Wednesday, April 20, 2022

NEWS ROUND-UP: Village Clean-Up Period Begins Saturday


Here's a look at what's happening right now in and around town:

Village Clean-Up Period Set for April 23-May 14: Time to clean up those yards! The Dorchester Community Clean-up will be from Saturday, April 23 to May 14. Enforcement of village code will be especially strict during this period -- so clean up your property. By the way, the village dump site will be open during regular business days/hours, so no excuses. (The dump is now open on Mondays and Wednesdays, 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. , as well as Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.)

Special Village Board Meeting Is Friday Night: Dorchester's village board will conduct a special meeting at 5 p.m. Friday evening, April 22, at the Dorchester Community Building. We are told by inside sources that the purpose of this "housekeeping" meeting is to review the village employee handbooks.

Dorchester Students Prepare for Upcoming Quiz Bowls: Dorchester's junior high students are preparing for an April 27 quiz bowl at the Seward Civic Center, while DHS underclassmen are getting ready for their quiz bowl on May 4. The competition has been put on alert. After all, DHS' "A Team" tied for third in the ESU 6 quiz bowl held last month (team members were Blake Hansen, Ashton Rasplicka, Sawyer Hanson, and Andrea Pavlish), while Team B placed fifth (Addison Lehr, Amber Kotas, Ashton Jirsa, Victoria Leavitt, Jacob Cerny, and Owen Vyhnalek).

This Wind Blows: Omaha, Lincoln and Norfolk have all set records this year for the number of days with wind gusts in excess of 40 mph, according to reports. And wind speeds have been increasing globally in recent years, as researchers say the increase is due to natural climate cycles. (In preceding decades, wind speeds globally were lessening.) Whatever the case, increased winds and the return of widespread drought are reminders that even in the era of pivot-based irrigation and ditch-to-ditch row crops, our part of the world needs plentiful pastures, tree cover, and cover crops to prevent what could become another Dust Bowl natural disaster. Otherwise, it will happen again.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Village Dweller checks all reader comments to determine if they are appropriate for print.