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CSI Blogs

House Fire at Night

Posted by: Terry Mayer in Terry's Blog

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Terry Mayer

 


      I have always had great respect for firefighters and what they do to keep us safe.  My father was a firefighter with the Dairen Fire Dept. and I always enjoyed going to the fire dept. and watching the fire department in their training.  No matter the weather or the time they are at the scene putting their lives on the line to save ours, they are the country's bravest.  


Media Swarm

Posted by: Terry Mayer in Terry's Blog

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Terry Mayer

 

     This photograph was taken during after a weekend shooting that left six people dead, including twin baby boys in a murder-suicide committed by the father. I was up in the Dells over the weekend. I had no cell reception while in the Dells but as I made our way home, the signal kicked in. I checked my phone and had messages about the shooting which had happened the previous day. Luckily, Week editor Dan Plutchak was aware of the shooting and got photos of the scene; most of my photos were from two or three days after the shooting but there was still quite a bit of commotion going on.

     News outlets from all over the Midwest region were camping out in front of the crime scene day and night. After one of the police briefings, a family member of the murdered victims came out to talk to the press.

     As you can see from the photo, all of the reporters and video photographers swarmed in on her to get any little bit of info that they could use for their publication or news show. I was in the back of the crowd when all of this took place. I held my camera up and got a photo or two with her in front but everyone their was getting the same photo.

     In an effort to get something different, I walked to the back of the subject, held my camera up as high as I could and snapped a photo but it was horizontal and I didn't care for it. I then flipped the camera vertically and got this photo with her in the bottom of the image and all of the press surrounding her. I was probably in quite a few of their photos and I am sure they were not happy with me being in their shots, but the photo was different then anything the rest of the media got plus it maintained the subject's privacy which I don't think she minded. Finally, this photo really shows how much the media swarms in on a hot story.


Residents to weigh in on Beloit budget

Posted by: Dan Plutchak in The News Blog

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Dan Plutchak
Who would have thought we'd be nostalgic for the days when budget balancing simply meant tightening our belts and trimming the fat.

And who remembers when no one from the public would show up for the annual budget hearings, and the budget would pass without much public input.

Well, the fat is gone, and budget hearings now draw a crowd.

Particularly in Beloit, where residents have been vocal about the proposed 2012 operating budget. It's a budget that will require tough choices between public safety or nearly every other service the city provides, and public input will play an important role in how those competing interests are resolved.

City Manager Larry Arft presented the budget to the city council Monday, and laid out a plan to fill a nearly $2.5 million hole. In his letter to the council outlining the budget, Arft notes that the state's budget repair bill significantly reduces funding to the city and limits the city's ability to raise taxes. Add to that, sharp increases in costs in everything from health insurance to fuel and the squeeze is on.

The "tools" the state provides local municipalities, however, don't make up the difference, because police and firefighters were exempt from the mandated public employee pension increases.

Officials are planning to cover the shortfall by spreading the cuts evenly throughout each department. But for fire and police, additional cuts are being considered to make up for the lack of additional pension contributions. Most departments are being asked to absorb a 5.5 percent cut.

But according to the budget presented Monday, "Because the police and fire departments did not receive the savings from employee pension contributions, their percentage of the allocation was 6.3 percent from the police department and 6.8 percent of the fire department, resulting in a need to make deeper budget reductions." Is this approach the best way to balance the budget? That's where resident feedback will be critically important.

(Poll: Should Beloit go forward with its plans for cuts and layoffs in public safety to preserve other city services? VOTE.)

Keep in mind that fewer cuts in police and fire mean greater cuts elsewhere.

According to Arft's budget summary, "An effort to have made all of the necessary budget cuts from the remaining departments of the general fund would have required deep cuts in staffing, the closure of facilities and possibly the elimination of some services that are provided to those other departments and divisions." The cuts include six police officers and six firefighters.

If last month's public safety budget workshop in City Hall's Forum was any indication, residents and public safety officials have plenty of opinions about where the city should go.

At the hearing, Lt. Scott Smith, representing the International Fire Fighters Association No. 583, cautioned that small fires will become big fires and big fires will become vacant lots.

Police Chief Norm Jacobs said that he won't sacrifice the safety of his officers, but services like parade crowd control, funeral procession assistance and high school football games may see a decrease.

It will be a while yet before the budget is finalized, but the options are both clear and stark.

Input from residents will be a key ingredient in how the issue is resolved. Two public workshops are planned from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for Monday, Oct. 10 and Monday, Oct. 17.

Two more workshops are being considered for Oct. 24 and 25.

The formal public hearing will take place at City Council's Oct. 17 meeting with a final vote by the council Nov. 7.

