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Vol. 7, No. 6 - Dec 1986�tl KISSING ZONE December,1986 Vol. 7 No. 6 •U'RE PROBABLY WONDERING How are the sticker sales going this year? Admittedly, there isn't a whole lot of interest in that subject (outside the Village Hall, that is), but bear with us - this is the last time you'll hear about it until early 1988. We've had a lot of questions asked. Here are the answers (if you have additional questions, give us a call): Q. For how long is the new sticker valid? A. January 1, 1987 to June 30, 1988. ;y •Q. What's the cost of this eighteen month sticker? A. Before January 1, 1987 - $37.50; after January 1, 1987 - $50.00. Q. When's the deadline for my motorcycle and recreational vehicle license? A. ALL stickers must be purchased prior to January 1, 1987. Q. I don't have my state plates. Can I still get my sticker? .� A. But of course! You can call and give us the plate number when you get it. Q. Will I get a rebate if I move before July, 1988? A. No. That would be an accounting nightmare. Remember, however, that most communities (like Deerfield) honor valid stickers from other communities. Q. If I get a new car after July, 1987, how much will the sticker be? A. $25 for the year July '87 to July '88. After January, 1988, if you get a new car, it'll be $12.50 for the remaining six months. Q. Where does this money. go? A. 65% to street maintenance; 35% toward law enforcement. Q. What if someone moves here from another community and has a valid sticker from there? A. We'll honor it until it expires. Q. Why don't you have a record of my dog's rabies shot? 1 showed you that last year! A. We don't keep that information... we note it on the application as being valid and we return your records to you. Dogs must have a current rabies shot - and we have to see it each and every year. All in all, the changeover has worked pretty well. Change is never easy, but almost everyone seems to agree that this was a necessary one. The prospect of putting stickers on when the •weather is warm apparently makes good sense to you - and we're glad you're pleased! The proof of rabies requirement seems to cause the most trouble. We've had to return many applications because that proof was not submitted. State Statutes require that every dog 4 months old and over must have a rabies inoculation. Our Municipal Code requires that we see a certificate from a licensed veterinarian before we issue our license. That's why we insist on your complying with the law. Remember, it's for your protection! FIRE INSURANCE RATING Here's one example of a lower class being more desirable! Because of the combined efforts of the Fire Department and the Village, our fire insurance rating has gone from Class 5 to a Class 4. To determine whether this affects you personally, we suggest you contact your agent. Our information is that there is no overall answer but that each individual and/or commer- cial establishment should check with his own insurance company. 0 SPEAKING OF THE FIRE DEPARTMENT... , Chief Gagne and his personnel extend to you their warmest wishes (no pun intended) for a happy AND SAFE holiday season. Here's a few suggestions: If the tree is fresh, keep it watered ... and keep it in a cool place away from registers, radiators or the fireplace. Make sure the lights are UL approved - never use more than 3 strings of lights on a circuit. Turn the lights out when you leave the house or go to bed. DO NOT BURN WRAPPING PAPER IN THE FIREPLACE. Check your smoke detectors! Both the Fire Department and the Village Hall are displaying wreaths with red lights. If a fire occurs involving holiday decorations, a red bulb will be replaced by a white one. KEEP THE WREATH RED! Remember - fire prevention should be practiced all year. The most important gift we have to share is each other! POOR, LONELY, COLD HYDRANTS!!! How would you like to sit on somebody's parkway all year and never have a kind word spoken to you? Worse yet, how would you like to have snow and ice covering you all winter? Or bushes growing over you? AND, after all that, how would you react when some strangers in boots and heavy coats took.a wrench to you so you could fill their hoses with water to fight a fire? Well, that's a look at the hydrant's side of outdoor living. Won't you take pity on yours and keep the snow brushed off? Heaven forbid that you would ever need help from the hydrant but if you should, you'd want it to be ready to shoot that water out immediately. Take a few minutes to clean the hydrant ... it could pay great dividends! SNOW ON THE ROOF 40 Besides serving as Jack Frost's decorating media and as a base for cross country and downhill skiing, snow is useful in providing an easy means of determining the extent to which your house is insulated. Observe the snow pattern on your roof and com- pare it to your neighbors'. If their roofs are all white and yours is bare (or bare in spots), then a shortage of insulation exists where the heat from the house melted the snow on the roof. Judgment must be used so you're not misled by roof areas on which snow never fell because of the sheltering effect of trees or because winds have swept an area clean. Comparison should be made with houses with similar heating on the upper floor. Remember, a clear roof means wasted heat!!! LET'S TALK UT SCAVENGER SERVICE Nothing has a worse effect on blood pressure than to be missed on garbage day. We've re- cently had a meeting with Laidlaw Waste Sys- • tems to exchange ideas on how to improve the service. This is the result: 1. Papers and magazines have to be taken to the curb. This is not to say that the evening paper can't be put in the garbage can ... this does mean that an accumulation of papers or magazines are too heavy and must be placed at the curb if you want them removed. 