www.SunThisweek.com NEWS Uphill battle in Burnsville Buck Hill’s efforts to diversify its business offerings by staging concerts face obstacles in Burnsville. Page 3A
OPINION Training can help save lives An incident during Grandma’s Marathon shows how CPR training can help save lives when emergency crews are not around. Page 4A
THISWEEKEND
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Lakeville July 14, 2017 | Volume 38 | Number 20
Lakeville development plans concern neighbors City amended ordinances to make lot buildable by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Neighbors are citing concerns after Lakeville City Council members this year changed city ordinances to allow development by permit on a nonconforming rural lot. Located on the border of Burnsville, the northwest Lakeville 1.29acre rural property that has concerned neighbors was subdivided in 1980 through Dakota County against city ordinance and without the city’s knowledge or approval. Dan Licht, Lakeville planning consultant, said at the Planning Commission’s April 20 meeting
Photo submitted
Glenn Klotz is seeking a conditional use permit that would allow a house to be constructed on this property in a rural area of Lakeville not served by city sewer. that the error falls to Dakota County at the time for not having ensured the proper approvals by cities before granting the property’s subdivision. The Lakeville City Council this spring backdated its ordinance to
make the lot, owned by Glenn Klotz, a legal nonconforming use, meaning with approval of a conditional use permit, the land could be used to build a house in the rural area not served by city utilities and requiring a well and septic
system. City code previously required lots to be at least 10 acres and 300 feet wide to support a septic system but allowed an exception for those that existed prior to Nov. 7, 1977. That ordinance was changed this May to make the date in the ordinance Jan, 1, 1984, opening the door for Klotz’s lot to develop. Klotz is now requesting a conditional use permit for the property, approximately 100 feet wide, that would allow it to be sold as a residential lot in the rural area. The Lakeville City Council is expected to consider the request at its July 17 meeting. Neighbors have for months protested the change, citing special treatment and concerns the lot is not large enough
Mixed reactions
Tech Work Group being formed by Laura Adelmann
Circus Juventas is presenting “Nordrsaga” this summer with the help from two Dakota County residents. Page 19A
SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Photo by Laura Adelmann
An orange snake excited some more than others during the annual Pan-O-Prog Pet Show on July 6. The event was one of many held during the 2017 Pan-O-Prog community celebration. See inside for more photos of the events that ran July 2-9 throughout the city.
High school honors its own Four individuals and a program recently were inducted into the Panther Hall of Fame in Lakeville. Page 12A
PUBLIC NOTICE Sun Thisweek Lakeville is an official newspaper of the Lakeville Area School District and the city of Lakeville. Page 14A
INDEX Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 12A Public Notices . . . . . . 14A Classifieds . . . . . . . . . 15A Announcements . . . . 18A
General 952-894-1111 Display Advertising 952-846-2019 Classified Advertising 952-846-2003 Delivery 763-712-3544
A fee is charged at some locations to cover distribution costs.
See LOT, 8A
Lakeville asks what’s next in technology
Nordrsaga has local flair
SPORTS
to accommodate a future septic system after the first one reaches the end of its life cycle. Neighbor Dan Callahan, who has lived in a neighboring house to Klotz’s property since his parents built it in 1967, cited concern the property does not allow space needed to replace a septic system when it fails. He said if the lot was just yards away in the Burnsville boundaries, that city would not allow septic and well services after experiencing problems when smaller lot septic systems failed. “That city requires at least a 2-acre minimum,” Callahan said at the April 20 Planning Commission meeting. He called it “very, very bad precedent” to retroac-
Lakeville is looking ahead by establishing a Technology Work Group that will explore how the city can best prepare for what is coming next. Mayor Doug Anderson said so much is changing in technology, the city should be prepared to offer its residents and businesses the backbone needed to support it so Lakeville remains a city of choice. City Council members recently interviewed three people interested in serving on the Technology Work Group and are searching for more members, possibly including tech-savvy youth and residents who are primarily users instead of experts in the field. The work group will also review proposals brought to the City Council that include a technology component to provide the council with recommendaSee TECH, 8A
County Road 50 project starts Local businesses remain accessible by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
With the last day of Pan-O-Prog 2017 came the Monday start of a major two-year road construction project through the heart of Lakeville. The long-anticipated widening of County Road 50 from 185th Street to Dodd Boulevard closed part of County Road 50 July 10, but businesses near the road closure, including Lakeville Dental, McDonald’s restaurant, White Funeral Home and McDonald Eye Care Associates, will continue to operating as the work goes on. John Sass, Dakota County transportation project manager supervisor, said much of the planning the county has done over the years has been to allow area businesses to remain accessible despite the road work. During the first month of the project, a new back-
Photo submitted
Moline the duckling shortly after she was rescued from a storm sewer. Photo by Laura Adelmann
Road signs went up and construction started this week for the widening of County Road 50, a two-year project. Local businesses will remain open and accessible during the project. age road behind some of the businesses will be built and will become their permanent access point. Signs are to be installed informing drivers how to reach the businesses at all stages of construction.
Rescued duck now cherished pet
by Laura Adelmann SUN THISWEEK Jim White, owner of DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE White Funeral Home, said A baby duck rescued he does not expect to encounter any problems con- from a storm drain this tinuing operations during spring has become a cherished pet. the project. Caleb Mulvihill, 13 of Lakeville, said he found See 50, 8A
the duckling in May a culvert where she was struggling to survive against a torrent of water. “There was so much rushing water,” he said. “She was trying to get up, See DUCK, 8A
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2A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
‘Club 210’ play staged at a 50-year high school reunion Apple Valley resident Denis LaComb’s work to be performed in Rosemount
Fifty-year class reunions can be significant milestones in a person’s life. They can cause anticipation, uncertainty and fear of “reliving� one’s past. That’s the premise for a new play entitled “Club 210� written by Apple Valley playwright and author, Denis J. LaComb.
Its title comes from a high school homeroom that plays a prominent role in the storyline. Room 210 is the homeroom where a small group of alumni gather during a 50-year school reunion. Back in high school this loose confederation of students called themselves Club 210 in honor of their homeroom and the high jinxs that occurred there. These old classmates haven’t seen one another in over 50 years ‌ and so the fun begins. Tension, anticipation and past animosities fill
the room along with unrequited love and humor. It’s romance, mischief and a doobie or two. After 50 years with those kids, what else would you expect? Last year LaComb’s first play “Riot at Sage Corner� was presented by the Second Act Players, a branch of the Rosemount Area Arts Council. It was a huge success with two sold out performances. LaComb hopes this year’s play performed Aug. 11 and 12 at the Steeple Center in Rosemount will do the same. The play has an en-
semble cast of eight actors and four supporting roles. It will also include two original songs written for the play and a cover song. The new songs were written by songwriter Susan Friedline who has been writing music most of her life and played in various local rock bands from 1995 through 2015. LaComb said expects his latest play to sell out very quickly. The fastest and easiest way to get tickets, is through rosemountarts. com which has a link to Brown Paper Bag Tickets.
“We’re doing a heavy email campaign back to those wonderful folks who went to my first play,’ LaComb said. “I think they’re going to like this one too and won’t be disappointed.� Besides promoting his latest play, LaComb is working hard at marketing his latest novel — “Follow the Cobbler.� It’s a suspense thriller that takes its protagonists around the world chasing after an elusive character called the Cobbler. LaComb is also working on the final draft of
another play entitled “The Last Sentinel.� Its storyline centers on four elderly women living in a nursing home and feeling the challenges of growing old. “It’s actually a comedy disguised as a tell-all about old age. At least that’s how I see it,� LaComb said. “Club 210� is another production of the Second Act Players. Two years ago, the RAAC launched the Second Act Players senior theater group for those 50 and over. See PLAY, 3A
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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 3A
Buck Hill concert plan faces obstacles Council vote scheduled Tuesday by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Buck Hill, in a continuing effort to diversify its core skiing and snowboarding business, wants to add outdoor concerts. But its proposal to use the hillside as an amphitheater with a stage at the bottom faces obstacles, including opposition from nearby residents and an order to reduce projected concert noise. Burnsvilleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Planning Commission voted 5-0 Monday to recommend approval of the plan. The measure included 13 conditions, including a city staff recommendation that Buck Hill do more noise study and contain music and crowd noise to levels set by the state and city. Buck Hill and its sound consultant say it isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t possible, by moving the stage or erecting barriers, to contain the sound to levels set by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and city code. The City Council is scheduled to vote on the proposal Tuesday, July 18. Eleven residents spoke at a public hearing Monday, many expressing fondness for the ski hill west of Interstate 35 in south Burnsville that long predated their moving to the area. A few said they support Buck Hillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s plans for concerts, which under
the conditions would be limited to six a year with crowds, including workers and volunteers, no larger than 4,999. But noise and the potential for increased vehicle and foot traffic through their neighborhoods worry many neighbors. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I totally support Buck Hillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s efforts,â&#x20AC;? said Joseph Russell, 15345 Greenhaven Drive. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve told them before, â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Thank you for being a part of our community.â&#x20AC;&#x2122; But this is the wrong idea for the area.â&#x20AC;? Andrew Burglund, 435 Stonewood Lane, said Buck Hill has been a good neighbor and applauded the idea of a concert series. But he said he worries about security in his neighborhood. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve had multiple people trespassing during the ski season,â&#x20AC;? Burglund said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve had to ask people to leave my yard during the ski season.â&#x20AC;? Plans call for a temporary stage south and west of Buck Hillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Black Diamond Restaurant. Noise â&#x20AC;&#x153;directly impacts the neighbors to the north,â&#x20AC;? said a city staff report. A noise-modeling study commissioned by Buck Hill shows levels of up to 79 decibels at homes to the north that have a direct line of sight to the stage. State noise rules â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and Burnsville city code â&#x20AC;&#x201D; allow decibel levels of 65 or 60 at residential property lines from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. The conditions call for music to end by
9:30 p.m. and the lights to be out by 10, followed by a 1 a.m. bar and restaurant closing. Buck Hillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s noise consultant, HDR, recommended the city seek a variance from Minnesota Pollution Control Agency noise rules. City staff says it contacted the agency, which said it doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t grant variances. Tim Casey of HDR insisted that there is an agency process for getting a variance. Staff says that if the city allows noise-rule violations, it is responsible for complaints. Further study should also factor in crowd noise, which HDR didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t do, staff said. Planning commissioners stood firm on requiring more noise study and mitigation. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There just needs to be more work done on that piece,â&#x20AC;? Commissioner Daniel Wolter said. The conditions include no parking less than 30 feet from the north and south property lines, as Buck Hill proposes. The propertyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s planned unit development requires a 30-foot setback. Buck Hillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s concert parking plan includes arrangements with Burnsville Center, Celebration Church and Zombie Boardshop to shuttle concertgoers in from their lots. Commissioners added a condition for a commission review of concert operations after one year if the council approves
them. Don McClure, the longtime general manager and now co-owner of Buck Hill, said concerts are another way to keep the business viable at a time when â&#x20AC;&#x153;aberrantâ&#x20AC;? weather is making its core winter business uncertain. McClure said he learned about some of the ongoing neighborhood nuisances at a June 8 neighborhood meeting on the concert plan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We learned some things from that neighborhood meeting. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re going to take some corrective action,â&#x20AC;? he said. McClure and co-owner David Solner, an Apple Valley architect, bought Buck Hill from the Stone family and other shareholders in 2015. They recently added a year-round Neveplast ski surface. Off-season special events range from running races to mountain biking. The property is also used for vehicle storage by nearby dealerships. Past offseason events included a Halloween haunted house and an outdoor market. In 2005 the council approved a comprehensive plan amendment and rezoning allowing development on unused Buck Hill land north of the ski hill. The councilâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s goal was to preserve the ski business as an amenity by giving the owners another means of generating income. Contact John Gessner at john.gessner@ecm-inc. com or 952-846-2031.
Woodbury woman dies in Highway 52 crash A 77-year-old Woodbury woman died when the vehicle she was driving collided with another vehicle while she was heading north in the southbound lanes of Highway 52 near the junction with County Road 50 in Hampton at about 12:30 p.m. Saturday. Fern Elaine Marty died at the scene. The driver of the other vehicle attempted to avoid hitting Martyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 2002 Subaru Forester, but was unable to,
hitting the passenger side, according to the State Patrol. Marty was wearing a seat belt and the airbag in the vehicle deployed. The driver of the other vehicle, Apple Valley resident John Carl Sparby, 45, was taken to Regions Hospital in St. Paul with non-life-threatening injuries. His passenger, Jocelyn Renee Kehr Sparby, 32, of Apple Valley, was uninjured.
Both of them were wearing seat belts and the airbags in the vehicle deployed. Road conditions were dry at the time of the crash. Highway 52 at this location is a four-lane highway divided by a median with two lanes going in each direction. There are on and off ramps at the junction of Highway 52 and County Road 50. The next junction to the south (Highway 52 and 250th
Street) has an at-grade junction that allows motorists to make left and right turns from County Road 50 to Highway 52. Alcohol was not a factor in the crash, according to the State Patrol. Southbound Highway 52 was closed and traffic rerouted for about three hours after the crash, according to the Dakota County Sheriffâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Office.
PLAY, from 2A
people that purpose â&#x20AC;&#x201D; a reason to get up in the morning.â&#x20AC;? While there are many groups for seniors in Dakota County, Loch said their research couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t find any other senior theater group in the area. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We think there are a lot of people out there who were in high school drama and they remember that was kind of fun,â&#x20AC;?
Loch said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are aiming at those people.â&#x20AC;? He said one way to build potential cast members is to host a recurring meeting when people will gradually progress from script reading, to character development, to action and dialogue presentations and finally to memorizing lines for a rehearsal. The council set Second
Act Players annual dues for membership at $25 for individuals and $35 for couples. These memberships are separate from RAAC memberships. Second Act memberships allow people to earn a discount on upcoming theater workshops. For more information, go online to RosemountArts.com or contact Loch at 952-255-8545.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think because of the aging of society, groups like this are very important,â&#x20AC;? said John Loch, RAAC member and chairman of the Second Act Players. â&#x20AC;&#x153;They say that a 60- or 70-year-old is not like that in previous generations. We are living healthier and we want to be involved. It can give
Two local soccer clubs merge Will keep sport robust locally, organizers say by John Gessner SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
of dissolving, though demographics were working against them, according to McIntosh. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know that I could quantify it, but decades ago, Burnsville and Apple Valley had much larger youth soccer-playing populations as they were growing young communities,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Just demographically, as the two cities have aged, I think thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s impacted participation numbers in soccer and other sports as well.â&#x20AC;? He expects BV Unitedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s summer youth traveling program, the clubâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest component, to have 500 to 600 players. Even at 600, BV United would be considered â&#x20AC;&#x153;a smaller metro club,â&#x20AC;? McIntosh said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll also offer fall traveling soccer,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll offer recreational soccer. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll offer summer camps, and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll offer different types of indoor winter training.â&#x20AC;? Keeping organized soccer affordable to families is another goal of the merger, McIntosh said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We primarily anticipate serving kids that will ultimately attend Burnsville High School, Apple Valley High School and Eastview High School, as well as the surrounding communities,â&#x20AC;? he said. BV Unitedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s director of coaching is Greg Holker, who had been Burnsville Fireâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s coaching director. He is the head menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s coach at Augsburg College in Minneapolis. BV United traveling program tryouts begin July 20 and run through early August, McIntosh said. For more information, visit www.bvunited.org.
The July 1 merger of two south metro youth soccer clubs comes down to quantity and quality. The Burnsville Fire and Apple Valley-based Valley United clubs have fewer players than they did years ago. Merging will keep the sport robust locally, said Andy McIntosh, president of the newly named BV United club. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s especially important now that Minnesota has a Major League Soccer team setting an example for younger players, McIntosh said. The arrival of the Minnesota United in 2015 has raised the bar at all levels of the game. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think that mergers and consolidations like this will probably continue to happen as clubs try to figure out how best to serve their members, meaning training them, developing them and offering quality programming,â&#x20AC;? said McIntosh, a Burnsville resident who was president of Valley United before the merger. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The quality of youth soccer will continue to rise because of Minnesota Unitedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s presence,â&#x20AC;? he said. The larger, merged club will be better able than its predecessors to fill team rosters at all competitive levels and attract and retain good coaches, McIntosh said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It allows us to better utilize resources, everything from volunteers to fields to indoor spaces,â&#x20AC;? he added. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And it allows us Contact John Gessner at to have a structure that is john.gessner@ecm-inc.com stable as volunteer boards or 952-846-2031. turn over.â&#x20AC;? Neither club was at risk
County Road 50 construction work County Road 50 between Icenic Trail and County Road 9 (Dodd Boulevard) in Lakeville was scheduled to close to traffic on Monday, July 10, for approximately two months to reconstruct Stage 1A. A detour is posted using County Road 9 and County Road 60 (185th Street). This section of County Road 50 will be converted to a four-lane section with raised median and turn lanes. Pedestrian and bike paths will be constructed along both sides of Coun-
ty Road 50, and the traffic signal located at the County Road 50 and Ipava Avenue intersection will be replaced. In addition, work on Icenic Way was scheduled July 7-15. Project completion is scheduled late November 2018. To receive email updates for this project, email Erin Borchert at erin.borchert@co.dakota. mn.us and include â&#x20AC;&#x153;CP 50-19 Updatesâ&#x20AC;? in the subject line.