Enjoying the Concert

Posted by: Terry Mayer in Terry's Blog

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Terry Mayer

 

  

     I like this photo, even though when it went up for state judging last year the judges poo-poo'ed it, I still like it.  But judging is very subjective and since I like it I am putting it up on my photo blog.  
    This was at Country Thunder USA last year and was early in the morning.  I was walking around through the vendors and little shops that scatter the midway when I saw these two kids walking up from the parking lot and through the midway.  Covered in mud they stood out and I wanted to get a photo of them but wasent sure what I wanted or how I wanted the photo to look so I just followed them around for a little while.  Other people would come up to them and get their photo but I wanted more.  As I was getting to the end of the midway I was about to give up, thinking I was not going to get a photo and move on to another idea.  
    Then on the stage the first band of the day began to play so the couple walked over to the to get a better view of the stage. As I was watching them through the camera I was reminded of the iconic photo from photographer Burk Uzzle and his photo from Woodstock with Nick and Bobbi Ercoline standing on a hillside with a blanket holding each other, some 40 years ago.  I snapped the photo.  I was not trying to recreate the photo or copy it, its just what it was at that time.  So even though the judges may not have liked it , I do and who knows in another 40 years maybe this couple will look back at this photo and say hay that was us covered in mud standing in each others arms. 


Can bright spots add light to a dim economy?

Posted by: Dan Plutchak in This Just In

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Dan Plutchak
Despite a persistent gloomy economic outlook, we’re always on the lookout for bright spots as we put together the paper each week.

   Even though Republicans and Democrats in Washington are pitching differing versions of job creation plans, local companies figuring out how to expand their markets and grow their businesses ultimately will do the heavy lifting.

Here are a few highlights close to home that we’ve reported on in the past few weeks:

Unlike our neighboring counties, Walworth County doesn’t have a base of large employers to dramatically affect the job market, but despite that, the unemployment rate dropped in the figures released last week by the state Department of Workforce Development.

In August, the unemployment rate fell to 7.4 percent, down from 7.7 percent a month earlier. How the busy tourist season plays into that number is unclear, and the August and September numbers will give a better indication of the long-term employment outlook in Walworth County.

Of course, the interesting measure of economic health in Walworth County is the high-end lakefront home market. Realtors in the market are writing on their blogs that activity has begun to slow heading into the fall, which may push prices down a bit further.

The bargain hunters are expected to turn up around November, although there are plenty of deals already out there if you’re looking for an entry level home in the million-dollar range.

The trickle down of these sales, however, is that buyers also have cash to spend on fixing up their new purchases, and it’s typically not a do-it-yourself crowd who buys these homes.

That’s good news for local contractors who have gravitated to remodeling work as the new home construction market has dried up.

Over in Rock County, the Beloit City Council on Monday agreed to purchase land that it will turn around and sell to NorthStar Medical Radioisotopes for $1. The company produces a necessary isotope used in medical imaging.

In return, NorthStar will invest $194 million in the Beloit facility and create more than 150 jobs by 2016.

Also in Beloit, Kerry Ingredients and Flavours announced plans to expand the company’s headquarters, as well as other Wisconsin facilities during the next year, thanks to a $1.5 million loan from the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp.

The agency is the public-private initiative created from the former state Department of Commerce.

The expansion is expected to create up to 67 new jobs, along with retaining about 800 jobs already in the state for the global food ingredient company.

And a short drive up Interstate 90, St. Mary’s Janesville Hospital is in the process of hiring more than 300 people by the time the hospital is ready to open its doors in early January.

Human resources staff had sifted through more than 6,000 job applications by early September, and had hired about 125 people, with another 200 to go.

We suspect some of those new hires will be coming from the Mercy Health System, setting up a domino effect that could add fuel to the competitive health care market just beginning to heat up.

That’s in addition to Mercy’s major expansion of the Mercy Walworth Medical Center outside of Williams Bay.

Although these bright spots remain few and far between, this is the kind of activity that will be the engine to drive us out of the economic doldrums.


Editor’s note: Dan Plutchak is an associate editor for CSI Media, publisher of the Janesville Messenger, Walworth County Sunday and the Stateline News. Contact him at dplutchak@communityshoppers.com, on Facebook.com/DanPlutchak or on Twitter @danplutchak

Barn on Starry Night

Posted by: Terry Mayer in Terry's Blog

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Terry Mayer

 

Photography is painting with light, so what better then a black canvas to start with? For this photo is was around 11:00pm and almost pitch black out. I even had trouble framing and focusing because it was so dark out. The light from the silo and the barn is from a very small light on the other side of the farm and the glow from the background is from Allen's Grove or maybe Sharon not sure which town. My exposure was wide open 2.8m at 30 seconds. I found this to work really well with this image, it picked up the stars enough without having them blurred and it was long enough of an exposure to illuminate the background sky and allowed the little farm light to fill in the barn enough to see it. I had to do a little more research for this photo, weeks before I had to go online and search for the moon phases so that it would be totally dark out then when I found the night that it would be dark enough I had to wait 2 weeks until I could go out and get the photo.


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