clothing, toys, books, movies & more! (12) 14052 AVANTI AVE - Fri 5/17 (3-5) & Sat 5/18 (8-2) Boy/Girl clothes up to sz 6, Barbie jeep, patio set, toys, books, pirate ship water table, Little Tykes outdoor playhouse & misc. (13) 14800 DAMASK CT W - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (9-4) Clothing, games & household items. (14) 3995 153rd ST W - Thur 5/16–Sat 5/18 (8-4) (15) 3571 CLARE DOWNS PATH - Thur 5/16 & Fri 5/17 (8-4) Children’s books, toys & clothing, movies, CD’s & HH items. (16) 2589 136TH ST W - 5/16–5/18 (9-4) Craft & HH items. (17) 13744 DANBURY PATH - 5/16–5/18 (8-4) Moving Sale! Furniture, outdoor items, snow blower & more! (18) 14059 DARTMOUTH PATH - Thur 5/16 – Fri 5/17 (8-3) Toys, games, books, clothes, furniture & household items. (19) 14069 AVANTI AVE - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (7-5) Coach, furniture, collectibles, designer clothes & home goods. (20) 13540 DIAMOND PATH - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (9-5) Women’s & girl’s clothing (NB-12 mos), toys & home décor. (21) 13539 ATHENA WAY - 5/16-5/17 (104) & 5/18 (9-2) Adult clothing, home décor, dishes, small furniture, electronics & more! (22) 4121 154TH CT W - Thur 5/16 – Fri 5/17 (8-4) Multi-Family Sale! Books, designer items, camping supplies, craft & sewing supplies, household items, collectables, holiday & more! (23) 15779 CICERONE PATH - 5/16–5/18 (9-4) Multi-Family Sale! Furniture, kid’s clothing, electronics, HH & more! (24) 15187 EVERLEIGH CIRCLE - Thur 5/16–Sat 5/18 (8-5) Books, 2 HP/Kodak color/photo printers in excellent condition, seasonal items, clothing (boy’s 6/8 & teen girl’s). (25) 2141 130TH ST W - Saturday, May 18th Only! Large screen TV, toys, Geotrax, 10 year old furnace, HH items & misc. (26) 13648 ATWOOD TRAIL - 5/16-5/17 Multi-Family Sale! Quality items -Little Tikes, Leapfrog learning, HH, Step 2 fire truck toddler bed, boy’s clothing (NB-8), books & more! (27) 13636 ATWOOD TRAIL - Saturday, May 18 (8-4) Boy’s & girl’s clothing, toys, baby swings & furniture, HH items & more! (28) 3965 155th ST W - Thur 5/16 – Sat 5/18 (9-5) Dishwasher, electric range, microwave & household items. (29) 13494 COACHFORD WAY 5/16-5/17 (9:30-4) 5/18 (9-12) Girl’s clothing (4-6x),

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May 16th – 18th

BISC

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6A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

House OKs increase of minimum wage

House passes anti-bullying bill after legislators recall personal experiences by T.W. Budig SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

A binding thread in the schoolbullying legislation debate is painful memories. The Democratic-led House passed on Monday, May 6, the socalled “Safe and Supportive Minnesota Schools Act,” legislation that uses recommendations from a recent governor’s school-bullying task force. A companion bill – one with a two-year $39 million statewide price tag – is advancing in the Democratic-led Senate. Although Republicans and Democrats differ on the bullying bills, debate has been filled with personal reminiscences of being bullied. “I got shoved into (school) lockers,” Rep. Joe McDonald, R-Delano, said of being physically short. Rep. Peggy Scott, R-Andover, who, like McDonald, has grave concerns about the legislation, also recalled being a target. “I got called ‘Piggy’ an awful lot,” she said. Rep. Pam Myhra, R-Burnsville, remembered her fourth-grade teacher holding up her poor test score, inviting the class to ridicule her. “She encouraged the bullying,” Myhra said. Powerful testimony was heard in committee. “My senior year I became a social outcast,” said Kyrstin Schuette of Anoka, who told a Senate committee of having a sports drink thrown at her, being called a sinner, dropping out of Anoka High School, attempting suicide, all related to her sexuality. The legislation takes a broad approach. It creates a School Climate Council to improve school climate and safety, and a School Climate Center at the Department of Education to serve as a point of contact for schools and parents, evaluate data and provide resources. Terms like “bullying” and “cyberbullying” are defined in the legislation – Senate and House bills

slightly differ. Bullying, as defined in the bill, can involve intimidating or harassing actions directed at students based on actual or perceived race, ethnicity, color, creed, religion, national origins – some 19 categories are specified. Under Senate language, school districts are required to conduct annual reviews and establish best practices. Minimum school district antibullying policy requirements are spelled out. For instance, primary contact persons must be designated. Procedures to investigate reports of bullying within three school days must be in place. Policies must prohibit reprisals, allow for anonymous reporting and offer ongoing professional development. The legislation calls for the creation of a state model anti-bullying policy. School districts that do not develop local policies must adopt the state policy. House Republicans were uncomfortable. “I can’t vote for your bill. And that troubles me deeply,” Rep. Jenifer Loon, R-Eden Prairie, said. Scott asked House bill author Rep. Jim Davnie, DFL-Minneapolis, whether a student saying that homosexuality was a sin constituted bullying. Davnie, while saying factors like time and place weigh into determining bullying, said free speech is protected by his legislation. Scott was unconvinced, describing the bill as the use of state power to spread ideology. “It’s a huge overreach,” she said. McDonald, saying bullying is a serious issue, also said he dealt with it. Rep. Ron Kresha, R-Little Falls, said the legislation veers off course and sets school districts up for failure. “I’m not going back to my district and say, ‘I don’t trust you,’ ” he said of honoring local control. In an amendment, Kresha attempted to make the anti-bullying legislation more of a guide than di-

rective, but failed. House Republicans attempted a number of times to amend the legislation, offering one amendment allowing school boards using the Minnesota School Boards Association’s model policy on bullying and acceptable Internet use as satisfying the requirements in the bill. “I don’t think it’s appropriate to outsource eduction policy to one group,” Davnie said. The amendment failed. The House passed the legislation 72-57. Senate Republicans voiced concerns in the Senate Education Committee on Tuesday, May 7. Sen. Branden Pedersen, R-Andover, called the anti-bullying bill a massive, unfunded mandate. Sen. John Hoffman, DFLChamplin, thanked Senate bill author Sen. Scott Dibble, DFL-Minneapolis. “This bill is long overdue,” Hoffman said. A Minnesota Association of School Administrators official indicated the association’s support for the bill. Anoka-Hennepin School District Superintendent Dennis Carlson said the legislation could be seen as an unfunded mandate. But he could think of other unfunded mandates, such as with special education, that school districts must deal with. “People (school districts) need to find the funding,” Carlson said. Children must feel safe at school, he said. Dibble, like Davnie, views the legislation as mirroring the recommendations of the task force. “Governor (Mark) Dayton pulled together a task force on the prevention of school bullying and this bill is really written to the recommendation,” he said. Right now, Minnesota has the weakest anti-bullying law in the nation – a mere 37 words, he said. The Senate Education Committee approved the legislation, advancing the bill to the Senate Finance Committee. Email T.W. Budig tim.budig@ecm-inc.com.

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One offered amendment would have allowed restaurants to pay servers $7.25 per hour if the wage and tips over the pay period averaged out to at least $12 per hour. Rep. Pat Garofalo, RFarmington, described the minimum wage legislation as an incentive for employers to replace workers. Those selling tablets to restaurateurs for customers to order with, rather than rely on servers, will use the increased minimum wage as a marketing tool, he said. Winkler views the bill as positive. “This will raise wages for over 350,000 Minnesotans and boost our state economy,” he said. Winkler’s bill raises the minimum wage for large employers to $8 an hour Aug. 1, $9 an hour the year after, and $9.50 per hour on Aug. 1, 2015. Under the bill, a large employer would be defined as making $500,000 or more a year. For smaller employers, on the same time line, wages would increase to $7 per hour, $8 per hour, and then $8.50 an hour, under the bill. The state minimum wage last increased in 2005. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2012 about 3.9 percent of Minnesota workers worked at or below the federal minimum wage. Mike Hickey, of the National Federation of Independent BusinessMinnesota, said increasing the state minimum wage would hurt the hiring of teenagers and people entering the workforce. Employers will balk at hiring an untried worker at $9.50 an hour, he explained. The federation also found the wage escalator provision in the bill objectionable. The Democratic-led Senate has yet to debate minimum wage on the floor. Gov. Mark Dayton is supportive of increasing the minimum wage.

The House of Representatives voted on Friday, May 3, to increase the state minimum wage to $9.50 per hour over three years. The legislation, authored by Rep. Ryan Winkler, DFL-Golden Valley, includes an inflation adjustment provision. “We are talking about a real benefit for workers who struggle,” Winkler said. Not everyone viewed the legislation as beneficial. House Deputy Minority Leader Jenifer Loon, R-Eden Prairie, to pointed to Wisconsin, Iowa and North Dakota, competitor states that have minimum wages mirroring the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. “Good intentions do not come without consequences,” Loon said. Winkler’s bill passed the House on 68-62 vote. Debate revealed the concerns of agriculture. Rep. Jeanne Poppe, DFLAustin, amended the bill to exclude agricultural businesses from paying overtime to laborers working up to 48 hours a week. Some pro-labor Democrats, such as Reps. Tom Anzelc, DFL-Balsam Township, and Tim Mahoney, DFL-St. Paul, opposed the amendment. “Forty hours is enough,” Anzelc said. Mahoney spoke of creating second-class citizens — a depiction one Greater Minnesota Rep. Debra Kiel, R-Crookston, a farmer, found offensive. “We can’t function without them,” Kiel said of agricultural workers. Farmers prize their workers and pay them well, she said. The Poppe amendment passed on a 99-30 vote. Rep. Jim Davnie, DFLMinneapolis, amended the bill to prevent employers from extracting money from tips paid by customers through debit, charge or credit cards. “That’s what a tip is, Email T.W. Budig at a little something extra,” tim.budig@ecm-inc.com. Davnie said.

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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 7A

Apple Valley woman ‘paralyzed with fear’ during UFO encounter

Apple Valley’s Dustin Hatzenbuhler says that performing in front of four celebrity judges and a studio audience of about 500 people on “The Voice” was such a rush that he doesn’t remember most of it. “To be honest I can’t play it back in my memory – it was such a crazy thing I must have blacked it out,” he said. (Photo submitted)

‘Voice’ appearance is latest milestone for Apple Valley singer Ferris, Hatzenbuhler released his debut solo album, “Fall,” in April 2012. The singer, pianist and ukulele player Dustin Hatzenbuhler has just one re- was a featured artist on Cities 97’s “Oake gret from his appearance on “The Voice.” on the Water” radio program last sumHe wishes he’d picked a different mer, and has logged concerts at venues song. throughout the Twin CitThe 24-year-old singeries. songwriter from Apple He currently works Valley performed Michael part-time for the city of Buble’s “Haven’t Met You Apple Valley, manning the Yet” for his televised audifront desk at the Apple tion on the NBC singing Valley Community Center. competition. This summer he’s booked Hatzenbuhler received a concert in his hometown high praise from the panel June 21 as part of Apple of celebrity judges – and a Valley’s Music in Kelley hug from pop star Shakira Park concert series. – but wasn’t picked to adHis experience on “The vance to the later stages of Voice,” he said, was among competition. the best of his life. “Looking back, I probOf special interest were ably would have chosen Dustin Hatzenbuhler comments from celebrity a song that would have judge Adam Levine, lead showcased my own vocal singer for Maroon 5 – a style a little more,” he said. band Hatzenbuhler has been listening to “Shakira seemed to like it the most. since his freshman year at Eastview High She said I had a very manly voice – thank School. you, Shakira.” “Adam was very encouraging,” HatHis TV performance, recorded in Los zenbuhler recounted. “He said that, as Angeles last fall, aired on NBC in April. a singer, ‘You’re technically perfect,’ and While it wasn’t the ending Hatzen- when he said that the crowd kind of went buhler had hoped for, it did bring nation- crazy.” al exposure to the 2006 Eastview High More about Hatzenbuhler’s music School graduate’s music career. and upcoming concerts is at www.dustin“The night I performed, the ratings hatzenbuhler.com. were something like 15 million people – that number is just crazy to me,” he said. Email Andrew Miller at Former frontman for pop-rock band andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.

Terror beset an Apple Valley couple late one night last month when an unidentified flying object appeared outside their bedroom window. According to testimony provided by the wife, light from the silent, low-flying object began shining into the bedroom just after 1 a.m. Saturday, April 27. “I was almost asleep when I noticed a bright light shining on me through my closed eyes,” the wife reported on the witness database of the Mutual UFO Network, a Denver-based nonprofit which seeks to scientifically resolve the enigma of UFOs. “I opened my eyes, woke my husband and we watched a silent object that didn’t seem very far away move south across the sky. “The object seemed to be at the same level as us. It kept its beam of light facing our bedroom window for about 10 seconds … It just kept moving south until it was out of our view.” The wife reported she did not get out

of bed to watch the object’s departure because she was “paralyzed with fear.” “My husband walked around the house a little just to check to make sure the doors were locked,” she stated. The Mutual UFO Network, or MUFON, compiles reports of such incidents and often conducts follow-up investigations with the witnesses, whose identities are not publicly released. The Apple Valley Police Department received no reports of anomalous aerial phenomena in the early hours of April 27, police Capt. Michael Marben said. Minnesota had four reported UFO sightings in April, according to coverage of the recent Apple Valley incident at the news and entertainment website Examiner.com. “Please keep in mind that most UFO reports can be explained as something natural or manmade,” the Examiner. com report notes. —Andrew Miller

by Andrew Miller

SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Business Buzz Pet salons celebrate 25 years Groomingdale’s Pet Salons will celebrate 25 years of pet grooming in May. Jennifer and Bruce Rohde have owned the salons since April 2007. They share the responsibilities of running the business, which has locations in Eagan, Farmington and Lakeville. Ribbon cuttings are planned at each location on the following dates: Friday, May 3, Eagan; Friday, May 10, Farmington; and Friday, May 17, Lakeville. Each will be at 10 a.m. Free nail trims for pets will be offered on the Friday of the ribbon cuttings and the Saturday following. There will also be drawings for free pet grooming, a grand prize drawing for one year’s worth of free grooming, and one free grooming from each salon location. Patrick Nau Photography will provide a free sitting and an 8-by-10 color photograph of clients’ freshly groomed pets. Cheryl Richardson, founder of Groomingdale’s, opened the first salon on March 20, 1988, in Eagan. She continues to be on staff grooming pets in the Lakeville salon.

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8A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

Business Buzz Bank advisory board members re-appointed

Homes for Heroes affiliate in Lakeville

Members of Merchants Bank – Twin Cities Advisory Board were re-appointed following the Merchants Financial Group Inc. annual meeting. Some of the members of the board include chairman James Trenda, CPA, advisor with CP Advisors LLC; Peggy Johnson, community relations director for Dakota County Electric Association; James L. Emond, Realtor with Remax Advantage Plus; Clyde Thompson, chief financial officer for HydroVac. Inc.; Mark McGrory, senior vice president and chief credit officer for Merchants Financial Group; and Twin Cities Regional President Lawrence Stovern. Stovern pointed out that Johnson was featured in the MFGI Annual Report in 2012. She is a Rosemount resident and has strong ties throughout the south metro, including Apple Valley. Trenda also has strong ties in Apple Valley. Additionally, he serves on the MFGI Board of Directors. Emond and Thompson are well known business people in Lakeville. MFGI owns 18 Merchants Bank locations in southeastern Minnesota and west-central Wisconsin, including locations in Apple Valley, Cottage Grove, Rosemount, Lakeville and Hastings.

Realtor and Lakeville resident Jeremy James of Keller Williams Integrity, is a Realtor affiliate of Homes for Heroes. Homes for Heroes aims to help close the gap between the costs of housing for military personnel, police officers, firefighters, teachers, first responders, health care workers and others who serve our community and nation. Homes for Heroes affiliates with Realtors, mortgage lenders, title companies, attorneys and other service providers who agree to provide significant rebates and discounts to those who serve our nation and its communities. More information about the program can be found at www.HomesForHeroes.com or by calling toll free 866-443-7637.

Citizens Bank teaches children to save Citizens Bank Minnesota taught second-graders in the Lakeville School District about saving on National Teach Children to Save Day, April 23. The day is aimed at raising awareness about the important role that banks and bankers play in helping young people develop lifelong savings habits. Since 2005, Citizens has educated almost 4,300 Lakeville students about the importance of saving.

Citizens Bank ranks in top 15 percentile Citizens Bank Minnesota, with a location in Lakeville, was named to the 2012 Top 15th Percentile of Community Banks by Seifried & Brew LLC, a community bank risk management firm. To earn the honor, Citizens demonstrated exemplary performance of balancing risk and reward based on the bank’s S&B Total Risk/Return Composite Ranking.

Home, garden e-newsletter Lakeville mural artist/faux painter Steve Diadoo has launched Steve Diadoo’s MN Homes & Gardens e-newsletter at www.MNHomesandGardens. com. For a free subscription and to enter to win a MacBook Air, visit http://mnhomesandgardens.com/freeeletters/ and subscribe to the e-newsletter.

