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By Greg Chandler 15 Jan, 2021
The youngest member of the Middleville Village Council has been named the village’s new president. Amanda Fisk, who was elected as a trustee to the council in November 2018, was appointed to the president’s office by her colleagues Tuesday night. She succeeds the late Charlie Pullen, who died Nov. 20, 2020, of complications from COVID-19. Pullen had been the village’s president since 2009. Fisk, 35, was one of three candidates who were considered for the president’s position, along with trustees Mike Cramer and Kevin Smith. President Pro Tempore Sherry Ronning took a straw poll of council members to see who they would support. Fisk and Cramer each supported themselves. The remaining council members – Ronning, Smith, Mike Lytle and Ed Schellinger – all supported Fisk. A formal motion followed, with Fisk being unanimously supported. “I support you in whatever help you need. I look forward to your leadership,” Ronning said. Fisk has several major goals she would like to see accomplished this year, most notably approval of an ordinance that would legalize marijuana-based businesses in the village. “Seeing that through was part of the reason I ran for council in the first place. I'm excited to see that nearing its end,” Fisk wrote in a text message following the meeting. Fisk also said she sees adjusting and reviewing the village’s contract with the Barry County Sheriff’s Department as a top priority. In addition, she supports continued park development, including improvements to the riverbank parks, Calvin Hill Park and the Paul Henry Thornapple Trail. “I embraced hiking this year as a way to get out of the house amid shutdowns and quarantines, so embracing and expanding on our distinction as a North Country Trail Town is something I'd be interested in exploring,” Fisk wrote. Fisk serves as Middleville’s representative on the Thornapple Area Parks and Recreation Commission. Finally, Fisk wants to increase contact with residents and business owners in the community. “The village is lacking a little in social media presence, and I think sometimes we struggle to reach members of our community in a way that works for them,” she wrote. “I definitely want to work with staff, council, and other boards and commissions to get the message out about what we're doing and how they can be involved.” Fisk was the top vote-getter among four candidates in the 2018 trustee election, capturing 762 votes. Last year, she announced that she was running for Barry County clerk as a Democrat but later withdrew her candidacy due to work and family circumstances. Fisk is a 2003 graduate of Thornapple Kellogg High School. She holds an associate’s degree in sociology and psychology from Lansing Community College, a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Michigan State University and a master’s in public administration from Walden University.
By Brett Bremer 26 Oct, 2020
The lead was so large that the Fighting Scots could start their celebration a day early. Certain South Lyon, Freeland and Thornapple Kellogg would be unable to catch the Caledonia High School equestrian team with one event to go on Sunday, Oct. 18, the Fighting Scots had fun with a team Halloween party Saturday after the first four days of riding at the Michigan Interscholastic Horsemanship Association State Championships in Midland. Taryn Kooiker, one of the seven ladies who was a senior captain for the Fighting Scots this fall, and freshman Griffin Wolverton, the only guy in the high school program, came dressed as each other. “Griffin really pulled off the Teryn outfit,” said Caledonia head coach Kellie Scheidel. Not only did they have each others' outfits down, but their personalities as well. Scheidel said for her it was just one more example of the outstanding team atmosphere and camaraderie among her riders as they worked to make that one step up from being the Division A 2019 Reserve Champions to the Division A 2020 State Champions at the Midland County Fairgrounds. The Fighting Scots finished the weekend with 417 points, 105 more than the 2020 Reserve Champions from Freeland who finished in second place with a total of 312 points. The victory caps off a perfect run through the season for the Scots who also won District and Regional Championships. The Scots also won MIHA State Championships in 2015 and 2002. This is Scheidel's second season leading the program. Caledonia was the only team to score in all 17 classes in Midland, and put up the top point totals of the finals in Saddle Seat Fitting and Showing, Saddle Seat Pattern, Saddle Seat Bareback, the Flag Race, the Stakes Race Timed Event and tied Thornapple Kellogg for the most points in the Two-Person Relay. Thornapple Kellogg was third at the state championship, just 24 points behind the Reserve Champions from Freeland, with a total of 288 points. The Trojans were the top scoring team in Saddle Seat Equitation and the Cloverleaf Race as well. Behind the