West Frankfort woman arrested for DUI

A 39-year-old West Frankfort woman was arrested Sunday by Benton police on an alcohol-related driving offense.

According to the police report April L. Williams was stopped during a routine traffic stop on Wastena Street, in Benton.  During the investigation it was determined that Williams was under the influence of alcohol.  Williams was cited for DUI,  speeding, illegal transportation of alcohol, expired registration and operating an uninsured vehicle.

Williams was taken to the Franklin County Jail.

 

More tax tips from Benton H & R Block

Does Your Teen Owe Taxes?

Generally, if a teen is a dependent of another taxpayer, he or she doesn’t have to file a tax return unless  their unearned income (such as interest and dividends) is over $950, their earned income is over $5,950, or their gross income is more than the larger of  $950, or earned income (up to $5,650) plus $300.
Check your teen’s earnings for the year to see if they are below the standard deduction amount. If they are, your teen won’t even need to file an income tax return in most cases.Print

Choose the Right Employee Designation

Pay attention to the way your teenager is classified by the employer. Some employers like the idea of hiring summer help as contractors, rather than as “regular” W-2 employees. Contract workers come with fewer paperwork and tax complications for the employer.
Teenagers might also find this arrangement attractive because they don’t see withholdings from their paychecks. When a teen is a W-2 employee, payroll taxes, and even federal taxes, can be withheld from the paycheck. The fact that federal taxes often come back as a refund rarely registers with teenagers. Being a contractor seems like the way to go because the paychecks are often bigger.
Unfortunately, being a 1099 contractor can come with extra headaches at tax time. A teenager who makes more than $400 as an independent contractor has to pay self-employment taxes. So, even if your teen doesn’t make enough to owe federal income taxes, he or she will have to file a return and pay self-employment tax.

Consider the implications of different types of employee classification, and realize what seems like a good idea for a summer job might not be as attractive come tax time.

Special Tax Rules for Teenagers

There are some special cases for teenagers doing certain jobs.
Household employees under the age of 18 don’t have to worry about payroll or self-employment taxes, unless they are in the trade or business of that job. This means that there are exceptions for jobs that include mowing lawns and babysitting. Those under 18 can also get a self-employment tax exemption if they deliver newspapers.
It’s also worth noting that you can hire your teen for work in your sole proprietor family business, and you don’t have to worry about payroll taxes. But, once again, you need to be careful. Even in the family business, once you pay your teenager enough to hit the standard deduction for filing, everything changes and withholdings become important.

The Kiddie Tax

Many parents like to teach their children the importance of investing. However, unearned income for teenagers is subject to different rules than earned income — just like it is for adults. If your teen’s investment income reaches a certain level ($950 for tax year 2012), he or she has to file a tax return and report.
Money above that level is generally taxed at 10%. However, there is another threshold ($1,900 for 2012) that is in effect as well. Once this second threshold is reached, your child’s unearned investment income is taxed at your marginal rate.
If your child has earned income, he or she is eligible for an IRA. It might make sense to hold some of the investments in a Roth IRA, so that income grows tax-free.

Don’t Forget State Taxes

Finally, even if you are covered with regard to federal taxes, it’s important to remember that each state has its own income tax rules and requirements. Don’t forget to look into your individual state tax law, and make sure that your teen is in full compliance.
Has all this information confused you even more? Let H & R Block in Benton help you.  We are still taking $20 off your tax preparation bill if you bring a sack of groceries for the food pantry. We also honor our competitor’s coupons.
Call us at 618-439-4641 to book your appointment. We are located at 101 West Main Street in Benton and are anxious to serve you! Our office hours are 9 am to 6 pm Monday through Friday, and 9 am to 5 pm on Saturday.

