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Luverne School Board Candidates

Name and place of residence: Greg Aubert, Luverne

Family information: Wife, Patti, and children, Zane, a fourth-grader, and Wyatt, a second-grader.

Occupation: Plant manager of Gold'n Plump Poultry Further Processing facility, Luverne

Education: Bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. Pre-engineering courses were completed at U of M, Morris.

Community activities and involvement: Member of the Southwest Minnesota Workforce Council, served as a board member for Luverne Area Chamber of Commerce 1999-2001, coached youth soccer for four years, served on the curriculum committee for Luverne Schools, volunteer for Bookin' Buddies and is a member of St. Catherine Church, Luverne.

Qualifications for service: "I believe that the next few years are going to be very challenging. The State of Minnesota looks like it will be in a deficit situation. The economy looks to be uncertain in the near term. This will definitely put a strain on the amount of money that the state will be able to allocate to education.

"New innovative ideas will be needed if we want to keep the programs and services that we have in place. I believe that my four years of experience as a plant manager and 10 years in areas such as engineering, purchasing, distribution, transportation, etc., can be a benefit to the school district.
I have experience managing a budget, which is very similar in scope and complexity to the school district. I have experience managing overhead expenses and can give ideas to the administrators on how to reduce these expenses without losing quality or service. I hope that I can also add insight into the budgeting process."

If elected, what should voters expect you to accomplish during your term as school board member? In other words, if elected, what issues will be important to you?

"I would like to see a comprehensive drug education and prevention program at all ages, including parents. I would support class size equity throughout the school (i.e. the fifth-grade class size is substantially larger than the rest of the grade school). Equity in the budgeting process needs to be maintained for all grades. Maintenance of programs and services that are presently in place will be a priority.

"My goal would be to keep the school district financially sound while offering as many opportunities as possible for all students."

Public learns more about meth

By Sara Strong
Rock County had another chance for drug education Monday night as the city of Luverne and Parents: The Anti Drug and Violence Task Force hosted an experienced speaker.

Kurt Rothwell is the safety director for the southwest region of the Minnesota Municipal Utilities Association. He works with the city of Luverne regularly, and the city asked him to return to speak to the general public.

He outlined some of the signs of drug use, especially methamphetamine, but emphasized that families should look at all substances they use as examples for their children, including cigarettes and alcohol.

“I think marijuana is more prevalent. And if you're using chemicals in your home, if you're popping pills every day, chances are, the kids will too. How do you expect them not to?” Rothwell said.

In his capacity as a safety director, he is constantly researching and keeping up with news.

Rothwell pointed to meth lab seizures peaking in the late 1990s. “For every one that's caught, there’s five to 10 still out there. They’re not as easy to catch. The drug makers are getting smarter.”

Many of the labs that are stopped are the smaller scale ones, with many large-scale meth production labs still operating in Mexico and on the west coast of the United States.

Just last month in St. Paul, one couple had what Rothwell called a “mom and pop” operation in a trailer house. In that bust, 20 pounds of meth were seized. That amount of the drug was worth 90,800 doses.

To watch for
The base of methamphetamine is always some form of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine. The rest of the chemicals react to it and form what's known as meth - or speed, ice, crystal and various street names for the drug.

Some of the solvents and reactors used in “cooking” meth include: lantern fuel, drain cleaner, battery acid, sulfuric and muriatic acid. Salt is also used in the production during cooking.

Rothwell said, “It's like making cookies. Instead of putting in chocolate chips, you want a little something else, but that little something sure changes the cookie. Buyers never know the ingredients they're getting.”

Some ammonia gasses can freeze lungs when inhaled; other chemicals cause explosions.

Rothwell cautions roadside cleaning crews or volunteer groups against touching unlabeled containers or almost anything they find other than standard trash along the road. In drug production, chemicals are stored in inappropriate containers and erode and leak or create what would essentially be a bomb because of the explosive nature of the contents.

“This is a very dirty drug,” Rothwell said. For every pound of meth created, six pounds of garbage is also created in the process.

Common in meth users is tuberculosis, cholera, herpes, hepatitis and AIDS.

Trash and byproducts are also a part of meth use that affects more than just the users. Paranoid delusions or fear of being caught as a manufacturer often mean cookers stockpile garbage and cause problems community-wide.

Rothwell said that drug manufacturers are getting more and more clever in their ingredients. They split up into groups to purchase things such as matches (for the red phosphorus) cold medicine, diet pills, lithium batteries and Epson salt. Buying most of these ingredients doesn't cause alarm unless it's in huge quantities.

