HB 10-21-2021

(J-Ad) #1

Page 2 — Thursday, October 21, 2021 — The Hastings Banner


The school will use money from a millage
passed in 2019 to pay for the new building.
Funds from the millage have already been
used to make other facility upgrades in the
district, including other sections of the ele-
mentary building.
Corlett said the district has needed to
replace the building for several years, due to
the high cost of maintenance of issues such as
flooding in the basement and a leaking roof.
In other business:


  • Corlett said the district has seen a slight
    increase in COVID-19 cases.
    “We haven’t had a single outbreak yet, so
    I’m incredibly thankful,” he said. “Our par-
    ents are doing a good job keeping sick kids
    home and getting them tested.”


He noted the district recently sent a survey
to parents, asking them to rate the district’s
performance on certain issues. He said the
district’s highest rating was in safety.


  • The district received a pallet of donations
    from Amazon, including laptops, tablets and
    miscellaneous items such as laundry soap.
    Corlett said some items will be used by the
    district, others will be given away as prizes at
    parent events, and some will be donated to
    residents in need.

  • The board unanimously approved the
    hiring of Katelyn Thompson as substitute
    teacher; Jennifer Sinclair as high school sec-
    retary; Natasha DeYoung as middle school
    special education paraprofessional; Emily
    Richie as DK Panther Clubhouse Day Care


Supervisor; Valerie Manwarren as DK
Panther Clubhouse Daycare Assistant; and
Lorie Nierman as elementary online teacher.


  • During public comment, two people
    thanked Corlett for his attendance at the meet-
    ing of the Barry County Board of Commissioners
    last month, where Corlett stated the belief that
    mask mandates were unnecessary.
    One woman criticized the district’s COVID
    quarantine policy.

  • Monday’s meeting was at the high school
    auditorium due to high attendance at previous
    meetings. But Corlett said meetings will
    move back to the elementary school library
    next month.
    That meeting will begin at 7 p.m. Monday,
    Nov. 15.


passed and Mole finally showed her the
image. It fit with what she was looking for.
“I said I didn’t want anything offensive. I
didn’t want anything political,” she said. “I
wanted something that would make people
think and talk. And Mole did the rest.”
But first, they had to get permission from
the building owner, Tom Kramer.
After seeing the initial image, it took 24
hours for Kramer to come around to the idea.
“It was something that I didn’t anticipate,
but once I looked at it, I thought it was a pret-
ty awesome thing,” Kramer said. “So, it
didn’t take long before it really grew on me.”
They also needed funding – $16,000 worth.
When Mole started in September, they only
had $2,000.
The Thornapple Arts Council doesn’t nor-
mally start projects without funding, Lavell
said. But she pitched the project to the board,
and they gave the go-ahead.
“I believed in the project enough that I got
my board to sign on and say, ‘Yeah, we can
do this, even if we don’t raise the full amount,
we can put some cash into this,’” she said.
It didn’t take long for the money to come
together. Lavell collected donations from
private donors and the Barry Community
Foundation. But they were still $2,000 short.
That coincided with the formation of a new
local philanthropic group, Guys That Give,
an organization designed after the Women’s
Giving Circle of Barry County. The group,
which will meet quarterly, plans to raise
money for projects in the community.
On September 9, eight men met for the
first time at Waldorff to discuss the formation
of the group and projects that might interest
them. As they talked, co-founder Chelsey
Foster looked out the window at Tom
Kramer’s brick wall. He knew about the
mural project, but it hadn’t started yet. He
turned to the seven other men at the table.
What about funding the new mural?
By the end of the meeting, the group had
the $2,000 committed from 14 different peo-
ple, and the project was fully funded.
“It just adds a new dimension to our down-
town and just yet another example showing,
in a big way, that Barry County and Hastings