Zeigler authorizes share of roofing cost at Central Dispatch

By Bruce A. Fasol
The Zeigler City Council has authorized an additional share of the cost to be paid for a new roof at the Central Dispatch building. That building is located in Christopher.  Zeigler is one of the participating members of the West Franklin Central Dispatch which dispatches first responders to portions of the western part of Franklin County.
The roof of the dispatch building was replaced by Beibel Roofing, of Benton.  Zeigler, Christopher, Valier and the Sesser Fire Protection District have all had to pay their share of the cost of the new roof. However, with the recent non-participation of the city of Sesser and the village of Royalton, the other members have also had to pay those shares of the cost as well.
The city of Christopher recently authorized $ 2,447.06 as their additional share.  This week the city of Zeigler approved payment of $1,601.71 to cover their share of the needed money.  Valier is expected to pay $143.45, with the Sesser Fire Protection District chipping in $766.45 as their total.  The money to cover the two member non-payments is based on the populations of their residents just like monthly participation is based.
Conflict has arisen within the group recently.  There is a lawsuit being considered by the board of West Franklin Central Dispatch against the city of Sesser.  That lawsuit is based on on the board’s belief that Sesser should have to pay their share of money owed to the IRS and other creditors after mismanagement in the agency.  Sesser denies that they owe the money.

Franklin County Farm Bureau News

By J. Larry Miller

Drought breaking rains continue to replenish ponds and reservoirs and make feeding cattle difficult. Rain is one thing but ice is another and we certainly experience that last week. The weather has been very disagreeable these last few days but spring is on the way.

Larry Miller, executive director Franklin County Farm Bureau

Larry Miller, executive director Franklin County Farm Bureau

The National Ag Statistics Service has put the average corn yield in Franklin County at 30.1 bushels per acre and soybeans at 27.2 bu. This makes the corn yield the lowest in the county since 1954 which was 21 bushels per acre, the lowest in 54 years. Soybean yield were the lowest since 2007. A quick check of Franklin County corn and soybean yields put us at about the 3rd lowest in the state.

HB 2651 (Rep. Mautino) has been introduced to limit value changes of all Farmland Productivity Index (PI) soils to 10% of Illinois’ median cropland soil PI.  Currently, each individual PI is limited to a growth rate of 10% from its prior year.  The median farmland soil PI in Illinois is PI 111.  This change would impact the 2014 assessed values for taxes payable in 2015.  Illinois Farm Bureau supports HB 2651.

In 1977 the Farm Land Assessment Law came into affect in Illinois and from that point farmland was assessed based on a productivity index rather than market value approach in assessments. To determine the assessment of individual soil types a formula based on commodity prices, non-land production costs; such as – seed, fertilizer and fuel, and farm mortgage interest rates are used to calculate a value of net-land income. This formula has been used successfully but in 1987 a limit of 10% of increase or decrease in the assessment caused the formula to skew the values.

Mortgage rates have decreased, commodity process have increased and has caused a rapid increase in the productivity in each soil group. But the limit of 10% caused the actual assessed value to progress slower than the actual values.

The Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) came to the Illinois Farm Bureau (ILFB)in the spring of 2012 and expressed concern over the values being assessed and the actual assessments applied to farmland which were skewed by the 10% limit. The IDOR views the ILFB as the caretaker of the Farm Land Assessment law. The ILFB recognized that the Farm Land Assessment Law could be in jeopardy unless changes were made to address the disparity from actual values to the certified values. Therefore, the lesser of two evils were embraced and ILFB is supporting HB 2651.

This is a complicated and very political issue. Speaker Mike Madigan would like for the Farm Land Assessment Law to be abolished and land assessed on market value which would be devastating for farmers and affect land prices negatively. If you have questions on this issue please feel free to call me and I will provide more information.

The Franklin County Young Leaders are currently taking orders for smoked pork loin. These will be ready to pick up on March 28, the Thursday before Easter. ½ loin – $30 full – $45. For more information please call 435-3616. Proceeds from the sale will be used to provide a college scholarship to a Franklin County student.

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

IHSA announces potential Class 1A/2A boys basketball state final schedule change

 

The Illinois High School Association (IHSA) is issuing a press notification in regard to the IHSA Class 1A and Class 2A Boys Basketball State Finals scheduled to be played at the Peoria Civic Center on Friday and Saturday, March 8-9.

