Supreme Court Case Spurs Sign Ordinance Update

by Lisa Dawsey Smith, Whitewater Banner Staff

In a roughly 90 minute long regular meeting, Whitewater’s Plan and Architectural Review Commission undertook what was described as a work session to review and discuss a proposed rewrite to the City’s sign ordinance. Background included reference to a Supreme Court case found here that debated and rendered decision about the legality of regulating the content of signs. Businesses or community members wishing to view the draft ordinance can find that here as one of the supporting documents for the meeting’s agenda. Those also wishing to view the entirety of the meeting can find that posted to the city’s Vimeo account here when it has been uploaded. The next regular meeting of the Plan and Architectural Review Commission is scheduled for September 14th at 6 pm and is expected to be a virtual meeting.

Also discussed with no action taken was an application for a driveway expansion for a residence located on Clay Street. That item is also expected to return for the September meeting.

Local Republican Vote Favors Fitzgerald to Replace Sensenbrenner by Nearly 3:1; Democrats Turn Out Strongly In Spite of No Competitive Race

Results of the August 11, 2020 state primary election

Walworth CountyJefferson CountyTotal
Democratic58289671
Republican34845393
Constitution11
No preference581270
Total9891461135

Rep in Congress /Dist 5 (R)Walworth CountyJefferson CountyTotal
Scott Fitzgerald26642308
Cliff DeTemple9711108
Total36353416
Rep in Congress / Dist 5 (D)Walworth CountyJefferson CountyTotal
Tom Palzewicz55587642
Assembly Rep / Dist 43Walworth CountyJefferson CountyTotal
Don Vruwink (D)55785642
Beth Drew (R) 29945344
Walworth County races
Reg of Deeds (D)Cairie Virrueta482
Reg of Deeds (R) Michele Jacobs 317
District Attny (R)Zeke Wiedenfeld316
County Clerk (R)Kim Bushey321
Treasurer (R) Valerie Etzel314
Jefferson County races
District Attny (D)Monica J. Hall85
County Clerk (R)Audrey McGraw44
Treasurer (R)John E. Jensen44
Reg of Deeds (R)Staci M. Hoffman 44

Jessie Jean (Harris) Butt of Richmond passed away on August 10, 2020

March 19, 1922 – August 10, 2020

Jessie Jean (Harris) Butt was born March 19, 1922 in Delavan the daughter of Jesse and Pearl Mitchell Harris. Graduate of Delavan High School and Wisconsin Academy of Cosmetic Art, Milwaukee, WI. Worked at beauty shops in Janesville prior to marriage to Orville L. Butt in Delavan Nov. 18,1944. He died June 20, 1984. They lived in the Delavan and Richmond area their married life. Member of Richmond United Methodist Church and served as treasurer for many years. Served as Richmond Town Clerk for 14 years. A member of Fairfield Grange for over 70 years, holding various offices in the Grange and was also a member of the Grange Degree and Drill Team. She belonged to Richmond Crafters for many years. Her family and the little country church were her life.

Survived by son Arlen (Dianne) Butt of Whitewater; daughter, Elaine (Dan)Kelleher of Delavan. Four grandchildren, Casey, Corey, Carmen and Chester. Sisters in law and many nieces and nephews also survive. Great Grandchildren, Kya, Natalie and Declan
Nolan, Savannah, Keyon’Dre.
Predeceased by her parents and an infant daughter Carla Jean and sister Frances Christiansen.
Her sister Charlotte Holt also survives. In lieu of flowers memorials made to Richmond United Methodist Church are suggested. Private Family services due to Covid 19 will be 10 a.m. Thursday, August 13 at 10 a.m. at the
church. Burial will follow in Richmond Cemetery. Betzer Family Funeral Home is serving the family.

Raymond Leo Erikson, 84, of Cambridge, MA and previously of Eagle, WI passed away on March 30, 2020

Raymond Leo Erikson, 84, of Cambridge, MA and previously of Eagle, WI passed away on March 30, 2020.

Ray was born on January 24, 1936 the son of the former Leo and Mary Erikson from Eagle, WI and brother of Gordon Erikson.

