Community News
Heritage Health Spotlight: Dorothy (Bunn) Williams
Published
13 years agoon
By
BenGil Staff
There are not too many people who can say they have been around in the world for almost a century, but our spotlight resident for the month of November can. Dorothy (Bunn) Williams turned 100 years old a few days ago, specifically the 17th of November. Think that’s incredible? Just wait.
For being 100 years old, Dorothy is alive and well. She talks to everyone at Heritage Health and is a Steve Davis fan favorite. It is hard to catch her without a smile on her face or without her calling someone “sweetheart” or “honey”. It is just her nature. It is how she was raised.
Although we were not able to catch her doing “wheelies” in her wheelchair, we were still able to jog her memory to see just a slight glimpse how different it was being raised in the 19th century. Dorothy has been at Heritage Health for a little over 10 years. “I know everyone here and everyone knows me,” she started in.
Born and raised in Gillespie, Dorothy was the daughter of Chris (C.C.) and Katie Bunn. Dorothy had one brother growing up and it was a “duzy” to say the least. She did not have to travel very far to have fun, she laughed. Growing up in a strict household, Dorothy was not the youngster you would find out at all hours of the night. “When my father said be home at 10, he meant 10 and not a second after,” she directed.
Dinner time consisted of the family sitting down together and eating a meal. Back then, they did not grab something fast or let everyone eat at their own time. “We sat down and we ate together,” she added. When she says eat, she means eat. Eat every last item on your plate as well or you will find C.C. adding more of it to your plate like the time he did it to Dorothy. “We always had portions of each item on our plate, no matter if we liked it or not,” she remembered. “One time I had spinach, and I hate that stuff. To this day, I can’t stand it. But, I told my dad I didn’t like it and he took my place and filled the entire plate up with it. I had to eat that!”
She went on to add that her parents had to be strict or she could have got with the wrong group of kids. Without her parents, she would have been the kid to end up with the wrong group. I got in with the wrong group of kids at the beginning, she recalled. “I am a grandmother of around 30 and I see it with my grandchildren.” But nowadays, Dorothy justified, both parents work a full time job and sometimes it is hard to be strict when you are not around.
Both of Dorothy’s parents were around a lot, too much maybe, but who is complaining? Her parents were the owners of 5 grocery stores. One store was located in Carlinville, one was in Litchfield, one was in Hillsboro, and two were in Gillespie. Gillespie was always the largest one, Dorothy explained.
Dorothy had her own car at the age of 15. Think it is trouble waiting to happen? Not so much. She enjoyed driving to Tarro’s Ballroom to dance or roller-skate and driving to Sadie’s to bowl. She took part in the bowling league on Saturday night, if she behaved herself all week. And, of course, she had to drive to get to work! Although, she will tell you that was not the highlight of having a car. We assume she would have happily given up the car to be excluded from working. If she did not have to drive to the store to work, she enjoyed driving to the store to get ice cream and a “pop”. She was not always confined to her car though. Dorothy and her friends enjoyed walking up to the band concerts on Sunday evening at the city park. “We used to walk up and down just to see who we could catch, if you catch what I mean.”
It was not all work and play for her. She attended school until she graduated from Gillespie High School. Before high school, she attended Little Brick School, Big Brick School, Maple Street School, and the Catholic School. Dorothy was part of the rather large graduating class of 1933. “I didn’t like to learn anything,” she shook her head. “I liked the teachers because we had some good ones.”
Dorothy liked to read a lot in high school and still likes it to this day, but she enjoys watching television over reading now. If you go in Dorothy’s room, you will probably find her television on a Western station. “I love all the Western History channels and books along with Everyone Loves Raymond and some other comical shows.” Sometimes she just wants to take Raymond and choke him, she laughed. “He is always right and he never does anything wrong. What a joke that is.”