‘Heading Home Dakota’ slated for May 16 Mary, Mother of the Church, 3333 Cliff Road, Burnsville, will host “Heading Home Dakota,” a first-year report card event about homelessness, at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, May 16, with a continental breakfast, followed by a program 10-11:30 a.m. The event is free and all are welcome. Heading Home Dakota is a plan to prevent and end homelessness in Dakota County and was launched one year ago. This is an opportunity to learn

how community members are standing together in addressing this problem. The inaugural Heading Home Dakota award will also be presented. Nearly 1,000 men, women and mostly children struggle to have a place to call home each night in Dakota County. For more information, contact Madeline Kastler at 651-554-5918 or madeline.kastler@co.dakota.mn.us. To view the plan, go to www.headinghomeminnesota.org/dakota.

Farmington woman charged with felony theft of $95,000 SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Dakota County Attorney’s Office charged Leah Marie Bremner of Farmington with felony theft by swindle for $95,000 at the Lakeville bank where she worked. “This is a significant economic crime and is the 19th theft over $50,000 in the last five years in Dakota County,” County Attorney Jim Backstrom said in a press release. Bremner, 31, worked at the bank and allegedly took the money in incremental amounts between May and October 2010. The criminal complaint details the following: On Oct. 4, 2010, Lakeville police responded to a call of internal bank theft. Bremner’s supervisor confronted her about discrepancies in her teller and vault entries. She admitted that she stole money from the bank because her husband recently lost his job and the couple had financial problems. When asked how much, Bremner allegedly wrote on a piece of paper “86,000.” The bank official told police Bremner was “distraught, hysterical, crying and rocking back and forth in her chair during the contact.” Email Theresa Malloy On Oct. 5, 2010, Bremner sent an theresa.malloy@ecm-inc.com.

by Theresa Malloy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

A Rosemount man faces one felony charge for burglary and a gross misdemeanor charge for stalking his ex-girlfriend in Lakeville. Officers responded to a 2:45 a.m. call April 30 from the victim who heard noises in her backyard around midnight and heard knocking on her basement bedroom window. The victim finally looked out to see Thomas James Rourke, 32, who then jumped into the window well, according to a criminal complaint. Rourke allegedly asked to come in and speak with her. Police searched the perimeter of the residence and found Rourke in the garage in the passenger seat of the victim’s

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car. Police observed he was highly intoxicated and saw several empty beer cans on the garage floor that the victim said were not hers. A December 2012 no-contact order was given to Rourke following a Dec. 10, 2012, incident when Rourke held the victim hostage and threatened to kill himself. A police SWAT team responded to this incident. Felony third-degree burglary holds a sentence of up to five years and $10,000. Gross misdemeanor stalking can result in as much as a year and $1,000 fine. The two other charges are misdemeanors for tampering with a motor vehicle and violating an order for protection. Both carry a maximum penalty of 90 days and $1,000.

Seized meth worth $400,000 SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Andy turns scrap metal into art and loves tinkering with cars (ask him about his blue ‘94 Geo that now gets 58 mpg!).

A 35-year-old Burnsville resident and barbershop owner faces two first-degree drug charges and two weapons charges after a police search of his home allegedly turned up 12 pounds of methamphetamine. The street value of the seized drugs exceeds $400,000, Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom said in a news release. Albert Morris Johnson, 62 Riverwoods Lane, was charged May 3 with two first-degree controlledsubstance crimes, one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm and one count of possessing a firearm with an altered or removed serial number. “This case involved a large quantity of methamphetamine,” Backstrom said. “We are pleased that law enforcement has been able to seize this significant quantity of an extremely dangerous illegal

drug and keep it from being sold on the street.” Investigation led Dakota County Drug Task Force officers to obtain a search warrant for Johnson’s home and barbershop, according to the criminal complaint. Officers began the search at about 1:10 a.m., entering the home after repeated knocks and announcements yielded no answer. Albert Johnson and Helen Johnson and two children, ages 1 and 17, were also inside, the complaint said. The adults were handcuffed. Officers seized 20 items, including 24 bags of a clear crystal substance that tested positive for methamphetamine. They seized three handguns — one loaded and one with a destroyed serial number — a scale, $16,540 in cash, a money counter, and an electronic benefit transfer card. Entering with a key Johnson provided, officers searched the barbershop — Q&A Barbershop at 2929 Cliff Road E. — at

2:50 a.m. Three items were seized, including a “suspected drug note,” the complaint said. The first-degree drug charges allege sale and possession, both occurring when Johnson or an accomplice used or possessed a firearm. Johnson was convicted of second-degree assault in Sherburne County in 2009, which made it illegal for him to possess firearms, Backstrom said. Backstrom said he’ll submit Johnson’s case to the U.S. attorney’s office for possible charging under federal law. If federal charges are bought, the state charges will be dismissed. Johnson’s bail was set at $1.5 million without conditions and $1 million with conditions. Johnson remained in custody Friday. His next court appearance is May 20 at 1:30 p.m. in Hastings. John Gessner can be reached at (952) 846-2031 or email john.gessner@ecm-inc.com.

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email to a coworker saying she lost her job for a “stupid decision,” and “I am starting to face the reality of what I did and it is something I will have to pay the consequence for which I am prepared to do.” An initial audit revealed $95,000 in cash was missing. The investigation revealed that Bremner falsified daily entries that allowed her through time to take cash from the bank while keeping the drawer balanced. The entries showed she “bought” cash from the vault to balance her teller drawer and would then “reverse” the entry she made to make it look like the money in the vault was balanced. The audit also found that Bremner tried to conceal her embezzlement by falsifying a log so it looked like she provided $86,000 to an armored car service. She tried to cover the drawer shortage by running false transactions through her personal bank accounts. Bremner made her first court appearance May 3 with a $10,000 bail without conditions set, $5,000 with conditions. She is due to appear in court July 22. A felony conviction could hold up to a 20 year sentence and $100,000 fine.

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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 9A

Burnsville man advocacting for the disabled by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

You could say that Chris Juhn, 24, has a beef with “the Man.” He’s homosexual, but it’s not any gay-rights agenda that has him stirred up. Juhn has a pervasive developmental disorder. He’s bugged by the intersection of his place on the autism spectrum with disabled people’s place in society. For Juhn, “the Man” is about classmates who shun or bully, schools that often teach down to disabled people and a society that undervalues and underestimates them. “You talk about bullying amongst the GLBT population,” said Juhn, of Burnsville. “You compare it to disabled people ... they get bullied beyond belief, and everybody’s focusing on the GLBT community. If you focus on disabled people and how we get treated in school, it’s horrible.” Fast-talking and articulate, Juhn has been learning new skills for what he says is his growing advocacy for disability rights and respect. On May 18 he’ll complete LETTERS, from 5A

Compass pointed in the right direction To the editor: A great “thank you” to Pastor David Livingston for his letter of the same subject on April 26. Livingston, with great understanding to gays, reminded us through scripture of the real meaning of marriage and the reasons “to want marriage laws upheld in their traditional form.” His message is especially poignant in a time when many religious leaders and many of our legislators have erred under the banners of “political correctness” and “all-inclusiveness.” I thank him for pointing our moral compass in the right direction.

Partners in Policymaking, an eight-month advocacy training program for adults with disabilities and parents of young children with developmental disabilities. Begun 26 years ago by the Minnesota Governor’s Council on Developmental Disabilities, the program has expanded across the nation and into many foreign countries. Participants apply for one of 40 spots per session. “I’ve never been through any training program that’s been this extensive, that’s been this good, that’s been this inspiring,” Juhn said. The program includes a survey of battles already won. Mostly gone are the institutions that once housed the disabled, thanks to those who advocated on their behalf, Juhn said. “There’s a lot more dignity that’s been given to people with disabilities. Before, it was like you were an animal, or worse than one.” Now is the time to time for self-advocacy to rise, he said. “I do think disability rights are the next huge, major civil rights movement in the country beyond the GLBT movement,”

AL KRANZ Burnsville

Help prevent arson To the editor: Did you know 65 percent of Minnesota’s 318 incendiary structure fires reported in 2011 happened in residential properties? May 5 -11 is Arson Awareness Week in Minnesota. The theme is “Reducing Residential Arson.” Residential arson can be prevented by implementing neighborhood clean-ups and improving internal and external security around homes and abandoned properties. Neighborhood crime prevention groups can add arson and suspicious activity to their watch. Nationally, 50 percent of arson arrests are chil-

he said. “There are bigger issues in the disabled community than the GBLT could even imagine. It’s just that the GLBT community has gotten on board sooner.” The son of Karen and Carlos Juhn, Juhn attended District 196 schools growing up, staring with Echo Park Elementary. After his diagnosis, he was moved to Red Pine and its Communication Interaction Program for students with high-functioning autism. “I don’t have as good of social skills as most people,” Juhn said. “I don’t grasp things, like, some sarcasm, I don’t get. I’m not as sociable, I guess. And I guess I’m just different, so they label you.” Special education at Falcon Ridge Middle School was “hell,” said Juhn, who has especially unfond memories of one teacher. “Basically, if the slowest person in the class couldn’t grasp what you grasped, a lot of times (teachers) would make it so you wouldn’t learn anything more,” he said. “Basically, they just teach one bit of curriculum to everybody. “You basically get put in all these classes and you get labeled by the teachers and by the students. It causes you to separate

dren under the age of 18. In Minnesota in 2011, 55 percent of arson arrests were juveniles. Of the 91 kids arrested in Minnesota that year, some were younger than 10 years old. Juvenile arson is also primarily residential arson and can be prevented. If your child has experimented with or misused fire it can be deadly. Addressing misuse of fire early, with appropriate intervention, can prevent a child from getting hurt or killed, getting involved in the legal system, or even becoming a serial arsonist. Youth Firesetting Prevention & Intervention teams are located throughout the state to provide appropriate intervention and stop this dangerous behavior before it is too late. Call 1-800-500-8897 to be connected with a local team who will set up

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yourself from the regular student body and basically create this idea in your head that, ‘I’m disabled, I’m different than these people, I’m not as good as these people.’ ” Eastview High School was better, said Juhn, who graduated in 2006 with a grade-point average of about 2.7. “The whole middle school experience set me off so much that I just really didn’t try hard, or I really didn’t try at all, when high school came around,” he said. “That was my fault, you know? But part of it was the mindset that I got put into in middle school. Plus, I didn’t believe in myself then, either.” After high school Juhn attended District 196’s Transition Plus, a program for young adults with special needs. He then attended Itasca Community College for two semesters and is now studying commercial photography at Hennepin Technical College. He’s done some shooting for Occupy Homes MN, an activist group that vows to defend people from foreclosure and eviction. On the disabilities front, one of the hot legislative topics is the

a meeting with the family and determine the best intervention strategy. There are many reasons that children start fires and the local teams are set up to help children and families be safe from fire and prevent juvenile arson. KATHI OSMONSON Deputy state fire marshal, Youth Firesetting Prevention & Intervention

Two-tiered minimum wage proposal To the editor: This week the Minnesota House of Representatives approved a minimum wage increase. While the House passed the increase, we ask legislators to consider the impact on restaurants and

federal ABLE Act, which would allow people with disabilities and their families to establish accounts for purposes such as education and housing without endangering their access to federal benefits such as Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income. “There are people I know and I went to school with that have tons of potential that basically live off the state now, don’t have a job, because if you work a job, you get penalized and you lose money,” Juhn said. It’s time for people with disabilities to “make noise” about their issues, he said. “I talk to so many people with disabilities. We’re p---ed,” Juhn said. “Everybody’s like, ‘How cute. They’re standing up for their rights.’ No. People really are truly angry at the way they’ve been treated. It’s not just me.” Another Partners in Policymaking session will begin this fall. Applications are due by July 15. For more information go to www.mngts.org/partnersinpolicymaking. John Gessner can be reached at (952) 846-2031 or email john.gessner@ecm-inc.com.

related industries if the state continues to ignore tips as part of the income earned by many restaurant employees. A survey of Minnesota restaurants found that tipped employees make an average of $18 per hour statewide and $22 per hour in the metro area. We want to maintain these good jobs and keep table service restaurants viable. However a minimum wage increase that does not recognize tips as income could cause restaurants to reduce employee hours, increase menu prices or delay investment or expansion. Restaurants don’t want to do that. The Minnesota Restaurant Association has put forward a balanced plan that protects the wages of tipped employees. The proposal would create a new tipped em-

ployee minimum wage tier. If a tipped employee earns at least $12 per hour including tips, they would receive the current base minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. If they didn’t make $12 an hour during the pay period, they would earn the new minimum wage plus tips. The floor of $12 per hour is higher than any of the proposed minimum wage hikes at the Capitol. At a recent town hall meeting, Gov. Mark Dayton suggested that restaurants might need to be considered differently regarding a minimum wage increase. The MRA’s reasonable plan is the right approach. SCOTT WINER Champps, Burnsville and Maple Grove, and vice president of the Minnesota Restaurant Association


10A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

Property taxes due May 15 Property taxes on Dakota County real estate for the first half of 2013 are due Wednesday, May 15. According to state law, the county will assess a penalty for late payments. The penalty depends on the tax amount, property classification and when the payment is made. Penalties are listed on the back of property tax statements that were sent to residents earlier this year. Property taxes can be paid online, by phone or by mail. Mailed payments must be postmarked by midnight May 15 to be considered timely. Payments can also be made in person at the following times and locations: • 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Monday through Friday at the Property Taxation & Records Office at Dakota County Administration Center, 1590 Highway 55, Hastings. • 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday at the service desk at Dakota County Western Service Center, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Apple Valley. • 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday at the service desk at Dakota County Northern Service Center, 1 Mendota Road W., West St. Paul. For more information, call the Dakota County Property Information line at 651-438-4576 or visit www.dakotacounty.us and search pay property taxes.

Sophia, Olivia, Ethan top baby names The Birthplace at Fairview Ridges Hospital in Burnsville has compiled its top baby names for 2012. The top names for girls delivered were Sophia and Olivia, first at 19 each; Ava and Emma, 15 each; Lily, 14; Abigail and Avery, 13 each; and Ella and Madison, 11 each. Emily, Aubrey and Isabella were also popular names. The top boys names were: Ethan, 21; William, 17; Liam, Jack and Alexander, 15 each; Owen, Mason and Lucas, 14 each; and Logan, 13.

Henry, Landon, Andrew, Evan and Noah were also popular in 2012. In 2011, Ethan was the seventh most popular boys name nationwide. Sophia was first and Olivia was fourth. The Social Security Administration has been publishing a national list of the most popular baby names since 1997. Its website offers lists for each year since 1880. The list is released each year around Mother’s Day. The Birthplace at Fairview Ridges Hospital delivered 2,636 babies last year.

Master Gardener presentations The Dakota County Master Gardeners from the University of Minnesota Extension are presenting a series of talks on successful gardening May 13, June 10 and July 8 at 7 p.m. at the Church of St. Joseph, 13900 Biscayne Ave. W., Rosemount. The presentations are free and open to the public. The presentation on May 13, “Tips for Planning a Successful Garden,” will include information

on soil testing, composting, planning garden spaces, sun-loving vegetables and cool crops, planting time and soil temperatures, sun requirements, spacing, plant staking, watering and weeding. Subsequent presentations will focus on maintaining a healthy garden and harvesting crops. For more information, call 651-423-4402 or email at StJoesgarden@gmail. com.

Education LSHS students at French speaking contest

A total of 25 Lakeville South High School students participated in the annual A Vous La Parole French speaking contest Tuesday, April 23, at the University of Minnesota. Sponsored annually by the Minnesota Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of French, with the support of the University of Minnesota Department of French and Italian, the contest recognizes excellence in French speaking skills. Students are given ratings based on a four-star system with four stars earning them a blue medal, three stars earning a red medal, and two stars earning a white medal. All participants receive a certificate of participation regardless of their particular rating. Participating students included (back row, from left): Emma Mickelson, Rachel Mickelson, Maddie Market, Clara Bauer, Macy Van Ert, Dakota Aretz, Christian Messier, Mallory Lewis, Matthew Holzer, Sydney Olsen, Student Teacher Chloe Mais. Front row: Stephanie Kolsrud, Kalie Kampa, Rachel O’Brien, Jacquelyn Chatelaine, Lauren Reed, Noel Jacobson, Natalie Keyes, Alexandra Dillon. (Photo submitted)

College News LNHS St. Cloud State University junior Jenna Andrews of Lakeville was awarded a Possum Works Seque Scholarship in Special Education in the amount of $750 for fall semester 2013. The scholarship is available to full-time students majoring or minoring in special education. Preference is given to students with experience working in group homes. Anthony W. Joyce and Thomas J. Joyce of Lakeville have accepted membership in The National Society of Collegiate Scholars, an interdisciplinary honors organization for firstyear and second-year college students. Membership is by invitation only, based on grade point average and class standing.

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student wins congressional art competition District 194 A drawing by Breanna School Board Babcock, a 10th grade student at Lakeville North High School, has been selected to be a part of this year’s Congressional Art Exhibit, “An Artistic Discovery,” sponsored by the U.S. House of Representatives. Babcock submitted a realistic black and white graphite drawing of a tiger for the competition. She will be awarded her honors this summer in Washington, D.C., by U.S. Rep. John Kline. Her art will be part of a display of art from all congressional districts in the United States and will be open for viewing at the U.S. Capitol.

