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Macoupin voters pick Dixon as nominee for Sheriff

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Ryan Dixon (left) handily bested his opponent Quinn Reiher (right) for the Republican Macoupin County Sheriff’s nominations a result of Tuesday’s primary election results.

Ryan Dixon handily bested his opponent Quinn Reiher for the Republican Macoupin County Sheriff’s nominations a result of Tuesday’s primary election. 

Dixon took 62 percent of Republican votes to Reiher’s 38 percent. Ryan landed 3,901 of 6,339 Republican ballots cast in the primary to 2,438 votes for Reiher. Both candidates are Carlinville residents, and both have long-term careers in the Sheriff’s Department. There were no Democrat candidates for the nomination, meaning Ryan is now on his way to becoming the first Republican Sheriff in Macoupin County in more than three-quarters of a century. The last GOP Sheriff in Macoupin County was Walter J. Wenner, elected in 1950.

Ryan won in all but three of the county’s 45 precincts. In Gillespie 1 and 2, Reiher won with 60 and 57 percent of votes cast. In Cahokia 2, he won by just one vote—69 to 68. But those successes were outpaced by Ryan’s juggernaut in the rest of the county.

Ryan enjoyed his greatest support in south and southwest Macoupin where his totals ranged from 70 to more than 80 percent of the vote. In Carlinville, where both candidates reside, support was evenly split with Ryan maintaining an edge of a few percentage points over Reiher.

On Wednesday morning, Ryan issued a statement about his win.

“I’m incredibly grateful and humbled by the support from my friends, family and everyone who stood with me in this campaign. This victory belongs to all of you. Thank you for your encouragement and hard work every step of the way. Now, we move forward together. I’m honored and ready for what’s ahead.”

Ryan also congratulated his opponent on his run for the nomination: “I also want to congratulate Quinn Reiher on a well-run and respectable campaign. It takes dedication to step forward and serve, and I appreciate the effort and commitment shown throughout this race.”

Ryan will run to replace Shawn Kahl, a Democrat, who is stepping down after three terms in the office. Reiher was appointed as Chief Deputy 11 years ago and was endorsed by Kahl for the nomination. Reiher’s law enforcement career spans 21 years. His father was Ronnie Joe Reiher, a popular Carlinville police officer and Chief of Police who died in 2023.

Dixon, also a Carlinville native, began his law enforcement career as a part-time police officer for the City of Carlinville. In 2004, he transferred to the Sheriff’s Department. Through a special agreement with the two agencies, he brought along his K-9 partner, Rico, becoming the Sheriff’s Department’s first K-9/Deputy team. He was promoted to the rank of Sergeant in 2007 and became a Lieutenant in 2011. Since 2019, he has been the Chief Detective with the Sheriff’s Department. Prior to the election, he earned endorsements from several County Board members and Circuit Clerk Amy Ashby.

The Sheriff’s race was the only contested local race on the ballot for the primary. Unless county Democrats name a nominee for election, Dixon will run unopposed in November to step into the Sheriff’s Office.

Voter turnout was nearly 29 percent—an unusually large turnout for a primary election, presumably driven by interest in the Sheriff’s race.  A total of 8,898 of the county’s 30,896 registered voters cast ballots. That compares to the last gubernatorial primary in 2022 during which Macoupin County’s voter participation stood at 19 percent. This primary’s voter turnout exceeded 2022 by nearly 2,700 ballots.

The number of voters casting early votes also exceeded previous primary elections, again purportedly driven by the Sheriff’s race. 

County Clerk Pete Duncan said the election process was uneventful except for a glitch resulting from new legislation requiring tabulators to kick back undervoted ballots regardless of whether a candidate was listed our not. Republicans did not field a candidate for State Treasurer, meaning Republican ballots where the voter did not cast a vote for a write-in candidate were rejected as undervoted. Likewise, Democrat ballots where a voter left a write-in race blank were kicked back. In both instances, the voter could opt to override the “undervotes” message and have their ballots counted.

In the closely watched race for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate, Macoupin voters favored Raja Krishnamoothi with 912 votes (39 percent) in an 11-way race. Current Lt. Gov. Julianna Stratton, who won the nomination statewide, captured 853  votes (36 percent) in Macoupin County. 

