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Olson: Pressure in DeKalb, giving in Genoa, flying to Miami

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The land swap plan with ShoDeen also included other ways for the school district to raise money through reimbursements for public improvements.

Preserving an established community resource is a worthy cause. However, there should be some conditions met by any deal between the park and school districts. The school district should get full value for its property. They should not be short-changed.

The park district shouldn’t forsake other important projects, such as the plan to replace the Hopkins Park pool in order to make the deal happen. Buying this property hasn’t been part of any long-range park plan presented to the public. When two sides are willing, creative negotiation can make the difficult possible. The park district could pay the school district the sale price in installments over a few years, rather than all at once. The school district could use the money it receives from the sale to try to buy some or all of the 33.5 acres it wanted to acquire near the new high school for future expansion.

But it’s not fair to expect the school district to take on more financial burden in order to keep the land from being developed. Not everyone in the school district is included in the DeKalb Park District, and paying for local schools costs property owners thousands each year.

We’ll wait and see what they come up with next.

Pack the bus: On any given school day, the transportation department at Genoa-Kingston School District 424 has 15 buses and four vans taking local children where they need to go.

But last week, they decided they wanted to do something to show their gratitude to the community they serve.

On Dec. 15, from 8 a.m. to noon, district buses were parked at Genoa-Kingston High School, Genoa-Kingston Middle School, and in downtown Genoa for the transportation workers’ first Pack-the-Bus Food Drive.

“It was just a [way of] thanking the community for all the support they’ve given us over the years,” said Gerald Stoffregen, transportation director at District 424. “And we felt it was something worthwhile doing.”

So did people in the community. Stoffregen said he and his fellow bus drivers were surprised at the generosity of their neighbors, despite the near constant drizzle on that damp Saturday.


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