Garamond 24 - City of Lincoln, ND

Transcription

Garamond 24 - City of Lincoln, ND
2016
City of Lincoln
74 Santee Road
Office 258-7969
Police 258-2403 Emergency 911
The City of Lincoln is looking for volunteers to help
stuff envelopes for the water bills. We meet on the 2nd
Wednesday of the month at 1pm. Please call the City
Office if interested to be added to our volunteer list.
FROM THE MAYOR’S DESK
April 2016
City Hall Office Hours
Monday-Thursday 8:00 AM- 5:00 PM
Friday 8:00 AM- 12:30 PM
www.cityoflincolnnd.com
Please remember if you would like to place an item on the agenda,
you need to contact the City Auditor’s office Thursday by 8:00 am
the week prior to the meeting for consideration. This allows our
council to be more prepared for the topics on the agenda. If you
would like to submit an insert or article for the newsletter, the
deadline is the first of each month.
HELLO EVERYONE!
There has been a slight schedule change for the 2016
Lincoln City Wide Rummage Sale. As we all know summer is
really busy with graduations, school getting out and vacations
starting. The new schedule for the rummage sale with
hopefully work better for most of you and allow more of our
"Lincoln Family" to participate.
The dates and times for 2016 will be: Friday, May 13th
from 3 pm - 8 pm; Saturday, May 14th from 8 am - 7 pm; and
Sunday, May 15th from 10 am - 3 pm. These times are just a
general guideline, of course you all have the choices as to
when you would like to be open but these are the times that
will be listed in the advertisements.
The fee this year will be $8.00 per home **CASH
ONLY, PLEASE HAVE CORRECT AMOUNT** Please
stop by the office to pay your fee's and fill out your
information sheet by April 22nd. The information sheet is
what we will use for the advertisements. The contact this year
is Jan Wolf. You can email any questions at
[email protected] or shoot her a text at 701-391-0930.
*Also don't forget to pick up your food permit when you stop
by the city if you plan on serving food during your sale*
Pet Licenses
Don’t forget that ANY pets 6 months or older need to be
licensed annually. Spayed/neutered is $5.00, and nonspayed/unneutered is $10.00. Please also bring in a copy of your
pet’s updated rabies vaccinations.
Go to our website to view: Qtr 1: 6 Storm
Water Facts on the 26th Anniversary of MS4
Spring is here! Children are out playing in
the streets, please drive careful.
I have some good news and some not so good news. First
the good. We're having a parade on June 11! We are
looking for venders and volunteers. If interested, the next
meeting is 6:00pm on April 11th at city hall or go to
Lincoln Days Committee on Facebook.
Now the not so good. Due to the practice of dumping
grease, hygiene products, toys and other not so nice items
into the sewer system, we had a blockage that caused some
residences in town a very unpleasant experience. Please be
careful on what goes into the system so we don't have this
problem.
Thank You
Gerarld L. Wise
Please remember to contact the city office if you are
starting/stopping utility service, replacement or
addition of a garbage container or if there is a street
light out. Thank you.
Clean-up Day
The City is planning their annual cleanup day for
June 11th. Please meet at the Tumbleweed parking lot at
8 am. Volunteers are needed. Please call or stop by the
City office if you are able to volunteer. You will need to
sign a waiver. If we don’t get enough volunteers, we
CANNOT have the cleanup.
Please keep in mind that spring is here and it is a
good time to start cleanup around your yard as the
beautification committee will be going around addressing
yards that need cleaning up. Thanks ahead of time for
your efforts to keep our city Clean!
Computer screens and TV’s are not acceptable
items for cleanup. Also household remodeling material is
not accepted. There will be a disposal charge for tires.
Any item containing Freon has to have a certified Freon
Free sticker to be removed. No fuel, paint, or chemicals
will be picked up.