If you could not find Dorothy with her friends, reading, or painstakingly attending school, she was working at her father’s store. She managed the cash register while her brother took care of stocking shelves. “Sometimes I had to stock shelves, but I usually left that for my brother to do,” she laughed. Working the cash drawer was enough work for her, especially on Saturday. She worked during the week for a few hours, but her big shift was on Saturday night. Her dad kept the store open until 9 o’clock and you can probably guess who got that shift. “I always wanted to go to Tarro’s, but I had to work!” Sometimes her friends would wait for her, but they got tired of that after a while.
Don’t think working the cash register was the easy way out either. It was tough work, especially when her father was standing over her shoulder watching every move she made. “I got paid just like everyone else, so I don’t know why he had to watch over me,” she explained. One time, she made a mistake just because she was so nervous. “I was not able to spend my money on junk food either,” she explained. “My parents watched what me and my brother spent our money on.”
After working for a few years, Dorothy got married at the age of 24. She went over to Mt. Olive with him and some other friends and they hit it off from there. They went together for about three years and then joined in marriage. The pair moved to Pana for a couple years because her husband worked for Kroger’s. Then, Dorothy got home-sick, so her father gave her husband a job as a meat-cutter at the store in Gillespie.
Before you knew it, they were back in the Gillespie area. The couple had 5 children together before they separated: Dixie, Christina, Terry Lee, Kenny, and John Christopher (J.C.). After having children, Dorothy took some time off from the grocery store.
Gillespie is her home and there is no other place she would rather be. Maybe Aruba so she can get her tan on, but she loves this town more than anything. “I know everyone here and that is what makes it the best,” she told us. “I wouldn’t live anywhere else.”
Dorothy loves it at Heritage Health. She explained she has been in 6 different rooms since she came in 10 years ago. “I had my share of bad roommates, but everyone has been good overall.” Dorothy is an easy person to get along with, as long as the door is open. She enjoys the door being open and watching people walk by. She does not like to be closed up.
The treatment is second to none at Heritage Health, Dorothy explained. She loves to play bingo with the other residents and even go to the Gillespie Civic Center with Heritage Health to play bingo on the second Monday of the month. “I have a bed full of toys I won from bingo,” she bragged. “I gave away over 800 animals already in two years. We always have a good time!” Besides bingo, she likes to attend the entertainment sessions and sing with Steve Davis, Joe Powel, or Ed Love.
9.9Wikipedia: 9.9 was an American R&B group in the mid 1980s. →
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Community News
Gillespie Council approves $15.7 million appropriation ordinance for current fiscal year
Published
1 day agoon
June 16, 2025By
Dave A
Members of the Gillespie City Council on Monday night voted unanimously to approve an appropriation of $15,758,490 for the fiscal year that began May 1. State law mandates an annual appropriation to set spending ceilings for specific municipal funds. The ordinance sets spending limits only and does not serve as a budget, according to outgoing City Treasurer Dan Fisher, who conducted a 15-minute public hearing prior to the council meeting.
Actual city expenditures are likely to be no more than a third of the appropriation total, Mayor Landon Pettit said. The city’s actual annual expenditures average around $3 million to $4 million.
The newly approved appropriation is about $1.4 million less than last year’s appropriation of $17,130,799, which was inflated by anticipated grant funds for the city’s ambitious streetscape project and Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA) funds. The new appropriation also inflated somewhat by $4.5 million, representing grant and local funds, for the streetscape project, and $1.3 million in anticipated CEJA grant funds. Removing those two items would take the appropriation of primarily local funds down to about $10 million, which is significantly less than pre-COVID appropriations.
The new ordinances authorizes expenditures of up to $2,400,600 for the Water Department, compared with $2,845,700 last year. The Water Department appropriation includes up to $200,000 for water line system improvements and $100,000 for a water tower improvement project.
