Electronics Recycling Event Today


Electronics Recycling Event
Saturday, May 20, 2023
9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
LOT B (Whitewater Street, across from Train Depot and Cravath Lakefront)
All TV’s – $20
Old tube CRT computer monitors – $10
Microwaves – $5
Exercise equipment – $5
Other items accepted: computers, laptops, monitors, printers, circuit boards, servers, modems, scanners, hard
drives, cables, keyboards, mice, UPS backup batteries, cell phone batteries, power cords/wires, metal, and
much more….
All electronics, TV’s, stereos, VCR’s, DVD players, power tools, gaming systems, cameras, telephones and much
more…
All appliances (with or without freon)
(Items not accepted: household batteries, light bulbs)
Cash and checks only…NO credit cards will be accepted!!

Editor’s note: The above news release was received from the city Public Works Department.

Whitewater Police Make Arrest in BP Gas Station Robbery

On Friday, May 19, 2023, at 6:07 a.m., Whitewater Police received a report of a robbery at the BP Gas Station at 1138 W. Main St. in the City of Whitewater. The suspect displayed an object believed to be a weapon and forced the employee to open the cash register. The suspect then stole the money from the register. Officers were immediately dispatched, and were able to identify the individual observed on surveillance footage through previous contact.

Officers attempted to locate the male suspect, a 68-year-old Whitewater resident, at his home. The suspect was not found initially, but was later reported to be in the area. At approximately 8:03 a.m., officers located the male near his residence. The suspect fled on foot and resisted officers’ attempts to take him into custody. Officers successfully deployed a taser and safely arrested the male. The majority of the money reported stolen in the robbery was recovered. The male was subsequently confined at the Walworth County Jail. Charges for Robbery (Wis. Stat. 943.32(1)b), two counts of Resisting Officer (Wis. Stat. 946.41(1)), and Disorderly Conduct (Wis. Stat. 947.01(1)) will be forwarded to the Walworth County District Attorney’s Office.

The Whitewater Police Department would like to thank those members of the community who provided information that assisted in the efforts to take the suspect into custody.

Editor’s note: The above press release was provided by the Whitewater Police Department on May 19. Chief Daniel A. Meyer indicated that the identity of the suspect is being withheld due to the fact that he has not been formally charged. Meyer also indicated that it is believed that this robbery is unrelated to the one that occurred at Fort Community Credit Union in Whitewater on May 12th.

The Historical Society Presents Whitewater Recollects Hardware Stores

The Whitewater Historical Society is delighted to announce the latest in our Whitewater Recollects series. This time, the topic is hardware stores. We’ll learn about the history of Whitewater’s hardware stores and have a chance to reminisce about the role hardware stores have played in Whitewater’s small-town life and community over the past fifty years. This event will be held on Sunday, May 21, 2023 at 1:00 p.m. at the Cravath Lakefront Community Center at 341 S. Fremont Street. The event is free and open to the public.

The Whitewater Historical Society is dedicated to the collection, interpretation, and preservation of the history of Whitewater and surrounding areas. To learn more, visit www.whitewaterhistoricalsociety.org and Like us on Facebook! Depot Museum hours are Tuesdays during City Market.

Irvin L. Young Library Presents Composting 101

The public is invited to a free informational session about learning how to compost. Composting is a natural process that uses some of the things that we usually put in the garbage or even in the recycling bin. The resulting compost is a very nutrient rich mulch that can be used to improve the soil. The presentation will be led by Linda Holmes. You will learn about different methods of composing, guidance, and information to get you started. May is the perfect time to start a compost pile! 

Join us at the Irvin L. Young Memorial Library’s Community Room at 431 W. Center Street in Whitewater on Tuesday, May 23 at 6:30 p.m. Contact Sarah French with questions at sfrench@whitewater-wi.gov or 262-458-2782. 

Editor’s note: The Banner appreciates having permission to use the homepage image by Couleur from Pixabay.

The Caregiver Crisis

When you are the caregiver for a person with dementia, you are responsible for the daily needs such as bathing, dressing, paying bills, shopping, meals and providing transportation. Caregivers provide emotional support and may have to manage a chronic disease or disability.  Caregiving responsibilities increase and change as the loved one’s needs increase. Financial pressures mount up.   Little wonder that caregiver stress and depression is becoming a serious public health issue

Shortage of Caregivers

In a recent survey of unpaid caregivers, AARP found that there were nearly 42 million people caring for an aging friend or family member, 10 times what it was in 1989. The baby boomers are living longer but doing so with more chronic diseases and less means than the generation before them.

