HB 9.16.2021

(J-Ad) #1
The Hastings Banner — Thursday, September 16, 2021 — Page 5

Friday is deadline for local ARPA project proposals


Barry County commissioners are seeking
proposals “from qualified local units of gov-
ernment to help inform its planning regarding
use of the funding being received by the coun-
ty through the American Rescue Plan Act.”
The county will be looking for formal pro-
posals – and the electronic copy must be
received via email – no later than noon Friday,
Sept. 17.
These ARPA-funded projects could be


transformative, commissioners have said, and
could have an impact across municipal bound-
aries. As a result, the county board has OK’d
the intention to collaborate with other coun-
ties or the state if the project is appropriate.
County officials have said they will consid-
er a grant award for projects that demonstrate
a critical, identified need in the community, a
long-term investment in the community, an
impact that extends beyond the boards of the

local unit, and a funding need that is beyond
the ability of the local unit to fund solely
through its own allocation of ARPA funds as
well as other resources.
Projects that are proposed need to adhere to
certain guidelines governing the use of ARPA
funds, including the following:
Support public health expenditures, by
funding COVID-19 mitigation efforts, medi-
cal expenses, behavioral healthcare and cer-
tain public health and safety staff.
Address negative economic impacts caused
by the public health emergency, including
economic harm to workers, households, small
businesses, impacted industries and the public
sector.
Replace lost public sector revenue, using
this funding to provide government services
to the extent of the reduction in revenue expe-
rienced due to the pandemic.
Provide premium pay for essential workers,
offering additional support to those who have

borne and will bear the greatest health risks
because of their service in critical infrastruc-
ture sectors.
Invest in water, sewer and broadband infra-
structure, making necessary investments to
improve access to clean drinking water, sup-
port vital wastewater and stormwater infra-
structure, and expand access to broadband
internet.
Ineligible uses for the funds include direct
or indirect off-setting of a reduction in net tax
revenue due to a change in the law from
March 3 through the last day of the fiscal year
in which the funds provided have been spent.
Also, no recipient may use the funding to
make a deposit to a pension fund.
General infrastructure spending is not eligi-
ble – other than water, sewer, and broadband
investments.
A fact sheet on The Rescue America Plan
Act of 2021 explains the relief will go to sup-
port urgent COVID-19 response efforts and

continue to decrease spread of the virus and
bring the pandemic under control, replace lost
public sector revenue to strengthen support
for vital public services and help retain jobs,
support immediate economic stabilization for
households and businesses, and address sys-
temic public health and economic challenges
that have contributed to the unequal impact of
the pandemic on certain populations.
“Recovery funds provide substantial flexi-
bility for each jurisdiction to meet local needs,
including support for households, small busi-
nesses, impacted industries, essential workers
and the communities hardest-hit by the crisis.
These funds also deliver resources, address
issues related to water infrastructure, broad-
band, the COVID-19 pandemic, and efforts to
help mitigate future pandemics,” the fact
sheet indicates.
The $1.9 trillion federal rescue plan was
signed into law March 11.

from our readers


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there are a few conditions that must be met before they will be published.
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    person per month.

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State News Roundup


The Hastings Banner
Devoted to the interests of Barry County since 1856
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:
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at Hastings, MI 49058


  • NEWSROOM •
    Rebecca Pierce (Editor)
    Kathy Maurer (Copy Editor)
    Brett Bremer (Sports Editor)

  • ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT •
    Classified ads accepted Monday through Friday,
    8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.


Frederic Jacobs
Publisher & CEO

Hank Schuuring
CFO

Scott Ommen
Mike Gilmore

Ty Greenfield
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Greg Chandler
Benjamin Simon Taylor Owens

Michigan Legislature
Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Democrat, P.O. Box 30013, Lansing, Mich. 48909.
Phone (517) 373-3400; 517-335-7858 (Constituent Services).
State Representative Julie Calley, Republican, 87th District (All of Barry County),
Michigan House of Representatives, N-1191 House Office Building, Lansing, MI


  1. Phone (517) 373-0842. e-mail: [email protected]
    State Senator Dr. John Bizon, Republican, 19th District State Senate, Phone 517-
    373-2426 or toll-free, 855-347-8019. Email: [email protected]; U.S.
    mail: Sen. Dr. John Bizon, P.O. Box 30036, Lansing MI 48909.


