Skip to main content

Trooper: Smoked tail lights pose safety concerns, are illegal

Question: Are smoked tail lights illegal in Minnesota?
Answer: Minnesota law states that “tail lamps shall be plainly visible from a distance of 100 feet to the rear during normal sunlight and at night.” The same goes for turn signals and headlights. Smoking, tinting, covering or placing any material over tail lights, brake lights, headlights or turn signals would be illegal and unsafe as they would not be plainly visible.  It is illegal in all 50 states, because it is a major safety concern.
I recommend getting into the habit of checking and keeping your rear lights clear of any snow, mud, dirt, dust or anything that can obstruct your lights.
You can avoid a ticket — and a crash — if you simply buckle up, drive at safe speeds, pay attention and always drive sober.  Help us drive Minnesota Toward Zero Deaths.
If you have any questions concerning traffic-related laws or issues in Minnesota, send your questions to Sgt. Troy Christianson – Minnesota State Patrol at 2900 48th Street NW, Rochester MN 55901-5848.  (Or reach him at, Troy.Christianson@state.mn.us)

Anhydrous safety should be top concern

Many farmers and applicators will soon apply anhydrous ammonia (NH3) prior to planting or side-dress after planting. Even with a rush against time and the weather, safety should never be compromised.
Accidents involving anhydrous ammonia have proven how dangerous and deadly the chemical can be when not handled properly.
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) is providing the following tips to farmers and applicators so they can safely apply anhydrous ammonia.
•Always wear appropriate goggles and gloves. Never wear contact lenses.
•Be sure to have a clean, adequate emergency water supply of at least five gallons.
•Exercise caution when making connections and disconnections as if lines contain anhydrous ammonia.
•Stand upwind when connecting, disconnecting, bleeding lines or transferring NH3. Also, close, bleed, disconnect and secure valves and transfer lines when taking breaks or disconnecting lines, and be sure to handle hose end valves by the valve body.
•Position equipment away and downwind from homes, people, and livestock.
Safety is also key to those maintaining anhydrous ammonia equipment. Never assume NH3 lines are empty, always wear proper protective equipment, and have access to safety water.
When towing a nurse tank down the road, drive sensibly. Do not go any faster than 30 miles per hour, display a slow-moving vehicle (SVM) emblem visible from the rear, and be sure the tank is secured to the tractor or truck with two separate, independent chains that supplement the hitch pin/clip.
If an accident or spill occurs, immediately call 911 and then the Minnesota Duty Officer at 1-800-422-0798 or 651-649-5451.
You can find more safety, storage, and transportation information on the MDA’s website at www.mda.state.mn.us/nh3.

Clarification April 13, 2023

Clarifying information was provided to the Star Herald for the story, “Hills-Beaver Creek School District voters weigh costs of bond referendum,” after the April 4 press deadline.
The tax impact to ag property land owners of homestead and non-homestead properties under the Ag2School program will be $3.37 to $6.74 per acre based on the $10,000 per acre average market value in the district if the new $29.9 million bond referendum passed April 11.
The last week’s story stated, “With a market value average of $10,537 per acre, the Ag2School program aid would bring the tax impact for ag property owners down to an average $1.27 per acre.” This figure did not include the 2023 referendum.

Public Safety Telecommunications Week

The Rock County Sheriff’s Office this week is observing National Public Safety Telecommunications Week, April 9-15.Every second week in April has been set aside to recognize and celebrate the work of telecommunicators helping to save lives every day by dispatching emergency professionals and equipment and rendering life-saving assistance to those who call 911. This week Sheriff Evan Verbrugge thanked telecommunicators who work in the Rock County Law Enforcement Center on North Blue Mound Avenue in Luverne. “They have gone above and beyond the call of duty, especially with us being recently short staffed,” Verbrugge said.

Pickup crashes into Luverne property

Law enforcement and emergency responders were dispatched to a crash on West Main Street Tuesday morning when a pickup crashed into a garage on Davidson Street.
The driver, 44-year-old Jesse Cody, Brandon, missed the curve at Rock County Opportunities and barreled across the boulevards to the northeast.
The 2020 Chevy pickup took out a light pole and hit a tree at Main and Walnut streets before crashing through the garage wall and landing inside the structure on its side.
It's unclear what caused the lapse for the motorist, who walked away from a twisted, mangled vehicle with unknown injuries, if any.
EMS personnel were treating him at the scene, and he was taken to Sanford Luverne ER by ambulance.
The home is owned by Lowell and Roni Feit. No one else was injured.
The Rock County Sheriff's Office reported speed as a factor in the crash, which remains under investigation.