Americans are becoming caregivers at a younger and younger age.  The share of caregivers under 45 is five times what it was two decades ago.  The Centers for Disease Control reported in 2021 that over 34% of Americans 18 and older are either caring for an adult or juggling the care of both adults and children.   Today’s “sandwich generation” is younger than ever and they face career interruption, acute financial strain, lack of support and fatigue from fulfilling the demands of too many roles.

At the same time the cost of professional caregiving is going up and nursing homes are unable to find employees.  Federal assistance might pay a caregiver minimum wage but the income level to qualify is extremely low and most people with any benefits at all can’t qualify.  Median costs for professional caregivers is $3,000 a month and a bed in a nursing home, $8,500 a month.

The situation is dire and the chances of mending the shredded safety net are not great in our current political climate.  Caregivers need community support and the comfort of small kindnesses.

Random Acts of Kindness

When asked the question “How are you feeling today?”, most caregivers of family members with dementia say they have never been asked this question.  People ask about the person with dementia but don’t seem to realize the overwhelming job the caregiver has.  Here are some ideas for small acts of kindness that can go a long way to make a caregiver feel appreciated and cared for:  Drop off a meal.  Send flowers or a card.  Offer to pick up items when shopping.  Give a gift card to a local restaurant.  Double your next cookie recipe and drop it off.   Offer to pay for a professional housecleaning.  Ship food treats from an online site.  Pay a visit and fold laundry or clean the kitchen.  Share favorite magazines.  Give a professional massage or pedicure and sit with the loved one.

See more at   https://www.cdc.gov/aging/caregiving/caregiver-brief.html

This article is submitted by Dementia Friendly Community Initiative, a program of Whitewater Seniors in the Park.  New members are always welcome.  Contact jfrench@whitewater-wi.gov or call Jennifer French at 262 473 0535.

#FlashbackFriday with the Historical Society: Old Library in Early 20th Century

It’s time once again for #FlashbackFriday with the Whitewater Historical Society.

This image shows the old Whitewater library, now the White Building, in the early 20th century. In May of 1903, 120 years ago, ground was broken for this building thanks to a large donation from Mary Flavia White, daughter of Judge White, who helped bring the Normal School (UWW) to Whitewater. It was a major milestone in Whitewater at the time.

The Classical Revival style building was designed by Madison architects Claude and Starck, who designed almost identical libraries in many communities. In fact, you can see similar buildings in Watertown and Delavan. The building served the community as a library for almost 90 years and continues to serve the community as the location of the Whitewater Arts Alliance and the offices of the local community TV station.

Join us next week for more from the Whitewater Historical Society.

(5539PC, Whitewater Historical Society)

City Welcomes Public Comment on Draft 2023 Strategic Plan

The UW-Madison Division of Extension Institute of Community Development has submitted a strategic plan to the City of Whitewater. The strategic plan was prepared by Steven Chmielewski, Community Development Educator for Waukesha & Jefferson County.

The strategic planning process began with a Community Listening Session on March 6, 2023, where taxpayers, residents, commercial property owners and representatives of organizations provided input into the strategic planning process.

On March 8 an initial session was held with department heads, Common Council, and the city manager to discuss the community listening session input, community and economic data, and environmental analysis. A second session with the same group was held on March 16 to discuss current and upcoming operational and strategic issues as well as to clarify and prioritize operational and five strategic issues to guide biennial budget development.

The following five high priority questions and goals were identified:

  1. How will the City use its resources to incentivize developers to build single family houses? Increase the amount of single-family homes by 20 per year for five years.
  2. How will the City find ways to communicate without a newspaper? Increase understanding of how the community broadly consumes information and become more efficient in sharing information.
  3. How will the City support a thriving business community, including attracting businesses to move here? To better understand the underlying issues and then leverage resources.
  4. How will the City improve and communicate our recruitment and retention efforts (including diversity)? To identify metrics to improve retention and evaluate or establish recruitment measures.
  5. How will the City navigate the prioritization of its expenditures with available resources (infrastructure, land use & environment, levy limits, unfunded mandates, landmarks)? Seek input to identify and prioritize.

    Chmielewski shares the conclusion, “This effort encompassed a set of concepts, tools and procedures to help the City of Whitewater clarify the strategic issues the organization is facing, and to increase the outcomes in high priority areas while delivering on mission and moving toward the vision. Through the three facilitated Strategic Planning Sessions, participants helped clarify and frame the issues or challenges the City is facing. The City will use these five high priority issues to develop goals and objectives that guide the budget process to create public value.”