Deerfield’s Chicagoland Jewish High School advanced to the finals of the Class 1A Mooseheart Sectional on Wednesday evening and is scheduled to play for the Sectional title on Saturday, March 2.

In the event that Chicagoland Jewish High School advances to the State Finals, the IHSA will release a revised schedule for Saturday, March 9 at the state tournament. The schedule on Friday, March 8 would not be changed.

In the revised format, the Class 2A games would be played during the first session (12:15 p.m., 2:00 p.m.) on Saturday, March 9, with the 1A games being played in the evening and the exact Class 1A schedule to be announced. The revised schedule would accommodate Chicagoland Jewish High School, which would be unable to play on the Jewish Sabbath – from after sundown Friday until after sundown Saturday.

The winner of Mooseheart Sectional advances to Tuesday’s Super-Sectional at Northern Illinois University, with the Super-Sectional winner advancing to the state tournament in Peoria.

The state final schedule if Chicagoland Jewish High School qualifies:

FRIDAY, MARCH 8

12:15 p.m. 1A Semifinal #1

2:00 p.m. 1A Semifinal #2

6:30 p.m. 2A Semifinal #1

8:15 p.m. 2A Semifinal #1

(no change)

 

SATURDAY, MARCH 9

12:15 p.m. 2A Third Place

2:00 p.m. 2A State Championship

Class 1A games at 6:30 p.m. & 8:15 p.m. to be announced

High-energy style has paid dividends throughout Jeff Early’s career

By Tom Weber
Saluki Media Services

Have you ever wondered why Saluki senior Jeff Early plays with such a non-stop motor — always hustling and scrapping — as if he has a chip on his shoulder? Turns out he does have an axe or two to grind.

The Virginia native, who spent most of his childhood growing up in Puerto Rico, will never forget the day he was cut from his eighth-grade basketball team. The coach flat-out told him he didn’t have the size or talent to play junior-high hoops.

A devastated Early practiced and trained on his own almost every day, determined to prove the coach wrong. Soon, he realized his coach was correct. He was short and his skills were lacking. That’s when Early decided to try a different approach that would set him apart.

“No matter how well you can shoot or how bad you are at dribbling, if you play as hard as you can and leave everything on the court, anything can happen,” he explained. “I still carry that feeling around of when I got cut and being the only one of my friends not on the basketball team.”

jeff early 228

Early’s frenetic, high-energy style was born out of necessity and made its debut at Rockbridge High School, where he blossomed into an All-State basketball player. He was also a football star and would’ve accepted a gridiron scholarship, except for academic deficiencies. Rather than play JUCO football across the country in Kansas, he elected to play basketball for nearby Allegany College and earned All-American status his freshman year. To increase his profile, he transferred to JUCO powerhouse Monroe College, where he subsequently broke both feet in the span of 18 months.

Although he was named an All-American at Monroe in 2011, most Division I coaches shied away from Early because of his injury history and lingering questions about his unorthodox shot. Saluki assistant coach Anthony Stewart loved Early’s dogged style and convinced Southern Illinois head coach Chris Lowery to take a chance on both Early and Monroe teammate T.J. Lindsay.

“Everything happens for a reason, and if I didn’t have academic problems, I would have pursued my football career out of high school, and if I didn’t break both feet, I wouldn’t be at SIU,” Early said. “God sent me on a different path.”

The 6-foot-1 Early was a part-time starter at guard last year for SIU and averaged 8.6 points and 3.8 rebounds — not bad numbers, but modest in comparison to the breakout season he’s experienced for Southern this year. Early is averaging 12.6 points and leads the nation among players 6-foot-1 or shorter with 7.4 rebounds per contest. He’s coming off a monster game against Miami University in which he scored a career-high 31 points and recorded his eighth double-double of the season.

Perhaps the key to his dramatic improvement has been a position switch to what first-year head coach Barry Hinson calls the hybrid forward. Early admits being skeptical at first about the proposed change.

