Serving Gogebic, Iron and Ontonagon Counties

News


Sorted by date  Results 1529 - 1553 of 9733

Page Up

  • Wisconsin votes today

    Feb 16, 2021

    Iron County voters join with the rest of the state in casting their ballots in the spring primary for the state superintendent of public instruction today. Seven candidates appear on the ballot — Deborah Kerr, who worked 13 years as superintendent of Brown Deer Schools; Jill Underly, superintendent of the Pecatonica Area School District; Sheila Briggs, an assistant state superintendent; Shandowlyon Hendricks-Williams, who has 25 years’ experience in the education field; Steve Krull, a principal in the Milwaukee Public Schools; Troy Gun...

  • GCC receives grant to restore old trail

    Feb 16, 2021

    IRONWOOD — Gogebic Community College is working to rebuild bridges on an old trail that runs from the base of Mount Zion north to Slade Road. The trail is a little more than a mile long and was created by college employees in 1981. The bridges were compromised by flooding in 2016 and are “crucial to the integrity of the trail,” according to a press release. “By restoring the two bridges which run over Welch Creek, we are promoting personal enrichment and wellness within our community,” said GCC President Dr. George McNulty in the release. The G...

  • Wisconsin votes in spring primary Tuesday

    Feb 13, 2021

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] Iron County voters head to the polls Tuesday to vote in the state’s spring primary. The lone race on the ballot involves no local candidates. Instead, voters will decide who will face off in the general contest for state superintendent of public instruction in April. Seven candidates appear on the ballot — Deborah Kerr, who worked 13 years as superintendent of Brown Deer Schools; Jill Underly, superintendent of the Pecatonica Area School District; Sheila Briggs, an assistant state sup...

  • Filmmakers shooting in Northwoods

    Feb 13, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] HURLEY - An independent film crew was south of Hurley on Thursday to shoot a scene for their comedy feature. "We're filmmakers from Milwaukee," said Mike Cheslik, director of the film, "Hundreds of Beavers," a comedy feature that is two years in the making and now in production for the past nine weeks. The story is set during the fur trade, he said. It's not focusing on the fur trade in general, but is the story of one man who goes from being an app...

  • Wakefield council addresses city's pension fund

    Feb 13, 2021

    By P.J. GLISSON [email protected] WAKEFIELD — The Wakefield City Council voted Monday evening to authorize the city to submit a waiver to the state regarding the city’s status in the Municipal Employees’ Retirement System. The action was at the recommendation of both City Treasurer Mandy Lake and City Manager Robert Brown, Jr. “Unless you apply for a waiver within 45 days and your application is granted, your local government will receive a determination of underfunded status,” stated a Jan. 28 letter to Lake signed by the Community...

  • County objects to vaccine diversion

    Tom LaVenture|Feb 12, 2021

    BESSEMER — The Gogebic County Board of Commissioners will voice its objection to what they described as a diversion of COVID-19 vaccinations from rural to more populated areas of the state. The board Wednesday unanimously approved sending a letter to the appropriate people within the offices of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and the Michigan Department of Public Health and Human Services. The letter will state the county’s concern that a decision was made to divert vaccines to larger health systems in more densely populated areas of lower Michigan. The...

  • Washington School kitchen heats up

    Charity Smith|Feb 12, 2021

    BESSEMER - Bessemer school officials were able to turn on the heat in the Washington Elementary School kitchen for the first time in months Wednesday as a repairs were made to the building's heating system. A crew of heating technicians spent four hours on Wednesday repairing the part of the system that controls the heat in the kitchen. According to head cook Brandy Babich, the kitchen has not been properly heated since the start of the school year. She said that the heat would come and go...

  • Montreal council seeks grant surveys

    Richard Jenkins|Feb 12, 2021

    MONTREAL, Wis. — With $1 million in grant funding on the line, the Montreal City Council decided Tuesday to make a final effort to collect the remaining income surveys needed to qualify for Community Development Block Grant funding. “Right now, we’re very close to having three of the four streets we looked at being qualified. I think we only needed eight more surveys to be completed,” said Art Bahr, with the city’s engineering firm, who appeared at the meeting via telephone. The income surveys are needed to determine whether the project a...