    John Weidl, Whitewater city manager shares, “Strategic planning is an opportunity for us to decide as a community who we are and where we want to be. It’s clear to me that the city needs to be focusing on housing, job creation, a thriving business environment, recruiting and retaining quality employees within the organization, better communicating our efforts and obtaining feedback from our stakeholders. Over the next two years, that’s exactly what we’re going to do.”

    The strategic plan was initially reviewed during the Common Council meeting on May 2. The strategic plan is available to view on the City’s website (click here to view the plan). The public is welcome to review and provide any comments by email to citymanager@whitewater-wi.gov by noon on May 30th. Comments can also be mailed to City Manager, 312 W. Whitewater St., Whitewater, WI 53190. Responses will be reviewed at the next Common Council meeting on June 6. Please feel free to contact Weidl at citymanager@whitewater-wi.gov or 262-473-0104 with any questions, comments, or concerns.

    The City of Whitewater provides efficient and high quality services which support living, learning, playing and working in an exceptional community. Visit www.whitewater-wi.gov for community information and updates.

Local Residents Graduate from UW-Milwaukee

The following individuals from Whitewater are among the 3,115 prospective candidates for degree attending University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee commencement exercises Sunday, May 21, 2023, in Milwaukee.

UWM is the second largest university in the State of Wisconsin, with over 24,000 undergraduate and graduate students.

 Jo Gonzalez, Helen Bader School of Social Welfare, Master of Social Work 
 Morgan Louchart-Inches, School of Education, Bachelor of Science 
 Hannah Tuinstra, College of Health Sciences, Master of Science 
 Jaime Weigel, School of Education, Master of Science 

Citywide Rummage Sales This Weekend (Updated)

Editor’s note: Updated on 5/18/23 @ 11:15 p.m. to add the list from the Daily Jefferson County Union.

EAST SIDE

N101 State Rd 59Thurs/Fri/Sat
N 101 State Rd 59 (Corner of E Starin Rd and Newcomb St.) Thursday May 18th 10 am-6 pm, Friday May
19th 8 am-5 pm, Saturday May 20th 8 am- 5 pm.
Holiday Decorations, Household, Gaming Systems, CD’s, Men’s Clothes, Kids Toys, Electronics, Dressers,
Bar Glassware, Books and so much more!

130 N. Newcomb St.
RUMMAGE SALE!✨ This weekend Friday-Sat 8am-6pm Sunday 12pm-5pm! Washer, dryer, refrigerator, oven, furniture, cloths and more! 130 N Newcomb St Whitewater *Street access in alley off of north or main*

139 N. Wakely St.

W͜͡h͜͡i͜͡t͜͡e͜͡w͜͡a͜͡t͜͡e͜͡r͜͡ C͜͡i͜͡t͜͡y͜͡ W͜͡i͜͡d͜͡e͜͡ R͜͡u͜͡m͜͡m͜͡a͜͡g͜͡e͜͡ S͜͡a͜͡l͜͡e͜͡! 139 𝘕. 𝘞𝘢𝘬𝘦𝘭𝘺 𝘚𝘵𝘳𝘦𝘦𝘵 𝘍𝘙𝘐. 5/19 8:00𝘢𝘮-4:00𝘱𝘮 𝘚𝘈𝘛. 5/20 8:00𝘢𝘮-4:00𝘱𝘮 𝘚𝘜𝘕. 5/21 8:00𝘢𝘮-4:00𝘱𝘮

T҉w҉o҉ H҉o҉m҉e҉ S҉a҉l҉e҉! 𝘉𝘢𝘣𝘺 𝘪𝘵𝘦𝘮𝘴, 𝘣𝘰𝘺𝘴 𝘤𝘭𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘴 𝘣𝘢𝘣𝘺-10/12, 𝘨𝘪𝘳𝘭𝘴 𝘤𝘭𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘴 5𝘛-6, 𝘸𝘪𝘯𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘤𝘭𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘴, 𝘸𝘰𝘮𝘦𝘯’𝘴/𝘮𝘦𝘯’𝘴 𝘯𝘢𝘮𝘦 𝘣𝘳𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘤𝘭𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘪𝘯𝘨, 𝘩𝘰𝘶𝘴𝘦𝘩𝘰𝘭𝘥, 𝘰𝘶𝘵𝘥𝘰𝘰𝘳 𝘳𝘦𝘤𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯