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4A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
Opinion CPR training can help save another’s life by Keith Anderson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
For more than one minute, Tim Cernohous appeared dead; face down on the pavement just yards from the finish line at Grandma’s Marathon, held during Father’s Day Weekend in Duluth. The completion chute at Grandma’s is a congested, noisy area stretching the equivalent of two city blocks in the city’s Canal Park district. Cernohous was in the stretch, just a few yards from completing the Gary Bjorklund Half Marathon when he collapsed and lay motionless on the gritty street of Canal Park Drive. Initially, spectators who saw him falter thought he had simply collapsed from exhaustion and were waiting for him to regain enough strength to finish the race. But as other runners continued to snake past him and he made no movement to get upright, a finish line that had been filled with clanging cow bells and cheers of encouragement was reduced to near-silence as spectators began to process the gravity of his situation. In the distance, beyond the stunned crowd, grayish clouds merged with Lake Superior’s expansive surface. Sunlight streaked across the sky in some regions, yet bursts of rain filled the lake elsewhere. A ship remained anchored miles off shore and seagulls squawked over-
Sun Thisweek Columnist
Keith Anderson head. Music from a tent blasted from a block away and the smell of coffee, popcorn and sweet pastries wrestled with each other in the Saturday morning air. Life plowed ahead as it always does. But for Cernohous it had stuttered to a sudden halt. Within seconds, another runner, seeing the motionless Cernohous, rushed to his side and quickly alerted others the downed runner was not breathing. Fire department first responders, just a few feet away, quickly converged, rolled the 33-year-old on his back and began chest compressions. Spectators were in shock. It was a surreal vision. Just seconds before this was a joyous runway of emotion as runners drenched with sweat completed their 13-mile run. Most looked exhausted, but equally elated that they had finally reached their destination. But not now. It had become this odd juxtaposition of life and death sharing the same space at the same time. Life was evident in all the athletes who continued to power through the finish line
funnel as family and friends looked on with pride. Then there was the threat of death, sprawled out on the city street before hundreds of spectators who felt helpless and afraid. Spent runners who were unaware of the magnitude of what was taking place continued to splice through the hushed finish-line crowd, offering curious glances at the commotion that had now surrounded Cernohous. For spectators looking on, everything seemed to unfold suddenly yet slowly. In some respects time felt as though it was being choked in quicksand. In reality it didn’t take long before compressions were started. And quickly Cernohous’s body twitched, his leg moved and air filled his lungs. As abruptly as he had gone down, he had regained consciousness, and within seconds was making a case to finish the race, which he ultimately did, flanked by rescue workers and others. It was an unusual circumstance to see CPR administered to an athletic, lifeless body in the most public of settings. Usually, when somebody stops breathing, it’s not in public, it’s at home. In fact, according to the American Heart Association, 88 percent of cardiac arrests occur at home. That’s why it’s so important that more of us learn CPR. It’s not known exactly what caused Cernohous to stop breathing, but he was fortunate that his situation
occurred near others who were trained in CPR. The American Heart Association estimates that 383,000 out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrests occur every year, and 88 percent occur in our homes. That means if you or somebody else in your home does not know CPR, the chances that your loved one will survive is greatly reduced. In fact, if you administer CPR, a person’s chances of survival are doubled or tripled, according to the Heart Association. Summer is busy for most people and a good time to refresh or educate ourselves on the latest techniques associated with CPR. The Heart Association offers this short video, http://bit.ly/1OZ8SAY, which demonstrates what is now recommended when it comes to CPR. It also offers official CPR/AED training classes. There are also numerous classes offered locally through hospitals and clinics. For Cernohous, help was just a few feet away. For most, that is not the case. But you can change that with some advance preparation and a willingness to act when needed. You could be the finish line for somebody else and what you know could be the difference between life and death. Keith Anderson is director of news at ECM Publishers. Columns reflect the opinion of the author.
Letters Democrats have a health care plan
necessary to repeal and replace the ACA. It just needs to be fixed. And Democrats are trying to do that. To the editor: Tell U.S. Rep. Jason The Democrats have proposals for improve- Lewis he needs to listen to ment of the Affordable the Democratic proposals. Care Act pending before Congress. Republicans LYNN CARLSON have a “plan” pushed by Eagan Sen. Mitch McConnell Why Lewis won that many Republicans the election have rejected. Despite the fact that they have com- To the editor: I recently read the letplained for seven years ter in last week’s newspaabout the ACA, and despite the fact that they per from Richard Iffert are now in power, Repub- and think an explanation licans still complain that is needed on why Lewis Democrats have no plan. got elected in the first Aside from the fact that place and her name is the ball is in the Republi- Paula Overby. Overby is a can’s court, that statement transgendered and former Democratic activist. is simply false. She left the DFL in Democrats have pro2014 after not getting the posed the following — and Democratic nomination have submitted legislation for Congress and comto enact these plans: • Ensuring cost sharing plaining about not being reduction payments are able to have the time she made to help stabilize in- wanted to grandstand at DFL events on Transgensurance markets • Creating a permanent dered rights. She joined reinsurance program to the Independence Party to spread the risk of large run as a third party candidate because at the time claims • Creating a mechanism she did not need signawhere people living in tures to run as the IP was a counties without an insur- major party in Minnesota er have access to insurance back then. She ran again in 2016. She essentially from another source • Gradually reducing took the third party vote the financial support for from those who voted for those whose incomes just third party candidates in exceed the income qualifi- the presidential race as the percentage totals between cation category • Preventing brand the Democratic candiname insurers from buy- dates, Republican candiing off generic drug mak- dates, and the third party ers, making generic drugs votes in the Congressioavailable on the market nal and Presidential races sooner than happens pres- were similar. Thus, she took the swing vote Demently • Requiring that Medi- ocrat Angie Craig would care negotiate drug prices have needed to win the with pharmaceutical com- 2016 election simply by putting her name on the panies • Making drugs more ballot. In interviews given in readily available from 2013 and 2014, she beCanada These proposals would lieved the Congressional go a long way to making endorsement was a sort the Affordable Care Act of acceptance of her bemore effective. It is not ing transgendered as she
wanted to be the first transgendered person elected to congress. But when the nomination was given to someone else, she then stated the DFL “excludes the majority of Americans “ and caters to white middle class men. However, Andrea Jenkins (who is transgendered) got the DFL endorsement to run for Minneapolis city council this year and the DFL ran an openly gay woman in Craig for the second congressional last year. The truth is that the DFL can’t give a nomination to a candidate simply because a candidate is a LGBTQ member as a candidate must be able to be the most electable and have the most knowledge to do the job. Therefore, I would urge people to stop booing Lewis at parades and convince Overby not to run again in 2018. Frankly, the needs of the many outweigh one person’s political agenda. WILLIAM CORY LABOVITCH South St. Paul
Fundamental differences To the editor: Republicans believe in social Darwinism. Democrats believe in social conscience. Republicans believe in social Darwinism: you won’t survive if you can’t do it yourself. Too bad for the poor. Too bad for the disabled. Too bad for the sick. Too bad for seniors. Health care is for those who can afford it, and society has no duty to provide health care for all. Democrats believe in social conscience: education, health care, employment. Democrats believe in social safety nets: Social Security for seniors and
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Laura Adelmann | LAKEVILLE NEWS | 952-894-1111 | laura.adelmann@ecm-inc.com Mike Shaughnessy | SPORTS | 952-846-2030 | mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com Mike Jetchick | AD SALES | 952-846-2019 | mike.jetchick@ecm-inc.com Tad Johnson | MANAGING EDITOR | 952-846-2033 | tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com John Gessner | MANAGING EDITOR | 952-846-2031 | john.gessner@ecm-inc.com Keith Anderson | DIRECTOR OF NEWS | 952-392-6847 | keith.anderson@ecm-inc.com GENERAL MANAGER. . . . . . . . . . . . Mark Weber LAKEVILLE/DISTRICT 194 EDITOR . . Laura Adelmann DISTRICT 196 NEWS. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tad Johnson SPORTS EDITOR . . . . . . . . . Mike Shaughnessy
NEWS ASSISTANT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Darcy Odden THISWEEKEND EDITOR . . . . . . . . Andrew Miller SALES MANAGER . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mike Jetchick
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disabled. Health care for all including veterans. “We all do better when we all do better.” If your attitude is “my neighbor be damned,” you are Republican. If your attitude is “my neighbor is my brother/sister,” you are Democrat. Do you vote your principles? RON GOLDSER Eagan
Get government out of the way To the editor: I’m writing in regard to last week’s letter titled “Sustainable energy sector is booming.” Aside from the headline, there was little information about the growth of sustainable energy — only false, partisan statements intended to paint Republicans as being anti-environmental. Contrary to the author’s claim, no Republicans legislators have signed a pledge to stop any action that would address the environmental destruction caused by fossil fuels; and no one, including U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis, is on board with a “status quo” energy policy. Republicans are not against sustainable energy. They are against government mandates. They believe in a competitive marketplace for energy. Let’s actually talk about the booming energy sector. The costs for sustainable energy are dropping to historic lows. Wal-Mart and other large corporations are using solar energy and saving money doing it. This is a very good thing! We need legislation to make this easier to do on a large scale. It’s booming, in part, because the GOP-led Congress extended incentives for clean energy production into the future for a predictable time period — five years. Legislation In the past, was often retroactive and rarely for more than two-years time. That’s not enough to give industry the predictability it wants. After 2020, the incentives start to wind down — no economy should be based indefinitely on federal tax credits. That’s what liberals fail to grasp. They can mandate and subsidize all they want, but rarely do what’s most needed: provide competition and choice in the marketplace to insure that products develop toward what consumers really want.
With solar and wind prices dropping to historic lows and competing outright with new coal and gas on an unsubsidized basis, all that’s needed is to get rid of over-regulation and the “one-size-fits all” federal approach. Lewis understands this, and works to make sure that our new energy future aligns with what consumers want — cleaner, cheaper, and more competitive. The phone industry did not begin to thrive precisely until government got out of the way. Why would energy be any different? CANDICE REYES Eagan
People are speaking up To the editor: NASA states: “Multiple studies published in peer-reviewed scientific journals show that 97 percent or more of actively publishing climate scientists agree: Climatewarming trends over the past century are extremely likely due to human activities. In addition, most of the leading scientific organizations worldwide have issued public statements endorsing this position.” Jerry Ewing calls that a “trope” in his letter “Repetition” and references a contradictory “declaration by 31,000 scientists.” This Oregon Petition, “has been criticized for its lack of verification, with pranksters successfully submitting the names of Charles Darwin, a member of the Spice Girls and characters from Star Wars” (Wikipedia). He repeats President Donald Trump’s claims as proof the claims are true (assuming the initial point). In eight letters over the past two years, Ewing has repeatedly claimed 1) everything happening is natural, 2) computer models are the only proof, 3) solutions are not possible, 4) are too expensive, 5) can only change the outcome by .018, .02, .05, .01 to .25, .20 degrees. The likely number at the end of this century is .9 C difference between 3.3 C with the Paris Accord and 4.2 C (7.5 F) without (Climate Central). Will our grandchildren survive to the year 2100? It gets worse after that. Imagine if oceans and temperatures “naturally” rose 10 feet and 20 degrees since the time of Christ. Effects that dramatic would be taught to every
schoolchild if it was true, but it’s not. The truth is, scientists in disciplines from astrophysics to zoology for more than a century have collected tens of thousands of lines of evidence that show our environment was very stable for 10,000 years, but is now changing at an increasing rate. Should we be trying to slow that down, or pressing the throttle harder? Every degree of warming costs more than the previous (Richard Alley). Solutions create millions of additional jobs while freeing us from enslavement by fossil-fuel moguls. Sustainable energy will be cheaper in the long run, save quadrillions in damage to our environment and human life, and will bring wonderful innovations to daily life, if we just let it. BILL MIDDLECAMP Apple Valley
Accountability in climate claims To the editor: The letter writer of June 30 claims that over 31,000 “scientists” have signed a declaration refuting the International Panel on Climate Change report. This declaration dates back to 1998. This petition was created by individuals and groups with political motivations, was distributed using misleading tactics, is presented with almost no accountability regarding the authenticity of its signatures, and asks only that you have received an undergraduate degree in any science to sign. Furthermore, it was created in opposition to the Kyoto Protocol which was created in 1992. The writer mentions tired “tropes,” and then he uses one. The letter writer goes on to repeat President Donald Trump’s claim that the Paris Climate Change Accord would lower the worldwide temperature by only .2 degree Celsius. The president purposely used a 2014 report, which gave him the number he wanted. A 2016 report shows that the Paris accord would curb rising temperatures by 1.8 degree Fahrenheit. It’s still not enough, but it’s a step in the right direction, rather than the retreat the president is advocating. SPENCER REPPE Apple Valley
SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 5A
Education District 196 population remains District 194 receives financial reporting honors stable at just over 153,000 Lakeville Area Public Schools has earned honors for its financing reporting. The Association of School Business Officials International awarded the district its Certificate of Excellence in financial reporting for the 2016 year for having met or exceeded the programâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s high standards for financial reporting and accountability. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The district is to be commended for its efforts. The Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) is of high quality,â&#x20AC;? the organization indicated in its comments. The award affirms the school districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s commitment to financial accountability and transparency. A comprehensive annual financial report is a set of government financial statements comprising a financial report of a state, municipality or school district that complies with the requirements of the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, which created the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles used by state and local governments. As part of its annual audit process for fiscal year 2016 (which encompassed the 2015-16 school year), Lakeville Area Public Schools adopted the higher level of requirements
for reporting financial information as a way to demonstrate the districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s commitment to fiscal responsibility, said Michael Baumann, superintendent of Lakeville Area Public Schools. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The ASBO Certificate of Excellence is the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Gold Standardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; for financial reporting in school districts,â&#x20AC;? Baumann said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This tells our community that our district is credible and committed to fiscal integrity. This can aid the district in achieving an ever-higher bond rating from credit evaluations by clearly disclosing all required information. The community values the districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s transparency and knowing we are highly credible and detailed in our financial work exceeding the standard as we share financial information above and beyond what Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) requires is very important to this administration.â&#x20AC;? Go to http://isd194.org/ about/departments-ser vices/business-services/budget-andfinance/ to learn more about the districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s financial health, adopted budget for 2017-18 and previous years and other financial information about Lakeville Area Public Schools.
Total populat ion in Independent School District 196 in 2017 is estimated at 153,174 by the state demographer. That represents an increase of 123 more than the demographerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s estimate of 153,051 from one year ago. The School Board approved the districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 2017 certified census at its June 26 meeting. The approved census figure is submitted
to the state demographer each year and is used to determine tax levies for funding community education programs in the district. District 196 is the fourth largest school district in Minnesota, with total enrollment of approximately 28,000 students. The district covers approximately 110 square miles and includes all or
parts of the cities of Rosemount, Apple Valley, Eagan, Burnsville, Coates, Inver Grove Heights and Lakeville, and Empire and Vermillion townships. Nearly nine of every 10 school-age children who live in District 196 attend District 196 schools. At 87 percent, District 196 has one of the highest â&#x20AC;&#x153;capture ratesâ&#x20AC;? of any school district in the state.
Seniors Lakeville resident a finalist for fitness award Lakeville resident Terry Werner has been selected as one of the top 10 finalists for the 2017 SilverSneakers Richard L. Swanson Inspiration Award, honoring older adults for their dedication to fitness and overall wellbeing. Werner began attending SilverSneakers with his wife and continues to be an engaged member of the program even after
she passed away. As a benefit through his insurance provider, UCARE, SilverSneakers has allowed him to remain socially active as he champions a group of members who meet at a coffee shop across the street from his gym, Anytime Fitness. When the movements get too quick, Werner breaks into dance and has earned the nickname â&#x20AC;&#x153;Dancing Terryâ&#x20AC;? by class-
mates. Exercise is what keeps Werner in shape, and his positive attitude is an inspiration for everyone around him. The national award winner will be selected by a public vote July 3-14 at SilverSneakers.com/ SwansonAward. Lakeville residents are encouraged to go online and vote for Wernerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s inspiring story.