Ray was a pioneer in cancer research.

Ray died peacefully at home in Cambridge, MA with his wife Donna and daughter Amanda by his side.

Whitewater Pixels participated in the Federal Aviation Administration Minecraft Airport Design Challenge

Hailey Peterson (5th Grade), Elijah Gonsior (4th Grade), Blake Robb (4th Grade), Josie Selby (5th Grade) and Autumn Robb (5th Grade)

In May and June, five Whitewater Elementary students from Lakeview and Washington Elementary, with the help of a little brother, completed the Federal Aviation Administration’s Minecraft Airport Design Challenge.  One of Autumn Robb’s Lakeview teachers sent her the information about this challenge so she got a team together.  These five kids learned a lot about airports and three of the kids had never played Minecraft before this project!  Each week during this challenge, students had to research and explore different parts of the airport.  These students chose the Fort Atkinson Municipal Airport as their airport to research and design to scale in Minecraft.  In their first week they learned about airport safety markings and different types of pavement used at airports.  They then began designing their airport in Minecraft to scale.  In week two they learned about airport safety and researched safety features at the Fort Atkinson Municipal airport.  In week three of their project they learned about airport lighting which included the different types of lights and colors on the runways.  They also learned about the different types of  buildings you would find at an airport.  In week four of their project they learned about the word innovation and were able to create additions to their airport.  The Whitewater Pixels created a FBO (Fixed Based Operation) store for pilots to get a bite to eat, a treehouse for kids to watch the airplanes take off and land, a security building, fencing around the runway and added solar panels to their beacon light.

The highlight of the project was meeting with the Airport Manager, Andy Selle, virtually to learn more about the airport and future vision for the airport.  These five kids met virtually to go through the lessons and decide what to build on their airport each week.  When the airport design was completed, they submitted a 17 page google slide show of their project.  Three judges scored their project.  The Whitewater Pixels did not get a top award but received certificates of participation.  One judge stated “One of my favorites.  You did a very good job explaining what you learned, and I can tell that you put a lot of time and effort into your project. Great work!,” and gave their project a score of 76/80!  It was a fun learning experience for all of these kids. 

Students who participated in this challenge were: Hailey Peterson (5th Grade), Elijah Gonsior (4th Grade), Blake Robb (4th Grade), Josie Selby (5th Grade) and Autumn Robb (5th Grade)

Sandra Ramirez is a Hometown Hero

Sandra Ramirez has been nominated as a WUL Hometown Hero.  Her nomination includes, “Although not a Whitewater resident, Sandra Ramirez is a teacher at Washington Elementary School, and she was instrumental in keeping our students and teachers connected through weekly virtual assemblies, setting up the technology, making videos, and keeping everything running smoothly during the spring school semester of COVID 19.”

?

Sandra said, “When all of a sudden technology is all we had to be able to connect with each other, I saw an opportunity to do just that. All virtual assemblies and videos were a group effort. They brought us very special moments. As a school community we had a venue to laugh, to vent, to reflect, and even to cry. We did what we needed in order to regain a sense of normalcy. In retrospect, it gave me a new purpose and helped me get through it all easier.”

WUL (Whitewater Unites Lives) is a locally-focused civil and human rights group that works to connect the people in our community and to create opportunities for all people to learn and support each other in our common humanity.   

 Anyone who would like to nominate a local hero of any age should send their nomination, with a short description, to whitewaterunites@gmail.com 

Absentee Ballots Must Be Received by 8 p.m. TODAY to Be Counted; Turnout Update

UPDATE: City Clerk Michele Smith indicates that as of 4:00 p.m. a grand total of 1048 ballots have been cast all day, including all absentee ballots. The poll workers spent the whole day, from 7:30 a.m. until nearly 4 p.m. processing the absentee ballots.

The August 11 partisan primary has only one contested race for city of Whitewater residents: Republican candidate for the 5th Congressional District. Polls will be open at the Downtown Armory, 146 W. North Street, from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Turnout is expected to be light, especially in view of the unusually high number of absentee ballots that have already been cast. City Clerk Michele Smith reports that as of 6:00 p.m. on August 7, 762 absentee ballots had been returned out of the 1286 that were issued. By comparison, the August 2018 partisan primary included the gubernatorial office, and there were only 306 absentee ballots and a total of 1381 votes, including absentees.