Music classes offered at New Horizon New Horizon Academy has selected MacPhail Center for Music as the primary music provider for its learning enrichment program. Early childhood music classes offered include: Musical Babies for ages 6 weeks to 18 months; Musical Toddlers for ages 10 months to 33 months; and Musical Preschoolers for ages 33 months to five years. New Horizon Academy has locations in Apple Valley, Burnsville, Eagan and Lakeville.

Following is the agenda for the 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, special meeting of the District 194 School Board in the District Office. 1. Preliminary Actions a. Call to Order b. Roll Call c. Agenda Additions 2. Discussion a. Executive Cabinet Contract Design b. Springsted Community Survey Review c. Levy Planning 3. Adjournment

District 194 School Board Following is the agenda for the 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, regular meeting of the District 194 School Board in the District Office. 1. Preliminary Actions a. Call to Order b. Pledge of Allegiance c. Roll Call and Board Introductions d. Spotlight on Education/ Good News e. Public Comment f. Board Communications g. Agenda Additions 2. Consider Approval of Consent Agenda a. Board Minutes b. Employment Recommen-

dations, Leave Requests and Resignations c. Resolution Relating to the Termination and Non-Renewal of Probationary Teachers d. Resolution Proposing to Place Teacher on Unrequested Leave of Absence e. Resolution Placing Named Teachers on Unrequested Leave of Absence f. Policy Deletions g. Other Personnel Matters h. Payment of Bills & Claims i. 2013-14 School Lunch Prices j. Other Business Matters k. Acceptance of Gift Donations l. Field Trips 3. Consent Agenda Discussion Items 4. Reports a. Gifted Program Update – Ms. Traub b. Impact Academy Update – Ms. Oxton c. Mental Health Update & Mental Health in the Schools Month – Ms. Ouillette d. First Reading New/Revised Policies – Mr. Massaros e. Use of School Facilities & Equipment Procedures – Mr. Porter f. 2013-14 Capital Budget – Mr. Anderson 5. Recommended Actions a. Resolution Relating to Increasing the General Education Revenue of the School District and Calling an Election Thereon – Dr. Snyder 6. Additions to Agenda 7. Information a. Superintendent’s Report b. Board Member Reports 8. Adjournment

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or households that have not owned a home in the past three years can use this financing with 30-year FHA or VA loans. Veterans do not have to be first-time homebuyers and are eligible for this program if they have not previously used a first-time homebuyer program. Single-family homes, townhomes or condominiums in Dakota County are eligible for the program with a maximum purchase price of $271,590. Income limits are $82,300 for a one- or twoperson household and $90,530 for a three- or more person household. Up to $10,000 in down payment and closing cost assistance loans are also available and amounts vary based on income. These loans feature zero percent interest and are deferred until the first mortgage is paid off, the home is sold or refinanced, or the home is no longer the buyer’s primary residence. Buyers accessing the First Time Homebuyer Program must complete an approved homebuyer education course before closing on their loan. The Dakota County CDA offers monthly Home Stretch homebuyer education workshops and the new online homebuyer education program called Framework. The Dakota County CDA partners with the local mortgage lending community to administer the program. Participating lenders have the necessary paperwork to qualify households for the first-time homebuyer financing, mortgage credit certificate and down payment assistance. These programs are part of the Dakota County CDA’s Homeownership Connection resources that provide homebuyers and homeowners tools to be successful. For more information, visit www.dakotacda.org or call 651-6754442.

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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 13A

The Taste of Lakeville aims to please Annual Rotary event raises money for community causes by Laura Adelmann and Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Over the past 11 years, the Taste of Lakeville has turned from a little idea into an event that has made a big difference in the lives of many Lakeville area residents. The primary fundraiser for the Lakeville Rotary Club, to be held from 5-9 p.m. Thursday, May 16, at the Lakeville Area Arts Center, has led to donations going to more than 30 community initiatives primarily focused on youths. This is one event that, literally and figuratively, leaves a good “taste” in one’s mouth. Among the initiatives to benefit the most from

the Taste of Lakeville are scholarships for graduating seniors in Lakeville schools, school music and sports programs, participation in day camps, the senior class and afterprom parties, and scholarships for STRIVE – a program that aims to boost the scholastic performance of students who are faced with a variety of challenges. Adults ages 21 and up can attend the Taste of Lakeville, which will include more than 30 food vendors from Lakeville area restaurants, more than 450 kinds of wine samples and many beers. Live music will be provided by “mock-androllers” The Dweebs on one stage and Vienna on another. The Dweebs are a perennial favorite, entertaining the crowd with their high-energy and sometimes interactive set of songs from the likes of

The Taste of Lakeville returns to the grounds of the Lakeville Area Arts Center from 5-9 p.m. Thursday, May 16. (Photo by Rick Orndorf) Johnny Cash, The Beatles, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga. More is at www. thedweebs.com. Vienna, which largely draws upon its own material, has a more understated presence. Led by

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Lakeville’s Crossroads Church worship director Shawn Vaughn (vocals, guitars and synthesizers), the self-described progressive dance rock group has equal parts Coldplay, Radiohead and

’80s synth rock. To hear samples of their music, visit www.viennarock. com. Pianist Michael Loonan will be playing inside the arts center. His repertoire includes

popular standards, contemporary classics, jazz and classical. More is at www.michaelloonan.com. As for the silent auction, it will include more than 200 items up for bid, including gift baskets, event tickets and vacation stays, all possible through local donors. Among those donating are Dakota County Sheriff Dave Bellows and Lakeville Chief of Police Tom Vonhof (lunch will be on them); Dick’s Sanitation, offering free garbage pickup for six months; Lakeville Family Bowl; and the Lakeville Area Chamber of Commerce, which is giving away Minnesota Twins tickets. Live auction items include a Brackett’s Crossing golf membership initiation fee, valued at $10,000, (subsequent See TASTE, 14A

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Lakeville Liquors Heritage County Road 50 & Heritage Drive

Lakeville Liquors Galaxie County Road 46 & Galaxie Ave.

Thank you for supporting small business

No matter your taste, No matter your style,

Join us Thursday, May 16th, 2013 from 5-9pm at the Lakeville Area Arts Center for the 11th Annual

Perfectly Random

has something just for you! As our name implies, our store is... Perfectly Random. While out for the Taste of Lakeville, come in and shop for unique items perfect for your home, cabin, family, friends and you.

Presented By The Rotary Club of Lakeville Foundation

Good Food. Good Wine. Good Time. Join us again in 2013! Enjoy live entertainment, first-class wine and beer tasting along with food samplings from over 35 local restaurants and caterers.

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at the gate © 2013 Taste of Lakeville All rights reserved.

Like us on

For tickets and additional info visit us online at: www.TasteofLakeville.org


14A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

TASTE, from 13A monthly dues would be the responsibility of the winner); a scooter donated by Leo’s South and Lakeville Family Dental; a Minnesota Wild hockey

package; a Lake Tahoe vacation from Jack and Jeannette Gibbons; and a two-night stay and winery tour and tasting in Stoller Vineyards, Ore., provided by the Stroller Family Estate and Ex-

press Employment Professionals. All funds raised will be used to support Rotary Club projects and community organizations. Taste of Lakeville tickets are $30 if purchased

in advance and are avail- $40. able from Lakeville RotaFollowing is a tentary members, at Lakeville tive schedule of events: retail outlets or online at • 5 p.m. - Gates open www.tasteoflakeville.org. • 5-9 p.m. - Live music Tickets can also be • 8 p.m. - Live auction purchased at the door on • 8:30 p.m. - “Wall the day of the event for of Wine” and “Wall of

Beer” drawings • 15 minutes after live auction ends - silent auction closes and live music resumes • 9 p.m. - Announcements

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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 15A

BUSINESS, from 1A restaurant. In an April 29 letter to the city, the Malmbergs’ attorney, David J. McGee, referenced possible legal action, citing numerous breeches of an easement agreement he said Dave Malmberg has with United Properties that restricts changes in common areas, including parking and building setback requirements. The letter also stated concerns Dave Malmberg’s property value would be reduced because his building would face the rear of the Advance Auto Parts building. According to McGee’s letter, the Malmbergs “vehemently� oppose construction of the Advance Auto Parts building, and according to minutes, Dave and Eric Malmberg appeared before the Lakeville Planning Commission April 4 to cite concerns about the project; they attended the city meeting as well, but Lakeville Mayor Matt Little did not open the issue for public comment before the council’s vote. City Attorney Roger Knutson wrote in a May 2 letter to Lakeville Planning Director Daryl Morey that the city is not party to the agreement “and has no authority to enforce it.� Knutson wrote that the city’s role was to determine if the plat complies with city ordinances and statutory requirements. “If it does comply, the city must approve it,� Knutson wrote. “The city cannot consider private agreements in making that decision.� ENGGREN, from 1A Lakeville Chamber of Commerce executive director, said “I think it’s a sad day for the Lakeville business community, and especially downtown Lakeville, when you have a stalwart of that business community pass away.� The Enggren’s grocery store became a gathering place for residents and farmers to meet, exchange ideas and form friendships, eventually becoming the city’s largest supermarket, stocked with groceries and retail items, according to a 2012 Sun Thisweek article. John Enggren and his bother Jerry Enggren joined their father, John G. Enggren, in the business in 1954. Joel Enggren said the brothers were very close and worked well together. “My dad was more of the people person, and Jerry was a more hands-on kind of guy,� Joel said. Jack Matasosky, CEO of Appro Development, said when he came to Lakeville in 1978, the Enggren family “was pretty much most of the business in Lakeville.� He said the family welcomed new business growth, and exerted “great influence and character in Lakeville over the years.� The brothers were involved in the community, helping to found Pan-OProg in 1967 to mark the opening of Airlake Industrial Park and celebrate the merging of the city and township of Lakeville; Jer-

In the letter, Knutson also noted a clause in the development contract that holds the city, its officers, employees and agents harmless from claims, damages sustained or costs incurred resulting from plat approval and development. Keith Ulstad, senior vice president of Retail Development for United Properties, told Planning Commission members the company bought the property in 2004 and there has been no interest in it until Advance Auto Parts approached them, according to meeting minutes. He reportedly said they want to divide the lot to avoid building a multi-tenant building, considering the recent lack of interest in the site. Meeting minutes state that Dave Malmberg said they originally wanted to build where the Advance Auto Parts building is proposed, but United Properties denied them because there was going to be a high-end, sit-down restaurant there. Eric Malmberg said that in the summer of 2004, he had lunch with Community and Economic Development Director Dave Olson and former City Administrator Bob Erickson, who “made it very clear to him that there was not going to be any options for this site other than a sit-down restaurant, period,� minutes state. In an interview with Sun Thisweek, Erickson denied ever having made that comment or going to lunch with Eric or Dave Malmberg, noting at that time he was interim city administrator,

working part time to help transition City Administrator Steve Mielke into the position. “I guarantee you, there has never been a commitment to a sit-down restaurant in that location,� Erickson said, adding that when he was administrator, city officials did not conduct business over lunch to discuss development projects. “It’s something I didn’t believe in,� Erickson said. Mielke said there is no written city documentation restricting the property use to a high-end, sit-down restaurant. “We were meticulous,� Erickson said. “If we promised it, it would be in writing, not just a willy-nilly statement.� According to the minutes, Dave Malmberg said they spent over $100,000 on soil improvements to construct the current building and parking lot, and the plan does not allow them enough parking because the shared parking agreement was based on night-time restaurant use versus RE/ MAX’s daytime use of the lot. In his letter, McGee, stated that the Malmbergs may pursue “any and all legal remedies� to either stop the construction or fairly compensate him for the damage it will suffer. When asked if they are going to file a lawsuit, Eric Malmberg stated in a text message they “are going to exhaust all possibilities in an effort to find an amicable resolution.�

ry Enggren died in 2010 at 80 years old. Matasosky said the brothers would be proud of how big Pan-O-Prog has grown, attracting people from all over. “I don’t think they envisioned it getting as big as it did,� Matasosky said. “To see it grow as a community celebration is quite a tribute to them.� MJ Henschel, sales manager at the Chart House, said she often shopped in the Enggren’s stores, describing their shop for women as the “place to go for women’s clothing.� Braun said the family’s clothing store “fell by the wayside� once the Burnsville Center opened in 1977, drawing away their customer base. She ran the grocery store for the last few years, until it crossed the 100-year mark and closed in 2006, also a victim of growing competition and significant changes in the retail industry. Doreen Enggren, Jerry Enggren’s widow, said the brothers respected each other as businessmen and cared deeply about the community. “I think it was just the love of the town� that kept them in Lakeville, she said. Joel Enggren said his father later bought the former Lakeville liquor store from the city and opened Babe’s Sports Bar and Grill, a popular downtown bar and restaurant now under different ownership.

John Enggren held his 60th birthday celebration at Babe’s right after he bought it, Joel said. His energy and interest in others set him apart, according to those who knew and worked with him in the community for decades. “Just like his father and brother, John was just a stalwart citizen in the community,� said Maynard Johnson, creator of the 1,500-acre industrial park and Airlake Airport. The Enggren brothers also made a point to donate food and clothing to local families in need and were very involved in community organizations including the Chamber of Commerce. “That’s one thing he taught me,� Joel Enggren said. “To always give back.� John Enggren’s sister, Shirlee Scott-Sandvik of Golden Valley said, like all Enggrens, John Enggren had worked in his father’s store since childhood. She recalled a time that may have been the key to his business acumen: He hitched a sugar beet train to Chaska, which was “just something kids did� back then. “My dad was so upset with him from that time on, I think he spent most of his after-school time in the store,� she said. “He was in hot water.� What may have been intended as punishment became a source of admiration for John Enggren’s siblings, who witnessed his

Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com.

Players at the MN Pro Paintball Challenge for Children’s event can choose whether to play for the Law, led by Larry Yatch, or the Underground, led by Isaiah Maring, both Navy SEALs. (Photo submitted) PAINTBALL, from 1A to Erika Emerick, MN Pro Paintball marketing manager. Players can bring their own equipment or rent it at MN Pro Paintball but must use the company’s environmentally safe paintballs, which will discounted that day to $55 for 2,000. Paintball guns brought in must meet the company’s safety standards; fully automatic guns are not allowed. All proceeds will be donated to the Children’s Hospital cardiac unit, a charity that holds significance for MN Pro Paintball founder and CEO Matt Ames, 29. He was rushed there shortly after being born with a congenital heart defect and has been a patient there ever since. At 18, he received a pacemaker, but his medical challenges are no match for his determination to be active and engaged, Emerick said. “He’s the most energetic, active person I’ve ever met,� Emerick said.

sudden business involvement awaken a new sophistication in him. “Jerry and I, we just thought he had it made,� Scott-Sandvik said. “He got in the truck all the time with my dad, and they talked business around the dinner table. It was a big deal.� Joel Enggren said his father went out of his way to get to know others. “It was like he knew everybody,� Joel Enggren said. “Wherever he went, he had to buy somebody a drink.� Mike Waters, Provincial Bank president, called Enggren’s death “the passing of an era,� noting the family, along with prominent business leaders like Earl Gephart and Jerry Erickson, helped shape the community and build Lakeville’s foundation. “John is part of the historical families here,� Waters said. “He was very active in Lakeville and part of a group that was very supportive of the Chamber of Commerce. That group of people were really kind of the core of Lakeville, so he’s the last of them. It’s a sad thing.� John Enggren is survived by wife Lois, sons Joel (Lisa); Jay (Debbie) and Jeff (Jill), many grandchildren and his sister Shirlee Scott-Sandvik of Golden Valley. Laura Adelmann is at laura. adelmann@ecm-inc.com.

“He’s a fighter. He still has issues, but he never lets that hold him back.� In the past four years the MN Pro Paintball event has raised more than $100,000 for the cardiac unit, and it’s growing in popularity. Last year, the event drew almost 500 players. This year, organizers have already raised $35,000 in corporate donations and are planning for at least 700 players, who will use every field for the adventure. Paintball props include giant pipelines, woods and a 10,000-square foot castle where teams will attempt to gather supplies to pick up points for the win. Everyone is invited to play, but there is also entertainment for those who would rather cheer the teams on, Emerick said. A bounce house and face painting will be on site for tots, and an impact paintball shooting range designed for children will be open for them to try the sport.

