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Girls’ track team wins back to back Sectional titles in 2012 and 2013

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Ladies win back to back titles for the first time in school history

The high school girls' track team won their sectional meet last week to win another Triple Crown in the 2013 season - conference, county, and sectional champs. The team won the Triple Crown in 2012 as well.

The girls’ track team are the 2013 Sectional Champions.
Photo by: Tracie Kirkwood

After winning the Macoupin County meet a week ago, the Gillespie Miners girls’ track team went on to win the IHSA Class 1A Carlinville Sectional. The Miners, who have already won both the SCC conference title and the Macoupin County title this season, won their second sectional championship in two years to get the Triple Crown in both the 2012 and 2013 seasons.

The Miners compiled 122 points to outdistance them from Carlinville (102 points) and Auburn (46). Coach Jack Burns said it is another great achievement for the girls to repeat last years “triple crown” performance by winning conference, county, and sectional meets again. Last year, the girls’ track team defeated Greenville 70 to 68.5 to win the sectional championship. Burns went on to add this is the first time ever in the history of Gillespie High School that the girls won a sectional championship in back to back years.

On the strength of the sectional victory, the Miners will send six ladies to the state final tournament where preliminaries will begin Friday at Eastern Illinois University in Charlestown. The Miners will represent the orange and black in a total of 10 events later this week. Making the trip to Charlestown for Gillespie is Haylie Kirkwood, Allison Goldasich, Alexis Burns, Tateum Rosentreter, Kayli Morris, and Molly Gray.

Haylie Kirkwood finished in second place at the sectional meet in the discus throw with a finish of 104’6” falling just 2 feet short of a first place finish. Allison Goldasich will represent the Miners in the 200m dash after finishing first at sectionals with a time of 27.19 seconds. Goldasich will also be a part of the 4x100m relay and 4x400m relay teams that are going the distance as well.

The 4x100m relay comprised of Tateum Rosentreter, Allison Goldasich, Kayli Morris, and Alexis Burns snagged first place in the sectional meet to get the ticket to the state finals as well as the 4x400m relay team who finished a half second behind Southwestern to get second at sectionals. The team, consisted of Molly Gray, Alli Goldasich, Tateum Rosentreter, and Alexis Burns, finished with a time of 4:21.50 at sectionals.

In addition to the 4x100m relay and 4x400m relay, Tateum Rosentreter will compete in the 100m hurdles and 300m hurdles after grabbing first place in both events. Kayli Morris, who will also compete with the 4×100 relay, will compete in three other events: high jump, triple jump, and long jump. Morris finished in first place in the long jump and high jump, but finished in second place in the triple jump right behind Sophie Fairman of Staunton.

The Miners will have a spread out attack heading into the State Finals this week, but these girls are not unfamiliar with the atmosphere. Multiple athletes have competed at this prestigious level the past few years while others still have the opportunity to compete at State in their remaining years in high school. Winning a state championship is the goal for the team now, and they know it will be a tough task.

Other results from the sectional meet:

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  • 4 x100 M Relay, second 52.1  Rosentreter, Goldasich, Morris, Burns
  • 4 x 200 M Relay, sixth 1:59.16   Ruyle, Willis, Hammann, M. Gray
  • 4 x 400 M Relay, second 4:21.5 Goldasich, M. Gray, Rosentreter, Burns
  • 4 X 800 M Relay, third 10:45.4 E. Gray, Hammann, M. Gray, Ross
  • 3200 M Run, ninth 15:12.6 Frensko
  • 100 M High Hurdles, first 16.64 Rosentreter; tenth 19.62 Eccles
  • 100 M Dash, third 13.20 A. Goldasich; seventh 13.96 Hammann
  • 800 M Run, fifth 2:33.08; seventh 2:38.4 Ross
  • 400 M Dash, no entry
  • 300 M Hurdles, first 48.91 Rosentreter; second 51.61 Burns
  • 1600 M Run, fourth 5:52.93 Ross
  • 200 M Dash, first 27.19 A. Goldasich
  • Long Jump, first 16’ 2” Morris; eighth 14’ 3”
  • Triple Jump, second 33’ 2.75” Morris; seventh 29’ 3” Landreth
  • Shot, second 30’9.5” Kirkwood; seventh 30’ 0” R. Goldasich
  • Discus, fifth 104’ 6” Kirkwood; third 95’ 2.5”: Gibson
  • Pole Vault, fourth 8’ 9” Burns; seventh 7’ 9” Eccles
  • High Jump, second 5’ 2” Morris

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Gillespie man injured in DUI accident

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Genisio's Ford Mustang in the City of Gillespie's impound lot Tuesday morning.