“Coach pulled Josh (Swan) and I to the side one day and said he had a plan for us to be successful this year,” Early recalled. “I’d never heard of the word hybrid, and he told me it was the four. I started thinking, how am I going to play the four?”

The move has paid off for the Salukis and Early, who can use his explosive, energetic style to his advantage against taller, slower four-men. Defensively, he’s worked hard not to be a liability.

“I have my disadvantages on height and weight,” he acknowledged. “With how aggressive I play and with the mentality I play, I think I overcome most of the disadvantages.”

The 24-year-old Early, who is the oldest player in the Missouri Valley Conference, said he’s improved as a team leader this season, as well.

“Coach told me not to be afraid to tell my teammates what’s right and what’s wrong,” he said. “We’re so cool together off the court that sometimes you don’t want to make them mad and mess the friendship up. Somebody might take a bad shot or make a turnover, and before, I wouldn’t say anything or say it under my breath. I started to get to know how each player responds. There’s certain players you can yell at to get them going, and there’s certain players you have to talk to them calmly so they don’t get off their game.”

The Salukis have won four of their last six games, and in the wins over Missouri State and Miami University, it was Early who shook his teammates out of their doldrums for come-from-behind victories.

“I think it’s the drive I have and the love for the game,” he said. “If the team doesn’t have the energy it needs, they need that captain and leader on the court to bring it out of them.”

Early plans to graduate in May and will play in the 14-team Puerto Rican pro league next summer.

“After I graduate, I want people to remember me as a hard-nosed warrior who left it all out on the court,” he said. “I play every possession like it’s my last.”

Saluki Men’s Basketball tops Northern Iowa, 63-57, on Senior Night

By Tom Weber
SIUSalukis.com

CARBONDALE, Ill. – Southern Illinois extended its home winning streak to five games — the longest since 2009 — by clamping down defensively on Northern Iowa in a 63-57 victory on Senior Night at SIU Arena on Wednesday.

The Salukis (13-16, 5-12) are getting hot just as the conference tournament approaches, having won five of their last seven games. They matched last year’s Missouri Valley Conference win total and sent their three seniors — Kendal Brown-Surles, Jeff Early and T.J. Lindsay — out on a high note.

Desmar Jackson scored 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lead SIU.

Desmar Jackson scored 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lead SIU.

“I’m really happy for our three seniors,” said SIU head coach Barry Hinson. “I’ve always made a big deal about Senior Night. This was my 12th Senior Night as a head coach and I’ve never had a team get beat on Senior Night.”

SIU played its best defensive game of the conference season, holding the visitors to 38 percent shooting and forcing 16 turnovers. Southern’s D recorded 11 steals that led to 15 fast-break points, as the team jumped to a 39-24 halftime advantage. Desmar Jackson had 14 of his game-high 18 points in the first half, including a pair of highlight reel dunks.

“We weren’t strong enough with the ball in traffic and it led to points without our defense being set,” said UNI head coach Ben Jacobson.

The Panthers (17-13, 10-7) struggled to run their offense without leading scorer, Anthony James, who was sidelined with a thigh bruise that he suffered in Saturday’s BracketBusters game. They were just 8-for-32 from 3-point range.

“You’re so far along into a routine of what you’re doing at both ends of the floor, and you take away somebody who is that experienced and that valuable to you at both ends of the floor (as James),” Jacobson said.

UNI played pretty strong defense of its own in the second half, holding the Salukis scoreless for more than eight minutes and trimming a 15-point deficit to five with 4:43 remaining. The Salukis finally broke through when Jackson made a pair of free throws with 2:50 remaining to push SIU’s lead to 50-43.

The Panthers made one final push, cutting the deficit to 58-54 on a 3-pointer by Marc Sonnen with 31 seconds remaining, but Jackson iced the game with two free throws with 22 seconds to go.

“We told the team at halftime, you know they’re going to make a run,” Hinson said. “We know it because we’re good at imploding.”