Due to the unusual circumstances in the April 2020 primary, a court ordered that ballots that were postmarked by election day were to be counted. This exception is not in effect for this election. If you still hold one of the 524 ballots that were not yet returned, these are the only options you have in order for your vote to be counted:

  • Deliver your ballot to the City Clerk at the Armory before 8 p.m. TODAY.

Same day registration is permitted, assuming that you will have lived in the city for at least 28 days. You must present an acceptable photo ID (generally a drivers license or VOTER ID) and acceptable proof of residency.

Upcoming Virtual City/School Bd Meetings (Updated with Landmarks Comm. on Thursday)

City of Whitewater Plan & Architectural Review Commission
Monday, 6:00 p.m.
Includes consideration of revised sign ordinance
More information
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/692797565
You can also dial in using your phone. (872) 240-3311 Access Code: 692-797-565

Whitewater Unified School District Board Special Meeting
Monday, 6:00 p.m.
Includes timeline clarification for fall instruction, epidemiologist update, adoption of the Jefferson County Metrix
More information – click on meetings in upper right hand corner
via Zoom online: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88157437668?pwd=U051QVhxODNzSklvbGJ1ZThubHdhUT09
– Passcode: 792608
Dial-in: 1-312-626-6799 – Webinar ID: 881 5743 7668 – Passcode: 792608

City of Whitewater Public Works Committee
Tuesday, 6:00 p.m.
More information
Includes space needs/master planning study, city streets included in 2021 budget, request for qualifications for outside city engineer, paint striping on Indian Mounds Parkway
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/845155645
You can also dial in using your phone. +1 (646) 749-3122 Access Code: 845-155-645

City of Whitewater Landmarks Commission
Thursday, August 13, 1:30 p.m.
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/805156741
You can also dial in using your phone. 1 (669) 224-3412 Access Code: 805-156-741
Includes Yasko mural as a local landmark, Landmark Hotel request to Rescind Landmark Status, Update on city historic signage, Effigy Mounds Preserve Cleanup and Future Plans
More information

UW-Whitewater nontraditional student brings wealth of experience to Board of Regents

UW-Whitewater nontraditional student Corey Saffold was appointed June 1, 2020 to a two-year term on the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents. Photos from July 14, 2020 at Verona High School. (UW-Whitewater photo/Craig Schreiner)

By Jeff Angileri
UW-W Director of University Communications
angilerj@uww.edu

Corey Saffold projects the confidence of one who walks on solid ground.

As a former Madison police officer, current head of safety and security for the Verona Area School District and a Black man who is an authority on police-community relations, Saffold — who is also a criminology major at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater — draws on a solid foundation of experience.

“I’ve always tried to bring my life experiences to add value to whatever situation I am in,” said Saffold, 41, who attends classes online as a nontraditional student at UW-Whitewater on a path to earn a Bachelor of Science.

Now Saffold can add serving as regent on the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents to his life experiences. The UW System, which appoints two student regents — one traditional and one nontraditional — to two-year terms with full duties including voting and serving on committees, selected Saffold in a competitive process. Gov. Tony Evers appointed Saffold, who also sits on the Office of School Safety Advisory Committee at the Wisconsin Department of Justice, on June 1, 2020.

UW-Whitewater nontraditional student Corey Saffold, left, was appointed June 1, 2020 to a two-year term on the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents. Saffold, at left in the photo, discusses equipment options for a utility vehicle at Verona High School. He is head of safety and security for Verona Schools. (UW-Whitewater photo/Craig Schreiner)

Saffold served as a City of Madison police officer for 10 years, learning about community policing and criminal justice from the inside. For six of those years, he was assigned in public schools. But his path to policing began much earlier, during an encounter with law enforcement as a youth growing up in Milwaukee.

“My influence (to become a police officer) was a detective in Milwaukee who gave me a second chance,” he said. “I realized that I can give people the same opportunity that was afforded to me, which was a second chance and an education.