On the Record April 13, 2023

Dispatch report
March 31
•Complainant west-bound on Interstate 90, mile marker 6, Luverne, requested assistance from another department.
•Complainant on S. Elizabeth Avenue, Hills, reported identity theft.
•Complainant on N. Spring Street reported suspicious activity.
April 1
•Complainant on Warren Street and Kniss Avenue reported a miscellaneous public assist.
•Complainant on E. Main Street reported suspicious activity.
April 2
•Complainant on Warren Street and Kniss Avenue reported fleeing.
•Complainant on County Road 4 and County Road 11, Luverne, reported a fire.
•Complainant on County Road 4 and 40th Avenue, Beaver Creek, reported flooding.
•Complainant on N. Lindale Street reported a residence check.
•Complainant on S. Church Avenue, Hills, reported a parking issue.
April 3
•Complainant on W. Interstate Drive reported counterfeit.
•Complainant on N. McKenzie Street reported a civil issue.
•Complainant on S. Elizabeth Avenue, Hills, reported threats.
April 4
•Complainant on S. Kniss Avenue reported a burglary.
•Complainant requested assistance from another department.
•Complainant on W. Main Street reported a civil issue.
•Complainant reported identity theft.
•Complainant in Pipestone requested assistance from another department.
•A warrant was issued in Cottonwood County, Windom.
April 5
•A weather issue was reported.
•Complainant westbound on Interstate 90, mile marker 11, Luverne, reported hazmat material.
•Complainant east-bound on Interstate 90, mile marker 1, Beaver Creek, reported road and drive laws.
•Complainant on N. Freeman Avenue reported suspicious activity.
April 6
•Training was reported on U.S. Highway 75.
•Complainant reported a scam.
•Complainant reported fraud.
•Complainant on N. Estey Street reported fraud.
•Complainant reported fraud.
•Complainant on E Bishop Street reported a miscellaneous public assist.
•Complainant on County Road 6 and E. 1st Street, Hills, reported a road and drive law issue.
•Complainant on Main Street and Cedar Street reported a road and drive law issue.
April 7
•A warrant was issued in Lyon County, Rock Rapids.
•Report of road closed on 60th Avenue, 41st to 61st, Hills.
•Complainant on N. Freeman Avenue filed a disturbing the peace complaint.
 
In addition, officers responded to 2 motor vehicle accidents, 2 transports, 2 escorts, 13 ambulance runs, 2 paper services, 2 animal complaints, 1 fingerprint request, 23 burn permits, 3 alarms, 10 purchase and carry permits, 36 traffic stops, 14 abandoned 911 calls, 2 welfare checks, and 1 follow-up.

Celebrations April 13, 2023

Card showers
Norma Gangestad will celebrate her 100th birthday on Sunday, April 30. Greetings may be sent to her at 2221 E. Horseshoe Place; Chandler, AZ 85249.
 
Vicky Bruynes will celebrate her 65th birthday on Sunday, April 16. Greetings may be sent to her at 110 N. Estey; Luverne, MN 56156

1943: Lou, Abraham Scott both born near Gettysburg

The following article is part of the Diamond Club Member group that began in the January 7, 1943, issue of the Rock County Star Herald. Members of this group consist of persons of age 75 and older.
The following appeared in The Rock County Herald on September 16, 1943.
The Civil War to most of the residents of Rock county was another war fought in the south over the question of slavery. Only a scattered few have forefathers who were in uniform during the conflict, and only a small number, perhaps, have seen Civil War battlegrounds.
To Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Scott, Hardwick, however, the Civil War represents quite a bit more than a chapter from an American history book, as they were born and reared almost within seeing distance of where the final battle, the battle of Gettysburg, was fought. Both had relatives who fought in the war, and from them heard many eye-witness accounts of Civil War days.
Mr. Scott was born July 7, 1886, in Adams county, Pa., the son of Joseph R. and Susan Weikert Scott, while Mrs. Scott, who before her marriage was Lou Manahan, was born Feb. 10, 1869, at Westminister, Carroll county, Md., the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Manahan.
Both Mr. Scott’s father and Mrs. Scott’s father fought on the side of the Union army. Had they lived several miles farther south, they would have been in Confederate territory, for their homes were but a short way from the Mason-Dixon line that divided the slave states from the free states.
The present selective service system is marked advancement over the system used in Civil War days, Mrs. Scott points out. At that time, one of the commanding officers came to their home, took her father and two uncles out of bed, and placed them on active duty without a bit of training. Her father escaped unhurt, but her uncle was killed, and the other seriously wounded.
For years afterward, when Mr. and Mrs. Scott were children, the battle field near Gettysburg was left untouched. Later it was made into a memorial park and is now visited by thousands of people annually during normal times.
When Mrs. Scott was 13 years old, her father moved to a farm adjoining the one owned by Mr. Scott’s father. The land there was rolling, and orchards dotted the countryside. Wheat was the main cash crop, although some oats and corn was raised for feed.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Scott began working early in life. Mr. Scott spent much of the time on the farm, as also did Mrs. Scott. She states that she learned how to plant corn by hand, dropping three kernels in each hill. She went to work in a canning factory, and recalls that she earned two cents for each huge bowl full of corn she cut from the cob. She also skinned tomatoes, prepared beans, and did other tasks at similar low wages. Her father had a large fruit orchard, and peaches from it were sold at 50 cents a bushel. She has picked a whole bushel of blackberries for only a dollar. Other fruit raised there included apples and pears. One year, her father raised 300 bushels of the latter.
(Scott story continues next week.)