U.S. House of Representatives
Peter Meijer, Republican, 3rd District (All of Barry County), 1508 Longworth House
Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20515-2203, phone (202) 225-3831, fax (202) 225-


  1. District office: 110 Michigan Street NW, Suite 460, Grand Rapids, Mich. 49503,
    phone (616) 451-8383.


U.S. Senate
Debbie Stabenow, Democrat, 702 Hart Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.
20510, phone (202) 224-4822.
Gary Peters, Democrat, 2 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20510-
2202, phone (248) 799-0850. District office: Gerald R. Ford Federal Building, Room
720, 110 Michigan Street NW, Grand Rapids, Mich. 49503-2313, phone (616) 233-
9150.
President’s comment line: 1-202-456-1111. Capitol Information line for Congress
and the Senate: 1-202-224-3121.

Know Your Legislators:


Great community


response for Hand2Hand


To the editor:
Summerfest Worship on Thornapple Plaza
was fabulous!
The many people who attended helped
make this special Summerfest worship possi-
ble.
The music was fantastic, the food was deli-
cious, and $1,120 was received in special
offerings to support the Hand2Hand program
here in Hastings.
Hand2Hand works through local churches

to provide food for school children who face
hunger on weekends.
Summerfest Praise Team – The Green
Street Praise Band – sang the crowds’ favor-
ite contemporary worship songs while chil-
dren colored encouragement cards for
Hand2Hand volunteers and recipients.
After worship, a free cookout took place
for the community.
Rev. Bryce Feighner,
Hastings

SOCIAL SECURITY MATTERS


Online glossary helps


with terms and acronyms


Vonda VanTil
Public Affairs Specialist
Some of the terms and acronyms people
use when they talk about Social Security can
be a little confusing. We’re here to help you
understand.
We strive to explain your benefits using
easy-to-understand, plain language. The Plain
Writing Act of 2010 requires federal agencies
to communicate information clearly in a way
the public can understand and use.
This can be particularly challenging when
talking about complicated programs like
Social Security, Supplemental Security
Income and Medicare. If there’s a technical
term or acronym you don’t know, you can
find the meaning in our online glossary at ssa.
gov/agency/glossary.
Here are a few examples.
If you’re considering retirement, you may
want to know your full retirement age, or
FRA, and your primary insurance amount, or
PIA. These terms determine your benefit
amount based on when you when you start
getting requirement benefits. The PIA is the
amount payable for a retired worker who
starts his or her benefits at full retirement age.

If you start your retirement benefits at your
FRA, you’ll receive the full PIA.
Most years, your benefit amount will get a
COLA (cost-of-living adjustment), which
usually means extra money in your monthly
benefit.
What about DRCs, short for delayed
retirement credits? DRCs are the gradual
increases to your PIA that occurs the longer
you delay taking retirement benefits after
your full retirement age. Every month you
delay taking benefits, up to age 70, your
monthly benefit will increase.
If one of these terms or acronyms comes
up in conversation, you can be the one to help
clarify the meaning, using our online glossary.
Learning the terminology can deepen your
understanding of how Social Security
programs work for you.

Vonda VanTil is the public affairs specialist
for West Michigan. You may write her c/o
Social Security Administration, 3045 Knapp
NE, Grand Rapids MI 49525, or via email to
[email protected].

Shadows of darkness still alive today


To the editor:
I recently moved to Hastings, Michigan,
from a bustling metropolis. Before that time, I
never heard of this mostly farming communi-
ty.
Perhaps it is the secrets of your past and the
shadows of the unsaid that this community
wanted hidden, but not forgotten.
Finding out that our Michigan community
was a “Sundown Town” was quite shocking
and saddened many hearts.

I was raised in our “Great State,” defended
it and our cities across the “Deep South,” and
the “Great Northwest,” for which I lived for a
total of 15 years.
When, on a lovely afternoon in downtown
Hastings, my beautiful chocolate brown
granddaughter was accosted with a racial slur,
my husband and I were both embroiled with
anger and it saddened us greatly.
I should note special thanks to our grand-
son who stood up for his cousin.