top three teams, South Lyon was fourth with 244 points followed by Ogemaw Heights 214, Rockford 193, Milford 114, Milan 66, Chippewa Hills 22 and Alpena 0. The Two-Person Relay was the only event left on Sunday at the championships, which were extended a couple days to help with social distancing. “It was a long one, but it was definitely worth it,” Scheidel said. “We competed Wednesday through Sunday, so it is longer than our usual shows.” Being that it started on Wednesday it left a little less time for riders and horses to recover from the regional round of the state tournament, and to perfect the state finals patterns in each class. “I kept telling the kids from day one you guys are state championship worthy, just keep your head in the game and don't get defeated if something goes wrong. Brush it off,” Scheidel said. Caledonia had one senior graduate after the 2019 runner-up finish at the state championship meet. All but four riders returned to the arena for the Scots this fall, and Scheidel said everyone got to contribute to the state championship performance. Kookier, Hailey Chu, Remington Steenwyk, Carlee Gibson, Madeline Peterson, Marcia Ball, and Lauren Kane were the Scots' seven senior captains this season. “We have seven seniors,” coach Scheidel said. “It is very sad. It is going to be very sad to see them all go. With the seven seniors it is such an experienced group of kids. They had been to state three years prior and they kind of know how it goes. Everyone exceeded my expectations.” The team also included riders Kendra Lloyd, Mia Stiver, Anna Eliassen, Mia Nelson, Griffin Wolverton and Kylie Greenlee and team groom Emma Hayden. Scheidel's coaching staff also included assistants Hannah Cox, Zach Scheidel, Laura Darby, Kim Fredrick and Karah Lloyd.
By Brett Bremer 26 Oct, 2020
Last year, Lydia Cole, then a Thornapple-Kellogg junior, was the star of the Delton Kellogg/Thornapple Kellogg/Hastings varsity girls swim team's annual Cancer Awareness Meet. Cole had been diagnosed with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors at the end of her sophomore year. She'd continued to swim the 2019-20 season while undergoing chemotherapy treatments, and her team dedicated the Cancer Awareness Meet to supporting Cole and her family, using the slogan “Team Lydia.” Cole — who was interviewed prior to the 2019 Cancer Awareness Meet — said cancer scared her less than it had. Swimming with her team and staying busy kept cancer from being the focus of her life. She had found a sense of normalcy and felt confident she could beat cancer. “The diagnosis isn't the tough part. It is the rest of it, going through scans and now knowing what the outcome is going to be and when the outcome isn't so great having to deal with it. I feel like I have handled it a lot better than I expected. It doesn't scare me that much anymore, because I know that I can beat it,” Cole said. Cole, 16, died just a few months later in January. Thursday, the DK/TK/Hastings girls again donned their pink swim caps — still adorned with “#teamLydia” — as they hosted the Wayland girls swim team for the 2020 Cancer Awareness Meet. They wrote Cole's name — along with the names of others who have fought or continue to fight cancer — in thick pink marker on their backs, shoulders, arms and legs. In keeping with tradition, swimmers on both teams wore pink caps and tied pink ribbons on their suits. Pink balloons and ribbons decorated the pool area, along with pink signs that read “Two teams, one hope.” DK/TK/Hastings Coach Carl Schoessel started the Cancer Awareness Meet after his wife, Loretta Schoessel, began losing her battle with breast cancer; she died in 2011. Since then, Schoessel and his team raise money for the American Cancer Society at the meet and, over the years, have donated several thousand dollars to the society. Last year's proceedings were given to Cole's family to help cover the cost of her treatments; this year they were donated to the Lydia Cole Scholarship Fund, in addition to the Cancer Awareness Society. Loretta Schoessel's name, along with Cole's, was written on each of the DK/TK/Hastings athletes. It was a big night for DK/TK/Hastings swim team's season, too. They went into the meet undefeated with a 4-0 record in the OK Rainbow Tier II conference, while the Wayland team was 3-1 in conference duals. Schoessel kicked off the meet by recognizing Cole's family and noted this event would not be like previous Cancer Awareness meets. “Due to COVID, many of the things we've done at this meet in past years won't be able to be done tonight,” Schoessel said, referring to a bake sale, raffle and chuck-a-duck fundraiser – where spectators through rubber ducks from the balcony into a life ring in the pool. Without these traditional modes of fundraising, the team has raised money by asking family members, friends and others for donations. Additionally, spectators could donate by putting money in buckets labeled either for the Lydia Cole Scholarship Fund or Cancer Awareness