support the arts,” Foster said.
Everyone involved with the project said
they have heard very little negative feedback
from community members. If anything, they’ve
received widespread positive feedback.
For Lavell, the response just underlines the
need for public art in Hastings.
“Art is part of a healthy community,” she
said. “It’s part of a well-rounded community.
If you think about communities that you
want to go to, that you want to spend your
time, that you want to vacation in – arts and
culture are a primary driver of those things.
So if you think about how important that is
for tourism dollars, it is equally important for
people who live there.”
Now, Mole is in the final stages of the proj-
ect, with about three weeks left.
Mole started the mural on Sept. 14. He
takes a picture of the mural every day at noon
to mark his progress.
“Every dry daylight hour for the last [38]
days, I’ve been out there,” he said.
Although it may look like a general outline
of the United States, the project has required
careful attention to detail. He used a sort of
gridding system, matching each part of the
drawing with a brick to make sure it accurate-
ly portrayed the United States map.
“Basically, just copy it, millimeter by mil-
limeter, brick by brick,” he said.

But it’s not meant to be an exact represen-
tation of the United States.
“Every map ... gets copied and copied and
copied and copied and things get stylized a
little bit,” he said.
After spraying the inside of the U.S. white
and the outside black, Mole has spent weeks
focusing on the intricacies of the coastlines. It
has required more detail than he originally
had anticipated. He has exhausted days
perched up in the lift, painting the crevices
and juts of Lake Michigan, for example.
“[The mural’s] pretty crude,” he said. “...
The more detail I put into the coastline, the
more delicate it starts to look, which is curi-
ous. It is delicate, like the coastline is deli-
cate, and that portrait of Florida is probably
going to look like that longer than Florida
looks like that.”
Still, the mural is missing a few important
parts. The final pieces, Kramer said, will
bring the project together.
“There’s going to be so little more,” he
added, “yet once he’s finished it’s going to
be, it’s going to complete the project.”
But Mole won’t reveal any details. Only a
handful of people have seen the final draw-
ings, and he doesn’t plan to show anyone else
until it’s finished.
“You’re going to have to wait and see,” he
said.

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Missing teen found


dead, suspect charged


Patrick Hunter Gilmore, 17, of Hastings,
was charged last Thursday with murder and
concealing the death of Lane Roslund, 17, of
Hastings.
Gilmore was arraigned in Barry County
District Court on one count of open murder, a
felony punishable by up to life in prison, and
concealing the death of an individual, a felo-
ny punishable by up to five years in prison.
Police had been seeking Roslund since
family members reported Sept. 21 that they
hadn’t heard from him for about two weeks.

They discovered the body of a male, believed
to be Roslund, on Wednesday, Oct. 13. Then
Oct. 15, Michigan State Police confirmed the
identity of the decedent as Roslund.
Gilmore was charged as an adult by auto-
matic waiver. Bond was set at $750,000 cash
or surety. His probable cause conference was
set for 9 a.m. Oct. 27 before Judge Michael
Schipper.
Prosecutor Julie Nakfoor Pratt said a photo of
Gilmore has not yet been released due to his age
and recent changes in the law regarding minors.

