Banner 2-29-2024

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VOLUME 170, No. 9 Thursday, February 29, 2024 PRICE $1.


T HE


H ASTINGS


Devoted to the Interests of Barry County Since 1856


Students explore their


futures at Career Fest


See story on page 3


Saxons mount thrilling


comeback in districts


See story on page 9


Tax tribunal sides with


TimberCreek Ranch


See story on page 8


Rotarians raising money


for Imagination Library


Voters approve operating millage proposals


and select presidential candidates


Jayson Bussa
Editor
Voters in Barry County have fallen in line
with the rest of the state by selecting both Pres-
ident Joe Biden and former President Donald
Trump to represent their respective political
parties in the upcoming race for the presidency.
The 2024 presidential primary election,
which concluded on Tuesday, offered few
surprises as county voters also passed a
renewal of an operating millage for Barry
County Central Dispatch that included the
restoration of 0.0584 mills that had been
slowly lost over the years due to the Headlee
Amendment, which requires a local unit of
government to reduce its millage when annu-
al growth on existing property is greater than
the rate of inflation.
With the approval of the operating millage,
Barry County Central Dispatch will again
levy 1.000 mill, an amount that was original-
ly approved back in 1992.
Stephanie Lehman, director for the depart-
ment, said in the days leading up to the elec-
tion that she expected the restoration of the
0.0584 mills to generate an additional
$164,860 – assuming all taxes are collected



  • for the department, which would ideally be
    used to hire two additional dispatchers for a
    department that has seen its utilization steadi-
    ly grow over time but is not fully staffed.
    The department also faces persistent tech-
    nological needs to keep infrastructure up to
    industry standards.


While Central Dispatch has routinely
passed previous operating millages in the
past, Lehman admitted she was a little ner-
vous to see how voters would respond to this
year’s request, as it came with a small
increase with the Headlee override.
“I was pretty nervous about it because it is
an increase in cost to the residents of Barry
County, and we’re living in a society and a
climate right now where the inflation rates
and things, in my lifetime, have reached an
all-time high,” Lehman said following the
successful campaign.
“So, everything is continuing to cost more
and costs continue to rise and even though the
difference between the Headlee (override)
and the full mill was not a huge amount of
money, it is some.”
The increase will cost the average property
owner an additional $5 or $6.
Of the 12,756 voters who weighed in on
the topic, 8,166 voted yes (64 percent).
“In a time and age where everybody is
struggling and every household is making
some sort of concession with today’s infla-
tion, and just the cost of life in today’s
market, we are incredibly fortunate to do
the work that we do in a community that
continues to support their 9-1-1 center,”
Lehman said. “Not every community is that
fortunate.”

Sheriff’s office fully


staffed with addition


of new deputy


Jayson Bussa
Editor
Barry County Sheriff Dar Leaf chalked it
up as a victory.
In what has become the hyper-competitive
field of law enforcement, the Barry County
Sheriff’s Office is mostly accustomed to los-
ing its personnel to larger agencies and juris-
dictions.
With the latest addition to the Sheriff’s
Department, it was the opposite.
On Tuesday morning, during a brief meet-
ing of the Barry County Board of Commis-
sioner, Leaf and Undersheriff Jason Sixberry
were in attendance to swear in the depart-
ment’s new deputy Caleb Skaggs.
Leaf joked about how his department was
finally able to “steal” someone from a larger
agency with Skaggs coming from the Battle
Creek Police Department.

“Usually they take from us and it was nice
to return the favor, you know,” Leaf said.
“It’s almost like a knife fight trying to get
people to work for you. It’s a battle of wages
and benefits and everything else.”
Leaf wasn’t necessarily overstating that
fact, either, as agencies across the state have
struggled to build solid talent pipelines to
keep their ranks filled. Only recently has the
city of Hastings been able to flesh out its
police department.
The Sheriff’s Department is now also
fully staffed, but only temporarily, as Leaf
referred to the dynamic on his force as a
“revolving door.”
The department plans to lose one member
to the Michigan State Police in the Spring

Hastings superintendent


retiring, district begins


search for candidates


Hunter McLaren
Staff Writer
Hastings Area School System Superinten-
dent Matt Goebel will be stepping away from
his role as superintendent this summer.
In comments made to the Hastings Ban-
ner, Goebel said he’s retiring to spend more
time with his family. Goebel joined the dis-
trict in 2012, working as assistant superin-
tendent of student achievement before mov-
ing into the role of interim superintendent in
2020 following the departure of former


superintendent Dan Remenap. Goebel was
appointed as the permanent superintendent
in 2021.
“Working for Hastings over the last nearly
12 years here in the district has been the
highlight of my career,” he said. “Working
with not only the students and staff, but the
community – and such a generous and giving
community – has just been just an awesome,

Rotarians across Barry County are
competing with each other to raise
money for the Barry Community
Foundation’s Imagination Library
endowment fund. Dolly Parton’s
Imagination Library is a national book
gifting program that mails free books to
children from birth to age 5. The endow-
ment fund helps financially support the
mailing of the books to Barry County
kids. The Delton Area Rotary Club chal-
lenged Hastings Rotarians to fundraise
for the program. So far, the two clubs
have raised $5,400, with the Delton
Rotarians in the lead. Community mem-
bers are invited to support the cause,
too. Those interested in supporting
BCF’s Imagination Library endowment
fund can visit barrycountyreads.org or
imaginationlibrary.org. More informa-
tion on the fundraising effort will be
found in the March 9, 2024, edition of
The Reminder. Pictured are (from left)
Delton Rotarians David Stoll and Kathy
Forsyth, along with Hastings Rotarians
Chelsey Foster and Michelle Skedgell.
(Photo provided)

Barry County went to the polls on Tuesday for the presidential primary election, which also featured a proposal to renew the
operating millage for Barry County Central Dispatch. (Photo by Jayson Bussa)

See VOTERS, page 2


Hastings Superintendent Matt Goebel
will be leaving the district at the end of
the current school year. (File photo by
Hunter McLaren)

See RETIRING, page 3


Caleb Skaggs, right, is sworn in as a member of the Barry County Sheriff’s Office
by Sheriff Dar Leaf during Tuesday morning’s Board of Commissioners meeting.
(Photo by Jayson Bussa)

See NEW DEPUTY, page 2

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