With one game remaining on the league schedule, SIU is locked into the No. 10 seed at next week’s MVC Tournament in St. Louis — the first time Southern has been No. 10 since the league expanded the conference tournament to 10 teams in 1997.

After starting the conference season 1-11, the Salukis have played free and easy the month of February, not worried about wins and losses, and suddenly the wins are taking care of themselves. Hinson said the turning point was the team’s 37-point loss to Illinois State on Feb. 2.

“After the Illinois State game, we sat down as a group and said we’re not going to stop,” he explained. “We’re going to try to get better every day. Attitude and effort — as long as you do that — don’t worry about the scoreboard.”

The Salukis have gotten stellar play from their three seniors. In his post-game press conference, Hinson noted that it was Lindsay’s 14-point first half in the upset win over Wichita State that got the train rolling. Since then, Early has played spectacularly — he had 14 points, eight rebounds and three steals tonight — and Brown-Surles has been a steady floor general.

“I’ve always written my three seniors a note and put it on their chair for the last home game,” Hinson said. “Basically, I told them I’m proud of them and how they’ve grown as young men this year.”

The Salukis play one more regular-season game at Drake on Saturday, and then will play either Bradley, Drake, Illinois State or Missouri State next Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at the Scottrade Center.

Benton girl’s open track season at Triad Invitational

The Benton girl’s track and field team participated recently in the Triad Indoor Invitational that was held at Principia University.  No team scores were kept and teams participating included Mahomet Seymour, Marshall Co KY, Jerseyville, Triad, Alton, Carbondale, Cahokia, Granite City, Mascoutah, Metro East Lutheran, Madison, and others.

Benton coach Andy Sloan said the meet is a great starting point for the season.

“It was nice to for our kids to get the opportunity to compete against some really good competition at this indoor meet,” said Sloan. “Several of them have been training all winter, and like all sports, after a while practicing gets old and you need a meet to see where you are.  Hopefully we will continue to build from some of the success we had as we move forward with our indoor season.  We are fairly inexperienced so I didn’t know what to expect but the kids really competed well and the effort was outstanding.”

Benton girls’ track will compete this Friday at the SIU Indoor.

Here are results from Triad Indoor Invitational

TOP 6 IN EACH EVENT WERE MEDALISTS
Shay Vick    HJ    No Height
Kaitlyn Biddle    SP    25’0”    23rd place
Kristy Hayden    SP    33’7”    6th place    BCHS Indoor #3
Kaitlyn Schutt    60 M Dash    8.49        9th place
Kaitlyn Schutt    800 Run    2:30.37        1st place
Kaitlyn Schutt    200 Dash    28.65        7th place
Jenna Johnston    800 Run    2:36.76        6th place, indoor PR, BCHS Indoor #3
Kryslyn Fowler  60 M Dash    8.88        18th place
Kryslyn Fowler 200 Dash    29.01        9th place, BCHS Indoor #5
Erin McDaniel  60 M Dash    9.03        21st place
Erin McDaniel 200 Dash        30.98        19th place
Bayley Eubanks 60 M HH    10.79        10th  place
Bayley Eubanks 400 Dash    68.27        4th place, Indoor PR, BCHS Indoor # 7
4×200 Relay    2:01.5        7th
Fowler 28.5, McDaniel 29.3, Eubanks 30.3, Vick 33.4
4×400 Relay    4:37.52        4th
Schutt 66.3, McDaniel 72.1, Fowler 68.1, Johnston 70.2

Benton man arrested on outstanding warrant

A 22-year-old Benton man was arrested by Benton police on an outstanding warrant.

According to a police report Kyle M. Holsapple was taken into custody on a warrant for failure to appear in court.  Holsapple was taken to Franklin County Jail for further processing.

 

Benton Ranger Wrestling Open slated for March 30

The Benton Ranger Wrestling Open will be held March 30, 2013 at Benton High School.  All the details are listed below in the link.  Anybody needing more information can contact Phil McMahon at 618-927-9040 or by email at pmcmahon4@hotmail.com.

Here’s the link:

wrestling-flyer

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News