March Bills
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE $10365.97, ND TAX COMMISSIONER $14.74, ADVANCED BUSINESS METHODS $395.58, AIRE-MASTER
OF NO DAK $14.00, AK TECHNOLOGIES $530.00, BISMARCK TRIBUNE $727.73, BORDER STATES ELECTRIC SUPPLY $6.69, BROWN
& SAENGER $81.95, BURLEIGH COUNTY DETENTION CTR $525.00, BUSINESS RADIO LICENSING $120.00, BUTLER MACHINERY CO
$275.93, CAPITAL ELECTRIC $3,613.68, CARDMEMBERS SERVICE, $744.92, CENTRAL DAKOTA FORENSIC NURSE $105.00, CITY OF
BISMARCK $1,070.98, DAKOTA DUSTEX $62.95, DAKOTA TOWING $210.00, EIDE FORD $45.28, FETZER ELECTRIC $97.05,
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEPT $67.55, KNIFE RIVER $124.40, KRAMER AGENCY $22,305.00, MACS, INC., $18.63, MARTENS
ATTORNEY AT LAW $2,675.00, MIDCONTINENT $234.13, NAPA AUTO PARTS $244.15, ND CLERKS ASSOCIATION $60.00, ND DEPT OF
HEALTH – MICROBIOLO $48.00, ND LEAGUE OF CITIES $10.00, ND ONE CALL, INC $7.10, PITNEY BOWES INC $820.99, RUNNING
SUPPLY, INC. $62.85, RUSTY MASON $150.00, SHORT ELLIOTT HENDRICKSON INC $13,934.04, Tri-Energy Cooperative $732.20,
WASTE MANAGEMENT OF WI-MN $13,855.06, BORSTAD, JOSH E $64.64, DALY, KAREN $123.47, FISCHER, ERVIN WALTER $184.70,
GREISCH, JEFFREY $64.64, Isakson, Charles $277.05, Panchol, Reuben, $64.64, VOLK, THOMAS $184.70, Wise, Gerarld $212.40,
ND TAX COMMISSIONER $7.05, SARAH MAENZA $37.28, STEVE BERG $200.00, ADVANCED BUSINESS METHODS $376.86, AFLAC
$297.36, AL DICKSON $320.50, BISMARCK TRIBUNE $233.23, BORDER STATES ELECTRIC SUPPLY $101.17, BRADY MARTZ
$3,890.85, BROWN & SAENGER $138.50, CENTRAL DAKOTA FORENSIC NURSE $210.00, CITY OF BISMARCK $17,715.54, DAKOTA
DUSTEX $7.65, DAKOTA SANITATION, INC $289.00, EIDE FORD $45.28, FERGUSON WATERWORKS $1,492.54, FETZER ELECTRIC
$150.00, FLASH PRINTING $56.00, GUARDIAN LOCK & SAFE, INC $76.00, MDU $545.93, MENARDS $25.19, OK TIRE STORE $31.95,
PITNEY BOWES INC $327.00, ROTO-ROOTER SEWER DRAIN SERVICE $1,250.00, SHORT ELLIOTT HENDRICKSON INC $23,180.00,
VERIZON WIRELESS $411.06, WORKFORCE SAFETY & INSURANCE $6,820.28, JUDY ANDERSON $62.80, BLUE CROSS BLUE SHEILD
OF ND $6,531.69
CITY OF LINCOLN COMMUNITY INFORMATION
MEETING DATES:
Planning & Zoning ~ April 5th at 7:00pm at the City office
Lincoln City Council ~ April 7th at 7:00pm at the City office
Park Board Meeting ~ The 3rd Tuesday of every month at the Park Shelter- 32 McDougall Drive 7:00pm
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Peace Lutheran Church of Lincoln @ 3310 66th St. SE would like to invite everyone to worship with them on Sunday mornings @ 9:30 AM with Sunday
School classes and Adult Bible Study classes immediately after church at 10:30 AM. Prayer or pastor needs contact Kevin Nelson at 333-8164. Visit our
website www.peacelutheranoflincoln.com
We will be having 1st Communion classes for Kindergartners - 3rd Grade on 26 April 2016 at 6:30 PM. Then again on 28 April 2016 for 4th Grade on up
at 6:30 PM. All will celebrate their 1st Communion at the 1 May 2016 Church Service which starts at 9:30 AM. Last Day of Sunday School for the
Summer is 15 May 2016. Join us again in September when Sunday School classes resume.