Macoupin County voters favored Don Tracy as the party’s nominee for U.S. Senate with 39 percent of the Republican vote. Tracy’s nearest competitor in Macoupin County was Jeannie Evans with 19 percent of the vote. The Macoupin tally mirrored Republicans statewide, who elected Tracy as their candidate to vie for the position long held by Democratic Dick Durbin, who is retiring at the end of this term. Tracy, the former State GOP Chair, was a leading fund-raiser in the six-way race and was favored to win.

Stratton was endorsed by Gov. JB Pritzker, who opened his vast war chest to help fund her campaign. Conventional wisdom has Stratton favored to prevail over Tracy in the fall, which would make her one of three black women serving in the U.S. Senate. Illinois was first to send a black woman to the Senate with Carol Moseley Braun in 1992.

Pritzker and running mate Christian Mitchell were unopposed in for the Democrat nomination for Governor. On the Republican side, Macoupin voters mirrored statewide balloting giving Darren Bailey and running mate Aaron B. DelMar 71 percent of the 5,817 votes cast for governor in Macoupin County. 

Bailey will face off for a second time against Pritzker this fall in the General Election.

Macoupin Democrats narrowly favored Pritzker-endorsed Margaret Croke for the Democratic nomination for Comptroller with 708 (32.26 percent) of 2,195 votes cast. Holly Kim was a close second with 704 votes, followed by Karina Villa with 526, and Stephanie Kifowit with 257.

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Statewide, Croke was Democratic voters’ choice, securing a narrow margin of less than two percent over challengers to win the nomination. She will face off in November against Republican Bryan Drew, who was unopposed in the primary.

As a write-in candidate, Max Solomon secured 653 Republican votes in Macoupin County in his bid to take on incumbent Democrat Michael Frerichs in the fall.

Republican voters in Macoupin County favored Diane M. Harris over Walter Adamczyk, 54 percent to 43 percent. Those totals statewide results that put Harris in the winner’s seat over Adamczyk with 53 percent of the vote. Both candidates are precinct committee persons in the Chicago metropolitan area. Harris will face incumbent Democrat Alexi Giannoulias in November.

First-term Democrat incumbent 13th District Cong.Nikki Budzinski easily held onto the nomination in Macoupin County as well as district-wide against challenger Dylan Blaha. In Macoupin County, Budzinski registered 2,004 votes to Blaha’s 417.

On the Republican side, Macoupin voters favored Jeff Wilson over Joshua Loyd to challenge Budzinski in the fall. Wilson secured 3,560 votes to Loyd’s 1,704. Wilson also was the district winner, 67.5 percent to 32.5 percent, and will be the party’s nominee in November.

In the Village of Brighton, a proposition opt out of an energy program failed to pass with 153 “no” votes to 69 affirmative votes. The Brighton proposition was the only non-partisan question on the ballot for this primary.

Complete Macoupin County primary results can be viewed at macoupinvotes.gov. 

Election results at this time are unofficial as mailed ballots postmarked by March 17 but not yet received will be legally counted after they arrive. Election results will be certified primary elect March 31.

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Gillespie to host blood drive with ImpactLife on May 11

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Gillespie will host a Community Blood Drive with ImpactLife, the provider of blood components for local hospitals. The blood drive will be from 1:00 pm to 6:00 pm on Monday, May 11 at 900 Broadway, inside Gillespie Methodist Church Gym.

To donate, please contact Brenda Lowe at (217) 7101336 or visit www.bloodcenter.org and use code 60020 to locate the drive. Appointments are requested. You may also call ImpactLife at 800-747-5401 to schedule.

Potential donors must be at least 17 years of age (16 with parental permission form available
through www.bloodcenter.org) and weigh more than 110 pounds. A photo I.D. is required to donate.

For questions about eligibility, please call ImpactLife at (800) 7475401. Donors who last gave blood on or before March 16, 2026, are eligible to give at this drive.

Blood donation is a safe, simple procedure that takes about 45 minutes to one hour. Individuals with diabetes or controlled high blood pressure may be accepted as eligible donors.

ImpactLife is a nonprofit community organization providing blood products and services to more than 100 hospitals and emergency medical service providers in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Wisconsin, as well as researchers and resource sharing partners across the country.