A Gillespie man was taken to a local hospital after suffering injuries following a single-vehicle accident that occurred Sunday morning, October 11, after he drove off the roadway and into a deep ditch near the intersection of Route 16 and Charles Street in Gillespie.

Gillespie Police Chief Jared DePoppe reported that the police department was dispatched to the scene of the accident shortly before 3 a.m. Officers arrived to find Jonathan Genisio, 29, of Gillespie as the driver and only occupant inside the Ford Mustang vehicle.

Genisio was arrested, but give a notice to appear in court so he could seek medical treatment. He was charged with six different counts in addition to having his vehicle impounded. His charges include driving under the influence of alcohol, no insurance, improper lane usage, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, failure to notify SOS of an address change and failure to wear a seat belt.

At the time of publication on Thursday evening, the vehicle was recovered from impound and Genisio was discharged from the hospital. The extent of his injuries was unable to be released by medical personnel.

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Community News

Gillespie council discusses budget and meeting process

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Treasurer Dan Fisher addresses the council.

Treasurer Dan Fisher (right) addresses the council.

The treasurer for the City of Gillespie had a lot to say about how city officials handle their subcommittees and how city funds are spent during the city’s committee meeting held Monday evening, July 27.

Dan Fisher, the elected treasurer for Gillespie, spoke to the council for over 30 minutes about how bills are paid and more importantly, how purchases are appropriated for and planned. During the city’s board meeting held earlier this month, Fisher suggested the council move their meeting dates to coincide with how the bills are paid.

He explained that many council members bring up issues or have questions about certain bills during the council meetings, but the questions are left to be answered by the city clerk who isn’t present at the board meetings. In addition to dragging out the meetings, Fisher said the questions should be taken care of before the meeting is held.

“We need to have a standardized process on how we buy things,” Fisher told the council Monday evening. “We need to spend more time on appropriating.”

We need to have a standardized process on how we buy things

Fisher distributed a “Budget Basics” packet to board members during the committee meeting held Monday and said the council should consider implementing a purchase order system to account for all purchases. “That way when the bills come in, we can match the form up with it and everyone knows what the purchase was for and what account it comes out of,” he clarified.

Council members agreed with what Fisher had to say to them. “We need to spend a lot of time when do our appropriation and it’s going to take a lot of time from everyone, including myself,” he continued. “We need to find a way to be collective in how we do things.”

Fisher closed by adding that the council also takes too long at their regular city council meetings, which are held on the second Monday of each month. Speaking of the city’s July meeting that lasted nearly 3 hours, Fisher said the council needs to be much more “business-like”.

“We take too long at our meetings,” he closed. “It’s been proven that people lose focus after 90 minutes and there is no reason why we shouldn’t be able to get a meeting done in 1 hour and 15 minutes.”

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City clerk Frances Smith spoke up after Fisher referred to the council’s last meeting. She prefaced her statement by saying she didn’t intend to saying anything, but continued by saying that the council’s July 13th meeting took her three days to transcribe. “It makes the clerk’s job hard – whoever it is,” she said. “There is a lot of side conversations and it’s very hard to hear on the tape.”

Ash Street Project

Alderman Steve Kluthe informed the board that he received the bid specifications back for the Ash Street Project which allows the council to advertise the specs to get an idea how much drainage project will cost.

Kluthe said the bid specifications cover everything including equal opportunity employer and prevailing wage information, but said the project could probably be handled by a local contractor. The project includes installing a culvert that will transfer the water to Cherry Street.

The council hopes the completed project will then alleviate the water that currently gets backed up north of Ash Street. “They are going to put a culvert underneath Ash Street to the north and grade the ground on the north side so the water flows to the culvert and down to the south end where there is a storm drain,” Kluthe explained.

TIF District

We should stretch the money out and begin to reinvest the money into community development

Fisher informed the council that the tax bills for the TIF district went out and the city can expect to receive close to $60,000. He reminded the council that even though the city made a big payment to United Community Bank last year in excess of $90,000, there will still be a payment made to UCB for their portion paid into the TIF until the TIF expires, which Fisher said is 12-14 more years.

After the city pays UCB, Fisher said the council can expect to still have somewhere north of $40,000 remaining each year. “I would like us to start to look at other projects that meet the TIF criteria that we could spend $20-$30,000 per year,” Fisher explained. “Long-range projects – projects that could last 10-12 years. We should stretch the money out and begin to reinvest the money into community development.”