Other signs of a drug lab are various containers of liquid or white powder, filters, tubes, jars, pressure cookers, hot plates, kettles and filters.

Rothwell said the best sign of meth manufacturing is ephedrine, because that’s always the base, no matter what’s mixed with it.

“They can make it different every time,” Rothwell said. “Some will make you sweat, some will make you smell. What are they made of? I don't know.”

How they make it is usually spread word of mouth in drug circles, but books and the Internet are also sources.

The typical cooker is hard to pinpoint. Sometimes young children get involved in manufacturing it; chemistry majors in college sometimes do and so do older burnouts. “There's a wide range,” Rothwell said.

Personal effects
Trees growing near meth labs sometimes die. Fires started by the chemical mixtures can't be extinguished with water. That said, Rothwell explained what using the drug can do to its users.

If meth users aren't victims of explosions, fires or frozen lungs during manufacturing, they still suffer the consequences of using.

Rothwell compares the effects of meth to cocaine, but stronger.

Pupils dilate, blood pressure rises. Hallucinations and delusions are common, especially when coming off a high, so another high is needed.

Meth users lose bone mass (and often lose teeth) and are further damaged internally by not eating because of a diminished appetite. Their skin feels like bugs are crawling on it and they swat and scratch at themselves until varying degrees of sores are visible.

Depression can be a side effect of coming off a high and suicide isn't uncommon.

The paranoia associated with meth use sometimes means users are rigging labs to explode if people enter. Users and cookers often carry weapons to protect themselves.

Rothwell suggests keeping a distance from known users. He said to avoid shining bright light on meth users because their dilated pupils can’t handle the brightness. Rothwell also said to speak in a slow, low voice and move slowly around people suspected of being high on meth. Also, keep hands visible.

Although meth is getting a lot of attention now, it is the same drug that was prevalent in the 70s. Younger users, though, become addicts faster than adults and that’s the concern of the task force.

Next Parents meeting
The next meeting of Parents: The Anti Drug and Violence Task Force is 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 21, at the Pizza Ranch, Luverne. Lila Bauer wanted to remind people that the group is open to anyone.

Voters choose school board members

By Lori Ehde
Contested seats in all of Rock County's school district s brought additional voters to the polls Tuesday.

In Luverne, incumbents easily won in the eight-way contest for four seats.

Becky Walgrave took 16.2 percent of the votes with 1,714 tallies. Bill Stegemann (1,646), Daniel Kopp (1,391) and Cary Radisewitz (1,356) followed closely behind. They will serve another four years on the board.

Challengers were Colleen Nath (1,341), Greg Aubert (1,157), Bruce Baartman (1,146) and Tim Burns (763). Luverne board members Don Bryan, Colleen Deutsch and Steve Tofteland are not up for election this year.

Ellsworth School District saw the most interesting race with nine candidates filing for four open seats on the six-person board.

Layton Gruis (40), Dave Goedken (36) and Rhonda Groen (34) were elected to the three open four-year terms. Korey Meester (29), Don Kramer (26) and Lynn DeBerg (24) were the other challengers for those seats.

Verlyn Timmer (38) was elected to fill the vacant two-year term on the board. He beat out Kelly Kramer (19) and Jody Hinrichs (10) for the job.

None of the Ellsworth incumbents, Dan Boltjes, Arnie Timmer, Brenda Deutsch and Jeff Deutsch, filed for re-election.

Cliff Schilling, whose seat is not up for election this year, said so many candidates filed because departing board members announced their decisions early and encouraged others to run.

Board member Jeff Boltjes holds the other seat not up for election this year.

In Adrian, newcomers garnered more votes than the two incumbents, displacing one of them. Patrick Thier (706), Tim Honermann (603), incumbent Gene Metz (579) and Mark Bullerman (485) were elected to the board for four-year terms.
They beat out Pamela Konz (395), incumbent Joe Wieneke (369), Kate McCann (327) and Joan Pater (294) for the job. Board members Dennis Kruger and Brenda Sailor did not file for re-election.

Current board members whose terms are up in 2004 are Mark Lonneman, Ted Reisdorfer and Aileen Tweet.

The Hills-Beaver Creek School District conducts its board elections in odd years - not concurrent with general elections. The next election for that board will be in the fall of 2003.

Elected school board members assume their duties Jan. 1.

Hospital announces plans to build new facility

By Lori Ehde
Sioux Valley and Luverne Community Hospital announced plans Tuesday to construct a new hospital and medical clinic building in or near the city of Luverne.

