OFF MSRP 16 20 HUMBOLDT MOTOR S · 25/10/2018  · 2012 Chevy Tahoe LT, heated leather .....$23,995...

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Thursday, OCTOBER 25, 2018 The Humboldt Independent 3A percent while the state aver- age is 30 percent.” Westhoff also reported on Manufacturing Day activi- ties slated for Oct. 22. Stu- dents in grades 9-12 would take part in presentations by several local industries, as well as tour a selected com- pany. “October is Manufactur- ing Month. Alissa O’Connor, Humboldt Economic Devel- opment Director, got a com- mittee of people together to help create this. We feel a lot of students don’t know what jobs are actually in the man- ufacturing eld here local- ly,” Westhoff. “They don’t know that there are also a lot of other jobs available than just manufacturing jobs. And a lot of these jobs have changed over the years.” “There is a demand for people to ll these manu- facturing jobs. There are over 20 manufacturing busi- nesses in Humboldt County. We feel this is a way to help promote and inform our stu- dents of what is available here locally,” Westhoff said. “We have done some pro- motion in school this past week to help prepare them for the upcoming activity on Oct. 22.” “I think it is great the manufacturing businesses are allowing our kids to come and visit. Let our kids see what cool stuff our local industries make. I think it will leave an impression on some of our kids,” Westhoff said. “At the recent Future Ready Iowa Conference, it was reported that 70 per- cent of all laborers will have some type of education be- yond high school and how do we prepare people for that and how do we prepare high school students and all the different people in our work force?” Westhoff said. “Alissa and I did a presenta- tion at the conference on the JOBS program we have in place to promote local busi- nesses and job opportuni- ties.” “We have several differ- ent partnerships between the school, Alissa and the local businesses and industry,” Darling said. In personnel, the board approved hiring Robyn Weisbrich as teacher as- sociate at Taft Elementary for the current year and Dakota Houston as middle school custodian for 2018- 19. Nicky Calmer was also hired as high school head food service director for 2018-19. The board approved the list of goals set in place by the School Improve- ment Advisory Commit- tee (SIAC) for the 2018-19 school year. “Our committee wants to continue with the goals we have in place. We had a really good SIAC meeting recently. A lot of good in- formation was discussed,” Darling said. In recognition, the board presented a Star Award to middle school associate By PHIL MONSON The ofcial enrollment count is in for the LuVerne School District and remains steady for the 2018-19 school year. In last week’s regular monthly meeting of the Lu- Verne School Board on Oct. 18, School Superintendent Jon Hueser said student en- rollment is down just 1.1 students overall. “We are down 1.1 stu- dents in certied enrollment district-wide, but that is not bad,” Hueser said. “We had a big jump last year in our enrollment.” The ofcial count submit- ted to the state recently num- LuVerne school enrollment count holds steady bers 164.1 students in grades pre-kindergarten through 12th grade. The district has 61 students in grades pre- kindergarten through fth grade. The district instructs its students in grades pre-kin- dergarten through fth grade in the LuVerne building with middle school and high school students attending classes in Algona. In action items, the board accepted a $500 bid from Robert Smith to purchase an old school van for sale. Smith submitted the only bid for the vehicle. The board also approved the rst reading of policy 705.4 covering use of a dis- trict credit card. “I had thought we put it in a few years ago, but I think we looked at it but didn’t get it nalized,” Hueser said. “It rms up some wording and requires receipts on purchas- es among other things.” Hueser said all of the fall reports have been submitted to the state. He said another audit is in the works and will be submitted by Dec. 15. Hueser said the district will work with Forecast Five on its line-item bud- get process. Forecast Five is a consortium of schools, which work on budget de- velopment for short-term and long-term purposes. Hueser said he took two teachers to Fort Dodge re- cently to view their process of teaching. “We came back with some good ideas and look to get some new things in place,” Hueser said. Another topic of discus- sion was Hueser sharing his own superintendent goals with the board, mainly the school’s implementing of Early Literacy. “I’m planning on spend- ing more time with staff dur- ing professional develop- ment to help implement this new curriculum,” Hueser said. “I would also like to try and be in the classroom more during the implemen- tation process and give feed- back about what I see in re- gards to this change we are doing.” At the end of the meeting, the board viewed a 15-min- ute training video from the Iowa Association of School Boards. “The session for today’s meeting covered discussing school staff performance with the public,” Hueser said. “It gave a scenario and possible answers to the sce- nario and how to respond and handle those situations when you get a complaint from a community mem- ber,” Hueser said. “The tough thing is, peo- ple really have to go through the proper steps and chan- nels. It is not the board’s role to get rid of someone or tell them how to do things. The board’s position should be as an impartial jury if some- thing ever got to that point,” Hueser said. “They take the administration’s recommen- dation and determine yes or no. It reminds people they have to go through the chain of command.” “Sometimes that isn’t the answer people want, but that is how it is when deal- ing with personnel issues the way the law says we can,” Hueser said. Hueser reported two staff members and the district’s instructional coach will be attending a TLC conference in Des Moines Oct. 25-26. Rhonda