Audit finds no issues,


Hastings schools to propose


bond in May 2022


Benjamin Simon
Staff Writer
Hastings Area School System will move
forward with a May 2022 bond proposal,
the board of education announced at its
meeting Monday.
The bond would cover the same scope of
the August 2021 proposal, which included
fixing the 20-year-old high school roof;
replacing windows, doors, desks and buses;
improving playground equipment; revamp-
ing bathrooms; renovating high school
locker rooms that date back to 1970; and
installing an air-purification system.
Superintendent Matt Goebel and Assistant
Superintendent of Operations Tim Berlin
will take the next steps by meeting with the
state treasury department in December to
finalize details for the bond proposal.
The news comes after an audit of the
2020-21 budget and 2015 bond found no
signs of money mismanagement in the
district.
The audit report was presented by Maner
Costerisan Manager Jonathan Ringlein at
the Oct. 18 meeting, where he provided the
district with an “unmodified opinion,”
which Ringlein said is the highest opinion
they can give.
The audit concluded that the district
received $27.5 million in revenues during
the 2020-21 fiscal year, more than $4 mil-
lion higher than it had initially budgeted for.
A large portion of the increase came from
$1.4 million in federal funding due to pan-
demic-related relief. The district finished
with a fund balance of $3.8 million, up from
$2.4 million at the beginning of the year.
“As I look around the room,” Trustee
Dan Patton said during the meeting, “I see
only a few faces that were here 10 years
ago, maybe 11 years ago, when this district
was over $600,000 in the hole.... At that
time, I told a lot of people we will never be
back there. And I’m glad to see that we’re
definitely in a direction where we will never
be back there.”
The budget is audited every year, and
Ringlein, who has audited the district for at
least three years, has yet to find any red
flags.
Bonds, however, are not reviewed every
year. An audit of the bond money begins
after 95 percent of the funds are used.
Maner Costerisan analyzed 80 to 85 percent
of the $43.6 million in bond expenditures,
Ringlein noted.
In the lead-up to the failed 2021 bond
proposal, many residents expressed concern
over how previous bond dollars were used.
But Ringlein confirmed that the district
did not spend money outside of its proposed
projects. That included major projects, such
as the construction of the middle school, the
building of the performing arts center at the
high school and the implementation of
security upgrades.
“From 2015-16 on, we have not noted
anything that was spent out of allowable
within the bond, and nothing that was spent
on anything other than what the voters voted
on,” Ringlein said during the meeting.

Although they don’t look at every trans-
action, Ringlein clarified that audits require
a thorough investigation of the district’s
finances and take around 100 to 150 hours
to conduct.
“We’re not just charging the district $20,
$25 grand just to slap an opinion on a piece
of paper,” he said. “We’re doing well-docu-
mented work to look at all these items.
“... We do have a sense of skepticism.
We don’t just trust anything management
says. So, we definitely get our third-party
confirmations, which is a big piece of
what we do.”
In an interview after the meeting, Goebel
expressed enthusiasm following the audit,
calling it an “A-plus rating.”
“We’re really excited about a fantastic
audit again this year,” Goebel said, “an
unbelievably clean audit that came through.
And, obviously, financially, our central
office team puts a lot of work into an audit
like that and making sure that all of our
taxpayer dollars are spent accordingly.”
Board of Education President Luke
Haywood praised the financial standing of
the district, pointing to the district’s one-
time federal funds as a major help.
But the district, he said, still has major
maintenance demands that require a bond.
“We have a lot of great needs in the dis-
trict – roofs, doors, windows,” he said
during the meeting. “... That’s why we
thought as a finance committee to bring this
[bond] forward again. Those needs don’t go
away. And our district is not in a financial
position to take care of all those needs.”
In other business, the board:


  • Approved a bid from Buist Automation
    of $270,823 for new security cameras and
    cabling in the district’s six buildings. It
    marks the end of funds from the 2015 bond.

  • Purchased a white 2015 Ford Transit
    handicap-accessible van from Broadmoor
    Motors for $26,245 to assist with wheel-
    chair transportation.

  • Accepted two donations for library
    books at Northeastern Elementary School:
    $1,000 from Tom Kramer, and $300 from
    Ted and Kathryn Robbins.

  • Accepted a $500 donation from an
    anonymous donor to be split between two
    Northeastern Elementary School teachers
    for their classrooms.

  • Accepted $1,455 worth of school sup-
    plies from Walmart.

  • Accepted the personnel report which
    included the retirement of Judy Way, mid-
    dle school social studies teacher; the
    appointment of Amanda Beadle, Ashley
    Morgan and Ashley VanBelkum, substitute
    paraprofessionals; Michelle Hineman, sub-
    stitute bus driver; Courtney Kloosterhouse,
    virtual special education teacher at the high
    school; Jeffrey Mansfield, career and tech-
    nical education paraprofessional; the trans-
    fers of Jennifer DeZwaan and Brenda
    Johncock, healthcare I paraprofessionals, to
    Star Elementary; and the resignations of
    Kami Collier, instructional assistant at
    Northeastern Elementary, and Dawn
    Goodman, bus driver.