  • Hurley to clarify overtime policy

    Feb 11, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] HURLEY — The Hurley City Council will hold a workshop to clarify an overtime rule in the employee handbook, according to business at the regular meeting on Tuesday. Mayor Jay Aijala said he wanted the matter added to the agenda because the misunderstanding doesn’t seem to have an obvious solution. Employees of the city Department of Public Works were called in to clear snow for five hours during late hours on Dec. 30. The department claims the hours are overtime while the city clerk said the wor...

  • Boutique official meets with airport board

    Feb 11, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] IRONWOOD TOWNSHIP - An official with Boutique Air Inc., said that recent lapses with on-time arrivals and departures are being addressed as a scheduling issue and that service should soon reflect the passenger airline's on-time ratings nationwide. Tom Warren, the vice president of business development from Boutique Air, Inc., a former Boutique pilot and instructor, flew in from Colorado to address concerns of the Gogebic-Iron County Airport Board...

  • Chamber starts planning for Festival Ironwood

    Feb 11, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] IRONWOOD — The Ironwood Chamber of Commerce is starting plans for the 2021 Festival Ironwood that is scheduled for July 14-17. The chamber board’s Festival Ironwood Organizing Committee agreed to start planning at its Feb. 8 meeting. The event may be modified or potentially canceled depending on COVID-19 restrictions guidelines or orders from the Western Upper Peninsula Health Department and the state of Michigan in place at that time. “We are just being cautiously optimistic to get the whole...

  • City approves fencing bids

    Feb 10, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] IRONWOOD — The city commission approved authorizing bids for fencing in Miners Memorial Heritage Park at its regular meeting on Monday. The fencing will also include the Jessieville elevated water storage tank — the one with the smiley face, said Scott Erickson, city manager. The project has been in the capital improvement plan for a few years, he said. Commissioner Rick Semo, who is also president of the Friends of the Miners Park, said the funding for the fencing was generated from previous easem...

  • Public Safety nearly complete with medical training

    Feb 10, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] IRONWOOD — The Ironwood Public Safety Department is meeting its goal to have all officers certified in emergency medical response within three years, according to the annual report of director Andrew DiGiorgio during the Ironwood City Commission meeting on Monday. Police officers often arrive to medical emergencies prior to the paramedics and their role is vital in sustaining life until other help arrives, he said. Department vehicles are equipped with medical response gear to include an a...

  • Forestry committee approves firewood vendor contract

    Feb 10, 2021

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] HURLEY — Although the price isn’t set yet, visitors to Saxon Harbor will likely be able to buy firewood at the harbor this summer after the Iron County Forestry and Parks Committee approved a contract with a vendor Tuesday. The wood will be sold through a self-serve kiosk where a series of lockers, similar to bus lockers or newspaper stands, are filled with wood and each user pays to access a locker and use the wood inside. “The lockers are actually a little bit bigger than a bundle of wood. So wh...

  • Basketball

    Feb 10, 2021

  • Saxon Snowcat Show thrives despite freezing temps

    Feb 9, 2021

    By P.J. GLISSON [email protected] SAXON, Wis. - A Vintage Snowcat Show drew steady streams of viewers on Saturday despite biting wind chills that sunk well below the zero mid-day temperature. Dozens of attendees faced the cold with great aplomb as they wandered around, admiring the decades-old machines, some of which once were used to clear snowmobile trails. The event was hosted by Perry Ofstad, owner of Pitt's Place in Saxon, and viewers were happy to use the bar as a refuge and a place...

  • Catholic church's La Rosa dinner carries on despite all odds

    Feb 9, 2021

    By P.J. GLISSON [email protected] IRONWOOD - In 45 previous years, the annual La Rosa Dinner at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church has resulted in a dining hall filled with folks happily chowing down a homemade spaghetti dinner while visiting with family and friends. The COVID-19 pandemic now makes that sort of gathering impossible, and - as though that didn't represent enough of a challenge - Mother Nature also took the past weekend's wind chills well below zero throughout the region....