HOUSING, from 1A

Numerous businesses will also have booths on site, including Dodge of Burnsville, Buffalo Wild Wings and Health Source Chiropractic; Emerick said there is room for more sponsors and welcomes those who are interested. JNH Band will play during lunch from noon to 1:30 p.m., and a raffle with prizes including theater tickets and paintball supplies will be held when the awards presentation starts at 5 p.m. “It’s a great cause,� Emerick said. “It’s a great way to get out in the community and try something new.� The gates open at 7 a.m. and games are set to start at 10 a.m. Registration is available at the door on the day of the event or online at challengeforchildrens.com. “This is a lot of fun,� Emerick said. “It’s a different type of charity event.� Laura Adelmann is at laura.adelmann@ecminc.com.

another one-access neighborhood. Morey said the area’s wet and steep topography prevented the city from an alternative road access. He said a drainage channel in the area and private property ownership further complicated the area’s access to a public street. Council Member Kerrin Swecker, who had welcomed Morey back to present development activities before council, said the road will “always be troublesome, until we figure out what the longterm plan for it is,� but they “need to develop this community.� She said both sides of County Road 50 will be right in, right out access once the road is developed to its full potential. “As difficult as it is to put homes, or put anything onto County Road 50 right now, if we have a developer that’s willing to develop in that area, I still think it’s a great piece of land,� Swecker said. City Administrator Steve Mielke said the county and city tries to avoid restricted access developments, but it is too costly to change, and noted emergency responders would have to adjust driving patterns so they are coming from the proper direction.

according to the city. Morey said Jewel Court does not meet county spacing guidelines for full access onto Kenwood Trail, and would be constrained to a right-in, right-out only, as Kenwood Trail is planned to widen to a fourlane divided road. The Dakota County Plat Commission is requiring the developer to install a sign at the location indicating the road will have future restricted access. Several City Council members cited concerns about adding to traffic and access problems for residents off Kenwood Trail. Nearby Jaguar Path residents have only one way in and out of their development, and parents of students at nearby Kenwood Trail Middle School have described morning and afternoon commutes crossing Kenwood Trail as “playing chicken.� According to the county, County Road 50 has 15,400 average daily trips. That is predicted to increase to 22,300 by 2030. Morey said the 188th Street intersection would be a full-access point to the development, and when property to the east develops, it will have access to Kenwood Trail. Council Member Doug Anderson cited “sig- Laura Adelmann is at nificant concerns� about laura.adelmann@ecm-inc. planning Jewel Court as com.

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16A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

Lakeville Briefs Benefit events set for LaSalle

ERICKSON DRUG, INC. E

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Celebrating 50 Years!

is battling severe ulcerative colitis. A supper and silent auction will be 4-8 p.m. at Patriot’s Pub at the Lakeville VFW, 870 Upper 208th St. W. A dona-

Two benefits for Lakeville South graduate Jessie LaSalle will be held Friday, May 17. She

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Run2Walk slated for May 18 The 2013 Run2Walk will be Saturday, May 18. It will include 1K, 5K and 10K runs that will start and finish at H e a l t h Wo r k s / D a n c e Works, 17470 Glacier Way, Lakeville. Run2Walk will be held on behalf of Lakeville graduates Scott Proudfoot and Dillon Borowicz, both of whom suffered spinal cord injuries as a result of diving accidents and are paralyzed from the chest down. Race times will be 6:45 a.m. (10K), 7 a.m. (5K) and 7:15 a.m. (1K). Online registration is available at http://www. e v e n t s. r u n n i n g r o o m . com/site/?raceId=9053. Call 952-432-7123 for more information.

Senior fraud and identity theft workshop The Lakeville Police Department will host a free senior fraud and identity theft prevention workshop from 1-3 p.m. Saturday, May 11, at Hosanna Church, 9600 163rd St. W., Lakeville. People of all ages are welcome to the free workshop. The workshop will explore identity theft, telemarketing fraud, caregiver fraud, financial exploitation methods and strategies to avoid becoming a victim. Presenters will be Michael Fahey, judge, 1st Judicial District; Kelly Archer, information security specialist, Hennepin County Medical Center; and Kevin O’Neill of the Lakeville Police Crime Prevention Unit. Call 952-985-4818 for more information.

Flapjack fundraiser for boys tennis The Lakeville South boys tennis team will hold at Flapjack Fundraiser from 8-10 a.m. Saturday, May 11, at Applebee’s, 18404 Kenrick Ave., Lakeville. The breakfast will include pancakes, sausage, scrambled eggs, coffee, juice, soda or tea. All proceeds will go to the Lakeville South boys tennis team. Tickets will be $10 at the door.

Workshop for parenting and teaching challenging kids A workshop for educators, parents and professionals who work and interact with challenging children and young

adults will be held 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday, May 17, at St. John’s Lutheran Church, 20165 Heath Ave., Lakeville. The workshop will explore the concepts and strategies of the Nurtured Heart Approach. This approach encourages cooperative and respectful responses in children, increasing their sense of inner worth and promoting resiliency. To learn more and register for this event go to www.interconnections. us.com.

Reading groups to meet The Reading Groups of the Heritage Library will discuss “The Healing� by Jonathan O’Dell at their next meetings at 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 29, and 12:30 p.m. Thursday, June 6, in the library meeting room. The reading groups are free and open to anyone who enjoys reading and discussing good books. New attendees are always welcome, and no advance registration is necessary. The Heritage Library is located at 20085 Heritage Drive in Lakeville. For more information, call 952-891-0362 or visit www.dakotacounty.us/library.

Risen Savior KCs award scholarships Amy Ferguson of Lakeville North High School and Nathan Woodford of Eastview High School received scholarships on May 5 from the Apple Valley Risen Savior Knights of Columbus Council 9096. Ferguson was awarded a scholarship based upon academic achievement and participation in extracurricular school, community and church activities. Her parents are Roxann and Thomas Ferguson. Woodford was awarded a scholarship for his participation in church activities during high school. His parents are Tracy Gunderson and Joseph Woodford.

KCs hold spring banquet The Knights of Columbus held their spring banquet at Lakeville’s Chart House Event Center on April 25. Speakers included Deputy Grand Knight Bob Curtis and Mayor Matt Little. Mike Annoni was recognized for his 13 years of service as financial secretary and his involvement in the 4th Degree council. Leroy Keher was recognized for his commitment as gambling manager.

‘Heading Home Dakota’ slated for May 16 Mary, Mother of the Church, 3333 Cliff Road, Burnsville, will host “Heading Home Dakota,� a firstyear report card event about homelessness, at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, May 16, with a continental breakfast, followed by a program 10-11:30 a.m. The event is free and all are welcome. Heading Home Dakota is a plan to prevent and end homelessness in Dakota County and was launched one year ago. This is an opportunity to learn how community members are standing together in addressing this problem. The inaugural Heading Home Dakota award will also be presented. Nearly 1,000 men, women and mostly children struggle to have a place to call home each night in Dakota County. For more information, contact Madeline Kastler at 651-554-5918 or madeline.kastler@co.dakota.mn.us. To view the plan, go to www.headinghomeminnesota. org/dakota.

Divorce info session People considering divorce or in the early stages of divorce can attend a free informational event from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, at Summit Executive Offices Suites, 1500 McAndrews Road W., Burnsville. Specialists in family law, therapy and finance will be available to answer questions on divorce. To reserve a spot or for more information, call Terryl Johnson at 952-431-0805. Sponsored by Divorce Financial Directions in Burnsville.


SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 17A

Sports Cougars win True Team Section Shaina Burns wins three events by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Lakeville South girls track and field team repeated as champions of the Section 1AAA True Team meet on Tuesday with 1002.5 points. Last year, the girls won the section and went on to win the True Team State title. The event favors depth as every member who competes can give the team points. Shaina Burns won the long jump, shot put and

the 300-meter hurdles. She was fourth in the 100 hurdles. Caraline Slattery won the high jump and the triple jump. She finished second in the 300 hurdles. Ali Skluzacek placed fourth in the 100 and pole vault and took fifth in the 200. Erin Kilbride ran to third in the 1600 and 3200. Kayt Larson was second in the 800 and the 1600 Haley Lubow, Rachel Mickelson and Rose Cozad were fourth, fifth and sixth in the 400, respectively. Morgan Pieri and

Jenny Mosser tied for fourth in the high jump. Emma Mickelson placed fourth in the 800, Jordyn Thornton was second in the discus, and Annie Brekken was runner up in the 3200. The 4x100, 4x800 and 4x400 relays won while the 4x200 was second. The Minnesota State True Team is May 17-18 at Stillwater Area High School. Email Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com. Lakeville South’s Jocie Johnson clears a hurdle at the True Team Section 1AAA Meet on Tuesday at Lakeville North. (Photo by Rick Orndorf)

Panther golfers take Cougars have makings for boys golf narrow lead in SSC of contender Two conference tournaments leads Players feel putting is holding team back

to two medalists for Lakeville South

by Andy Rogers

by Andy Rogers

SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

A month from now, if all goes as planned, the Lakeville North boys golf team will be scouting the links at Bunker Hills Golf Club in Coon Rapids – site of the Class AAA state tournament. Anyone who has ever played golf knows that things don’t always go as planned. Focusing on the next shot is usually best. The next shot for the team is to repeat as champions of the South Suburban Conference. Lakeville North has a narrow lead midway through the season after winning the second South Suburban Conference tournament on Monday at Minnesota Valley Country Club in Bloomington after finishing runner-up in the first round. The conference is decided by the results of four conference tournaments throughout the season. Lakeville North has 19 points with Lakeville South close behind with 18, with two matches remaining. Mike Oberg led the Panthers with 73, which was second best in the tournament. Bobby Thomas shot 77, and Freddy Thomas carded 75. Both Matt Ostdiek and John Henke came in with 80s. Carter Gidlow and Zac

The early returns for the Lakeville South boys golf team show is has the parts to be a contender in 2013. Two of those parts have already earned medalist honors at the first two South Suburban Conference tournaments. Max Redetzke was the most recent medalist shooting 71 at the second South Suburban Conference tournament Monday at the Minnesota Valley Country Club in Bloomington. He said his first round wasn’t the best, but things really came around on the back nine. “The greens were rolling really fast and I think I was just putting well,” Redetzke said. “I haven’t had a lot of time practicing, but the greens were similar to Brackett’s (Lakeville South’s home course).” Teammate Justin Doeden had 76, Jordan Nelson 81, Phil Thompson 82 and Noah Rasinski 87. “It’s been a slow start, but now I feel more comfortable,” Redetzke said. “The whole team is coming around. We’re getting better every day.” The Cougars finished third with 310 behind winner Lakeville North at 305 and Eagan at 307. It didn’t help that one

Lakeville North’s John Henke takes a swing at a South Suburban Conference tournament at Minnesota Valley Country Club on Tuesday. (Photo by Andy Rogers) Whalen have also been in the mix this season. With five to six golfers capable of shooting in the 70s, it’s easy to see why the Panthers have high expectations. “We have so much depth,” Bobby Thomas said. “It helps when I play terrible, we have guys who can pick that up.”

Oberg has shone early on for the Panthers. He was the medalist at the first conference tournament at Creeks Bend Golf Course in Prior Lake on April 30 and runner-up during the second. “The swing is cooperating nicely,” Oberg said. See PANTHERS, 18A

Panther girls second at True Team section

of their top golfers Mack Farley had something important to attend to. He was unable to compete because of an AP test. It was scheduled to be done by 2:30 p.m., but it ran late. “It was a tough situation given what happened

last week with North,” head coach Bill Schommer said. Redetzke was the second straight Lakeville South golfer to earn medalist honors at a conferSee COUGARS, 18A

Out! Lakeville South’s Isabella Laden (2) gets the final out against Lakeville North with Allie Ward (9) backing her up in a makeup game on Tuesday. Playoffs for both teams begin on Wednesday. (Photo by Rick Orndorf)

Boys team third thanks to speedy sprinters by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Lakeville North girls track and field team placed second at the True Team Section 1AAA meet with 936 points on Tuesday on the Panthers’ home track just a few points behind the winners from Lakeville South. The girls dominated the 100-meter dash with Alexa Trakalo winning and Emily Okins 0.03 seconds behind her at second. Temi Carda was fifth. Trakalo was second in the 200, third in the 400, and third in the long jump. Taylor Perkins won the 1,600 by almost seven seconds and Michaela Preachuck won the 100 hurdles beating teammate Lindsey Smits, who was second, by about a tenth of a second. Kendall Naatjes was fourth on the pole vault and fourth in the long jump. Okins was fourth in the 200, Courtney Earle was third in the 800, Elle Severson was fourth in the 1,600, Smits was fourth in the 300 hurdles, Katie Dillie nailed the second best high jump and Emily Wilson leaped to second on the pole vault. The 4x100 relay took

Lakeville South’s Justin Doeden knocks in a putt at Minnesota Valley Country Club in Bloomington on Monday. (Photo by Andy Rogers)

Bares sets record in pole vault Cougars place sixth overall at True Team sections by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Lakeville North’s Lindsey Smits competes at the True Team Section Meet on Tuesday. (Photo by Rick Orndorf) second, the 4x200 re- Anyaogu won the 200 and lay won, the 4x400 re- Nick Valentini was fourth. Both sprint relays – the lay placed third, and the 4x100 and 4x200 – came 4x800 was fifth. home champions. Lakeville North Anyaogu also won the triple jump competition. boys track Ben Krynski took second Overall the Panthers in the shot put and threw boys team finished in third the farthest discus. place behind the winAustin Hegseth placed ners from Owatonna and fifth in the 300 hurdles second-place Farmington and Nathan McMillon with 724 points. was sixth. Michael BuenJustin Greene was the ing ran fourth in the 100. first to cross the finish line in the 100 and he was Email Andy Rogers at third in the 200. Andrew andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

Lakeville South’s Lee Bares had a brilliant afternoon at the Section 1AAA True Team Meet on Tuesday at Lakeville North. He set a new state record in the pole vault, leaping 15 feet, 9 inches, breaking the mark by an inch set by Moorhead’s Macauley Spandl in 2010. Overall the Cougars placed sixth at the True Team meet. Grant Mosser had the best long jump and Bares wasn’t far behind in third. Orion Hinchley was fifth in the 1,600-meter run and second in the 3,200. Christian Lemaster tied for sixth in the high jump with teammate Mosser. Zach Gelineau had the third-best pole vault and

Alex McKennell from Lakeville South clears a hurdle at the Section 1AAA True Team Meet on Tuesday. (Photo by Rick Orndorf) Evan Keil was sixth. Con- third in the shot put. nor Rousemiller was fifth in the shot put and dis- Email Andy Rogers at cus. Josh Corcoran placed andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.


18A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

Panther girls lacrosse winning big Lakeville North posting several double-digit victories by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

If you’re going to lose, sometimes the best time is early in the season. It’s much better to have a list of things to work on during the first week, rather than during playoffs. After a season opening loss to Eden Prairie 16-7 last month, the Lakeville North girls lacrosse team made the most of its learning experience. Most teams have been losing to Eden Prairie this season. The No. 1 ranked Eagles outscored opponents on average 16-3 this season. Since then, Lakeville North has been on a tear, outscoring opponents by more than 10 goals every night. “It shook the dust off us after a difficult spring,” head coach Mo Gaitan said. “We are better than our performance in that game, and we have played to our full potential since. I like the fact that we had our hair blown back early in the season. It put things into perspective and

showed us where we need to be at the end of the year.” The Panthers followed up the Eden Prairie loss with a 19-8 victory against Apple Valley, the team that knocked them out of the playoffs in 2012. “(It) was a huge mental hurdle for our girls,” Gaitan said. “Being able to take down the team that ended their season last year helped us build more momentum. We have a deep, competitive conference, so every win is important to us. They rode the win to a six-game winning streak with victories against Holy Angels 17-5, Rosemount 19-7, Bloomington Jefferson 21-9, Prior Lake 18-9 and Bloomington Kennedy 21-12. The offensive prowess of Hannah Koloski (27 goals, 9 assists), Kacie Waagbo (21, 5), Lauren Storhoff (14, 5), Hannah Tillou (10, 0), Logan Dobratz (13, 12), Emmie Madsen (9, 4) and Emily Engelhart (7, 3) have helped the girls get off to a fast start.

With a comfortable lead, the Panthers have been spread around the playing time and it has allowed the girls to get some experience at different positions. The result is 17 girls have scored at least one point (a goal or an assist). “Our coaches have emphasized team-oriented offense since day one,” Gaitan said. “Seeing the girls execute and share the load is very rewarding. We definitely have our go-to players, but I think everyone on this team is crucial to our success.” Since allowing 16 goals in the opener, the defense has only allowed double digits once since. Goal keeper Alyssa Friesen has kept the opponents frustrated with some help from Megan Skelly in goal and the rest of the defense. “They understand the game and they play together as a unit,” Gaitan said. “Limiting shots is important, and they know Alyssa has their back if there’s a letdown.” The double digits came on Tuesday against Kenne-

dy, although the game was already in hand by halftime with a 16-4 Panther lead. The girls won’t have long before playoffs begin. The Section 1 tournament is scheduled to begin on May 28, so they hope to put it all together quickly. “Every team in our conference is out to take us down, so we have to come prepared to compete against everyone that stands in our way,” Gaitan said. “We came into this season with no shortage of talent, but the girls needed stronger chemistry and confidence.” The run has given the Panthers a 5-0 record in the South Suburban Conference, leaving the girls in a race with 6-0 Lakeville South. If it stays that way, the girls will have to wait to find a champion. The teams are scheduled to play in the final game before playoffs begin on May 21. Email Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

Best start yet for Cougar girls lacrosse Lakeville South in hunt for South Suburban Conference title by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Lakeville South girls lacrosse team came into the season with high expectations, but after nearly a month of postponements and rescheduling, a few questions lingered. Missing a month of outdoor games has left little time for players new to varsity to grow accustomed to competition in the South Suburban Conference. Even the programs with several veterans returning had to shake off the rust and it leaves little time for a slump. Lakeville South answered those questions by winning its first six games. “Our first two games were a little closer than we liked (both by one goal), but both Prior Lake and

Burnsville are good teams, so I am not too concerned about our overall result,” head coach Patrick Crandall said. The Cougars are quick learners and moved closer to playing a complete game with three-straight victories over Apple Valley 166, Bloomington Kennedy 15-3, Farmington 17-7 and Eastview 10-7. Nearly everyone has contributed on offense. “I don’t see one player on our offensive set who is not a legitimate threat to either score or make the right pass on an assist,” Crandall said. Abbie Ness (18 goals, 21 assists) has been the leader offensively with much help from Abby Quinell (22 goals), Madeline Channey (12 goals) Logan Halvorson (10 goals) and Brooke Galle (15 goals). Courtney

Backstrom, Maddie Brown and Chloe Crosby also have contributed. On defense Halvorson, Annika Tureson and Alyssa Reigel have been helping goalkeeper Kelsey Olson keep the opponents’ score low. “I would say that our MVP so far is our goalie, sophomore Kelsey Olson,” Crandall said. “She just started playing the game last year when I saw some potential in her as a goalie. We put her in goal halfway through last season, and she has taken the reins and run with it.” It’s been easy to stay on a winning streak when you play nearly every day. The Cougars have four games in five days this week. It’s been the best start since Lakeville South has ventured out as its own team. Lakeville North and

brought to you this week by

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of the week

Megan Skelly Girls Lacrosse

Chase Roseth Tennis

South played as a combined program until 2010. At that time, the majority of the experienced players attended Lakeville North. “I think the reasons for the recent success is just a maturation of our team,” Crandall said. “When we split three years ago we started to put in place a philosophy and groundwork for the kind of play we are looking for here at South. We have been working those three years to work on a specific style of play, and with the talent that we have here, it has been a steady progression to results we are seeing thus far.” The the leadership of the veteran players has helped. Crandall pointed out that it hasn’t just been the seniors. Several sophomores have been on the team since they were in eighth grade. “All of them have been working in the same system and together for the past three years,” Crandall said. “This is just the culmination of their leadership and hard work.” The girls will be back on the field Friday against Rosemount at the Lakeville North turf field. Email Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

Lakeville South boys tennis fundraiser at Applebee’s The Lakeville South boys tennis team will have a flapjack fundraiser from 8-11 a.m. Saturday at the Lakeville Applebee’s, 18404 Kenrick Ave. The breakfast will include pancakes, sausage, scrambled eggs, coffee, juice, soda or tea. All proceeds will go toward the Lakeville South boys tennis team. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at the door.