Up to $1,855.000 in expenditures is authorized for the Police Department, compared with $2,316,000 last year. The appropriation of General Administrative Expenses comes in at $1,364,500, compared with $1,356,500 a year ago. A spending ceiling of $929,000 is set for the Street Department, compared with $1,281,500 last year. The appropriation for Parks and Recreation is $697,800, compared with $846,000 a year ago. A total of $200,000 is appropriated for Parks and Recreational Areas, which is the same as last year’s appropriation. The ordinance appropriates $665,000 for Motor Fuel Tax expenditures, compare with $600,000 last year. Expenditures of up to $200,000 are appropriated from the Tax Increment Financing Fund, compared with $280,000 last year.
The new ordinance sets spending limits for the Emergency Services and Disaster Administration (ESDA) at $58,900, which compares with $33,900 last year and includes money to replacement storm/emergency sirens.
The ordinance appropriates $170,500 for Administrative Building costs, down from $220,000 last year. The ordinance sets a spending limit of $165,000 for FICA, compared with $160,000 last year; $65,000 for Liability Insurance, which is the same as the previous year.
The ordinance appropriates $42,020 for Salaries of General Elective and Appointed City Officials, which is unchanged from last year.
A total of $40,670 is appropriated for the Public Library, and $5,000 for the Municipal Band, both of which are the same as last year.
Presenting the Public Hearing was the last official act for Fisher. Soon after convening the council’s regular monthly meeting, Rusty Fredericks was sworn in to serve a two-year appointive term as City Treasurer. Fredericks will have the option to run for election to the office in April 2027.
STREETSCAPE UPDATE
Mayor Pettit told the council the long-awaited streetscape project to enhance the downtown shopping district is set to begin soon. In the meantime, he said the city will schedule public meetings with downtown business owners to advise them about when and how construction might affect their businesses.
The streetscape project has been in discussion for about six years. Aimed at improving aesthetics and the business climate downtown, the plan calls for establishing downtown as a cultural center for small festivals, farmers markets, concerts and other activities. The plan includes converting parking from perpendicular spaces to diagonal spaces. The parking arrangement will marginally reduce the number of spaces. Triangular “dead spaces” at intersections will be converted into “green spaces” with small trees and other plantings, along with green spaces interspersed along each block. Sidewalks will be replaced, drainage will be improved with grates leading to the city’s storm sewer system, and new, more attractive light poles will be installed. With the creation of green spaces at intersections, the distance for pedestrian crossing will be reduced from 76 feet to 46 feet, not only improving aesthetics but also improving safety for pedestrians.
The city received a $4 million grant from Rural Development, a program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and awarded a construction contract in March to Stutz Excavating, Inc., Alton, contingent upon the federal funds being released to the city. Pettit said the first installment of the grant money has been received, enabling the city to start construction.
In a related matter, the council voted unanimously to employ Lake Manager Ethan Martin to the city’s on-site manager for the project. Martin basically will monitor construction to ensure the work is congruent with contract provisions. Martin will be paid a supplemental salary in addition to his earnings as Lake Manager for the duration of the project, after which his wages will return to their original level.
WELFARE PARK IMPROVEMENTS
On the Mayor’s recommendation, the council voted unanimously to spend up to $50,000 for new bleachers and playground equipment for Welfare Park. Pettit said the existing wooden bleachers at the park are deteriorating and dangerous to spectators. He recommended replacing them with six four-row aluminum bleachers—two for each athletic field—which require less maintenance than the existing bleachers. The aluminum bleachers are low enough to not require handrails and will cost a total of $15,480, plus about $380 for hardware. Pettit said he also located playground equipment with plastic covered metal for about $3,000 from Uline, Inc., not including shipping and engineered mulch.
Improvements are nearing completion at Big Brick Park, which includes new playground equipment, picnic tables and other improvements.
“I’d like to see a little more focus on our parks,” Pettit said. “They’ve been let go for too long.”
“That’s why it’s so expensive when we do improvements,” said Ald. Wendy Rolando, who moved to authorize the expenditure.

Pettit said the city is due to received $70,000 in CEJA funding as part of the current grant cycle. That money should arrive in two to three months.
In the meantime, he said the city can pay for the improvements with existing funds and reimburse itself when the grant funds are available.
