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  • Family still seeks information on missing Bergland woman

    Jul 19, 2018

    By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] MELLEN, Wis. - More than six weeks after a Bergland woman was reported missing, her family is still seeking information as to what happened to her. Jody Lynn Newberry, 54, went missing at a music festival near Mellen, Wis., on the Saturday of Labor Day weekend. Her family continues to use Facebook, hundreds of posters and other media outlets to try to stir up some tips that may be helpful in solving her May 26 disappearance, but has been unsuccessful....

  • Trucking job fair held at Michigan Works

    Jul 19, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] IRONWOOD — Connie Hicks and Kim Zekovich, representing Gogebic Community College, were on hand to answer questions for those who took part in the Schneider Trucking job fair held at Michigan Works Wednesday. The college has held Commercial Drivers License classes for the past two years and will begin their third class this fall semester with Hicks as the lead instructor. One of the trucks they use for instructing is parked in the old K-Mart lot across from Cloverland Cinema. The semi sports an a...

  • DEQ holds hearing on Copperwood permit

    Jul 18, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] IRONWOOD - The public had a chance to express its opinions on Highland Copper's effort to develop a mine in northern Gogebic County at a Michigan Department of Environmental Quality public hearing Tuesday, with most speakers expressing support for the project. The hearing, held at Gogebic Community College, was a required part of the process to obtain a MDEQ permit for the company's Copperwood Project near Lake Superior in Ironwood and Wakefield...

  • Tribal center holds Ojibwa prayer ceremony

    Jul 18, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE jnordine@yourdailyglobe WATERSMEET - Taking place this week is the 2018 Healing Circle Run. It is a prayer for healing for the Ojibwa Anishnaabeg communities and is similar to a relay. The run is an opportunity for people to come together to pray for healing for themselves, their families, their community, their nation, Akii, and all their relatives. There is a Ojibwa teaching on healing that says, "For a nation to heal, it must begin with the individual. As a person heals, then...

  • Gogebic farmers markets to start accepting SNAP

    Jul 18, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] HURLEY — Qualifying residents will soon be able to use their SNAP benefits to purchase food at area farmers markets. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which Gogebic Range Farmers Market Association president Darrin Kimbler said was formerly known as food stamps, is a federal program serving low-income residents. Kimbler said the Depot Park Farmers and Artisans Markets and Ironwood Township Farmers Market will be accepting SNAP benefits as soon as the machines are delivered — which he...

  • Ironwood hires new K-12 principal

    Jul 17, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] IRONWOOD — The Ironwood Area Schools has a new K-12 principal after the district’s board of education voted to hire Melissa Nigh Monday. Nigh was a principal in Mellen, Wis., from 2008-13, according to Ironwood superintendent Travis Powell, before joining the faculty at Northland College in Ashland. “Her main role there was helping train pre-service teachers. So in my former capacity as an elementary principal, I worked closely with Mrs. Nigh in a couple of different capacities,” Powell told th...

  • Under the big top

    Jul 17, 2018

  • Hurley district's state aid to total around $2.5 million

    Jul 17, 2018

    By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] HURLEY — Hurley School District administrator Chris Patritto said Monday the district will receive $85,000 more in state aid than he previously projected. That means taxpayers may be getting a break on the levy for the 2018-’19 school year. It’s possible the levy could decrease from $9.35 to $8.96 per $1,000 of assessed value, he said. The school board adopted a preliminary budget of about $7.2 million that includes around $2.5 million in state aid. The budget will be down by about $241,000. Years...

  • Bessemer City Council discusses small scale grow operations

    Jul 17, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] BESSEMER — During Monday nights Bessemer City Council meeting the council agreed that Ordinance No. 366, Medical Marijuana as a home occupation, should include the prohibiting of future small scale growing operations from operating 1000 feet of parks, playgrounds, and/or churches. However the passing of the ordinance was tabled until further information can be obtain concerning EPA standards regarding such an occupation. In other business: —The council passed a resolution to support the Ojibway Cor...

  • Big tent

    Jul 17, 2018

  • Valley laid to rest

    Jul 16, 2018

    By JAN TUCKER [email protected] ONTONAGON - A solemn line of people waved flags and bowed their heads as the hearse holding the casket of Ontonagon native Lowell Earl Valley was carried through Ontonagon to his final resting place at Holy Family Cemetery Saturday. Navy Fireman Second Class Valley, was killed December 7, 1941 when his ship, the Oklahoma, was torpedoed at Pearl Harbor. It took 77 years and several graves, before his remains were identified and sent home to Ontonagon. A full...

  • Seniors get opportunity to ride area bike trails

    Jul 16, 2018

    RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] HURLEY - Senior citizens who can no longer bicycle will be given the opportunity to ride the trails with a new bike that was on display Saturday at Cary Park in Hurley. The bike was demonstrated at the Iron County Outdoor Recreation Enthusiasts event at the park. On an 85-degree day with only slight breezes, bicyclists went out in intervals on the non-motorized trails. It was a fundraiser for ICORE, but Enni Gregas, of the Friends of the Iron Belle Trail,...

  • Festival Ironwood kicks off Wednesday

    Jul 16, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] The big top tent is being set up today for the 27th annual Festival Ironwood. The 2018 Festival gets in full swing this Wednesday and continues through Saturday, concluding on Sunday with church services and the Range Art Association Master’s Art Show at the Ironwood Memorial building. Festival coordinators Will Corcoran and Keith Johnson appreciate the numerous work by volunteers behind the scenes, before, during and after the festival. It is truly a team effort to bring it all together. There are p...