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School board approves $160,000 in capital improvement project

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During a District Focus segment, the board recognized sophomore Matrix Wright, whose art was the only entry from the United States included in the 2026 TOLI International Student Art Exhibition.

Members of the Community Unit School District 7 Board of Education on Wednesday night approved a package of four capital improvement projects totaling more than $160,000 in value. Work will start on the projects after the end of the current school year and is expected to be completed before the start of the 2026-27 academic year in August.

The board met on Wednesday night after Monday’s inclement weather forced the district to reschedule the board’s regular monthly meeting.

The board approved entering into a contract with Fisher Tracks, Boone, Iowa, to resurface the district’s all-weather track at a cost of $105,209. Supt. Shane Owsley told the board the district will use about $50,000 from an all-weather track activity fund, with the remainder to be paid with proceeds from an alternate revenue bond issue approved last year for capital improvements.

Great Western Abatement, Jerseyville, was retained to remove flooring containing asbestos from the choir room floor and middle school gymnasium school at a cost of $40,700. Great Western’s bid was the lowest of seven bids, ranging up to $65,000, submitted for the work. Additionally, the district is paying $8,900 to Reliable Environmental Services, Springfield, for engineering and design work associated with the asbestos removal.

All-purpose rubberized flooring material will be installed on the middle school gym floor by Dynamic Sports Construction, Leander, Texas, at a cost of $51,424.

For the first time in a number of years, the high school gymnasium floor will be sanded and refinished with new artwork. Blast Technologies, St. Louis, was hired to sand the 4,200-square-foot floor at a cost of $5,250. Designs Unlimited, Pinckneyville, will paint game lines and logos on the floor before sealing it with a clear stain at a cost not to exceed $18,738.

The board also accepted a bid of $33,890 from DeLaurent Construction, Wilsonville, to resurface the 118,700-square-foot parking lot at Benld Elementary School.

Though no action was taken, Board President Mark Hayes reported that the Building and Grounds Committee had directed Owsley to investigate the cost of replacing the CUSD 7 administrative building.

“This building is very much in need of replacement,” Hayes said. “It’s beyond its time.” During Monday’s torrential rainfall, Hayes said water came in through windows and water seeped in under the sill plate, bringing displaced nightcrawlers into the building. Staff members ran fans after the storm in an effort to dry out the interior.

According to Hayes, the school has been in contact with the local Baptist Church to investigate the possibility of acquiring the former Trinity Baptist Church for use as an administrative building. Church officials, however, have not yet made a decision about the fate of the former sanctuary after Gillespie’s two Baptist churches merged.

Owsley said the current administrative building comprises about 6,000 square feet. Current estimates are $400 per square foot for new construction which would translate into about $2.5 million to replace the administrative facility. The district might be able to shave some dollars off that estimate by reducing the size of the building.

“There’s a lot of unusable space in this building,” Owsley said, suggesting a more efficient floorpan could reduce cost. He also mentioned the possibility of a basement to provide storage space for outdated documents.

In addition to construction costs, Owsley noted, the district would be responsible for tearing down the existing building.

“I have no idea what’s in this building,” Owsley said, raising abatement concerns. “I’m guessing disposal of this building is going to be expensive.”

Hayes said Kevin Wills, the district’s bond issue advisor, will attend the June board meeting to discuss the possibility of refinancing some existing bonds to free up enough revenue to build a new administrative building. The administration currently is housed in a “temporary” structure that has served as the administration building for several decades.

MINE SUBSIDENCE STUDY

After several minutes of discussion, the board took no action in relation to entering into a contract with Marino Engineering and Associates to assess the district’s risk for incurring damage from a mine subsidence event. Owsley said existing maps show that portions of Gillespie Middle School are undermined. While the high school is not undermined, a major subsidence would likely damage the high school as well as the middle school. In recent months, more than one residential home on Elm Street near the school property has experienced damage from mine subsidence.

Marino’s $94,000 Phase I proposal would “determine the likelihood of something happening to one of our buildings,” Owsley said. The problem is that too much information could negatively impact the district’s ability to purchase subsidence insurance. “Information is great until it’s not.”