Lakeville Parks and Recreation programs Lakeville Parks and Recreation will offer the following activities. Register at https:// webtrac.lakevillemn.gov or call 952-985-4600. Nickelodeon Universe, Mall of America, Bloomington: Purchase all-day discount wristbands for $26 at the Lakeville Parks and Recreation office in City Hall, 20195 Holyoke Ave., or call 952-984-4600. Pick up tickets at City Hall. Puppet Wagon, June 19 to Aug. 11. Bring a blanket or lawn chairs, relax and enjoy the shows. For the 2017 schedule, log onto www.lakevillemn.gov under City Departments, Parks & Recreation tab. Family Campout Adventure, 7 p.m. Friday, July 21, Casperson Park, 19720 Juno Trail. Set up your tent, then participate in games and activities throughout the night. Bring beverages and food; hot dogs and sâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;mores will be complimentary. Cost: $10 per family, pre-registered. 30th annual Youth Shore Fishing Contest, 9-11 a.m. Saturday, July 22, Casperson Park,
19720 Juno Trail. Prizes awarded for various fish categories. Ages 13 and under are eligible for prizes. Participants need to bring their own fishing equipment and bait. Register the day of the contest. Free. Little Tykes Safety Camp, ages 5-7, 9-11 a.m. July 24-25, Antlers Park, 9740 201st St. W. Designed to introduce younger children to safety lessons about water, fire, 9-1-1, stranger danger, animal safety and more. Cost: $19. Country Heat Live, 6-7 p.m. Tuesdays, Lakeville South, 21135 Jacquard Ave.; Fridays, Lakeville North, 19600 Ipava Ave. Low-impact, high-energy dance class set to country hits. First class is free. Call 952-9854600 or instructor Amanda Ewers, 515-460-5850, for more information. Kamp Kermit, ages 4-6, 9-11:30 a.m. or 12:30-3 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays, July 17 to Aug. 9, at Steve Michaud Park, 17100 Ipava Ave., or 9-11:30 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, July 18 to Aug. 10, at
Prairie Lake Park, 18179 Kingsway Path. Cost: $75. Tiny Tots Surf Soccer, ages 4-7, 5-5:45 p.m. Thursdays, July 27 to Aug. 17, Greenridge Park, 17685 Flagstaff Ave. Learn soccer basics. Soccer ball size 3 or 4 required; shin guards recommended for safety. Tennis shoes or soccer cleats required. Cost: $25. Calling All Horse Lovers, ages 8-13, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, Aug. 11, and/or Tuesday, Aug. 22, Golden Ridge Stables, 8315 190th St. W. Participants are required to wear jeans and boots; riders will not be allowed to ride in tennis shoes. Helmets provided. Bring water, a snack and/or a lunch. Cost: $95 per person/per session. Safety Camp, ages 8-9, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Aug. 14-15, Antlers Park, 9740 201st St. W. Participants will learn about fire, water, electrical safety, selfdefense, drug awareness and stranger danger. Families invited to 4 p.m. graduation ceremony on Aug. 15. Cost: $35, includes T-shirt.
Sports Unlimited Camps (Skate Start, Floor Hockey, Cheer Camp, Lacrosse, Skateboard Camp, T-Ball, Pickleball, Ultimate Frisbee, Sand Volleyball, Mini-Sport Camp, Badminton, Game On Camp) focus on helping kids learn the rules of the game while working on sportsmanship. To view dates, times or to register, go to webtrac.lakevillemn.gov or call 952985-4600. Skyhawks (Multi-Sport Camp, Game Camp, Track & Field) camps use skill-building games and activities to give each athlete a complete understanding of the sport. To view dates, times or to register, go to webtrac.lakevillemn.gov or www. skykawks.com/Minnesota or call 952-985-4600. Lynch Camps (Tennis, Agility Camp, Basketball, Baseball/ Softball) for beginners to advanced levels. Staff teach fundamentals and building strong sport specific skills using drills, games and friendly competition. To view dates, times or to register, go to webtrac.lakevillemn.
gov or call 952-985-4600. Active Solutions (Outdoor P.E. Safari, Kayaking, Fishing & Beach Play, KayBiRu Kids Triathlon) provides a variety of quality activities and adventure for kids. The instructors are professional physical education educators and experienced outdoor enthusiasts. To view dates, times or to register, go to webtrac.lakevillemn.gov or call 952985-4600. Life Time Fitness (Rock Climbing Camps for ages 5-11, Teen Rock Climbing Camp for ages 12-17, Squash Camp). To view dates, times or to register, go to webtrac.lakevillemn.gov or call 952-985-4600. On Belay, ages 18 and older, 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, July 26, Life Time Fitness, 18425 Dodd Blvd., Lakeville. The class is for any climber looking to improve their rock climbing technique. It covers all necessary skills for top rope belay certification. Open to all skill levels. Cost: $35.
News Briefs Glow Run is Aug. 5
Needs assessment open house at Heritage An open house is scheduled 5-7 p.m. Thursday, July 20, at the Heritage Library in Lakeville to review and discuss preliminary concepts for the upcoming library and license center renovation. Library Director Margaret Stone, Leo A Daly Architects and Dakota County staff will be avail-
able for questions. This will be the first remodel for the Heritage Library since it opened in 2000. The first step was to conduct a comprehensive needs assessment to collect information about the current facility and identify improvements. The study will result in a space plan, preliminary con-
cepts for improvements, and cost estimates. This information will then be presented to the Board of Commissioners for consideration. Dakota County plans improvements through its Capital Improvement Program, a five-year plan identifying building, transportation, parks and
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other improvements. For more information or to sign up for the library text message service, visit www.dakotacounty.us/library, call 651-450-2900 or contact Joe Lexa, senior project manager, by email at joe. lexa@co.dakota.mn.us.
The Lights and Sirens Glow Run starts 9 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, at Lakeville Fire Station 4, 9465 185th St. The event includes a 5K non-timed run and a 1.25mile run/walk. Proceeds go to the Lakeville Public Safety Foundation, a nonprofit organization that promotes public safety by enhancing the capabilities
of the Lakeville police and fire departments. Dave Osborn, former running back for the Minnesota Vikings, will be the honorary race starter. Registration is $25 at runsignup.com/Race/ MN/Lakeville/Lightsand SirensGlowRun. Register by July 15 to receive a Tshirt. For questions, email info@lpsfmn.org.
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6A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
Business Business Buzz BlueNose in community events BlueNose Coffee will participate in these Farmington events: July 21, 2-3 p.m., Relay For Life â&#x20AC;&#x201C; donation of free iced tea and lemonade. July 27, 3-6 p.m., Summer Block Party â&#x20AC;&#x201C; free food and beverages provided by BlueNose Coffee, Bourbon Butcher and Round Bank. The carnival-themed party also includes games and prizes.
Photo submitted
The Eagan City Council reviewed a concept plan for a new hotel in the Cedar Grove district. One of the brands developers are considering is Fairfield Inn and Suites. The photo was part of the concept plan viewed by Eagan City Council members.
Plans for a second hotel in Eaganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cedar Grove underway New hotel would be built next to Home2 by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
A second hotel in the Cedar Grove district near Twin Cities Premium Outlets in Eagan is in the planning stages. The Eagan City Council reviewed a concept plan for a new lodging option just south of the outlet mall next to a Home2 Suites by Hilton, which is currently under construction.
The concept includes a four-story, 109-unit hotel similar to the quality of Home2, but caters more to clientele staying one-tothree nights as opposed to Home2, which caters more to longer stays. The new hotel would include a complementary breakfast, pool and fitness center, and everything else that one would expect from an upscale hotel catering to business professionals and families, Jay Bhakta, of JR Hospitality who spoke in representation of the developers during the meeting. He said they havenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t
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settled on a brand yet, but Bhakta said one of the brands theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re considering is Fairfield Inn and Suites. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s still in the concept phase,â&#x20AC;? Bhakta said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll work with city staff. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll work with the architect and ultimately the brand we choose for this, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll refine this to make it the most attractive for the area.â&#x20AC;? The same team is building both the new hotel and the Home2. â&#x20AC;&#x153;(Home2) is well under construction,â&#x20AC;? Bhakta said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re just starting framing the second the second floor. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re (hop-
ing to open in spring), but Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m pushing our contractors to be open for a special event (Super Bowl) in February that will be pretty nice for all hotels in Minneapolis.â&#x20AC;? The driveway access is shared with the Home2 Suites and parking is accommodated within the Cedar Grove parking ramp. A public hearing for the project was scheduled July 18. Contact Andy Rogers at andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.
Membership expands Prior Lake-based South Metro Federal Credit Union has expanded its field of membership to include two additional counties in Minnesota. Financial services provided by South Metro will now be available to residents who live or work in Hennepin
and Carver counties as well as Scott County. Immediate family members of these residents are also eligible for South Metro membership regardless of where they live. For more information, visit southmet.com.
Business owner wins award for community involvement Lakeville Toppers Pizza franchisee Jeff Beck was awarded the Hometown Hero award at the Toppers annual conference in Madison, Wisconsin, in June, for his involvement with Lakeville charities and fundraisers. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Winning this award means our team achieved our goal, and that was to help people here as much as we possibly could,â&#x20AC;? Beck said. In 2016, Beck donated more than 200 pizzas and participated in 20 charity events in the Lakeville area. Beck also donates to every Lakeville high school football program. The walls of his store are covered in high school jerseys and banners. In addition to helping students, he supports school faculty as well. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We offer area teachers 30 percent off their orders,â&#x20AC;? Beck says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The same goes for our firefighters and police officers. We want to take care of the folks who do so much for all of us.â&#x20AC;? Toppers Pizza is located on Holyoke Avenue in Lakeville; call 952-6839599 for information.
Chuck & Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s selects nonprofits to spotlight Chuck & Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s pet supply store has chosen three Minnesota- and Wisconsin-based nonprofit organizations as the recipients of its annual Raising Awareness fundraiser: Pets Loyal to Vets, Leech Lake Legacy and Midwest Animal Rescue & Services (MARS). In Colorado, the campaign will support the Colorado Rapid Avalanche Deployment (CRAD). The Raising Awareness campaign launched in 2013 as a way for Chuck & Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s to give back to the community while empowering its customers to do the same. Customers can support the Raising Awareness campaign by rounding up their purchases in-store or making a separate donation between now and July 31. Chuck & Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s has stores locally in Eagan, Lakeville, Rosemount and Savage. Visit https:// chuckanddons.com/ for more information.
Adams Radio acquires Florida stations Adams Radio has acquired four stations from Red Hills Broadcasting in Tallahassee, Florida. The acquisition includes: WHTF-FM, Havana, Florida; WWOFFM, Tallahassee, Florida; WQTL-FM, Tallahassee, Florida; and WANKâ&#x20AC;&#x201C;FM, Lafayette, Florida. This is the fifth market for Lakeville-based Adams Radio Group. Adams owns and operates clusters in Las Cruces, New Mexico; Fort Wayne, Indiana; suburban Chicago (northwest Indiana); and Salisbury-Ocean City, Maryland.
Business Calendar
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To submit items for the Dakota County Regional Business Calendar, email: Chamber of Commerce darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com. events: â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 18, 8-9:30 Apple Valley Chamber of a.m., open house, Xfinity, 3325 Commerce events: Central Park Village Drive, Suite â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 25, 11 a.m., 100, Eagan. Ribbon cutting, ribbon cutting, Infinity Wealth 8:30 a.m. Free to attend. RSVP Alliance, 14800 Galaxie Ave., to ensure appropriate accomSuite 104, Apple Valley. Free. modations. Information: 651Information: Fabiana at fabi 452-9872 or info@dcrchamber. ana@applevalleychamber.com. com. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 18, 6-7 Burnsville Chamber of Com- p.m., Mendota Heights State merce events: of the City Address, Mendota â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 18, 11:30 Heights City Hall, 1101 Victoria a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Women Em- Curve, Mendota Heights. Inforpowered Luncheon, Innovative mation: 651-452-9872 or info@ Office Solutions, 151 E. Cliff dcrchamber.com. Road, Burnsville. Speaker: â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 25, 8-9 a.m., Jennifer Smith, founder and Coffee Break, Acctech LLC, CEO of Innovative Office So- 14555 S. Robert Trail, Suite lutions. Cost: $10 members, 202-204, Rosemount. Free to $15 nonmembers. Registration attend. Information: Emily Correquired. Information: Tricia son at 651-288-9202 or ecor Andrews at tricia@burnsville son@dcrchamber.com. chamber.com. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 25, 11:30 a.m., ribbon cutting, Viverant,
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3325 Central Park Commons Drive, Eagan. Information: Lori Oelrich at loelrich@dcrcham ber.com. â&#x20AC;˘ Wednesday, July 26, 4:30-6 p.m., Emerging Leaders Social, Lone Oak Grill, 3010 Eagandale Place, Eagan. Networking event for emerging leaders under 40. Cost: $20. Information: Kelli Morgen at kmorgen@dcrchamber.com. â&#x20AC;˘ Thursday, July 27, 8-9 a.m., Rosemount Business Council, The Rosemount Senior Living at Steeple Center, 14344 Cameo Ave. W., Rosemount. Free to attend, but RSVP required. Information: Vicki Stute at 651-452-9872 or vstute@dcrchamber.com. Lakeville Area Chamber of Commerce events: â&#x20AC;˘ Friday, July 14, 3 p.m., ribbon cutting, Mowers To Blowers, 21225 Hamburg Ave., Lakeville. Information: Shanen
Corlett at 952-469-2020 or shanen@lakevillechamber.org. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 18, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., General Membership Luncheon, Holiday Inn, 20800 Kenrick Ave., Lakeville. Speaker: Jay Gubrud. Cost: $25 early bird registration (before July 14), $30 after July 14 and $35 general admission. Information: Amy Green at 952-469-2020 or amy@lakeville chamber.org. â&#x20AC;˘ Tuesday, July 25, 2-3 p.m., Ambassador anniversary visits. Information: Shanen Corlett at 952-469-2020 or shanen@ lakevillechamber.org. Business Networking International events: â&#x20AC;˘ Leads to Referrals Chapter of BNI meets 7:30 a.m. Tuesdays at Vivo Restaurant, 15435 Founders Lane, Apple Valley. Information: Helen Peterson, 952-412-0265.
SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 7A
Seniors Ready for retirement? Ecumen Centennial House in Apple Valley will host â&#x20AC;&#x153;Are YOU Ready for Retirement?â&#x20AC;? 4-5 p.m. Wednesday, July 26. Attendees will receive information on financial planning and health-care directives. Amy Nielsen, a financial associate with Thrivent Financial, will be the speaker. Refreshments will be provided. Space is limited at this free event. RSVP to nancysolinger@ecumen. org or 952-542-5687. Ecumen Centennial House is located at 14625 Pennock Ave., Apple Valley.
Apple Valley seniors The Apple Valley Senior Center, 14601 Hayes Road, is home to the following activities, which are organized and run by the Apple Valley Seniors and Apple Valley Parks and Recreation. The facility is open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. For information, call 952953-2345 or go to www. cityofapplevalley.org. Monday, July 17 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Int. Line Dancing, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Stretch, 10 a.m.; Pool, noon; Bridge, 12:30 p.m.; Happy Stitchers, 1 p.m. Tuesday, July 18 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Quilting Bees, 9 a.m.; Bike Group, 9 a.m.; Tuesday Painters, 9:30 a.m.; Indoor Picnic Lunch, 11:30 a.m.; Pool, noon; Cribbage, noon; Pinochle, 12:30 p.m.; Hand & Foot Cards, 1 p.m.; Table Tennis, 1 p.m. Wednesday, July 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Defensive Driving, 8:30
a.m.; Donated Bread, 9 a.m.; Fun Folks on Spokes, 9 a.m.; Yoga, 9:45 a.m.; Morning Stretch, 10 a.m.; Menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bowling at Apple Place Bowl, noon; Pool, noon; Dominoes, 1 p.m.; Mahjong, 1 p.m. Thursday, July 20 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Beg. Line Dancing, 9:15 a.m.; Int. Line Dancing, 10 a.m.; FMSC, 11:30 a.m.; Insurance Counseling, noon; Pool, noon; Duplicate Bridge, 12:30 p.m.; Recreated Cards, 1 p.m.; Table Tennis, 1 p.m.; 500, 1 p.m.; Color & Chat, 1:30 p.m. Friday, July 21 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Breakfast, 8:30 a.m.; Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Breakfast, 8:30 a.m.; Fun Folks on Spokes, 9 a.m.; Discover Group, 10 a.m.; Morning Stretch, 10 a.m.; Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pool, 11 a.m.; Menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bowling at Apple Place Bowl, noon; Members Bingo, 12:30 p.m.
Nature walk in Burnsville Burnsville Recreation offers seniors ages 62-plus the Wildflower & Wildlife Nature Walk, 9-10:30 a.m. Thursday, July 20, at Sunset Pond, 3350 W. Burnsville Parkway. The walk is free. Participants are asked to wear comfortable shoes and can expect to travel one mile on an asphalt trail. Binoculars are encouraged. Registration deadline is Monday, July 17. Register by phone at 952-895-4500, online at www.burnsville. org/recreation (click â&#x20AC;&#x153;Online Registrationâ&#x20AC;?), or in person at Burnsville City Hallâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Recreation Office, 100 Civic Center Parkway, Burnsville.
Summer movie in Burnsville Burnsville Recreation will present Senior Summer Movie Day 1-3 p.m. Thursday, July 25, at Burnsville City Hall, 100 Civic Center Parkway, Burnsville. Adults 62-plus can beat the heat, enjoy some treats and learn how to waste less eats during this screening of â&#x20AC;&#x153;Just Eat It: A Food Waste Story.â&#x20AC;? Attendees will learn how to save money and waste less food. Popcorn and ice cream will be provided. All participants will also take home an â&#x20AC;&#x153;Eat Me Firstâ&#x20AC;? bin for the refrigerator. Registration deadline is Friday, July 21. Register by phone at 952-895-4500, online at www.burnsville. org/recreation (click â&#x20AC;&#x153;Online Registrationâ&#x20AC;?), or in person at Burnsville City Hallâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Recreation Office, 100 Civic Center Parkway, Burnsville.