COUGARS, from 17A

son,” Schommer said. The third conference meet is scheduled Tuesday at Brackett’s Crossing, Lakeville South’s home course. “We’ll definitely be ready for that one,” Redetzke said. After two tournaments, Lakeville North is in the lead with 19 points while South is second with 18. Eagan has 16 and Bloomington Jefferson 15.

ence tournament this season. The week before teammate Farley tied for medalist honors with Lakeville North’s Mike Oberg at the first conference tournament at Creeks Bend Golf Course in Prior Lake. Lakeville South won the tournament. “The season has started nicely and I feel we should be in the running for the conference title with Email Andy Rogers at North, Eagan and Jeffer- andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

PANTHERS, from 17A “The only thing I think I need to really work on is putting. That’s the only thing that’s holding us back.” It was a common theme. Nothing inside can replicate the natural greens on a golf course, which have been covered with snow through most of April. The tournament at Minnesota Valley was supposed to be played April 22. Seven of the team’s tournaments have been either rescheduled or cancelled. The greens at Minnesota Valley were quick, which took some adjustment. “You just have to stay positive,” Bobby Thomas said. “You’re going to have bad shots because of the lack of work.” The players say there’s been a little “rust” on the golf clubs. “It was a struggle,” Bobby Thomas said. “I felt like I was hitting the ball solidly, but the short game wasn’t that good. The short game has been really rough. Last summer I was shooting 69.” With just a few weeks left, the players feel like it’s plenty of time to scrape the rest of the rust off. “I think I’m one good round away from being back,” Freddy Thomas said. “Once we start putting well we’ll be back in the 200s.” The goal is to compete for a state championship in June. They feel they need to break into the 200s

consistently to get there. The Section 1AAA first round is scheduled May 30 at Bellwood Oaks in Hastings. A win there would put them at Bunker Hills. “The main goal for the talent on our team is to win the state tournament,” Oberg said. “We got upset last year, but we have one of the best teams Lakeville North has ever had. Last year we played really well early on, but we just didn’t have it at sections. We just need to peak at the right time this year.” The boys also played at Ridges at Sand Creek in Jordan on Tuesday in a nonconference tournament. The Panthers finished third with 301 behind Wayzata and Minnetonka. Oberg shot 71 and Bobby Thomas posted 73. That was the only meet of the week, so the boys had the rest of the time to practice. The Panthers will get another chance to increase their lead in the South Suburban Conference on Tuesday at Brackett’s Crossing in Lakeville. The final conference tournament is May 21 at Inverwood Golf Course in Eagan.

Girls golf The Lakeville North girls golf team won the a the Prior Lake Invitational on Tuesday at the Wilds. Christi Vetter shot the Lakeville North all-time competition record scoring 69. Email Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

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Megan is the quarterback of our defensive system. She’s a leader on and off the field, and she’s a tremendous athlete. Her primary position is low defender. She has nine (9) ground balls and four (4) caused turnovers, along with two (2) goals to date. Our defensive unit, lead by Megan, has shut down opponents this year allowing a total of 54 goals against. Recently, she demonstrated how athletic she really is, in the absence of our starting goalie this past week, Megan, one of our senior captains, stepped up between the pipes. With very limited previous goal tending experience, after two games Megan is 2-0 and ranked 11th in the sate for goals against average (9). She now has “solid goaltender” to add to her athletic resume. • Girls Lacrosse All State 2012 • Girls Lacrosse All Conference 2012 • Girls Lacrosse Captain 2013 • Girls Hockey Captain 2013 • Girls Hockey Honorable Mention • Girls Hockey Hobey Baker Award Winner

8th LAKEVILLE SOUTH HIGH SCHOOL Chase went undefeated at #1 singles helping his team win the Lakeville South Invitational tournament and they won two in the last week. Chase helped his team beat arch-rival Lakeville North for the first time since the two schools merged winning the decisive match with the score tied at 3-3 As an 8th grader, Chase already has the most career singles wins in school history. His only loss last week was to a #2 ranked where the two competed hard, losing 6-1, 7-5. Chase is a big part of the 8 wins Lakeville South has already had this season. 8 wins is the most Lakeville South High School has ever had in a single season. Last year Chase won two sectional matches as well as helping his school to its first post-season victory.

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**A CONCRETE** PRESSURE LIFTING “THE MUDJACKERS”

2130

PearsonDrywall.com 35 yrs taping, ceiling repair, remodel 952-200-6303

Driveways

All Types of Concrete Work! Additions, drive-

Expert Cabinet/Trim & Window-Wood Refinishing

2090

952-985-5516

952-469-1211

Cabinetry & Counters

2070

Owners on job site •Stamped Concrete •Standard Concrete •Fire Pits & Patios •Driveways •Athletic Courts •Steps & Walks •Floors & Aprons www.mdconcrete.net

Find a meeting:

www.aastpaul.org www.aaminneapolis.org

Cement, Masonry, Waterproofing

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

No job too small!!

Quality Work @ Competitive Prices! Free Estimates.

Ray 612-281-7077

952-492-2783 16586 Johnson Mem. Dr. Jordan, MN 55352 Mon-Fri 7:30am - 6:00pm Saturday 8:00am - 3:00pm

• Pulverized Dirt - $12.75 yd • Concrete Edging Starting at $1.29 ea. • Rock Engraving • Colored Mulch $28.00 yd • Bagged Mulch $3.00 2cu. yd

$

Lawn & Garden

1

612-810-2059 Kevin Senior Discount! License # BC637738 Insured www.constructivesolutionsllc.com

See website for all varieties. Exp. 5/31/13 Limit one per customer.

- We Deliver www.HermansLandscape.com

2360

Each Yard OFF of Mulch

• Roofing • Siding • Windows

2360

Lawn & Garden

General Contractors STORM DAMAGE RESTORATION LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1978

Mowing • Fertilizing Weed Control Landscaping

READERS’ CHOICE

Awards

Voted #1 Lawn Care Company by Sun Readers

www.MinnLocal.com

www.fertilawnmn.com Bloomington, MN • 952-884-7331

ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS

FREE ESTIMATES Lic # 6793

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

3500 Vicksburg Lane Suite 400-351 • Plymouth, MN 55447


20A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville Tree Service

2620

Silver Fox Services

Bloomington Multi-Estate Sale! 5/9-11 (8-5) @ 1556 E 89th St Furn, Sr. stuff, boat gear.

Tree Trimming/Removal & Stump Grinding.

Bloomington Multi-Family

BBB Accredited “A� Rating Registered W/Dept of Agriculture. 16+ Yrs Exp. No Job Too Big or Small

Bloomington

Fully Licensed & Insured

Free Estimates

952-883-0671 612-715-2105

Window Cleaning

2660

Rich's Window Cleaning Quality Service. Affordable rates. 952-435-7871

Window Cleaning 651-646-4000 3000

Merchandise Antiques

3010

5/15-16-17

(Wed-Fri) Plants, Coca-Cola, & misc. 100 th St. & 10th Av.

REALLY BIG! 5/9-10 (open 7am) Something for everyone! 8425 Stanley Ave S.

Bloomington Sale! May 9 & 10! Furn, kids clothes, misc. items. 8228 West 104th St Circle

Burnsville 15506 Fremont Ave. May 711 9-5p, Hummels, Dept 56, camp stove, Furn.& Misc!

7 Vintage Shops

Open 3 Days Every Month! Thurs (10-5); Fri-Sat (10-4)

May 16, 17, 18

Facebook: The Occasional Shops of Carver

3110

Collectibles & Art

N. Rockwell Mother's Day Plates (12) 1982-1993, certif. & boxes. Best offer 763-537-4474

Estate Sales

3130

COON RAPIDS

Fabulous Estate Sale!

May 16-17-18

For info 612-227-1269

3160

Furnishings

Sale 19th Ave & River Hills Dr. Signs! 5/9 -11th 9-5p. Furn, tools, antqs. Lawn mower Burnsville Fri / Sat. - May 10th / 11th 8:30am - 4pm Boys, men's cloz, Toys, games, sporting equip. books,electronics & stereo equip. 1712 James Court BURNSVILLE

May 17 & May 18 (8am-5pm) HUGE sale furn, home decor

clothing. 1305 Forest Cir

Burnsville Mega Garage Sale & Flea Market, Weekends 10a-4p at: Buck Hill Ski Area Columbia Heights Multi-Family 5/9-11 (8-5) Furn, cloz, collectibles, antiqs. 4141 Cleveland St.

Boxer Puppies: AKC Reg. born March 4. Many colors. Tails/dews/shots/vet ck'd, $600. 651-399-8949

4000

9100

May 17 (9-5); May 18 (8-12) $3 Bag sale day &½ off Non-bag items

Calvary Lutheran

7520 Golden Valley Rd. 1 blk N, 2 blks E of Hwy 55

Annual Garage Sales 5/16-18 (9-5) Kings Valley Road & Mendelssohn

HOPKINS 5th Annual Plant Sale Hennepin County Master Gardener. Sat. 5/18 (9a-2p) Hopkins Pavilion 11000 Excelsior Blvd. Lakeville 19058 Inca Ave (1 blk E. of Ipava @ 190th St.) 5/16-18th 8-4pm. HH, kids, & misc! Lakeville Christiania Church Sale 26691 Pillsbury Ave. Fri. 5/17 7am-6pm, Sat. 5/18 8am-1pm.

Misc. Wanted

3270

WANTED Old Stereo / Hifi equip.

Andy 651-329-0515

3280

Musical Instuments

Bundy Alto Saxophone, made in USA by Selmer. Exc. cond. $550. Call after 5pm. 952-835-7972

3500

Garage Sales

Apple Valley 12898 Garrett Ave 5/10-11 8-4pm. Multi family.! HH, kids & womens cloz. Toys.

Eden Prairie Huge Sale! 18042 S. Shore Ln W, May 9-11, 8am-5pm. Baby, HH, Clothes, Etc.

Neighborhood Sale! Furn, antiques, collectibles, china

Garage Sales Thursday - Saturday

Preserve Garage Sale

Sat, May 18 (8:30am- 4:30pm)

50+ Garages!

Come early for best selection! Thurs 5/9 (8-6); Fri 5/10 (8-3) Patio pots, hanging baskets, annuals & some vegetables

Edina 40+ HH Sale! Bikes, HH, clothes, more! 5/16; 8-7, &

Bloomington HUGE FUNDRAISING GARAGE SALE Corner of 96th & Vincent Thu. May 16 8am-6pm Fri. May 17 8am-6pm Sat. May 18 9am-5pm (Sat. $5/bag after 1pm) ALL proceeds go to help Minnesota Boxer Rescue Bloomington Huge Sale! 10325 Zinran Ave S, May 15-17 (9-5) Bloomington Huge Sale! Don't Miss!

preserveassociation.com

5/17; 7-2. 7808 Creekridge Cir

Edina Huge 10+Family Charity Sale! 100% of proceeds to

May 16, 17, 18 FREE Sale List

for buyers available starting May 14 at: Richfield City Hall 6700 Portland Ave. Richfield Community Ctr., 7000 Nicollet Ave S Richfield Liquor Stores Craig's List & website:

charity. Toys, clothes, handbags, HH – you name it! Sat, 5/11 (8-4) 7320 Cornelia Dr

www. richfieldrecreation.com

Edina Multi-Family 5/9-10 (8-5) Furn., Kids items, misc. 7324 Cornelia Drive

612-861-9363

Excelsior Moving 5/9-10 (9-6); 5/11 (912) HH, yrd, BR furn, tools. Pix on Craigs list. Hwy 7 & Vine Hill Rd 20085 Vine St

For more information

Richfield Rummage Sale Blessed Trinity School 5/8 $1 Admission (5-8p); 5/9 (8a-5p); 5/10 Half price (8a-12p); 5/11 $5 Bag-day (8a-12p). 6720 Nicollet Av. S. (Gym)

Farmington Estate Sale 417 Oak St. Rosemount (EvMay 9-11, 9-5pm. Tools, HH 13587 Crosscliffe Plc. ermoor) May 16-18th 8-5pm. furn. Vintage. Sm appls. Bloomington th th th Furn. HH, cloz & toys! May 16 8-5. May 17 -18 9-5. Snow blower, tiller, Farmington 8-11, Rosemount power shovel and pilates Moving Sale May th Rosemount UMC Sale! machine, hobby, col- 8am-5pm, 3100 225 St. W. May 23-24 Thurs (8-7); lectibles, HH, LPs, ext. lad- Furn, HH, desks, Tools, Fri (8-12). Cloz, toys, furn, ladders, gun cabinet, cloz. der, propane tanks, more. HH & more! 651-423-2475 Jewelry. All indoors Huge! 1404 East 96 th Street 14770 Canada Ave. West Bloomington Farmington St Louis Park May 9-10 (8-6) Furn, HH, Multi-Family Sale Annual Neighborhood Sale cloz, tools, misc. vintage & 5/16-17th 8am-5pm, 5/18 Sat, 5/18 (8-4) 22nd Lane more! 8301 West 103rd St 8am-noon. 18725 Easton (Cedar Lk Rd & Hwy 169) Avenue & 18551 EdgeBloomington ST LOUIS PARK wood Ct. Infants, kids, Moving: May 9 (8-6) May Browndale N'hd 16 Annual adults, HH items, 10 (8-3). Furn., tools, table Sale! 25+sales: Sat 5/18, Furniture & toys! saw, misc. 10441 Xylon Rd 8-3. Map & info on Browndale FB pg. Excelsior & Tree Tree Wooddale by Miracle Mile.

5/16-18 (7-4) Cash only

10828 Vincent Ave. So.

2620

Service

2620

Service

Victoria City Wide Garage Sales Fri, May 17; Sat, May 18 See:

victoriatownsquare.com

Senior Discounts

Great Service Affordable Prices

3900

4100

Agriculture/ Animals/Pets Pets

Family Care Child Care

Seeking entry level carpenter. Strong candidate will have some experience framing or other similar carpentry work. Must be comfortable with heights and heavy lifting. Must provide own transportation to south metro area. Call Chris at 612-749-9752

Farmington Fun Loving! Lic'd. Ages 2 +. Preschool prog. Theme days. Kelly 651-460-4226 LV: Lic. Daycare All Ages, Activities, Food Prog. 21+ Years Exp. 952-431-3826

5000

5100

Computer-Development Lead(Eagan, MN) Coordnt dvlpmnt activities for client prdctn & non-prdctn envrmnts including prdctn dplymnt, planning, integration execution, resource assgnmnts & scheduling,& prob resolution. Coordnt connectivity btw offshore & on-shore resources. MS incompsci & 2yrs sftwr dvlpmnt lead exp or BS in comspci & 5 yrs sftwr dvlpmnt exp. Must have exp w DB2, JCL, Changeman, SAS, Quikjob, CICS, Workbrain, Information Expert (IE), Artemis, IMS, Install1, Focus, Unix, C++, Java,& PHP. Resumes to: Pointwest Technologies Corporation, 1500 Tower view Rd. Eagan,MN, 55068.