“When I was a police officer in schools, I would use moments where there were disciplinary matters as an opportunity to educate students,” he explains. “Too often, teenagers can do things that they don’t fully understand the consequences of. Rather than throw the book at them, if they can receive an education about that one thing they did, that can go a long way for everybody in the society.”

That philosophy of personal policing brought Saffold to the UW-Whitewater criminology program to further his understanding of why people step outside the law.

“Was it the environment?” he asks. “Is it a problem with opportunity, joblessness, homelessness, need? Criminology answers a lot of questions for us in terms of human behavior.”

UW-Whitewater nontraditional student Corey Saffold was appointed June 1, 2020 to a two-year term on the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents. He works in his office at Verona High School on July 14, 2020. (UW-Whitewater photo/Craig Schreiner)

Saffold credits UW-Whitewater for making degrees accessible to nontraditional students through online learning. By anyone’s estimate, he leads a demanding life.

On a recent July afternoon, Saffold was in his office at Verona Area High School. He develops safety training and emergency procedures for weather and all manner of other incidents which might threaten his schools. As a staff member, he attends school board meetings, a recent one lasting until almost midnight. He hires security staff.  At the end of his day, Saffold met with a salesperson outside the school building to discuss equipment options for the school’s utility vehicle.

He is the father of a teenage son who attends high school in Madison and a daughter, 22, who plans to attend law school. Before the pandemic hit, he traveled across the state to speak to groups on police-community relations.

As he begins his second year at Verona, Saffold and his staff will oversee a new high school building of almost 600,000 square feet and a campus that will accommodate up to 2,200 students in addition to the eight other schools they manage.

“I hope to graduate (from UW-Whitewater) next year,” he said. “And this will sound funny, but I don’t really keep track of when I’ll graduate. Working full time, I take classes as I can take them. But after I receive my B.S., I plan to apply for law school at UW-Madison.”

“Right now, I’m doing political science, the Constitution and the police,” he said. “’Policing and the Constitution’ is the name of the class. So that’s perfect. I’m reading case law that I’ve already practiced. I’ve lived this, so it’s quite interesting.”

Saffold embraces his role as the voice of nontraditional students at UW System campuses.

“It is an honor to be on the board and it’s an honor to even be considered,” he said. “Whether it’s a nontraditional student in a rural area who works on a farm or if it’s increasing enrollment for our nontraditional students of color who come out of Milwaukee or Madison, I want to be part of that.”

Whether or not the nation’s current focus on unity, recovery and stability influenced his appointment to the Board Regents, Saffold calls himself an optimist about the future.

“Black lives do matter, and I want to move beyond just saying that, to put in place actionable items that shape that,” he said. “I want the students to feel like they have a voice in this and to feel like they are listened to. I want to empower and equip our leaders — our chief diversity officers, our student affairs folks — with the resources they need to make sure our schools are welcoming.”

And his optimism extends to the UW System’s ability to navigate the challenges ahead.

“COVID-19 has had an impact on the whole UW System — both financially and on the students. We’re very concerned about the students, faculty and staff and their welfare. Foreign exchange students should be able to stay here to attend school. I’m confident in our president, (former U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services Secretary and Wisconsin Governor) Tommy Thompson. I’m confident that he will successfully navigate the UW System through these waters.”

And he has some words of advice for his colleagues and community.

“Think about your classmate or your colleague or coworker and think of ways to help them. If we all thought of someone other than ourselves to support, then we all would be supported,” he said. “Other than that — be safe.”

Local Resident Graduates from Marquette University

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (August 7, 2020) – This past spring, Allison Sedmak of Whitewater, WI, graduated from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wis. Sedmak earned a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Sciences.

Sedmak was one of 2,236 students to graduate from Marquette in May. Marquette University is a Catholic, Jesuit university that draws its more than 11,500 students from all 50 states and more than 84 different countries. Marquette is ranked in the top 10 nationally for job placement.

In addition to its nationally recognized academic programs, Marquette is known for its service learning programs and internships as students are challenged to use what they learn to make a difference in the world. Find out more about Marquette at marquette.edu.