The feasibility of the new construction is contingent on the sale or disposition of the current medical facility on East Luverne Street, according to a statement released Tuesday afternoon.

The announcement came on the heels of the Rock County Board of Commissioners approval Tuesday of a resolution to work with the city of Luverne and Sioux Valley to consider alternative uses for the current facility.

The city of Luverne will consider a similar resolution at the next regular council meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 12.

Sioux Valley Hospitals and Health System, which owns the Luverne hospital, is working with the Luverne Advisory Board on the project.

Background
The option for new construction on a new location was just one of several options the hospital’s been considering to bring its facility up to date.

Increasing numbers of patients are utilizing services such as physical therapy, outpatient infusion, chemotherapy, respiratory care, laboratory services and more.

According to hospital administrator Gerald Carl, the current buildings are not well-suited to accommodate those services.

Further, inpatient rooms are outdated, lacking amenities such as personal showers, which have become standard in most hospitals.

In April, Sioux Valley hired an architect to study the pros and cons of renovating versus expanding. In July, that study yielded three possible options to pursue:

•Renovate and expand the present hospital and clinic on their existing campus.

•Build a new hospital on the parking lot to the north and expand and renovate the clinic in its current location. This option would include closing Brown Street and new space for parking would need to be addressed.

•Build a new hospital and clinic facility on a completely different site.

Since then, the third option has become the most attractive.

Still many unknowns

At this point, the only concrete decision is to build new on a new location.

Carl and Sioux Valley executives said two, possibly three locations are under consideration and negotiations are in process with landowners.

The size of the campus and the new facility will be determined by the hospital's budget considerations.

“What we want and what we can afford are still two different things,” Carl said Tuesday.

He was also unable to answer whether the new facility would offer additional services that would generate new jobs in the community.

All that aside, Greg Burger, president of the Rock County Development Corporation, said the new facility alone is good for the community.

“The opportunity to have a new healthcare facility in Luverne would be an asset to the people of Rock County,” he said. “When businesses want to relocate, the availability of good healthcare can be a deciding factor.”

Ed Weiland, president of Sioux Valley Regional Health Services, thanked the city and county for agreeing to work cooperatively on the project.

“More space and an updated infrastructure will make it possible to offer more services to the people who make Rock County their home,” he said.

Adrian School Board Candidates

Name and place of residence: Kate McCann, rural Adrian

Family information: Husband, Bruce, moved here six years ago from Colorado Springs. They have four children, three of which attend Adrian schools: Jenni, 15, Nick, 11, and Andy, 6.

Occupation: City clerk-treasurer for the city of Lismore where she's worked for five years.

Education:
Community activities and involvement: Vice president of the newly-formed Blue and Gold Parent Teacher Organization for District 511 schools. "I feel that volunteerism is necessary on all levels, and this community is great when it comes to stepping up and helping each other."

Qualifications for service: "My past work experiences that I feel qualifies me for this position are my numerous years of employment in the financial field. I was an insurance agen for 15 years, bookkeeper for my husband's custom home building business for 10 years and I have a broker's license in real estate. I am certified with the Minnesota Clerks and Financial Officers Association and the International Institute of Municipal Clerks. My No. 1 qualification would be as a parent that cares about the educational needs of my children."

If elected, what should voters expect you to accomplish during your term as school board member? In other words, if elected, what issues will be important to you?

"My reason for running for a position on the school board is to see better communication between school officials, teachers, parents and kids. At this time, my experience with the school board has been as an observer, and I would like the issues the school board faces to be relayed to the public, so that we, the public, can better understand the decisions the school is making. The input from all parties involved in the school district is essential.

Adrian School Board Candidates

Name and place of residence: Pam Konz, rural Adrian

Family information: Husband, Mike, and children, David, 20, Paul, 18, James, 16, Jonathan, 14, and Kaitlyn, 11.

Occupation: Faith Formation Director for St. Adrian Catholic Church for grades 1-12 and adults, as well as for grades 1-4 at St. Anthony, St. Kilian and Our Lady of Good Counsel churches in Lismore, St. Kilian and Wilmont. It's a full-time position sheÕs held for six years, and she was part-time for three years prior to that.

Education: She graduated from Trimont High School in 1978 and received an associate's degree in open studies from Mankato State University in 1980. She graduated summa cum laude from MSU in 1981 with a bachelor's degree in business administration with minors in finance and management.