Thank you for your service

Brenda Hansel, volunteer coordinator for Sanford Hospice, presents Jim Harner with a tie blanket in patriotic colors Saturday afternoon at the Good Samaritan Society Mary Jane Brown Home in Luverne to honor him as a veteran and to thank him for his service. He also received a plaque, a certificate and a pin. Harner was joined by his wife, three children and grandchildren, many of whom traveled from several states to be part of the ceremony.

Remember When April 13, 2023

10 years ago (2013)
•If traffic through the front door is any indication, Sturdevant’s recent relocation from Luverne’s East Main Street to Highway 75 was a great move.
Owner-partner Bob Boelman said after 30 years, a handful of people didn’t know there was a Sturdevant’s store in town.
The automobile parts distribution business has been in Luverne since the 1980s.
“A few people told me they thought it was great that Luverne was getting a Sturdevant’s,” Boelman said.
He and his partners — the Sturdevant family — had been thinking about moving to Highway 75 to increase exposure to the passing traffic.
“Then the brewery thing came up,” Boelman said. “Connells were dealing on their building. The buyers wanted more room. So we had a chance to sell our old building. We decided it was a really good time to try to do something different.”
 
25 years ago (1998)
•Due to renovation of the eastbound lanes of Interstate 90, the Beaver Creek Travel Information Center has been closed and will move temporarily to Luverne.
The travel center, normally at the Minnesota/South Dakota border, will operate in a vacant convenience store in Luverne, one block north of the I-90 exit on Highway 75. It will open Wednesday, April 22, and will remain there until Nov. 15.
The move was possible with the help of Dave Smith and the Luverne Convention and Visitors Bureau.
 
50 years ago (1973)
•Delegates from 33 congregations, making up the seven-county Worthington Conference of the American Lutheran Church (ALC), will be attending the annual spring convention of the American Lutheran Church Women (ALCW) here on Wednesday, April 18.
Host church for this year’s convention, is Grace Lutheran Church, and all sessions will be held there, starting at 10 a.m. A coffee hour, starting at 9:30 a.m., will precede the program.
 
75 years ago (1948)
•Completion of the new addition to the city power plant, and completion of the installation of the steam boiler, will cost an estimated $65,000, in addition to what has already been spent. O.J. Pfeifer, Jr., of Pfeifer and Schultz, consulting engineers, told the city council last Thursday night. The Pfeifer and Schultz firm had been employed by the city to supervise construction of the building and the cooling tower. Up to April 1, $38,960.54 has been spent for labor and materials on the addition.
Pfeifer told the council that new plans would have to be drawn in some instances, due to changes at the plant the past few months. The cooling tower, he said, would be in operation as soon as the installation of certain motors and pipes is completed. Several months, with favorable weather, would be required to complete the addition.
 
100 years ago (1923)
•Discharge of a 750-pound “toe-cap” deposit of dynamite at the Quartzite Quarries, Inc., plant shortly after 6:00 o’clock Wednesday morning fairly shook the earth for an area of at least fifteen miles east of Luverne, rattled windows and dishes, and jarred open doors in numerous homes, as well as awakened thousands of people with a suddenness that left them thoroughly bewildered.
This charge was a portion of the 7,000-pound plant of dynamite that was used in the big blast at the quarries last September, and for some reason this toe-cap charge, which was at the bottom of a 100-foot deep hole on about a level with the loading floor, had failed to go off, although several separated charges immediately above the toe-cap charge, had all exploded. From time to time since the September blast wonderment had been expressed that the ledge at that point was not more thoroughly broken up, but quarrymen had no suspicion that this charge of dynamite had not gone off along with the others at that time.

Subscribe to

You must log in to continue reading. Log in or subscribe today.