Society, depending on what they wanted their donation to support. While the total funds raised from Thursday's meet have yet to be counted, Schoessel said Friday they might have raised a few thousand dollars. “From what I've been told and what I saw, it looks like we're going to easily get a couple thousand dollars,” Schoessel said. The meet began with a flurry of activity as athletes paced the poolside cheering passionately for teammates, their voices echoing off the tiled room, through the crowd, and up into the rafters. The swimmers approached the pool, ready to complete their events. They paused only to dedicate races to those who've been impacted by cancer, reading their names aloud before the event began. “Before each event, the names of the people we want to honor and remember will be announced,” Schoessel said. The 100-yard breast stroke event was dedicated to Cole; it was her favorite event. The meet ended with even more intensity than it started, as the Wayland girls beat the DK/TK/Hastings swimmers by only 1 point, with a score to 93-92. Before the meet, DK/TK/Hastings was in first place in its conference; now, the team is tied with Wayland for first place. “We knew it was going to be very close going in. In fact, I had told the girls it could come down to a one-point lead,” Schoessel said. “There's no hard feelings because we really value this meet.” “We would have loved to have won.” The final words of Coach Schoessel's speech, which began the meet, ring true for the DK/TK/Hastings girls as they look to come back from Thursday's defeat. “Finally, the motto of our meet: Support the fighters, admire the survivors, honor the taken,” Schoessel said, “and never, ever give up hope.”
By Greg Chandler 26 Oct, 2020
Two write-in candidates have filed to run for the Middleville Village Council, while another write-in has filed for a seat on the Caledonia Village Council. Robert Bishop and Kevin Smith turned in their names as write-in candidates for the Middleville council by Friday's 4 p.m. deadline, while Cheryl King-Miller put her name into the ring for a council seat in Caledonia. Robert Bishop, 40, is a longtime area resident who graduated from Thornapple Kellogg High School in 1998. “I've been hemming and hawing about it for years,” Bishop said. “I saw there were two candidates for three positions, so I decided to throw my hat in.” Bishop's professional background is in engineering and information technology. He studied computer programming at Grand Rapids Community College and holds a bachelor's degree in political science from Grand Valley State University. Bishop has been cubmaster of Cub Scout Pack 3065 in Middleville for the past three years, and spent nine years as an assistant scoutmaster for Boy Scout Troop 105 in Middleville, where he received his Eagle Scout award in 1998. Kevin Smith, 51, is community manager and co-owner of Mix Coworking Studio, a collaborative and creative work space in downtown Middleville that serves startup firms, entrepreneurs and remote workers. He also owns 165 Properties, a local real estate management company. He is the former head of information technology at Acrisure, an insurance broker in the Grand Rapids area. Smith has lived in Middleville for 13 years. “I love living here and I think the population of Middleville has drastically changed since I started living here,” he said. Smith recently proposed a series of traffic-calming measures out of concern for speeding in the downtown area. Smith has a bachelor's degree in computer information systems from Western Michigan University. He and his wife, Renee, have four children, three of whom attend Thornapple Kellogg High School. A total of three seats are up for grabs on the Middleville council Nov. 3. Incumbents Sherry Ronning and Mike Lytle are running for re-election, while Phil VanNoord decided not to seek another term on the council. Village President Charlie Pullen is running unopposed. Cheryl King-Miller, 41, has lived in the Glen Valley neighborhood in Caledonia for the past three years. She is a former teacher in the Chicago area and has been a substitute teacher at Emmons Lake Elementary School. She currently homeschools her two daughters, ages 12 and 10. “I thought we needed some representation from our neighborhood on the council,” King-Miller said. “I knew one of the people from the neighborhood is leaving [the council, referring to incumbent Trustee Eric Van Gessel.] and the other one is running for president [referring to Trustee Jennifer Lindsey, who is running against current President Todd Grinage].” King-Miller earned a bachelor's degree in elementary education from Western Michigan University and a master's in language literacy from Nova Southeastern (Florida) University. She was once president of a local parent-teacher organization in Holt, a suburb of Lansing. Only two candidate names are on the Caledonia village ballot for three available council seats. Incumbent trustees Daniel Erskine and Karen Hahn seeking re-election.