Lange. Lange was honored for her efforts in getting all of the computers organized at the start of the school year. She also han- dles the computer-side of MAP testing. Open enrollment requests were approved for Abi- gail Bruening in from Fort Dodge for 2019-20, Farrah Dunphy out to Twin Rivers for 2018-19, and Ryan Mc- Cauley out to Algona for 2018-19. The board also: –approved Bank Iowa as district nancial depository for $7 million for 2018-19. –approved policy on ac- tivity fundraisers for 2018- 19. –approved the rst read- ing of policy series 502.3 through 804.3 covering progress reports, lunch pro- gram and emergencies. –approved the second reading of policy series 105 through 710.1 covering complaints, nutrition and vendors and contracts. Mom and Me Humboldt is a new group whose purpose is to bring together moms and children to talk about faith and family life. Children are welcome but not required. The group is meeting on the second oor of the St. Mary’s Parish Ofce (311 4th Street North). Coffee and donuts will be served. There will be coloring activ- ities for children and loving hands to hold infants. The rst meeting is Fri- day, Oct. 26, from 8:15-9:30 a.m. Second meeting is slat- ed for Nov. 16 from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. and then on Dec. 7 from 9:45-10:45 a.m. Mom and Me 1st meeting set for Oct. 26 Harvest Moon Madness will be held on Thursday, Oct. 25, from 4-7 p.m. in downtown Humboldt. A Scarecrow Contest will be held on Sumner Av- enue and the Plaza. Scarecrow Contest entry forms are available at downtown businesses. There will be kids’ games and a costume parade at 6 p.m. Hy-Vee will offer cinnamon rolls and caramel apples. Miller’s Landing will offer chili. Gordy’s at Rustix will offer spiked apple cider and a chicken special. There will be cookie decorating and pumpkin decorating, plus a pet costume contest sponsored by Humboldt Vet Clinic. In addition, there will be sales and specials at downtown stores. Harvest Moon Madness Oct. 25 in downtown Humboldt TRUCKS 2016 Dodge 3/4T Crew 4x4, 6.4L V8 ...................................... $26,995 2015 GMC Canyon Ext Cab SLE, 4x2, auto temp, remote start, backup camera .............................................. $21,995 2014 Chevy 1/2T Crew LT 4x4 with All Star Pkg ................... $25,995 2013 GMC 1/2T Crew 4x4 Denali 6.2 V8, 20” chrome wheels, heated & cooled power memory seats ............... $27,995 2012 Ford F350 Crew Lariat 4x4 Diesel ................................. $31,995 2012 GMC 1/2T Crew SLT 4x4, dual power heated bucket seats, chrome & convenience pkg, XM Bose radio .......... $27,995 2012 GMC 1/2T Crew SLT 4x4 with All Terrain Pkg .............. $18,995 2012 Chevy 1/2T Ext 4x4 LT ................................................... $16,995 2008 Chevy 1/2T Crew 4x4, only 81,000 miles ..................... $17,995 2007 Chevy 1/2T Crew Z71 4x4............................................... $17,995 1997 GMC 1/2T Reg Cab 4x2 ..................................................... $2,995 SUVS 2018 GMC Acadia SLT-2, AWD, leather heated power seats, NAV, Bose XM radio, 20” wheels, driver alert pkg II ........ $34,995 2018 Chevy Equinox Premier, AWD, heated & cooled power leather seats, heated rear seats, heated steering wheel, surround vision ...................................................................... $27,995 2018 Chevy Equinox Premier, AWD, heated & cooled memory seats, heated rear seats and steering wheel ..$26,995 2018 Chevy Equinox Premier, FWD, 1LZ ............................... $24,995 2018 Chevy Equinox, FWD, 1LT ............................................... $22,995 2018 Chevy Tahoe, 22” wheels, sunroof, Luxury package, power heated memory leather seats ............................... $53,995 2017 GMC Acadia LTD AWD, heated leather, 2nd row buckets, NAV......................................................... $32,995 2017 Buick Envision AWD, heated leather ............................ $28,995 2016 Buick Enclave, heated leather ....................................... $25,995 2014 Buick Enclave AWD, heated leather, chrome wheels $22,995 2014 Buick Enclave AWD, leather ........................................... $19,995 2013 Mazda CX-9 Grand Touring AWD, heated leather ......................................................................$17,995 2012 Chevy Tahoe LT, heated leather .................................... $23,995 2012 GMC Acadia Denali, AWD, sunroof ............................... $21,995 2012 GMC Yukon XL SLE, XM & CD, steering wheel controls, Bluetooth ................................................................................ $16,995 2012 GMC Terrain SLT, sunroof, heated leather ................... $13,995 CARS 2016 Buick LaCrosse ................................................................. $21,495 2015 Chevy Impala LTZ............................................................ $22,995 2014 Subaru Legacy AWD, leather ......................................... $13,995 2013 Buick Verano, sunroof, heated leather, XM radio ...... $12,995 2013 Mazda 5 Grand Touring, sunroof, heated leather ........ $8,995 2011 Chevy Cruze LTZ, sunroof, leather .................................. $6,995 2008 Toyota Camry LE, sunroof ................................................ $6,995 2008 Buick Lucerne CXL ............................................................. $4,995 2003 Ford Taurus ......................................................................... $2,995 VANS 2015 Chevy Express 1T Cargo Van, 6.0 V8............................. $21,995 AND 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 19 2 2 0 0 20 20 20 20 20 HUMBOLDT MOTOR S ALES 2019 Chevy Equinox 2018 Chevy Silverado 16 % * 20 % * OFF MSRP OFF MSRP SALE $ 46,244 2018 Buick Enclave $ 11,000 * OFF MSRP 2018 GMC Sierra $ 5,000 IN REBATES! 2018 GMC Acadia * WAC, WHEN FINANCING WITH GMF - SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS 2019 Buick Encore 2019 Buick Envision $ 2,250 REBATE! $ 2,000 * REBATE! [ School board CONTINUED FROM FRONT PAGE ]