Burnsville seniors The Burnsville Senior Center is located in the Diamondhead Education Center at 200 W. Burnsville Parkway. Call 952707-4120 for information about the following senior events. Monday, July 17 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 9:30 a.m.; Balance/Brains, 10:15 a.m.; Mobility, 11:15 a.m.; Pinochle, 12:45 p.m.; Defensive Driving Class, 1 p.m.; Coffee Talk â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Should I Go, 2 p.m. Tuesday, July 18 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Balance/Brains, 10:15 a.m.; Scrabble, 10:30 a.m.; Mobility, 11:15 a.m.; Dupli-
cate Bridge, 12:30 p.m.; Defensive Driving Class, 1 p.m.; Line Dancing. Wednesday, July 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Woodcarvers, 8 a.m.; Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Cribbage, 9:30 a.m.; DARTS CC, 10 a.m.; Chair Tai Chi, 11 a.m.; 500, 12:45 p.m.; Belle Luncheon, 1 p.m.; Wednesday in the Park, 7 p.m. Thursday, July 20 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Foot Clinic, 9 a.m.; Health Insurance Council, 9 a.m.; Belle Scrappers, 9:30 a.m.; Crafters, 10 a.m.; Balance/ Brains, 10:15 a.m.; Mobility, 11:15 a.m.; Defensive Driving Refresher, noon; Wood Carving, 6 p.m. Friday, July 21 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Sunrise Stretch, 8:30 a.m.; Painting, 9 a.m.; Hand & Foot, 12:15 p.m. Deadline: Llamas.
The following activities are sponsored by the Rosemount Parks and Recreation Department and the Rosemount Area Seniors. For more information, call the Rosemount Parks and Recreation Department at 651-322-6000. Monday, July 17 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Bridge, 9 a.m.; Bone Builders, 9:30 a.m.; 500, 1 p.m. Tuesday, July 18 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Coffee at Cub, 8 a.m.; Owatonna Tour, 8:15 a.m.; Bid Euchre, 9 a.m.; Craft Club, 1 p.m.; Easy Tai Chi, 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Advisory Board Meeting, 9 a.m.; New Member Social, 10 a.m.; Canasta, 10 a.m.; Quilting Club, 1 p.m.; Hand & Foot, 1 p.m.; Musical Jam, 1 p.m.; Matter of Balance, 1 p.m.; Yoga, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, July 20 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Cribbage, 9 a.m.; Bone Builders, 9:30 a.m.; Pinochle, 1 p.m.; Yoga, 1 p.m. Friday, July 21 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Euchre, 9 a.m.; 500 Tourney, 7 p.m. Saturday, July 22 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Euchre Tourney, 7 p.m. The Rosemount Area Seniors are located in the Steeple Center, 14375 S. Robert Trail. Check monitors and room schedules at the facility for activity locations.
Eagan seniors The Eagan Parks and Recreation Department offers programs for seniors in the Lone Oak Room at the Eagan Community Center, 1501 Central Parkway. Call 651-675-5500 for more information. Monday, July 17 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Mahjong, 9 a.m.; Zumba (Oasis), 9 a.m.; F&Fab, 10 a.m.; FFL (Oasis), 11 a.m. Tuesday, July 18 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Quilting, 9:30 a.m.; Euchre/500, 12:45 p.m. Wednesday, July 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Coffee & Discussion Group, 9 a.m.; Hand & Foot, 12:45 p.m. Thursday, July 20 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dominoes, 9 a.m.; Bridge, 12:45 p.m. Friday, July 21 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Drop In Time, 9:30-11:30 a.m.; Zumba (Oasis), 10:15 a.m.; S/B/Yoga (Oasis), 11:10 a.m.; Bingo, 1 p.m.
Lakeville seniors All Lakeville Area Active Adults events are held at Lakeville Heritage Center, 20110 Holyoke Ave. Call 952-985-4620 for information. Monday, July 17 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Yoga, 8:15 a.m.; Computer Tutoring, 9 a.m.; Knitting Class, 9:30 a.m.; Interval
Rosemount seniors
Walking, 9:30 a.m.; Wii Bowling, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Silver Sneakers Flex Fitness 1, 11 a.m.; Silver Sneakers Flex Fitness 2, noon; Texas Hold â&#x20AC;&#x2122;em & Mahjong, 1 p.m.; Spanish Beginners Class, 1 p.m.; Spanish Intermediates Class, 2 p.m. Deadline: State Capitol Tour. Tuesday, July 18 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Owatonna Trip, 8:45 a.m.; Pickleball, 9 a.m.; Dominoes & Poker, 9 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Party Bridge, noon; Ping Pong, 12:30 p.m.; Bingo, 1 p.m.; Billiards, 1 p.m. Wednesday, July 19 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Golf, 8 a.m.; Health Angels Biking, 8:15 a.m.; Beginners Line Dancing, 8:30 a.m.; Poker & Hearts, 9 a.m.; Line Dancing, 9 a.m. to noon; Casual Golf Women, 10 a.m.; iPhone 1-on-1 Assistance, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Silver Sneakers Flex Fitness 1, 11 a.m.; Pinochle, noon; Facebook â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Introduction, 1 p.m.; Cardio & Strength, 5:30 p.m.; Pickleball, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, July 20 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Red Hat Chorus, 10:30 a.m.; Silver Sneakers Flex Fitness 1, 11 a.m.; Silver Sneakers Flex Fitness 2, noon; Euchre, Hand & Foot, noon; Quilting Group, 1 p.m.; Tai Chi, 1:30 p.m.; Red Hat Chorus at Trinity Terrace, 2 p.m.; Zumba Gold, 3:30 p.m. Friday, July 21 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Yoga, 8:15 a.m.; Pickleball, 9 a.m.; Poker, 9 a.m.; 500 Cards, 10 a.m.; Day Old Bread, 10:15 a.m.; Duplicate Bridge, 12:30 p.m.; Social Painting, 1 p.m.
Religion Garage sale at St. Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s St. Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Lutheran Church, 20165 Heath Ave., Lakeville, will hold its Epic Sale July 13-15. Sale hours are 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. July 13; 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. July 14; 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. July 15 (bag sale, $5 per bag or three bags for $10). For more information, call 952-469-4916 or visit sjlcl.org.
Orphan choir returns to AV church The Matsiko World Orphan Choir will perform at the 10 a.m. worship service Sunday, July 16, at Spirit of Life Presbyterian Church, 14401 Pilot Knob Road, Apple Valley. All are welcome. The Matsiko choir is currently made up of 27 of the poorest orphaned
and at-risk children from Nepal, India, Liberia and Peru. Their ages range from 5 to 16. The children, with their 11 adult leaders and teachers, will stay in the homes of Spirit of Life families from July 13-18, as the choir will also perform at other venues in the Twin Cities area. For further information on Matsikoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s visit to Spirit of Life, call 952-423-2212. For further information on Spirit of Life Presbyterian Church, visit www. spiritoflifeav.org.
Memorial Park in New Prague. Champions Night will feature former Viking defensive back Anthony Bass, former Gopher AllAmerican and Baltimore Raven Ron Johnson II, former Minnesota state champion and Gopher wrestler Nate Thomas, and three local high school athletes. All will share some of their life story, and what it means to be a true champion. The free family event includes door prizes, carnival games, live band, inflatables for all ages, PS4 Community arcade tent, face painting, block party free snacks and catered and champions food, and meet and greet with the athletes. night For more informaCalvary Church in New tion, visit www.calvaryPrague is sponsoring the churchmn.com or call fifth annual Community 952-222-7987. Block Party & Night of Champions 5-8:30 p.m. Thursday, July 27, at
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Former District 194 Executive Director of Business Services Michael Baumann attends his first School Board meeting in his new role as superintendent of the district July 11.
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8A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
When dreams go up in smoke
DUCK, from 1A but there was junk in the way so she couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t swim out.â&#x20AC;? He brought the bewildered black and yellow duckling he named Moline home, and with the help of family created a fenced house for her on the familyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s deck, complete with a child-size swimming pool, a ramp and shelter. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a little hut she can go into if itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s raining,â&#x20AC;? aid Calebâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s sister Jocelyn Mulvihill, 18. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s bedding on the bottom of it and a kiddie pool with a stairs to go up and down.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;This duck is pretty well set up,â&#x20AC;? agreed Calebâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mom Melissa Gephart. She said at first they were considering releasing the mallard, who they figured was only a few days old when Caleb found her, but Moline quickly melded into the hearts of everyone in the family. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She was still yellow and fuzzy and just very adorable,â&#x20AC;? Melissa said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;You canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t really turn stuff like that away.â&#x20AC;? Moline has bonded most strongly with Caleb and often follows him around. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She and Caleb are attached at the hip,â&#x20AC;? Melissa said. She said Moline squawks at Calebâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s bedroom door at night until she is let in and snuggles next to him on the bed to sleep. They at first put her in a glass aquarium, then graduated to a bigger tote before putting her in the biggest tote they could find before making her the pen, a more permanent structure that seemed to
LOT, from 1A tively change requirements for rural development and asked for residents to have more input. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not good to backdate checks, so if weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re going to back-date an ordinance 40 years, that doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t make any sense,â&#x20AC;? Callahan said. Lakeville Planning Commission member Karl Drotning said the city has amended its ordinances in the past to accommodate other nonconforming lots, many around local lakes. He said when the property was subdivided, there was an expectation set, and when the property does develop, it will have to meet the same requirements of any unsewered
EZ Auto Repair owner reflects on recent fire by Maren Bauer SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Photo submitted
Moline the duckling shortly after she was rescued from a storm sewer. seal her place in their lives. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think we have a new family member, which is wonderful,â&#x20AC;? Melissa said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She loves Caleb so much,â&#x20AC;? agreed Jocelyn. Molineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s days are usually spent in her deckhouse and they bring her inside the house at times when there is bad weather. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Caleb doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t even like to leave her out when thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rain, although ducks are supposed to like rain,â&#x20AC;? Melissa said. The familyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s five-pound dog, Rio, took it in stride when Moline came as a tiny duckling, but now appears to family to be somewhat alarmed at how fast the duck has grown. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re basically the same size,â&#x20AC;? Jocelyn laughed. Caleb brought Moline to Pan-O-Progâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pet Show although he could not enter her in any of the com-
petitions because of the age restrictions. He easily scooped her into his arms where she nestled near him amidst a crowd of people and he focused completely on her as he answered questions about how much his life has changed since finding her. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know how to be outside anymore because sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s so used to me feeding her,â&#x20AC;? Caleb said. Melissa said the family is working on plans to build her a winter home inside their garage and keep it warm with a heater lamp. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I want to keep her forever,â&#x20AC;? Caleb said. Melissa agreed Moline is not going anywhere. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The go hand in hand,â&#x20AC;? she said.
lot. Drotning said the conditional use permit requires plans to show where two septic systems go and meet all the setback requirements. â&#x20AC;&#x153;So itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s held to a fairly high standard, the most important one being can you have your original septic and then the alternate one when the first one goes south if that happens,â&#x20AC;? Drotning said. He called the lot size small, but said there are many lots in the area that also are non-conforming because they were subdivided as well. â&#x20AC;&#x153;All this really is, is correcting a wrong where the county allowed it to be subdivided and created the expectations,â&#x20AC;? Drotning
said. Planning Commission Chair Jason Swenson then said he considered changing the ordinance to change the date retroactively was the most positive outcome they could have for the situation. He noted there would be a public hearing process for any development on the lot that would have to take place. â&#x20AC;&#x153;They have to meet the standards required for that at that time,â&#x20AC;? he said. Callahan told Sun Thisweek he has nothing against development of the house, but is concerned there is not enough space to replace the septic system, which would require running 55,000 pound dump trucks that could damage neighboring homesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; foundations or crush the pipes of the first septic system. He suggested Klotz purchase more frontage from neighbors to ensure the lot would have sufficient access to a replacement septic system. Callahan said he is trying to protect the people who would eventually purchase the property, which is for sale. Klotz did not return calls seeking comment.
Eric Zeimet had worked tirelessly for years to realize his dream of owning his own auto repair shop. The dream lasted for just over two months. On Wednesday, June 21, Zeimet watched in shock as his dream went up in flames. In a fluke accident, EZ Auto Repair on Third Street caught fire. Zeimet says that no one is to blame, and he recognized the accident as one of the risks in his line of work. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I honestly do not know if this could have been prevented, we were fixing something to hopefully prevent this exact situation from happening somewhere else or even while driving,â&#x20AC;? he said. The silver lining of the situation: it couldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been worse. He hasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t had time to sit idle. Zeimet is continuing to run his business out of a personal garage and is trying to figure out what to do next. He remains inspired by encouraging
social media posts, as well as motivated to better his future for himself, and for his family. Zeimet has realized his dream once before, and even though the event devastated him, he remains optimistic. In building his business from the ground up, he has an even wider support network. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The support and outpouring from the community, my family, and friends have been nothing short of amazing and have truly inspired me to keep moving forward,â&#x20AC;? Zeimet said, â&#x20AC;&#x153;to ensure I keep my dream alive, to rebuild and prove to all of them and myself that it can happen again.â&#x20AC;? In difficult times, we find ourselves repeating a set of words to keep us focused and grounded. They can be fairly simple, sometimes considered cliche, but in their simplicity they can have a profound impact. Zeimetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mantra follows this pattern: â&#x20AC;&#x153;What doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t kill you, makes you stronger.â&#x20AC;? As he focuses on the rebuilding process, this is the biggest piece of advice to anyone else facing a setback. The phrase, often used in sports and physical en-
A water quality town hall meeting will be held in Burnsville on Oct. 4. The meeting is one of 10 town halls Gov. Mark Dayton announced July 5 that will offer Minnesotans an opportunity to discuss the Contact Laura Adelmann at water quality challenges laura.adelmann@ecm-inc.com. facing their communities
50, from 1A â&#x20AC;&#x153;Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not going to interfere with us very much,â&#x20AC;? White said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There will be a lot of construction going on, but itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not going to interfere with our business at all.â&#x20AC;? Next summer, stage two of the $15.6 million project will focus on widening County Road 50 to a fourlane divided road with turn lanes. Bike and walking paths will flank the road, and a TECH, from 1A tions. Anderson said issues the group may explore range from accessibility to app development, body cameras and security infrastructure. He said the group should also explore ways the public can contact the city using technology. City Council Member Luke Hellier said the work group could focus on concerns of accessibility for residents and business, investigate and promote ways to eliminate paperwork, and generally make things easier for people to do. He suggested the group work with providers to find ways for seniors and low-income families to
and the state, to learn from experts, and to engage with policymakers. The town hall meetings will be attended by key members of Daytonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cabinet who want to hear from Minnesotans about ways to improve the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s water quality at the local
level. The Oct. 4 town hall meeting will be 6:30-8:30 p.m. at Diamondhead Education Center, 200 W. Burnsville Parkway. Registration opens at 6 p.m. This meeting is free and open to the public.
traffic signal at County Road 50 and Ipava Avenue will be replaced; the Lakeville North High School sign will be removed. Lakevilleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s project share totals $7.2 million, and the countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s share is $8.7 million. Sass said the county has reached agreements acquiring rights of way from 30 of the 44 properties owners in the project area. Mayor Doug Anderson emphasized in a June 26
City Council work session the need for accesses to remain open for businesses in the area. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have to work really hard to ensure that people know how to get to the businesses that are there,â&#x20AC;? Anderson said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And so somebody coming to one of those three legacy businesses, they need to know they can still come down Highway 50 when it says â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;local traffic.â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;?
have reduced costs for WiFi and affordable internet access. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think the broader picture is how can we just be more accessible on technology,â&#x20AC;? Hellier said. Council Member Bart Davis agreed, noting the city should strive to offer residents and businesses â&#x20AC;&#x153;the opportunity to interact with us how they want to interact with us.â&#x20AC;? He said businesses owners are responding to customer inquiries when it is convenient for them, not just limited work-week hours. â&#x20AC;&#x153;How can we start thinking a little bit more about that, given the change in consumer behavior and the expectations of more information, more real-time, and
how do we address that as a city,â&#x20AC;? Davis said. City Council Member Colleen LaBeau said the city needs to consider how it can serve the small business owner who may be a one-person shop. Davis described cybersecurity as â&#x20AC;&#x153;a critical piece to explore,â&#x20AC;? especially in areas involving police video recordings. Lakeville Information Systems Manager Ralph Vetter said the city needs a gap analysis to discover what technology and access the community needs but is missing. He said technology security may be more internal, but the big thing is looking at a gap analysis to augment services the city offers. City Council Member Brian Wheeler said the city needs to investigate what it would take to put free WiFi in downtown Lakeville or at Antlers Park. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wi-Fi for kids is huge,â&#x20AC;? Wheeler said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Because all you hear every day is â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m out of data,â&#x20AC;&#x2122; so having it at the lake or downtown, citywide Wi-Fi spots, thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d be cool.â&#x20AC;? City Administrator Justin Miller said the city expects to have the group in place and ready to start meeting by the end of summer.
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deavors, implies a sense of gratitude that one is alive. As Psychology Today reported, â&#x20AC;&#x153;research demonstrates that focusing on what we are grateful for is a universally rewarding way to feel happier and more fulfilled.â&#x20AC;? Zeimet has continued to push onward and look for the silver linings. He hasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t focused on what happened, but instead â&#x20AC;&#x153;that we all got out safely. We all are uninjured. That is a miracle; that is the silver lining.â&#x20AC;? Zeimetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s setback is a testament to the power of gratitude and the strength found in community. With a campaign started by his family, Farmington strangers have given donations and words of support in Zeimetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s time of need. A You Caring page is at http://tinyurl.com/ yabvw4ng. Besides a knack for fixing cars, Zeimet also possesses that all-important thing with feathers â&#x20AC;&#x201D; wings. Forever looking forward, Zeimet hopes he can come out the other side of this with his dream alive again.