By Greg Chandler 26 Oct, 2020
The Thornapple Area Parks and Recreation Commission is seeking input on the area's parks and recreation plan over the next five years. A series of public hearings are planned over the next several weeks to get input on the TAPRC plan, starting Thursday, Nov. 5, when the commission will hold its hearing at 6 p.m. at the Thornapple Township Hall, 200 E. Main St., Middleville. Most notable on TAPRC's plan is the development of a community sports complex, which could consist of ballfields, pickleball courts, a dog park, walking trails and nature areas. Funding for the project could come through Michigan Department of Natural Resource Trust Fund grants, local government general funds, private contributions, community foundations or fundraisers, according to the plan draft. The capital improvement plan for TAPRC calls for the sports complex to be established in 2022. The plan also calls for the following improvements over the next five years: 2021: Continued development and extension of the Paul Henry Thornapple Trail, north and south. 2023: Updating park facility equipment, where needed. 2024: Establishing a Thornapple River access point between the village and Parolee Road. 2025: Establishing an outdoor water recreation feature, such as a splash pad. Future hearings are scheduled the following dates: -Thornapple Kellogg Board of Education, Monday, Nov. 9, at 7 p.m., Thornapple Kellogg Middle School, Room 1616, 10375 Bender Road, Middleville. -Thornapple Township Board, Monday, Nov. 9, at 7 p.m. at the township hall, 200 E. Main St., Middleville. -Village of Middleville, Tuesday, Nov. 10, at 7 p.m. at the village hall, 100 E. Main St. Copies of the plan are currently available for examination at the township and village halls as well as the Thornapple Kellogg Schools administrative offices, 10051 Green Lake Road. Written comments on the plan may be submitted via email to info@taprc.org or by mail to TAPRC, P.O. Box 459, Middleville, MI 49333.
By Greg Chandler 26 Oct, 2020
Two years after creating Barry'd Treasures, the Middleville Downtown Development Authority is spinning off the small retail business incubator. The DDA board Tuesday voted to turn over management and responsibility of Barry'd Treasures to the Left Field Cafe, where its products have been sold since its inception, effective Jan. 1, 2021. DDA Director Nichole Lyke said the decision was driven by DDA moving its offices from the back of the coffee shop to The Mix co-working studio across Main Street. Lyke said there's no room in the new offices to house Barry'd Treasures. “In the last six months, it's really grown. We've added more vendors. We went from three vendors to six or seven down there,” Lyke said. “The space that was available for the booths is completely full. There isn't room for more vendors at this point. That's a good problem to have. We were hoping to get to that point eventually.” Some of the items sold in Barry'd Treasures include artwork, jewelry and Thornapple Kellogg Schools-themed items, such as coffee mugs and seat cushions. DDA member and Thornapple Township Supervisor Mike Bremer called the move a win-win for all involved. “The whole idea of Barry'd Treasures … was to be incubator space – here's a place to get your business going,” he said. “If you can outgrow this place, great. Let's help you find a new place and bring someone else to use this small space. Barry'd Treasures was one of our little babies, and we're cutting it loose now.” In other business Tuesday, the DDA board approved a change in its sign grant policy, allowing the authority to grant funds for up to two signs per business, as long as the signs are located within the DDA district and conform to local ordinances. The change in policy came out of a recent request by Cherry Valley Plumbing and Electric at 491 Arlington St. for grants for two signs. Shortly after approving the policy change, the board approved the company's request for the grants, totaling $3,819. The board policy allows for grant awards of up to $2,000 per sign or no more than 50 percent of the sign cost. “Up to this point, the committee has not received a request for more than one sign per location in which both signs are located within the DDA district,” Lyke wrote in a memo to the board. “The [design] committee believes that as businesses grow along the M-37 corridor, there will be more requests that include multiple signs.” The board also recognized Bremer for his eight years of service as Thornapple Township's representative on the board. Bremer will be leaving as township supervisor next month since he will be moving out of the township.
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