Transcript of OFF MSRP 16 20 HUMBOLDT MOTOR S · 25/10/2018  · 2012 Chevy Tahoe LT, heated leather .....$23,995...

Page 1: OFF MSRP 16 20 HUMBOLDT MOTOR S · 25/10/2018  · 2012 Chevy Tahoe LT, heated leather .....$23,995 2012 GMC Acadia Denali, AWD, sunroof ... 2012 GMC Terrain SLT, sunroof, heated

Thursday, OCTOBER 25, 2018 • The Humboldt Independent • 3A

percent while the state aver-age is 30 percent.” Westhoff also reported on Manufacturing Day activi-ties slated for Oct. 22. Stu-dents in grades 9-12 would take part in presentations by several local industries, as well as tour a selected com-pany. “October is Manufactur-ing Month. Alissa O’Connor, Humboldt Economic Devel-opment Director, got a com-mittee of people together to help create this. We feel a lot of students don’t know what jobs are actually in the man-ufacturing fi eld here local-ly,” Westhoff. “They don’t know that there are also a lot of other jobs available than just manufacturing jobs. And a lot of these jobs have changed over the years.” “There is a demand for people to fi ll these manu-facturing jobs. There are over 20 manufacturing busi-nesses in Humboldt County. We feel this is a way to help promote and inform our stu-dents of what is available here locally,” Westhoff said. “We have done some pro-motion in school this past week to help prepare them for the upcoming activity on Oct. 22.” “I think it is great the manufacturing businesses are allowing our kids to come and visit. Let our kids see what cool stuff our local industries make. I think it will leave an impression on some of our kids,” Westhoff said. “At the recent Future Ready Iowa Conference, it was reported that 70 per-cent of all laborers will have some type of education be-yond high school and how do we prepare people for that and how do we prepare high school students and all the different people in our work force? ” Westhoff said. “Alissa and I did a presenta-tion at the conference on the JOBS program we have in place to promote local busi-nesses and job opportuni-ties.” “We have several differ-ent partnerships between the school, Alissa and the local businesses and industry,” Darling said. In personnel, the board approved hiring Robyn Weisbrich as teacher as-sociate at Taft Elementary for the current year and Dakota Houston as middle school custodian for 2018-19. Nicky Calmer was also hired as high school head food service director for 2018-19. The board approved the list of goals set in place by the School Improve-ment Advisory Commit-tee (SIAC) for the 2018-19 school year. “Our committee wants to continue with the goals we have in place. We had a really good SIAC meeting recently. A lot of good in-formation was discussed,” Darling said. In recognition, the board presented a Star Award to middle school associate