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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 11A
Pan-O-Prog Memories
Photo by Laura Adelmann
Big Wheel races get kids rolling.
Photo by Laura Adelmann
Kids take shots into a basketball hoop on the back of a wandering character during the Pan-O-Prog parade.
Photo by Laura Adelmann
Kids await the next candy-throwing float.
Photo by Laura Adelmann
Lakeville Yellow Ribbon inspires applause from some in the crowd.
Photo by Laura Adelmann
A treat helps pass the time before judging at the pet show.
Photo by Laura Adelmann
New District 194 Superintendent Michael Baumann waves behind a banner welcoming him to his new position in the district. He started with the district in 2013 as the executive director of business services. School Board members also walked with him in the parade. Flanking him here are School Board Members Bob Erickson and Judy Keliher.
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12A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
Sports Lakeville honors its athletic tradition Four individuals and a program go into Panther Hall of Fame by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
If a group of athletes goes six years without losing a meet – not even at sections or state – that’s likely to get them some kind of commemorative plaque displayed at their school. And so it is with Lakeville High School’s gymnastics teams of the 1990s and early 2000s, which were honored at the Panther Athletic Hall of Fame induction ceremony Sunday afternoon. The hall of fame committee inducted its first class in 2005 and in the years since has cited several high-achieving Lakeville teams from specific seasons. This was the first time the Panther Athletic Hall of Fame recognized an era – specifically, the gymnastics team’s “Decade of Dominance,” which ran from late 1992 to early 2003. Yes, that’s actually 11 seasons. The Panthers qualified for all 11 state meets in that period, winning the Class AA team championship nine times. In one stretch from the 1994-95 season through the 1999-2000 season, the team never lost. Four individuals, two student-athletes and two coaches, also were inducted into the hall of fame at Sunday’s ceremony at Crystal Lake Golf Club.
All for one The Panthers earned nine of their school’s 11 state gymnastics championships from 1993 through 2003. They placed third in the two years they didn’t win. While Lakeville had numerous quality gymnasts in that time frame, it never had the state individual
all-around champion. One of the team’s top performers of all time said that was because of a philosophy that prioritized team goals over individual objectives. “Some individuals had to make sacrifices in order for the team to have success,” said Kelli NygrenHolm, a 2012 Panther Athletic Hall of Fame inductee. “That came from Milan (Mader, Lakeville’s head coach) and the phenomenal coaching staff he surrounded himself with. If you had to go first on an event because the team needed your score, then you went first” even though the gymnast might have had a higher individual score had she competed later in the event. Lakeville did have six state event championships, won by four different gymnasts, during the “Decade of Dominance.” But it was primarily team accomplishments that made it a successful run. In addition to the six-year undefeated streak in all competitions, Lakeville won 130 consecutive dual meets from February 1987 until December 2000.
Making Lakeville a basketball town Former Lakeville and Lakeville North girls basketball coach Andy Berkvam and current Panthers boys basketball coach John Oxton went into the hall of fame the same year. But twenty-seven years ago, they were seeking the same job – head coach of Lakeville High School’s boys team. The position went to Oxton, who had just arrived in Lakeville after six years of teaching and coaching in Montana. “I wanted to be the boys basketball coach, but they hired the right guy,” said Berkvam, who accepted the Lakeville girls basketball head coaching opening.
There were some early struggles, as Berkvam’s first Lakeville team started the Jon Jellum season with a 13-game l o s i n g streak. The Pa n t h e r s ’ fortunes eventually changed, and they Andy made the Berkvam first of nine state tournament appearances u n d e r Berkvam in 1999. L a ke v - John Oxton ille won back-toback state Class 4A championships in 2001 and 2002, going a combined 55-1 over the two seasons. The Panthers also finished second in the 2004 Class 4A tournament. Berkvam’s program remained a state power after the North-South split in 2005. The Panthers won their third state title in 2010. They were 32-0 in the 2009-10 season and are the last Class 4A team to go undefeated. “When I first started coaching, I was all about winning,” Berkvam said. “Later, I understood the importance of helping kids develop.” Berkvam still teaches physical education in Lakeville but in 2013 returned to his alma mater, Northfield High School, to coach boys basketball. Oxton, similarly, helped put Lakeville and Lakeville North boys basketball on the map. He has taken nine Panthers teams to the state tournament. Lakeville North has won section championships the last six years; if the Panthers win again in 2018, it’s believed
that will be a state record for Class 4A. North was in the Class 4A championship game three times in five years, winning in 2014 with an improbable finalminute comeback against Hopkins in the title game. Both got a chance to coach their children on varsity teams; Oxton also took a two-year sabbatical as North head coach so he could watch his daughter play basketball for Lakeville South. Both coaches said they relished the opportunity to influence young people on and off the court. “I get a chance to make a difference in a kid’s life, and hopefully he can pay it forward someday,” Oxton said.
Four-sport athlete What Merle Thompson did in the 1950s was a rarity then and is almost unheard of now. He was a four-sport athlete, competing in football, basketball, baseball and track and field. He earned 14 letters in the four sports and still had time left to study, as Thompson also was valedictorian of Lakeville High School’s class of 1953. Lakeville was a much different community then, Thompson recalled. “It was a rural school,” he said. “We had a student body of 150 for grades 9-12. The senior class had 20 boys and 14 girls.” That didn’t stop Lakeville from playing 11-man football – and being very good at it. The 1952 team went undefeated and won its conference. Thompson served in the Navy, then had a 48year career as an engineer and project manager at IBM in Rochester. He and his wife, who’s also a Lakeville graduate, have three children and seven grandchildren. He remembers his high school graduating class fondly. “There are about
Larson, Peterson win Pan-O-Prog races More than 300 compete at Casperson Park by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Lauren Peterson and Kaytlyn Larson traded championships in the women’s 1- and 4-mile races at Saturday’s Pan-O-Prog Run at Casperson Park in Lakeville. Peterson, who will be a junior at Farmington High School in the fall and is the reigning Class AA girls 3,200-meter champion in track and field, came in three seconds ahead of Larson in the 1-mile race. Larson, a Lakeville South graduate who will be a junior at Oklahoma State this fall, edged Peterson by three seconds in the 4-mile. The 4-mile was the first race of the PanO-Prog Run, with the 1-mile taking place one hour later. Andrew Thies, a former South Dakota State University runner, won the men’s 1- and 4-mile races. The 4-mile race had 215 finishers, while 128 completed the 1-mile race. The event also included a halfmile fun run for children. Following are some of the top finishers in the 1- and 4-mile races:
1 mile Male top 10 Andrew Thies, 24, 4:52.8; Kyle Serreyn, 26, 5:03.8; Kyle Economy, 25, 5:08.1; Noah Revels, 15, Farmington, 5:10.9; Adam Unke, 18, Burnsville, 5:22.6; Paul Schmitter, 15, Eagan, 5:24.1; Emmanuel Schmitter, 13, Eagan, 5:24.1; Vijay Pranav, 14, Apple Valley, 5:26.4;
Jason Schultz, 48, 5:28.1; Matthew terson, 16, 23:29; Noah Revels, 15, Berg, 16, Savage, 5:31.1. Farmington, 23:45; Brennen Peterson, 14, Farmington, 24:02; MatFemale top 10 thew Berg, 16, Savage, 24:02; Paul Lauren Peterson, 16, Farming- Schmitter, 15, Eagan, 24:29. ton, 5:26.4; Kaytlyn Larson, 20, Lakeville, 5:30.0; Patty Jo Eng- Female top 10 lish, 17, 6:01.0; Lindsay Wirfs, Kaytlyn Larson, 20, Lakeville, 12, 6:16.4; Lilyen Peterson, 11, 23:56; Lauren Peterson, 16, Farm6:24.5; Ella McDevitt, 14, Lakev- ington, 23:59; Patty Jo English, 17, ille, 6:46.4; Lydia Schmitter, 10, 26:19; Hannah Moland, 19, 26:20; Eagan, 7:00.2; Gail Gruebling, 47, Bethann Chamberlain, 35, BloomFarmington, 7:06.3; Theresa Ka- ington, 28:32; Elisabeth Rosandich, vouras, 51, 7:17.6; Hadley Knight, 34, Lakeville, 29:07; Sydney Re9, 7:18.3. galado, 17, Rosemount, 30:02; Jennifer DeGrave, 30, 30:32; Andrea Male age-group winners Loger, 37, 30:38; Violet Tessier, 16, 9 and under – Brodie Gilbart, 30:44. 7:04.9; 10-11 – Nicholas Randall, 7:07.3; 12-14 – Emmanuel Schmit- Male age-group winners ter; 15-19 – Revels; 20-29 – Thies; 9 and under – Levi Van Ginkel, 30-39 – Kyle Fleener, Lakeville, Lakeville, 31:32; 10-11 – Braylon 5:43.4; 40-49 – Schultz; 50-59 – Kerr, Lakeville, 25:09; 12-14 – John Romig, Burnsville, 6:35.8; 60- Brennen Peterson; 15-19 – Schultz; 69 – Brian Benson, Apple Valley, 20-29 – Thies; 30-39 – Kyle Fleen6:39.6. er, Lakeville, 25:05; 40-49 – David Chamberlain, Bloomington, 24:48; Female age-group 50-59 – Robert Carney, Lakeville, 25:09; 60-69 – Pat Haake, 28:33; 70 winners and over – Rick Schuldt, 32:26. 9 and under – Knight; 10-11 – Lilyen Peterson; 12-14 – Wirfs; Female age-group 15-19 – Lauren Peterson; 20-29 – Larson; 30-39 – Jennifer DeGrave, winners 7:24.2; 40-49 – Gruebling; 50-59 – 9 and under – Mikalya VetTheresa Kavouras, 7:17.6; 60-69 – ter, 38:03; 10-11 – Claire Koznick, Sue Schneeman, 5:31.2; 70 and over 43:18; 12-14 – Emma Meyer, 30:58; – Barbara Schuldt, 11:41.3 15-19 – Lauren Peterson; 20-29 – Larson; 30-39 – Bethann Chamber4 mile lain; 40-49 – Jennifer Acker, 30:52; 50-59 – Theresa Kavouras, 30:51; Male top 10 60-69 – Sue Schneeman, 39:39; 70 Andrew Thies, 24, 21:49; Kyle and over – Rosemary Harnly, 39:31. Economy, 25, 22:05; Spencer Schultz, 18, 22:34; Messai Kurz, 15, Contact Mike Shaughnessy at mike. 22:39; Kyle Serreyn, 22:52; Jack Ot- shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com.
North goes 1-4 at Gopher Classic baseball Wayzata won the Gopher Classic for the second consecutive year, while Farmington and Burnsville were among local teams that made impressive runs in the largest American Legion baseball tournament in the country. Wayzata defeated West Fargo, N.D., 3-2 in the
championship game Tuesday at Minnetonka High School, completing a 9-0 sweep through the fiveday tournament. Wayzata shut out four of its opponents, including three in the playoff rounds. Farmington won four of six games in the Gopher Classic and won the Lakeville North pool,
becoming the only team to advance to the playoff stage. Burnsville was 4-1 in pool play at Alimagnet Park, the same record as Chaska, but Chaska advanced to the playoffs because of its 13-11 victory over the Cobras. Eastview, Rosemount and Eagan also were among the 96 teams that
Photos by Mike Shaughnessy
(Above) Gymnasts on Lakeville High School’s teams of 1993 through 2003 are greeted at the Panther Athletic Hall of Fame ceremony Sunday. (Below) Merle Thompson, a 1953 LHS graduate and new hall of fame inductee, talks about his time in Lakeville.
competed in the Gopher Classic. Lakeville North was 1-4 in pool play at Fredrickson Field in Elko and Lakeville North High School. Braden Walsh pitched a two-hit shutout in the Panthers’ 2-0 victory over Omaha Roncalli on Saturday in Elko.
five of us left from that class,” Thompson said. “We played all the sports together through junior high and senior high. I think we did ourselves, our school and our town proud.”
Jellum’s records still stand Lakeville shot put and discus throwers have had a tough time equaling Jon Jellum’s school records, even though they’ve had almost 25 years to try. Jellum was the state Class AA champion in the shot and discus in 1993, and his best throws in those events still rank among the top 50 all-time in Minnesota high school competition. As a 6-foot-4, 230-pound senior, he played on Lakeville’s 1992
state championship football team and was named All-State. He was a threetime all-conference athlete in football and track. Jellum also was on John Oxton’s first boys basketball team at Lakeville High, was a four-year letterwinner in that sport, and by his senior year was a captain and all-conference player. He lives in North Carolina now with his wife and five children and works as a sales representative. He welcomed the opportunity to return to Lakeville and reconnect with people who helped shape his future. “It has been far too long. I’ve missed you guys like you can’t imagine,” Jellum said. “I can’t tell you how grateful I am to receive this award.”
Off to take on the world
Mike Shaughnessy
Regan Smith speaks with swimmers at her club, Riptide Swimming in Apple Valley, at a reception Monday afternoon. On Tuesday, the Lakeville resident left for Croatia to train with the other American swimmers who have qualified for the FINA World Championships in Budapest, Hungary. Smith, 15 and a Lakeville North High School student, advanced by finishing second in the women’s 200-meter backstroke in the U.S. national championships in Indianapolis. She is now ranked eighth in the world in that event. The women’s 200 backstroke competition will be July 28-29.
Sports Brief Lakeville North football camps The Lakeville North Panther Football Camp for players in grades 3-8 will be Monday, July 17, through Thursday, July 20, at the Lakeville North High School stadium and practice fields. All sessions are 1-4 p.m. Players in grades 3-5 need to bring football shoes and a water bottle. Players in grades 6-8 will wear full pads. Camp instructors are Lakeville North varsity coaches, current varsity players and former varsity players now on college teams. Snack and drink breaks are built into the camp schedule. All players will receive a camp T-shirt. For more information or to register, visit www.lakevillenorthfootball.com/youthcamps.
SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 13A
More Pan-O-Prog 2017
Photo by Laura Adelmann
A horse makes friends in the crowd. Photo by Laura Adelmann
Two dogs revel in attention at the pet show.
Photo by Laura Adelmann
The public is introduced to Schmitty & Sonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; new electric bus in the parade. Photo by Laura Adelmann
Expect the unexpected at the pet show.
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14A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
Hands-on learning in a digital age Dakota City Heritage Village hosts summer events by Maren Bauer SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Photo by Terri Greenberg
Former Eagan City Administrator Tom Hedges thanks John Nasseff and shows him the contents of the historical markers at the historic town hall in Eagan during a dedication ceremony June 28. Nasseff’s financial gift made the plaza possible.
Tom Hedges plaza dedicated at 1914 Historic Town Hall Tom Hedges Town Hall Plaza was officially dedicated during a ceremony last week at the 1914 Town Hall in Eagan. A gift of $100,000 made in December by former West Publishing executive John Nasseff, and his wife Helene Houle, helped fund both the plaza and future displays and display cases. Tom Hedges Town Hall Plaza includes brick pavers, two granite benches and the historical marker sign.