Community activities and involvement: She is past president and current member of Music Parents Association. She has served on the Nobles County Library Board for eight years, most of those years as secretary, and is a member of the Plum Creek Library System governing board.

Qualifications for service:
"One of my responsibilities, since I married a farmer, has been to keep up the farm books and prepare them for the tax season. In addition, part of my job at St. Adrian is to submit a yearly budget and then to operate from it.

"These two experiences, along with the Library BoardÕs responsibility of overseeing the Library's budget, make me very aware of financial concerns and money management. None of these entities have unlimited incomes, so I've developed some skill at creative allocation of resources. As MPA president (and as a parent), I've learned how to listen to both sides of the story and to reserve judgment on issues until all sides have weighed in."

If elected, what should voters expect you to accomplish during your term as school board member? In other words, if elected, what issues will be important to you?

"I would like to encourage the board to consider the needs of the students as a priority in any policy making that the board does. I would also like to see that the financial situation of the school district is improved."

H-BC students turn in solid performance on MCA tests

By Jolene Farley
Hills-Beaver Creek third- and fifth-graders turned in a "very solid" performance on the Minnesota Comprehensive Test administered in March, according to Superintendent Dave Deragisch.

"ItÕs not just good teaching," said Superintendent Dave Deragisch at the Oct. 14 school board meeting. "It's good teaching and good learning."

Of 26 fifth-grade students taking the reading portion of the test, 92 percent received a Level III or above.

Students at Level III demonstrate solid performance and competence in the knowledge and skills necessary for satisfactory work in the state's content standards.

Students scoring in Level IV demonstrate advanced academic performance, knowledge and skills that exceed the level necessary for satisfactory work in the state's content standards.

Across the state in the reading portion of the test, only 64 percent of students scored a Level III or better, according to the Minnesota Department of Children, Families and Learning website.

Of 27 Hills-Beaver Creek third-graders taking the reading portion of the test, 63 percent received a Level III or above. Statewide, 49 percent achieved a Level III or better.

In the math portion of the test, 92 percent of 26 fifth-graders taking the test achieved a Level III or better. The state average is 53 percent.

While 70 percent of Hills-Beaver Creek third-graders received a Level III or better in mathematics, 48 percent reached that level statewide.

Scores for the writing portion of the test for fifth-graders weren't available on the website as of this writing.

Statewide, public school third- and fifth-graders who took the tests in 2002 achieved similar results to last year.

Despite improvement in narrative and problem-solving writing assignments, about the same percentages of students fell into the same achievement levels in 2002 as 2001.

Evelyn Rognley

Evelyn Rognley, 93, Hills, died Friday, Oct. 25 at Tuff Memorial Home, Hills. Services will be Tuesday, Oct. 29 at 10:30 a.m. at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Hills, with Rev. Lowell Berg officiating. Roste Funeral Home of Hills is in charge of arrangements.

Lauretta Tobiason

Lauretta Emma Tobiason, 81, Magnolia, died Thursday, Oct. 17, 2002, in Luverne Community Hospital.

Services were Monday, Oct. 21, at Kenneth Lutheran Church in Kenneth. The Rev. Mike Zaske officiated. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery, Luverne.

Lauretta Pank was born to Edward and Emma (Hindt) Pank on Dec. 5, 1920, in Luverne. She graduated from Luverne High School and attended Nettleton Business College, graduating in 1942. She worked for a public accounting firm in Luverne and at a grocery store.

She married Gordon Tobiason on June 16, 1947. After their marriage, they moved to a farm near Magnolia. She worked at Safeway Egg Plant in Adrian and sold Fuller Brush products for more than 20 years.

Mrs. Tobiason was a member of Kenneth Lutheran Church. She enjoyed fishing, camping, her dogs and making woodcarving name signs.

Survivors include her husband, Gordon Tobiason, one son, Lyle Tobiason, Magnolia; two daughters, Linda (Doug) Broich, Montevideo, and Laurie (Jeff) Deutsch, Ellsworth; six grandchildren, Michael (Julie) Broich, Todd Broich, Ryan Broich, Jennifer Deutsch, Tiffany Deutsch and Nicholas Deutsch; two great-grandchildren, Staci and Cathi Broich; one sister, Luella Woodley, Pipestone; one brother Marvin (Charlotte) Pank, Flandreau, S.D.; one sister-in-law, Helen Kruger, Luverne; and many nieces and nephews.

Mrs. Tobiason was preceded in death by her parents and one brother, Freddie Pank.

Dingmann Funeral Home, Luverne, was in charge of arrangements.

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