Rentals Senior Rentals

Burnsville - Twin Home

for lease. Avail. May 1st 3BR, 2 full bath, 1250 sq ft. $1295+utils. 612-978-6227

5200

Townhouse For Rent

Burnsville: 1, 2 & 3 BD Townhomes - wash/dryer, attach gar., fireplace, central air, storage, dogs OK. $875-$1250. 952-746-5941

5300

Duplexes/Dbl Bungalows For Rent

Apartments & Condos For Rent

Fgtn: 1 BR Apt. laundry, Sec. Bldg. $535 incls. Utils. Car plug-in. 507-271-1170 Fgtn: 2 BR, garage avl. No pets. On site laundry. 612-670-4777

8100

Real Estate Manufactured Homes

Apple Valley/Lakeville border: 3 BR, 2 BA dbl wide. Avail. immed. $17,900 Financing avail. 612-581-3833

Burnsville: Rambush Estates

1340 sq ft Manuf. Home One level living. Garden tub in master bath. W/D in home. Deck. $1270/mo.

952-890-8440

8400

Homes for Sale

RADON

Digital Testing 612-865-2879

9000

9020

Employment Business Opps & Info

Profitable Business Available: Convenience Store avl. for rent, turn key, good profit, terms avail. on inventory.952-292-0988

HOUSE CLEANERS

3700

Leisure

3720

Boats, New & Used

14' Jon Boat, 5 HP mtr & trl, many extras. $1195, Cash only. 952-831-6997

$80-$110/day FT/PT 7:20am-3:00pm. We provide CAR. Burnsville Location. 952-432-2134

This space could be yours

952-846-2000 3970

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Pets

3970

Pets

SIMON WILL GIVE YOU MUCH JOY! Meet Simon, a 10-11 month old neutered male. He is quite handsome with his athletic wild cat look. He has the most loving disposition, and is tons of fun with loads of personality! Simon and his sister were rescued 2 months ago when they were found wandering in a ďŹ eld. Simon does not kiss up to strangers right away but once he calls you his own then you are in for a huge treat! His foster parents’ exact words: “Once Simon knows you then snuggling, petting and belly rubs are the absolute best things in the world! Every time we come to see him he greets us at the door. As soon as we sit down he jumps in our laps for a big snuggle. After that, it’s play time and he chases his feather wand until he’s exhausted. He has awesome ninja talents! His acrobatic feats are breathtaking!â€?

Help Wanted/ Full Time

9100

Food Manufacturing

Entry level positions available 1st and 2nd shifts $8-$10 hour. Open House EVERY Wednesday 9-3. No Appt Necessary. Bloomington, Chaska and New Hope office. Call 952-924-9000 for more information.

Manager/Sales:

National industrial distributor seeks site manager for Bloomington operation. Responsible for all aspects of running a facility including planning and goal setting, driving performance, P&L, & expanding business relationships. Requires excellent time mgmnt and organizational skills. Bnft package & competitive salary. Send resume to hrnationaldistrib@ gmail.com

McLane Minnesota Now Hiring Experienced CDL A Drivers

*$1500 Signing Bonus* McLane Minnesota, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Berkshire-Hathaway, is currently seeking qualified candidates to join our team! McLane, a wholesale grocery distributor, has been in business for over 119 years and continues to grow each year! Our Minnesota location has recently added additional customers and must fill team driver positions immediately. If you want home time, a secure paycheck, and make over $60,000, in your first year, apply now. Program runs until May 31 st. Drive for the best, drive for McLane!

CONSTRUCTION

CR Spring STORAGE 6X 8 just $39 Outside starts at $29 crstoreandstorage@ yahoo.com 651-463-4343

7000

9100

Established garage door company is looking for experienced installers and service techs to add to it's field crew. The right canMcLane Minnesota didate will have a good 1111 5th Street West work history, and driving Northfield, MN 55057 record. We offer paid vacamnhr@mclaneco.com tion, paid holidays, health, (507) 664-3038 dental, and disability inFax: (507) 664-3042 surance, and a 401K program with company match. Contact Dwight or McLane Minnesota, a Mike @ 952-895-7300 or greatgaragedoor@att.net wholly-owned subsidiary of Berkshire-Hathaway, is Customer Service currently seeking qualified candidates to join our Bloomington delivery ser- team! McLane, a wholevice seeks exper individu- sale grocery distributor, al who enjoys a fast paced has been in business for environment & working over 100 years and continas part of a team. Duties ues to grow each year! Our include: Heavy inbound Minnesota location has rephones, contact with cently added to our portfoclients, data entry, typing lio of outstanding cusspeed of 60 wpm. Ideal tomers and must fill the candidate will have exc following positions immephone manner & attention diately. to detail. Hours M-F 10am Full Case Grocery Se6:30pm, Call Diane. On Time Delivery Service lectors M-F 7:30 am start $13.30/hr 952-767-2560 or email dfreund@bontime.com Selectors (Candy/GMP) M-F 6:00 am start FedEx home delivery $11.25/hr drivers needed. Must Cooler/Freezer have 12 months of comselectors- M-F 5:30 am mercial driving experience within the last 3 start $.35 extra years. Must have clean premium/hr driving record. CDL license not required. We are seeking candidates Fax Resume: 651-686-6236 with a good work history Email Resume: and a great attendance Vscroggs@hotmail.com record. Must pass drug Call to inquire 612-369-8952 test, physical screening and background check. Some positions require adFinish Carpenters ditional skills. Schwieters Companies is hiring entry level to expeIf you are interested in rienced finish carpenters. joining the McLane Team Top Benefits & Pay: please email or fax your tools/medical/dental/401k resume, or stop in to fill majority of work on west out an application. & south side of metro area. Not required to go to office. Please call 612-328-3140 to schedule an interview. www.finishcarpenters.com

5700

6400

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Carpenter/Framer

BV: Christian Day Care Infant Opngs Cliff/River Hills FT/PT 952-895-5431

Richfield City Wide

Eden Prairie

Maps avl. 5/14 952-941-8400 11221 Anderson Lakes Pkwy.

8300 Sheridan Ave. So.

Plymouth Multi-Family 5/9-10 (9-5); 5/11 (9-1). Clean, good HH items, Furn., Cloz. Great prices! 2235 Xanthus Ln N.

Valley View & Mitchell Saturday, May 11; 9-3

Bloomington

Garden Club Plant Sale

Zachary off Schmidt Lk Rd

PRIOR LAKE Lake Home MOVING Art, Furn, Sports, W/D, Holiday, Model Planes, Eden Prairie Elec, Jet Ski Lift, Lwn/ Moving: Furn., incl. like Grdn, Antiques MORE! new bunkbeds, antiqs, HH, 5/24 - 5/25. 8-3 Fr. Numb@ books, kids items 5/9-11 7:30 SeasonsEstate.com (9-5). 9044 McGuffey Rd. Eden Prairie

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

Lakeville Huge Multi-Fam. 5/9-11 (9- Fgtn: 4/5 BR, 2 BA, 5) Collectibles, HH, furn. & 2000sf + w/o bsmnt. All more! 17318 Ipswich Way new: hdwd flrs, SS appls. & more! Lg yd, $1295/mo + LAKEVILLE utils 507-271-1170 May 8, 9; 8a-4p.Multi Fam Clothes, Furn, HH, Decor, Storage rugs. 20571 Jupiter Path

3260

Eagan Multi-Family 5/15 (8-8); 5/16-17 (8-5) TV's, jewelry, more! 1730 Sartell Ave.

Health Care

Golden Valley 1300 Angelo Dr 5/16-17 (9-4) tools, furn, HH, Sporting goods, books, art

3230

Whirlpool self-cleaning Oven, glass top. Bisque $200 952-953-6390

9050

3970

Crystal 2 Family - Moving 5/17-18 (8-4) Furn., HH, tools, & Lakeville New In Plastic!! $150 th Moving sale! 5/18-19; 10-5 MUST SELL!! 763-360-3829 more! 7000 38 Ave. No. 17857 179th Trl W. SnowCrystal blwr, Patio Set, Furn, HH All Oak Desk 4 pcs. All BABY SALE 5/16-17 (8-5) electric + chair. $500. 2 5/18 (8-1) Girl cloz, toys, & Minnetonka Press Back antique furn. 5237 Florida Ave. No. Huge Moving Sale! Antq, rockers. $300 pr. Coffee HH, yard/tlz, many free Crystal table & 2 end tables. items. Cash only. 1900 Verth Moving Sale! 7916 35 Ave $200. Call 651-414-9022 non Dr S. 5/16-18 (9-5) N, 5/10 (6-8p), 5/11 (9-3). Minnetonka HH, Schwinn bike, gravity Like new Queen Bed set Multi-Fam Fundraiser w/dresser, mirror, nite bike rack, 4 pc sofa set, etc Sale 5/9-10 (8-4); 5/11 (8-1) stands. Like new $750. Sm. Crystal 14504 Moonlight Hill Rd Kitchen table w/4 chrs Yard Sale-Rain or Shine! $175. Ent. Ctr. for 55� TV Fri., May 17 (9:30am - 4pm) MINNETONKA room for DVD, pics, plants Neighborhood Garage Sale Crystal Care Center $400 new, asking $225. 3245 Vera Cruz Ave. North Thurs 5/9; 8-5. HH, Furn, 763-443-2731 Kids Cloz, Toys, & More. 3090 St Albans Hollow Cir Side Chairs (2) Never used! Eagan 1775 Turquoise Trail 5/16 Designer fabric. Paid $800, th MOUND Ask. $550/BO. 612-437-5900 -18 9-5pm. HH, Ant sew Moving Sale! Sat & Sun mach, cloz, crib & toys Only! Hunting eqp cloz furn Stickley large Cherry CorHH. 6499 Cty Rd 15 Lwr apt ner Desk, $900. Oak Table, Eagan 613 Atlantic Hills Dr. 5/17 Round, 52�, $350. Solid oak New Hope chairs (4), $400. 952-927-6619 5/18 10 – 4pm. Photos on estatesales.net Antiques! 2 Family Sale 5/9-10 (8 - ?) Kids cloz & toys, furn, HH Lawn/Garden Eagan & misc. 9017 32 nd Ave. N EHS Girls Hockey Equipment New Hope Garage Sale 2008 Craftsman rear en- Eagan Civic Arena Park- May 9-11 (8-6) HH items, gine Riding Mower, less ing Lot, Pilot Knob Rd & clothing, TV, furn., more! than 50 hrs, 13.5 hp, A-1 Wescott Sat, May 18th, 8-3 3954 Zealand Ave. North cond! $785/BO 952-412-8953 Bikes, Scooters, Clothes PLYMOUTH HH, Books, Games, Toys 10755 & 10760 54th Ave N Misc. 5/9-11 (8-5) HH, furn, fishEagan For Sale Estate Sale: Furn., HH, ing gear, tlz, fish house, 2009 Yamaha Scooter cloz, some toys, microwv., costume jewelry & misc. Like New! 16 miles! $2200. counted cross-stitch kits. 651-347-8603 5/16-18 (8-4) 3955 Mica Trl Plymouth Chelsea Woods Annual 4 Pc Bed Set $300, Hall Eagan Sat, 5/18 (8-4) Townhouse Tree $151, Bookcase $151, HUGE! Antiqs, HH, furn., Community - Vicksburg & Qu Hideabed like new glasswr. & more! 5/17-18 Cty Rd 6 GREAT STUFF! $200. B/O 952-423-2382 20+ Families. Follow signs (9-5) 4521 Ridgeview Dr. Lawnboy Push Mower w/ EAGAN PLYMOUTH bag & extra blade, $75. Lexington Square N'brhd Huge moving sale! HH, dÊWell maintained 952-545-1179 Sat, 5/18 (8-3) 70+ Homes! cor, dishes, more! May 8-10 Maple Dinette Set w/4 SE crnr of Lexington & Wescott 9-5; 5069 Everest Lane N chrs, & 1 fold dwn Dinette. Eagan Plymouth Set. $50 ea 952-432-7496 Moving/Garage Sale Furn HUGE N'brhd Sales! HH, Furn., vintg., artwork, antqs & misc HH. May 16-18; 9-4 Rattan Sofa, Loveseat & more! 5/16-17 (9-6), 5/18 3630 Widgeon Way w/Ottoman & Rocker $575 (9-?) Dunkirk & 40th Ave 651-454-6940 EAGAN Weber Q220 Portable Gas Multi Fam Estate-Gar Sale Plymouth Grill w/cart & access. A lot of great Stuff! May Jamestown N'brhd: Multi17-18; 8-3. 949 Trillim Ct Homes 5/9-11 (8-4) 1 blk W of $199/bo 952-898-5482

QN. PILLOWTOP SET

Boats, New & Used

Fridley: 5/16-19, 9:30a-5p. 7330 Lyric La NE. Lots of baby/kids, cloz & toys, ++

Burnsville & Winnetka (park in N. lot) 2404 Highland View Ave. th Golden Valley 5/17-18 8-5pm. HH, dĂŠcor, Kings Valley N'brhood yd/garden & collectibles! Burnsville

3720

RN or LPN for Pediatric Home Care Apple Valley, MN area. One year of nursing experience required. Provide holistic nursing care to children in their homes Orientation and education a top priority as well as 24 hour case management availability Apply online at www. pediatechnursing.com or call 952-449-5282

Fridley mega-estate sale Designer cloz/shoes/purses, jewelry, PM collect's & more! Wed-Sun: 5/8-10, 9a7p; 5/11 9a-5p; 5/12, 10a-2p. 6711 Madison Str. NE.

Bloomington: 100th Str & 10th Av. 5/15-17, 8a-5p. Collect's incl Coke, misc HH! Golden Valley 2000 Wisconsin Ave. N. Brooklyn Center Mega Multi-Fam: 5/9-11 Multi-Fam 5/18 (8-3) Furn, (8-6). Furn., HH, Antqs., yrd tools, Men/Wmn cloz, Tools, Collect. Must See! HH. 5706 Colfax Ave. No. Hwy 55 & N. on Winnetka, W on Duluth right on Wisc Brooklyn Park N'brhd Sale 5/17-18, 8-5 Golden Valley Days Something for everyone! HH items, cloz, collectibles Church Rummage Sale May 16 (4:30-8:30) $3 Adm.; Glen Edin Ln 8915-9157

Vintage & Antique Sales Estate/Garage Historic Downtown Carver

Fridley Innsbruck N. Twnhome N'brhd Sales! 5/16-17 (8-5); 5/18 (8-3) Meister Rd & West Bavarian Pass. Must See!

McLane Minnesota 1111 5th Street West Northfield, MN 55057 Fax (507) 664-3042 mnhr@mclaneco.com EOE/M/F/D

Now Hiring!

Warehouse/ Packaging/Assembly

All shifts. Entry level to skilled positions available. Stop into one of our branches (Bloomington, New Hope or Chaska) Wednesdays From 9-3 for our job fairs. Call (952)924-9000 for more info.

Last Hope, Inc. (651) 463-8747

SCOTT COUNTY In this position you’ll perform skilled and technical design, construction, inspection, and enforcement work, overseeing and participating in complex engineering and design activities of major highway and infrastructure projects. MQs: Requires an associate’s degree in civil technology or related ďŹ eld and four years experience directly related to highway design and construction. Design experience with Autodesk Civil 3D with use of drawing features and work w/MS Project-Professional is highly preferred. A valid driver’s license is required. Hiring Range: $47,553 to $65,448-DOQ. Selection: Rating of Training & Experience. Closing: 05/17/13. Obtain application from Scott County Employee Relations at (952) 496-8890 or on the Internet at www.co.scott.mn.us EOE TTY/TDD: 952-496-8170 Let’s work together.

LAKEVILLE

Dual Position Class B CDL Driver & Concrete Manufacturer Competitive Wages! FULL BENEFITS For more information Call (800) 672-0709 Monday thru Friday 8 am - 4 pm To Apply Submit resume to:

Email: hr@brown-wilbert.com or FAX: (651) 842-3493 or Mail to: Brown-Wilbert, Inc. 2280 N. Hamline Avenue St. Paul, MN 55113

IMMEDIATE FULL TIME OPENINGS AT GENPAK, a fast-growing Lakeville, MN exible packaging company. FOLDER GLUER MULTI-WALL OPERATORMust have 1-3 years experience as a Folder/ Gluer Operator I. Must be willing to work overtime as needed. Significant overtime may be required during busy periods. FLEXO PRINTING PRESS OPERATORExperienced on Wide-Web Flexographic Printing Press. Qualified candidates must have experience running 8-10 color state-of-the-art flexo press. Competitive pay and benefits. E-mail resume and cover letter to slehmann@genpak.com

IMMEDIATE NEED! *BURNSVILLE BRANCH*

ALL experience levels encouraged to apply! Outside Sales Representative Salary + Comm. General Laborers • Lawn Care Specialists Hourly+ x 1/2 +Comm. Benefits: Full Time/Paid Training & benefits you’d expect from the U.S. Industry Leader! Required to pass: Drug screen, background & motor vehicle record checks. APPLY TODAY! Call Christy to schedule an interview at 612-490-5849 or contact her via email at: christyswecker@ trugreenmail.com or apply online at www.jobs.trugreen.com AA/EOE/M/F/V/D

Framing Carpenter Immediate placement in your area. JL Schwieters Construction/Building Supply Inc. is seeking qualified applicants for the position(s) listed below. All current job openings are for full-time employment with the industries top pay and full benefit package. For over 30 years JL Schwieters has lead the industry in employee pay and benefits. Everyone has been paid every Friday since day 1, no waiting for pay checks, no excuses, no name changes etc... Start Immediately Entry Level Residential Wood Framing Carpenter, Construction related experience preferred but not required Experienced/Lead Framer, 4+ years of residential framing experience. QualiďŹ cations: All candidates must be highly motivated and thrive in productive environments. Dependable transportation is required. Previous construction related experience is preferred. All applicants must pass a pre-employment physical and drug screening. All positions include access to:

•Weekly paychecks •Overtime pay •Health Insurance •Dental Insurance •401(k) •Disability Insurance

All sites have forklifts and cranes Established Safety and Health Program Advancement Opportunity

OTR Flatbed Driver. Home most weekends. Late model equipment. Full benefits. Drivers can take their truck home. Allow one small pet. Commercial Transload of MN, Fridley. Contact Pete: psandmann@ctm-truck .com or 763-571-9508

5100

Senior Rentals

N ATTENTIO SENIORS!