Hedges was Eagan’s first city administrator and guided Eagan from a rural township to the city it is today. He moved to Eagan with his wife Debbie in 1976 when there were 16,000 residents. During the 37 years Hedges served, the city grew to 65,000 and staff grew to more than 235 employees. Nasseff was a senior executive when West Publishing, what is now Thomson Reuters, relocat-
LEGAL NOTICES INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 196 ROSEMOUNTAPPLE VALLEY-EAGAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS STATE OF MINNESOTA NOTICE OF FILING DATES FOR SCHOOL BOARD ELECTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the period for filing affidavits of candidacy for the office of School Board member of Independent School District 196 shall begin at 7:30 a.m., Tuesday, August 1, 2017, and shall close at 5 p.m., Tuesday, August 15, 2017. The School Board election shall be held from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, November 7, 2017. Three members will be elected to the School Board for terms of four years each. Affidavits of candidacy are available during office hours (7:30 a.m. - 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, August 1 - August 14, and until 5 p.m., on Tuesday, August 15, 2017) from the Office of the School Board, 3455 153rd Street West, Rosemount (651-423-7736). Candidates must pay a non-refundable $2 filing fee or submit a petition of at least 500 signatures. A candidate must be an eligible voter, 21 years of age or more on assuming office (January 1, 2018), must have been a resident of District 196 for 30 days before the school district general election and may not be registered as a convicted sex offender. A person who meets the candidacy qualifications may also become a candidate if five or more voters draft the candidate by filing an application on behalf of the candidate with the school district clerk. Proof of service of the application on the candidate must be endorsed on the application. The same filing fee requirements and timeline are applicable. Both the affidavits of candidacy and candidacy by application forms must be filed in the Office of the School Board and the filing fee paid prior to 5 p.m., Tuesday, August 15, 2017. Dated: June 26, 2017 BY ORDER OF THE SCHOOL BOARD By: /s/ Gary Huusko School Board Clerk Published in the Apple Valley Sun Thisweek, Lakeville Sun Thisweek, Burnsville-Eagan Sun Thisweek July 14, 2017 709926
CITY OF LAKEVILLE DAKOTA COUNTY MINNESOTA SUMMARY ORDINANCE NO. 983 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING TITLE 8 OF THE LAKEVILLE CITY CODE REGARDING THE FIRE PREVENTION CODE AND RECREATIONAL FIRES This ordinance amends Title 8 of the City Code regarding the fire prevention code and recreational fires. The ordinance adopts Minnesota State Statute Chapter 88 regulations concerning open burning. The ordinance requires a permit for open burning within the City except for recreational fires, which are defined in the ordinance, provided the recreational fires are in compliance with the requirements set forth in the ordinance. The ordinance also prohibits open burning of specified materials. A printed copy of the entire ordinance is available for inspection by any person during the City Clerk’s regular office hours. Approved for publication by the City Council of the City of Lakeville, Minnesota, this 5th day of July
2017 CITY OF LAKEVILLE BY: Douglas P. Anderson, Mayor ATTEST: Charlene Friedges City Clerk Published in the Lakeville Sun Thisweek July 14, 2017 709256
PUBLIC NOTICE DRAFT 2035 LONG-TERM COMPREHENSIVE PLAN AIRLAKE AIRPORT PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD OPEN The Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC) has prepared a draft version of the 2035 Long-Term Comprehensive Plan (LTCP) for Airlake Airport. The purpose of the LTCP is to identify facility needs at Airlake Airport through 2035. The public is invited to review this document and provide written comments to the MAC. Airlake Airport is located in Dakota County, within the borders of Eureka Township and abutting the southern border of the City of Lakeville. A small portion of the airport lies within the City of Lakeville boundary. The Draft 2035 LTCP recommends that the runway at Airlake Airport (Runway 12-30) be extended to a length of 4,850 feet from its current length of 4,099 feet. Unlike previous plans, the recommended concept in this update does not require the relocation of Cedar Avenue (County Road 23) on the east side of the airport. It does, however, consider the relocation of a section of 225th Street (a township road) to a new intersection with Cedar Avenue in order to accommodate the runway changes. Copies of the Draft LTCP document will be available for distribution, and for viewing on the MAC’s website, beginning Monday, July 17, 2017. Written comments will be accepted until Wednesday, August 30, 2017 at 5:00 PM CDT. https://metroairports.org/General-Aviation/Airports/Airlake.aspx A printed copy of the document will be available for review at the following locations: MAC General Office building, 6040 28th Avenue South, Minneapolis; Lakeville City Hall, 20195 Holyoke Avenue, Lakeville; Eureka Township Town Hall, 25043 Cedar Avenue South, Lakeville; Heritage Library, 20085 Heritage Drive, Lakeville; and at Airlake Airport (MAC Office), 8140 220th Street West, Lakeville. Requests for a paper copy can be sent to the email address below. The public is also invited to attend informational meetings to learn more about the proposed improvements included in the Draft LTCP. See below for the times and locations: Wednesday, August 9, 2017 6:00 to 8:00 PM Lakeville City Council Chambers 20195 Holyoke Avenue Lakeville, MN 55044 Thursday, August 10, 2017 6:00 to 8:00 PM Eureka Township Town Hall 25043 Cedar Avenue South Lakeville, MN 55044 The meetings will include a 6:30 p.m. presentation by MAC staff, as well as opportunities to ask questions and talk directly with staff. Written comments can be submitted via email by sending them to Airlake-Airport-LTCP-Comments@ mspmac.org, or by physically mailing them to Neil Ralston, MAC Airport Development, 6040 28th Avenue South, Minneapolis MN 55450. Published in the Lakeville Sun Thisweek July 14, 2017 710626
ed from St. Paul to Eagan thanks in part to the help of the city administrator at the time, Hedges. “Eagan is what it is today, in large part, because of Tom Hedges,” said Nasseff in a news release last year. “Tom’s leadership, work ethic and cando approach is why West Publishing came here, and it’s why Helene and I wanted to honor Tom with a plaza in his name, while at the same time helping Town Hall continue to recover from the fire with new displays.” Hedges mentored 40 people who went on to become city managers or department directors. He served 13 different city councils and eight mayors while attending 1,600 city council meetings. Tom Hedges Day was proclaimed May 11, 2001, in honor of when he was named City Manager of the Year in Minnesota. He retired in 2013. The Eagan Town Hall has stood at the corner
of Pilot Knob Road and Wescott Road since 1914 and it’s the oldest surviving government building within the city. It served as the location for meetings and election until 1965. A new city hall was built across the street in 1965. The building was moved back 100 feet in 1988 when Pilot Knob was widened, and a grant from the state and donations from Eagan Rotary was used to help refurbish the building in 1990. In 2013, arsonists set fire to the building. Many of the contents were saved, but the building went through an extensive rebuilding process through which the roof structures and interior surfaces were refurbished or replaced. The building has since been restored to its original 1914 appearance, and serves as a museum, hosted by the Eagan Historical Society. — Andy Rogers
in the early 1900s is a great way to continue using her teaching skills. Peterson said that retired folks make for great volunteers, but high school and college students have also been seen at the village. They’re always looking for volunteers, especially during the Dakota County Fair, the October harvest, and the first weekend in December in which they celebrate a Victorian Christmas. Tollefsrud and Peterson both enjoy seeing the joy in children’s faces and sometimes the nostalgia that older generations experience. Attendees’ reactions are part of the reason Peterson still loves what she does. Tollefsrud enthuses that “Dakota City Heritage Village is a gem in Farmington,” but Kris Akin, a board member in charge of marketing, says that “there is much competition nearby in the metro area for families and individual’s free time.” What separates Dakota City, Akin maintains, is that “we are unique though, in that we are a local, educational, visual representation or re-enactment of our region’s earlier history. The village has been built, planned, supported and maintained by dedicated volunteers, financial donations, businesses and organizations that see the value in sharing this history.” As an independent nonprofit, all of the admission fees and donations go back to the restoration of the village. Its volunteers and board members are committed to preserving the history of the region, and sharing that with the community. More about Dakota City is at dakotacity.org.
SmartBoards, iPads, and smartphones are everywhere. In this Digital Age, where infinite information reigns supreme at the ends of our fingertips, people sometimes get locked behind a screen. In need of some experiential learning? Or perhaps some time-travel? Just around the corner at Dakota City Heritage Village, Alisa Peterson, education director at Dakota City Heritage Village, routinely takes students and families on “time travel trips back in time.” She’ll be doing that a lot in the summer months as the village gears up for Summer Fun in the Village on July 14, Family & Friends Fun Day on July 21 and the Dakota County Fair in August. Peterson has been education director for Dakota City for eight years and has been a volunteer since 2001. She loves dressing up in a costume and playing a villager, while giving onlookers a glimpse into what life was like in 1900. She recruits and trains volunteers, leads a summer day camp, and gives tours throughout the school year. Penny Tollefsrud, a longtime volunteer, enjoys seeing children’s curiosity as “they see the blacksmith pounding iron, a mother baking dessert in a wood stove or doing laundry outside with tubs and wringer, and enjoy looking through stereoscopes, and gazing at what they can buy at the general store.” A retired elementary and special education Contact Maren Bauer at teacher, Tollefsrud has maren.bauer@ecm-inc.com. found that re-enacting life
Summer theater presents ‘Hunchback’ Performances to feature local students by Tad Johnson SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE
Young people from throughout the south metro this month will be performing the Midwest premiere of “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” which will combine elements of Victor Hugo’s novel and songs from the Disney animated version. “This is a huge deal in the musical theater world,” said Jodene Wartman, director of Eagan High School Summer Community Theatre. She said the script has only been used in five U.S. states and Australia. It was debuted in Berlin, Germany, in 1999 and ran for three years on their version of Broadway, she said, and was the first Dis-
ney musical to premiere outside the U.S. “Eagan applied for the rights on the day they became available, Jan. 25, 2017,” she said. “So we are indeed the first nonprofessional community theater in the Midwest to premiere this show – a rarity and honor for any theater.” She said more than 100 quality musicians auditioned in late May and early June. Last year, Eagan Summer Community Theatre sold out all 13 performances of “The Little Mermaid.” “This show is not as kid-friendly as Disney’s other musicals,” Wartman said. “And unlike the cartoon version of ‘Hunchback,’ this show embraces the darker elements of the Victor Hugo novel. However, its simple theme of being an outcast is relevant and timely, as well
as the Hunchback’s question to the audience: ‘Who is the monster and who is the man?’ ” Wartman said the musical score was done by one of the finest in the business — by Alan Menken, whose scores for “The Little Mermaid,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Aladdin,” and “Pocahontas” have each won him two Academy Awards. She said it is very close to operatic with lyrics by Stephen Schwartz, who has written music for “Godspell,” “Pippin” and “Wicked.” Wartman said the style of the show is similar to the Broadway smash “Hamilton: An American Musical,” in that a troupe of players tells the story, while the choir underscores, continually invoking the dominance of the church during that time period. Eagan Summer Com-
munity Theatre’s artistic staff consists of several Eagan High School graduates and the cast includes graduates and students from many high schools in Dakota County. Performances will be at 7 p.m. July 14, 15, 19-22 and 26-29 and at 3 p.m. July 16 and 23 in the Eagan High School Auditorium. Tickets are $15 for adults and students ages 13 and over, $10 for children 12 and under, and $10 for those ages 62 and over. Visit http://www.eaganhs.portal.rschooltoday.com/page/2590 to purchase tickets or call 651-683-6964 Mondays and Wednesdays from 4-6 p.m. Contact Tad Johnson at tad. johnson@ecm-inc.com or at twitter.com/editorTJ.
Public Health Department wins national award The Dakota County Health Department was honored with the Model Practice Award at the 2017 conference of the National Association of County and City Health Officials. The award recognized the health department’s Breastfeeding Friendly Health Departments initiative. The award celebrates local health departments for developing programs that demonstrate exemplary and replicable best practices in response to a critical local public health need. The Breastfeeding Friendly Health Departments initiative was one of 41 health department programs to receive the award. The initiative established a framework and process for local health departments to follow in
order to promote, protect, and support breastfeeding in their communities. By increasing the number of women who start breastfeeding, and continuing through at least six months, communities can have a significant impact on health in the short and long term. The model uses a 10-step process for local health departments to lead by example for breastfeeding promotion and support. The development of the initiative was led by Bonnie Brueshoff, director of public health in Dakota County. The model has been further expanded through the Minnesota Department of Health, with additional efforts and tools developed to support success. “We are proud to receive NACCHO’s Model
Practice Award for the Breastfeeding Friendly model. The award is evidence of our commitment to supporting breastfeeding mothers and the health of infants,” said Brueshoff. “This recognition is shared with local public health partners and the Minnesota Department of Health, who were willing partners in developing a responsive and innovative public health program to improve health through the promotion and support of breastfeeding.” Since 2003, NACCHO’s Model Practice Awards have honored programs, resources, and tools that demonstrate how local health departments and their community partners can effectively collaborate to address local public health challenges. Each innovative project receiving
the Model Practice Award was peer-reviewed and selected from a competitive group of more than 100 applicants. Breastfeeding Friendly Health Departments is now part of a searchable online database of successful public health practices in areas that range from immunization and maternal and child health to infectious diseases and emergency preparedness. The database provides users an opportunity to learn best practices and discover what resources are needed to implement comparable programs in other jurisdictions. To read more about the initiative, visit http://www. health.state.mn.us/divs/ oshii/bf/healthdeptBFF. html.
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16A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
5420 Tree Care & Stump Removal
5260 Garage Doors
5340 Landscaping
5380 Plumbing
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HAPPY YARD
SAVE MONEY Competent Master Plumber needs work. Lic# M3869. Jason 952-891-2490
$0 For Estimate Timberline
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A Family Operated Business
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Status Contracting, Inc. Kitchens & Baths, Lower Level Remodels. Decks. Wall/Ceiling Repair/Texture
Tile, Carpentry, Carpet, Painting & Flooring #BC679426
MDH Lead Supervisor
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No job too small!! Quality Work @ Competitive Prices! We Do It All!
Ray 612-281-7077
This space could be yours
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Â? All Home Repairs! Â? Excell Remodeling, LLC Interior & Exterior Work One Call Does it All! Call Bob 612-702-8237 General Home Repair Brick, Block, Stone & Concrete work No Job Too Small New & Repair Call Steve @ 612-532-3978 spersellservicesllc.com
Home Tune-up
r 'JY *U r 3FQMBDF *U r 6QHSBEF *U 0WFS :ST &YQ *OT E Ron 612-221-9480
5330 Irrigation SOUTH METRO BACKFLOW TESTING New & Annual Valve Testing of Your Sprinkler. Licenced by the State of MN & ASSE Certified. Call John 612 386-0147
5340 Landscaping Anderson Bobcat Srv. Bobcat/Mini-X, Trucking, Retaining walls, grading, holes, etc. 952-292-7600
Yard Clean Ups & Gutter Cleaning, Lawn & Landscaping Services, Brush Removal & Bobcat Service Available 15% off new customers Mendoza 612-990-0945
Modern Landscapes r 3FUBJOJOH 8BMMT r 1BWFS 1BUJPT r i$PNNJUUFE UP
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modernlandscapes.biz
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5370 Painting & Decorating 3 Interior Rooms/$275 Wallpaper Removal. Drywall Repair. Cabinet Enameling and Staining. 30 yrs exp. Steve 763-545-0506 *A and K PAINTING* Book Summer Painting Now!
Stain/Texturing. Free Est. 952-474-6258 Ins/Lic Major Credit Cards Accepted
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Benâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Painting Ext/Int, Drywall Repair Paint/Stain/Ceilings.
952-432-2605 DAVEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING and WALLPAPERING *OU &YU r 'SFF &TU r :ST 8JMM NFFU PS CFBU BOZ QSJDF -JD *OT $PNQMFUF )BOEZNBO 4WD 7JTB .$ 952-469-6800 **Mike the Painter Interior/ exterior, Wallpaper, 35 yrs exp, Ins 612-964-5776
5370 Painting & Decorating
Advertise your sale with us Insurance Claims, Tearoffs, BBB A+, Angies List A+, Certifâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d GAF Installer 50 yr warranty Insured, Lic # BC170064 952-891-8586
ArborBarberTrees.com
Randyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Residential Local Roofing - We Can Help with Ins. Claims z 612-414-0308 z #BC635383 BBB Member
BretMann Stump Grinding Free Ests. Best$$ Insâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d Bck Yrd Acc 612-290-1213
Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs - 30+ Yrs Exp Insured - Lic#20126880 John Haley #1 Roofer, LLC. Call 952-925-6156 REGAL ENTERPRISES Roofing, Siding, Windows & Gutters. Insurance Work. Since 1980. Lic. BC 515711 We remove blk roof mold Call Dave @ 952-201-4817
â&#x2014;&#x2020; Roofing â&#x2014;&#x2020; Siding Gutters â&#x2014;&#x2020; Soffit/Fascia TOPSIDE, INC.
612-869-1177 Lic CR005276 â&#x2014;&#x2020; Bonded â&#x2014;&#x2020; Insured 37 Yrs Exp. A+ Rating BBB
5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
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5370 Painting & Decorating
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E-Z Landscape Hardscape & Landscaping y Paver Patios y Retaining Walls y Boulder Walls y Bobcat Work
5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
5390 RooďŹ ng, Siding & Gutters
Call 952-334-9840
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612-703-0175 Mbr: BBB Trimming, Removal & Stump Grinding.
NOW HIRING! Experienced and Non-Experienced CDL Truck Drivers in Burnsville, MN! $1,000 Sign-On Bonus! Requirements: 21 Years or Older Class A or B CDL Competitive Pay, Great Benefits! Call, text or apply online for immediate consideration! 1-877-220-5627 Text â&#x20AC;&#x153;WASTEâ&#x20AC;? to 51893 to Learn More jobs.wm.com Equal Opportunity Employer Minority/ Female/Disability/Veteran
Easy Tree Service, LLC Trim/Removal. Lic/Ins Eugene 651-855-8189 NOVAK STUMP REMOVAL
Free Ests. Licâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d & Insâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d 952-888-5123
Silver Fox Services Tree Trimming/Removal Fully Licensed & Insured BBB Accredited Registered W/Dept of Ag. Located in Bloomington Family Owned & Operated
Free Est. Open 8am-7pm
5510 Full-time
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Plumber Farmington Plumbing & Heating is looking for an experienced Plumber for new home construction & service calls. Must be able to work independently. Wages up to $45/hr DOQ. For more info call Laura or Dan 651-463-7824 or email to: farmph4@frontiernet.net
612-715-2105 952-883-0671
5510 Full-time
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5440 Window Cleaning Richâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Window Cleaning Quality Service. Affordable rates. 952-435-7871 Window Cleaning /Gutter Cleaning 612-298-8737 10% off New Customers
5500 EMPLOYMENT Consulting Engineers Group, Inc. seeks Project Engineer in Lakeville, MN to provide technical design & support of high quality electrical substation engineering services. Qualified candidates must have B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering, completion of Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) exam; 4yrs engineering exp electrical power system substation design; working knowledge of substation control schematics & wiring; working knowledge of substation physical design; & ability to apply reqmnts of National Electrical Safety Code (NESC), the National Electric Code (NEC), IEEE, ANSI, & other standards to engineering design. Send resume & cover letter, including salary reqmnts, to HR, Consulting Engineers Group, Inc., 21875 Grenada Ave, Lakeville, MN 55044 DAYCARE PROVIDER/ WAREHOUSE POSITION Full time in Burnsville @ Nor-Tech with benefits. Email: cynthiab@nor-tech.com
www.e-zlandscape.com LANDSCAPES BY LORA landscapesbylora.com Quality work @ competitive prices. 15+ yrs exp.! 612-644-3580
952-392-6888
5510 Full-time
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Tree Trimming, Tree Removal, Stump Grinding
5510 Full-time
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Tree & Landscape. Summer Discount - 25% Off
Having a Garage Sale?
