sn 8-5-2023

(J-Ad) #1

The Sun and News


Your Hometown Newspaper Serving Middleville and Caledonia Areas


No. 31/ August 5, 2023 Published by J-Ad Graphics, Inc. • 1351 N. M-43 Highway, Hastings, MI 49058 145th year


- Caledonia village officials hold open
house for golf cart ordinance
- Thornapple fire captain still on leave
after drug-related charges
- Lee Elementary School hires new
principal
- Developer gets go-ahead to start
townhouse development in Gaines
- Crews finishing up AstroTurf project
at “The Ralph”


IN THIS ISSUE...IN THIS ISSUE...


Farmers Elevator grain bin out of


service after Wednesday incident


Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
A potentially hazardous
situation involving a large
grain bin at the Caledonia
Farmers Elevator was
resolved safely by co-op
employees late Wednesday
afternoon.
The incident was first
reported to Kent County cen-
tral dispatch about 12:
p.m., but CFE chief execu-
tive officer Joel Stoepker
said one of his employees
noticed something was amiss
much earlier.
“We had a grain bin that
started to (experience) a
small separation on one side
of it, from the foundation. It
was noticed it early in the
morning,” Stoepker said
Thursday morning in a tele-
phone interview with the Sun
and News
. “One of our oper-
ations managers noticed
there was a very small pile of
grain (near the foundation) –
I’m talking like two or three
coffee cups (full) – it was a
rather small amount and he
thought it was funny, he
hadn’t seen that there
before.”
The manager then told
another individual about the
situation, and they soon start-
ed to inspect the area around
the grain bin. He also called
Stoepker to let him know
what was happening.
“We started immediately


moving that grain to another
bin, just to take a precaution-
ary measure. We brought
some trucks in and we moved
the grain very steadily out of
that bin, just to be sure that
there wasn’t going to be an
issue with it,” Stoepker said.
The Caledonia Fire
Department was called to the

scene and the elevator kept
the department up to date on
what was going on. Five
employees from the CFE
feed office across the street
were evacuated. Portions of
Kinsey and Lake streets were
closed off. Elevator officials
determined it would take
about six hours to empty the

bin and get it transferred to a
larger adjacent bin and a
newer cone-bottom bin.
“We wanted to err on the
side of caution and be safe,”
Stoepker said.
The bin is currently out of
service until it can be inspect-

Longtime Thornapple firefighter retires


Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
Firefighters from the
Thornapple Township Fire
Department honored one of


their own Monday night, as
he is retiring from the depart-
ment.
Capt. Alex Middleton is
retiring after 21 years as a

firefighter and emergency
medical technician with the
department, previously
known as Thornapple
Township Emergency
Services until the depart-
ment recently rebranded
itself. Middleton cited health
issues in his decision to step
down from the department.
“He’s going to be very
(much) missed in our depart-
ment, with his knowledge,
skills and abilities that he
has, his institutional knowl-
edge of this organization,”
Chief Bill Richardson said.
“It’s going to be a definite
loss for us.”
Firefighters from the
department and members of
the Township Board ate
cake, signed the fire helmet
that Middleton wore for so
many years and extended
congratulations to him for his
service to the community.

Richardson presented
Middleton with an engraved
fire ax with the department
logo and Middleton’s dates
of service to the township
— “just in case he needs to
chop some trees down while
he’s up in the (Upper
Peninsula),” Richardson
said.
Middleton joined TTES
on July 22, 2002. He held a
variety of responsibilities
within the department over
the years, most recently
serving as a training officer
for the past five years.
“It’s been a pleasure. It’s
been an honor,” Middleton
said in accepting his gift. “I
don’t even know what to
say. You move forward,
you do the job that needs to
be done, do it the way it
needs to be done, don’t

Michigan Supreme


Court ruling a


massive victory


for local auto


accident victims


Jayson Bussa
Editor
When Teresa Hughes
heard the news, she broke
down.
“I just cried for a half
hour — happy tears,” said
Hughes, of Middleville.
“Because my son’s life has
changed so much — drasti-
cally bad.”
Hughes’ son, 35-year-
old Troy Hughes, is one of
the thousands of motorists
around the state of
Michigan who were criti-
cally injured in an auto
accident and unexpectedly
saw the quality and acces-
sibility to medical care

plummet when lawmakers
in Lansing made sweeping
changes to the state’s auto
no-fault insurance laws.
Because of the new law,
any medical service not
already covered under fed-
eral Medicare laws, which
includes in-home caregiv-
ers and transportation to
medical services, will now
only be reimbursed by
insurance companies at 55
percent of what they were
back before 2019. Existing
accident victims were not
grandfathered into this
change in the law, either,

Troy Hughes is pictured outside of his current
living facility at Spectrum Health Rehabilitation and
Nursing Center in Grand Rapids. Hughes, originally
from Middleville, was injured in a motorcycle acci-
dent over a decade-and-a-half ago and requires
around-the-clock care. (Photos provided)

See HUGHES, page 3

Employees at the Caledonia Farmers Elevator work to remove grain from a
compromised bin on Wednesday afternoon. (Photos by Greg Chandler)

See ELEVATOR, page 2

Retiring Thornapple Township Fire Department
Capt. Alex Middleton (right) accepts a fire ax from
department Chief Bill Richardson, engraved with the
department logo and Middleton’s dates of service, at
Monday’s celebration. (Photos by Greg Chandler) See MIDDLETON, page 2

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