WEST SIDE

233 N. FranklinThurs./Fri./Sat.

Rummage sale Thursday thru Saturday 8am to 4pm
New items added. Household, microwave, induction heater and pans, means, women’s clothes, designer purses, pet kennels, end tables ,air fryer, travel refrigerator lawn and garden . Basketball stand (adjustable) Only advertised fri-sat. so ww anything gets first shot at the bargains Furniture available 27th ..couch, love seat, full size bed, recliner, chair, and small kitchen table and chairs

1236 Tower Hill PassSat/Sun
Rummage sale , 1236 Tower hill pass. Whitewater.  Here are just some of the items we will be having. Coach, Thirty-one, Grace Adele, Scentsy, pampered chef, household items, woman clothes, new king comforter set and much more.  Saturday ( 20)and Sunday ( 21) 8-4 both days

1716 Turtle Mound Ln.Fri/Sat
Huge Moving Sale! Housewares, home decor, big and small tools, antique glassware, pewter
items, decorations and much, much more. 1716 Turtle Mound Ln. Friday 9 a.m. – 5 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.

234 S. Pleasant St.Fri/Sat
234 S Pleasant St, Whitewater, WI 53190. Multi Family: lots of small girl sizes 0-5. Men’s sizes Large, XL, 32-34. Friday & Saturday only.

RUMMAGE…Breidsan Dr (just past Taco Bell) Friday and Saturday

425 S. Douglas Ct.
Rummage Thursday, Friday, and Saturday 9-4 – 425 S. Douglas Ct. Tons of stuff for cheap!!!

Out of Town

W5910 Greening RdSat/Sun
Three Family Garage Sale W5910 Greening Rd Whitewater, LaGrange. Saturday May 20th 8AM – 4PM and Sunday May 21st 8AM -1PM Snowblower, Tools, Power Tools, Golf Clubs, Trek Bike, Huffy Bike, Water Cooler, Cobb Grill, Portable Gas Grill, Large George Foreman Grill, Kitchen Items, Clothing , Shoes, Dolls, Doll Furniture, Much, Much More. HWY 12 to CTY RD H to Greening Rd.

N9218 Wooded Ct Friday 10-2

Here’s the list on the Daily Jefferson County Union, courtesy of Debra Kraus’s post on Facebook. It seems to be a small citywide sale this year.

A Banner Service: Garage Sale Ads

As a result of a reader’s comment that it’s hard to find garage sales in Whitewater now that we no longer have a weekly shopper, the Banner staff agreed to begin a “consolidated” garage sale posting that will be published by Thursday morning for the upcoming weekend’s sales. This announcement will only be for garage sales (a sale of miscellaneous household goods, often held in the garage or front yard of someone’s house) in the city and school district boundaries. We will not be accepting, for example, ads for cars or other items that are not part of a scheduled garage sale. There will be a limit of three times per year for a particular property. Although we may eventually make a small charge for this service, initially it will be complimentary.

Those wishing to place a notice must send the information to whitewaterbanner@gmail.com by Wednesday at 6 p.m. You may include a brief description of the items that are for sale, the hours and days of the sale, and of course your address.

Dementia Friends Informational Session – Today

Join a growing movement of people who are helping fellow community members living with dementia. A little support can make a big difference in their lives. Be a Dementia Friend! The Irvin L. Young Memorial Library will be hosting an informational session to learn about this worldwide movement, about living with dementia, and the simple things you can do to support someone living with the disease. 

The one-hour session is a discussion led by a Dementia Friends Champion. It is not a training session. You’ll learn what dementia is, what it’s like to live with the disease, and some tips for communicating with people who have dementia. Everyone who attends is asked to turn their new understanding of dementia into a practical action that can help someone living in your community. The action can be as big or as small as you choose—every action counts! 

Dementia Friends is a global movement that is changing the way people think, act, and talk about dementia. Developed by the Alzheimer’s Society in the United Kingdom, the Dementia Friends initiative is underway in Wisconsin and across the United States. By helping everyone in a community understand what dementia is and how it affects families, each of us can make a difference for people touched by dementia. 

The session will be held in the library’s Community Room at 431 W. Center Street in Whitewater on Thursday, May 18 at 6:30 p.m. There is no cost to attend. Registration is requested. Please visit whitewaterlibrary.org and click on “Events – Registration Forms” to register in advance. You may also email sfrench@whitewater-wi.gov or call 262-458-2782 to register, or with any questions.