&YDFMMFODFu r 4VNNFS 1SJDJOH 612-205-9953
5510 Full-time
Director, Behavioral Health, Seeking Nurse to manage 12-bed inpatient Geropsych Unit in Regina Hospital, Hastings, MN. Reqâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s BSN or MSN, plus 3 yrs acute care inpatient psych mgmt. experience in a hospital setting. Grow with national company. Resume to: Terry Good, Horizon Health, terry.good@ horizonhealth.com; Fax: 1-804-684-5663. EOE
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Turn to Sunâ&#x20AC;˘Thisweek Classifieds Real Estate & Rentals
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SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 17A
TURN YOUR CAR INTO CASH!
5520 Part-time HOUSECLEANERS $14-$15/Hour 15-25 hrs/week Morning & early afternoon South metro area. Car req’d KDS Cleaning Inc. Email resume to: kdscleaningmn@gmail.com
or call 952-831-5178
Sun•Thisweek Classifieds 952-392-6888
5520 Part-time
5520 Part-time
5530 Full-time or Part-time Retail Sales - FT/PT Sell state-of-the-art sewing and embroidery machines Retail Sales & Sewing experience preferred. Open 7 days/wk. Hrly. wage, commission, bonuses!
in Sun•Thisweek Classifieds
Creative Sewing Centers Minnetonka, Roseville, Apple Valley, Spring Lake Park
Diane 952-593-3866
5530 Full-time or Part-time
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LOOK for a new pet
5530 Full-time or Part-time
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18A July 14, 2017 SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville
Obituaries
Anita Louise Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor (June 20, 1936 - July 6, 2017) Age 81 of Burnsville, formerly of St. Cloud, passed away July 6th peacefully surrounded by her family at The Rivers in Burnsville. 1LWD LV ÂżQDOO\ DW SHDFH DIWHU suffering from the advances of Alzheimerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Disease for six years. She is preceded in death by her son William (Willie), parents: Alvin and Florence Woods, and brother John Woods. Survived by her loving husband Michael; children: Deb Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor Cramer, Kelly (Paul) Becker, Katie (Mike) Beckius, Daniel Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor and Thomas Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor; grandchildren: Daniel, Michael and Patrick Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor, Jeremy Hagen, Megan and Joe Lehman, and Matt Cramer; great grandchildren Keira and Gavin Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor and Jaelyn Hagen; siblings: Marilyn (Gene) Borgert, Marjorie (Warren) Bystedt, Judy (Don) Byram, Mike (Jeanne) Woods, Susan (Dave) Fritz, Sharon (Bob) Bemboom, Patrick Woods, Nancy (Ed) Johnson, Laurie (Maury) Bloom, and Lia (Grant) Golberg; sisters-in-law, Judy Woods and Kathi (Mike) DuMoulin; also by other loving family and friends Nita attended school in St. Cloud at St. Maryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, Cathedral High School and St. Cloud Teachers College. She was a devout Catholic and proud of her Irish heritage She met her loving husband Mike at a school dance and they were inseparable from then on; married for over 61 years. She loved homemaking in Burnsville, Scottsdale and Breezy Point and was proud of her gardening and landscaping projects, especially those for the HomeownHUV $VVRFLDWLRQ DW :LQÂżHOG 3ODFH ZKHUH WKH\ ZLQWHUHG IRU 25 years. She also enjoyed managing the family concession stand at the state fair, along with her six children. Nita loved music and dancing, and she and Mike especially enjoyed the Carlyle Big Band music both at Breezy Point and in Arizona. She was a voracious reader and book tradHU ,Q $UL]RQD VKH ZDV YHU\ DFWLYH LQ VZLPPLQJ JROÂżQJ bowling, hiking and power shopping with her sister Judy. She was a competitive card player, especially bridge and Texas Hold â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Em. 1LWD ZDV DOZD\V IDPLO\ ÂżUVW EXW ZDV ZDUP SDWLHQW loving, supportive and giving to all. Beautiful inside as well as outside. A hands-on volunteer at Dorothy Day Center and Loaves and Fishes for over 40 years. She also volunteered at St. John the Baptist School and Fairview Hospital during her kidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; school years. Later she worked, and retired, from Fairview Southdale Hospital. The family wishes to extend a special thanks to the wonderful staff at The Rivers in Burnsville for their comSDVVLRQDWH FDUH LQ 1LWDÂśV ÂżQDO PRQWKV DQG DOVR D WKDQN \RX to the Brighton Hospice team. Mass of Christian Burial, was 11 a.m. on Wednesday, July 12th at Mary, Mother of the Church (3333 E Cliff Rd) Burnsville. Visitation was from 4-7 p.m. on Tuesday, July 11th at White Funeral Home (12804 Nicollet Blvd) Burnsville and one hour prior to the service at church. Interment: Resurrection Cemetery, Mendota Heights, Minnesota. Memorials preferred to The Dorothy Day Center or donors choice. Condolences: www.whitefuneralhomes.com White Funeral Home Apple Valley 952-432-2001
Anthony â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tonyâ&#x20AC;? Campobasso April 21, 1925 - July 4, 2017
Anthony â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tonyâ&#x20AC;? Campobasso, age 92, dear husband and father passed away. Survived by Marilyn, wife of 68 years; children, Diane (Jeff) Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Donnell, John (Karna) Campobasso and Mark (Diane) Campobasso; grandchildren, Shannon (Tim), Michael, Jessica (Eric), Anthony and Ana; six great-grandchildren and many nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by parents, Petronella and Frank; sister, Conchetta and brother, Nicolina. Tonyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life was built on faith and family. +H ZDV D ÂżUVW JHQHUDWLRQ ,WDOLDQ $PHULFDQ :RUOG :DU ,, 1DY\ 9HWHUDQ DQG KDG \HDUV DV VSHFLDO delivery mailman with St. Paul Postal Service. Mass of Christian Burial 11 a.m., Thursday, July 13, 2017 at Mary Mother of the Church, 3333 Cliff Road East, %XUQVYLOOH ZLWK 9LVLWDWLRQ RQH KRXU SULRU DW WKH &KXUFK 0HPRULDOV SUHIHUUHG WR $O]KHLPHUÂśV 5HVHDUFK ,QWHUPHQW with Honors Fort Snelling National Cemetery. Klecatsky and Sons - Eagan Chapel Â&#x2021; ZZZ .OHFDWVN\V FRP
David J. Jensen Jensen, David J., age 58 of Lakeville, passed away July 10, 2017. Preceded in death by his mother, Shirley. Survived by his father, Norbert Jensen; brother, Bradley (Mary Pat) Jensen and sisters, Kristy (John) Bertsch and Peggy (Jim) Spadafore, also survived by his loving nieces and nephews. Memorial visitation Friday, July 14, 2017 from 5-7 PM, with a service at 6 PM at White Funeral Home, 20134 Kenwood Tr., Lakeville. Burial of Ashes at All Saint Catholic Cemetery, Lakeville, MN. Condolences: www.whitefuneralhomes.com White Funeral Home Lakeville 952-469-2723
Genevieve Marie Koester (August 24, 1914 - July 7, 2017)
Koester, Genevieve Marie (Brimmer) age 102 of Burnsville formerly of Rosemount and Farmington passed away on July 7, 2017. Preceded in death by husband Albert; infant son John, son Michael, 3 brothers and 4 sisters. Survived by children Elaine (James) Dierich, Lois Ann (Tom) Ames, Mark (Wendy) Koester and Mary (Howard) Swedin; daughter in-law, Margaret Koester; 12 grandchildren; 27 great grandchildren; 1 great great grandchild; brother Bill (Joan) Brimmer. Mass of Christian Burial 11AM Friday, July 14, 2017 at St. Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Catholic Church, 13900 Biscayne Ave. Rosemount, MN. Visitation one hour prior to Mass at FKXUFK ,QWHUPHQW 6W -RVHSKÂśV &HPHWHU\ ,Q OLHX RI Ă&#x20AC;RZers memorials perferred to St. Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cemetery, Rosemount, MN. White Funeral Home Apple Valley 952-432-2001 www.whitefuneralhomes.com
James â&#x20AC;&#x153;Jimâ&#x20AC;? A. Smith Age 81 of Eagan, MN Formerly of Nashwauk, MN
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theater and arts briefs Bluegrass and Beer at Caponi Caponi Art Park will host Bluegrass and Beer 6-8:30 p.m. Friday, July 14. The event will feature music by the Sawtooth Brothers, beer from Urban Growler and food from New Bohemia Wurst + BierHaus. Gates open at 5:30 p.m., with music starting at 6 p.m. Tickets are $10 presale and $12 at the door. Admission for children under 12 is free. Caponi Art Park is at 1220 Diffley Road, Eagan. More information is at caponiartpark.org.
Dance workshops at Heartbeat
Heartbeat Performing Arts Center in Apple Valley will offer flamenco and Hawaiian dance workshops July 15 and 16. Teens/adults: Flamenco, 10 a.m. to noon Saturday; Hawaiian, noon to 2 p.m. Saturday. Ages 10-12: Flamenco, noon to 2 p.m. Sunday; Hawaiian, 2-4 p.m. Sunday. All workshops are taught by professional instructors and performers; all skill levels welcome. Each two-hour workshop is $32. Call Heartbeat at Martha Clara Schoenborn Kids music at 952-432-7833 to reserve a spot in class. Heartbeat is Martha Clara Schoenborn, 98, BlueNose located at 7661 145th St. of Farmington, MN, formerly BlueNose Coffee will W., Apple Valley. Mahnomen, MN, died Thursday, host Kids Music with AliJuly 6, 2017 at the Trinity Care son Cromie 2-3 p.m. SunCenter in Farmington. day, July 16. BlueNose is Dakota City Martha was born October 20, at 20700 Chippendale Ave. family fun 1918, in Mahnomen to Henry and W., Farmington. More Gertrude (Buermann) Ahmann. Dakota City Heritage information is at https:// Village in Farmington will She attended the Ahmann Counwww.facebook.com/Blue host a Family and Friends try School and helped on the farm. Nosecoffee/. As a young lady, Martha worked Fun Day at the Village on at Schermerhorn Ranch and for Friday, July 21. wealthy families on White Earth Lake. In 1941, Mar- â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Suessical Jr.â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Attendees will experitha was united in marriage to Edward Schoenborn at St. ence life at the turn of the Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Catholic Church in Beaulieu, MN. The couple in Lakeville last century. Tours will be Forte Fine Arts Acad- provided every half hour PDGH WKHLU ÂżUVW KRPH LQ 0LOZDXNHH :, $IWHU WZR \HDUV in Milwaukee, they returned to Mahnomen and began emy presents â&#x20AC;&#x153;Suessical from 10 a.m. to noon. The farming. Ed and Martha were blessed with six children. Jr.,â&#x20AC;? a musical based on museum will be open to They lived on the farm until their son, Jerome, purchased the characters from books see horse-drawn buggies the farm in 1972. At which time, Ed and Martha built a by Dr. Seuss, 7 p.m. Fri- and farm machinery. house in Mahnomen, where they lived until Edâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s death day, July 21, and 2 p.m. Vintage games will in 2008. Martha remained in their home until 2011, when Saturday, July 22, at Ken- be available for children. she moved in with her daughter and son-in-law, Geral- wood Trail Middle School, They will also see a blackdine and Clarence, in Lakeville, MN. Martha has made 19455 Kenwood Trail, smith at work in his forge her home the past four years at the Trinity Care Center in Lakeville. and woodworker working Farmington. Tickets will be available on a project. Visitors are Martha was a hard worker and remained busy, her to purchase onsite one encouraged to bring a picÂżQJHUV ZHUH QHYHU LGOH 6KH HQMR\HG JDUGHQLQJ SOD\LQJ hour before the perfor- nic lunch to enjoy before cards and loved to quilt, cook and bake. Over the years, mances. Seating is general or after a tour. 0DUWKD ZRUNHG DW YDULRXV ORFDO UHVWDXUDQWV LQFOXGLQJ .MRV admission and doors open For more information, CafĂŠ, Bridgemanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s CafĂŠ and Johnsonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bakery. She was a half hour before perfor- visit www.dakotacity.org a member of the Catholic Daughters of the Americas and mances. Tickets are $8 for or call 651-460-8050, ext. the Christian Mothers of St. Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. Martha made an adults and $5 for children. 3. endless number of quilts, prayer blankets and cherished More information is at treasures for her family. fortetheater.org. Martha is survived by four sons: Jerome (Ann) of Waubun, MN, Richard (Herta) of Lakeville, MN, Kenneth (Kathleen) of Keller, TX, Donald (Julie) of Lakeville, MN; one daughter, Geraldine (Clarence) Winter of To submit items for the weekly timed 5K run, 9 a.m. Lakeville, MN; daughter-in-law, Mary Schoenborn of Family Calendar, email: Saturdays at Thomas Lake Livonia, MI; 15 grandchildren; 22 great-grandchildren; darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com. Park, 4350 Thomas Lake Road, Eagan. Rain or shine. To get a 10 step-grandchildren; two sisters, Dorothy Vaught of time recorded and stored onDallas, TX and Rosemary Walz of Moorhead, MN; and Friday, July 14 Friday Night Flicks on the line, register at www.parkrun. several nieces and nephews. Bricks â&#x20AC;&#x201C; â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Dogâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Purpose,â&#x20AC;? us/register and bring your barShe was preceded in death by her husband; parents; rated PG, 7:30 p.m. seating, code with you. Information: son, Leonard; three brothers: Albert, Raymond and Paul; dusk showtime, Nicollet Com- www.parkrun.us/eagan. mons Park in the Heart of the Emotions Anonymous, and three sisters: Veronica, Elvina and Alma. Blessed be the memory of Martha C. Schoenborn. City, 12600 Nicollet Ave. Free. 7:30-9 p.m. Tuesdays at SouthCross Community Church, Mass of Christian Burial was held at 11:00am on Wednes- Monday, July 17 1800 E. County Road 42 (at day, July 12, 2017 at St. Michaelsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Catholic Church in Legal Assistance of Dakota Summit Oak Drive), Apple ValMahnomen, MN. Visitation took place on Tuesday, July County, 1-4 p.m., Galaxie Li- ley. EA is a 12-step program for 11, 2017 from 5:00-7:00pm, with a Catholic Daughter brary, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Apple those seeking emotional health. Receive a free 30-minute Information: http://www.emoRosary and Prayer Service beginning at 6:00pm at St. Valley. consultation from a volunteer at- tionsanonymous.org/out-ofMichaelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Catholic Church. Burial will be in the St. Mi- torney regarding family law mat- the-darkness-walks. chaelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Catholic Cemetery. ters such as domestic abuse, Recovery International, 3
family calendar
Patrick W. Bresnahan Bresnahan, Patrick W., of Lakeville, passed away July 4, 2017, at the age of 89. Born and raised in Hibbing, MN. He received a Bachelorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Degree in Education from St. Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s University, where he met the love of his life, Elaine (Scholz). They married in 1951. He serviced in the Marines before receiving a Masterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Degree in Education from St. Thomas University. Pat was a respected Educator, Counselor, acting Superintendent, acting Principal, and retired as Director of Special Education for the Lakeville Public School District. Pat had a strong faith and was a longtime member of All Saints Catholic Church in Lakeville. He enjoyed raising his three sons, golf, coaching various sports, his second home in Naples, FL, and spending time with family and friends. Pat is preceded in death by this wife, Elaine, sister Eileen, and three infant children. He is survived by devoted sons Tim (Jill), Kevin (Lori), Terry (Sue). Also survived by loving grandchildren: Nick (Beth), Jamie, Ryan, Matthew, Adam (Alyssa), Anna and Tom Bresnahan, and Ashley and Leah Peterson. Great-grandchildren Hayden, Dalton and Colton Bresnahan, brother James â&#x20AC;&#x153;Corkâ&#x20AC;? (Nancy) Bresnahan, and sister Nancy Laliberte, as well as many nieces, nephews, and friends. The family would like to thank the nursing and medical staff at Fairview Ridges. A very special thank you to the loving and dedicated staff of Highview Hills Memory Unit at Lakeville. A Mass of Christian Burial was held at All Saints Catholic Church, 19795 Holyoke Ave. in Lakeville on Friday, July 7th, at 11 AM with a visitation one hour prior to the VHUYLFH DW WKH FKXUFK ,Q OLHX RI Ă&#x20AC;RZHUV SOHDVH FRQVLGHU D memorial in Patâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name to Highview Hills (Walker Methodist) or All Saints Catholic Church. White Funeral Home Lakeville 952-469-2723 Condolences: www.whitefuneralhomes.com
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custody, child support or visitation. Call 952-891-7135 for more information and to schedule an appointment. Tuesday, July 18 Consumer law clinic, 1-4 p.m., Galaxie Library, 14955 Galaxie Ave., Apple Valley. Get help with consumer law matters such as debt collection, garnishment, credit issues, foreclosures, contracts and conciliation court with a free 30-minute consultation from a volunteer attorney. This clinic is a joint program of Legal Assistance of Dakota County, the Dakota County Family Court and the Dakota County Law Library. Call 952-431-3200 for more information and to schedule an appointment. Wednesday, July 19 Storytime in the Park, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Lake Julia Park, 5105 187th St. W., Farmington. Theme: Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s for Lunch. Free. Eagan Market Fest â&#x20AC;&#x201C; The Art Experience, 4-8 p.m., Eagan Festival Grounds at Central Park, 1501 Central Parkway. Farmers market, entertainment by Marv Gohman & Friends. Information: www.cityofeagan. com/marketfest or 651-6755500. Thursday, July 20 Wiggle, Jiggle and Jam, 10 a.m. at Central Park amphitheater, 2893 145th St., Rosemount. Part of the Summer Music in the Park series. Bring a blanket or lawn chair for seating. Free. Call 651-322-6020 and select option 6 to check for cancellation due to inclement weather. Thursday Rockinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Readers, 11:15 a.m. at Nicollet Commons Park, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Books are geared toward elementary and preschool children. Readers: Ken Essay, principal, Harriet Bishop Elementary, and Stephanie Corbey, retiring individualized student services director. Free. Sticks and Tones will perform at noon for the Thursday Rockinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Lunch Hour concert at Nicollet Commons Park, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Free. Trinity Care Center 50th anniversary celebration, 3:30-7 p.m., 3410 213th St. W., Farmington. Free street tacos, ice cream, live music, bouncy house and balloon artist. Open to the public. Ongoing Eagan
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p.m. Tuesdays at Mary, Mother of the Church (Room 9), 3333 Cliff Road, Burnsville. Park in lower lot. Self-help group for depression, anxiety, fears, panic attacks, anger and more. Information: Rita at 952-8907623 or www.recoveryinternational.org. Al-Anon Finding Hope Beginners Group, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Saturdays at Mary, Mother of the Church, 3333 Cliff Road, Burnsville. Troubled by someoneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s drinking? Al-Anon can help. More information: alanon-alateen-msp.org. Horse Day Camp, July 17-20 and Aug. 7-10, Golden Ridge Stables, 8315 190th St. W., Lakeville. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hands and seat onâ&#x20AC;? day camp for ages 8-13 learning how to safely work with a horse on the ground and riding. Indoor facility. Games, learning activities, and crafts. More is at www.GoldenRidgeStables.com, 952-469-4640. Reunions Lakeville High School Class of 1992, 25th reunion, July 22 at The Chart House. Information: www. lakevillehighschool1992.myevent.com. Questions: lakev illehighschool1992@gmail.com. Blood drives The American Red Cross will hold the following blood drives. Call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767) or visit red crossblood.org to make an appointment or for more information. â&#x20AC;˘ July 15, 10:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m., Burnhaven Library, 1101 W. County Road 42, Burnsville. â&#x20AC;˘ July 17, 12-5 p.m., Best Western Premier Nicollet Inn, 14201 Nicollet Ave. S., Burnsville. â&#x20AC;˘ July 17, 12-6 p.m., American Legion, 12375 Princeton Ave., Savage. â&#x20AC;˘ July 18, 12-6 p.m., Ecumen Seasons, 15359 Founders Lane, Apple Valley. â&#x20AC;˘ July 18, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Culverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, 17800 Kenwood Trail, Lakeville. â&#x20AC;˘ July 19, 1-7 p.m., Church of St. Michael, 22120 Denmark Ave., Farmington. Memorial Blood Centers will hold the following blood drives. Call 1-888-GIVE-BLD (1-888448-3253) or visit mbc.org to make an appointment or for more information. â&#x20AC;˘ July 18, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Argosy University, 1515 Central Parkway, Eagan. â&#x20AC;˘ July 19, 2:30-6:30 p.m., Life Time Fitness, 1565 Thomas Center Drive, Eagan.