5100

Spruce Place Senior Apartments

651-463-2511 2 BRs available

7100

Commercial Properties Space

7100

0DLQWHQDQFH 7HFK ,,,

Please apply within or online to: 3OHDVH DSSO\ ZLWKLQ RU RQOLQH WR +XPDQ 5HVRXUFHV Human Resources Department &HGDU $YH 21673 Cedar Ave. /DNHYLOOH 01 Lakeville, MN 55044 3KRQH Phone: 218-847-4446 Fax: 218-846-4448 )D[ www.btdmfg.com ZZZ EWGPIJ FRP $OO HPSOR\PHQW RIIHUV DUH FRQWLQJHQW RQ WKH VXFFHVVIXO SDVVLQJ RI GUXJ VFUHHQLQJ DQG SUH HPSOR\PHQW SK\VLFDO

Senior Rentals

Commercial Properties Space

Office Space for Rent

Perfect for professional office, small business office, artist or craft studio. Three large rooms: 557 sq.ft., 609 sq.ft.,& 817 sq.ft. $550 - $800/room or $1950 for all 3. Convenient St. Louis Park location (corner of Hwy 100 & Minnetonka Blvd) Call:952-926-1646

Interested applicants can go to www.JLschwieters.com to apply or call 651-762-1110 to schedule an interview.

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www.last-hope.org

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Senior Public Works Technician - Design

Simon would make a superb companion for another cat!! He LOVES other cats! He has proven himself VERY reliable with his litter box and scratching post. He is a very content and happy indoor cat and shows no interest in returning outdoors. Adoption fee $140. For more information please contact Simon’s foster mom, Judy at 952-492-2331 or weidtje@ gmail.com Please check out Simon’s awesome video on our website at www.lasthope.org under adoptable cats or see our other cats and dogs looking for homes. Simon, along with out other dogs and cats can be seen by appt. or in person at the Petco Apple Valley.

9100

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Oasys Technologies Inc. has openings for following positions: Senior Quality Assurance Analyst (OS130401) with Bachelor’s degree in Engineering (any), Computer Science, Technology or related & 5 yrs. of relevant experience to work on Developing, documenting &  revising system design procedures, test procedures, &  quality standards. Understand User & System requirements and design test cases & scripts. Consult with management to ensure agreement on system principles. Provide status reports. Confer with clients on information processing or computation needs. Senior Systems Analyst (OS130402) with Bachelor’s degree in Engineering (any), Computer Science, Technology or related &  5 yrs of experience to configure management strategy & tools: Subversion, CVS, related. Deploy & administrate in Oracle Weblogic Middleware container. Install & administrate using Hudson and Sonar. Integrate applications using tools like MQ, LDAP & EKMS. Architect & automate deployments using Shell scripting. Manage Test, QA & Prod-like environments. Competitive Salary with standard company benefits. Work location is Eagan, MN, Minneapolis-St. Paul metro with required travel to client locations throughout USA. Please mail resumes to: Oasys Technologies Inc., 1250 Yankee Doodle Rd, Suite 222, Eagan, MN 55121 or Fax to (651) 234-0099 email to jobs@oasys-corp.com


SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 21A

9100

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Shop/Yard Worker FT Mon-Fri. Apply at: U Pull R Parts Co. 2985 160th St. W. Rosemount 55068 651-322-1800

9200

Help Wanted/ Part Time

Appointment Setters Local remodeling co. Start immediately. Make up to $15/hr. Call Eric 952-887-1613

Teller

Fidelity Bank, a commercial bank in Edina that focuses on relationships not sales quotas, is seeking a teller that is an enthusiastic self-starter with previous banking experience and demonstrated customer service skills. $13$14/hr DOQ. High school diploma and one year banking experience, or equiv. Required. Hours will rotate 7:15-3:45 and 9:45-6:15 and one Sat. per month 9-12. Must pass criminal and credit background checks. Send resume to hr@fidelitybankmn.com No phone calls please. EEO

Sales HOME IMPROVEMENTS $1,000 Hiring Bonus!! Custom Remodelers is a Twin City based multi-million dollar home improvement company. Due to an over abundance of leads, we are in need of 2 more sales people for our siding and window divisions. Qualifications: • Willingness to learn • Highly motivated • Career oriented • Sales experience preferred but not required. We offer: • Qualified appointments • Paid training • Trip incentives • $100K potential If you are seeking a change to a strong, reputable company, Call Mike Ryan at 651-784-2646

Assistant Property Manager Responsible, under the direction of the Property Manager, for all phases of the property operations, and to act as main point of contact in the absence of the Property Manager. Performs a variety of administrative/clerical duties and has primary responsibility for the collection and post of all income due to the property. Demonstrates knowledge of Fair Housing and other legal issues and local ordinances as they affect the property's operations. (p.gingrich@aol.com) Barn Help: 4 Days per wk. Approx. 1-1.5 hr/day. West Lakeville area. Great after schl job! Must be reliable! Call Cory 952-8925661 Drivers You can Have Fun at Work while earning extra money! Godfather's Pizza has immediate openings for Part-Time, Day & Evening Delivery Drivers at our Burnsville location, 850 W County Road # 42.

9200

Media Relations, Inc. seeking PT New Business Development Team Member. Call Cynde at 612-798-7218 careers.publicity.com

9100

Help Wanted/ Full Time

9200

General Office Cleaning

Help Wanted/ Part Time

Part- time Office Cleaner

Mendota Heights, Cottage Grove, Woodbury and Hastings. 6pm-9pm. Apply in person Mon-Fri 8am-4pm. Mid-City Cleaning. 8000 University Ave. NE. Fridley. 763-571-9056

needed for 2 locations. Lakeville - Monday & Thursdays from 1:30pm-6:00pm. Eagan Wednesdays & Fridays starting anytime after 5pm, job takes 2.5 hrs per cleaning. Pay starts at 10.00 per hour must have current DL must be legal to work in U.S. & be able to provide proper documentation. Please contact Tammy at 763-568-9840 Cady Building Maintenance Inc.

Part-time Maintenance

Position at Sr. Co-op. Experience in building maintenance and repair. Contact Manager at 952-894-6524 or rcboffice@comcast.net

9200

Help Wanted/ Part Time

Permanent

PT TELLER

Provincial Bank, located near downtown Lakeville, is looking for an individual with great customer service skills and availability to work approximately 15-20 hrs/wk. Hours are flexible but typically require 2 or 3 afternoons a week w/alternate Saturdays. Excellent opportunity for local college students. Pick up an application at our office or email gnicol@ provincialbank.com

9200

Help Wanted/ Part Time

Preschool Teacher in AV Country Garden Nursery School days a wk, begins in late Aug. Email: Nicole.Maloney@district 196.org 952-432-2476 Production Floater Experience in dry cleaning required. Work at 5 plants in metro area. Various day shifts, $12.00/hr. Pilgrim Cleaners. Apply online at: pilgrimdrycleaners.com Turn your unneeded items in to

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

952-846-2000

MAKE a DIFFERENCE in the LIFE of a Senior:

9250

Help Wanted/ Full & Part Time

9250

Help Wanted/ Full & Part Time

Now HIRING CAREGivers South of the River.

Trinity Campus

No Healthcare Exp. Necessary. PAID TRAINING Provided

• PT Mornings, Evenings, and Overnights • Companionship, Meals, Errands, Light Housekeeping, Transportation, Med Reminders, Personal Care. To apply visit: www.homeinstead.com/505 and click on “Become a CAREGiver” Or call: 952-767-6596

RN Director of Nursing for Memory Care For information, see our job post on Careerbuilder.com

Cook - DAY Shift - Part-time

PT CAREGIVERS

Duties include: preparation, serving and clean up of meals. Candidates must have knowledge of food safety practices, diet modifications & recipe conversion. Previous health care dietary experience preferred.

8 am Fri - 8 am Sat. To care for 5 elderly adults in Burnsville.

Trinity, a five-star rated facility, offers an outstanding compensation package with scheduled pay increases and a fun & rewarding work place! Or at: Apply online: TRINITY CAMPUS www.sfhs.org/employment 3410 213th Street West EEO/AA Farmington, MN 55024

24 Hour Sleepover 8 am Wed. - 8 am Thurs.

Drivers receive: competitive pay, tips, flexible hours and a great environment: To drive for Godfather's Pizza you must 18 years of age, have a good driver and have access to an insured vehicle. EOE

Help Wanted/ Part Time

$170 per shift Call Rob at

TRANSIT DRIVERS

Schmitty & Sons

Cardenas Friendship Homes 612-670-1380

is currently experiencing rapid growth in our public transit division We are now hiring for:

PART-TIME LIQUOR SALES CLERK

Full Time & Part Time Monday - Friday

The City of Farmington is seeking applications for a part-time Liquor Clerk for approximately 10-15 hours per week. Must be able to work evening and weekend shifts. Duties: assisting customers; cashiering; stocking shelves and coolers; lifting beer and liquor cases; and some data entry. High school diploma or equivalent; retail experience, preferably in the liquor industry; and excellent customer service skills required. Starting salary $10.55 per hour. Applications and additional required forms are available at City Hall, 430 Third Street, Farmington, MN 55024 or may be downloaded from www.ci.farmington.mn.us Position open until filled. EOE

9100

Help Wanted/ Full Time

9100

Transit Drivers Please Apply at: 3600 Blackhawk Rd, Eagan or 11550 Rupp Dr, Burnsville Visit www.schmittyandsons.com for on-line application and more employment opportunities. 952-985-7516 Pre-employment drug test required. EOE

Pizza Ranch®

Apple Valley & Lakeville Looking for friendly people to fill positions.

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Inside Sales Account Executive

• Front Counter • Kitchen Crew • Dishwashers • Delivery Drivers • Etc. Full & Part Time positions. Both day and night shifts. Secure Summer positions now! We’re flexible with student schedules. Apply in person today!

Join our professional sales team and be proud of the products you represent.

Apple Valley Pizza Ranch 15662 Pilot Knob Rd Apple Valley 55124

Sun Newspapers has an immediate opening for an inside sales account executive at our Eden Prairie location. • Be part of a winning team • Enjoy selling once again • Thrive in a setting where you can succeed • Take advantage of great benefits • Fun/Professional workplace If you are organized, proficient on a computer, have exceptional phone skills and a desire to learn, you have found your next career. Send your resume to: Pam Miller at pam.miller@ecm-inc.com

OUTSIDE SALES ECM-Sun Media Group is currently looking for Outside Sales Executives with at least 1-2 years related experience in sales. Experience in a print or media industry is a plus. The Outside Advertising Sales Executive is responsible for establishing and maintaining profitable relationships with customers on behalf of the company and actively prospecting for new accounts and maximizing sales potential with existing customers. We seek the following qualities:

Lakeville Pizza Ranch 16995 Kenyon Avenue Lakeville 55044

• Self-motivated and problem-solving

Help Wanted/ Part Time

Temporary FT Tractor Trailer Driver Mpls/Eagan/MG Qualified applicants will: Be 21 yrs of age or older; Pass a DOT physical exam; Have valid commercial driver's lic with doubles endorsement; Have no moving violations or avoidable accidents in the past yr, no more than 3 in the past 3 yrs; No alcohol related offenses in the past 3 yrs. 3+ yrs experience preferred. Package Handler, PT Metro Area Various perm PT positions in Maple Grove, Mpls, Eagen & the MSP Airport. This is a physical, fast pace position involving continual lifting, lowering & sliding of pkgs weighing up to 70 lbs. Students: We offer tuition assistance for this job. www.upsjobs.com UPS is an EOE M/F/D/V

9250

Help Wanted/ Full & Part Time

Castle Rock Tree Service – Needed FT &

PT truck driver. Full time labor & equipment operator. Call: 651-463-2268. Lawn care position at the Dakota County Fair. Job duties include but not limited to mowing and maintenance on the mowers. Applications available at www.dakotacountyfair.org or 651463-8818

PT/FT LPN/CNA

12 Hr Shifts, Nights. The Lodge on Summit Oaks in Burnsville, an assisted living specializing in end of life care. Competitive wages, benefits, meals provided if you are a compassionate, individual with a strong work ethic, please call to schedule an interview. Jackie 952-435-6828

9500

9600

Automotive Vehicles

2000 Subaru Forester, wht, 5spd man. trans., 176K, (88K on reblt eng.) 2nd owner, maint. rcrds, trlr hitch $4150/BO John 612-270-1649 2001 Jaguar XJ8 Vander Plas. Extended sedan. 80,000 Great Shape! Great Interior! Silver. Garage Kept. $9,200 612-205-8201 Chev Corvette '94 Red, 350 eng. V-8, convert. w/hd top $6000 952-894-0369

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

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

www.crosstownauto.net

612-861-3020 651-645-7715

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

9999

Classified Misc./ Network Ads

!!OLD GUITARS WANTED!! Gibson,Martin,Fender,Gretsch . 1930-1980. Top Dollar paid!! Call Toll Free 1-866-433-8277

Enhancing the quality of human life through the provision of exceptional healthcare services Clinic RN (Ref. #769/750) (FamilyHealth Medical Clinics) .8 FTE (64hrs/2wks) (#769). Casual Call (#750). Current RN licensure in Minnesota, current BLS/CPR, and valid driver’s license. Clinic CMA/LPN (Ref. #774/731) (FamilyHealth Medical Clinics) .85 FTE (68hrs/2wks) (#774). Casual Call (#731). Current CMA certification or LPN licensure, current BLS/CPR certification required, & valid driver’s license. Clinic Radiology Tech (Ref. #766) (FamilyHealth Medical Clinic-NFLD) Casual Call. Current certification by the ARRT or ARRT eligible. Must maintain compliance with continuing education requirements set forth by the ARRT and must have a valid driver’s license. Physical Therapist (Ref. #785) (Center for Sports Medicine & Rehabilitation) 1.0 FTE (80hrs/2wks). Licensed or eligible for license to practice physical therapy in Minnesota and current American Heart Association CPR certification. Please visit www.northfieldhospital.org for further details and to complete an online application! Northfield Hospital & Clinics is an Equal Opportunity Employer

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

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

651-322-1800

EXT. 2

www.upullrparts.com

• Strong verbal and written communication skills • Good math skills

9200

9999

Classified Misc./ Network Ads

9999

Classified Misc./ Network Ads

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• Identifies prospects, customers, and referral sources • Strong persuasive and interpersonal skills • A strong sales aptitude • Able to meet monthly, quarterly, and annual revenue sales goals • Show tact, sensitivity, and professionalism with customers at all times • A valid driver’s license, reliable transportation, and current auto insurance The Outside Sales Executive is in contact with current and prospective customers. EXCELLENCE is a must for this challenging opportunity. We offer a competitive compensation and benefits program‚ medical, dental, 401K, life insurance, holidays, and paid time off. Please send your resume to: jeremy.bradfield@ecm-inc.com

Classified Misc./ Network Ads

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• Able to identify and meet customers’ needs and requirements • Develops and maintains relationships with customers

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HELP WANTED - DRIVERS

AUTOS WANTED

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22A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

theater and arts briefs Family Night is May 20 at IMAX Theatre

site with giveaways, the theme is “At the Movies.� Reserved seating is $16 chance to win tickets to the home opener, and (in person only). General admission is $8 for adults, ticket information. $5 for students (5-17) and The IMAX Theatre at the Minnesota Zoo in Skating show is seniors (62-plus), free for ages 4 and younger. Apple Valley will host May 10, 11 Family Night on Monin Burnsville Book signing day, May 20. Admission for the 6:30 “Impressions on Ice� at Barnes & p.m. showing of “Deep skating show will be at Sea� is $5 per person. 7 p.m. Friday, May 10, Noble Complimentary pizza and Saturday, May 11, at JoAnn Deveny, auand drink (while supplies Burnsville Ice Center, 251 thor of “When Bluebirds last) will be served in the Civic Center Parkway. Fly: Losing a Child, Livlobby beginning at 5:30 The event is a col- ing with Hope,� will sign p.m. laboration between the copies of her book from Family Night will also Burnsville Ice Center 1-3 p.m. Saturday, June 1, be part of the Minnesota “Learn To Skate� pro- at Barnes & Noble, 14880 Lynx “15 Days to Tipoff.� gram and the Burnsville Florence Trail, Apple The Minnesota Lynx will Minnesota Valley Figure Valley. have a representative on- Skating Club. This year’s Deveny’s son, Billy,

Announcements

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drowned in Lake Minnetonka in 1991. “When Bluebirds Fly� starts with the Devenys’ journey to their son’s bedside, and then leads readers through the adversities that often come with a tragedy.