The district currently pays about $300,000 for mine subsidence insurance on the middle school, high school and vocational arts building. The school carries no subsidence insurance on BenGil Elementary because mine shafts under the building were grouted before the school was built.

“If we find out there’s not a major concern,” Owsley noted, it could reduce the district’s subsidence insurance costs. 

On the other hand, if the study reveals a high risk of experiencing mine subsidence, the insurer could drop the district at the end of the current policy’s term. With only two companies in the country offering subsidence insurance, the district could end up with no insurance at all to cover damage from mine subsidence.

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The only way to avoid that scenario would be to implement whatever options Marino might recommend to reduce risk. Those recommendations would likely include grouting (backfilling) mine shafts under the middle school. Grouting for the elementary school cost $4 million. To grout under the middle school would likely run as much as $6 million or more.

The only way the study would make sense, Owsley suggested, would be if the district was “comfortable making the corrections the study is going to make.”

Moreover, $94,000 would cover only a preliminary assessment.

“To get a full understanding of what’s going on underground, we’d be looking at a half million dollars,” said Owsley.

The issue was allowed to die when no board member moved to consider the contract.

COMMUNITY SOLAR PARTICIPATION

On a motion by Bill Carter, seconded by Weye Schmidt, the board voted unanimously to enter into a contract with Summit Ridge Solar to participate in a community solar project. Under terms of the 15-year contract, the district will realize a 13 percent savings on electrical power bills. The contract is automatically renewable for five years unless the district chooses to withdraw.

“Illinois provides a number of incentives for using solar,” Owsley said. “However, not everyone likes the look of having solar panels on their property. This will get us the benefits without putting up solar panels on our property.”

Summit Ridge’s proposal was the most lucrative of the proposals the district received. Other companies offered shorter terms with savings of five percent. 

After 20 years, it’s likely the savings would drop to five percent. Owsley said he was told the district was better off going with the longer contract to get 13 percent in savings for as long as possible.

The school district was able to secure such favorable rates, according to Owsley is because there is an issue with solar fields storing the power they generate. “Our main usage time is during their maximum production time.”

DISTRICT FOCUS

During a District Focus segment, the board recognized sophomore Matrix Wright, whose art was the only entry from the United States included in the 2026 TOLI International Student Art Exhibition. The exhibition is a project of The Olga Lengyel Institute for Holocaust Studies in New York. The exhibit includes student art relating to themes associated with the Holocaust.

Wright’s work, entitled “An Immortal Continuum,” attempts to portray “the constant entrapment a Holocaust survivor might feel.” 

Exhibition organizers received more than 250 entries from around the globe. 

BUDGET PROCESS

On a motion by Peyton Bernot, seconded by Board President Hayes, board members voted unanimously to begin work on developing a district budget for fiscal 2027. Board members also approved a routine measure to permit expenditure of fiscal 2027 funds after July 1, pending approval of a new budget.

The school district’s fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30 but new budgets typically are approved two to four months after the start of the fiscal year.

The current fiscal year’s $19 million budget was approved in September last year.

PERSONNEL

Following a one-hour executive session to discuss personnel and other issues, the board voted unanimously to approve the request of long-time middle school English and language arts teacher Kim Henderson, effective at the end of the 2028-29 school year.

Board members also voted unanimously to hire Andrew Crook as a first-year, non-tenured high school English teacher for the 2026-27 school year, pending documentation of certification and a routine background check. A graduate of Gillespie High School, Crook earned his teaching certificate at Illinois College, Jacksonville and for the past two years, he taught English at North Mac High School.

In separate actions, the board made multiple assignments to staff the district’s summer school program. Those hired include: Jessica Kelly as a middle school teacher, Ashlee Gibbs as a high school math teacher, and Jennifer Brown and Rob Macias as high school drivers’ education instructors. Each of the positions are contingent upon adequate student enrollment to offer the classes. In addition to academic staff, the board hired Andy Hirstein as a summer school food service worker.

The board voted unanimously to accept the resignation of Foli Seferi as high school paraprofessional and as assisted football coach. Both resignations are effective immediately.

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In other personnel action, the board appointed Cate Plovich as the BenGil Elementary School yearbook sponsor, and appointed Josh Ross as a volunteer assistant football coach, pending documentation of certification and a routine background check.