  • Fallen soldier welcomed home

    Jul 14, 2018

    By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] IRONWOOD - Ironwood area residents gathered Friday evening to pay tribute to a war hero they never knew. The Patriot Guard caravan escorted the remains of Pearl Harbor victim Navy Fireman Second Class Lowell Valley to Ontonagon, where he will be buried today. Around 50 people, many of them veterans, had gathered at the Michigan Tourism Information Center on U.S. 2 in Ironwood by 9 p.m., as darkness was setting in. Former Iron County Veterans Service...

  • Blood donation helps raise money for scholarship fund

    Jul 14, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] HURLEY - The Hurley School held a blood drive Friday in the library of the school. The school participates in a scholarship program with the Red Cross. The scholarship goes to a graduating senior and the scholarship amount depends on how many pints of blood are collected during the year. The school hosts blood drives three or four times a year, with the next one in September. Friday's was the first blood drive to count in the total for the...

  • Wakefield Township continues to support mining effort

    Jul 14, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] WAKEFIELD TOWNSHIP — The Wakefield Township board of trustees on Tuesday expressed its continued support for Highland Copper’s effort to develop a mine in the township. Wakefield Township Supervisor John Cox said the support will extend to the upcoming Michigan Department of Environmental Quality public hearing regarding several permits for the company’s Copperwood Project in northern Ironwood and Wakefield townships. “All five of our board members will be there and we’ll be standing together....

  • One dead in Bessemer accident

    Jul 13, 2018

    By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] BESSEMER - One person was killed and two were injured in a Thursday afternoon accident in the city of Bessemer that closed U.S. 2 for more than four hours. Gogebic County Sheriff Peter Matonich said a 41-year-old Wakefield man, Rex Robert Smith, was traveling east near Fairview Drive when he lost control of his vehicle and it spun into the westbound lanes of the highway. It collided with a vehicle driven by Alvin Liikanen, 86, of Ironwood. Liikanen and...

  • Bessemer DDA approves asethetic improvements on Sophie Street

    Jul 13, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] BESSEMER - At Thursday night's city of Bessemer's Downtown Development Authority meeting, DDA agreed to a request for facade improvement funds for Alpha Management, 302 S. Sophie St. Owner Kara Bucknell asked for improvement funds to be able to repaint the non-brick areas of the building. Bucknell was approved $1,100 for the project. She is to bring in all receipts once the project is completed to get reimbursed. Also receiving funding was Louis Campos...

  • Iron County moves forward with broadband grant application

    Jul 13, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] HURLEY — Iron County is continuing its efforts to expand broadband access throughout the country, with the Board of Supervisors’ finance committee budgeting $18,000 towards local matching funds for the latest state grant application Wednesday. The application to the Wisconsin Public Services Commission is seeking to build a new tower in the area near Fisher Lake in the town of Mercer. “This would be a new tower out near Fisher Lake and it would kind of expand off of what we’ve already been doing ...

  • Wesley United Methodist Church roof project continues, services return Sept 2

    Jul 12, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] IRONWOOD - After 117 years of U.P. winters the Wesley United Methodist Church's roof was on the verge of collapsing. When the church was built in 1910 with old growth timber, the trusses were not adequately reinforced which eventually led to a crack in the roof. Over the years the weight of snow build up made the crack travel the length of the roof. Last fall the members of the church knew that something had to be done, but weren't sure how to begin. A...

  • Iron County non-motorized trail fundraiser planned

    Jul 12, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] HURLEY - Iron County Outdoor Recreation Enthusiasts and other trail advocates in Iron County continue to work to develop the non-motorized trail between Hurley and Montreal, with a fundraiser planned Saturday at Cary Park in Hurley. ICORE will have brats, hot dogs, salad and cold drinks at Cary Park, according to Iron County's University of Wisconsin-Extension community educator Amy Nosal, starting at noon Saturday. Along with the food, the...

  • Gogebic County joins suit for PILT money

    Jul 12, 2018

    By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] BESSEMER — Gogebic County has joined a class action lawsuit for the past three fiscal years, seeking additional payments from the federal government for payments in lieu of taxes. After Wednesday’s county board meeting, county treasurer Lisa Hewitt noted the county receives about $600,000 annually in PILT money, so the suit could mean a great deal to the county. The suit seeks to recover money the county is owed for the past three years. The county was required to join the suit by Sept. 14. Kane Cou...

  • Graham discusses issues surrounding possible Ojibway closure

    Jul 11, 2018

    By JEAN NORDINE [email protected] BESSEMER - A public meeting in the auditorium of Bessemer City Hall, concerning the possible closure of Marenisco's Ojibway Correctional Facility, drew approximately 40 people last evening. Jeanne Graham, Gogebic Community College's dean of students, power point presentation provided statistics and information the public can use to spread the word about how detrimental the closure would be for the area. The information shared was compiled by Graham...

  • Hurley City Council approves sewer rate increase

    Jul 11, 2018

    By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] HURLEY - The Hurley City Council approved sewer rate increases at Tuesday's regular monthly meeting. The increase to Hurley customers was necessary because of higher rates being charged by the Gogebic-Iron Wastewater Authority. City clerk Stacey Wiercinski said the first bill from the wastewater authority with the higher rates was for $1,667 more per month, or around $5,000 per quarter. She said the Hurley increase will amount to about $7 per quarter...

  • Western UP meth ring gets federal sentence

    Jul 11, 2018

    By RICHARD JENKINS [email protected] MARQUETTE — Four western Upper Peninsula drug dealers were sentenced to federal prison, the Department of Justice’s office in Michigan’s Western District announced Monday. Patrick Joseph Sievers, 36, formerly of Ironwood, was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison and eight years of supervised release. Kathryn Maria Hellen, 27, formerly of Ironwood, was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison and five years of supervised release. Jennifer Elizabeth Smith, 29, formerly of Ontonagon, was sente...

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