Lumberjack songs

Women’s chorus presents spring concert Eagan Women of Note will present the group’s spring concert “American Music, American Composers� at 7 p.m. Saturday, May 11, at Falcon Ridge Middle School, 12900 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. Tickets are $10 for adults and $6 for seniors and children under 12.

Local musicians to perform in France Local musicians Hannah Hanssen and Tucker Peterson of the music duo Better Together have been selected to perform at the Jazz Ă Juan OFF Festival in Antibes, France, on July 16. Jazz Ă Juan runs July 12-21 and will feature international headliners Wynton Marsalis, Sting and Diana Krall. The fringe OFF festival presents more than 20 jazz acts performing around the public squares of Antibes and Juan-les-Pins.

Pink Floyd laser show at Mystic Lake Tickets for the 8 p.m. Friday, July 12, Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular will go on sale at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 11, at Mystic Lake in Prior Lake (mysticlake.com). Tickets are $19.

Photo opportunities at Caponi Caponi Art Park and Learning Center in Eagan offers a photography program for aspiring photographers of all ages. From May 18 through Oct. 6, people can submit up to five images taken at Caponi Art Park dur-

Guitarist Brian Miller (pictured), a Bemidji native who specializes in the Celtic-influenced music of 1800s-era Midwestern lumberjacks, will perform from 1:30-3 p.m. Wednesday, May 15, at Rosemount’s Robert Trail Library as part of the ongoing Silver Tea concert series geared to adults 55 and older. The Heritage Library in Lakeville is also hosting a Silver Tea concert next week, featuring folk musician Charlie Maguire from 1:30-3 p.m. Tuesday, May 14. Admission is free to both performances and more information is at www.dakotacounty. us/library. (Photo submitted) ing 2013. Select photographs will be displayed at the Caponi Art Park Photography Exhibition at the Eagan Community Center this winter. Photographers of the firstand second-place photographs in both youth and adult categories will receive an enlarged print of their photograph after the exhibition. Two photography workshops taught by Michael Proebstle of Legacy Creative Images will be offered. Each workshop will be $5. Call 651-4549412 to register. • Introduction to Digital Photography, 10 a.m. to noon, Saturday, June 8. Ages 10 and older; youth under 15 must be accompanied by an adult. • Storing and Archiving Your Digital Images, 10 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Aug. 10. Ages 15 and older. The art park will host a Family Portraiture Day with Legacy Creative Images on Aug. 24. Legacy Creative Images will be at the park from 10 a.m.

to 4 p.m. to take outdoor photos of families, couples or individuals. For a $40 sitting fee, visitors will receive a private session and digital copies of the best five photos. Reservations are required. More information about Caponi Art Park’s photography program is at www.caponiartpark. org/programs/photoprogram.

‘Walk Like A Man’ tickets on sale Tickets go on sale May 14 for the 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 9, “Walk Like A Man! A Celebration of the Music of Frankie Valli� performance at Burnsville Performing Arts Center. The “Walk Like A Man� quartet is led by tenor Val Martinez, who toured as one of the Four Seasons in Frankie Valli’s solo tours. Ticket prices are $51, $61 and $71 at BPAC and Ticketmaster.com.

family calendar To submit items for the Family Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com.

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

Friday, May 10 Plant sale by the DCTC Landscape Horticulture Club, 7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Dakota County Technical College, 1300 E. 145th St., Rosemount. Bedding plants and vegetables for sale. Information: catherine.grant@dctc. edu. Saturday, May 11 Stamp Out Hunger food drive by the National Association of Letter Carriers. Leave nonperishable foods in a sturdy bag next to your mailbox for pick-up by your mail carrier. Flapjack fundraiser by the Lakeville South boys tennis team, 8-10 a.m., Applebee’s in Lakeville. Includes pancakes, sausage, scrambled eggs, coffee, juice, soda or tea. Tickets are $10 at the door. Dakota Gardeners Perennial Sale, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Community of Christ Church, 5990 134th St. Court, Apple Valley, 651-455-2889. Garden gloves also for sale. Plant sale by the Eagan Garden Club, 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Holz Farm Park, 4665 Manor Drive, Eagan. Perennials, hanging baskets, annuals, vegetables and herbs. Tuesday, May 14 “Help! I’m Getting Divorced,� free informational meeting for those considering divorce, 6:30-8 p.m., Summit Executive Suites, 1500 McAndrews Road W., Burnsville. Limited seating. RSVP to Terryl Johnson at 952-431-0805. Sponsored by Divorce Financial Directions. Friends of LeDuc of Historic Hastings meeting, 7 p.m., LeDuc Estate, 1629 Vermillion St., Hastings. Speaker: Dr. Lee Frelich on the Boreal Forest. Free and open to the public. Wednesday, May 15 MOMS Club (Moms Offering Moms Support) of Apple Valley South meeting, 9:30 a.m. at Alimagnet Park, 211 Ridgeview Drive, Apple Valley. Information: momsclubofapplevalleysouth@live.

com. Thursday, May 16 Free Alzheimer’s workshop, “Techniques to Handle Challenging Behaviors/Activities to Encourage Engagement� combination class, 6-8 p.m., Home Instead Senior Care, 1600 E. Cliff Road, Burnsville. RSVP: http://alzheimerscare34may.eventbrite.com/# or 952-882-9300. Informational session hosted by MTS Minnesota Connections Academy, a virtual K-12 program, 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Best Western Nicollet Inn, 14201 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Learn what it’s like to attend public school online. Information: www.connectionsacademy. com or 800-382-6010. Parent informational meeting hosted by MTS Minnesota Connections Academy, a virtual K-12 program, 6:30-7:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble – Cafe, 1291 Promenade Place, Eagan. Learn what it’s like to attend public school online. Information: www.connectionsacademy. com or 800-382-6010.

All cats and kittens must be transported in a carrier. Donations appreciated, www.felinerescue.org. Blue Star Bash for Wounded Warriors, 7 p.m. to midnight, Knights of Columbus Hall, 1114 American Blvd., Bloomington. Tickets: $10 in advance and $15 at the door. Raffle tickets: $5. Proceeds will go to Heroes on Horseback, Eagle’s Healing Nest and Wounded Warrior Project. Information: info@ southmetrobluestarmoms. org. Sunday, May 19 Free practice ACT test, 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Sylvan Learning, 170 Cobblestone Lane, Burnsville. Bring a calculator. Reservations: 952435-6603. To receive test results, parents must be present at a follow-up appointment.

Ongoing Kids & More Sale, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. May 16-18, Ames Arena, 19900 Ipava Ave., Lakeville. Free admission. Information: www.TreasureHuntSales.com. Citywide garage sale, Friday, May 17 Elko New Market, May 16Syttende Mai annual 18. Information: www.ci.enm. luncheon buffet, 11 a.m., mn.us. Casper’s Cherokee, 4625 Nicols Road, Eagan. Speaker: Blood drives Jon Pederson, chair of the The American Red Cross Norway House Capital Cam- will hold the following blood paign. Cost: $16. Walk-ins drives. Call 1-800-RED welcome. Information: 612- CROSS (1-800-733-2767) 597-3714. or visit redcrossblood.org to make an appointment or for Saturday, May 18 more information. Plant sale by the Apple • May 11, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Valley Garden Club, 9 a.m. to Caribou Coffee, 3868 150th 1 p.m., Redwood Park Pavil- St., Rosemount. ion at County Road 42 and • May 11, 10:15 a.m. to Redwood Drive in Apple Val- 3:15 p.m., Burnhaven Library, ley. 1101 W. County Road 42, Family Fun and Fitness Burnsville. Day, 9:30 a.m. to noon, • May 11, 10 a.m. to 3 Nicollet Junior High School, p.m., Wescott Library, 1340 Burnsville. Sponsored by the Wescott Road, Eagan. Burnsville girls track and field • May 14, 1:30-6:30 p.m., team. Preregister at www. School District 191 - Commublazegirlstrack.com. Regis- nity Education Center, 200 W. tration opens at 9:30 a.m. the Burnsville Parkway, Suite 102, day of the event. Free. A free- Burnsville. will offering will be accepted • May 15, 2-7 p.m., Good on behalf of the American Shepherd Lutheran Church, Cancer Society. 151 E. County Road 42, Free Cat Claw Clipping Burnsville. Clinic by Feline Rescue Inc., • May 15, noon to 6 p.m., 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Chuck and Christ Lutheran Church, 1930 Don’s Pet Food Outlet, 1254 Diffley Road, Eagan. Town Centre Drive, Eagan.


SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville May 10, 2013 23A

Thisweekend WAR COMES TO FARMINGTON World War II re-enactment event runs May 18-19 at Dakota City by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The fog of war is descending on Farmington, and you’re invited. A World War II re-enactment event at Dakota City Heritage Village May 18-19 will see mock European Theater battles staged by living history groups portraying Axis and Allied soldiers. As for the outcome of the faux skirmishes, those rooting for the Allies won’t be disappointed. “The battle scenario is set near the end of the war, outside a German-occupied railroad depot,” explained event coordinator Jon Boroom, who also participates in the mock battles. “The Germans will be milling about near the depot, the Russians will attack, and the Americans will come in and finish it off.” The weekend’s activities run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. Mock battles are sched-

uled in the morning and afternoon each day. The event, now in its fourth year, also features soldier encampments, weapons and military vehicle displays – including a Sherman tank and Russian armored vehicle – and talks by World War II veterans. A military vehicle parade through downtown Farmington returns this year, and is sizing up to be bigger than ever. “We’ve opened the parade up to civilian vehicles from that era, and we’ve invited local car clubs to come take part,” Boroom said. New this year will be a World War II-era fashion show with civilian and women’s military attire from the 1940s. A military swap meet also is planned, with vendors selling original and reproduction military uniforms and equipment. Minnesota’s Beyond the Yellow Ribbon organization will be on hand throughout the weekend to provide information

Historical re-enactors will stage infantry battles during the World War II event at Dakota City Heritage Village. (File photo) about services available to veterans, military personnel and their families. Other groups slated to participate include the Commemorative Air Force, the Marine Corps

Jazz at the Steeple Center

League, and the Granite Falls-based Fagen Fighters, who are scheduled to do a flyover in their World War II-era planes. Admission to the event at Dakota City, located at

4008 220th St. W. on the county fairgrounds, is $7, or $5 with the donation of a nonperishable food item for the food shelf. Children under 5 and World War II veterans

get in free. More information is at www.dakotacity.org. Email Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.

theater and arts calendar To submit items for the Arts Calendar, email: darcy. odden@ecm-inc.com. Dance “Cinderella 1944,” 7 p.m. May 10, 2 and 7 p.m. May 11, and 2 p.m. May 12 at Burnsville Performing Arts Center. Tickets: $12 to $26 at the box office and at Ticketmaster.com or 800-9822787. Danceworks 2013: Power, Strength, Move! 7:30 p.m. May 16-18, Apple Valley High School Theater. Tickets: $7 adults, $5 students. Events/festivals Taste of Lakeville, 5-9 p.m. Thursday, May 16, at Lakeville Area Arts Center. Tickets: $30 in advance, $40 cash at the door. Information: www.tasteoflakeville.org. World War II Weekend, May 18-19 at Dakota City Heritage Village, 4008 220th St., on the fairgrounds in Farmington. Hours: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. Admission: $5 with a nonperishable food item for the local food shelves or $7 without a food item. Children 5 and younger are free. Information: www.dakotacity.org. I Love Burnsville Week, June 1-8. Information: www. ci.burnsville.mn.us/index. aspx?NID=738. Rhythm & Words Family Music and Book Festival, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 8, at Burnsville Performing Arts Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave. For children ages 10 and younger and their parents. Free.

Music Organ recital, 8 p.m. Friday, May 10, at Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church, 12650 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley. Free. Information: www. TCAGO.org. “From Ragtime to Rock” by the Twin Cities Bronze handbell choir at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church, 12650 Johnny Cake Ridge Road in Apple Valley. An offering will be collected. Organ and piano recital by Karissa Dennis, 7 p.m. Sunday, May 19, at Farmington Lutheran Church, 20600 Akin Road. Songs will range from Bach to Bumble Boogie. An offering will be taken. Information: 651-4634100 or visit www.farmingtonlutheran.com. Theater “Five Women Wearing the Same Dress” by Chameleon Theatre Circle, 7:30 p.m. May 10, 11, 13, 17 and 18 at Burnsville Performing Arts Center. Tickets: $20 for adults, $17 for students and seniors. Tickets are available at the box office and at Ticketmaster.com. “The Seussification of Romeo and Juliet,” 7 p.m. Friday, May 17, and 6:30 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Christian Life School, 6300 212th St. W., Farmington. Tickets: $8 for adults, $5 for students, available at the door or school office. Child care provided on a donation basis. Information: www.christianlifeschool. org or 651-463-4545. Workshops/classes/other Get On the Grid, networking party for part-time musicians,

2:30-5:30 p.m. Sunday, May 19, Icehouse, 2528 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis. Admission: $7. Information: www.rockandrolltherapyroom.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, 952953-2385. Ages 12-18. Adult painting open studio, 9 a.m. to noon Fridays at the Eagan Art House, 3981 Lexington Ave. S. Fee is $5 per session. Information: 651-675-5521. Teens Express Yourself with Paint, 5-7 p.m. Mondays at Brushworks School of Art in Burnsville, www.BrushworksSchoolofArt.com, 651-214-4732. Drama/theater classes for ages 4 and up at River Ridge Arts Building, Burnsville, 952736-3644. Show Biz Kids Theater Class for children with special needs (ASD/DCD programs), In the Company of Kids 13710 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville, 952736-3644. Broadway Kids Dance and Theater Program for all ages and abilities, In the Company of Kids, 13710 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville (Colonial Shopping Center), 952-736-3644. Join other 55-plus adults at the Eagan Art House to create beaded jewelry. The Jewelry Club meets on the third Friday of each month from 1-3 p.m. Information: 651-675-5500. Soy candle making classes held weekly in Eagan near 55 and Yankee Doodle. Call Jamie at 651-315-4849 for dates and times. $10 per person. Presented by Making Scents in Minnesota.

Exhibits Children’s Art Festival, featuring art by District 191 elementary students, May 9 to June 8, Burnsville Performing Arts Center, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Information: 952-895-4685.

Jazz is coming to Rosemount’s Steeple Center on Saturday, May 18, with a performance by the Paul Renz Quartet. Renz, a guitarist, is an instructor at MacPhail Center for Music and is the director of jazz studies at West Bank School of Music in Minneapolis. The quartet will be joined at the 8 p.m. concert by flute player Anders Bostrom, who was a featured soloist on Renz’s latest CD, “In My Own Hands.” Tickets for the Rosemount Area Arts Council-sponsored event are $15/adults, $10/students, and will be available at the door. (Photo submitted)

Champagne Omelette Breakfast

Sunday, May 12th 8:00 am to 1:00 pm Apple Valley American Legion 14521 Granada Drive, Apple Valley

Omelettes made to order Hash Browns, Fruit, Toast, Juice, Milk & Champagne $9.00 for adults $4.00 for children 12 and under Prepared by: Dakota County Voiture 1457 (40/8)

www.voiture1457.com


24A May 10, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville

It’s almost like getting free windows for a year!

SELL

During our FREE in-home Window Diagnosis, our Project Manager will identify the windows most beneficial to replace. And because our windows are not available in stores or from contractors, we’ll bring one to you to demonstrate its benefits. Then we’ll provide a price quote that’s good for a year.

BUILD

Using our patented Fibrex® material, we will custom build your windows to your home’s exact measurements. Fibrex has twice the strength of vinyl and requires virtually none of the maintenance that wood demands.* When you choose a stronger window material, you’ll likely replace your windows just once.

INSTALL

Even before wiping their feet outside your front door, many of our Master Installers have had over 10 years of experience. They are so trained and skilled, most installations—including the clean up—are completed in just one day.

WARRANTY

Renewal by Andersen is the company that takes responsibility for the entire process, including warranting the windows and installation.* And backed by Andersen’s 109 history, we’re not going anywhere.

$

0

MONEY DOWN

%

0 0

PAYMENTS

No Money Down, No Payments, No Interest & call before May 18th to

1

SAVE $175 on every window

1

Call before May 18th to

INTEREST

FOR 1 WHOLE YEAR

1

Interest accrues from date of purchase but is waived if paid in full within 12 months.

on every window1 1

Call for your FREE Window Diagnosis

1-800-641-8798

)DETAILS OF OFFER – Offer expires 6/15/2013. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. $175 off per window and 12 months no payments, no interest when you purchase four or more windows or patio doors between 4/21/13 & 6/15/2013 with approved credit. APR of 16.89% as of 3/1/13, subject to change. Repayment terms from 0 to 12 months. Interest accrues from date of purchase but waived if paid in full within 12 months. Available only at participating locations. See your local Renewal by Andersen location for details. License MN: BC130983/WI:266951. Excludes MN insurance work per MSA 325E.66. Some Renewal by Andersen locations are independently owned and operated. “Renewal by Andersen” and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen Corporation. ©2013 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved. ©2013 Lead Surge LLC. All rights reserved. *See limited warranty for details.

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Auctions for Business & Industry 121 Vehicles, Boat Motors, Lighting

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North Auctions Heating and Cooling Liquidation #1

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C LO S ES May 20

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