By PHIL MONSON The offi cial enrollment count is in for the LuVerne School District and remains steady for the 2018-19 school year. In last week’s regular monthly meeting of the Lu-Verne School Board on Oct. 18, School Superintendent Jon Hueser said student en-rollment is down just 1.1 students overall.

“We are down 1.1 stu-dents in certifi ed enrollment district-wide, but that is not bad,” Hueser said. “We had a big jump last year in our enrollment.” The offi cial count submit-ted to the state recently num-

LuVerne school enrollment count holds steadybers 164.1 students in grades pre-kindergarten through 12th grade. The district has 61 students in grades pre-kindergarten through fi fth grade. The district instructs its students in grades pre-kin-dergarten through fi fth grade in the LuVerne building with middle school and high school students attending classes in Algona.

In action items, the board accepted a $500 bid from Robert Smith to purchase an old school van for sale. Smith submitted the only bid for the vehicle. The board also approved the fi rst reading of policy 705.4 covering use of a dis-

trict credit card. “I had thought we put it in a few years ago, but I think we looked at it but didn’t get it fi nalized,” Hueser said. “It fi rms up some wording and requires receipts on purchas-es among other things.” Hueser said all of the fall reports have been submitted to the state. He said another audit is in the works and will be submitted by Dec. 15.

Hueser said the district will work with Forecast Five on its line-item bud-get process. Forecast Five is a consortium of schools, which work on budget de-velopment for short-term and long-term purposes. Hueser said he took two

teachers to Fort Dodge re-cently to view their process of teaching. “We came back with some good ideas and look to get some new things in place,” Hueser said.

Another topic of discus-sion was Hueser sharing his own superintendent goals with the board, mainly the school’s implementing of Early Literacy. “I’m planning on spend-ing more time with staff dur-ing professional develop-ment to help implement this new curriculum,” Hueser said. “I would also like to try and be in the classroom more during the implemen-tation process and give feed-

back about what I see in re-gards to this change we are doing.” At the end of the meeting, the board viewed a 15-min-ute training video from the Iowa Association of School Boards. “The session for today’s meeting covered discussing school staff performance with the public,” Hueser said. “It gave a scenario and possible answers to the sce-nario and how to respond and handle those situations when you get a complaint from a community mem-ber,” Hueser said. “The tough thing is, peo-ple really have to go through the proper steps and chan-

nels. It is not the board’s role to get rid of someone or tell them how to do things. The board’s position should be as an impartial jury if some-thing ever got to that point,” Hueser said. “They take the administration’s recommen-dation and determine yes or no. It reminds people they have to go through the chain of command.” “Sometimes that isn’t the answer people want, but that is how it is when deal-ing with personnel issues the way the law says we can,” Hueser said. Hueser reported two staff members and the district’s instructional coach will be attending a TLC conference in Des Moines Oct. 25-26.

Rhonda Lange. Lange was honored for her efforts in getting all of the computers organized at the start of the school year. She also han-dles the computer-side of MAP testing. Open enrollment requests were approved for Abi-gail Bruening in from Fort Dodge for 2019-20, Farrah

Dunphy out to Twin Rivers for 2018-19, and Ryan Mc-Cauley out to Algona for 2018-19. The board also: –approved Bank Iowa as district fi nancial depository for $7 million for 2018-19. –approved policy on ac-tivity fundraisers for 2018-19.

–approved the fi rst read-ing of policy series 502.3 through 804.3 covering progress reports, lunch pro-gram and emergencies. –approved the second reading of policy series 105 through 710.1 covering complaints, nutrition and vendors and contracts.

Mom and Me Humboldt is a new group whose purpose is to bring together moms and children to talk about faith and family life. Children are welcome but not required. The group is meeting on

the second fl oor of the St. Mary’s Parish Offi ce (311 4th Street North). Coffee and donuts will be served. There will be coloring activ-ities for children and loving hands to hold infants.