Lane Roslund, 17, of Hastings, was
reported missing Sept. 21.

ARTIST, continued


from page 1 ––––––––––


announced a partnership to share their exper-
tise in food processing innovation.
The MSU Product Center will expand out-
reach efforts by managing the FARM food
processing accelerator that was developed by
the association.
That facility in Muskegon will provide
space and technical assistance to entrepre-
neurs and businesses to scale up new product
and service ideas into the food, agriculture
and bioenergy markets, according to a joint
announcement.
AgFunder’s 2021 Agrifoodtech Investment
Report ranked Michigan third among the top
states for its investment in this sector of the
economy, because of its cold-chain logistics,
automation software and innovations from
streamlining production agriculture to re-envi-
sioning convenient, healthy local food supply.
Organizations in the region individually
excel in food, agriculture, research, manufac-
turing and business sectors, Kuhn noted, but
there is a need for a comprehensive approach
to using regional and statewide expertise to
maximize the growth potential.
Federal support through a regional chal-
lenge grant “would enable the region to
increase capacity and create more access to
resources,” she pointed out. “This, in turn,
will aid in strengthening the regional food
system, and equip the workforce of the
future, based on science and data-driven pro-
tocol, ultimately increasing economic, envi-

ronmental and social impacts to the West
Michigan region’s food sector.”
As Bee put it simply, “We make it locally
to get the benefit locally.”
One aspect to the project that could be
considered for Barry County, he mentioned,
would be to improve cold storage here.
In her list of project ideas, Kuhn mentioned
that Barry County is currently conducting a
feasibility study on cold storage capacity.
The initiative envisions high-tech, highly
paid jobs in the food sector.
With increased capacity and access to
resources, the regional food system would be
strengthened and equip the workforce of the
future, she wrote.
“The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic severely
disrupted the global food supply chain, leaving
food companies and other supply chain partici-
pants to begin redirect work with regional net-
works and logistics,” Kuhn said. “In many sit-
uations, regional players ultimately provided
the solution in delivering food to retail, schools
and food banks, as the state and country contin-
ued to redirect the flow of food. ...
“As the flow of food redirected from insti-
tutions, restaurants and like venues, food
companies were forced to repackage huge
quantities of food suitable for retail, creating
opportunity for MSU’s expertise in packag-
ing and new AgTech companies with innova-
tive solutions, to become a higher demand
need for the food industry.”

The crisis forced food companies to
explore and implement solutions so that oper-
ations become more effective and efficient on
the plant floor.
“Strengthening regional networks and sup-
ply chains through the work of WMFPA and
other partners will ensure resiliency in the
supply chain for the future,” she noted.
Kuhn suggested a variety of project ideas
that could be funded by the federal grant
money, including:


  • Capacity building for the WMFPA region-
    al network and supply chain logistics.

  • Technical assistance and training in new
    technologies addressing current needs of the
    food industry related to reducing food waste in
    landfills, sustainable packaging, energy-effi-
    cient build-outs and minimally processed foods.

  • Workforce development efforts to fill
    labor and skills gaps in agricultural produc-
    tion and food manufacturing through partner-
    ships with MSU Institute of Agricultural
    Technology, local community colleges and
    state workforce development agencies.

  • Increasing programming opportunities
    for the FARM center.

  • A mobile food processing unit and equip-
    ment.

  • A regional analysis of water infrastruc-
    ture, including drinking water and wastewa-
    ter treatment capacity to serve the food sector
    and potential construction projects related to
    capacity needs.


FOOD, continued from page 1 –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––


DELTON, continued from page 1 –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––


J. Maizlish Mole works on the coastline of Texas mid afternoon on Oct. 18. Mole
moved to Hastings from London last year.
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