2. You do not have to cart the household waste to the curb. If you choose to do so, be consistent. Your route men get used to picking it up'in the same place and they might miss you if you change your routine without telling them. 3. They are going to try leaving you a notice explaining why your cans weren't emptied ... i.e. too heavy, not household waste... whatever. And, last but certainly not least, to make lffe easier for all of us: 4. DON'T CALL US ... call the service directly at 945-5558. This eliminates one call for you and enables them to check with the driver im- mediately. In some cases where you've been missed, the driver will still be in your neigh- borhood and can return right away. If you call us, it delays the whole process and the driver • might be on the other side of the Village by the time the problem is discussed. If you have questions, we have an information sheet available at the Village Hall which ex- plains the service. OUR UNSUNG, UNPAID, UNHERALDED ADVISORY BOARDS, COUNCILS AND COMMITTEES!!! While the herald angels are singing, we decided to add our voices to thank the residents who serve the Village so efficiently. Here's a tribute to all of them ... PLAN. COMMISSION Mike Swartz, Ch. Mary Ehlers Larry Hearn Joe Koss, Dave Marks Edna Schade Herb Sundmacher BOARD OF BUILDING APPEALS Ed Zarek, Ch. Ted Galvani Maury Lipowich Pat McBride Dick Osman Bob Rubin Randolph Thomas HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION Cathy Curtis, Ch. Marlene Goldberger Shirley Horton ° ave Kornfeld .7 nibal Merino o Carl Sabath Lydia Scott o v Coralee Schwartz ° CABLE ADVISORY BOARD Jesse Rotman, Ch. Lou Adler Herb Kessel Doris Roethlisberger John Sanner Mike Stickney Dave Savner CEMETERY ASSOCIATION John Willman, Ch. Bill Hoyerman George Marty BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Bob Speckmann, Ch. Alan Garfield Henry Hollander Mike Lewitz Aftaura Keller IlWob Schlossberg 0 Howard Sterenstein q MANPOWER COMMISSION Bill Brown, Ch. Russ Ferris Julie Morrison Tom Needham Jean Reuther SAFETY COUNCIL Sheila Stanger, Ch. Howard Foote , Bill Luke T• Herb Nicholson '► Jeff Picklin Jeff Rabin Daniel Garramone FLOOD ADVISORY BOARD Alan Schultz, Ch. Roy Ray Wally Hanson Harlan Johnson Phil Maxey Dick Miller Lee Rose VILLAGE CENTER DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION Tom Whaley, Ch. Bob Ducharme Fred Goldberger Ed Josephson Joanne Leslie Ron May Melliney Saltarelli Jan Zobus 1*,*r* POLICE COMMISSION Art Rollin, Ch. Steve Jackson Arnie Silberman YOUTH COUNCIL Al Silvian, Ch. Thelma Leveaux Dick Rurey Lynne Samuels; Rosemary Sazonoff N. Ellyn Shepard Donna Small -4!t- Patty Stryker)VAt Dick Wallace Ida Greenfield ENERGY ADVISORY COUNCIL Charles Scott, Ch. Steve Freedman .. Joe Furco Milan Weber Chris Strong ELECTRICAL COMMISSION Jim Brown Jack Gagne Ted Galvani Jack Liske Dick Osman SISTER CITY COMMITTEE Bill Sause, Ch. Guenther Kolb Ruth Schiffels Charlotte Wolf EMERGENCY SERVICES AND DISASTER AGENCY Stan Rundell, Director Dave Arnold Kai Kahn Bob Salmen APPEARANCE REVIEW COMMISSION Tom Bergseth, Ch. Gerry Grethen Mike Tarnow Ed Zarek POLICE PENSION BOARD Jack Cooper, Ch. Harry Morgan Joyce Charles Mike Soler Bob Hamilton NORTRAN TRUSTEE Bob Benton HELP! vut, The Manpower Commission is in dire need of volunteers who would like to serve on one of the many advisory.Boards and Commissions. If you're interested and can spare some of • your valuable time to attend meetings, just give us a call and we'll send you the neces- sary form to fill out. The Manpower Commission will then contact you to arrange an inter- view with you. n HERE'S YOUR CHANCE!! We're going to give you some homework ... and we hope you'll turn it in! Here's the problem: No matter how we structure the leaf pick-up schedule, we end up with too many unhappy people. We'll give you the facts - you give us the solution. Fact #1: We have to pick up the most leaves possible, in four quadrants of the Village. Fact #2: We have two vacuum machines only. Fact #3: We have to guess at weather conditions and when the leaves will fall. Fact #4: The season is short but it ends when the snow falls. Fact #5: Everyone wants their leaves picked up the day the last leaf falls. Fact #6: Two of the quadrants have more trees than the other two quadrants. Fact #7: Because of time constraints, we can only go down each street once. Now, how would YOU solve this problem so that the southwest and southeast quadrants don't feel like orphans but you still get the maximum truckloads of leaves removed from the north- east and northwest quadrants where there are more trees and, consequently, more leaves? Don't suggest eliminating the program ... we tried that and it caused near pandemonium. And don't suggest bagging ... we tried that and it's only marginally successful. Don't suggest more equipment ... we only have so much manpower and two crews, full time, for a month is the limit. °° •HERE'S MY GUARANTEED SOLUTION: a 1. VILLAGE OF DEERFIELD 850 Waukegan Road Deerfield, Illinois 60015 Fire Department .....................945-2121 Fire Department Non -Emergency .......945-4066 Police Department ...................945-2131 Police Department Non -Emergency .....945-8636 Village Hall.........................94.5-5000 BERNARD FORREST, Mayor TRUSTEES James L. Marovitz Edwin B. Seidman Cynthia J. Marty Vernon E. Swanson Harriet Rosenthal J. Robert York Printed at Standard Printing Service, Inc. (312) 498-6126 POSTAL CUSTOMER DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS 60015 Bulk Rate U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 1 Deerfield. Illinois CAR/PRE-SORT