The fi rst meeting is Fri-day, Oct. 26, from 8:15-9:30 a.m. Second meeting is slat-ed for Nov. 16 from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. and then on Dec. 7 from 9:45-10:45 a.m.

Mom and Me 1st meeting set for Oct. 26

Harvest Moon Madness will be held on Thursday, Oct. 25, from 4-7 p.m. in downtown Humboldt. A Scarecrow Contest will be held on Sumner Av-enue and the Plaza. Scarecrow Contest entry forms are available at downtown businesses. There will be kids’ games and a costume parade at 6 p.m . Hy-Vee will offer cinnamon rolls and caramel apples. Miller’s Landing will offer chili. Gordy’s at Rustix will offer spiked apple cider and a chicken special. There will be cookie decorating and pumpkin decorating, plus a pet costume contest sponsored by Humboldt Vet Clinic. In addition, there will be sales and specials at downtown stores.

Harvest Moon Madness Oct. 25 in downtown Humboldt

TRUCKS 2016 Dodge 3/4T Crew 4x4, 6.4L V8 ......................................$26,9952015 GMC Canyon Ext Cab SLE, 4x2, auto temp, remote start, backup camera ..............................................$21,9952014 Chevy 1/2T Crew LT 4x4 with All Star Pkg ...................$25,9952013 GMC 1/2T Crew 4x4 Denali 6.2 V8, 20” chrome wheels, heated & cooled power memory seats ...............$27,9952012 Ford F350 Crew Lariat 4x4 Diesel .................................$31,9952012 GMC 1/2T Crew SLT 4x4, dual power heated bucket seats, chrome & convenience pkg, XM Bose radio ..........$27,9952012 GMC 1/2T Crew SLT 4x4 with All Terrain Pkg ..............$18,9952012 Chevy 1/2T Ext 4x4 LT ................................................... $16,9952008 Chevy 1/2T Crew 4x4, only 81,000 miles .....................$17,9952007 Chevy 1/2T Crew Z71 4x4 ...............................................$17,9951997 GMC 1/2T Reg Cab 4x2 ..................................................... $2,995

SUVS 2018 GMC Acadia SLT-2, AWD, leather heated power seats, NAV, Bose XM radio, 20” wheels, driver alert pkg II ........$34,9952018 Chevy Equinox Premier, AWD, heated & cooled power leather seats, heated rear seats, heated steering wheel, surround vision ......................................................................$27,9952018 Chevy Equinox Premier, AWD, heated & cooled memory seats, heated rear seats and steering wheel ..$26,9952018 Chevy Equinox Premier, FWD, 1LZ ...............................$24,9952018 Chevy Equinox, FWD, 1LT ...............................................$22,9952018 Chevy Tahoe, 22” wheels, sunroof, Luxury package, power heated memory leather seats ...............................$53,995

2017 GMC Acadia LTD AWD, heated leather, 2nd row buckets, NAV .........................................................$32,9952017 Buick Envision AWD, heated leather ............................$28,9952016 Buick Enclave, heated leather .......................................$25,9952014 Buick Enclave AWD, heated leather, chrome wheels $22,9952014 Buick Enclave AWD, leather ...........................................$19,9952013 Mazda CX-9 Grand Touring AWD, heated leather ......................................................................$17,9952012 Chevy Tahoe LT, heated leather ....................................$23,9952012 GMC Acadia Denali, AWD, sunroof ...............................$21,9952012 GMC Yukon XL SLE, XM & CD, steering wheel controls, Bluetooth ................................................................................$16,9952012 GMC Terrain SLT, sunroof, heated leather ...................$13,995

CARS 2016 Buick LaCrosse .................................................................$21,4952015 Chevy Impala LTZ............................................................ $22,9952014 Subaru Legacy AWD, leather .........................................$13,9952013 Buick Verano, sunroof, heated leather, XM radio ......$12,9952013 Mazda 5 Grand Touring, sunroof, heated leather ........ $8,9952011 Chevy Cruze LTZ, sunroof, leather .................................. $6,9952008 Toyota Camry LE, sunroof ................................................ $6,9952008 Buick Lucerne CXL ............................................................. $4,9952003 Ford Taurus ......................................................................... $2,995

VANS 2015 Chevy Express 1T Cargo Van, 6.0 V8 .............................$21,995

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2019 Chevy Equinox

2018 Chevy Silverado

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2018 GMC Sierra$5,000

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2018 GMC Acadia

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2019 Buick

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2019 Buick

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[School board CONTINUED FROM FRONT PAGE]