By Liz Holbrook
Apr 19, 2021 9:56 PM
WESTON, WI (WSAU) A final bid has been approved for a new municipal facility in Weston.
Monday night the Village of Weston Board of Trustees discussed a recommended bid for the Village’s new municipal facility. The recommended bid from the Building Committee is for a base building of 23,117 square feet with VRF HFVAC system, a repair bay crane, a vehicle and mobile column lifts, and two manual vehicle wash bays done by Neenah-based Miron Construction.
During the discussion, board members heard from Building Committee Chair Mort McBain about the specific features of the recommended bid, Village Administrator Keith Donner about the financing for the project, and Kueny Architects Jon Wallenkamp about the specific construction features of the bid.
Village of Weston Board of Trustees Approves Municipal Facility Bid Recommendation
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Village of Weston Board of Trustees Approves Municipal Facility Bid Recommendation
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The Iowa Central Community College Board of Directors is about 30 steps closer to finding a new president of the college.
The applications for the open president position closed on Jan. 28 and the college received “upwards of 30” applications, according to Board President Mark Crimmins.
For the next couple weeks, Crimmins is asking the board members to review those applications to determine which applicants will advance to the next part of the process.
“We are just in the last stages of establishing a search committee, which is going to be made up from a variety of areas of the college and outside of the college,” Crimmins said. “What we’re attempting to do as a search committee is get a wide range of representation, but at the same time keep it at a manageable level.”
By Kent Casson
For The Daily Leader
FAIRBURY A high school plan for addressing student deficiencies was shared with members of the Prairie Central Board of Education Thursday night during the regular January meeting.
Prairie Central High School Principal Brad Allen explained the process which looks at grade trends with comparisons to the previous year. A significant difference was discovered. There were 122 failing grades in 2019-2020 with 336 in 2020-2021. Out of the 336 failing grades, 138 students are responsible for those numbers of failures, according to Allen.
“We wished we could have attacked this sooner,” Allen said. “Every time you solve a problem, two more pop up.”