SUN THISWEEK - Lakeville July 14, 2017 19A
Thisweekend Performing under the Big Top Vikings, Valkyries, gods and a quest to find Thorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hammer and save the universe The thrill of performing for a crowd of people is not for everyone. But for Eaganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Morgan Frantes, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the best part about being in the circus. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s really cool to know that all those people had so much fun watching you,â&#x20AC;? she said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s very fun to be able to be in character and costume and put on a show that people really enjoy watching.â&#x20AC;? Frantes has been in Circus Juventas for four years, and will be performing in its summer show, entitled â&#x20AC;&#x153;Nordrsaga,â&#x20AC;? along with Apple Valley native Alexa Johnson. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I play two characters in the summer show â&#x20AC;&#x201D; a Midgardian, and one of the dishonorable dead,â&#x20AC;? Frantes said. Johnson, who has been performing with Circus Juventas for five years, will be performing in multiple acts, including the cloud swing and wall trampoline. Being in the summer show isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t all fun and games. For Frantes, it also holds a strong sense of commitment. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If you are in the summer show, thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a lot of long practices most nights of the week, and lots of shows in a short period of time,â&#x20AC;? she said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It can get pretty long.â&#x20AC;? She said the work is worth it in the end. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s worth the time commitment, and worth all the effort because the results are amazing,â&#x20AC;? Frantes said.
Photo submitted
Alexa Johnson practices for an upcoming performance by Circus Juventas. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m so lucky to be a part of such a great place.â&#x20AC;? Frantes and Johnson can be seen performing in â&#x20AC;&#x153;Nordrsaga,â&#x20AC;? a swirling, high-flying adventure through the Nine Realms of Norse legend, July 28 through Aug. 13, under the Big Top at 1270 Montreal Ave., St. Paul. The story is told through the cirque nouveau style combining artistic storytelling with physical feats in the tradition of Cirque du Soleil. The show features Circus Juventasâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; most advanced circus performers in a professionally staged large-scale theatrical production.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;The epic nature of Norse legend was an ideal canvas for us to showcase our highest caliber circus feats that will leave the audience holding their breath in amazement,â&#x20AC;? said Elizabeth â&#x20AC;&#x153;Bettyâ&#x20AC;? Butler, Circus Juventas cofounder and artistic director. Tickets range from $17.50 to $40 VIP seats. Family four packs of tickets are available for Saturday matinees. For complete details and to order tickets visit www.ticketworks. com, 612-343-3390, or by calling the Circus Juventas Box Office, 651-6998229. More information is available at www.circusjuventas.org.
Art show looks beyond dementia perceptions The â&#x20AC;&#x153;I Am Hereâ&#x20AC;? art show opens Thursday, Aug. 10, at the Adler Graduate School, 1550 E. 78th St., Richfield. The show celebrates the voices of older adults with chronic conditions such as dementia. Art by Augustana Open Circle participants will be honored at the event, which runs 10 a.m. to noon. The Augustana Open Circle Choir will perform at 10:45 a.m. and rePhoto submitted freshments will be provided. Participantsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; art will be displayed â&#x20AC;&#x153;Gilbert Self Portraitâ&#x20AC;? at the school throughout August. The theme â&#x20AC;&#x153;I Am Hereâ&#x20AC;? was chosen to remind everyone that people with dementia or similar conditions remain vigorous participants in society. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are all creative throughout our life span,â&#x20AC;? said Patty Crawford, Augustana Open Circle manager. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Augustana Open Circleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s goal is to offer individuals with dementia or other challenges opportunities for self-expression.â&#x20AC;? Augustana Open Circleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s adult day services help people with changing physical, cognitive and social abilities live more fully and enjoy authentic connections with others in structured, nurturing settings. Members develop new friendships and strengthen their abilities to remain vital in the larger community. Augustana Open Circle has a location in Apple Valley. More information is available at opencircle.org and by calling 952-935-8143.
theater and arts calendar To submit items for the ro Funk (Wings Financial Night), Arts Calendar, email: 6-9 p.m. Friday, July 14, at Keldarcy.odden@ecm-inc.com. ley Park, 6855 Fortino St., Apple Valley. Free. Food and bevAuditions erages available for purchase. Front Porch Players of Information: http://avartsfoun Rosemount will hold auditions dation.org/. for â&#x20AC;&#x153;Murder on the Rerun,â&#x20AC;? a Jonny Lang, 7:30 p.m. Fricomedy-mystery in two acts, day, July 14, in the amphithe5-8 p.m. July 24-25 at the Stee- ater at the Minnesota Zoo as ple Center Theater, 14375 S. part of Music in the Zoo. TickRobert Trail, Rosemount. Cast: ets: $65, $77.50 VIP box seat. two males and five females. Information: http://suemclean. Character info is at Rosemount com/. Arts.com and MinnesotaPlay Northern Winds Concert list.com/classified/auditions. Band (symphonic band), 7 Bring a photo and list of dates p.m. Sunday, July 16, as part that might conflict with rehears- of Heart of the City Music Fesals. Rehearsals will be 5-8 p.m. tival at Nicollet Commons Park, Monday through Thursdays, 12600 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Aug. 14 to Oct. 5. Performanc- Free. es: 7 p.m. Oct. 6-7, 13-14; and Equador Manta (music of 2 p.m. Oct. 8 and 15. Infor- the Andes and Latin fusion), mation: Keith Reed, 651-261- 7 p.m. on July 19 as part of 1954. Wednesday in the Park at Civic Center Park, 75 Civic Center Events Parkway, Burnsville. Free. Bluegrass and Beer, Amos Lee, 7:30 p.m. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Friday, July 14, Wednesday, July 19, in the Caponi Art Park, 1220 Diffley amphitheater at the Minnesota Road, Eagan. Information: ca Zoo as part of Music in the Zoo. poniartpark.org. Tickets: $10 in Tickets: $68, $80.50 VIP box advance, $12 at the door. seat. Information: http://suemMidsummer Festival, 10 clean.com/. a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, July Music in Kelley Park 15, Cedar Lake Farm Re- featuring JD Steele and the gional Park, New Prague, in MacPhail Community Youth conjunction with the Credit Choir, 6-9 p.m. Friday, July 21, River Antique Tractor Show. at Kelley Park, 6855 Fortino St., Music, entertainment, fish- Apple Valley. Free. Food and ing, kayaking, canoeing, ar- beverages available for purchery, inflatable bouncers. chase. Information: http://avarFood concessions available. tsfoundation.org/. Free. Children 13 and younger Jerry Jeff Walker, 7:30 must attend with an adult. In- p.m. Friday, July 21, in the amformation: threeriversparkdis phitheater at the Minnesota trict.org. Zoo as part of Music in the Minnesota Scottish Fair Zoo. Tickets: $46, $58.50 VIP & Highland Games, 9 a.m. to box seat. Information: http:// 8 p.m. Saturday, July 15, 980 suemclean.com/. Discovery Road, Eagan. InforBlackwood Brothers, 7 mation: mnscottishfair.org. p.m. Saturday, July 22, KenneInternational Festival of dy High School, 9701 Nicollet Burnsville, 3-9 p.m. Saturday, Ave. S., Bloomington. A MinJuly 15, Nicollet Commons nesota Gospel Opry concert. Park, Burnsville. Information: Tickets: $15-$25. Information: https://intlfestburnsville.org/. https://www.minnesotagos Family and Friends Fun pelopry.com/. Day, Friday, July 21, Dakota Maryann Sullivan and CorCity Heritage Village, Farming- ner Jazz (jazz), 7 p.m. Sunday, ton. Information: dakotacity.org July 23, as part of Heart of the or 651-460-8050, ext. 3. City Music Festival at Nicollet Rosemount Leprechaun Commons Park, 12600 Nicollet Days, July 21-30. Information: Ave., Burnsville. Free. www.RosemountEvents.com. Casting for Community â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Theater Iron Pour, 12-4 p.m. Saturday, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Hunchback of Notre July 22, Caponi Art Park, 1220 Dame,â&#x20AC;? presented by Eagan Diffley Road, Eagan. All ages. High School Community TheFree. A few extra molds will be atre, 7 p.m. July 14-15, 19-22, available for last-minute enthu- 26-29 and 3 p.m. July 16 and siasts. Fee: $30 per mold. Infor- 23, Eagan High School, 4185 mation: caponiartpark.org. Braddock Trail, Eagan. Tickets: $15 ages 13 and older, Exhibits $10 ages 12 and younger and David Pates Photography seniors age 62 and older. Inforexhibit is on display through mation: www.eaganhs.portal. July 31 in the art gallery at the rschooltoday.com. Lakeville Area Arts Center. Inâ&#x20AC;&#x153;Menopause The Musiformation: 952-985-4640. cal,â&#x20AC;? 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday, July Cultural Perspectives: â&#x20AC;&#x153;A 16, Ames Center, 12600 NicolGlobal Familyâ&#x20AC;? Art Exhibit is let Ave., Burnsville. Tickets: on display through Aug. 5 in the $33-$53 at the box office, 800Ames Center art gallery, 12600 982-2787 or Ticketmaster.com. Nicollet Ave., Burnsville. Inforâ&#x20AC;&#x153;Seussical Jr.,â&#x20AC;? presented mation: https://intlfestburns by Forte Fine Arts Academy, 7 ville.org/. p.m. Friday, July 21, and 2 p.m. Saturday, July 22, Kenwood Music Trail Middle School, 9455 KenMusic in Kelley Park fea- wood Trail, Lakeville. Tickets: turing David Gonzalez and Ret- $8 adults, $5 children. Doors
open a half hour before performances. Information: fortethe ater.org. â&#x20AC;&#x153;An Evening with Mark Twain,â&#x20AC;? 6:30 p.m. Sunday, July 23, Caponi Art Park, 1220 Diffley Road, Eagan. Tickets: $10 adults, $8 seniors and students. Information: caponiartpark.org. Workshops/classes/other Homeward Bound Theatre Company offers theater classes July 17-20 at Black Hawk Middle School in Eagan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Land of Fairy Tales,â&#x20AC;? 10:30 a.m. to noon, kindergarten through grade two. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Crazy Fairytales,â&#x20AC;? 12:30-2 p.m., grades three to five. For information and cost of registration, call District 196 Community Education at 651423-7920 or register online at www.district196.org/ce. Cheers & Canvas paint night, 7-9 p.m. Monday, July 17, at Lakeville Brewing Co. Eat, drink and paint. Cost: $30. Register at www.watch medraw.net. Information: 952469-1234. Summer art camps for ages 5 and older are available at Watch Me Draw Art Studio, 20908 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville. Clay and Canvas Madness, 10 a.m. to noon July 17-20; Glitter Girls, 1-3 p.m. July 17-20; Turtle Mania, 10 a.m. to noon July 21. Register at watchmedraw.net. Information: 952-469-1234. Kids Club, 1-3 p.m. Thursdays, Divine Time, 14555 S. Robert Trail, Rosemount. Friendship, crafts and more. Ages: 7-11. Cost: $22 per class, pay as you come. No registration required. Sibling discount. Information: 651-343-8606. Coffee and Canvas classes run 9-11 a.m. on the fourth Thursday of the month (July 27, Aug. 24) at BlueNose Coffee, 20700 Chippendale Ave. W., Farmington. Cost: $36. Different theme each month. Sign up in store or online at www. tracygiza.com. Yoga wind down class is the first Thursday of the month at Precision and Flow Pilates, 13708 County Road 11, Burnsville. Information: www.preci sionandflowpilates.com. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Flemish and Renaissance Oil Painting Method,â&#x20AC;? 4-7 p.m. Thursdays, River Ridge Arts School, Burnsville. Six weeks of comprehensive study of oil painting for students of all levels. Information/registration: Dan Petrov at 763-843-2734 or www.danpetrovart.com. Drawing & Painting (adults and teens) with artist Christine Tierney, classes 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and 9 a.m. to noon Wednesdays, River Ridge Studios, 190 S. River Ridge Circle, Burnsville. Information: www.christinetier ney.com, 612-210-3377. Brushworks School of Art Burnsville offers fine art education through drawing and painting. Classes for adults and teens. Information: Patricia Schwartz, www.Brushworks SchoolofArt.com, 651-2144732. Soy candle making class-
es held weekly in Eagan near 55 and Yankee Doodle. Call Jamie at 651-315-4849 for dates and times. $10 per person. Presented by Making Scents in Minnesota. Line dance lessons, 1:304 p.m. Mondays, Apple Valley American Legion, 14521 Granada Drive. Information: Marilyn at 651-463-7833. The Lakeville Area Arts Center offers arts classes for all ages, www.lakevillemn.gov, 952-985-4640. Rosemount History Book Club meets 6:30-8 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Robert Trail Library. Information: John Loch, 952-2558545 or jjloch@charter.net. SouthSide Writers, Saturday workgroup for aspiring writers, offering critique, submission and manuscript preparation information, support and direction, 10 a.m. to noon, Wescott Library, 1340 Wescott Road, Eagan. Information: 651688-0365. Dakota Speakers Toastmasters meets 6-7 p.m. Mondays at Apple Valley Ecumen Seasons Learning Center. Information: http://dakota.toast mastersclubs.org/.
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