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Burleigh County Bookmobile
Thursdays: March 10th, April 14th, May 12th
Lincoln Cenex Gas Station………………3:10-3:30
Lincoln-Lakota Lane………………….…3:35-3:55
Lincoln-Edgerly Lane………………....….4:00-4:30
Lincoln-Allen Drive………...………….....4:35-5:00
Drop Boxes: For your convenience, there is a double gray drop box in front of the City Building at 74 Santee Rd. This box is secure and
checked daily. The upper slot is for your City Water Bill, Pet License, Police Fines etc. and the lower one is for MDU bills. Please do not
place Capital Electric bills in either the city drop box or the MDU drop box. There is a Capital Electric drop box at Dakota Community
Bank. Using the wrong box may result in your payment never reaching them.
Council Members:
Mayor Gerarld Wise, 214-9620 Oversees all portfolios
Karen Daly, 751-1442 or 527- 4819 Council President, Parks, Beautification and Forestry
Tom Volk, 218-791-5233 Fiscal Affairs/Police Dept.
Ervin Fischer, 390-8208, Public Works, Engineering and Police Dept.
The CCR Rule requires all community water systems to issue annual drinking water quality reports to their
customers. It will give consumers information on their drinking water and opportunities to get involved in
protecting their source of drinking water. The Consumer Confidence Report (CCR) is available at:
www.cityoflincolnnd.com
Quarter 1: 6 Stormwater Facts on the 26th Anniversary
of MS4
It’s been 26 years since the Environmental Protection Agency began the Phase I Municipal Separate Storm
Sewer System (MS4) permit program in November of 1990.
The NPDES MS4 permit is designed to protect our rivers, lakes and streams from polluted stormwater runoff. In
honor of the anniversary, we connected with SEH MS4 specialist April Ryan, PE, who shared some key facts
about stormwater, pollution, permitting and MS4.
1. Stormwater is precious and powerful. Stormwater is precipitation (rain or snowmelt) that falls to the ground
then flows over land rather than percolate into the ground. In essence, it is the combination of earth’s most
precious resource, water, and its most ubiquitous force, gravity. An inch of rain on an acre of land is equivalent
to 27,154 gallons. It weighs about 113 tons. That’s powerful.
2. Stormwater affects the water you drink. When precipitation hits the ground, some water trickles down into
groundwater aquifers, while the rest flows on the surface to lakes, streams and rivers. Depending on where you
live, your drinking water comes from either surface water (lakes and rivers) or a groundwater aquifer.
3. Today’s stormwater moves faster than ever. Prior to urbanization, the majority of precipitation was naturally,
and slowly, filtered by soil and grasses. As development occurred and pavements became widely used,
stormwater conveyance systems (ditches, gutters, storm sewers) were constructed which quickly transport
water from streets to surface waters, like lakes, rivers, wetlands and streams. The NPDES permit program
controls water pollution by requiring MS4s to treat stormwater prior to discharging into surface waters.
4. Polluted stormwater runoff is the number one water pollutant. As stormwater moves across developed areas
it picks up garbage, debris, sediment, chemicals, automotive fluids, fertilizers, leaves and other pollutants from
parking lots, yards, streets, roofs and other hard surfaces. If left untreated, these enter directly into our
waterways.
The Tartan Crossing redevelopment project combines surface water treatment with a stunning aesthetic centerpiece at an abandoned
mall site in Oakdale, Minnesota.
5. Stormwater pollution is classified in two ways. Water pollution comes either from “point” or “nonpoint”
sources. A point source is identifiable, such as a pipe or drain discharging a pollutant directly into a body of
water. A nonpoint source is more difficult to define. It entails all the polluted stormwater within a certain
geography, like a watershed, for example.
6. An MS4 battles against stormwater pollution. MS4 refers to conveyance or system of conveyances (including
roads with drainage systems, streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, man-made channels, and storm
drains) which is owned or operated by a state, city, town, county, district, association, or other public body
(created by or pursuant to state law).
This summary is part of a larger write-up originally published on Novevmber 24th, 2015 entitled 25 Stormwater
Facts on the 25th Anniversary of MS4
- See more at: http://www.sehinc.com/news/25-stormwater-facts-25th-anniversary-ms4#sthash.sunVbv4L.dpuf