In a related matter, the council authorized the mayor to apply for a new round of CEJA grant funding for the current fiscal year.
BENLD POLICE CONTRACT
The council approved Ald. Dona Rauzi’s proposal to cease police protection services to the City of Benld if Gillespie and Benld can not reach an agreement for a new contract within 30 days. The current contract expired April 30, and Gillespie has continued to provide police protection to Benld for $20,000 per month under terms of the current contract. In April, both parties agreed to a 90-day extension to continue negotiations.
The 90-day extension will end next month, after which the City of Gillespie will terminate services.
Gillespie has provided police protection services to Benld for five years after the Benld Police Department was disbanded.
NUISANCE PROPERTIES
The council added 416 East Elm to a previously prepared resolution to declare 307 E. Elm as nuisance properties, after neighbor Geri Meyer voiced concerns to the council about the condition of the house.
“It’s a dilapidated house,” Meyer said, citing loose siding and a large whole that allows raccoons and other wildlife to enter the home. “It’s right there on what I call the main drag, and I was just wondering when someone was going to do something about it.”
Ald. Dona Rauzi said she spoke to the property owner, who assured her he was working with a contractor to start work on the house within the next two weeks.
“That’s exactly what he told me when I moved in two years ago,” Meyer commented.
“Other than that, I don’t know what I can do,” Rauzi explained. “I can’t force him to remodel his house.”
City Attorney Rick Verticchio agreed. “While you can’t force him to do it, this council can declare it a public nuisance,” Verticchio said, which would give the property own 30 days to at least start the work or face further legal action. “If you need to give him more time, you can do that but the first step is to declare it a nuisance.”
FOOD TRUCK ORDINANCE
On a motion by Ald. Rauzi, the council voted unanimously to amend an existing food truck ordinance to offer an annual permit at a cost of $300. The current ordinance required a daily permit fee of $25. Rauzi’s motion included a provision to waive fees for food truck operators who have already spent $300 or more for permits this calendar year.
Rauzi said the amendment will benefit food truck operators, and simplify record keeping for the Deputy City Clerk.
LJ AVENUE PARKING
Also on a motion by Rauzi, the council voted 6-1 to rescind a previously approved ordinance banning parking on the west side of LJ Avenue. The school district plans to post no parking signs in front of gates to the football field and along a 50-zone zone to restrict parking near a fire hydrant.
The issue has been somewhat controversial since Community Unit 7 School District rerouted buses at the beginning of the school year to synchronize class starting and ending times for all three attendance centers.
Ald. Janet Odell-Mueller case the sole negative vote. Ald. Rauzi, Ald Rolando, Ald. J.Q. Halteman, Ald. Dave Link, Ald. Frank Barrett and Ald. Bob Fritz all voted in favor of the measure. Ald. Bill Hayes was absent.
In a related matter, the council tabled further discussion of repairs to Plum Street.
Without taking formal action, the council agreed to have Ald. Fritz survey the city for missing street signs. Ald. Rolando said she had several phone calls regarding missing signs on Broadway and Frey. Mayor Pettit said street signs also frequently go missing from several other streets, including Baker and High. He said street signs are relatively inexpensive and the city should have money to pay for them. He recommended finding which signs are missing and placing an order for all of them.
“If there are some that go missing all the time, go ahead and order extras,” he said.
CIVIC CENTER CHANGE ORDER
Council members voted unanimously in support of Ald. Fritz’s motion to approve a $7,272 change order for ongoing remodeling work at City Hall and the Civic Center. Fritz said contractors discovered that the original fiberglass ductwork installed when the building was constructed is deteriorating and releasing fiberglass fibers. Mayor Pettit assured the council the city has available Tax Increment Financing (TIF) funds to cover the expense.
The council also voted Monday night to close out the TIF I fund and transfer remaining funds to TIF II.