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Elementary School News

Elementary school releases supply lists for fall

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School Supply 2

Kindergarten

  • 5 boxes CRAYOLA brand crayons (24 count)
  • 1 box CRAYOLA brand broad-line markers (classic)
  • 1 backpack
  • 1 box of water paints
  • 1 pair FISKAR brand scissors (children’s)
  • 6 large glue sticks
  • 1 small plastic school box
  • 4 pocket folders
  • 4 large erasers
  • 20 pencils (#2, lead, plain yellow)
  • 2 boxes of Kleenex
  • 2 rolls of paper towels
  • 2 containers of anti-bacterial wipes
  • 1 large box of sandwich size ZIPLOC bags (girls)
  • 1 large box of gallon ZIPLOC bags (boys)
  • 1 clipboard
  • 1 highlighter
  • 1 spiral 1-subject notebook (wide ruled)
  • Extra set of clothes to keep at school
  • Tennis shoes for P.E.

First Grade

  • 1 plastic school box
  • 3 packs of pencil top erasers
  • 2 large pink erasers
  • 5 packs of Ticonderoga brand pencils
  • 2 yellow highlighters
  • 2 boxes of CRAYOLA crayons (24 count)
  • 12 Elmer’s brand glue sticks
  • 1 pair of FISKAR brand scissors
  • 1 spiral 1-subject notebook (wide ruled)
  • 2 plastic 2-pocket folders
  • 1 8ct classic CRAYOLA fine line markers
  • 2 dry erase markers
  • 1 roll of paper towels
  • 2 boxes of Kleenex
  • 3 containers of Clorox Anti-Bacterial Wipes
  • 1 box of sandwich size ZIPLOC bags (girls)
  • 1 box of gallon ZIPLOC bags (boys)
  • Tennis shoes for P.E.
  • Extra set of clothes to keep at school

Second Grade

  • Handheld pencil sharpener
  • 8 large Elmer’s glue sticks
  • 1 large zippered pencil bag
  • 24 – #2 pencils
  • 1 wide ruled spiral notebook
  • 1 package wide ruled loose leaf paper
  • (2) 1” three ring binder
  • 1 pack of pencil top erasers
  • 1 pair of FISKARS brand pointed scissors
  • 1 yellow highlighter
  • 1 box broad line classic CRAYOLA markers
  • 2 boxes CRAYOLA crayons (24 count)
  • 2 plastic pocket folders
  • 1 CRAYOLA watercolor paints
  • 1 box of Kleenex
  • 1 roll of paper towels
  • Large Ziploc bags
  • Sandwich size Ziploc bags
  • 2 containers of Clorox wipes
  • 1 box of CRAYOLA colored pencils
  • 2 dry erase markers
  • Extra set of clothes to leave at school
  • Tennis shoes for P.E.

Third Grade

  • 1 small school box
  • 4 packages of pencils (#2, plain yellow)
  • 2 boxes CRAYOLA crayons (24 count)
  • 1 box CRAYOLA colored pencils
  • 1 highlighter
  • 1 pair pointed scissors
  • 6 ELMER glue sticks
  • 2 pocket folders
  • 3 boxes Kleenex
  • 2 containers of CLOROX wipes
  • 1 roll of paper towels
  • 1 package of loose leaf paper (wide rule)
  • 2 notebooks (wide rule)
  • (2) 1” binders
  • 2 packs of pencil top erasers
  • Gallon-sized Ziploc bags (boys)
  • Sandwich-sized Ziploc bags (girls)
  • 2 packages of post-it notes
  • Tennis shoes for P.E.

Fourth Grade

  • 2 packages of wide rule loose leaf paper
  • 48 pencils
  • 3 packs pencil top erasers
  • (1) 2” binder
  • 1 box 24 or 48 count CRAYOLA crayons
  • 1 pair FISKAR scissors
  • 1 box of colored pencils
  • 1 single subject notebook (wide rule)
  • 3 folders
  • 2 packages of white index cards
  • 4 highlighters
  • 4 packages of post-it notes
  • 2 boxes Kleenex
  • 1 container of Clorox wipes
  • Hand held Pencil Sharpener
  • Dividing tabs for binder
  • Tennis shoes for P.E.

Fifth Grade

  • Art Box
  • Pencil Pouch
  • 36 pencils (mechanical preferred)
  • 12 pencil top erasers
  • Crayola crayons
  • Markers
  • Crayola Colored Pencils
  • Red or Blue Pen
  • Scissors
  • Clear Ruler
  • Clear Protractor
  • 1 Bottle of Elmer’s Glue or 2 Glue Sticks
  • (1) 3 Ring Binder (2 inch)
  • 2 notebooks (one subject-wide ruled)
  • 1 package of loose leaf paper (wide ruled)
  • 3 folders
  • 2 highlighters
  • 2 boxes Kleenex
  • Girls-Antibacterial Wipes
  • Boys-4 pack of post it notes
  • Hand Held Pencil Sharpener
  • Pocket Dictionary
  • Tennis shoes for P.E.

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