For the refusal to see that we are all beauti-
ful and wonderfully made: Psalm 139:13, 14.
That should not be a scripture touted to
apologize for cultural and ethnic difference.
We should be seen in the truth and reality
that we are all one race: Human, Acts 17: 26,
27
Desiree C. Holley and Joe Sancimino,
Hastings

It’s a great time to be alive


To the editor:
What a great time to be alive!
One of the things that gives life meaning
and satisfaction is accomplishment. Then,
again, adversity can lead us to despair and
make life miserable. Let’s not look at adversi-
ty as a totally negative aspect of life, but
consider the possibility of accomplishment
presented by adversity.
We are at a pivotal moment in human histo-
ry right now. Many problems face us. Do I
need to make a list? Environmental and polit-

ical concerns top the list and threaten the sta-
bility of our existence. Many of these prob-
lems are intertwined and are best tackled
concurrently.
With each problem or challenge is an
opportunity to find a solution and make things
better – maybe even better than they were
before.
So do we despair and do nothing? Or
worse, do we work against those who are try-
ing to solve problems and make things better?
I think it’s much better to not ignore the warn-

ing signs we are being given. It’s better to
support those who are actively trying to work
for the betterment of all people and the pro-
tection of our environment.
If we, as a global community, survive the
next few decades, it will be because we faced
our adversities and accomplished much to
make things better.
Think how satisfying that will be.
What a great time to be alive!
Scott Savage,
Hastings

Michigan National Guard


praised for helping food bank


The Food Bank Council of Michigan
Wednesday celebrated the Michigan National
Guard for their service and devotion of more
than 150,000 hours to the food bank mission.
“It is truly amazing what can happen when
no one cares who gets the credit, and that was
the precise ‘can do’ attitude the men and
women of the Michigan National Guard
brought with them to our warehouses,” Dr.
Phillip Knight, FBC Michigan executive
director, said during the luncheon celebration.
“Their work, impact and dedication enabled
Michigan’s food banks to do more than ever
before in our history. I am thankful for these
men and women and the leaders of the MNG
for their vision, selflessness and strength to
accomplish the mission.”
For Michiganders facing food insecurity,
the Michigan National Guard’s efforts to
distribute food helped equate to more than 55
million meals. To distribute food safely during
the pandemic, distribution centers used a
drive-through style process, providing a safer,

quicker and more efficient way to deliver
food.
“With a joint task force comprising an
average of 95 MING members, approximately
1.3 million pounds of food moved through
seven food banks weekly to local homes,
schools and shelters,” said U.S. Air Force Lt.
Col. Joseph Meadows, commander and officer
in charge of the Joint Force Air Component
for the Michigan Joint Forces Headquarters.
The National Guard assisted the state’s
seven regional food banks in distributing 47
percent more food in the first 12 months of
the COVID pandemic than at any other time
in history.
“The members of the Guard were diligent
in learning every aspect of food distribution,”
said Dr. Knight. “During their time with us,
they truly became members of the food bank
team.”
For more information, visit https://www.
fbcmich.org/.

BARRY ISD, continued
from page 1

They discussed the advantages of the oper-
ation, in which Hastings and Delton-Kellogg
are the top priority.
“If the school becomes part of an ISD in
another county, which is the case for some of
the school districts in our county, then they’re
kind of a tail of the dog, if you will,” Franklin
said. “It’s not that the whole dog isn’t import-
ant, but this is the end, you know, and you’re
farther away from the center of things.”
BISD board members President Bob
Becker, Vice President Carl Schoessel,
Secretary Deb Hatfield, Treasurer Bette
Matteson and Trustee Marsha Bassett brain-
stormed ways they could better highlight the
options that the intermediate district offers to
students.
Becker called it a “focus issue.”
“If we can be the facilitator to say, “Here’s
all that is available,’ can’t we find a way to
support each other?” Becker said. “It will
build a strengthening between, not just the
two districts, but the students. They will now
know and understand people, and you can’t
help but grow stronger through that.”
In other action, the board:


  • approved hiring paraprofessional April
    Tobias, paraprofessional Claudia Spieth and
    Young Adult Program teacher Annette
    Shumay.

  • selected Becker to represent the BISD
    board at the Michigan Association of School
    Boards Special Assembly. Hatfield will serve
    as the alternate.

  • went into closed session to conduct the
    superintendent’s evaluation. They did not
    assign an evaluation score. They said they
    will continue their discussion during the
    BISD’s Oct. 12 meeting.


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