OTHER ACTION

In other action, the board:

• Approved a mens highs school soccer coop with the Carlinville School District, with the provision Carlinville will dissolve the agreement if it pushes its program into a higher competitive classification.

• Approved an intergovernmental agreement with Lewis and Clark Community College under which the college will recognize some high school courses as college level credits.

• Approved early graduation requests for an undisclosed number of students, provided all graduation requirements are met.

• Approved renewing the district’s membership in the Illinois Elementary Schools Association.

• Approved the final calendar for the 2025-26 school year pending no further emergency days. Barring the use of emergency days, Monday, May 18 will be the last day of student attendance, with graduation ceremonies set at 2 p.m., Sunday, May 17.

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Kentucky Derby winner of 1889 was bred in Macoupin County

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One of the greatest annual events in American sports is the Saturday is the Kentucky Derby, which will be run for the 152nd time this Saturday. One past champion was bred in Macoupin County.

This week marks 137 years since the victory of Spokane, who captured the 1889 Kentucky Derby during the infancy of the event. The horse was bred at “The Meadows,” the farm of Gen. Richard Rowett one mile north of Carlinville.

Rowett horses, and their jockey colors of orange jacket and blue cap, were on tracks throughout the west and south. But Spokane was the greatest production of The Meadows, a nationally recognized breeding ground for thoroughbreds.

 In 1885, a prized dark brown horse named Hyder Ali was standing at The Meadows when Rowett bred him to one of his top mares, Interpose. This pairing had produced favorable offspring in the past, including Grey Cloud, a fine racer owned by Noah Armstrong of the Doncaster Ranch near Twin Bridges in the Montana Territory.

Armstrong’s famous stable included such horses as Lord Raglan, the third-place finisher in the 1883 Kentucky Derby. When Rowett offered Interpose for sale late in 1885, Armstrong, familiar with the high quality of Rowett stock, purchased the pregnant mare and her suckling filly, Madelin, for the price of $1,000 and shipped the brood to Montana.

The Doncaster Ranch was known for its spectacular, three-story round barn that featured an indoor track. While in Spokane in the Washington Territory on business, Armstrong received word of the birth of Interpose’s colt. In honor of the city, he named the colt Spokane.

Spokane showed great promise as a two-year-old, winning two of five starts in 1888, and Armstrong entered him in the 1889 Kentucky Derby. Although a premier race, the Derby had not achieved the monumental status it enjoys today.

The race was run on May 9, 1889–a Thursday–in front of a crowd of 25,000, a fraction of the throngs that fill Churchill Downs today.

Home state favorite Proctor Knott was the overwhelming favorite at 1-to-2, while the relatively unknown Spokane was listed at 10-to-1 odds. That was enough for Frank James, brother of outlaw Jessie and a regular at countless tracks. 

James, flush with a windfall of $2,400 from an earlier race that day, asked a bookmaker of the odds on Spokane. The reply was “Ten-to-one and the sky’s the limit.” James threw down $5,000 on Spokane, causing the bookmaker to reply, “As far as I’m concerned, that’s the sky!”

Under jockey Thomas Kiley, Spokane edged Proctor Knott by a head, setting a record at 2:34 ½ over the mile-and-a-half layout (it was changed to a mile and a quarter in 1896).  He remains the only Kentucky Derby winner ever born in Montana.

Proving the win was no fluke, Spokane again beat Proctor Knott five days later at the Clark Stakes in Louisville. On June 22, Spokane won another key race of the era, the American Derby at Washington Park in Chicago, to become the first horse to win both races in the same season.

Back in Illinois, Rowett did not live to see the triumph of Spokane, as he died on July 13, 1887. His death was covered on page one of the New York Times the following day.

In addition to breeding, Rowett is also remembered as the first to introduce the true-bred beagle hound to this country from his native England. Prior to that, he was a Civil War officer and state politician. 

The only horse actually born in Illinois to win the Kentucky Derby was the 1970 champion, Dust Commander.

Tom Emery of Carlinville, who wrote the award-winning biography Richard Rowett: Thoroughbreds, Beagles, and the Civil War, may be reached at 217-710-8392 or ilcivilwar@yahoo.com.

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