SIDE-BY-SIDE
The council authorized the expenditure of up to $15,000 for a new Kawasaki 4×4 side-by-side for use at Gillespie Lake. The city previously used a UTV belonging to the former lake manager, who took his personnel equipment with him when he changed jobs.
The new machine will come from Action Powersports, Litchfield.
OTHER ACTION
In other action, the council:
- Tabled action on a policy regarding workers who want to return to work early after a medical leave. Attorney Verticchio is expected to review the proposed policy to resolve possible liability issues.
- Accepted a bid of $925 to be paid from Motor Fuel Tax funds from Emmons Tree Service, Carlinville, to remove three trees from boulevards on Chestnut and Maple streets.
- Referred a proposed ordinance to govern burning back to committee for further work before being presented to the full council.
- Referred to committee the issue of whether or not to hold a city-wide clean-up day. Mayor Pettit said the city’s cost for the event could be up to $18,000 for dumpster rentals. Meanwhile, Ald. Rauzi again pointed out that adopting a single-provider city-wide trash hauling service would include two annual city-wide clean-ups at no cost to the city. Ald. Rolando said a city-wide program would reduce costs for local consumers and limit the number of trash hauling trucks on city alleyways.
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Community News
LLCC announces spring 2025 President’s and Vice President’s lists
Published
4 days agoon
June 13, 2025By
BenGil Staff
SPRINGFIELD — Lincoln Land Community College has announced its full-time and part-time President’s and Vice President’s lists for the spring 2025 semester. Part-time students are enrolled in six to 11 credit hours while full-time students are enrolled in 12 or more credit hours.
Students who earned a 4.0 grade point average (GPA) are noted with an asterisk and earned President’s list honors. Students who earned between a GPA of 3.5-3.99 earned Vice President’s list honors. The excerpt below features Macoupin County students.
FULL-TIME STUDENTS
Bunker Hill – Logan R. Helling
Carlinville – Reid P. Evans*, Brody M. Reif
Gillespie – Maris E. Brill, Austin L. Grace*
Girard – Max Allen*, Katie Angulo*, Mick B. Downs*, Josh Hagerman, Reed Lewis, Michael S. Prose*
Mount Olive – Jakobb E. Brown*, Georgia G. Kampwerth
Palmyra – Alexis R. Bowman*
Staunton – Paige N. Horstmeyer*, Michael J. Matesa*, Lauren R. Mathis, Brandon Mo
Virden – Zorah E. Austin*, Michaeh N. Barnhouse*, Maddie Carver, Jackson R. Pierce*, Morgan C. Snell*, Grant M. Strickler, Courtney N. Ulinski*
PART-TIME STUDENTS
Benld – Christopher Young*
Carlinville – Alex C. Nance*, Jerry D. Nance Jr.*
Gillespie – Jessica L. Tiek*
Girard – Lindsey J. Ferguson*, Jackson R. Henke*, Natalie Moriconi*
Mount Olive – Kara A. Harmon*, Justin D. O’Neill*, Hayden Wylder*
Virden – Candace L. Carlile*, Lillian M. Carlile*, Natalie M. Little*, Josie P. Patterson, Luciano Pierce*
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Community News
2:18 Missions Team to host fundraiser cookout at Randy’s on June 21
Published
4 days agoon
June 13, 2025By
BenGil Staff
The 2:18 Missions Team, a dedicated local outreach group based in Gillespie, is excited to announce its upcoming cookout fundraiser to support its community initiatives. The event will take place on Saturday, June 21st, at Randy’s Market in Benld.
From approximately 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., community members are invited to enjoy delicious homemade food while supporting a worthy cause. The menu will feature pork chops, pork burgers, hot dogs, and refreshing water — perfect for a summer day of good food and fellowship.
“All proceeds from this event will go directly toward our mission efforts to serve and uplift our community,” said a spokesperson for 2:18 Missions Team. “We’re grateful for the support of our neighbors and look forward to seeing everyone there!”
Come out to Randy’s Market in Benld on June 21st to enjoy a tasty meal, support local endeavors, and connect with others in the community.
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