  • Planning Commission prepares for marijuana process  

    Feb 9, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] IRONWOOD — The Ironwood Planning Commission continued its site plan review and conditional permit application process at its regular meeting on Thursday. The information was to ensure the members understand the process and scheduling for what could be around eight public hearings over the next two months to consider marijuana establishment licensing applications, said Tom Bergman, director of community development for the city of Ironwood. There are eight applicants with a total of 16 total a...

  • Watersmeet to continue remote learning

    Feb 6, 2021

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] WATERSMEET — Watersmeet Township School District officials have decided the cold temperatures forecast for next week and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic were a combination that meant it was better to continue remote learning for another week. Students in the district will continue learning from home at least through Feb. 12, the district announced Thursday. “After looking at our COVID numbers and at next week’s weather forecast of minus 30 to minus 50 below zero the entire week, the decis...

  • Schools bring awareness to teen dating violence

    Feb 6, 2021

    By CHARITY SMITH [email protected] IRONWOOD – In order to spread awareness of teen dating violence, officials with the Domestic Violence Escape shelter have placed information on tables at Bessemer, Hurley, Wakefield-Marenisco, and Mercer schools. "We just really want to get awareness information out there in general. I don't think people realize just how big of an issue teen dating violence actually is," said Alyssa Ahonen, the Michigan children's advocate for DOVE. "It is actually v...

  • Fire department purchases thermal imagers

    Feb 6, 2021

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] IRONWOOD TOWNSHIP -— The Ironwood Township Volunteer Fire Department recently purchased six personal thermal imagers, making it one of the first departments in the county to equip its members with the smaller versions of the technology. “Typically, … in a fire setting, (thermal imagers) are used to locate hotspots inside the wall. They can also tell the temperature of the room, whether it’s getting to be that point of flashover. They’re used in low light situations when it’s smoke filled and...

  • Lighted ski trail plan gets complicated

    Feb 5, 2021

    By TOM LAVENTURE [email protected] IRONWOOD — A project to light some trail areas of Miners Memorial Heritage Park may need to wait a year unless other sources of funding are identified. Tom Kangas, a member of the Ironwood Parks and Recreation Committee, previously recommended that work continue to try and install around 1.9 miles of solar or standard electric lighting on the Aurora Loop at Miners Park. At the meeting on Monday, the discussion on the project led to questions that presented concerns on the ability to put a solid p...

  • GCC Lindquist Student Center reopens to public

    Feb 5, 2021

    By CHARITY SMITH [email protected] BESSEMER - The Gogebic Community College Lindquist Student Center reopened on Monday. The center had been closed for public use since the start of the coronavirus pandemic in early 2020. The center offers a venue for the public to walk, lift weights, and use the gym. "We're getting the community back in," said Erik Guenard, vice president of business services at GCC. "The walking track has been the main source of what we're seeing for people visiting th...

  • Special prosecutor named

    Feb 5, 2021

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] HURLEY — A special prosecutor has been appointed in the criminal case against former Hurley Fire Chief Darrell Petrusha. Taylor County Judge Ann Knox-Bauer, who is hearing the case, has appointed Allen Brey to the position. Brey will receive $80 an hour, according to court documents, including travel time. “This deviation from the standard special prosecutor rate is necessary due to the difficulty in finding qualified and experienced people willing to take this special appointment where the distric...

  • Free tuition offered to local GCC non-traditional students

    Feb 4, 2021

    By CHARITY SMITH [email protected] IRONWOOD — Non-traditional college students at Gogebic Community College may soon be attending classes tuition free. The college announced on Tuesday that it will participate in the Michigan Reconnect program, which will provide free tuition to those students who qualify for the program starting in summer 2021. “The program does serve largely non-traditional students, those that are age 25 or older and do not have an associate or bachelor’s degree. We are targeting non-traditional students that eithe...

Page Down